Obama, Bush, and counterterrorism: Daniel Benjamin says in interview that the president has made progress, unlike George W. Bush. (VIDEO)

Why Obama Tops Bush on Counterterrorism

Why Obama Tops Bush on Counterterrorism

Interviews with people who shape our culture.
June 17 2013 7:03 PM

Obama Doesn’t Fight Like Bush

A former State Department official on how the president has kept a step ahead on counterterrorism.  

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U.S. State Department coordinator for counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin in November 2011 in Algiers.

Photo by FAROUK BATICHE/AFP/Getty Images

Whatever the long-term fallout from recent disclosures about the NSA’s data mining, the leaks from whistleblower Edward Snowden are, if nothing else, a stark reminder that the war on terrorism is still being waged aggressively on multiple fronts. They also offer more fodder for critics who say the Obama administration’s counterterrorism policies, including the ongoing use of drone strikes and the continued operation of the Guantanamo Bay prison, are merely a continuation of the overreach and missteps made by President Bush.

Daniel Benjamin begs to differ. He was the point person on counterterrorism at the State Department under Hillary Clinton from 2009 until the end of 2012 and he sat down recently for an interview with Slate’s Jacob Weisberg. Benjamin concedes that Guantanamo is “a huge problem,” but he says the Obama administration’s comprehensive approach has not only undone much of the blowback damage caused by the war in Iraq but also dramatically degraded the threat from al-Qaeda. And Benjamin says there’s a lot more to the story than you see in movies like Zero Dark Thirty.

Watch more of our interview with Benjamin, including his take on threats from lone-wolf terrorists and his account of a vital tool in the war against terrorism that gets very little attention.