PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, MARCH 6, 2015 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Do not be goaded into war When in doubt, cut taxes or send in American military troops. Those seem to be the only choices for some of the nation’s politicians on the right. No tax is good—taxes feed the government beast that has an in- satiable appetite. Cut off its food source and government will shrink to a manageable size, whatever that is. Taxes are especially bad when they fund things conservative po- liticans don’t support—food stamps, unemployment benefi ts, clean air and water. For some the only good tax is the tax that feeds the military budget. That’s especially true these days when some are calling for American boots on the ground and missles in the air to fi ght the Islamic State. Or, to follow Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s exortation to take out the regime in Iran before it gets any closer to a nuclear weapon. In a recent Keizertimes web poll, 75 percent of the respondents were against an increase in the Oregon gas tax even if the money was ear- marked solely for transportation and highway projects. The American people do not like taxes, a feeling that thas been re-enforced by talk- ing heads, pundits and politicans for decades. But there is always money to funnel to defense, which is the only governmental responsibility that gets universal approval. There is no doubt that the Unit- ed States needs to spend money on defense. The issue is what that mon- ey is being spent on. Millions of vehicles across the nation bear rib- bon magnets with a “Support Our Troops” message. Yet, our troops re- main woefully underfunded, either on the battlefi eld or once they get home. Congress and the Pentagon is pushing for the new F-35 fi ghter. Experts say that this state-of-the- art plane will not perform nearly as well as the two planes it is to replace: the A-10 and the F-16. The F-35 project is expected to cost upwards of $1.5 trillion. Our troops could be very well supported with a portion of that kind of money. Better equip- ment in the fi eld, more intelligence and certainly better care for them when they return home bruised, battered and/or broken. National defense is important, but the defense game has changed over the past few decades. The United States is safe from other na- tions—no nation-state dare attack continental America. Our current defense strategies must address that some of our prime enemies are stateless and rely on goals other than conquest. There will not be a con- voy of military ships heading for the U.S. across the Atlantic; there will be a convoy of jeeps and SUVs racing across the Middle East to build a ca- liphate the leaders say is the begin- ning of the End of Days. The United States ended its ma- jor offense in Iraq four years ago and it has been drawing down in Afghanistan. Much of the equip- ment American used in those wars have been left to the governments with which we were allied. In Iraq much of that military hardware is now in the hands of fi ghters of the Islamic State (after U.S.-trained Iraq troops dropped their weapons and ran—not unlike our allies in south Vietnam 40 years ago). American taxpayers have spent about $2 trillion since 2001 to fi ght wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—two wars we did not win, nor did we lose. We just walked away, as some had been calling for from the very beginning. It’s unfathomable that in the face of just concluding the longest war in our nation’s history, that some politicans are again beating the war drums. Should the American govern- ment spend money on solving the Middle East? Is there a solution? Regardless of Netanyahu’s shame- ful anti-Obama speech, on Ameri- can soil, in the midst of an Israeli election campaign, the administra- tion should keep it steady as it goes. No one wants an Iran with nuclear weapons, That’s what we said about North Korea and we did not attack that country. Iran is the target of war chanting because of its neigh- borhood. The American people have war fatigue and do not want to see young American men and women sent overseas, especially in a confl ict that has no U.S. interests involved. As Lyndon Johnson once said about a war 50 years ago, American boys should not be sent to fi ght when the people under attack should be fi ghting for themselves. The American people do not want to pay more taxes, though most of the taxes they pay are from the state and local levels. Those po- liticans who have control of the nation’s purse strings can certainly spin a rationale for war (even when it comes from a foreign leader). It would be nice if once in a while they could make the need for im- proved infrastructure here at home sound as necessary as buyng a tril- lion dollar jet plane or sending America’s youth back to the Middle East. —LAZ Share your opinion, Send a letter to the editor (300 words) or a guest column (up to 500 words) to the Keizertimes. Deadline for submissons is noon each Tuesday. E-mail to: publisher@keizertimes.com The Bibi-Boehner coalition By E.J. DIONNE JR. It was disconcerting to watch Congress cheer wildly as a foreign leader, the prime minister of one of America’s closest allies, trashed an American president’s foreign policy. It was equally strange that the speaker of our House of Representatives in- terjected the United States Congress into an Israeli political campaign. It fell to Isaac Herzog, Benjamin Netanyahu’s leading opponent in Is- rael’s March 17 election, to make the essential point: that this week’s speech was “a very harsh wound to Israel- U.S. relations” and “will only widen the rift with Israel’s greatest ally and strategic partner.” The rapturous greeting Congress bequeathed on Netanyahu for his at- tack on President Obama’s approach to negotiations with Iran no doubt created great footage for television ads back home and won him some votes at the right end of Israel’s electorate. But Herzog’s observation stands: John Boehner’s unprecedented act of inviting the leader of another na- tion to criticize our own president, and Netanyahu’s decision to accept, threaten to damage the bipartisan and trans-ideological coalition that has al- ways come together on behalf of Is- rael’s survival. Netanyahu may have spoken the words, “We appreciate all that Presi- dent Obama has done for Israel,” but the rest of his speech painted the pres- ident as foolish and on the verge of being duped on a nuclear deal by the mullahs in Tehran. The Israeli leader reached for the most devastating metaphor avail- able to him, the appeasement of the Nazis that led to the Holocaust. He urged the United States “not to sac- rifi ce the future for the present” and “not to ig- nore aggression in the hopes of gaining an il- lusory peace.” This is what he was accusing Obama of doing. No wonder House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi de- scribed herself as “near tears” over Netanyahu’s “condescension toward our knowledge of the threat posed by Iran.” Pelosi was on to something here because the differences between Obama and Netanyahu are not over whether the Iranian regime in its current form is trustworthy. Nobody believes it is. At stake is a balance of risks, a choice between two imperfect outcomes. On the one side is a deal that buys at least a decade in which Iran will not be able to produce a nuclear weapon and will be subjected to in- spections and other limitations. On the other side is a decision to blow up the current negotiations because the guarantees of any likely accord would not be suffi ciently airtight. Yes, the emerging deal does car- ry the risk that down the road, Iran could get nuclear weapons. But fail- ing to reach an agreement will not necessarily stop Tehran from going nuclear, and an end to negotiations would in no way ensure that the rest of the world would return to effec- tive sanctions. Netanyahu’s rhetoric pointed toward his real goal, which is regime change, but how exactly could that happen without armed confl ict? Netanyahu evaded this by offer- ing a thoroughly rosy scenario. “Now, other views if Iran threatens to walk away from the table—and this often happens in a Persian bazaar—call their bluff,” he said. “They’ll be back, because they need the deal a lot more than you do.” Really? If the Iranian regime is as horrible as Netanyahu says it is, why does he expect its leaders to be as fl exible as if they were haggling over the price of a carpet? The crux of the difference be- tween Obama and Netanyahu is about a bet on the future. The Israeli prime minister argued that “the ide- ology of Iran’s revolutionary regime is deeply rooted in militant Islam, and that’s why this regime will always be an enemy of America.” He added, “I don’t believe that Iran’s radical regime will change for the better after this deal.” Obama’s bet, by contrast, is that a deal opening up space and time pro- vides the best chance we have of en- couraging political evolution in Iran. Of course there is no guarantee of this, but it’s a reasonable assumption that ending the negotiations would set back the forces of change. Skeptics of an agreement, Ne- tanyahu included, can usefully push Obama to get the longest time line and the toughest guarantees he can, and American negotiators can try to use the threat of opposition in Con- gress to strengthen the fi nal terms. But Netanyahu never gave a satis- factory answer to the most important question: What is the alternative? As for Netanyahu’s provocative and divi- sive intervention in American politics and Boehner’s meddling in Israel’s election, the voters of our friend and ally will render a judgment soon. (Washington Post Writers Group) Gov. Brown replace key Kitz cronies Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com NEWS EDITOR SUBSCRIPTIONS Craig Murphy editor@keizertimes.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Eric A. Howald news@keizertimes.com One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 ADVERTISING Paula Moseley POSTMASTER advertising@keizertimes.com Send address changes to: PRODUCTION MANAGER Andrew Jackson graphics@keizertimes.com EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon A. Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 BUSINESS MANAGER Laurie Painter billing@keizertimes.com LEGAL NOTICES Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon legals@keizertimes.com facebook.com/keizertimes twitter.com/keizertimes As noted in my most recent guest column, I speak with sincerity when I wish our new governor, Kate Brown, every success as she moves forward through the initial days and ensuing months of her time in of- fi ce. I have one disappointment already, however, that I am not able to ignore, even during her “honey- moon:” That is, according to media reports, Brown has decided to keep her predecessor’s administrator and director appointees. Based on what we know from emails, persons among the agency heads and their immedi- ate subordinates, Cylvia Hayes was able to boss these peo- ple around as though she was the governor. Only one of them, the now former com- munications director, Nkenge Harmon John- son, had the strength of character to stand up for right over wrong, questioning Hayes’ au- thority. She was fi red for saying that state managers should keep a wary eye on Hayes as she appeared to be on her merry way to do- ing whatever she wished to do. Meanwhile, Hayes was known to be push- ing Michael Jordan, director of the Depart- ment of Administrative Services (who himself has been questioned by the IRS and FBI) around as well as a num- ber of other state agency heads. Not one of these tax- payer-paid state appointees to high-paying state jobs had the cour- age to bring what should have been their concerns over Hayes to public attention. They should have threat- ened to resign if she wasn’t reined in. Their acts of self-preservation in the face of what should have been pa- tently obvious as ethically and law- gene h. mcintyre fully unacceptable spells “coward.” It all adds up to a bottom line where they should not be retained in the jobs they held under the Kitzhaber administration because they cannot be trusted. They should be replaced by persons known for their adherence to principles and practices of acceptable conduct. Governor Brown has said she wants to restore faith in state govern- ment. Surely she does not want her legacy to be: She was much about talk without related action. (Gene H. McIntyre’s column ap- pears weekly in the Keizertimes.)