We have a president who
remains unengaged and really unequipped to handle the tasks he is
confronted with. Worse, he lacks even the ability of George Bush to
defer those decisions to those who had his trust. This is as bad as
it gets.
The developing result is
that all the world's troublemakers are becoming restive and
incresingly dangerous. This is how we so quickly forget the lessons
of Hitler who singlehandedly caused a war that killed 80,000,000
people. We now have an equally threatening scenario that could
easily bring a bout a nuclear war in the Middle Eastern Cauldron.
George Bush blundered
badly in his early handling of Iraq in dismissing the Iraqi Army. He
recovered that blunder with the surge on his exit from office. Obama
then proceeded to throw away a won hand and today we have an
ignomious situation in Iraq and Syria that will soon demand the
deployment of foreign peace keepers at the least. Obama patently is
incapable of doing even that.
This can dissolve into
direct intervention of Iranian forces followed by the Turks
intervening, all tearing apart Iraq at the expense of the arabs
simply because they can.
America surrenders
in Iraq, Syria and Ukraine
Now the world is
learning the high price of American detachmentLuiza Ch. SavageJuly 7,
2014
On a Saturday
afternoon in July 2012, then-secretary of state Hillary Clinton
invited CIA director David Petraeus to her brick colonial home in
Washington. The four-star general had led George W. Bush’s U.S.
troop surge in Iraq and President Barack Obama’s in Afghanistan.
Clinton asked him whether it was possible to vet, train and equip
moderate opposition fighters in Syria where the forces of
President Bashar al-Assad had begun killing civilians by the
thousands.
“He had already
given careful thought to the idea, and had even started sketching out
the specifics and was preparing to present a plan,” Clinton
recalled in her new memoir,Hard Choices. The next month, Clinton flew
to neighbouring Turkey to discuss plans for a no-fly zone over Syria
and support for the opposition. Clinton and the Turkish foreign
minister made calls to foreign ministers of Britain, France and
Germany to build an international coalition. She returned to
Washington “reasonably confident” that allies were on side.
But when Petraeus
presented the plan to the President, Obama balked. He had just ended
the Iraq war and did not want to get mired in a new conflict. He had
promised war-weary Americans he would do “more nation-building at
home.” Besides, the weapons could fall into the wrong hands. Given
Saudi Arabia was already arming rebels, he didn’t think American
arms would make a decisive difference in driving Assad from power.
Clinton argued that the U.S. could train fighters responsibly, and
that the goal was to weaken Assad enough to get him to the
negotiating table with the opposition.
Still, Obama said no.
Clinton turned her efforts to getting food and medicine to suffering
Syrians, and cellphones to anti-Assad activists. But, she wrote, “all
of these steps were Band-Aids.”
Clinton’s was not
the only voice Obama overruled as he sought to keep the U.S. out of
Syria. Last February, as the death toll surpassed 130,000 and Assad
resisted UN-led peace talks, the U.S. ambassador, Robert Ford, became
so frustrated with the President’s hands-off approach that he quit
his job in disgust. “When I can no longer defend the policy in
public, it is time for me to go,” Ford told PBS this month.
Three years after it
began, the Syrian crisis has now spread to Iraq. A portion of
northern Syria has been taken over by an offshoot of al-Qaeda, known
as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), which, this week,
declared it has established a theocratic caliphate. Washington has
been jolted by the nightmarish sight of ISIS sweeping through a large
swath of Iraq—the largely Sunni north and west—seizing city after
city, and looting banks and oil refineries. Iraqi forces, trained and
equipped by the U.S., have in some instances dropped their weapons
and run away. Executions and beheadings by ISIS are hardening
sectarian divisions between Sunnis, Kurds and the Shia-led government
in Baghdad.
Reluctance to aid
Syria’s moderate rebels may not have been Obama’s only mistake.
His failure to leave behind a residual force of several thousand
troops in Iraq, as counselled by his generals and cabinet members, is
now in the spotlight. Meanwhile, the President’s modest vision for
American power is being tested, not only as the sectarian war in Iraq
worsens, but as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s expansionism
destabilizes Europe.
The President who
aimed to extract America from its entanglements abroad is suddenly
learning the price of detachment. Halfway through their second terms,
presidents often turn to foreign affairs as a constructive diversion
from gridlock at home. But Obama is facing what could be the biggest
foreign policy challenge of his presidency. And, as the superpower
steps back, it may be horrified to see who steps in to fill the
breach.
