Bernie Sanders Determined to Be Heard on Foreign Policy

How could a former conscientious objector run with a former secretary of state?

The Vermont senator scoffed. "Oh, really? Well, compared to whom?" he said with a little guttural gruff.

Such a response, in a nutshell, is the crux of Sanders’ argument for why he is fit to be commander in chief, and he’s sticking to it.

In bars and spin rooms surrounding the Iowa debate, operatives from rival campaigns pushed the same narrative. After all, on the trail, during his large addresses to people across the country, Sanders barely touches on issues abroad.

So, it would have been easy for the independent Sanders, 74, to shy away from this topic, his perceived weakness, in the days after the head-to-head debate in Iowa. But he has done the opposite.

"We should be working with the Russians and with others in a coordinated effort to destroy ISIS and not everyone doing it alone," he said during the Yahoo interview.

Still, Sanders concedes that expanding cooperation with partners like these remains a challenge. “This coalition is a tough one to bring together, because you have Saudi Arabia, which hates Iran; you’ve got Russia, which obviously has a lot of differences of opinion with the United States,” he told Couric.

A senior strategist for the Sanders campaign, Tad Devine, put it this way to reporters recently: "Bernie Sanders believes that the burden of defending this world should not be shouldered just by America."

Sanders other central argument, which conveniently doubles as an attack on Clinton’s record, is that the United States should never have gone into Iraq to begin with, and should now steadfastly oppose putting boots on the ground in the region. Sanders often tells crowds to go back and look at what he said in 2002 leading up to the vote. “Sadly,” he adds, much of what he predicted has come to pass.

"I want to be smart. I don’t want to see young men and women coming home in caskets. I don’t want to see us spending trillions of dollars on a war,” he told Couric. “I want to see the entire world coming together and I want to see the Muslim nations on the ground.”

Without offering many specifics, Sanders stuck unapologetically to his message: that troops from nations in Gulf region should be the ones to fight against ISIS with help and support from the United States and other nations.

But backing the administration might make it harder for him to distinguish himself from Clinton, or even take swings at her.

Since Clinton has been front and center of the nation’s foreign policy for almost a decade, it will be interesting to see whether Sanders chooses to turn those attacks on her.