Among the non-arguments proposed by the unhappy few we
have this: Trump’s animosity toward Obama is causing him to undo the Obama legacy,
brick by brick, piece by piece. The only reason for Trump's actions, these mindless mavens suggest,
is that Obama did it.
By their poor excuse for reasoning, we should keep all
elements of the Obama legacy intact… because Obama did them. Keep in mind, the American
people, in casting their votes in hundreds of elections, repudiated the Obama legacy throughout the
Obama presidency.
Uri Friedman addresses the question in The Atlantic, though
he relies far too much on noted Obamaphile flack Ben Rhodes.
He summarizes the Trump wrecking crew:
When
Donald Trump last week opted to decertify the nuclear agreement that Barack
Obama forged with Iran, it appeared to fit a
pattern in the president’s emerging foreign policy. In withdrawing
from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and the Paris climate-change
accord, in announcing that he was “canceling” the U.S. opening to Cuba, Trump
seemed similarly determined to dismantle Obama’s achievements in international
affairs.
But, it’s not just Trump, Friedman continues. Many Obama
policy initiatives were wagers … like the wager on Iranian moderation. Reality
has proved these to be bad bets:
But to
the extent that Obama’s foreign-policy legacy is under threat, it’s not only
Trump that’s doing the threatening. Some accomplishments are fraying for
reasons that have nothing to do with the 45th president’s apparent contempt for
the 44th. Obama’s legacy partially depends on his bets that certain
countries—Cuba, Iran, Burma—would, with time, respond positively to diplomacy,
which the former president once
described to The
Atlantic as “the element of American power that the rest of the
world appreciates unambiguously.”
Strangely enough, Friedman suggests that the Trump war against
ISIS is just a continuation of the Obama war against ISIS. He does not seem to
recall that ISIS arose and prospered under the Obama presidency and that the
former president exhibited his signature cowardice when confronting it.
On Monday the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa fell. Clearly, it was
yet another Trumpian effort to undo the Obama legacy. Obama’s flacks and
flunkies were not running around explaining that Trump had wanted to destroy
ISIS because he held Obama in contempt. They preferred, in the media, to portray
it as a defeat. After all, we cannot have it that Trump might look like he was
succeeding, can we?
It took special talents with spin to make victory in Raqqa
look like a defeat, but the New York Times was up to the challenge in its news analysis (via Maggie’sFarm):
Its de
facto capital is falling. Its territory has shriveled from the size of Portugal
to a handful of outposts. Its surviving leaders are on the run.
But
rather than declare the Islamic State and its virulent ideology conquered, many
Western and Arab counterterrorism officials are bracing for a new, lethal
incarnation of the jihadist group.
The
organization has a proven track record as an insurgency able to withstand major
military onslaughts, while still recruiting adherents around the world ready to
kill in its name.
Islamic
State leaders signaled more than a year ago that they had drawn up contingency
plans to revert to their roots as a guerrilla force after the loss of their
territory in Iraq and Syria. Nor does the group need to govern cities to
inspire so-called lone wolf terrorist attacks abroad, a strategy it has already
adopted to devastating effect in Manchester, England, and Orlando, Fla.
I do not quite see how it happened, but the Times neglected
to mention that jihadis far and wide were drawn to ISIS because it looked like
it was winning, winning in Mosul, winning in Syria. Obama’s pusillanimous withdrawal
from the region empowered ISIS and inspired jihadis in Europe and America.
The Associated Press echoes the Times worry that defeat is
really a victory:
Over
several nights in September, some 10,000 men, women and children fled areas under
Islamic State control, hurrying through fields in northern Syria and risking
fire from government troops to reach a province held by an al-Qaida-linked
group.
For an
untold number of battle-hardened jihadis fleeing with the civilians, the escape
to Idlib province marked a homecoming of sorts, an opportunity to continue
waging war alongside an extremist group that shares much of the Islamic State's
ideology — and has benefited from its prolonged downfall.
While
the U.S.-led coalition and Russian-backed Syrian troops have been focused on
driving IS from the country's east, an al-Qaida-linked insurgent coalition
known as the Levant Liberation Committee has consolidated its control over
Idlib, and may be looking to return to Osama bin Laden's strategy of attacking
the West.
For those bemoaning the erasure of the Obama foreign policy,
it’s yet another occasion for anguish and anger.
4 comments:
"Among the non-arguments proposed by the unhappy few we have this: Trump’s animosity toward Obama is causing him to undo the Obama legacy, brick by brick, piece by piece. The only reason for Trump's actions, these mindless mavens suggest, is that Obama did it.
By their poor excuse for reasoning, we should keep all elements of the Obama legacy intact… because Obama did them. Keep in mind, the American people, in casting their votes in hundreds of elections, repudiated the Obama legacy throughout the Obama presidency."
And the Left / Dems have never forgiven the American people for dissing them.
Stuart: Keep in mind, the American people, in casting their votes in hundreds of elections, repudiated the Obama legacy throughout the Obama presidency.
I'm not sure what "hundreds of elections", but certainly Clinton got nearly 3 million more votes than Trump. Maybe "hundreds of elections" is referring to the county-by-county maps that look nearly red because the GOP currently has an advantage in lower population rural counties.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2016_Presidential_Election_by_County.svg
Even 2008 had McCain's 7% margin, 10 million vote loss existed in a sea of red counties:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2008_Presidential_Election_by_County.svg
We could look at Congress where Republicans got about 1.5 million more votes that Democrats, while Dems got about 1.5 million more votes in 2012, and about 7 million more votes in 2008, so certainly that's the wrong direction, but there's no clear consensus on which party should dominate the county, except by the luck and skill of gerrymandering.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections,_2016
And we can look at approval polls. Trump's approval poll never went above 46%, while Obama's approval at the end of 2016 was about 54%. That doesn't sound like repudiation. Although Clinton's approval was in the low 40's during the months before the election last year, so Trump's election may be a fair repudiation of the Clintons.
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