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Monday, January 4, 2010

Barack Obama And Foreign Policy; He Thinks Its All About HIM



Even the Smartest of people have certain subjects they just don't understand. In high school I was an "A" student except for trigonometry. Maybe it was a mental block but for the life of me I couldn't get my grades out of "failing" territory. Thankfully when it came time for the state-wide final some enterprising young men from the Solomon Schechter HS in Queens decided to steal the test out of their principals office safe and there was no final. A generous teacher rewarded by hard work with a "C."

President Obama's "trigonometry" is Foreign Policy. Lets face it, despite the Nobel Peace Prize, just about everything he has done has been wrong. Most of our closest allies, Britain, France, Germany are upset at the POTUS. With Honduras he took the side of totalitarianism over democracy. His outreach to Iran has become a Joke in the Islamist world.

President Obama's Middle East policy is in ruins. While the U.S. continues to press Israel for a settlement freeze (and a freeze on Jerusalem), Obama's strategy is falling apart piece by piece. He has turned the Israeli populace against him and strengthened the hand of Prime Minister Netanyahu. At the same time, he has eroded his own support among American Jews and other U.S. friends of Israel. This is why he has pressured political hacks such as Congressman Steve Israel to lend their names to the anti-Israel group known as J Street.

The Arab League nations answered no to the President's request for a peace gesture, and the President of the Palestinian Authority has used Obama's settlement pressure as his "out" from reentering negotiations. Settlement-building didn't start with Netanyahu, but it didn't become a roadblock to negotiations until Obama was elected.

Obama basic management style and large ego, is totally wrong for a successful foreign policy. As Robert Lieber said in today's LA Times
For a president with a daunting domestic agenda and limited experience in foreign policy, Barack Obama has taken on an unusually active world role. He has made important policy overtures to America's adversaries, delivered major addresses in Cairo, Prague, Moscow and at the United Nations, and set a White House record with visits to more than 20 countries in his first year in office. And with his December speech on Afghanistan, he now owns that wa
..Early assessments have focused on specific policy details and missteps not unusual for a new president, but an underlying explanation may have to do with President Obama's unique operational style.

First, there is Obama's remarkable solipsism, i.e., his penchant for projecting himself as the personification of U.S. policy. Personal attraction can be a useful political and diplomatic tool, and polls in Europe and to a lesser extent in Asia and the Mideast confirm that foreigners strongly prefer him to his predecessor. Nonetheless, the emphasis on the president's own persona is quickly wearing thin.
Obama's pitch to the Olympic Committee in Copenhagen showcased his Chicago roots but fell flat. In his September speech to the U.N. General Assembly, he declared, "I am well aware of the expectations that accompany my presidency around the world," but achieved little substantive result. And in a video to Germany on the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, which ignored the roles played by Mikhail Gorbachev, Ronald Reagan, Vaclav Havel and others, he managed to observe that "few would have foreseen . . . that [Germany's] American ally would be led by a man of African descent," while leaving his audience miffed at his failure to appear in person. The impression is emerging of overreliance on his own powers of explanation, reassurance and rhetoric.
Second, Obama overestimates the extent to which America's adversaries determine their policies in reaction to U.S. rhetoric and policy rather than as expressions of their own values, history and interests. Emphasis on interdependence, good intentions and the belief that "the interests of nations and peoples are shared" does not go very far in explaining the motivations of Vladimir Putin, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Bashar Assad or Hugo Chavez. The message conveyed is that if only he could assure adversaries or allies that he -- and thus America -- means well, threats or problems could be mitigated or overcome altogether.
In a quest to bridge differences, the president sometimes slips into mirror-imaging by downplaying the distinction between allies and adversaries, and in seeking to equate very different kinds of responsibility. For example, his Cairo speech suggested Western sources for the region's problems and downplayed local causes such as authoritarianism, corruption and internal obstacles to social and economic progress. Anxiously anticipating how others will react may also explain Obama's curious downplaying of human rights, as in his muted response to massive protests by the Iranian people over the rigged outcome of the June presidential election, and in his recent China visit.
Third, there remains the president's inexperience, coupled with a proclivity for Olympian detachment. Obama came to office with a very limited legislative background and without having run any large public or private organization. The result has been missteps that to foreign leaders suggests uncertainty and indecision. Some have been minor flaps, as in presenting a minimal gift of DVDs of American films to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, bowing to the Japanese emperor and occasional factual misstatements in speeches.

