[Salon] How Kevin Roberts flipped the script at the hawkish Heritage Foundation - Responsible Statecraft



First, I have heard that the great Dan Ellsberg is having issues with his health, but will say no more on that. Except to say that he is one of my greatest inspirations, along with Bill Polk, and their like minded friends, such as Noam Chomsky, BG John Johns, and Sy Hersh, all of whom, except for the latter, I have recorded videos with. And all of whom would have been/were attacked by the “right-wing,” of both parties, over time, for their opposition to U.S. imperialistic wars. As that is what these wars have been, for U.S. Global Military Primacy, even when the “other side” attacked first, in response to our “concealed” provocations. 

But in Daniel Ellsberg’s book, “Papers On the War,” published in 1972, when the “Jackson Democrats” were just getting started in response to what they saw as the Democrats going “weak,” in their growing opposition the Vietnam War, epitomized by George McGovern, Ellsberg write of the lack of “specialized studies” on those factors which drive war policy, such as “the domestic politics of U.S. foreign policy.” He goes on to write, of the Vietnam War, the fear politicians had of a “McCarthyite 'right-wing backlash’ if they should be associated with 'losing Indochina.’”

Today, obviously, the fear is of "losing Ukraine,” for both parties, with the “right-wing backlash” against Biden already on display as Republicans demand ever higher levels of warfare against Russia, as I’ve shared in a number of articles. But to one small faction in the Republicans, the “New Right” (see attached file on a previous generation of such) as they call themselves, war with China always takes precedence. As it always has with the U.S. right-wing even before Mao prevailed in China, with their support going to the fascist-like Chiang Kai-shek in earlier days, but now with Taiwan for its geopolitical position for what they demand as an inevitable U.S. war with China. 


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Title: How Kevin Roberts flipped the script at the hawkish Heritage Foundation - Responsible Statecraft

All of which is by way of explanation of why I have been particularly vitriolic toward the “right-wing” of the War Party, as they continue to lead the way toward more U.S. wars, and its founding movement and founders, as taken forward by Joe McCarthy, and his CIA acolytes whom I’ve frequently named. The “firm” of Buckley, Burnham, Kendall, Casey, and Buckley, founders of National Review magazine, and all alumni of the CIA. And as has been frequently written the last few years, Kendall and Burnham are the precursors to Trump. With Sen. Joe McCarthy, whose consigliore Roy Cohn became one of Trump’s best friends, as well as his advisor, never included by Trumpites. But for anyone who has studied the “Right,” it is common knowledge that a “parallel” wing would become part of the Democratic Party, equally as fascistic as far as loving war, repression of rights, especially “free speech,” and as celebrants of the “martial virtues,” all elements of what Mussolini called his movement; fascism. After more than 21 years now of “Perpetual War,” and having killed, wounded, and displaced millions of human beings, with even greater numbers as our “targets” yet, it is an outrage to call ourselves by any euphemisms to hide our "true nature,”which is fully revealed now with our Perpetual War doctrine, and on-going wars, against Iran, China, and Russia, with any of their allies included though being fought today by economic and cognitive war “instruments” of war,” like Syria and Cuba. 

That “parallel wing” was begun by Barry Goldwater"s fellow Senator, militarist, and friend, as "Scoop Jackson Democrats,” and today, differs only on domestic issues from their ever more “militaristic,” to use a euphemism, and founding “War Party” partners, the Republican Party.  With that difference always evident in the greater amounts of funding always demanded by the Republicans for our “Warfighters.” In fact, the two wings of the U.S. War Party, left and right, are more like tributaries, rivers, running parallel with each other, on a course, and with an outlet, to Hell, and overlapping when it’s time to call for, and wage, war. But sometimes diverging ever so slightly to appeal to different factions in their respective political constituencies, especially when war-weariness begins to surface in their respective constituencies. As when gullible Ron Paul Republicans were micro-targeted with claims that Trump would "end the endless wars,” per his campaign advisor Arthur Finkelstein’s “Six-Party Theory,” even while to other factions he boasted of how he would make the U.S. military the most feared in the world. Which in itself requires using it to kill people, which Trump did in Iran, and prepared to do in China and Russia in encircling both of them. And in each party’s wing, is always their respective “think-tanks,” providing the ideology, and ideological justification, for war.

