Politics | Richard Cohen Obama's Tone Deaf on Terror 'President is ignoring citizen security fears' By Rob Quinn Posted Feb 2, 2010 8:13 AM CST Copied President Barack Obama, accompanied by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, delivers a statement on his budget yesterday. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) The Obama administration's policy on captured terrorists seems like it's aimed more at pleasing America's critics than making Americans feel safer, writes Richard Cohen. Blunders like trying to hold the KSM trial in New York and giving the "underwear bomber" suspect his Miranda rights show that the administration is tone-deaf to the public's concerns, Cohen writes in the Washington Post. The Bush administration damaged America's international reputation by bending over backwards to prevent another 9/11, but the Obama administration appears to be bending over backwards not to be the Bush administration, Cohen writes. It's striving to ensure that terror suspects get American civil liberties. It forgets that "the paramount civil liberty is a sense of security and this, sad to say, has eroded under Barack Obama." Read These Next ICE arrests casino magnate in a remote US territory. Norwegians are flabbergasted by Machado's Nobel giveaway. Pamela Anderson didn't love sitting near Seth Rogen at the Globes. John Mellencamp's little-known side gig: Indiana football fan. Report an error