Author Topic: Why Obama's policies FAILED in the Middle East - as predicted here on GB  (Read 1411 times)

Soul Crusher

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dario73

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Dumbocrats will claim that he didn't fail because there was nothing he could do. But at the same time they will worship him for "killing" Bin laden and give him credit for the supposedly "great" economy.

All his failures is someone else's fault.

Soul Crusher

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http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2014/08/18/Obama-Makes-Middle-East-Our-New-Quagmire



By Patrick Smith,
The Fiscal Times


August 18, 2014




“Quagmire” is a term commonly associated with Vietnam, but we need to haul it out of storage. There is no other way to describe the mess the Obama administration has led us into in the Middle East.

President Obama and Secretary of State Kerry have addressed the region’s “arc of crisis” more or less incoherently since each took office. Until recently, it seemed they might luck out: The war in Syria, while worsening, was more or less contained; Iraq simmered under the Shiite-chauvinism of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, but it wasn’t boiling over.

Related: With Iraq in Ruins, ISIS Turns to Genocide

Now come the flowers of error, and the bloom is horrific. The scarcely believable rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, confronts Washington with the most dramatic geopolitical transformation in the region since Iraq and Syria took shape after World War I. One: With $80 billion worth of intelligence at their disposal, how could the White House and State miss this? Two: They do not appear equipped to address this very new reality.

The Iranians were alert to the magnitude of ISIS’s threat as soon as its militias began their savage drive south from Syrian border to within a few miles of Baghdad. But few others were, as Patrick Cockburn, the noted Middle East commentator, wrote recently in The London Review of Books. 






New US Strikes In Iraq Include Land-based Bombers


Inform



The U.S. is expanding its air campaign in Iraq with attacks aimed at helping Iraqi forces regain control of the strategic Mosul dam. The White House said President Barack Obama notified...





















New US Strikes In Iraq Include Land-based Bombers


























































































“Politicians and diplomats tend to treat ISIS as if it is a Bedouin raiding party that appears dramatically from the desert, wins spectacular victories, and then retreats to its strongholds leaving the status quo little changed,” Cockburn observed. As to Baghdad: “Even with ISIS at the gates, Iraqi politicians have gone on playing political games as they move ponderously towards replacing the discredited prime minister.”

This has now changed. Late last week al-Maliki, under pressure from the U.S., Iran, and domestic allies and adversaries, agreed to step down. The administration, now calling ISIS a global threat, continues the bombing that began two weeks ago, chiefly in support of Kurdish militias and in defense of Erbil, capital of the Kurdish autonomous region.

Related: Obama’s Policy Shifts Could End with U.S. Boots on the Ground

On the other side of the border—such as one remains—ISIS has pushed all forces opposing it and the Assad regime in Damascus to the brink of defeat. As Anne Barnard reported in Sunday’s New York Times, ISIS and the Syrian army have encircled “mainstream insurgents” within a five-mile radius of Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and the insurgents’ stronghold.

On Friday, the UN Security Council approved a resolution blocking ISIS funding and weapons supplies and authorizing the use of force; the vote was unanimous. The immediate question is whether world opinion and unexpected alliances, not least between Tehran and Washington, have galvanized too late to stop a movement that is medieval in its ideology and diabolically effective in battle.

The deeper question is what Obama and his policy advisers did or failed to do to land the U.S. in this complex crisis, and whether they now see straight enough to correct the mistakes.

There is little sign this administration yet recognizes either its errors or what this fundamental change in the Middle Eastern dynamic requires of it.

Related: Iraq, Middle East, Paying for Obama’s Miscalculations

Look at Syria first. The White House, State, Defense, and the intelligence agencies have long cast the anti-Assad forces as aspiring democrats and toyed with training and arming them for more than a year. The enemy of my enemy is my friend, especially when the enemy is friendly with Russia: This is the principle.

Two big mistakes here. One, the “mainstream insurgents”—what does this phrase even mean?—were born and raised in Washington imaginations. In another important commentary Sunday, Cockburn put it this way: “Unfortunately, this group scarcely exists except as a propaganda slogan and a consumer of subsidies from the Persian Gulf.

Two, it may have appeared opportune to back the anti-Assad rebels, but it is painfully clear now that Washington had the wrong men. With ISIS about to monopolize the insurgency, the bitter truth is that Assad is the best of a bad choice in Syria for the time being. Damascus is just as fearful of the virulent ISIS strain of Islam as Washington is—and as Moscow is, a big reason the Kremlin backs Assad.

Obama now declines to bomb ISIS on its northern flank for reasons no one makes clear. This is the mistake going forward in Syria; as many analysts said over the weekend, bombing in Iraq and not Syria is almost certain to prove fruitless—and then go on to calamitous as ISIS continues to advance its gains.