Especially distinctive in promoting U.S. wars has always been the “hawkish Heritage Foundation,” disingenuously (read “close” what Roberts is actually saying with his war incitement toward China) described below. But there is more to the “hawkish Heritage Foundation” than just the “perpetual" incitement of Perpetual War. There’s also the “legal coup d’é·tat” they’ve led since their founding, promoting an “Original” U.S. Constitution, sans the Bill of Rights, as explained here: 


BLUF: "Kendall and Carey expressed very little concern over the various and sundry rights of minorities being protected by a gifted and chosen elite acting through the judicial branch or another organ of government.

. . .

"A republic, Kendall said, cannot long thrive and succeed if it’s not prepared to defend and maintain its conception of justice, of the good, and of how its citizens should live together in what they affirm and in what they reject. Such a society will slowly come apart at the seams as its citizens increasingly look at one another and realize they have no core beliefs and principles that they hold in common. The result will be apathy, anger, and aggression as civilized argument becomes impossible to sustain because the public square is no longer upheld by a consensus about who the “We the people” really are.

"This, ultimately, was the issue involved in the Joseph McCarthy hearings, Kendall reasoned. He detailed a series of arguments the McCarthy hearings engaged and the reasons why Americans favored and opposed him, but the key question, Kendall highlighted, that McCarthy raised was if an American could espouse communist beliefs regardless of whether those beliefs were capable of actually being implemented in American government.”

For those capable of reading, and I know some here will again shout, "three cheers for Kendall” for eviscerating the “illegitimate" First Amendment, as Conservatives have articulated every time there is dissent to our wars (while perhaps complaining when the President happens to be a Democrat, but most likely because censorship isn’t severe enough!), Heritage carries on the arguments made against the Bill of Rights first made by Kendall, and then by Kendall/Carey (see attached file above of how “symbols” are used under militaristic movements). Which was what Dan Ellsberg was up against, as the “right-wing backlash” against anyone opposing the Vietnam War!

As can be seen at this link., Heritage is in lockstep with the “legal coup d’é·tat” underway in Israel currently, as are virtually all Conservatives, with the exceptions capable of being counted on the fingers of one hand. With Conservative to include right-wing Democrats and oligarchic supporting libertarians slavering for another tax-cut for their Oligarch Masters, like Peter Thiel. https://www.heritage.org/courts/report/against-judicial-supremacy-the-founders-and-the-limits-the-courts

But if one is ignorant enough to believe the Conservative” Heritage Foundation only opposes “excesses” like free-speech” as rights, look again. They led the way, with an “Originalist” Judge, in opposing Habeas Corpus for those hundreds of actual “innocents” swept up by the U.S. military, through payment of bribes and other trickery, and thrown into Guantanamo with the “original” intent to let them rot there, per “Conservative Doctrine.” It was only through the efforts of non-conservatives, with the exception of Bruce Fein, and only a handful of non-ideological “conservatives,” that arguments for habeas corpus were even being made, with “Originalist Conservatives,” like the one at the link below, openly declaring in opposition to the Supreme Court that they would never grant release of a Guantanamo prisoner. The video below is only a snippet of what Judge Raymond Randolph had to say in his defiance of the SC, as I know from attending this event:

Not saying he was equal to this judge, but the thought certainly crossed my mind of a resemblance. Two companions and I had to get out of there quickly as the smell of sulphur was becoming overwhelming, but not before I got a picture of David Addington and me as a “memento” of my visit to pre-war Hell!


