(http://www.usnews.com/) 
Saturday, June 19, 2010
    *   Mort Zuckerman: World Sees Obama as Incompetent and  Amateur

 
 
The president is well-intentioned but can't walk  the walk on the world 
stage
By _Mortimer B. Zuckerman_ 
(http://www.usnews.com/Topics/tag/Author/m/mortimer_zuckerman/index.html)  
Posted June 18, 2010
 
President Obama came into office as the heir to a great foreign policy 
legacy  enjoyed by every recent U.S. president. Why? Because the United States 
stands on  top of the power ladder, not necessarily as the dominant power, 
but certainly as  the leading one. As such we are the sole nation capable of 
exercising global  leadership on a whole range of international issues from 
security, trade, and  climate to counterterrorism. We also benefit from the 
fact that most countries  distrust the United States far less than they 
distrust one another, so we  uniquely have the power to build coalitions. As a 
result, most of the world  still looks to Washington for help in their region 
and protection against  potential regional threats.  
Yet, the Iraq war lingers; Afghanistan continues to be immersed in an 
endless  cycle of tribalism, corruption, and Islamist resurgence; Guantánamo 
remains  open; Iran sees how North Korea toys with Obama and continues its 
programs to  develop nuclear weapons and missiles; Cuba spurns America's offers 
of a greater  opening; and the Palestinians and Israelis find that it is U.S. 
policy positions  that defer serious negotiations, the direct opposite of 
what the Obama  administration hoped for. 
The reviews of Obama's performance have been disappointing. He has seemed  
uncomfortable in the role of leading other nations, and often seems to 
suggest  there is nothing special about America's role in the world. The global 
community  was puzzled over the pictures of Obama bowing to some of the 
world's leaders and  surprised by his gratuitous criticisms of and apologies 
for 
America's foreign  policy under the previous administration of George W. 
Bush. One Middle East  authority, Fouad Ajami, pointed out that Obama seems 
unaware that it is bad form  and even a great moral lapse to speak ill of one's 
own tribe while in the lands  of others. 
Even in Britain, for decades our closest ally, the talk in the  press—
supported by polls—is about the end of the "special relationship" with  
America. 
French President Nicolas Sarkozy openly criticized Obama for months,  
including a direct attack on his policies at the United Nations. Sarkozy cited  
the need to recognize the real world, not the virtual world, a clear reference 
 to Obama's speech on nuclear weapons. When the French president is seen as 
 tougher than the American president, you have to know that something is 
awry.  Vladimir Putin of Russia has publicly scorned a number of Obama's 
visions.  Relations with the Chinese leadership got off to a bad start with the 
 