Related: If Kurds Fall, Chaos in Iraq and Abroad Will Follow

As to Iraq, it starts to look like a Keystone Kops routine. With fanfare, the administration mounted a humanitarian rescue, backed with bombing runs, to save the Yazidi minority. Abruptly, it then declared the mission successful and canceled evacuation plans, only to have reliable Yazidi spokespeople and the U.N.’s humanitarian agency assert “the situation is far from solved,” as the U.N.’s man put it. Am I the only one needing help here?

The bombing runs on ISIS are now focused on Erbil in part because there is an American consulate there and in part because “the Kurds have been our best friends for years,” as Gen. James L. Jones, Obama’s former national security adviser, said on CNN a few days ago.

This may seem right to a general, but a good diplomat would see it differently. Al-Maliki’s successor, Haider al-Abadi, must urgently form a unity government. It is at least bad appearances, and maybe bad strategy, to favor Erbil over Baghdad now. If Obama has any faith in al-Abadi, and Ben Rhodes, the deputy national security adviser, professes much, then he is Washington’s best friend now.

Related: An Iraq Intervention with the Usual Caveats

This point is crucial. The ISIS goal of reestablishing a caliphate is a declaration that it intends to send the Sykes-Picot Agreement, the Anglo-French pact that led to the formation of modern Iraq and Syria, into history. Does the administration understand that in favoring the Kurds over the unity effort in Baghdad it risks encouraging the breakup of a nation?

Obama cannot be blamed for all of the mess before us.  When American pilots are bombing an insurgency firing American weapons and driving American vehicles, it is a reminder that things started long before he took office.

But wasting time in Syria that could have been spent on a political solution, and reading Iraq wrong since American troops were ordered home three years ago—these mistakes are Obama’s and have worsened the crisis considerably.

Walter Russell Mead, the noted policy scholar, wrote a piece in Foreign Affairs two years into the Obama presidency suggesting Obama was due to stumble into “the Carter Syndrome,” meaning he was a president of too many minds to be effective. I considered it unfair to both men at the time.

Now it looks as if Obama would be fortunate to achieve even Carter’s standard on the foreign side.
- See more at: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2014/08/18/Obama-Makes-Middle-East-Our-New-Quagmire#sthash.piCFBDVV.dpuf

Soul Crusher

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Top Iranian Official: Obama is ‘The Weakest of U.S. Presidents’
 
Adviser to Iranian president mocks Obama’s ‘humiliating’ presidency

 
 



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Barack Obama
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BY:  Adam Kredo   
October 23, 2014 4:10 pm

The Iranian president’s senior advisor has called President Barack Obama “the weakest of U.S. presidents” and described the U.S. leader’s tenure in office as “humiliating,” according to a translation of the highly candid comments provided to the Free Beacon.

The comments by Ali Younesi, senior advisor to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, come as Iran continues to buck U.S. attempts to woo it into the international coalition currently battling the Islamic State (IS, ISIL, or ISIS).

And with the deadline quickly approaching on talks between the U.S. and Iran over its contested nuclear program, Younesi’s denigrating views of Obama could be a sign that the regime in Tehran has no intent of conceding to America’s demands.

“Obama is the weakest of U.S. presidents, he had humiliating defeats in the region. Under him the Islamic awakening happened,” Younesi said in a Farsi language interview with Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency.

“Americans witnessed their greatest defeats in Obama’s era: Terrorism expanded, [the] U.S. had huge defeats under Obama [and] that is why they want to compromise with Iran,” Younesi said.

The criticism of Obama echoes comments made recently by other world leaders and even former members of the president’s own staff, such as Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

Younesi, a former minister of intelligence in the country, also had some harsh comments about U.S. conservatives and the state of Israel.

“Conservatives are war mongers, they cannot tolerate powers like Iran,” he said. “If conservatives were in power they would go to war with us because they follow Israel and they want to portray Iran as the main threat and not ISIS.”

Younesi took a more conciliatory view towards U.S. Democrats, who he praised for viewing Iran as “no threat.”

“We [the Islamic Republic] have to use this opportunity [of Democrats being in power in the U.S.], because if this opportunity is lost, in future we may not have such an opportunity again,” Younesi said.

The candid comments by Rouhani’s right-hand-man could provide a window into the regime’s mindset as nuclear talks wind to a close.

The Obama administration has maintained for months that it will not permit Congress to have final say over the deal, which many worry will permit Iran to continue enriching uranium, the key component in a nuclear weapon.

About the potential for a nuclear deal, Youseni said, “I am not optimistic so much, but the two sides are willing to reach results,” according to an official translation posted online by Fars News.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have adopted a much more pessimistic view of Iran’s negotiating tactics, which many on the Hill maintain are meant to stall for time as Tehran completes its nuclear weapon.

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R., Fla.), for instance, wrote a letter to the White House this week to tell Obama his desire to skirt Congress is unacceptable.