So I admit I find this “white-washing” of the “hawkish Heritage Foundation” repugnant. Not because I don’t believe even the worst of the worst “think-tanks” can’t change ideological direction, but because this interview of  Roberts is a masterpiece of “double-talk,” in that he lays out all the reasons why 


"And so it would be excellent if Speaker [Kevin] McCarthy (R-Calif.), who has remained consistent on this issue, is able to turn the spigot off until and unless there is an articulation that is an answer to the question: What is in the best interest of the everyday American as it relates to spending $113 billion on Ukraine, so much of which has not gone to direct military aid? Senator [Josh] Hawley (R-Mo.) gave an excellent speech at Heritage yesterday. He was supportive of at least one of the military packages to Ukraine, if my memory serves, and he, I thought, put it really well. We want the Ukrainians to win, we want Putin to lose, and we want to make sure that we’re not wrecking our budget and paying attention to the much more present threat, which is Chinese aggression all around the world.


"But the point is that, both in the House and in the Senate, there are more members who are supportive of this third way, and that’s not a surprise. I know that that’s at the very least the plurality position, if not the majority position, of conservatively-minded Americans. They want to support Ukraine with very strictly defined, highly accountable military aid. They want the Ukrainians to win, and yet they also understand something that seems to be missing in the minds of so many of our policymakers and even friends in D.C., which is that the United States fiscal position has deteriorated so greatly that it’s actually very responsible, very natural for a conservative to be saying, “Guys, these are all competing goods: Ukrainians winning, harming Putin, but also making sure that our budget is responsible, also making sure we’re answering these strategic questions about Americans interests.” 

"Having said that, those are not mutually exclusive either. You can do both diplomacy and that military buildup simultaneously, and that’s what Heritage is calling for. We’re saying that, perhaps preaching — to use your language — some restraint. We don’t want to sound at Heritage like we’re saber rattling towards the Chinese, but what we’re trying to do is sound the alarm for Americans that unless we take these steps in this set of legislation that we’ll be proposing in this upcoming major research project on what to do about China, we probably will find ourselves out of time for diplomacy and therefore looking at open military conflict. We abhor that idea. I’m cautiously optimistic that we can avoid it, but only if the percentage of Americans who recognize the grave threats posed by China to us increases. (TP translation-"so let’s boost the military budget beyond anything hitherto imaginable.”)


How Kevin Roberts flipped the script at the hawkish Heritage Foundation

In a wide-ranging Q&A, this ‘recovering neocon’ says there’s a way to support Ukraine — and confront China — without more war.

Throughout the last four decades, the Heritage Foundation has pursued a steadfastly hawkish, if not neoconservative agenda. It has justified this as Reagan-era “peace through strength,” even as post-Cold War conflicts have become predominantly preemptive wars of choice, and invariably endless.

As recent wars have become less popular with conservatives — as evidenced by Donald Trump capturing the GOP nomination after calling the Iraq War “a failure” — there has been a discernible shift at Heritage. Kevin Roberts, who took over as president in 2021 has been decidedly more populist on the foreign policy front than previous foundation leaders, and has made headlines over the last year criticizing the lack of transparency in Ukraine aid and calling for its oversight. He is also questioning the efficacy of Washington’s voluminous defense spending — for which Heritage has been a perennial big booster.

In September, he told the Washington Post he was a “recovering neocon” and that “Heritage is moving toward an explicit embrace of restraint, that’s true…But we’ve always talked about restraint.”

When Heritage hosted Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) this month, Roberts moderated, accusing the “uni-party” on Capitol Hill of stifling debate on Ukraine and declaring himself a supporter of a strong but “more restrained” approach to foreign policy.  

In a recent interview with Responsible Statecraft, we asked Roberts — who has a PhD in American history and served as the CEO of the Texas Policy Foundation before coming to Washington — if he would flesh out some of these ideas on Ukraine, as well as China, and restraint in general.