But other lapses have been more telling. These have included embarrassing leaks concerning Afghanistan policy, as the president weighed troop requests and carried out a protracted reassessment about what he had described in August as a necessary war. And allied leaders have begun more openly to voice their doubts. For example, Polish and Czech leaders expressed dismay at the reversal of the decision to deploy an anti-missile system on their soil. And after the U.N. speech, French President Nicolas Sarkozy acidly remarked that "President Obama dreams of a world without weapons . . . but right in front of us, two countries are doing the exact opposite. . . . What good has proposals for dialogue brought the international community? More uranium enrichment and declarations by the leaders of Iran to wipe a U.N. member state off the map."

And, most recently, there was the president's delayed public response to the Christmas Day attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airplane. His remarks, delivered three days after the event, drew criticism -- both for the delay and for using the word "allegedly" in reference to the attacker's attempt to ignite an explosive device, and led him to follow up a day later with a more forceful statement.

To be sure, presidents typically face a steep learning curve during their first year. And given Obama's political skills, his handling of foreign policy could become more adept. Yet the impact of his operational style on policy remains considerable and arguably not well suited to managing two wars and an intransigent Iran, let alone a major foreign policy crisis of the kind that is almost certain to arise at some point during his term.

Just like his domestic policy, Obama's foreign policy does not feed the needs of others it feeds the Ego Of Barack Obama, and thus does not work because our friends and enemies both are trying to serve their own needs.

2 comments:

TexasFred said...

John Brennan has his head so far up Obama’s ass, should Obama make a sudden change in his direction of travel, Brennan will suffer a broken neck!

The Obama administration was taken completely by surprise when Abdulmutallab was able to nearly pull off a horrendous act of terrorism on Christmas Day. They were so taken aback that the head of DHS made outlandish statements saying that “The system worked”, and was later forced to retract that inaccuracy.

The Obama administration was taken by surprise and has spent the last 9 days trying to get the ‘barn door’ closed after the horse is out and on the run.

To release any terror ’suspect’ to the nation of Yemen is a mistake!

To bring the Guantanamo prisoners to the United States, to place them on trial here, possibly forcing our legal system to afford these prisoners the same legal rights enjoyed by American citizens, is WRONG!

To close our embassy in Yemen, and then not address the cause of that closing with the FULL military might of the United States is WRONG!

All of the above are actions being taken by the Obama administration. It is my firm belief that Barack Hussein Obama is a coward of the 1st order and is failing to fully protect and defend this nation from ALL enemies, foreign and domestic! Failing miserably!

It is also my fullest belief that Barack Hussein Obama is failing in his duties because he is one OF the enemies that has come against this USA!

There, I said it. Now they have all the reason they need to place ME on a terrorist watch list. You can takes bets that they won’t be placing any REAL terrorists on it…

Tom Degan said...

A year ago tonight I was looking forward with great anticipation to the presidency of Barack Obama. I thought that this may very well be the "new age" that I have been looking forward to for most of my life. What a difference a year makes. Thus far, as you might imagine, I have been let down by this president. That is why it is so funny to see him labeled by the Right a "radical socialist". If Obama were half as radical as the Conservative media is trying to portray him, people like me wouldn't be one tenth as disappointed in him as we are.

Don't misunderstand, I am still grateful that he was elected last year. I thank God every day that John McCain will not be sleeping in the Executive Mansion tonight and that Fascist Barbi will not be a heartbeat away from the presidency. While it is true that he has not yet given us the "change we can believe in", it is still too early in his term to make any final assessment. There is some time for optimism - although that time is dwindling rapidly. Still, the alternative to Obama's election last year is just too weird to even contemplate. We should be grateful for that - I guess.

http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY