*World Beat*
by JOHN FEFFER | Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Vol. 5, No. 28

Obama: Faking Right?

President Obama, who played on a high school team that claimed a state
championship, knows basketball. He famously sank a three-pointer during a
2008 campaign visit to U.S. troops in Kuwait. He continues to play at the
White House, where he has installed a basketball court on the South Lawn.
And he has imported some of his basketball moves into the policy world. With
his stimulus package and health care reform, the president faked right and
feinted left before driving down the center of the court for a lay-up. He
scored his points, but his critics called foul.

Now, on immigration reform, the president is again faking right. To
determine his ultimate destination, don't be fooled by what the president
does with his mouth. Pay close attention to his hands to figure out which
way he'll move.

In its head fake to the right on immigration, the Obama administration
expects to deport 400,000 undocumented people this year, 10 percent more
than the 2008 total of the Bush administration. More critically, the
government has quadrupled the number of audits conducted on firms to make
sure that they're not hiring undocumented workers.

The administration has tried to spin these efforts to sound more appealing.
The government argues that it's targeting people who commit crimes and will
try not to separate families. But immigration advocates contend that the
reality is very different, as zealous local officials and police apply a
full-court press. These advocates recently brought their message to the
White House, where they
say<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=06WoWMQOmk2%2Ffhaczi%2FGNcAPqteRbyqp>
that
the president "was surprised by evidence that thousands of ordinary illegal
immigrants continue to be targeted and deported, often for minor violations,
despite the official focus on criminals."

The right wing is certainly making enough noise to force the president to
fake right. Illegal immigrants are pouring into the country, the Big Wall
supporters claim. The border areas have turned into war zones, and the
English-only movement worries that a future president will deliver a State
of the Union speech in Spanish. But it's not just Latinos that kindle the
racism of the uber-patriots. The organization Americans for Immigration
Control goes out of its way to
praise<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=chytRdqQRdW8CS5DM2Z8u8APqteRbyqp>
the
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882: "Today, the violent criminal activities of
the Chinese Tong gangs, the widespread criminal activities of Chinese alien
and drug smugglers, and the espionage at the Los Alamos Research Labs proves
the wisdom of our ancestors." Say what?

Wenho Lee, the Los Alamos physicist accused (and ultimately acquitted) of
selling top secrets to a foreign country, received over a million bucks in
compensation plus a judicial apology for government misconduct in its legal
suit. And it's not the FBI that's worried about the wave of Chinese
immigrants, but America's top universities that are overwhelmed by
applications from those overachieving Tong members and drug smugglers.

The arguments made against Latino immigrants are just as absurd. In fact,
illegal immigration numbers are down, largely as a result of economic crisis
and fewer jobs available in *el Norte*. As for the wave of violence sweeping
through the Southwest, it's just not happening. "Violent crime, though
rising in Mexico, has fallen on this side of the border: in Southwestern
border counties it has dropped more than 30 percent in the past two
decades," 
writes<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=EP7q1%2BhElY6AhMgK%2B9TIrMAPqteRbyqp>William
Finnegan in *The New Yorker*. "According to FBI statistics, the four safest
big cities in the United States -- San Diego, Phoenix, El Paso, and Austin
-- are all in border states."

The right wing is by no means unified on this issue. Indeed, several
conservative evangelical leaders have supported the need for immigration
reform. They base this support in scripture -- love thy neighbor, etc. --
but demography is really the driving factor. By opposing immigration, the
church would be cutting off its nose to spite its base. "My message to
Republican leaders," Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, president of the evangelical
National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference,
told<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=LcweD146VuHoi1c%2Fa4otKLVrK4p8ClVz>
 *The New York Times*, "is if you're anti-immigration reform, you're
anti-Latino, and if you're anti-Latino, you are anti-Christian church in
America, and you are anti-evangelical."