Vlahos:  The Heritage Foundation has pushed for defense budget increases for as long as I’ve been reporting, which is a very long time. It has typically not made fiscal conservatism part of its advocacy for strong national defense, but in your own words in the American conservative magazine recently, you said, “Republicans must defund unnecessary programs and unneeded bureaucrats while also ensuring our military is ready to confront the nation’s threats. It will not be easy, but with enough political will, it can be done.” What do you say to veteran lawmakers like Senator Lindsey Graham who are warning Kevin McCarthy against any cuts, saying there are too many threats out there, namely China. Graham said recently, “my goal is to get Kevin and everybody looking at the defense needs based on threats and the threat portfolio. The threat picture doesn’t justify being on the low end of GDP.” How do you respond to that reasoning, and has it been difficult to convince others at Heritage to take a different approach on this?

Roberts : Great question. In a lot of ways, for those of us who are Reagan conservatives and believe in peace through strength, which obviously everyone at Heritage still does, that’s constant. And I appreciate Senator Graham’s comments about the threats. I believe — and a growing number of conservatives at Heritage certainly believe — that because of those threats, and because of something that has changed substantively since the 1980s, and that is America’s fiscal health, that we have to be that much more responsible about which defense programs we are prioritizing. And D.C., which is the city of false dichotomies, it’s been apparent to me for months, that when someone like me says that, even though I’m very much a foreign policy and defense hawk, immediately that means that you must be for a weak Department of Defense. And you and I both know and any reasonable person knows that that’s simply not the case. 

In fact, we’re saying that we care so deeply about a strong America, we care so deeply about a strong Department of Defense, and most importantly, we care so deeply about the rank-and-file servicemen and servicewomen that we want to ensure that Congress is doing its job and providing the Pentagon direction on where money should be best spent. It’s laughable on its face that there’s any agency in the federal government that doesn’t have wasteful spending, including the Pentagon. And so we’re not singling out the Department of Defense for that problem. We’re saying that we want the Department of Defense to be the most effective, the most efficient that it’s ever been. 

We’re still very supportive of a very strong military budget, but what Heritage is saying — nodding very much to to your observation, Kelley, about the importance of our fiscal conservative budget analysts — is that the United States of America is really flirting with fiscal disaster. And I don’t want to sound too dramatic in saying this. We certainly don’t intend to sound dramatic, and therefore we really believe it. Until and unless the United States government gets its fiscal house in order, we’re actually undermining our very ability to confront the threats that Senator Graham so accurately depicts.

Vlahos: On Ukraine aid — you’ve said that “Leader Kevin McCarthy is right to oppose a blank check that lacks an accompanying strategy, robust congressional debate, and fiscal responsibility. Americans should applaud him for setting clear expectations.” That was back in October. The U.S. has now allocated over $113 billion in aid, and lawmakers like Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) are now saying they want to turn the spigot off completely. Short of that, new senator J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) wants a complete accounting of the money already spent. Where do you stand on the issue of Ukraine and Washington’s war policy on Ukraine, and specifically the Ukraine aid today?

Roberts:That whole package of aid to Ukraine has been as irresponsible as Heritage forecasted last spring when the first package came up, and we opposed it. And immediately thereafter  (in) the subsequent conversations in Congress about this, we issued a set of very clear criteria by which Heritage would support Ukraine military aid. First of those criteria, as you no doubt will remember, was that it actually be focused on the military, not Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) favorite social justice pet programs.

What has happened over the last year is that the United States has spent even more money than even we at Heritage would have predicted, and we have very low expectations about Congress being fiscally responsible. The second thing that’s happened, which is making matters worse, even though we’re grateful that the Ukrainians have fought the war to a stalemate, even though we’re grateful that Russia’s military ability has been significantly deteriorated by the Ukrainian heroism, there still is no American strategy for how this war ends. And that is not conservative.