president's poorly-organized visit to China, where his hosts treated him  
disdainfully and prevented him from speaking to a national television audience 
 of the Chinese people. The Chinese behavior was unprecedented when 
compared to  visits by other U.S. presidents. 
Obama's policy on Afghanistan—supporting a surge in troops, but setting a  
date next year when they will begin to withdraw—not only gave a mixed 
signal,  but provided an incentive for the Taliban just to wait us out. The 
withdrawal  part of the policy was meant to satisfy a domestic constituency, 
but 
succeeded  in upsetting all of our allies in the region. Further anxiety was 
provoked by  Obama's severe public criticism of Afghan President Hamid 
Karzai and his coterie  of family and friends for their lackluster leadership, 
followed by a reversal of  sorts regarding the same leaders. 
Obama clearly wishes to do good and means well. But he is one of those 
people  who believe that the world was born with the word and exists by means 
of 
 persuasion, such that there is no person or country that you cannot, by 
means of  logical and moral argument, bring around to your side. He speaks as 
a teacher,  as someone imparting values and generalities appropriate for a 
Sunday morning  sermon, not as a tough-minded leader. He urges that things 
"must be done" and  "should be done" and that "it is time" to do them. As the 
former president of  the Council on Foreign Relations, Les Gelb, put it, 
there is "the impression  that Obama might confuse speeches with policy." 
Another journalist put it  differently when he described Obama as an "NPR 
[National Public Radio] president  who gives wonderful speeches." In other 
words, 
he talks the talk but doesn't  know how to walk the walk. The Obama 
presidency has so far been characterized by  a well-intentioned but excessive 
belief 
in the power of rhetoric with too little  appreciation of reality and 
loyalty. 
In his Cairo speech about America and the Muslim world, Obama managed to 
sway  Arab public opinion but was unable to budge any Arab leader. Even the 
king of  Saudi Arabia, a country that depends on America for its survival, 
reacted with  disappointment and dismay. Obama's meeting with the king was 
widely described as  a disaster. This is but one example of an absence of the 
personal chemistry that  characterized the relationships that Presidents 
Clinton and Bush had with world  leaders. This is a serious matter because 
foreign policy entails an  understanding of the personal and political 
circumstances of the leaders as well  as the cultural and historical factors of 
the 
countries we deal with. 
Les Gelb wrote of Obama, "He is so self-confident that he believes he can  
make decisions on the most complicated of issues after only hours of  
discussion." Strategic decisions go well beyond being smart, which Obama  
certainly is. They must be based on experience that discerns what works, what  
doesn't—and why. This requires experienced staffing, which Obama and his top  
appointees simply do not seem to have. Or as one Middle East commentator put 
it,  "There are always two chess games going on. One is on the top of the 
table, the  other is below the table. The latter is the one that counts, but 
the 
Americans  don't know how to play that game." 
Recent U.S. attempts to introduce more meaningful sanctions against Iran  
produced a U.N. resolution that is way less than the "crippling" sanctions 
the  administration promised. The United States even failed to achieve the 
political  benefit of a unanimous Security Council vote. Turkey, the Muslim 
anchor of NATO  for almost 60 years, and Brazil, our largest ally in Latin 
America, voted  against our resolution. Could it be that these long-standing 
U.S. allies, who  gave cover to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Iran's nuclear 
ambitions, have decided  that there is no cost in lining up with America's most 
serious enemies and no  gain in lining up with this administration? 
The end result is that a critical mass of influential people in world 
affairs  who once held high hopes for the president have begun to wonder 
whether 
they  misjudged the man. They are no longer dazzled by his rock star 
personality and  there is a sense that there is something amateurish and even 
incompetent about  how Obama is managing U.S. power. For example, Obama has 
asserted that America  is not at war with the Muslim world. The problem is that 
parts of the Muslim  world are at war with America and the West. Obama feels, 
fairly enough, that  America must be contrite in its dealings with the 
Muslim world. But he has  failed to address the religious intolerance, failing 
economies, tribalism, and  gender apartheid that together contribute to 
jihadist extremism. This was  startling and clear when he chose not to publicly 
support the Iranians who went  to the streets in opposition to their 
oppressive government, based on a judgment  that our support might be 
counterproductive. Yet, he reaches out instead to the  likes of Bashar Assad of 
Syria, 
Iran's agent in the Arab world, sending our  ambassador back to Syria even as 
it continues to rearm Hezbollah in Lebanon and  expands its role in the 
Iran-Hezbollah-Hamas alliance. 
The underlying issue is that the Arab world has different estimates on how 
to  deal with an aggressive, expansionist Iran. The Arabs believe you do not 
deal  with Iran with the open hand of a handshake but with the clenched 
fist of power.  Arab leaders fear an Iran proceeding full steam with its 
nuclear weapons program  on top of its programs to develop intermediate-range 
ballistic missiles. All the  while centrifuges keep spinning in Iran, and Arab 
leaders ask whether Iran will  be emboldened by what they interpret as 
American weakness and faltering  willpower. They did not see Obama or his 
administration as understanding the  region, where naiveté is interpreted as a 
weakness of character, as amateurism,  and as proof of the absence of the tough 
stuff of which leaders are made.  (That's why many Arab leaders were appalled 
at the decision to have a civilian  trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in New 
York. After 9/11, many of them had  engaged in secret counterterrorism 
activities under the umbrella of an American  promise that these activities 
would 
never be made public; now they feared that  this would be the exact 
consequence of an open trial.) 
America right now appears to be unreliable to traditional friends, 
compliant  to rivals, and weak to enemies. One renowned Asian leader stated 
recently 
at a  private dinner in the United States, "We in Asia are convinced that 
Obama is not  strong enough to confront his opponents, but we fear that he is 
not strong  enough to support his friends." 
The United States for 60 years has met its responsibilities as the leader 
and  the defender of the democracies of the free world. We have policed the 
sea  lanes, protected the air and space domains, countered terrorism, 
responded to  genocide, and been the bulwark against rogue states engaging in 
aggression. The  world now senses, in the context of the erosion of America's 
economic power and  the pressures of our budget deficits, that we will compress 
our commitments. But  the world needs the vision, idealism, and strong 
leadership that America brings  to international affairs. This can be done and 
must be done. But we are the only  ones who can do it.
 





 
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