In case you missed it, the WPost was pro-Obama in 2008 and 2012
and is reliably pro-Democratic Party generally.
 
By implication the article also says that neo-isolationist views found  on
the political Right also flunk, badly.
 
BR
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
W Post
 
June 30, 2014 at 8:05 PM
 
 
Obama’s smaller vision of U.S. interests flunks its first test in  Iraq

 
 
 
_Michael  Gerson_ (http://www.washingtonpost.com/pb/michael-gerson) 
The summary moment of Barack Obama’s foreign policy came  in August 2013 
during a consequential stroll.
 
Walking on the South Lawn of the White House with his  chief of staff, 
Obama effectively canceled airstrikes against the Syrian regime,  which had 
used 
chemical weapons on civilians in defiance of an American “_red  line_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/obama-issues-syria-red-line
-warning-on-chemical-weapons/2012/08/20/ba5d26ec-eaf7-11e1-b811-09036bcb182b
_story.html) .” With a deference usually unexpressed on domestic matters, 
Obama  decided to request _congressional  permission for the use of force_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/obama-set-to-speak-on-sy
ria-in-rose-garden/2013/08/31/65aea210-125b-11e3-85b6-d27422650fd5_story.htm
l)  — raising a hurdle he seemed reluctant to  clear. On the verge of 
(predictable) congressional defeat, he accepted a  face-saving deal, brokered 
by 
Russia, which protected the Bashar al-Assad regime  in exchange for its 
_surrender  of chemical weapons_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/us-russia-reach-agreement-on-seizure-of-syrian-chemical-weapons-arsenal/2013/09/14/69e3
9b5c-1d36-11e3-8685-5021e0c41964_story.html) . 
 
 
“_My  central goal throughout this process_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/news/obama-i-understand-american-people-arent-with-me-on-syria-strike/)
  has not 
been to embroil ourselves in a  civil war,” argued Obama, adding in a separate 
interview, “_My  narrow concern right now_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/09/09/transcript-president-obama-interview-with-fox-news-chris-wallace/
)  is making sure that Assad does not use these  chemical weapons again.”
 
 
On this foreign policy theory, challenges can be managed by narrowing them. 
 Pick the solvable problem that relates most directly to U.S. interests — 
in this  case, chemical weapons — without becoming embroiled in broader 
conflicts. And a  message was duly sent to friends in the region (the Gulf 
states, Jordan, the  Free Syrian Army): Apart from U.S. humanitarian 
assistance, 
they were on their  own.
 
 
Foreign policy theories seldom get so quickly and  thoroughly tested. A 
narrowed definition of American interests did not actually  serve American 
interests. The death, suffering and chaos of Syria have spilled  out across the 
region, as many predicted. Syria’s civil war fed Sunni militancy,  which 
took advantage of Sunni grievances within Iraq. Lebanon and Jordan are  
vulnerable to the same sectarian brushfire. 
 
In this case, “somebody else’s civil war” has produced complex layers of  
global threat. The caliphate that Sunni radicals abortively declared in Iraq 
in  2005 has reemerged, strengthened by freed prisoners, seized weapons and 
[1/2  billion] hard currency. The 
power struggle between the brutal leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and  
Syria, _Abu  Bakr al-Baghdadi_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/06/11/how-isis-leader-abu-bakr-al-baghdadi-became-the-worlds-most-
powerful-jihadi-leader/) , and _al-Qaeda’s  Ayman al-Zawahiri_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/david-ignatius-the-return-of-al-qaeda/2014/06/10/
4a82eaaa-f0ea-11e3-bf76-447a5df6411f_story.html)  is not good news. What 
better way to gain street cred in  the global jihadist movement than another 
attack on the U.S. homeland? U.S. and  European officials have compiled a 
list of thousands of people who might be  headed across the Turkish border to 
join radical groups or returning from the  fight. Those holding European 
passports would have an easier time entering the  United States. As usual, the 
impressive (and sometimes derided) professionals  fighting terrorism must be 
right 100 percent of the time. 
 
After a swift, brutal and profitable terrorist advance,  the United States 
is arguably worse off — more vulnerable, more threatened —  than before 
9/11. The disorders of the Middle East are not ignorable. They can  gather in 
strength, cross borders, gain new capabilities and ambitions, and  threaten 
our citizens. This only sounds alarmist to those with fading memories  of 
falling towers. 
 
The Obama administration now is engaged in a major course  correction: 
proposing _half  a billion dollars in aid to the Syrian rebels_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/obama-backs-us-military-training-for-s
yrian-rebels/2014/06/26/ead59104-fd62-11e3-932c-0a55b81f48ce_story.html) , 
sending _hundreds  of military advisers to help stiffen Iraqi resistance_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/obama-announces-he-is-se
nding-up-to-300-troops-back-to-iraq-as-advisers/2014/06/19/a15f9628-f7c2-11e
3-8aa9-dad2ec039789_story.html) , encouraging the  creation of a unity 
government with greater legitimacy, discouraging Iran and  the Gulf states from 
turning Iraq into another endless proxy war. This is all  welcome. It also 
has some unavoidable implications: Interests can’t be drawn  narrowly just to 
make them appear more manageable. Threats are best opposed  before they 
fully emerge. U.S. leadership is irreplaceable in containing global  aggression.
 
Obama is now likely to face some very difficult choices,  even if an Iraqi 
unity government takes shape. There is little doubt that delay  has weakened 
America’s overall position (and the position of our friends in the  
region). Even the aggressive counterterrorism tactics conducted in Iraq circa  
2007 
— think _Gen.  Stanley A. McChrystal and the Joint Special Operations 
Command_ (http://www.brookings.edu/events/2013/01/28-mcchrystal-zarqawi)  — won’
t be  able to retake lost territory. A successful effort might more closely 
resemble  the initial stage of the Afghan war in 2001, in which U.S. Special 
Operations  and intelligence forces married up ground-based fighters (the 
Northern Alliance  and Hamid Karzai’s forces), supported by airstrikes. 
 
Pursuing the Iraqi equivalent would require the  president to do something 
he hasn’t done much in an international context.  Instead of checking a box —
 announcing a minor input, sufficient to avoid  culpability — he will need 
to set out some national goals. If these include (as  they seem to) a 
united, federated Iraq and the defeat of ISIS, Obama must make  these 
objectives 
clear to Americans, do what is necessary to achieve them — and  avoid a walk 
on the South Lawn.  
----------------------------- 
FAT CHANCE ! 
His heart isn't in it, he is grossly ignorant of even the fundamentals of  
Islam or Mid East culture, his head can't wrap around it, and he can't make  
sense of any of it because he is a Leftist ideologue who cannot conceive 
that  something other than some version of Marxism is desired by the 
multitudes. In  5-1/2 years he has proven himself to be every bit as much an  
incompetent as Carter or George W Bush. 
BR comment 

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