Of the two mistakes, the "Right of Return" question is a smaller issue in my mind. Mr. Cain has admitted that he hadn't heard the term, but having his mind go blank on hearing a question would not look so bad to me. We all have our minds go blank at a question occasionally. To me, the bigger issue is his failure to have educated himself enough to give us some idea of what he'd do in Afghanistan.
I understand that he doesn't have access to all of the intelligence on this topic, but plenty of experts have written books and journal articles. He could have read these books and articles and come up with some ideas. As a prominent man in talk radio and to some extent in GOP circles, he could call these people and ask them to educate him in more depth. They couldn't tell him secret information that they had learned in government service, but they could help him put together a guideline for a policy. If he had given us this guideline, we could see how he approaches the problem. He could even preface his answer with a promise to take a fresh look when he was in office to be sure that important facts wouldn't dictate another course. We care about the answers to these questions because they speak to the preparation that the candidate has done and the thought process that he will bring to the office.
It would have seemed a normal question or topic half a Century ago. As it stands now, Mike Wallace used duplicitous Ilamo-fascist newspeak to give wildly rabid liberals a weapon to attack Herman Cain.
As for Afghanistan, do some historical investigation and then seriously tell us again you want someone to give a soundbite answer to perhaps the most difficult foreign policy problem that we have faced in our current times.
Herman Cain answered the question the way Ronald Reagan would have answered. He would gather the best people to counsel him and go on to develop a plan from there. Why did you not appreciate that honest answer?
I suggest we let him began gathering his advisers and futher developing program plans in the course of his campaign before expecting him to tell all he knows before his run has even begun.