“Congress cannot and will not sit idly by if the Administration intends on taking unilateral action to provide sanctions relief to Iran for a nuclear deal we perceive to be weak and dangerous for our national security, the security of the region, and poses a threat to the U.S. and our ally, the democratic Jewish State of Israel,” Ros-Lehtinen wrote.

“If the Administration opts to act in a manner that directly contradicts Congress’ intent, then Congress must take all necessary measures to either reverse the executive, unilateral action, or to strengthen and enhance current sanctions law,” she told the president.

Soul Crusher

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A credibility gap


 



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Fred Hiatt
 
By Fred Hiatt Editorial page editor February 22 
 



Can President Obama sell an Iran deal at home?

If his negotiators strike an agreement next month, we already know that it will be far from ideal: Rather than eradicating Iran’s nuclear-weapons potential, as once was hoped, a pact would seek to control Iran’s activities for some limited number of years.


Fred Hiatt is the editorial page editor of The Post. He writes editorials for the newspaper and a biweekly column that appears on Mondays. He also contributes to the PostPartisan blog. View Archive
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Such a deal might be defensible on the grounds that it is better than any alternative, given that most experts believe a military “solution” would be at best temporary and possibly counterproductive.

But making that kind of lesser-evil defense would be challenging in any circumstances. Three conditions will make it particularly hard for Obama to persuade Congress and the nation to accept his assurances in this case: the suspicious, poisonous partisanship of the moment here, with Israeli politics mixed in; worries that he wants a deal too much; and the record of his past assurances.

The partisanship needs no explanation, but the record of foreign-policy assurances is worth recalling:


●In 2011, when he decided to pull all U.S. troops out of Iraq, Obama belittled worries that instability might result. Iraq and the United States would maintain “a strong and enduring partnership,” Obama said. Iraq would be “stable, secure and self-reliant,” and Iraqis would build a future “worthy of their history as a cradle of civilization.”

Today Iraq is in deep trouble, with a murderous “caliphate” occupying much of its territory and predatory Shiite militia roaming through much of the rest.

●That same year, Obama touted his bombing campaign in Libya as a model of U.S. intervention and promised, “That’s not to say that our work is complete. In addition to our NATO responsibilities, we will work with the international community to provide assistance to the people of Libya.”

The United States and its NATO allies promptly abandoned Libya, which today is in the grip of civil war, with rival governments in the east and west and Islamist terrorists in between.

●Obama also said then, “Some nations may be able to turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries. The United States of America is different. And as president, I refused to wait for the images of slaughter and mass graves before taking action.”

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That was before Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad’s barrel bombs, systematic and well-documented prison torture and other depredations of civil war killed 200,000 of his compatriots , and drove millions more from their homes.

●In August 2011, Obama declared that Assad must “step aside.” In a background briefing a senior White House official added, “We are certain Assad is on the way out.” In August 2013 came Obama’s statement that “the worst chemical attack of the 21st century . . . must be confronted. . . . I have decided that the United States should take military action against Syrian regime targets.”


No military action was taken, and Assad remains in power.

●In September, the president said his strategy for defeating the Islamic State “is one that we have successfully pursued in Yemen and Somalia for years.” Shortly thereafter, an Iran-backed rebellion deposed Yemen’s pro-U.S. government, forcing the United States to abandon its embassy and much of its anti-terror operation.

●Just last month, in the State of the Union address, Obama presented his Ukraine policy as a triumph of “American strength and diplomacy.

“We’re upholding the principle that bigger nations can’t bully the small by opposing Russian aggression and supporting Ukraine’s democracy,” he said.

Since then Russian forces have extended their incursion into Ukraine, now controlling nearly one-fifth of its territory. Russia’s economy is hurting, but Ukraine’s is in far worse shape.

This litany of unfulfilled assurances is less a case of Nixonian deception than a product of wishful thinking and stubborn adherence to policies after they have failed. But inevitably it will affect how people hear Obama’s promises on Iran, as will his overall foreign policy record.

That record includes successes, such as the killing of Osama bin Laden, warming ties with India and a potentially groundbreaking agreement with China on climate change. By most measures, though, the world has not become safer during Obama’s tenure. Islamist extremists are stronger than ever; democracy is in retreat around the globe; relations with Russia and North Korea have worsened; allies are questioning U.S. steadfastness.

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Openings as well as problems can appear unexpectedly in foreign affairs, but the coming two years offer only two obvious opportunities for Obama to burnish this legacy: trade deals with Europe and with Pacific nations, and a nuclear agreement with Iran. That limited field fuels worries that administration negotiators will accept the kind of deal that results from wanting it too badly.

Whatever its contours, Obama would be making a big mistake to try to implement such a momentous pact, as administration officials have suggested he might, without congressional buy-in. But it’s not surprising that he would be tempted to try.

headhuntersix

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Nope ...no serious debate....more worried about Bill Oreily and other bullshit while the world burns.
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James

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