And so it would be excellent if Speaker [Kevin] McCarthy (R-Calif.), who has remained consistent on this issue, is able to turn the spigot off until and unless there is an articulation that is an answer to the question: What is in the best interest of the everyday American as it relates to spending $113 billion on Ukraine, so much of which has not gone to direct military aid? Senator [Josh] Hawley (R-Mo.) gave an excellent speech at Heritage yesterday. He was supportive of at least one of the military packages to Ukraine, if my memory serves, and he, I thought, put it really well. We want the Ukrainians to win, we want Putin to lose, and we want to make sure that we’re not wrecking our budget and paying attention to the much more present threat, which is Chinese aggression all around the world.

Vlahos: How much support do you think that position has among Republicans in both the House and the Senate today? Do you feel it building? Because this is not a natural fit for Republicans on national security and war policy, at least in the past. What is your sense of what it looks like today?

Roberts: Well, let’s be argumentative. I see more natural fit and consistency than your question suggests, but again, not to be argumentative, I understand what you’re saying, at least about the recent past. The heart of your question is about whether there’s been an evolution, an increase in support, and we’ve definitely seen that. Just the sheer number of meetings that Republican offices, Republican members of the House and Senate have requested of our Heritage policy leads on this, especially Victoria Coates and Max Primorac, who’s a real expert on the question of rebuilding, which we haven’t even gotten to and it really concerns us deeply at Heritage. 

But the point is that, both in the House and in the Senate, there are more members who are supportive of this third way, and that’s not a surprise. I know that that’s at the very least the plurality position, if not the majority position, of conservatively-minded Americans. They want to support Ukraine with very strictly defined, highly accountable military aid. They want the Ukrainians to win, and yet they also understand something that seems to be missing in the minds of so many of our policymakers and even friends in D.C., which is that the United States fiscal position has deteriorated so greatly that it’s actually very responsible, very natural for a conservative to be saying, “Guys, these are all competing goods: Ukrainians winning, harming Putin, but also making sure that our budget is responsible, also making sure we’re answering these strategic questions about Americans interests.” And that’s really what Heritage is going to continue to drive. We’re gratified that there are more and more Republican members, and of course a few Democrats, who are in agreement.

Vlahos: I have to ask you this because it is something that we’ve written about. Heritage does get support from defense contractors and private industry. Particularly on the issue of cutting the budget, is there any pressure for not going after certain weapons programs or pet projects? Do you feel any tension there in talking about cutting the budget among friends of Heritage who would like to see certain programs continue to be funded?

Roberts: Yeah, thanks for the question. We feel literally zero pressure on that because we abhor the typical practice in D.C. of pay-to-play. And the key thing there, Kelley, is that the most important part of our financial support is the several hundred thousand regular Americans who support us each year. It inoculates us from the typical D.C. game. We never speak about amount of support from particular industry, which I know you understand, but I can assure you that it’s immaterial. And even if it were more material than immaterial, it simply wouldn’t affect our research. It allows us to be objective, and I think the evidence of that is how strident we have been in saying that the status quo has to end. If that is unpopular in some circles that are used to saying, “we’re gonna give you X amount of money for Y result,” then we look forward to changing that, and in the rest of the city as well.

Vlahos: Thank you. So you seem to be speaking the restrainers’ language on Ukraine, and so have other conservatives….

Roberts: I’m speaking Heritage language.

Vlahos: Well, I’ll say you’re speaking our language — restrainers, people all over the spectrum — about Ukraine. So have other conservatives, like Josh Hawley and Elbridge Colby, for example. But I know that some of their arguments will go something like this: We can’t get bogged down in Ukraine because we need to pour resources into countering the real threat, which is China. First, do you consider China a threat to U.S. national security interests? And second, should the U.S. go to war with China if Taiwan is attacked?

Roberts: Great questions, and I appreciate your framing. The first [answer] is absolutely. China is at war with us in every way except — thank goodness — open conflict. And I say thank goodness because our great experts at Heritage who produce the index of military strength, concluded for the first time in the long history of that product, as you no doubt know, that America’s military is weak if not unprepared for even a single arena war. 

