Opinion
Obama: Courage to kill, but not to lead

When it comes to supporting democracy and rebranding Mideast foreign policy, 
Obama's 'realism' lacks action.

Mark LeVine Last Modified: 16 May 2011 18:30

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Obama and his senior staff gladly accept praise for the capture of bin Laden, 
but are reluctant to act in full support of the ongoing Arab Spring [REUTERS]

Say what you will about the long-term wisdom or even legality of the 
spectacular raid that killed Osama bin Laden. It's undeniable that the 
president took a huge gamble in authorising such a risky operation in which so 
many things could have gone wrong. If they had, Mr Obama's presidency would 
likely have been left in tatters.

As it turned out, the president demonstrated a steely nerve and strong 
operational sensibility in the planning and execution of the raid, without 
which it would likely not have succeeded. As secretary of defence Robert Gates 
described it on 60 Minutes, the raid marked "one of the most courageous" 
decisions he's seen a president make.

Which begs the question: Why can't Obama display these qualities in other, 
non-lethal facets of his policies in the Arab world? How can he risk so much to 
kill one man, but lack the courage to take the far smaller risks that would 
accompany a regrounding - and not merely rebranding - of American Middle East 
policy?

A photo worth a thousand words

One answer might come from the now iconic photo of the president, hunched in a 
corner of the White House situation room, surrounded by about a dozen of his 
most senior civilian and military aides during the bin Laden operation. Let us 
imagine that, instead of bringing this group together to watch the attack on 
bin Laden's compound, the president had called them down to the situation room 
to discuss how to demand Israel begin evacuating most settlements and allow the 
creation of a viable Palestinian state within one year (a perfectly achievable 
goal if he chose to pursue it)? Or, to announce his intention to suspend aid, 
arms sales and diplomatic support for all states in the region who are not 
moving quickly towards democratic reforms?

The killing of Osama bin Laden has boosted Barack Obama's domestic approval 
ratings [Reuters]

Or, thinking domestically. If Mr Obama called in his most senior aides to work 
out a plan to outfit every home in the southern half of the United States with 
solar power. It would cost roughly $500bn, a far more cost-efficient way to 
protect the country than an empire of bases that costs one trillion dollars per 
year (as it happens, the president instead announced on Saturday that he would 
speed up the awarding of leases for oil drilling in Alaska and the Gulf of 
Mexico).

One could easily imagine the president in the same room, in the same corner, 
but now alone, his aides having resigned rather than participate in such risky 
and unrealistic policies.

Or would they?

One of the most important qualities a president must demonstrate is leadership. 
Obama's companions in the situation room certainly understood the risks of 
failure during the bin Laden operation, not just to the country but to their 
own careers and legacies. And yet, brought together under his firm leadership, 
they pulled off what the president described as "one of the greatest 
intelligence and military operations in our nation's history".

Who is to say if the president forcefully articulated a rationale for a radical 
reboot of his Mideast policy his aides wouldn't be willing to stay the course 
with him, even if it meant taking on entrenched interests such as the Israeli, 
defence and oil industry lobbies?

Sadly, we will likely never know the answer to this question, because it seems 
that the president will not bring himself to do it.

Fear or something else?

>From the start, Mr Obama attempted to distinguish himself from president Bush 
>by dialling back the pro-democracy rhetoric his predecessor had made a 
>centrepiece of in his foreign policy. The president's June 2009 speech in 
>Cairo was his first attempt to reboot America's relationship with the Muslim 
>world based on "mutual respect" and a desire not to "impose" any particular 
>political system on other cultures.

This focus on not imposing or interfering seems to be a cardinal point of the 
president's foreign policy discourse. It was used as a justification for not 
pushing too hard for Ben Ali or Mubarak to leave until it was clear that the 
people were going to topple them anyway.

But what does this discourse of staying out of the way really mean?

According to secretary of state Clinton, it means that the US cannot simply 
intervene wherever governments mistreat people. She argued in a recent New 
Yorker profile of Obama and his Mideast policies: "People are being killed in 
Cote d'Ivoire, Congo, they're being oppressed and abused all over the world by 
dictators and really unsavory characters. So we could be intervening all over 
the place. But that is not a - what is the standard?"

This view is related to that of another central player in the shaping of 
Obama's foreign policy: National Security Council member Samantha Power. 
Power's Pulitzer Prize winning book, Problem from Hell, argued that in the wake 
of the genocides in Rwanda or the Balkans, the United States had the obligation 
to intervene forcefully in cases of mass killing.

