No, it wasn't former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who was too busy stroking her war on.
It was former Governor Martin O'Malley who talked about the need for diplomatic intelligence. He spoke of it with regard to Iraq, he spoke of it with regard to Libya (and Benghazi specifically).
O'Mally's best moment in the debate? Probably this exchange:
O'MALLEY:
During the Cold War -- during the Cold War, we got into a bad habit of
always looking to see who was wearing the jersey of the communists, and
who was wearing the U.S. jersey. We got into a bad habit of creating big
bureaucracies, old methodologies, to undermine regimes that were not
friendly to the United States. Look what we did in Iran with Mosaddegh.
And look at the results that we're still dealing with because of that. I
would suggest to you that we need to leave the Cold War behind us, and
we need to put together new alliances and new approaches to dealing with
this, and we need to restrain ourselves.
I mean, I know
Secretary Clinton was gleeful when Gadhafi was torn apart. And the
world, no doubt is a better place without him. But look, we didn't know
what was happening next. And we fell into the same trap with Assad,
saying -- as if it's our job to say, Assad must go.
We have a role to play in this world. But we need to leave the Cold War and that sort of antiquated thinking behind.
DAVID MUIR:
But -- you criticized -- you criticized Secretary Clinton for what came
next. What's your proposal for what comes after Assad?
O'MALLEY:
I believe that we need to focus on destroying ISIL. That is the clear
and present danger. And I believe that we can springboard off of this
new U.N. resolution, and we should create, as Secretary Clinton
indicated, and I agree with that, that there should be a political
process.
But we shouldn't be the ones declaring that Assad must
go. Where did it ever say in the Constitution, where is it written that
it's the job of the United States of America or its secretary of State
to determine when dictators have to go?
We have a role to play
in this world. But it is not the world -- the role of traveling the
world looking for new monsters to destroy.