It ought to be well enough known, but peace mongering
invites war. Assessing the Obama record on war and peace, Kathleen Hennessy of
the AP shows that the world is less peaceful than it was when Barack Obama took
office, or when he won his Nobel Peace Prize. And that he largely responsible.
Hennessy describes the Obama paradox:
He is
the erstwhile anti-war candidate, now engaged in more theaters of war than his
predecessor. He is the commander-in-chief who pulled more than a hundred
thousand U.S. troops out of harm's way in Iraq, but also began a slow trickle
back in. He recoiled against full-scale, conventional war, while embracing the
brave new world of drone attacks. He has championed diplomacy on climate
change, nuclear proliferation and has torn down walls to Cuba and Myanmar, but
failed repeatedly to broker a lasting pause to more than six years of slaughter
in Syria.
She continues:
By some
sobering measures, the case for Obama the peacemaker is difficult to make.
Analysts who track conflict, refugee populations, terrorist attacks and
political upheaval say the world has only become less peaceful during Obama's
tenure, a trend that began just before he took office.
Instances
of terrorism have peaked, deaths in battle around the world are at a 25-year
high, and the number of refugees and displaced people has reached a level not
seen in sixty years, according to the 2016 Global Peace Index, a report on
international stability produced by the nonpartisan think-tank the Institute
for Economic and Peace. The researchers attributed the trends to the expanded
warfare in the Middle East and North Africa and broad ripples across the region
and in Europe.
3 comments:
Obama the dronemonger. He likes to use drones, he drones on whenever he speaks, and his supporters are drones.
"[T]he case for Obama the peacemaker is difficult to make..."
That's so mean. The First Black President gets victimized again.
A "monger", from the usages I've see, is one who makes, or one who sells, something. As I see it, Obama is an Obama-monger, and an enabler of bad conduct in his administration.
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