That logic helped convince the president to do just that when Gaddafi began 
killing Libyan citizens in large numbers. Yet at the same time, by that 
measurement, the administration is refusing to adopt forceful policies against 
other, increasingly violent crackdowns, such as in Bahrain and now Syria.

Bad logic

The seeming common sense of this argument - the US can't be the world's 
policeman but has a duty to intervene in exceptional cases - belies its 
convenience, and more so its speciousness. In reality, the choice of either 
military intervention or staying out of the fray is politically and empirically 
false.

The United States is already deeply involved with all the countries now in the 
midst of uprisings. It has been intervening in their affairs for decades, 
almost uniformly on the side of the governments rather than the people.

Refusing to support the region's pro-democracy movements is neither 
particularly respectful, nor does it represent a lack of interference. It is a 
form of action - powerfully so - in favour of the status quo. And most everyone 
in the region understands it as such.

Clinton's argument, that either the United States must invade Syria, Yemen or 
Bahrain, or - aside from a few rhetorical slaps on the wrist - do nothing, is 
nonsense. There are innumerable options available to the president, from 
suspending military aid or basing agreements to calling for the suspension of 
offending states' UN memberships and putting trade embargoes in place. What it 
would take, however, is a well articulated policy that is applied to all the 
governments of the region equally, and a willingness to defend it against the 
various domestic constituencies for the strategic status quo.

Infectious deception

The costs of not doing this are already apparent.

In Egypt, Obama's late endorsement of the pro-democracy forces has left the US 
with little leverage as the emerging political system realigns Egyptian foreign 
and security policy in new directions. In Syria, the administration's refusal 
to come down hard against Assad will leave it with few allies in a post-Assad 
environment if the pro-democracy movement's continued defiance ultimately 
triumphs over his murderous repression.

Indeed, it also has produced a situation where, albeit for different reasons, 
the Iranian and US governments are each acting to prop up the Baathist regime. 
Is this really the side the United States wants to be on?

In Israel/Palestine, the peace process has become so hopeless that the 
president's special envoy, George Mitchell, resigned from his position.

In Afghanistan, so desperate is the situation that Obama has argued that the 
killing of bin Laden next door indicates progress there.

"Our strategy is working and there is no greater evidence of that than justice 
finally being delivered to Osama bin Laden... I am confident we're going to 
succeed in this mission." If the president really believes that the killing of 
bin Laden deep in the heart of Pakistan demonstrates the success of his Afghan 
policy, then the logic under-girding US foreign policy has sunk to a new level 
of purgatory.

It seems unlikely, however, that the president, a self-described "student of 
history", believes his own words and doesn't understand the implications of his 
policies. As his national security adviser, Thomas E
Donilon, has pointed out, Obama "has really been the central intellectual 
force... designing the approaches" the US has adopted towards the various 
uprisings. So he is not merely following the advice of senior aides; he is 
actively shaping the policies himself.

Already last August he sent a five-page memo called "Political Reform in the 
Middle East and North Africa" to his most senior aides, a document which in 
some measure predicted the uprisings to come. Increased citizen protest in 
response to stalled progress towards political reform and openness would, he 
warned, "threaten the political and economic stability of some of our allies". 
This would undermine American credibility if the US was seen as "backing 
repressive regimes and ignoring the rights and aspirations of citizens".

>From pragmatism to realism

Here is the point where Mr Obama's oft-described "pragmatism" has done him so 
much harm. Unwilling to take on the entrenched interests behind the status quo, 
Obama was forced to focus on calling for "reform" rather than deeper, 
structural change. This is the rationale, even though people across the region 
would see his administration's language as supporting governments who have 
spent decades using "reforms"  to entrench the governments in power.

"The people want the fall of the system," millions have chanted. Against that 
ubiquitous cry, from Tunis to Sanaa, Obama's supposed "realism" and the 
administration's declarations that "each country must be treated differently" 
ring hollow.

On Thursday, the president will deliver a new address to the Muslim World, 
hoping that with the killing of bin Laden, he can again reboot America's 
relationship to the region. It will be hard to better the rhetoric of his
2009 Cairo speech, but the quality of the discourse isn't really the point any 
more.

With the cries of revolution sweeping across North Africa and the Middle East, 
talk has become cheap. It's time for president Obama to deliver. If he could 
risk his presidency to kill Obama bin Laden, he has no excuse to remain on the 
sidelines as the region's equally nefarious leaders, friend or foe, continue 
killing their people with impunity.

Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and senior visiting 
researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in 
Sweden. He has authored several books including Overthrowing Geography: Jaffa, 
Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine (University of California Press, 2005) 
and An Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books, 2009).

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Source:
Al Jazeera



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