by Yoram Ettinger
Mitt Romney's Ten 
Commandments on national security are based on recent pronouncements by 
the Republican presidential contender, including his Oct. 8 speech at 
the Virginia Military Institute. 
1. Thou shall adhere to
 the classic U.S. worldview, highlighting American moral and strategic 
exceptionalism — a U.S. global competitive edge. American moral 
exceptionalism is a derivative of America’s Judeo-Christian values, 
formulated by the early Pilgrims and the U.S. founding fathers. Romney 
believes in America’s moral, economic, scientific, technological, 
educational, medical and military exceptionalism. He is aware that 
America’s best interests and the minimization of global disorder — 
militarily and economically — require U.S. proactive leadership. 
2. Thou shall embrace 
U.S. global leadership, underscoring U.S. freedom of unilateral action, 
rather than subordinating U.S. policy to multilateral considerations. 
The U.S. — not the U.N. or any international order — is the dominant 
quarterback of international relations. U.S. global leadership is 
critical for its economic, homeland security and military concerns. It 
bolsters posture of deterrence, providing a tailwind for allies, thus 
constraining clear and present threats posed by rogue/terrorist Islamic 
regimes. On the other hand, U.S. withdrawal is interpreted as weakness, 
emboldening adversaries, weakening allies, fueling clear and present 
dangers and facilitating the recurrence of the Sept. 11 attacks.
3. Thou shall abide by 
realism and experience and not by wishful-thinking and delusion. Thus, 
the Arab street intensifies anti-U.S. terrorism and not democracy. 
Confronting, rather than engaging, rogue regimes upgrades deterrence and
 reduces the threat of war. Pre-empting, rather than retaliating 
against, undeterred rogue regimes spares humanity calamitous wars. 
Moreover, President Vladimir Putin’s Russia is a rival of the U.S., not 
an ally. Steadfastness, not flexibility, would restrain Moscow’s 
imperialistic ambition, reassuring the U.S.'s East European allies. 
Realism requires confidence, marathon-like resolve, and clarity — not 
apology, hasty-wavering and ambiguity. 
4. Thou shall follow 
moral clarity — a prerequisite for operational clarity. Do not 
subordinate moral clarity to political convenience. For example, since 
Islamic terrorism is the most distinct threat to Western democracies, it
 must be clearly identified and not be blurred by linguistic acrobatics,
 such as “workplace violence,” “man-caused disasters,” or “isolated 
extremism.” The threat of Islamic terrorism must be lucidly presented 
and not be deleted from the training literature of the defense and 
counterterrorism establishment. Islamic terrorism has systematically 
afflicted the U.S. since the 18th century. Core American values of 
liberty and justice are a lethal threat to rogue and tyrannical Islamic 
regimes. The U.S. is the chief strategic obstacle to megalomaniac 
transnational aspirations. 
5. Thou shall advance 
strength, and not pliability, to promote peace. Strength deters, and 
perceived weakness fuels, terrorism. Enhancing military capabilities — 
of the U.S. and its European allies — is essential to facing the rising 
threats and deterring aggression. 
6. Thou shall enhance 
strategic cooperation with capable, reliable, stable, predictable, 
democratic and unconditional allies — such as Israel — which contribute 
to the U.S. in the areas of defense and commercial high-tech, 
intelligence, battle tactics, training and operations. Israel is the 
only ally resembling a U.S. aircraft carrier, which does not require a 
single American on board, cannot be sunk, already deployed in an area 
critical to primary U.S. interests, snatching hot U.S. chestnuts out of 
the fire, saving the U.S. taxpayer some $20 billion annually. 
7. Thou shall not 
indulge in the morally wrong and strategically flawed moral equivalence 
between a role model of counterterrorism (e.g., Israel) and a role model
 of terrorism (e.g., Mahmoud Abbas’ PLO); between a role model of 
unconditional alliance with the U.S. (e.g., Israel) and a role model of 
systematic alliance with enemies of the U.S. such as Nazi Germany, the 
Communist Bloc, Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden (e.g., the 
Palestinian leadership). 
8. Thou shall prevent 
Iran’s nuclearization for the sake of American, and not Israeli, 
interests. A nuclear Iran would traumatize the supply and price of oil; 
devastate pro-U.S. Gulf regimes; coalesce Iran’s takeover of Iraq; 
accelerate nuclear proliferation; upgrade the military capabilities of 
anti-U.S. Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador; embolden anti-U.S. Islamic 
terrorism, including sleeper cells in the U.S.; and would devastate the 
U.S. posture of deterrence.
9. Thou shall be 
cognizant of the secondary role played by the Palestinian issue in the 
Middle East. It is not the root cause of regional turbulence and 
anti-U.S. Islamic terrorism; not the crown jewel of Arab policymaking; 
and not the crux of the Arab-Israeli conflict. As Romney said: The 
Palestinians are concerned about the existence, not the size, of Israel.
 He is aware of the indispensability of the mountain ridges of Judea and
 Samaria for Israel’s existence. He is also aware of the adverse impact 
by the proposed Palestinian state upon cardinal U.S. interests. Hence, 
the unacceptability of the “two-state delusion.”
10. Thou shall not subordinate the Ten Commandments to political correctness, expediency and global/domestic pressure.
Will Romney be faithful to the Ten Commandments on national security if elected on Nov. 6, 2012?
                    Yoram Ettinger
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=2677
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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