kalu_miah
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US allied govt.'s in Mid-east region and elsewhere need to rethink their dependence on the US and start making alternate plans. Just when they needed the US, the US went Missing in Action (MIA). Syria is just the latest example.
Syria denouement: An unmitigated disaster for US foreign policy and credibility « Hot Air
Syria denouement: An unmitigated disaster for US foreign policy and credibility
POSTED AT 2:01 PM ON SEPTEMBER 10, 2013 BY ED MORRISSEY
Note: This post was written earlier today, before Vladimir Putin issued an ultimatum to the US to stand down on the use of force in Syria as the price for a UN Security Council resolution to take control of Syrias chemical weapons. As I remarked on Twitter:
This, of course, just underscores what follows.
Barack Obama tried spinning the Vladimir Putin peace plan as his own intentional strategy to defuse the Syria crisis in his suddenly-inconvenient interviews yesterday, in an attempt to restore the US position of leadership on global security that Putin managed to usurp. Obama told Gwen Ifill that, er, he meant to give Putin that opening:
Nevertheless, it is on these slender reeds that a few die-hard Obama apologists are constructing a case for his brilliance. The record over the past year proves otherwise. In my column for The Week, I point out the ad-libbed red line, the series of retreats from it over the past year, and the lack of any preparation at home or abroad to enforce it. But thats just the appetizer to the cornucopia of incompetence that took place over the last three weeks:
Julia Ioffe calls this amateur hour at The New Republic, and says, Obama got played by Putin and Assad:
The New York Times Roger Cohen pronounced himself mystified by Obamas fumbling on Syria last night, and used another colorful metaphor:
Even the normally friendly Politico called Obamas performance an avert-your-gaze moment and his policy flaccid, producing an image of The United States of weakness:
Perhaps theyre cringing as they try to make the argument for Barack Obama, super genius, but Ben Smith at BuzzFeed isnt fooled, either. Calling it a rough road to Damascus, Smith outlines the nine key blunders made by Obama in the Syrian crisis. Number 4 is drawing the red line in the first place, which is also the focus of Eric Ostermeier at Smart Politics. Eric looks at the history of presidential red lines on military intervention and finds only 13 instances of their use and 11 of them have been by Barack Obama:
The other two came from George W. Bush, but they were hardly in the same category. One applied to North Korea, but the red line was on missile testing, and it was for a new round of UN Security Council review, not unilateral military action. The other was a warning to Taiwan not to declare independence, or risk losing American support. The red line was not only set by Obama alone, hes the only President to use it to promise a unilateral military response which seems rather odd coming from a Nobel Peace Prize winner.
Speaking of which, I speculated about the next Nobels last night on Twitter:
Lets wrap this up with Glenn Reynolds, who wrote this deconstruction of Obama as inadvertent genius before the Putin gambit snatched leadership away from the US:
Weve now made Vladimir Putin the leader of Western diplomacy. Thats not exactly smart power.
Syria denouement: An unmitigated disaster for US foreign policy and credibility « Hot Air
Syria denouement: An unmitigated disaster for US foreign policy and credibility
POSTED AT 2:01 PM ON SEPTEMBER 10, 2013 BY ED MORRISSEY
Note: This post was written earlier today, before Vladimir Putin issued an ultimatum to the US to stand down on the use of force in Syria as the price for a UN Security Council resolution to take control of Syrias chemical weapons. As I remarked on Twitter:
Ed Morrissey @EdMorrissey
An ignominious end to the "Putin partnered with us" claim Fiasco: Russia not enthusiastic about UN resolution on Syria, says French FM; Update: Putin wants U.S. to call off strike « Hot Air [update] Putin issues stand-down ultimatum to US
10:25 AM - 10 Sep 2013
12 RETWEETS 1 FAVORITE
An ignominious end to the "Putin partnered with us" claim Fiasco: Russia not enthusiastic about UN resolution on Syria, says French FM; Update: Putin wants U.S. to call off strike « Hot Air [update] Putin issues stand-down ultimatum to US
10:25 AM - 10 Sep 2013
12 RETWEETS 1 FAVORITE
This, of course, just underscores what follows.
Barack Obama tried spinning the Vladimir Putin peace plan as his own intentional strategy to defuse the Syria crisis in his suddenly-inconvenient interviews yesterday, in an attempt to restore the US position of leadership on global security that Putin managed to usurp. Obama told Gwen Ifill that, er, he meant to give Putin that opening:
IFILL: John Kerry talked today about a limited, targeted, unbelievably small effort. And now were hearing news that Russia has a plan, a solution, perhaps, which would allow Syria to take all of its weapons and put it under international control. Is that something that youve had any conversations at all with President Putin about when you were in St. Petersburg last week?
OBAMA: I did have those conversations. And this is a continuation of conversations Ive had with President Putin for quite some time. As I said to you the last time we spoke, this chemical weapons ban matters to us, to the United States.
Ahem. As Karl pointed out on Twitter, the Obama administration didnt bother to bargain at all with Putin last week. Its possible that this was done in secret, but how likely would that have been while Samantha Power was busy blasting Russia as obstructionist at the UN at almost the same moment?
OBAMA: I did have those conversations. And this is a continuation of conversations Ive had with President Putin for quite some time. As I said to you the last time we spoke, this chemical weapons ban matters to us, to the United States.
Ahem. As Karl pointed out on Twitter, the Obama administration didnt bother to bargain at all with Putin last week. Its possible that this was done in secret, but how likely would that have been while Samantha Power was busy blasting Russia as obstructionist at the UN at almost the same moment?
Nevertheless, it is on these slender reeds that a few die-hard Obama apologists are constructing a case for his brilliance. The record over the past year proves otherwise. In my column for The Week, I point out the ad-libbed red line, the series of retreats from it over the past year, and the lack of any preparation at home or abroad to enforce it. But thats just the appetizer to the cornucopia of incompetence that took place over the last three weeks:
That was not the end of the disarray; indeed, it was just beginning. Kerry tried to argue that bombing another country didnt amount to an act of war as long as we didnt land troops on the ground, which he called war in the classic sense. At almost the same time, Kerry suggested that troops on the ground might be an option to engage the Syria hawks who want to impose regime change on Damascus, and then abruptly dismissed the idea when challenged to reconcile the contradiction. Obama then denied hed set the red line at all, claiming that the world had set it through conventions barring the use of chemical weapons. But those conventions require global diplomatic action and then U.N. enforcement, not American unilateral military action.
As President Obama prepared to make his case on every television network and in a speech directly to the American people this week, the disarray continued. Kerry, in another attempt to argue that bombing Syria wasnt an act of war, promised an unbelievably small attack, which would presumably still deter Assad. In the same press conference in London, Kerry inadvertently suggested a diplomatic solution that would involve having an international force secure Assads chemical weapons a suggestion that the State Department tried desperately to reverse. Instead,Russia agreed to quarterback the effort and Syria announced its support for the proposal, which might have been a diplomatic triumph for the U.S. if (a) we had demanded this a year ago when President Obama set the red line, and (b) the Obama administration had thought to at least try it first before demanding approval for military strikes on Syria. Meanwhile, Obamas arguments for military strikes were already taped by the networks, and his White House address on the eve of the anniversary of 9/11 and Benghazi remained on the schedule.
If any foreign policy deserved a vote of no confidence, the White Houses handling of the Syrian crisis tops the list. Voters apparently believe so as well. In a CNN poll published on Monday, 59 percent of Americans opposed potential congressional authorization for military strikes, including majorities in every demographic. A Pew poll put that figure at 63 percent.
Obama and the White House argue that the strikes have to take place to maintain American credibility in the Middle East, as a further deterrent to Assad and to the Iranians who support the regime and want to develop nuclear weapons. The disarray displayed by the administration has done more damage to that credibility than a measured approach within the global conventions ever could have done. A congressional rejection of military strikes would prove less humiliating in the long run than anything weve seen from the White House over the last year. Based on what has already transpired, who could possibly have any confidence in the Obama administrations handling of actual military intervention?
As President Obama prepared to make his case on every television network and in a speech directly to the American people this week, the disarray continued. Kerry, in another attempt to argue that bombing Syria wasnt an act of war, promised an unbelievably small attack, which would presumably still deter Assad. In the same press conference in London, Kerry inadvertently suggested a diplomatic solution that would involve having an international force secure Assads chemical weapons a suggestion that the State Department tried desperately to reverse. Instead,Russia agreed to quarterback the effort and Syria announced its support for the proposal, which might have been a diplomatic triumph for the U.S. if (a) we had demanded this a year ago when President Obama set the red line, and (b) the Obama administration had thought to at least try it first before demanding approval for military strikes on Syria. Meanwhile, Obamas arguments for military strikes were already taped by the networks, and his White House address on the eve of the anniversary of 9/11 and Benghazi remained on the schedule.
If any foreign policy deserved a vote of no confidence, the White Houses handling of the Syrian crisis tops the list. Voters apparently believe so as well. In a CNN poll published on Monday, 59 percent of Americans opposed potential congressional authorization for military strikes, including majorities in every demographic. A Pew poll put that figure at 63 percent.
Obama and the White House argue that the strikes have to take place to maintain American credibility in the Middle East, as a further deterrent to Assad and to the Iranians who support the regime and want to develop nuclear weapons. The disarray displayed by the administration has done more damage to that credibility than a measured approach within the global conventions ever could have done. A congressional rejection of military strikes would prove less humiliating in the long run than anything weve seen from the White House over the last year. Based on what has already transpired, who could possibly have any confidence in the Obama administrations handling of actual military intervention?
Julia Ioffe calls this amateur hour at The New Republic, and says, Obama got played by Putin and Assad:
While the Russians are already cutting deals and drumming up promises from the Syrianswith whom, as theyve insisted for years, they have no leverageand as the world lines up on the off-ramp, the White House was still marshalling its case for a military strike, trotting out National Security Advisor Susan Rice, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and poor Tony Blinken, who was left making the case for two mutually exclusive things: Well talk to the Russians, he kept repeating even as he hammered on the intelligence and the need to degrade, deter, et cetera, et cetera.
Last night, President Barack Obama, who, just over a week ago, had said he was ready to act, tells the nations cable watchers that hes now discussing this bogus plan with Russian President Vladimir Putin, and that hes going to take this very seriously while also not letting up on the drumbeat of military strikes while. On Tuesday, Syria said it had accepted Russias proposal and France said it would seek the UN Security Councils backing for the proposal.
This, in other words, is no light at the end of the tunnel. This, to borrow a phrase from a Congressional staffer at his wits end, is an unmitigated clusterfuck.
There are two clear winners in this slow-motion train wreck, and they are not Obama or Kerry. They are Assad and Putin. Obama, on the other hand, found himself constantly check-mated, either by his own hand, or, this time, by Kerrys.
Last night, President Barack Obama, who, just over a week ago, had said he was ready to act, tells the nations cable watchers that hes now discussing this bogus plan with Russian President Vladimir Putin, and that hes going to take this very seriously while also not letting up on the drumbeat of military strikes while. On Tuesday, Syria said it had accepted Russias proposal and France said it would seek the UN Security Councils backing for the proposal.
This, in other words, is no light at the end of the tunnel. This, to borrow a phrase from a Congressional staffer at his wits end, is an unmitigated clusterfuck.
There are two clear winners in this slow-motion train wreck, and they are not Obama or Kerry. They are Assad and Putin. Obama, on the other hand, found himself constantly check-mated, either by his own hand, or, this time, by Kerrys.
The New York Times Roger Cohen pronounced himself mystified by Obamas fumbling on Syria last night, and used another colorful metaphor:
Roger Cohen ✔ @NYTimesCohen
For a very serious man Obama is looking deeply unserious on Syria. This has feel of Monty Python's Flying Damascus. A sad saga. #Syria
6:22 PM - 9 Sep 2013
76 RETWEETS 16 FAVORITES
For a very serious man Obama is looking deeply unserious on Syria. This has feel of Monty Python's Flying Damascus. A sad saga. #Syria
6:22 PM - 9 Sep 2013
76 RETWEETS 16 FAVORITES
Even the normally friendly Politico called Obamas performance an avert-your-gaze moment and his policy flaccid, producing an image of The United States of weakness:
Red lines that may or may not be real, retaliatory strikes that may or may not be hours from launch, congressional debates that may or may not be necessary for the president to do what he wantswhatever that happens to be this hour.
Barack Obamas unsteady handling of the Syria crisis has been an avert-your-gaze moment in the history of the modern presidency highlighting his unsettled views and unattractive options in a way that has caused his enemies to cackle and supporters to cringe.
Barack Obamas unsteady handling of the Syria crisis has been an avert-your-gaze moment in the history of the modern presidency highlighting his unsettled views and unattractive options in a way that has caused his enemies to cackle and supporters to cringe.
Perhaps theyre cringing as they try to make the argument for Barack Obama, super genius, but Ben Smith at BuzzFeed isnt fooled, either. Calling it a rough road to Damascus, Smith outlines the nine key blunders made by Obama in the Syrian crisis. Number 4 is drawing the red line in the first place, which is also the focus of Eric Ostermeier at Smart Politics. Eric looks at the history of presidential red lines on military intervention and finds only 13 instances of their use and 11 of them have been by Barack Obama:
A Smart Politics review of the Public Papers of the Presidents finds that presidents prior to Obama have been extremely gun-shy when it comes to drawing rhetorical red lines particularly within the context of international relations and the threat of military force.
U.S. Presidents have mentioned the phrase red line 47 times across 33 speeches or statements over the decades.
However, the term has been used only 13 times by presidents in the realm of international relations, with 11 of these delivered over the last year by Obama.
U.S. Presidents have mentioned the phrase red line 47 times across 33 speeches or statements over the decades.
However, the term has been used only 13 times by presidents in the realm of international relations, with 11 of these delivered over the last year by Obama.
The other two came from George W. Bush, but they were hardly in the same category. One applied to North Korea, but the red line was on missile testing, and it was for a new round of UN Security Council review, not unilateral military action. The other was a warning to Taiwan not to declare independence, or risk losing American support. The red line was not only set by Obama alone, hes the only President to use it to promise a unilateral military response which seems rather odd coming from a Nobel Peace Prize winner.
Speaking of which, I speculated about the next Nobels last night on Twitter:
Ed Morrissey @EdMorrissey
I wonder who will be the first to nominate Vladimir Putin for a Nobel Peace Prize.
6:30 PM - 9 Sep 2013
26 RETWEETS *3 FAVORITES
Ed Morrissey @EdMorrissey
It might be the first Nobel Peace Prize awarded for stopping another Nobel Peace Prize winner from starting a war.
6:31 PM - 9 Sep 2013
66 RETWEETS 17 FAVORITES
I wonder who will be the first to nominate Vladimir Putin for a Nobel Peace Prize.
6:30 PM - 9 Sep 2013
26 RETWEETS *3 FAVORITES
Ed Morrissey @EdMorrissey
It might be the first Nobel Peace Prize awarded for stopping another Nobel Peace Prize winner from starting a war.
6:31 PM - 9 Sep 2013
66 RETWEETS 17 FAVORITES
Lets wrap this up with Glenn Reynolds, who wrote this deconstruction of Obama as inadvertent genius before the Putin gambit snatched leadership away from the US:
When I wrote last week on our bumbling Syria diplomacy, it seemed that things couldnt possibly go further downhill. Boy, was I wrong.
Last week, it seemed our only ally was France. But now the French are having second thoughts. Obamas efforts to get support at the G20 conference came to nothing. Even the pope is undercutting him.
Meanwhile, at home, polls show Americans are against a strike, and Obama is facing double-digit defections among Democrats in the Senate. The outlook for passage in the House, meanwhile, looks so bad that a resolution to authorize war may not even make it to a vote. If its sure to fail, why force members Republicans and Democrats alike to go on record? You can bet they dont appreciate Obama putting them in this position.The Pentagon isnt happy, and even The Atlantics Ta-Nehisi Coates, a reliable Obama supporter, calls his policy dumb.
Some critics are even comparing the collapse of American influence under Obama to the end of the Soviet Union. Well, that may be an exaggeration but Obama promised a fundamental transformation, after all.
Last week, it seemed our only ally was France. But now the French are having second thoughts. Obamas efforts to get support at the G20 conference came to nothing. Even the pope is undercutting him.
Meanwhile, at home, polls show Americans are against a strike, and Obama is facing double-digit defections among Democrats in the Senate. The outlook for passage in the House, meanwhile, looks so bad that a resolution to authorize war may not even make it to a vote. If its sure to fail, why force members Republicans and Democrats alike to go on record? You can bet they dont appreciate Obama putting them in this position.The Pentagon isnt happy, and even The Atlantics Ta-Nehisi Coates, a reliable Obama supporter, calls his policy dumb.
Some critics are even comparing the collapse of American influence under Obama to the end of the Soviet Union. Well, that may be an exaggeration but Obama promised a fundamental transformation, after all.
Weve now made Vladimir Putin the leader of Western diplomacy. Thats not exactly smart power.