So by every measure, economically — specifically trade — socially, culturally. You think about what the Chinese are doing with Tik Tok. you think about what they apparently are doing with espionage, even if the balloon debacle had not happened. There’s evidence around the country of Chinese espionage. The evidence of Confucius Institutes, which simply had been renamed in most places where they existed, all of that points to something that Americans need to realize — and thankfully they are — which is that we were all mistaken, myself included. I’m always really clear about that. I thought as recently as six or eight years ago that America could turn China into America through our economics, our persuasiveness, the appeal of our way of life, and actually the opposite has happened. And so I don’t gratuitously criticize those who still aren’t there yet because I understand the evolution that’s happened. I’ve undergone that myself, all of us at Heritage have. 

But the second point is really important. If China were to invade Taiwan, should the United States declare war on China? The United States first needs to be sending, as Senator Hawley mentioned yesterday, more armaments to Taiwan so that we can prevent that from happening. I do think that the question of China invading Taiwan is a much more serious threat to American security than the Russians invading Ukraine. But I want to be really clear. That doesn’t mean that I think it’s acceptable that the Russians have invaded Ukraine — back to my comment earlier about a false dichotomy. I just think that, as Senator Hawley said, the most pressing security concern for the everyday American is what China has been doing to us.

Vlahos: How do you explain to the regular American that China is a threat to them here in the United States?

Roberts: Good question, because it’s all around us. There were something like almost 100 major public universities and private universities with Confucius Institutes. There are excellent studies, a couple of them by Heritage over the last several years, that indicate not only the direct influence on the student body there, but [also] on the training of scientists and engineers who are in some of our national laboratories. The second thing is that you could be living near one of the military bases in the Dakotas or one of the oil fields in South Texas, where the Chinese have bought land. And when the Chinese send an espionage balloon that the feckless president of the United States allows to control to traverse our entire continent, you realize that, every day, the Chinese are gaining more intelligence about how we would react in a more open conflict and more open warfare. 

But I would say the even graver issue, which is twofold, is in society generally and in economics. In economics, the Chinese have been in a trade war with us for at least a decade and a half, and we’ve allowed that to happen. Conservatives have allowed that to happen, and that has degraded in part the ability of the average American family, the average American household, to keep up economically. [There are] a lot of factors there, but that’s one of them. And then socially, I’m deeply concerned, and Heritage in particular is deeply concerned — our colleague Kara Frederick has been leading the way on this — about how the Chinese have used Tik Tok and other platforms not just potentially for invading our privacy, but also for affecting the way we think. That they don’t allow so many of those videos on their own social media platforms in China tells you everything about their insidious aims.

Vlahos: What do you say to folks who would like to see more engagement diplomatically with China in order to resolve some of the issues that you raised and worry that the buildup of military assets in the region might be escalatory and actually lead to some conflict that we were trying to avoid in the first place?

Roberts: I would say — and my faith informs this, and Heritage’s long-standing position of wanting to avoid war at all costs until you just have to defend our interests would suggest this too — that absolutely diplomacy is crucial. [We support] diplomacy until the last possible moment and even after that because we hate the thought of any human life being risked by not having real, serious diplomatic efforts. Having said that, those are not mutually exclusive either. You can do both diplomacy and that military buildup simultaneously, and that’s what Heritage is calling for. We’re saying that, perhaps preaching — to use your language — some restraint. We don’t want to sound at Heritage like we’re saber rattling towards the Chinese, but what we’re trying to do is sound the alarm for Americans that unless we take these steps in this set of legislation that we’ll be proposing in this upcoming major research project on what to do about China, we probably will find ourselves out of time for diplomacy and therefore looking at open military conflict. We abhor that idea. I’m cautiously optimistic that we can avoid it, but only if the percentage of Americans who recognize the grave threats posed by China to us increases.

