Of course there’s no proof he’s even American…

 

Certainly nothing “American personified”!

 

B

 

 

 

[This president is gnawing away at our greatness from within. It will hard 
enough to repair his damage if we replace the man in 2012, and virtually 
impossible if we don’t. df]

 

 

NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE

 

April 26, 2011 

 

 
<http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/265586/embarrassed-superpower-rich-lowry>
 The Embarrassed Superpower

 

President Obama oversees a lengthening list of national humiliations. ...[He] 
seems to want to leave the position of the leader of the free world vacant 
deliberately, to prove a point about our limits and our deference to others.

 

By Rich Lowry 

 

When Barack Obama said he’d conduct our affairs with more humility, little did 
we know he meant he’d humiliate us.

 

He is allowing a vicious little tin-pot dictator to fight us to a standstill in 
Libya without bestirring himself to do much of anything about it. His latest 
initiative is to fly two unmanned drones over Libya to send a signal to Moammar 
Qaddafi about our seriousness. He must have thought sending three unmanned 
drones — strong letter to follow — would have been unduly harsh.

 

Obama launched the war with an unconditional demand that Qaddafi’s forces leave 
Ajdabiya, Misrata, and Zawiya. After an initial American barrage, Obama 
outsourced the war to Britain and France, regardless of their ability to make 
good on his own demands. In an interview the other day, the president noted 
that the war was becoming a stalemate on the ground, as if he were an analyst 
at the Council on Foreign Relations commenting on a matter with which he had no 
direct connection.

 

In the worst days of American inaction during the Balkan wars of the 1990s, 
French president Jacques Chirac said, “The position of the leader of the free 
world is vacant.” Pres. Bill Clinton eventually got over his indecision and 
bombed the Serbs. President Obama seems to want to leave the position of the 
leader of the free world vacant deliberately, to prove a point about our limits 
and our deference to others. He’s holding an ongoing world seminar on the 
dispensability of the formerly indispensable nation.

 

Obama’s America is a country whose commander-in-chief makes highly conditional 
suggestions in the guise of unconditional demands, whose allies can’t count on 
it, whose interests and values are negotiable. It is the embarrassed 
superpower, wishing away its unparalleled influence and seeking to hide behind 
euphemism and multilateral fictions. (It’s not “a war” in Libya, and besides 
it’s NATO, not us, fighting to a draw.)

 

When protests broke out in Syria, a country run by an Assad family mafia that 
has facilitated the killing of American soldiers in Iraq, Obama could barely 
summon a harshly negative statement when the regime began shooting people. 
Elsewhere in the Middle East, the so-called Arab Spring is a decidedly 
ambiguous affair. It is toppling flawed U.S. allies, with no guarantee anything 
better will replace them. In Syria, it’s much simpler: A ruthless anti-American 
regime seeks its survival by firing live ammunition at funeral-goers.

 

For the realist, the unrest presented the opportunity to give an enemy of the 
United States a good, hard shove. For the idealist, it presented the 
opportunity to stand up for what’s right. The Obama administration initially 
did neither. Softheaded and hardhearted, the administration mumbled bromides 
about how it sure hoped Bashar al-Assad would begin reforming soon. Must 
America be so naïve about its enemies and so shamefaced about its values?

 

Under Obama, we’re making a practice of accumulating national embarrassments. 
The dollar is in decline. The state of the nation’s fiscal house is so shoddy 
that Standard & Poor’s warns that a downgrade in our AAA rating may be in the 
offing. Saudi Arabia is furious at us and is not playing ball on oil 
production. We have to depend on foreign creditors to keep operating our 
government, $14 trillion in the red. We endure lectures from Communist China 
about sound finance. 

 

For his sophisticated defenders, Obama is ushering in the long-overdue 
post-American world. For the rest of the public, for whom national pride still 
means something, it may feel like the 1970s again, when a self-impressed 
Democratic president last tried to get us to accept our supposedly inevitable 
diminishment. Jimmy Carter made his era synonymous with American weakness and 
decline.

 

Carter had the failed Iranian hostage rescue attempt (he called it “an 
incomplete success”) to put an exclamation point on his fecklessness and 
America’s stumbles. Obama has Libya, a perfect expression of his ambiguous 
leadership. At this rate, he’ll give us much to be humble about.

 

— Rich Lowry is editor of National Review

 

 

Dan Friedman
NYC



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