In March, 2012 President Obama told Russia’s then-president Dmitry
Medvedev that after his next election he would have more flexibility in dealing
with missile defense issues.
He suggested that since he would never have to run for
office again, he would be free to be the
transformative president he had always wanted to be.
Obamacare was part of it. But, apparently, reducing America’s
leadership role in the world was also a major, albeit unspoken part of it.
Polls are showing that more and more Americans believe that
President Obama has diminished America’s role in the world. They see a reactive
and pusillanimous American president ceding authority to the president of
Russia.
Americans have the unmistakable impression that the Vladimir
Putin is leading and that Obama is following. This has reduced America's status and
stature. Besides, it is demoralizing.
No one should have been surprised. President Obama has
consistently believed that America should be just one among many nations of the
world. In his “cosmopolitan” view America should be less active in leading the
world. To his mind America’s authority makes other nations feel badly about
themselves.
In Obama’s gauzy multicultural view of the world, all
cultures are equal. Those that have been more successful—think America and
Israel—could only have achieved what they achieved by cheating.
Since winners are exploiters and oppressors they must cede
authority and territory to the less fortunate, that is, their victims.
Obama has effectively shrunk America. Yet, he
still knows how to bluster and bluff. He still issues empty threats, the
better, one imagines, to keep American public opinion more or less with him.
Unfortunately, there is no substances behind the bluster and
everyone knows it.. You cannot bluff very well when everyone knows you are
bluffing.
Some pundits have called it a “speak loudly and carry a
baguette” policy, but I prefer: “speak loudly and don’t carry a stick.”
This morning the Washington Free Beacon reports on
administration efforts to disempower the American military:
President
Barack Obama is seeking to abolish two highly successful missile programs that
experts say have helped the U.S. Navy maintain military superiority for the
past several decades.
The
Tomahawk missile program—known as
“the world’s most advanced cruise missile”—is set to be cut by $128 million
under Obama’s fiscal year 2015 budget proposal and completely eliminated by
fiscal year 2016, according to budget documents released by the Navy.
In
addition to the monetary cuts to the program, the number of actual Tomahawk
missiles acquired by the United States would drop significantly—from 196 last
year to just 100 in 2015. The number will then drop to zero in 2016.
The
Navy will also be forced to cancel its acquisition of the well-regarded and highly
effective Hellfire missiles in 2015, according to Obama’s proposal.
What are the likely consequences of this strategy?
Military historian Victor Davis Hanson reminds us of what
happens when leaders speak loudly while showing weakness.
Remember Pearl Harbor? Hanson explains how FDR’s bluster
helped incite that attack:
The
Roosevelt administration once talked loudly of pivoting to Asia to thwart a
rising Japan. As a token of its seriousness, in May 1940 it moved the home port
of the Seventh Fleet from San Diego to Pearl Harbor — but without beefing up
the fleet’s strength.
The
then-commander of the Pacific Fleet, Admiral James O. Richardson, an expert on
the Japanese Imperial Navy, protested vehemently over such a reckless
redeployment. He felt that the move might invite, but could not guard against,
surprise attack.
Richardson
was eventually relieved of his command and his career was ruined — even as he
was later proved right when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
For obvious reasons, this side of the story has been largely
eliminated from history books.
Not to be outdone, the Truman administration made a similar
error in a different context:
By
1949, the U.S. was pledged to containing the expansion of Communism in Asia — even
as Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson (who had been chief fundraiser for
Truman’s 1948 campaign) declared that the Navy and Marines were obsolete. He
began to slash both their budgets.
A
“revolt of the admirals” followed, to no avail. But Mao Zedong’s China and
Stalin’s Soviet Union took note of the new disconnect between American bluster
and massive defense cuts. So they green-lighted a North Korean invasion of
South Korea in June 1950.
And then there is Russia. Hanson reminds us of how Putin got
the idea that he could fill the leadership vacuum left by President Obama:
Consider
also Russia. We forget that “reset” in 2009 was a loud Obama attempt to reverse
the Bush administration’s efforts to punish Russia for its aggression against
Georgia — a Russian gambit itself perhaps predicated on the impression that the
United States was bogged down in Afghanistan and Iraq, and that the Bush administration
had been weakened by the midterm elections of 2006. Bush’s efforts to promote
new missile-defense initiatives with Poland and the Czech Republic, suspension
of nuclear-arms-limitation talks, curtailment of official communications with
Moscow, and bolder efforts to isolate Iran from Russian interference were all
intended to advise Moscow not to bully its neighbors.
Yet
Obama entered office declaring that it was the Bush administration’s reaction
to the Georgia aggression, and not the Russian invasion itself, that had cooled
U.S.–Russian relations. The result was a red plastic reset button that presaged
loud lectures about human rights in Russia without any real, concrete
follow-through.
Our
relationship with Russia is far worse now than during the Bush administration.
Vladimir Putin is not just not deterred — who would be, after the U.S.
fickleness in Libya, Egypt, and Syria, and in dealing with Iran? — but quite
eager in the Crimea and Ukraine to show the world how to deflate American
moralistic sermonizing. Putin believes that his amoral show of power impresses
others who admire not his strength — for in truth he has little of it — but the
simulation of strength that wins him support at home and a sort of sick
admiration abroad.
