Commentary
 
 
We Have to Talk About Obama’s  Ignorance
 
_Seth Mandel_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/author/smandelcommentarymagazinecom/)  | 
_@SethAMandel_ (http://twitter.com/SethAMandel)  02.11.2015
 
 
In the wake of the controversy over President Obama’s offensive labeling of 
 anti-Semitic violence as “random,” it became clear that regardless of 
whether he  chose his words carefully, he certainly chose his audience 
carefully. He was not  challenged by his interviewer at Vox for his undeniably 
false 
characterization  of the Paris attacks. And now, having given an interview 
to BuzzFeed’s Ben  Smith, he has continued exposing his own ignorance in the 
hope that he would  continue not to be called on it by his interviewers. He 
was in luck yet  again. 
BuzzFeed has posted the _transcript_ 
(http://www.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeednews/full-transcript-of-buzzfeed-news-interview-with-president#.wq9ELjAD7)
  of 
the interview, and when the  subject turns to Russia, Obama said this: 
You know, I don’t want to psychoanalyze Mr. Putin. I will say that he has a 
 foot very much in the Soviet past. That’s how he came of age. He ran the 
KGB.  Those were his formative experiences. So I think he looks at problems 
through  this Cold War lens, and, as a consequence, I think he’s missed some  
opportunities for Russia to diversify its economy, to strengthen its  
relationship with its neighbors, to represent something different than the old  
Soviet-style aggression. You know, I continue to hold out the prospect of  
Russia taking a diplomatic offering from what they’ve done in Ukraine. I  
think, to their credit, they’ve been able to compartmentalize and continue to  
work with us on issues like Iran’s nuclear program.
As people pointed out immediately, Obama is wrong about Putin and the KGB.  
Ben Judah, a journalist who recently wrote a book on Putin’s Russia, 
_responded_ (https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/565501696684859394) : “The 
interesting and informative  thing about Obama’s view on Putin is how 
uninsightful 
and uniformed it is.” 
Putin ran the FSB–the successor agency to the KGB–and the difference 
matters.  But what also matters is the emerging pattern for Obama’s view of the 
world: he  has no idea what he’s talking about. The president, as Sam Cooke 
sang, don’t  know much about history. And it’s evident in each major area of 
conflict the  president seeks to solve and ends up only exacerbating. 
It is not my intention to run down a list of all Obama’s flubs. Everybody  
makes mistakes, and any politician whose words are as scrutinized as the  
president’s is going to have their share of slip-ups. Yes, Obama is a clumsy  
public speaker; but that’s not the problem, nor is it worth spending much 
time  on. 
The problem is that Obama tends to make mistakes that stem from a worldview 
 often at odds with reality. Russia is a good example. Does it matter that 
Obama  doesn’t know the basics of Vladimir Putin’s biography and the 
transition of  post-Soviet state security? Yes, it does, because Obama’s habit 
of 
misreading  Putin has been at the center of his administration’s failed 
Russia policy. And  it matters with regard not only to Russia but to his 
broader 
foreign policy  because Obama has a habit of not listening to anyone not 
named Jarrett. Obama  appointed among the most qualified American ambassadors 
ever to represent the  U.S. abroad in sending Michael McFaul to Moscow. But 
with or without McFaul,  Obama let his own naïveté guide him. 
Obama has also run into some trouble with history in the Middle East, where 
 history is both exceedingly important and practically weaponized. The 
legitimacy  of the Jewish state is of particular relevance to the conflict. So 
Obama was  criticized widely for undermining that legitimacy in his famous 
2009 Cairo  speech, _puzzling_ 
(http://forward.com/articles/107574/debating-again-the-founding-of-israel/)  
even Israel’s strident leftists.  The speech 
was harder to defend than either his remarks to BuzzFeed or Vox  because such 
speeches are not off the cuff; they are carefully scrutinized by  the 
administration. When Obama could say exactly what he meant to say, in other  
words, this is what he chose to say. 
It wasn’t the only time Obama revealed his ignorance of the Middle East and 
 especially Israeli history, of course. And that ignorance has had 
consequences.  Obama has learned nothing from the history of the 
Israeli-Palestinian 
conflict,  a fact which was reflected quite clearly in his disastrous 
mishandling of the  negotiations and their bloody aftermath. He didn’t 
understand 
Palestinian  intentions, Israeli political reality, or the lessons from 
when the U.S. has  played a beneficial role in the conflict in the past. The 
president can simply  move on, but Israelis and Palestinians have to pay the 
price for his learning  curve. 
And the Vox errors echo throughout the president’s mishandling of the other 
 great security challenge: Islamic terrorism. Such terrorism has 
contributed a  great deal to the undoing of many of the gains in Iraq and the 
international  state system. _Here_ 
(https://twitter.com/ianbremmer/status/562955216916865025) , for example, is a 
map tweeted out  last week by Ian Bremmer, 
which shows, in his words, “Statelessness overlapping  with radical Islam.” 
We can certainly argue over the chicken-or-egg quality to  such an overlap, 
but the threat radical Islamic violence poses to global order  is fairly 
obvious. 
Yet it’s not just the history of Islam and of anti-Semitism that the  
president gets wrong when trying to spin away the threat of Islamist terror. He 
 
also created a firestorm with his faux history of the Crusades in order to 
draw  a false moral equivalence that only obscures the threat. 
In other words, it’s a comprehensive historical ignorance. And on matters 
of  great significance–the major world religions, the Middle East, Russia. 
And the  president’s unwillingness to grasp the past certainly gives reason 
for concern  with Iran as well–a country whose government has used the façade 
of negotiations  to its own anti-American ends for long enough to see the 
pattern. 
They’re not just minor gaffes or verbal blunders. They serve as a window 
into  the mind of a president who acts as if a history of the world before 
yesterday  could fit on a postcard. We talk a lot about the defects of the 
president’s  ideology, but not about his ignorance. The two are related, but 
the 
latter is  lately the one causing a disproportionate amount of  damage.

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