In principle, Barack Obama is not an amateur on the world
stage. Having been president for well over four years, he is now, we might say,
a seasoned player. In his case it means that he is reaping what he sowed.
Yesterday, the British House of Commons decided that it did
not want to line up behind Obama as he conducts his police action in Syria. The American press
immediately denounced the faithless British and declared that Prime Minister
Cameron had suffered a grievous defeat.
In truth, the vote was a rebuke to President Obama. Nile Gardiner explained that, in the conduct of foreign policy, Obama has been making George Bush
look good. Would that not be a crushing irony?
When your allies refuse to follow your lead, it means that they do not trust your leadership.
Gardiner explained it:
There
can be no doubt that David Cameron’s defeat in the House of Commons was a huge
blow to President Obama, and has dominated the US news networks this morning.
The absence of Britain in any American-led military action significantly
weakens Obama’s position on the world stage, and dramatically undercuts the
Obama administration. The vote reflected not only a lack of confidence in the
Commons in the prime minister’s Syria strategy, it also demonstrated a striking
lack of confidence in Barack Obama and US leadership.
Drawing out the comparison, he continued:
In
marked contrast to Obama, President Bush invested a great deal of time and
effort in cultivating ties with key US allies, especially Britain. The Special
Relationship actually mattered to George W. Bush. For Barack Obama it has been
a mere blip on his teleprompter. … Obama
simply hasn’t bothered making friends in Europe, and has treated some nations
with sheer disdain and disrespect, including Poland and the Czech Republic. He
has found common currency with France’s Socialist President Francois Hollande,
an ideological soul-mate, but finds himself in a very lonely position elsewhere
across the Atlantic.
As I said, you reap what you sow.
In fairness, the administration has not touted its forthcoming
strike as a military action. It has defined it as a police action. Remember
when we weren’t going to be “the world’s policeman?”
Obama has noted that Bashar Assad has gassed his own people. Assad did it even after Obama told him not to do it. So, Assad has committed a
genocidal crime and he must be punished.
This is what you get when your foreign policy guru is
Samantha Power. Now, American military power can only be used to exact justice,
to punish people who do very, very bad things. By implication, it cannot be
used to defend American interests or to advance American goals. We are citizens
of the world before we are citizens of the USA.
Obviously, the policy is incoherent. It makes our nation look like an adolescent bumbler with an identity crisis.
Mark Steyn points out that when you see the world as a
courtroom you
follow the rules of “discovery” and announce what you are going to do before
you do it.
Steyn writes:
In the
world’s most legalistic culture, it was perhaps inevitable that battle plans
would eventually be treated under courtroom discovery rules and have to be
disclosed to the other side in your pre-war statement. But in this case it
doesn’t seem to be impressing anyone. Like his patrons in Tehran and Moscow,
Assad’s reaction to American threats is to double up with laughter and say,
“Bring it, twerkypants.” Headline from Friday’s Guardian in London: “Syria: ‘Napalm’ Bomb Dropped on School
Playground, BBC Claims” — which, if true, suggests that even a blood-soaked
mass murderer is not without a sense of humor. Napalm, eh? There’s a word I
haven’t heard since, oh, 40 years ago or thereabouts, somewhere in the general
vicinity of southeast Asia.
You know and I know and everyone else knows that Assad is now
filling his important military sites with political prisoners and other
innocent souls. In the pursuit of criminal justice Obama will be punishing the
people he wants to be helping.
I didn’t think it possible, but he has gone beyond
intellectual incoherence.
The amazing thing, Steyn adds, is that the administration’s
stated goal in Syria is … not to be mocked. Having made itself an international
joke the administration is now worried that the world will start laughing at
it.
Naturally, the people who want to punish Assad did not in
any way want to punish Saddam Hussein for gassing a far larger number of Kurds.
It’s what happens when you run policy by the seat of your ego.
Steyn explains:
I see
the Obama “reset” is going so swimmingly that the president is now threatening
to go to war against a dictator who gassed his own people. Don’t worry, this
isn’t anything like the dictator who gassed his own people that the discredited
warmonger Bush spent 2002 and early 2003 staggering ever more punchily around
the country inveighing against. The 2003 dictator who gassed his own people was
the leader of the Baath Party of Iraq. The 2013 dictator who gassed his own
people is the leader of the Baath Party of Syria. Whole other ball of wax. The
administration’s ingenious plan is to lose this war in far less time than we
usually take. In the unimprovable formulation of an unnamed official speaking
to the Los Angeles Times,
the White House is carefully calibrating a military action “just muscular
enough not to get mocked.”
Excepting the French, the whole world is laughing.
2 comments:
Now that you remind me, she also said: Let Allah sort it out!
I agree, it does make liberals look like a bunch of hypocrites for criticizing Bush and supporting Obama for essentially wanting to do the same thing.
But then, it makes you a hypocrite, too. If you're going to attack Obama for trying to be a "policeman" and letting "Samantha Power" determine his foreign policy, then what about Bush and Saddam? Power, as I recall, was nowhere around then.
So which is it? It kind of makes you a double hypocrite.
Post a Comment