Liz Peek
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Radio
  • About
  • Contact
Screenshot 2019-06-26 07.54.58
October 17, 2023

Biden’s missteps in Middle East could cost him the White House, just like Jimmy Carter

Liz Peek Articles

Joe Biden’s presidency is tracking Jimmy Carter’s four years in the Oval Office so faithfully it must give his campaign team hives. Recent events in Israel create even more parallels. It was a Middle East crisis that brought down Jimmy Carter’s presidency; the current conflict in the region could prove Biden’s undoing as well.

In 1979, more than 50 U.S. citizens were taken hostage in Iran, and Carter failed to secure their release. Worse, a U.S. military mission sent to rescue the prisoners failed, infuriating Americans. Carter’s foreign policy blunders sank his reelection bid, but they were far from his only problem. His administration was considered weak and inept, and the events in Tehran reinforced those perceptions.

Like Biden, Carter was already in trouble when the hostage crisis occurred. The Georgia peanut farmer presided over sky-high inflation: so has Biden. Carter pushed enormous and controversial increases in government spending: ditto Biden. Like Biden, Carter started with high approval numbers that went pretty much straight downhill.

As he approached reelection in 1980, Carter faced a primary battle from fellow Democrat Senator Ted Kennedy; nearing next year’s presidential election, another Kennedy — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. – was until recently attempting to mount a primary challenge against Biden. History may not repeat but it sure does rhyme.

Today, 30 Americans have been murdered by Hamas and more than a dozen are being held captive.  Voters will hold President Biden responsible for punishing the terrorists responsible for those deaths, and for bringing both American hostages and those trapped by war home safely. 

So far, the Biden White House has not impressed. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan boasted eight days before Hamas’ invasion of Israel that, “The Middle East region is quieter today than it has been in two decades,” displaying either incredible ignorance or unjustifiable smugness.   

Elsewhere, it turns out that Robert Malley, Biden administration’s “special envoy” to Iran, who is known to have had close contacts with Hamas, was put on leave from his State Department post several months ago.  Officially, he has been accused of mishandling classified documents, but there is speculation that he has long worked on behalf not of the U.S. but of Iranian interests.

Biden and his national security team have refused to accuse Iran for complicity in Hamas’ attack on Israel, claiming repeatedly there is no evidence of Tehran’s involvement. That is untrue. There is increasing proof that the planning for the attack went on for months, discussed by senior officials of both Hamas and Hezbollah meeting with leaders of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard in Beirut. 

Biden is understandably loathe to implicate Iran in Hamas’ atrocities. Confronting Tehran could escalate the hostilities in the region, and would also boost oil prices, which would inevitably hurt Biden’s approval ratings. Also, Biden’s White House, foolishly pursuing a nuclear pact, has enriched and emboldened the mullahs, in part by loosening enforcement of sanctions; voters will not look kindly on that decision.

Wisconsin Representative Scott Fitzgerald wrote recently in an op-ed, “Relaxing sanctions has allowed Iran to generate oil revenues exceeding $80 billion annually while strengthening its relationship with China. As I warned in April 2021, using China to dodge U.S. sanctions allows Iran to funnel money to its proxy forces in the Middle East, including the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps and Hamas, which is armed, funded, and led by the Iranian regime.” 

At the same time, there has been a spike in the number of people on the terror watch list who have been apprehended at the uncontrolled southern border, through which millions of people have entered our country illegally since Biden took office. Fox News reports that four Iranians have been caught since October 1, heightening concerns. 

Our State Department has been slow to help evacuate Americans from Israel, even as other countries have arranged to airlift their citizens to safety. In addition, recent news reports show U.S. citizens responding to our government’s advisory and arriving at the Egyptian border, only to find it blocked and being told to go home. 

The Biden White House claims to be “surging additional military assistance” to our ally. Given that Biden goofed some months ago by admitting that the conflict in Ukraine has drained our stocks of munitions, it is not clear how much we can provide.

Hamas, on the other hand, appears to be well-equipped, thanks at least in part to mountains of weapons and ammunition abandoned by U.S. forces in their hasty exit from Afghanistan, which Joe Biden and his team continue to applaud as a “success.” 

Meanwhile, while the world has been transfixed by the horrors taking place in Israel and Gaza, the president has carried on with his campaigning. Biden’s support for Israel may be unwavering, but his attention span is not. As Israel declared war, Biden and his wife hosted a barbeque for White House staffers; the next day the president spoke at a Rose Garden campaign event celebrating his efforts to cut down on “junk fees.” 

The very next day, Biden traveled to Philadelphia to promote his green energy agenda. An agenda, we note, that includes curbing U.S. oil production and consequently driving prices higher, helping to fund Iran-backed groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. The president may have received word that his campaigning was not well received; he abruptly canceled a trip to Colorado on Monday to “instead hold meetings with his national security team as Israel’s war with Hamas appears set to escalate,” as one news outlet helpfully explained.

Jimmy Carter, faced with the hostage crisis, had the decency to suspend campaigning and focus his government on the plight of the captive Americans. One of his aides at the time, Stuart Eizenstat, wrote that the Carter’s so-called “Rose Garden strategy” “personalized the crisis in the American media by focusing the responsibility on the Oval Office and showing the terrorists they could put the American presidency itself into dysfunction.” Maybe that’s why Biden is choosing to keep up his campaigning, but his behavior is unseemly. 

So far, voters back our support for Israel; if more American lives are lost, or the conflict spreads, they will not be so forgiving, and they will blame Joe Biden.

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/bidens-missteps-middle-east-cost-white-house-jimmy-carter

Published on Fox News

Fox News Liz Peek: Concerns Over Biden’s Age Amid Israel-Hamas War The world was safer under Donald Trump 

Related Posts

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

Articles

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

Screenshot 2019-06-26 07.54.58

Articles

What Kamala Harris buzz is telling us. Read between the lines, America

Screenshot 2025-05-02 at 8.06.58 AM

Articles

China underestimates Trump and his trade war — America is ready for battle

Recent Posts

  • Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agendaRepublicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda
  • Screenshot 2019-06-26 07.54.58What Kamala Harris buzz is telling us. Read between the lines, America
  • Screenshot 2025-05-02 at 8.06.58 AMChina underestimates Trump and his trade war — America is ready for battle
  • Ignore biased polls, Trump voters love his first 100 daysIgnore biased polls, Trump voters love his first 100 days

Tweets by Liz

Unable to load Tweets

Follow

Liz on Facebook

Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

Liz Peek

15 hours ago

Liz Peek

Republicans in Congress going Squishy at Worst possible Time … See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Republicans need to grow a spine and support Trump’s agenda

After a few months of celebrating Donald Trump’s astonishing political comeback by offering the president near-unanimous support, Republicans are going squishy.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 9
  • Shares: 1
  • Comments: 2

Comment on Facebook

Tillis has always stabbed us in the back. Since his very first day.

Another great article and insight.

Liz Peek

3 weeks ago

Liz Peek

Janet Yellen, despite a career chock full of massive blunders, continues to pontificate. Where was she when Joe Biden decided to flood a booming economy with trillions of excess (and uneeded) dollars?
… See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Janet Yellen is wrong about US manufacturing — and pretty much everything else

Janet Yellen remains wrong on a host of issues — including inflation, sanctions enforcement and U.S. interest rates.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 12
  • Shares: 1
  • Comments: 6

Comment on Facebook

Powerful article. Thank you for reporting the truth

Wrong about the U.S. dollar, as well.

Bet you that she has business in China. The way she was bowing for XI.

You support the current evil regime? Shame on YOU. thanks for pointing out someone who is no longer in control of ANYTHING. Jesus weeps. Happy Easter tho ma'am

Wrong about the U.S. dollar, as well.

She was doing the 'TRANSITORY' dance along with Biden and Powell knowing damn well that it would be misinterpreted by many to mean that prices would come back down. In the meantime, the FED sat on their asses with rates at zero for a year while inflation shot from about 2% to over 9%. These people essentially screwed Americans out of 20% of their life savings with the 40 yr high inflation while they printed and squandered. 'Grandma' Yellen is not the sweet, innocent little lady she portrays herself to be.

View more comments

Liz Peek

4 weeks ago

Liz Peek

Years of cheating by China has brought us to this place: it was bound to happen, but President Trump is the only president to confront our biggest adversary
… See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

Trump and Xi go mano a mano on tariffs — who will back down first?

If the showdown between Xi and Trump persists, it will hurt both countries — one will have to break, and I’m guessing it won’t be Trump.

Share

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email

  • Likes: 6
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 1

Comment on Facebook

I was an IP paralegal for over 30 years. China was the absolute worst in stealing America’s intellectual property rights. Trying to fight in their courts was impossible and took years and lots of money. Most law firms gave up. Only one employer (a big corporation) fought to the end, but still their courts ruled against us. Frustrating!!

LOAD MORE

Tags

AGENDA AIR FORCE BIG GOVERNMENT BORDER WALL CHINA CLINTON CONGRESS CYBERWAR DEMOCRATS DRAIN THE SWAMP E-VERIFY ECONOMY ELON MUSK FILLIBUSTER FREEDOM CAUCUS FREEDOM WATCH GOP GORSUCH GRADUATION HACKING HEALTH CARE HILLARY IMMIGRATION INFRASTRUCTURE KUSHNER MEDIA MIDDLE EAST MOODY'S NUNES NYC OIL RAND PAUL STOCK MARKET SUPREME COURT SUSAN RICE TAXES TAX REFORM TECHNOLOGY TED CRUZ TERROR TRUMP TURKEY WALL STREET WEATHER WELLESLEY
[themify_map address="233 78th Street New York, NY 10032" width=100% height=250px zoom=14]
  • Articles
  • Videos
  • Radio
  • About
  • Contact
©2017 LizPeek.org. All Rights Reserved.
Site by Steeplechase Strategies