The potential threat
ISIS poses to America is chilling. It is technologically
sophisticated and well-funded by wealthy donors, theft, kidnappings
and extortion. It is seizing tanks and heavy equipment intended for
the Iraqi army to defend against insurgents just like ISIS. U.S.
officials estimate that ISIS now numbers 10,000 fighters, of which
3,000 to 5,000 are from outside countries. Some of them have European
or American passports allowing them to travel to the U.S. without
visas.
With a brutal
terrorist organization now controlling an area the size of some
countries, including border crossings in Iraq, Syria and Jordan,
critics blame Obama’s neglect of Syria and Iraq for forsaking what
stability had been achieved by a decade of U.S. military effort, at a
cost of nearly 4,500 American lives, and more than $1.7 trillion in
taxpayer dollars.
Critics point to
several key decisions in which Obama’s desire to keep out of the
conflicts may have helped enable the current crisis: his decision not
to leave troops behind in Iraq after 2011; his decision not to arm
the Syrian rebels in the early days of the conflict; and his
declaration of a “red line” against Assad’s use of chemical
weapons that was not followed up with military consequences.
They say the President
was wrong to assume the threat could be contained, rather than
confronted: “We saw this happening, and that was what’s so
frustrating. We watched them pool in eastern Syria in a way we have
never seen before, thousands and thousands of al-Qaeda-affiliated
individuals,” the Republican chairman of the House intelligence
committee, Mike Rogers, told CBS last week. As for the extremists
with Western passports: “That is as dangerous as it gets.”
Of course, it was
Bush’s invasion of Iraq that opened the Pandora’s box of
sectarian violence in that country. Hillary Clinton had voted for it.
And many of the voices now calling for a stronger U.S. role in the
region had also supported the ill-fated war.
Obama’s reticent
approach to the region is largely a reaction to Bush’s zeal. But
the debate in Washington is whether he is being too passive where
Bush was too aggressive. On May 28, in a major speech at the West
Point military academy in New York, Obama laid out his vision for a
more modest American role in the world. He told graduating cadets he
would be betraying his duty if he ever “sent you into harm’s way
simply because I saw a problem somewhere in the world that needed to
be fixed, or because I was worried about critics who think military
intervention is the only way for America to avoid looking weak.”
Obama said he reserved
the right to use unilateral force “when our core interests demand
it—when our people are threatened, when our livelihoods are at
stake, when the security of our allies is in danger.” In other
situations, he said, the U.S. will act through diplomacy, development
and in co-operation with allies. “U.S. military action cannot be
the only—or even primary—component of our leadership in every
instance. Just because we have the best hammer does not mean that
every problem is a nail,” he said.
Some critics see
Obama’s approach as an alarming departure from America’s
traditional postwar role as the guarantor of a stable world order.
They fear that U.S. withdrawal will leave a power vacuum filled by
the likes of ISIS. Some have argued that it emboldens leaders such as
Russia’s Vladimir Putin, who witnessed Obama drawing a “red line”
on the use of chemical weapons by Assad, but then took no military
action to stop it. Moreover, when Russia invaded Crimea and backed
rebels in eastern Ukraine, the U.S. response was much softer
than what many had hoped for, and rattled allies in the region. A
Polish newspaper recently published a leaked recording of the
country’s foreign minister describing the alliance with the U.S. as
“worthless” and harmful, because it leads to a “false sense of
security.”
The Iraq crisis is
also a challenge to Obama’s stated approach to counterterrorism.
Where Bush invaded Afghanistan to root out the Taliban, who
were giving sanctuary to al-Qaeda, Obama has said he will not follow
suit to pursue other terrorist groups. “A strategy that involves
invading every country that harbours terrorist networks is naive and
unsustainable,” Obama said at West Point. (Of course, the U.S. has
built up its counterterrorism efforts since 2001, including
intelligence and a lethal drone program, which give it more options.)
At a press conference this month, Obama emphasized he would not “play
whack-a-mole” by going after individual groups such as ISIS.
Instead, he would “partner” with countries where terrorists seek
a foothold.
