The Federalist
Ben Rhodes Proves Obama Is About Story-Telling, Not  Accomplishments
The Iran deal was always going to happen, because  President Obama’s vision 
of his foreign policy legacy required it. He just  waited for the right 
narrative to come along and give him  cover.

 
 
M. G. Oprea
 
May 10, 2016
 
 
 
 
Over the weekend, New York Times Magazine ran a _profile  of Ben Rhodes_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/08/magazine/the-aspiring-novelist-who-became-ob
amas-foreign-policy-guru.html?_r=0) , President Obama’s deputy national 
security adviser for  strategic communications. Amidst the biographical details 
about his life and  work came the revelation from Rhodes himself that the 
Iran deal was misleadingly  framed to deceive the American people into 
accepting it.
 
Rhodes openly acknowledges manipulating the press by positioning  “
arms-control experts” in think tanks who were then fed what to say to the  
journalists Rhodes sent their way. This created what he calls an “echo 
chamber.”  He 
admits the administration pulled the wool over the eyes of the American  
people and media to seal the deal. He even smugly describes how this deception 
 campaign drove opponents of the Iran deal wild with frustration.

 
 
 
Rhodes created a narrative that the Iran nuclear deal was pursued only once 
 Iranians had elected a moderate president, Hassan Rouhani, whom President 
Obama  felt would be a good negotiating partner. The truth, it turns out, is 
that Obama  had the deal in mind from the beginning of his presidency. He 
just had to wait  for the right narrative arc to present itself. It was, from 
the start, the  lynchpin in his plan for America’s eventual disengagement 
from the Middle East,  something Rhodes and Obama feel passionately about. 
The Iran deal was always  going to happen, because Obama’s vision of his own 
foreign policy legacy  required it.
 
Soundbyte Over Substance
According to one of his colleagues who was interviewed for the profile,  
throughout the negotiation of the Iran deal Rhodes would ask himself how this 
or  that would affect how they sell the deal to the public, and what it 
would do to  the “narrative.” Rhodes framed it to the American people as a 
choice between  peace and war. If they don’t support this deal, we will never 
have peace  with Iran, a false dichotomy that preyed on good people’s desire 
to avoid  war.

 
This admission of crafting a narrative for political ends seems to confirm  
what _I  have argued in the past_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2016/01/18/the-short-term-president/) , that Obama is 
more interested in the story, the  
headline, and shaping his legacy than with the merits or success of his  
policies. He cares more about how it sounds on the news when the anchor  
announces “Obama has negotiated a nuclear deal with Iran,” than with the  
consequences of his actions, or the deceptions he used to get there. 
 
This was true for his signature legislation, the Affordable Care Act, which 
 Obama and Democrats shoved through Congress by promising Americans there 
would  be no hikes in premiums and if they liked their doctor they could keep 
their  doctor. Both promises were, of course, blatant lies. But this has 
been Obama’s  modus operandi for the past seven years: if it sounds good and 
will  convince the people, Obama will say it.
 
Rhodes, a one-time aspiring novelist who was in a master’s of fine  arts 
writing program in New York when the Twin Towers were hit, is an ideal  
candidate to help Obama with these fictional endeavors. But foreign policy 
isn’t  
a novel or short story. It doesn’t have well-timed arcs and neatly arranged  
endings. It’s a wild and unruly thing, as the last seven years of the Obama 
 presidency have clearly shown.
 
Despite Obama’s best efforts to make the “story” of his presidency play  
out—as the president who got us out of the Middle East—reality had other 
plans.  It was his _dogged  insistence on sticking to the script_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2016/04/29/obama-promised-change-but-he-wont-do-it/)  
and not 
adapting his policies that has  gotten us into the situation in which we now 
find ourselves with ISIS and the  ongoing Syrian civil war.
 
All We Need Is PR, Not Experience
The Rhodes profile also reminds us how dangerous it is to have a president  
who won’t take the advice of experts. Rhodes discusses how he and Obama are 
of  one mind when it comes to their attitude toward the foreign policy  
establishment, or what the erstwhile novelist calls “the blob.” They want no  
part of it. Rhodes has scorn for former Defense Secretary Robert Gates and  
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and says working on the Iraq 
Study  Group convinced him the foreign policy decision makers are  morons.

 
Obama and Rhodes are a match made in heaven: they both think that people 
who  have devoted their lives to foreign policy are beneath them. In 2014, 
_Kimberly  Strassel detailed_ 
(http://www.wsj.com/articles/kimberley-strassel-meet-obamas-kissingers-1402011139)
  the president’s persistent eschewing of 
experienced  national security and foreign affairs advisers, opting instead 
for political  operatives like David Axelrod or Tom Donilon. She points to 
the havoc this  caused abroad because of Obama’s unwillingness to ask for or 
take advice from  people with training, knowledge, and experience in national 
security. 
 
Not only is this approach to foreign affairs dangerous, it also shows a  
tremendous contempt for the American people. Rhodes says, “In the absence of  
rational discourse, we are going to discourse the [expletive] out of this,”  
implying that he thinks the American people aren’t capable of rationally 
sorting  out the pros and cons of the Iran deal, that they more or less don’t 
know what’s  good for them.
 
Rhodes and Obama, however, feel confident that they do. Since rational  
discourse isn’t, according to Rhodes, an option, he’ll just make up a story 
that  will help Americans reach the “right” conclusions. The fact that Rhodes 
admits  these tactics so breezily shows an even greater disdain for the 
public than does  Obama, who at least has the decency to pretend he’s engaging 
in rational  discourse.
 
Just Keep Spinning
On Sunday evening, after strong reactions from the press, Rhodes tried to  
walk back some of his comments, posting on Medium that he and the 
administration  had not knowingly misled anyone. So how does he square this 
with what 
he said in  the profile? Maybe he thinks he can just “discourse” this 
controversy  away

 
Not surprisingly, when asked about Rhodes’s comments on Friday, White House 
 Press Secretary Josh Earnest insisted the administration is proud of the  “
principled” and “fact-based” case they made to the American people, 
despite  beginning negotiations in secret in 2012. He chalked the negative 
reaction to  the profile up to “sour grapes” from those who opposed the Iran 
deal. 
The  administration, it seems, is going to keep its narrative firmly in 
place,  regardless of what facts come to light. 
 
Rhodes acknowledges in the interview that while he has no scruples about 
the  strategies he’s employed to enact his and Obama’s vision of America’s 
role in  international affairs, he would be uncomfortable if similar methods 
were used by  another administration (presumably a Republican one). But as is 
too often the  case, the Obama administration thinks little of how its own 
tactics or  actions—executive overreach, for example—set a precedent moving 
forward. 
 
Imagine if Donald Trump becomes president. Will he, too, draft novelists to 
 weave a tale to convince the American people to deport 11 million illegal  
immigrants or start a trade war with China?
 
Are we so cynical about politics that we have abandoned the “sober, 
reasoned  public debate” that Rhodes says is preferable but, according to him,  
“
impossible”? For the sake of our fragile democracy, I hope  not.

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