Vlahos:  Okay, thank you. Two quick ones. When you were brought on to Heritage in 2021 as president, you mentioned your disappointment with elite Republicans who, you said, did not force Biden’s hand on “his ridiculous, tragic, embarrassing withdrawal from Afghanistan.” I’m sure you’re pleased that the new House majority has pledged to hold hearings on the withdrawal. But would you also like to see lawmakers pressure civilian and military leaders about the failed policies for years that might have led to the chaotic withdrawal? In other words, how much accountability for Washington’s war in Afghanistan would you like to see?

Roberts:  We would like the same amount of accountability for that long, seemingly endless war as we would for the last phase, which was the withdrawal that I mentioned. And the reason for that, Kelley is — well, [there are] many. First, we believe in Heritage, now as we always have, that no serviceman or servicewoman wearing an American uniform should ever go into conflict without Congress first declaring war. It’s not just a constitutional issue. It’s not just a legal issue. It’s a social and cultural issue. And we believe that having hearings about the execution of that war over two decades will get us back to regular constitutional order, which ultimately is good for America. 

The second thing is [that] it’s really important in these episodes in American history — in this case, I’m referring to the larger conflict, not just the withdrawal — that we learn our lessons, and I think that’s what Americans are anticipating. A majority of Americans albeit slim at the time, supported the invasion of Afghanistan. I was one of them. As you know, I refer to myself as a recovering neocon. And I think the value of having that conversation in respect to people who still are neoconservatives is learning the lessons from the past so we don’t repeat them in the future. If there’s a common thread in in our conversation this afternoon, it’s that what Heritage is saying is [that] it’s not 1983 anymore. It’s not 2003 anymore. America in 2023 is a lot weaker, in large part because of the fiscal irresponsibility by both Republicans and Democrats for decades and because we have not updated our own thinking about lessons from the end of the Cold War. We’re not fighting the Cold War anymore. We’re hopefully never going to have to fight another war again. It’s unlikely it seems, but if that must happen, then let’s be sure we’re prepared for that one, rather than for the last one.

Vlahos: Exactly. One last question: The new right conservatives — I call them national populist conservatives — are largely in line with the efforts to realign foreign policy based on U.S. interests, limit endless wars, and take a tough look at how we’re spending our money defense-wise in Washington, all the things that you’ve just talked about. Are you hopeful that a candidate espousing those views will be the next GOP nominee for president? And are you supporting anyone yet in particular?

Roberts: You’re so good at what you do. I’m chuckling at the last part of your question because I can’t answer that as the head of a 501(c)(3) because it would be tantamount to an endorsement. No, just for the record, both for public and private, we tell the government we’re not going to endorse anybody. We don’t play fast and loose with that. But I’m very happy to answer the first part of the question. And that is, yeah, at Heritage we’re very serious about what we call the third way in foreign policy. We call ourselves conservatives, no adjective. No disrespect to our friends who call themselves national conservatives, or fiscal conservatives, or Reagan conservatives. We’re conservatives, period. 

But when it comes to foreign policy and defense spending, we’re hopeful that whoever takes the oath of office next as president of the United States — whoever he or she may be — that they will reflect that. And I actually have more than cautious optimism. I have great optimism that in fact that will happen. And the follow-up question, that is “why Kevin, how in the world do you know that?” Because I spend so much time outside Washington, D.C., with hundreds if not thousands of everyday conservatives, each of whom has their own preference when it comes to presidential candidates, but the one thing that really unites us as a movement is that we are recognizing America is in a much different — that is, weaker — place than it was 20 or 40 years ago, and that if we want America to be able to return to a position of influence and strength internationally, that we’re going to have to confront the reality that the old way of doing things, the status quo, simply is broken. And I think that, in order to be elected both for the conservative banner but then also in the general election, a conservative presidential candidate who wins will have to reflect that.

Vlahos: Wonderful, thank you.

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