Obama is leaving America weaker on the world stage than Carter did.
By James Kirchick, New York Daily News
It’s now official: On foreign
policy, Barack Obama is worse than Jimmy Carter.
For decades, Carter’s presidency was
synonymous with weakness on the world stage. The late 1970’s was the era of
double-digit inflation, a worldwide oil crisis, Iranian hostages and Soviet
military advances from Latin America to Afghanistan. So pathetic was America’s
predicament at the time that the late Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy mounted a
primary challenge to Carter from the left.
Obama’s rise to power mirrored his
Democratic predecessor’s in many ways. Both men came to office in the wake of
widespread public disenchantment with the political establishment, and promoted
themselves as outsiders and breaths of fresh air. Both men spoke of surmounting
what they portrayed as Americans’ exaggerated anxieties about the dangers hyped
by fear-mongering conservatives.
For Carter, in a 1977 commencement
speech, it was “our inordinate fear of communism” that Americans needed to
overcome. For Obama, in his 2009 Cairo address, it was the “fear” and
“mistrust” that had grown between the West and Muslim world in the wake of the 9/11
terrorist attacks. Both men came into office emphasizing the promotion of human
rights as a crucial dimension of American foreign policy. And both men gave the
impression that their good intentions would be enough to accomplish these
Herculean tasks.
Unfortunately, as is often the case,
the reality of the world came crashing down.
It is barely remembered today, but,
for all the derision heaped upon Carter as a weak and feckless President, he
eventually responded to foreign aggression in tough and concrete ways. In
November 1979, Iranian revolutionaries — fresh after having overthrown the
American-allied Shah — seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, taking 52 American
diplomats hostage. In December, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan.
Gone was the President Carter who
had scolded Americans for their “fear” of the communist behemoth.
By January, Carter announced a
series of proposals directed at weakening America’s adversaries. First was a 5%
increase in defense spending, a move that angered many of his Democratic allies
in Congress who had taken to slashing the defense budget in the wake of the
Vietnam War.
In his State of the Union address,
Carter announced what would later come to be known as the Carter Doctrine: that
the United States would use military force to protect its vital interests in
the Persian Gulf.
Next came an embargo on grain and
agricultural technology to the Soviet Union. Carter also declared that the
United States would boycott the 1980 Moscow summer Olympics unless the Soviets
withdrew their troops from Afghanistan. When they did not, he began covert
funding of Afghan rebel fighters.
Conservatives like to credit Ronald
Reagan with ending the Cold War. To the extent that the collapse of the Soviet
Union was brought about by American policies and not the internal
contradictions and weaknesses of the communist system itself (a debate that
engages historians to this day), the last year of the Carter administration
laid the groundwork.
The correlations between the world
situation in the twilight of the Carter administration and in the second Obama
term are hard to ignore. Once again, Russia has invaded a neighbor. Only this
time, that neighbor is on the European continent, and Moscow went so far as to
annex — not merely attack — its territory. And once again the Middle East is in
flames, with the prospect of another Islamist movement taking control over a
state, this time in Iraq.
But rather than respond to the
collapsing world order by supporting our allies and undermining our
adversaries, the Obama administration dithers. It is an indication of just how
worrisome the situation is that many in Washington are pining for the resolve
and fortitude of Jimmy Carter.
For months, the beleaguered
Ukrainians have requested the most basic of military aid. The administration
sends Meals Ready to Eat. Even hard-hitting, “sectoral” sanctions aimed at the
Russian economy are viewed as too provocative.
Last year, Obama declared a “red
line” on Syrian dictator Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons against his own
people. Assad’s deployment of such weapons, the world was told, would
constitute the sort of breach of international law and norms requiring an
American response.
When Assad did use such weapons,
Washington allowed itself to be coopted into a farcical deal — proposed by that
most altruistic of world leaders, Russian President Vladimir Putin — that saw
the purported removal of Assad’s chemical arsenal. The message from Washington
to Assad: You can continue murdering your people en masse and destabilizing the
entire Middle East, but just do so using conventional weapons.
But even that solution was full of
holes. Days ago, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
announced that evidence it has gathered from the field “lends credence to the
view that toxic chemicals, most likely pulmonary irritating agents such as
chlorine, have been used” against civilians. Two senior administration
officials working on Syria, special advisor for transition Fred Hof and
Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford, resigned their posts rather than continue
participating in this charade.
Few take America, least of all
Secretary of State John Kerry, at its word anymore. Earlier this week, Kerry
demanded that Russia urge separatists in Ukraine to disarm “within the next
hours, literally.”
