What this article makes abundantly
clear is the sparseness of Obama’s foreign policy record itself. What was presented was another round of the
old appeasement argument which generated the usual worsening environment in
exchange for ‘peace’ in Obama’s time. I
question Mr Obama’s historical perspective since the last time around it cost
the lives of twenty million Russian Socialists.
On a more positive note, old age
appears to be sorting things out in North Korea ,
Burma and even China
without much nastiness so far.
More troublesome, the Arab
Spring, which was inevitable, is presently dissolving into a grab for power by
fascist elements that need to be isolated and controlled. This could only be done with UN intervention
forces whose task would be to establish proper democratic structures and a
responsible bureaucracy.
Obama did not lose the Arab
Spring, but failed to actively participate and protect the interest of the
demos. Present failure in Syria is that
the people are not aided or protected and the rebel factions will use victory
to rationalize their own grab for power and suppression of minorities. Boots on the ground now can change that
outcome.
The USA prospers when they intervene to
protect the demos and install some such system.
Iraq
is in trouble, but the institutions are in place that can sort it all out. It is rarely satisfactory but the hopeful
trend lines do emerge.
What history has taught us over
and over again is that passively sitting back and hoping for the best is stupid
and only tosses up another thug who the demos must either out live or
overthrow.
Lawrence
Solomon | Oct 19, 2012
No match for Nixon, Carter, Reagan and Bush
During the presidential debate on foreign policy Monday evening,
President Obama will likely be asked to explain top-of-mind issues such as the
Libyan ambassador’s death in Benghazi , Iran ’s bomb, the Russian reset, and China ’s
emergence as a military and economic power. Obama will likely not be asked why,
unlike almost every other president in our lifetimes, he has few
accomplishments likely to last, and not a single foreign-policy triumph to his
name.
Richard Nixon famously travelled to Red China to open relations with
Mao Zedong and he ushered in a new era of “peaceful coexistence” with the USSR
that fostered trade and limited the threat of nuclear war through two landmark
arms control treaties: the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT 1) and
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. Among Nixon’s lesser but still
significant foreign-policy achievements, he ended the Vietnam War through the Paris Peace Accords, he launched a joint mission of the
American Apollo and Soviet Soyuz spacecraft, he riskily airlifted arms to Israel during the 1973 Yom Kippur War, and he
then established relations with Egypt ,
to move it out of the Soviet camp.
Gerald Ford, who unexpectedly became president following Nixon’s
Watergate-related resignation, nevertheless managed a foreign-policy triumph
during his brief two-and-a-half year presidency. His Helsinki
Accords committed the USSR
to respect the self-determination of peoples and their human rights, including
fundamental freedoms such as the freedom of thought and religion. Although the
Soviets signed it cynically at the time, it empowered the peoples of the East
Bloc countries and the Jews within the Soviet Union
to demand rights of their Communist leaders, ultimately leading to their
freedom from Communism. In lesser accomplishments, Ford opened America to Vietnamese boat people and used his
military to overcome crises involving Cambodia
and North Korea .
Jimmy Carter, although generally viewed as weak on foreign policy,
logged a triumph in ending three decades of hostility between Israel and Egypt
through the signing of the Camp David Accords.
Among other lasting accomplishments, he negotiated the Panama Canal Treaties,
which gave Panama the Panama
Canal, and SALT 2 with the USSR ,
to reduce the number of nuclear weapons. Although SALT 2 was not ratified, the
countries nevertheless honoured it.
Ronald Reagan had too many foreign policy accomplishments to list here
— the end of the Cold War and the Canada-U.S. free trade agreement were among
his triumphs. Reagan’s successor, George H. Bush, triumphed in winning the
first Gulf War while logging lesser accomplishments by continuing the SALT disarmament
talks and invading Panama to depose its dictator, Noriega.
Bill Clinton’s foreign-policy triumphs included NAFTA, a major trade
agreement with China , and
two wars in the Balkans against the Serbs, which secured Bosnia and led to the creation of
Kosovo. Clinton also deployed a military force
to Haiti
to reinstate President Jean-Bernand Aristide.
All the presidents had failures as well as triumphs, and even their
accomplishments are very much in the eye of the beholder — many considered
Carter’s return of the Panama Canal a mistake,
for example. I am listing the lasting accomplishments and the triumphs only to
describe the scale of achievements, not to suggest they are or were universally
viewed as wise.
Obama’s immediate predecessor, George W. Bush, certainly had
controversial foreign-policy achievements, many of them viewed as unwise; some
of them, such as the democracies he established in Afghanistan
and Iraq ,
may prove to be fleeting successes. Yet Bush did succeed in overthrowing the
Taliban government in Afghanistan
and Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq ,
in a risky military surge that expelled al-Qaeda from Iraq , and in
giving the citizens of these countries the experience of electing their own
governments. Bush also won plaudits for leading the battle against HIV/AIDS in
Africa by providing antiretroviral treatment to some two million Africans, and
in signing the six-country Central America Free Trade Agreement, as well as
individual free trade agreements with eight other countries.
As for Obama, none of his foreign-policy accomplishments rise to the
level of triumph; moreover, his accomplishments are few and often unlikely to
be lasting. Obama did help overthrow Gaddafi from Libya, he did pull out troops
from Iraq and is on track to
do so in Afghanistan .
But Libya
is in flames with jihadis, including al-Qaeda, resurgent. With the departure of
American troops, Iraq has
become subservient to Iran
and civil war looms. And in Afghanistan ,
the Taliban seems set to come back once the U.S. leaves. Obama’s one unalloyed
foreign success — killing Osama bin Laden — was not a policy success. In fact,
in policy terms it appears a failure — Obama no longer claims that al-Qaeda is
in retreat. Obama’s lasting accomplishments? He signed a new version of the
SALT treaties with Russia
and free trade deals with Colombia ,
Panama and South Korea .
Obama’s would-be triumphs — the Russian reset, the negotiations with
Iran that would placate the Mullahs, a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, making the U.S. loved around the world, especially in the Muslim
world — have all gone down in flames, not unlike the effigies burned during the
recent embassy riots in 20-odd cities around the world.
LawrenceSolomon@nextcity.com
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