You don't have to be an evangelical Christian to realize that immigration
reform is in U.S. self-interest. According to a
report<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=e1f2o%2ForqW8cnLWMmV0IPcAPqteRbyqp>
earlier
this year from the Campaign for American Progress and the American
Immigration Council, an amnesty program affecting the more than 11 million
undocumented people in the United States would add $1.5 trillion to the GDP
over a decade. That's a lot more folks generating government revenue and
keeping U.S. businesses afloat.

With a bumper sticker like "It's good for God and country!" immigration
should be an easy win for the administration. If only politics were so
sensible.

Obama has pledged to remake the U.S. relationship with the global community.
Such global engagement begins at home since we are, increasingly, the world.
I'm not happy with the president's feints to the right in an attempt to
please the anti-immigrant lobby: the law-and-order rhetoric, the
support<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=LYg70BktUp6DEUHKPiM2oMAPqteRbyqp>
of
free-trade agreements that ultimately push people into leaving their
countries. But if Obama manages to drive to the basket -- and win amnesty
for millions of hard-working *de facto* Americans -- I'll cheer the victory.
We just have to make sure that the president doesn't fool us all by faking
right and dribbling right. It's our responsibility to close down that lane
and make sure he drives to the left.

Driving Right

When it comes to promoting counterinsurgency, the Obama administration has
been driving right into disaster. "Counterinsurgency has seized the high
ground in the Pentagon and the halls of Washington, and there are other
places in the world where it is being deployed, from the jungles of Columbia
to the dry lands that border the Sahara," writes FPIF columnist Conn
Hallinan in The Great Myth:
Counterinsurgency<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=XLQzi6hHMqydwuoIiniFZMAPqteRbyqp>.
"If the COIN doctrine is not challenged, people in the United States may
well find themselves debating its merits in places like Somalia, Yemen, or
Mauritania." Hallinan details the historic failures of COIN, and why it will
fail just as surely in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The administration is also driving to the right on climate change. Obama
recently sent his climate czar Todd Stern on a tour of Latin America. Alas,
the trip was not designed to gather innovative suggestions from leaders and
thinkers in the region.

"Stern's South American tour -- only three weeks before the next UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiating session in Bonn
-- shows the increasingly important role of Latin American nations in
reaching a climate deal," writes FPIF analyst Janet Redman in Climate Change
Swing 
States<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=xbeqobQnTVjkCdV06jCz48APqteRbyqp>.
"His itinerary offered a window into how the United States is using the
climate debate as part of a larger agenda to secure political influence,
trade, and access to resources in the hemisphere."

Remapping the Middle East

The latest "axis of evil" to emerge from the fevered minds of the "vast
right-wing conspiracy" of pundits, bloggers, and TV apparatchiks is the trio
of Iran, Syria, and Turkey.

Three is not a charm in this case, argues FPIF contributor Richard Javad
Heydarian in An Alliance of
Convenience<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=BH46tOw1LnJFASPQHIDYncAPqteRbyqp>.
Indeed, the three countries are pursuing their own national interests, often
in competition or direct conflict with each other. "In an effort to avoid
losing the limelight to Turkey, Iran dispatched its own flotilla to Gaza,"
writes Heydarian. "On the other hand, Syria, squeezed between two bigger
powers and right next to Israel, is most interested in defending its
territories, regaining its lands in the Golan Heights, and carving out a
place among the region's main powers. There is no assurance on how Turkey
and Iran would effectively assist Syria in achieving its main political
goals."

Finally, FPIF contributor Alec Dubro uses Google Earth to uncover a driving
factor often overlooked in Israel's controversial settlements in the
occupied territories: urban sprawl around Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. "Israel's
megalopolis is growing," he writes in Armed
Sprawl<http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=7TtrR%2FiIJLXe7oLYIWEzFsAPqteRbyqp>.
"And that growth includes the settlements in the West Bank. Ignore, for the
moment, the human story of the settlements. What you see from the air is
scattered suburban development. The so-called outposts are cheaper buildings
and mobile homes. This sprawl is at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. If we start thinking of the conflict as a problem of urban
development, perhaps we can find a different set of solutions to the
longstanding impasse."

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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