You have probably noticed that Obama foreign policy experts
have been flooding the zone… that is, the media… with analysis of how badly
President Trump is conducting foreign policy. They are especially avid to cover up their own errors and mistakes.
They want to influence the way history is written and they
are writing a new version that makes them look good, even at the expense of an American
president. Yesterday, congenital liar Susan Rice took to the media to explain
that Donald Trump had been played like a fiddle in China.
She is entitled to her opinion. She was entitled to her
opinion about Benghazi, but her opinion on that occasion was a blatant lie, a
way for her administration to wash its hands of responsibility for the deaths
of four Americans… deaths caused by Obama administration incompetence.
And yet, as noted in these pages before, President Trump was
treated with great respect, like a world leader, in China. Barack Obama was
not. The same was true in Saudi Arabia. Whatever we all think of Donald Trump’s
foreign policy credentials—so to speak—his ability to develop good relations
with foreign leaders matters.
Our foreign policy elites, especially the Obamaphile left,
believe that making empty declamations about human rights, leaning in to
threaten foreign leaders in their own countries, is the way that great nations
conduct their affairs. It is not. Obama did not understand this. Susan Rice did
not understand this. Apparently, a rank amateur like Donald Trump does. One
understands that those who live in the world of ideas do not believe that
people matter or that personal relationships matter. They do. To ignore them is
reckless and dangerous.
If an American president does not treat a foreign dignitary
with respect, nothing will happen. If he threatens the leaders face, nothing
will happen.
After all, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger did not travel
to China in order to denounce the Cultural Revolution or the Great Leap
Forward. And yet, all of the foreign policy hands believe that Nixon’s opening
to China was of monumental importance.
Now, as you might have been noticing, the Obama foreign
policy team is out in force to denounce the Trump administration handling of
the Middle East, in particular, the recent actions of the Saudi Crown Prince,
Mohammed bin Salman.
Caroline Glick calls them out by name. They are, for now,
Aaron David Miller, Richard Sokolsky and Robert Malley. They were the architects
of the Obama administration’s submission to Iran and to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Timorous souls that they are they quiver in fear at the possibility of
political and social disruption in the region. They want things to return to
the way they were when Obama was in charge.
Glick puts it in context. And she argues effectively that
the situation produced by the appalling Obama approach to the conflict paved
the way for today's upheaval:
For
eight years, the Obama administration deliberately alienated and willingly
endangered Saudi Arabia and Israel by implementing a policy of appeasing Iran.
Despite repeated warnings, the US refused to recognize that as far as Iran is
concerned, it cannot have its cake and eat it too.
Iran is
at war with Saudi Arabia and its Sunni allies and with Israel.
Consequently,
Miller and Sokolsky’s claim that there can be an “equilibrium to America’s
relations with Saudi Arabia and Iran” which doesn’t involve the US siding with
one side against the other is an illusion. On the ground in the Middle East, as
events in Syria, Lebanon, Qatar, Yemen, Bahrain, Iraq, Gaza and Egypt have made
clear, Obama’s strategy of appeasing Iran weakened America’s traditional
regional allies and strengthened Iran and its proxies.
The
change in the balance of forces that the Obama administration’s policy caused
forced the US’s spurned allies to reassess their strategic dependence on the
US. Contrary to Miller and Sokolsky’s claims, the Saudis didn’t abandon their
past passivity because Mohammed is brash, young and inexperienced.
Mohammed
was appointed because Salman needed a successor willing and able to fight for
the survival of the kingdom after Obama placed it in jeopardy through his
appeasement of Iran. Mohammed is the flipside of the nuclear deal.
Malley
noted blandly that like the Saudis, Israel has also been sounding alarms at an
ever escalating rate.
The situation in the Middle East is as it is became
President Obama spent eight years appeasing Iran, sucking up to the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas. His nuclear deal with Iran-- circumventing constitutional authority to ratify treaties-- coupled with his willingness to finance Iranian terrorism created a greater danger to everyone in the region.
Correcting such a grievous error is not going to be
easy. It will not occur without any breakage. It will not happen without
errors. And yet, forming an anti-terrorism alliance with Sunni Arab nations is
surely in the best interest of the world entire.
Fortunately, the people in charge are not repeating Obama’s
mistakes:
It
makes sense that Obama partisans are unhappy with King Salman and Crown Prince
Mohammed. It makes sense that they are unhappy with Netanyahu and with Trump.
All four of these leaders are impudently insisting on basing their policies on
recognizing the reality Obama spent his two terms ignoring: Iran is not
appeasable.
3 comments:
Will never be fixed because of Islam.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INAnWZdUk84
Summary: Iran is bad. Saudi Arabia is good. Bad talking the Saudis and Chinese won't help them save face, but bad talking Iran will make them change their ways.
Good talking won't change Iran, either.
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