So, we have a president who came into office believing that
America was at fault and that if only America would cease its belligerent ways,
world peace would break out.
Of course, the American people are responsible for their
votes. Having been duped by the Obama campaign they are now paying the price.
But, if they go out and vote in 2016 for one of the major
architects of the Russia “reset” policy, that is, for Hillary Clinton, they will
deserve what they are going to get.
12 comments:
Stuart, I am not confident at all about us recovering from this disaster. The American people were different in the 1980s - demographically and culturally - and still possessed intuitive understandings of international relations that emerged in WWII/Cold War. The new American electorate is dumber and lazier and more invested in progressive BS.
I watched some interviews the other day with some college students and they could not name ONE US senator - not one. But they could name the latest dreck pop hit. A certain degree of ignorance has always been the hallmark of youth - but I think that we are plumbing new depths. They can be easily distracted with fatuous accusations against conservatives - "they want to ban contraceptives!", "war on women", "warmongers", "tax breaks for the rich", etc etc ad nauseum. With social media technology they can be corralled to vote en masse.
The upshot is that we are stuck with this vast progressive constituency (Obama's bottom seems to be about 40%) and they are lathered in this essentially anti-US worldview. This produces the Obamas, Kerrys, Boxers, Clintons of this world. Not to mention the left-wing control of the media, universities, entertainment, and Federal bureaucracy (on the last one see what has happened to N. Virginia).
Obama is getting beaten up on the international scene and he does not care and, more importantly, his constituency does not care. It is sad and dismaying.
The only people who fear Obama are American citizens and the occasional ally he has insulted. It is like watching a disaster in the making.
It would seem that Obama is making a good attempt at becoming the American Neville Chamberlin. Unfortunately we may not survive the results.
It is not like we could have not helped the Ukraine by creating a currency board built on tying the hryvnia to the euro among other measures like not raising taxes.
It was Obama that helped to weakened the Ukraine. It appears that Obama destroys almost everything he touches.
Problem is, all will be punished for the sins of those who voted for him.
Given western fecklessness, it is unsurprising that Russia is on the move everywhere. The arctic is just one such theatre:
http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/is-vladimir-putin-coming-for-the-north-pole-next-20140327
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-464921/Putins-Arctic-invasion-Russia-lays-claim-North-Pole--gas-oil-diamonds.html
I'm not sure neocons like Victor Davis Hanson are worth listening to, unless you have a really short memory.
anon at 222, VDH is a historian; see books at
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_3_9?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=victor%20david%20hanson&sprefix=victor+da%2Cstripbooks%2C202
I'd guess he has a better grasp of world history and how things today compare than you do.
Sam at 316, yes VDH is a historian and as rationalwiki trash talks him, experts often get uppity to think their opinions are tall because they have perfectly cherry-picked historical facts to match their preconceived conclusions with the utmost care.
"Victor Davis Hanson is an expert on ancient warfare and a professor of classical studies. When writing on those fields, he is typically very knowledgeable and strong. Of course, he has decided that knowing everything about Rome and Greece means he knows everything about everything. ... This, in essence, is how Hanson approaches all of politics. He looks back to history (usually Greece or Rome) for something he feels is vaguely analogous, and tries to make them fit."
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Victor_Davis_Hanson
Anon? Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight. I guess we all drink different Kool-Aid. rationalwiki isn't my flavor.
Anon @2:22 + 5:03p: Ye without preconceived conclusions, I'm sure... And you probably think 26-year-olds are "children" who've just graduated from Hogwarts. Is that what rationalwiki tells you, too? I'm with Sam, that website ain't my speed. After all, I'm a "global warming denier." And it's funny that y'all came up with global warming theories.... I thought you didn't like Creationism. "Myths" about Adam and Eve are a far cry from hockey stuck theories of global doom and "Noah" Armageddon adaptations. First time I've been on rationalwiki... thanks for the moonbat recommendation. They probably wouldn't think too highly of me, would they?
Sam at 754 and Anon at 1004,
I said trash talk, and rational wiki is more entertainment, but facts remain - experts exist within certain fields, and if an expert wants to offer opinions outside his field (history professors opinions of modern politics warfare for instance), its still called opinion, and its uncritical value exists only to those who have the same cherry tree in their back yard.
Here's a less anonymous critic of neocon Victor Davis Hanson's cookie-cutter political style.
Expert opinions are helpful, especially if you have an objective reputation on the line, but ideological narratives have as much chance to deepen the echo chamber as enlighten a way out to complex reality.
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/its-all-greek-to-victor-davis-hanson/
"Victor Davis Hanson has been writing the same thing for years now: cheerleading for the Iraq War spiced up with classical military history. Doesn’t matter whether he’s writing a 400-page book or a 1000-word column for National Review Online, Hanson uses the same formula. And it’s sure worked out well for him. Hanson’s got his fans convinced that Socrates himself would volunteer for duty in Fallujah, if only he didn’t have to drink that damn goblet of hemlock."
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