Yet Obama’s failure
to reach an agreement to leave a U.S. military force in Iraq past
2011 made the country vulnerable to the invasion by ISIS, critics
argue. Military commanders had counselled him to leave 20,000 troops
behind. His defence secretary, Robert Gates, argued for 10,000 to
15,000 troops to be left for a transition period of three to five
years. Obama ultimately offered the Iraqis a small force of 3,000,
but could not strike a deal with Iraqi leaders that would give legal
immunity for the troops. Obama withdrew all of them at the end of
2011. While on the re-election campaign trail Obama claimed credit
for ending the Iraq war, now, he blames Iraq’s prime minister,
Nouri al-Maliki, for the absence of U.S. forces there: “That wasn’t
a decision made by me; that was a decision made by the Iraqi
government,” he said at a press conference this month.
Insisting on a small
number of troops, however, may have made a deal less likely. “Few
Iraqi politicians were willing to fight for such a meaningless
presence,” argues Kenneth Pollock, a Middle East specialist at the
Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, a
Washington think tank. “There were other ways that Washington might
have handled the legal issues as well, but the White House made clear
it was uninterested.”
But Steve Simon, who
served as senior director for Middle Eastern and North African
affairs at the White House from 2011 through 2012, argues there was
little Washington could do. “My recollection is that the
administration tried very hard. They put a lot of pressure on Maliki
and they worked parliamentarians pretty hard to make the case,” he
told reporters.
Only last summer,
after the U.S. government concluded that Assad had used chemical
weapons against his own people, did Obama approve sending small arms
to the rebels who are fighting against the regime but are not ISIS
extremists—a move that Ford, the former U.S. ambassador, and other
critics say was too little and too slow.
Ford is urging for
more and heavier military hardware, including mortars and
surface-to-air missiles to help the Free Syrian Army. “More
hesitation and unwillingness to commit to enabling the moderate
opposition fighters to fight more effectively both the jihadists and
the regime simply hasten the day when American forces will have to
intervene against al-Qaeda in Syria,” Ford wrote this month in
the New York Times.
As the crisis has
worsened, Obama has responded. On June 20, he ordered 300 members of
the U.S. special forces to “assess” the situation on the ground
and to “advise and assist” the Iraqi military. On June 26, Obama
formally requested $500 million from Congress to train and arm the
Syrian rebels, the biggest single step taken so far by the
administration. The money was part of a request for $1.5 billion for
a stabilization fund that would also include partnering with
neighbours such as Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq. The same day,
the United Nations said conditions have deteriorated to the point
that 10.8 million Syrians—half the population —now require
humanitarian assistance.
Obama is under
pressure to do more, such as launch air strikes against ISIS, a step
he did not rule out. “We will be prepared to take targeted and
precise military action, if and when we determine that the situation
on the ground requires it.” However, sending U.S. troops into
combat is off the table. “American forces will not be returning to
combat in Iraq.”
Both in Obama’s
speeches and in his actions in Syria and Iraq, some see a troubling
shift to a more circumspect America on the world stage. “Superpowers
don’t get to retire” is the title of a recent essay by historian
Robert Kagan in The New Republic. Kagan argues that the Syria and
Ukraine crises “signal a transition into a different world order,
or into a world disorder of a kind not seen since the 1930s.” He
thinks that with military spending larger than all other nations
combined, the U.S. had the power to enforce a liberal world order and
promote democracy. If America refrains from using its own power,
other actors, such as Putin, will fill the void. “The world will
change much more quickly than they imagine. And there is no
democratic superpower waiting in the wings to save the world if this
democratic superpower falters,” Kagan wrote.
For now, there is
little consensus among Americans about their role at a time when they
thought they were finished with Iraq and had decapitated al-Qaeda.
But they are worried about the unfolding crisis. A recent New
York Times/CBS poll suggests 58 per cent disapprove of the way Obama
is handling foreign policy, a jump of 10 points in the last month to
the highest level since he took office in 2009. (Obama’s overall
approval rating is down to 40 per cent, with 54 per cent disapproving
of his job as President. That is where Bush was at the same point in
his second term.)
They are evenly
divided about whether Obama should send 300 people from the special
forces to Iraq, or whether he should have left a residual force
behind in 2011. The poll found the biggest decline in support for
Obama was among Democrats, many of whom oppose sending even a small
number of troops.
There is one thing
they do agree on. A record number of Americans—75 per cent—now
believe the Iraq War was a mistake. No one knows that better than
Obama.
Spoken like a true Neocon psycho. When will the USSA ever get over its compulsion to conduct these futile crusades?
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