In 2007, Rand Paul gave his first interview to Alex Jones, the conspiracy theorist radio host and founder of Infowars.com.
Paul was helping his father, then-Congressman Ron Paul, campaign for the Republican presidential nomination and, Jones said, the entirety of his audience helped to make up the elder Paulâs base of fervent supporters.
Jones was struck by the younger Paulâs similarity to his father. âYou know, talking to you, you sound so much like your dad,â Jones said. âThis is great! We have, like, a Ron Paul clone!â
When Jones noted that the elder Paul was the only anti-war candidate, Rand replied, âI tell people in speeches, I say you know, weâre against the Iraq war, we have been since the beginning, but weâre also against the Iran warâyou know, the one that hasnât started yet. You know, the thing is I think people want to paint my father into some corner, but if you look at it, intellectually, look at the evidence that Iran is not a threat.â
As evidence of this, he said, you neednât look further than the fact that
âIran cannot even refine their own gasoline.â
And further, Paul said, âeven our own intelligence community consensus opinion now is that theyâre not a threat. My dad says, they donât have an air force! They donât have a navy! You know, itâs ridiculous to think that theyâre a threat to our national security. Itâs not even that viable to say theyâre a threat to Israel. Most people say Israel has 100 nuclear weapons.â
Eight years later, Paulâs beliefs are very different.
In response to the agreement reached Tuesday between Iran, the United States, the UK, France, China, Russia and Germany to diminish Iranâs nuclear program, Paul, now the junior Senator from Kentucky and candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, released a statement outlining his opposition.
âThe proposed agreement with Iran is unacceptable for the following reasons:
1) sanctions relief precedes evidence of compliance
2) Iran is left with significant nuclear capacity
3) it lifts the ban on selling advanced weapons to Iran
I will, therefore, vote against the agreement. While I continue to believe negotiations are preferable to war, I would prefer to keep the interim agreement in place instead of accepting a bad deal.â
Asked how Paulâs position had shifted so dramatically since he was campaigning for his father, Doug Stafford, his senior campaign adviser, said, âForeign policy should reflect events and events change. Senator Paul has always thought Iran getting a nuclear weapon was a bad idea and dangerous. But over the last eight years, as Iran has made progress in their nuclear enrichment program, itâs become more of a threat. Not allowing your opinions to reflect changing threats would be foolish.â
But itâs just frankly not true, as the Alex Jones interview demonstrates.
What is true is that the Iran deal places Paul in an impossible bind. Paulâs positions are usually so nuanced that they escape criticism of flip-flopping, but his shift on Iran is unusually clearâeven if it was gradual.
Whether compromise is a wise strategy for Paul in the primary is uncertain. Paul is currently polling at 6.6 percentâbehind Jeb Bush, Donald Trump, Scott Walker, Marco Rubio, Ben Carson and Mike Huckabee. Paul is not going to vault back into the top tier by siphoning off votes from more establishment candidates, whose supporters will never buy him as one of their own. And he wonât mobilize his libertarian base by taking them for granted.
In April, reporter David Weigel, outlined in detail Paulâs transformation for Bloomberg Politics. In 2011, while in the Senate, Paul was still vocally opposed to war, telling reporter Zaid Jilani he wanted to âinfluenceâ Iran instead. In 2012, while again campaigning for his father, he reiterated their anti-war position while clarifying that Ron Paul âdoesnât want Iran to nuclear weaponsâŚBut should they get nuclear weapons, he thinks that there are some choices.â A few weeks later, Paul explained to CNN that when it came to preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, âI did finally come down to the conclusion that doing something was better than doing nothing.â
By 2013, Paul was saying that âthe most pressing issue of the dayâ was how to contend with Iranâs nuclear program, and said that although he still did not want war, if he were in the White House while a deal collapsed, âI would say all options are on the table, and that would include military.â
Back in March, Paul was faced with a choice: sign the open letter penned by his Senate colleague, Tom Cotton, which Cotton explicitly said was designed to halt negotiations, or be the only presidential contender in the Senate to not sign it, and risk losing support in the fallout.
Despite the fact that Paul had maintainedâand continues to maintainâthat he favors negotiations, he compromised and opted for the first choice, contorting himself uncomfortably in his effort to explain his decision and irking some of the longtime libertarian supporters he inherited from his father in the process.
He has pursued a similar strategy with the deal.
The Atlanticâs David Frum made what on its face felt like a reckless prediction on Tuesday: âThe Rand Paul Candidacy for the Republican Nomination Is Over.â Frumâs case was that throughout the course of his short Senate career, Paul has been able to carve out space for himself within his party by mostly focusing on the issue of domestic surveillance, which comfortably placed him in opposition to the hawks he bemoans and to President Obama. The deal presented for Paul a no-win: Were he to support the deal, however, Frum argued, he would âfind himself isolated with the old Ron Paul constituency,â but were he to oppose it, he would vanish amid a sea of similar voices in the primary field.
The best explanation for Paulâs new position may come from Paul himself.
In an interview with The Today Showâs Savannah Guthrie in April, the same day two attack ads were released tying him to Obama on the issue, Paul said, â2007 was a long time ago and events do change over long periods of time. Weâre talking about a time when I wasnât running for office, when I was helping someone else run for office.â
So when the facts changeâbe they the facts of the issue at hand or the facts of Paulâs personal political objectivesâPaul changes his mind.