Or what? This empty threat followed
months of similar reprimands from Washington.
Two days earlier, Kerry was in Cairo
meeting with Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, Egypt’s military dictator. The United States
had just released millions of dollars in military aid to Egypt, aid that had
been frozen after al-Sisi launched a coup to topple the country’s
democratically elected Muslim Brotherhood president last year. “We also
discussed the essential role of a vibrant civil society, free press, rule of
law and due process in a democracy,” Kerry told the New York Times.
Hours after Kerry’s plane took off,
an Egyptian court demonstrated the country’s commitment to “free press, rule of
law and due process” by sentencing three Al Jazeera journalists to long prison
sentences.
So convinced was he that American
presence, rather than absence, causes problems, Obama hastily exited Iraq in
2011 rather than try to negotiate an agreement that would have left a
stabilizing American military force in the country.
Obama and his surrogates endlessly
complain about the “disaster” they inherited from the Bush administration
there, but the country was largely pacified by the time Obama entered the White
House. Today, due largely to American absenteeism in the region, Islamist
militants that make Al Qaeda look like a Rotary Club control a large chunk of
the country.
Obama’s hands-off approach seems to
be aimed at appeasing a domestic constituency that sees diplomacy, no matter
how toothless, as the best way to maintain peace. A recent poll conducted by
the Pew Research Project finds that an overwhelming 91% of “solid liberals”
believe that “good diplomacy” is the best way “to ensure peace” while only 5%
see “military strength” as having that effect.
But even “good diplomacy” is too
much to expect from this administration. Over the past six years, no issue
received more diplomatic attention from Obama, as well as Kerry and his
predecessor Hillary Clinton, than the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Despite
countless trips to the region from high-ranking American officials, the parties
are further apart today then they were when Obama swore the oath of office.
Along with Israeli-Palestinian
peace, global nuclear disarmament was the other grand Obama diplomatic project.
This was always woolly-headed - but this goal, no matter how well-intentioned,
was dealt a devastating blow with Russia’s invasion and annexation of the
Crimean Peninsula. In 1994, Ukraine signed (with the U.S., Great Britain and
Russia), the Budapest Memorandum, which stipulated that, in exchange for
delivering its then-considerable nuclear weapons stockpile to Moscow, Kiev’s
territorial integrity would be assured.
Now that Russia has blatantly
violated the terms of that document, how can Obama convince a nuclear
weapons-aspirant state like Iran that it does not need such an arsenal to
ensure its own survival?
The administration and its
supporters are banking upon hopes that Americans will remember their distaste
for the foreign policy of George W. Bush as some sort of salve against its own,
present-day failures.
The other day, former President Bill
Clinton lashed out at the Bush administration, telling NBC News that “what
happened in Syria wouldn’t have happened in Iraq” had the U.S. not invaded in
2003. Given the sectarian fissures opening up across the region thanks in large
part to the Obama administration’s allowing the Syrian morass to fester for so
long, confidently predicting that the tremors would have left Iraq untouched
were Saddam Hussein still in power is a wild claim.
And keep in mind that this was the
same President Clinton who himself bombed Iraq, signed the 1998 Iraq Liberation
Act committing the United States to Hussein’s overthrow, and who vocally
supported “Bush’s war” — along with the vast majority of his Democratic
colleagues.
Global instability is on the rise
and faith in America’s stabilizing presence is on the decline, and all we have
from Washington are empty, millennial-friendly buzz phrases. “Leading from
behind” was how one, too-clever-by-half administration official termed Obama’s
global strategy. Hitting “singles” and “doubles” is Obama’s own, jocular
assessment of his foreign policy. And now, “Don’t do stupid s---” is the mantra
being repeated throughout the halls of the White House and State Department.
“Don’t do anything at all” seems
more apt a description of this administration’s approach.
Kirchick is a fellow with the
Foreign Policy Initiative.
SoRo: As I often tell Americans, the one thing that Europeans hate more than a muscular United States is a weak one. They may love to hate America, but the love even more the security we provide, which frees up their resources for a more and more luxurious welfare state. They are also learning that nature abhors a vacuum. In the wake of World War I with its faith in God shaken and belief that religion was a primary cause of history's wars, the Continent began moving toward a secular society. What they failed to foresee and understand is that the vacuum created by their Godless, faithless society would be filled with radical Islam. Whether it's America's retreat from the world stage or Europe's quest for secularisation, the voids created are always filled with the most malevolent of actors.
No comments:
Post a Comment