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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNYT - Friedman - It’s Not Just About Obama
Complete Op-Ed at link
THERE has been a festival of commentary of late bemoaning the pusillanimous foreign policy of President Obama. If only we had a president who rode horses shirtless, wrestled a tiger or took a bite out of a neighboring country, wed all feel much safer. Your Honor, I rise in partial defense of Mr. Obama.
Let me start by asking a question Ive asked about other countries: Is American foreign policy today the way it is because Obama is the way he is (cerebral, cautious, dispassionate) or is Obama the way Obama is on foreign policy because America is the way America is today (burned by two failed wars and weakened by a great recession) and because the world is the way the world is (increasingly full of failed states and enfeebled U.S. allies)?
The answer is some of both, but Id put a lot more emphasis on the latter. Foreign policy, our ability and willingness to act in the world, is about three things: interests, values and leverage. Do we have an interest in getting involved in Syria or Crimea, are our values engaged, and if either is true do we have the leverage to sustainably tilt things our way at a price we can afford? Leverage is a function of two things: the amount of economic and military resources we can bring to bear and the unity of purpose of our partners on the ground and our allies elsewhere.
Id argue that a lot of what makes America less active in the world today is a product first of all of our own diminished leverage because of actions taken by previous administrations. The decisions by the Bush I and Clinton teams to expand NATO laid the seeds of resentment that helped to create Putin and Putinism. The Bush II team not only presided over two unsuccessful wars, but totally broke with American tradition and cut taxes instead of raising them to pay for those wars, weakening our balance sheet. The planning for both wars was abysmal, their execution worse and too many of our allies proved to be corrupt or used our presence to prosecute old feuds
.
Let me start by asking a question Ive asked about other countries: Is American foreign policy today the way it is because Obama is the way he is (cerebral, cautious, dispassionate) or is Obama the way Obama is on foreign policy because America is the way America is today (burned by two failed wars and weakened by a great recession) and because the world is the way the world is (increasingly full of failed states and enfeebled U.S. allies)?
The answer is some of both, but Id put a lot more emphasis on the latter. Foreign policy, our ability and willingness to act in the world, is about three things: interests, values and leverage. Do we have an interest in getting involved in Syria or Crimea, are our values engaged, and if either is true do we have the leverage to sustainably tilt things our way at a price we can afford? Leverage is a function of two things: the amount of economic and military resources we can bring to bear and the unity of purpose of our partners on the ground and our allies elsewhere.
Id argue that a lot of what makes America less active in the world today is a product first of all of our own diminished leverage because of actions taken by previous administrations. The decisions by the Bush I and Clinton teams to expand NATO laid the seeds of resentment that helped to create Putin and Putinism. The Bush II team not only presided over two unsuccessful wars, but totally broke with American tradition and cut taxes instead of raising them to pay for those wars, weakening our balance sheet. The planning for both wars was abysmal, their execution worse and too many of our allies proved to be corrupt or used our presence to prosecute old feuds
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NYT - Friedman - It’s Not Just About Obama (Original Post)
Algernon Moncrieff
May 2014
OP
tularetom
(23,664 posts)1. Even a blind clock finds an acorn twice a day
Friedman's scorecard:
Correct: This time
Wrong: Every other time
BlindTiresias
(1,563 posts)2. Friedman said something coherent?!
Welp we are done for, this has to be a sign of the Apocalypse.
surrealAmerican
(11,364 posts)3. Surprisingly nuanced, considering the source
grasswire
(50,130 posts)4. welcome to DU
If this is your first post, thanks. It's worth a read.
KG
(28,752 posts)5. piss on him anyway.