President Obama’s Recent Foreign Policy Strides a Fragile Legacy

Policies face little political buy-in at home, legal challenges


By 

CAROL E. LEE

 

WASHINGTON—President  <http://topics.wsj.com/person/O/Barack-Obama/4328>
Barack Obama made major strides over the past year on the four planks of his
second-term foreign-policy agenda: a nuclear deal with Iran, restoring
diplomatic ties with Cuba, a global climate-change agreement and a new trade
pact with Asia.

But each of those remains fragile. Some have gotten little political buy-in
at home so far. Others face legal challenges, or could be eroded over time
under his successor in the White House or counterparts abroad.

As a result, much of the White House’s effort in 2016 will be focused on
safeguarding these four initiatives by pushing them so far along by 2017
that they would be too hard to undo.

On Cuba, that means taking additional executive actions so Americans become
accustomed to traveling to the island-nation 90 miles off the coast of
Florida and U.S. businesses are deeply invested there. For the
climate-change deal, he will instruct administration officials to work to
keep the 195 countries that agreed to it on board through discussions next
year designed to firm up certain parts of the deal.

On the Iran agreement, he must ensure that Tehran continues to dismantle its
nuclear infrastructure. And it means pushing hard for congressional
ratification of the trade deal despite bipartisan reluctance among some in
Congress and resistance from candidates of both parties in the presidential
campaign.

Mr. Obama, while acknowledging some of the political obstacles his agenda
still faces, has argued that making tough choices now increase the chances
his achievements will stand the test of time. 

“As I look back on this year, one thing I see is that so much of our steady,
persistent work over the years is paying off for the American people in big,
tangible ways,” he said on Friday, citing diplomatic efforts on Iran, Cuba,
trade and climate change. “We have shown what is possible when America
leads.”

Mr. Obama’s victories, which supporters and critics agree could reshape U.S.
foreign policy for years to come, also risk being overshadowed by growing
fears of the threat of terrorism in the U.S., and Americans’ deepening
dissatisfaction
<http://www.wsj.com/articles/obama-says-coalition-hitting-islamic-state-hard
er-than-ever-1450118364> with his strategy in Syria and Iraq to combat
Islamic State.

Syria, in particular, could be a blemish on Mr. Obama’s legacy despite his
other accomplishments, foreign-policy experts say, and will open him to
critiques of his broader approach of relying heavily on diplomatic and
economic engagement.

“Obama has focused on what can be accomplished through patient and
persistent diplomacy, which is a lot,” said Bruce Jones, the director of the
Foreign Policy Program at the Brookings Institution. “But by the same token,
the Obama administration has frequently underestimated the importance of
military power as a tool for shaping what’s possible politically, and Syria
is that in spades.”

Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said Mr.
Obama’s approach to the Middle East has been different from that of his
predecessor,  <http://topics.wsj.com/person/B/George-W.%20Bush/5369> George
W. Bush, but its implications equally important. “In its own way, what he
failed to do in Syria will be seen as every bit as consequential for the
region as what Mr. Bush chose to do in 2003 in Iraq,” Mr. Haass said. “We’ve
gone from a president who history could well judge critically by what he did
in the region, to a president that history is likely to judge critically for
what he failed to do.”

As he pivots to his final year in office, Mr. Obama faces his last chance to
solidify the foundation of his legacy and turn around public opinion.
Following the terrorist attacks in San Bernardino and Paris, the majority of
Americans—60%—disapprove of Mr. Obama’s handling of the fight against
Islamic State, and 57% disapprove of the job he is doing on foreign-policy
issues in general, according to a December Wall Street Journal/NBC News
poll.

Mr. Obama on Friday defended his Islamic State strategy and his approach to
the Syrian conflict since it began five years ago. He argued that diplomatic
negotiations that protect the interests of Russia and Iran and allow Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad to be part of a government transition could lead
to a more unified international effort to combat Islamic State.

“We now have an opportunity not to turn back the clock,” Mr. Obama said,
“but to find a political transition that maintains the Syrian state, that
recognizes there are a bunch of a stakeholders inside of Syria, and,
hopefully, to initiate a cease-fire.”

Mr. Obama’s shift in his second term to emphasizing both his executive
authority and an ambitious foreign, rather than domestic, policy agenda has
made some of his biggest accomplishments possible, but also more vulnerable.

“Our theory of the case is that the cost of undoing these policies will be
far too high in the real world,” said Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security
adviser at the White House. “Tearing up the Iran deal jump-starts Iran’s
program and could lead to war. Pulling out of Paris angers almost 200
countries. Closing our Embassy and telling Americans they can’t go to Cuba
makes no sense. It’d be totally illogical for a new president to begin their
presidency by creating crises and alienating the world, so there are natural
checks.”

The Asia trade pact is the one policy that could be legislatively binding,
and the White House plans to make an aggressive push next year for
Republican leaders to schedule a vote on it. Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R., Ky.) recently said Congress shouldn’t vote on the pact until
after the November election, while House Speaker
<http://topics.wsj.com/person/R/Paul-Ryan/6420> Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) has
said lawmakers should approve the deal before then. Mr. Obama expressed
optimism on Friday that lawmakers would pass it next year.

White House officials see climate change as the most vulnerable piece of Mr.
Obama’s legacy if a Republican is elected president. The U.S. commitments in
the agreement reached in Paris this month rely entirely on executive
actions. “Most of the steps we’ve taken we’ve done through executive
authority, so they remain at the authority of the executive,” said Brian
Deese, Mr. Obama’s top adviser on climate change. “But I think the thing
that is very important is that regulations, once enacted and then once
absorbed and built into the way the industry operates, are very difficult to
pull back.”

Mr. Obama’s commitment to, for the first time, put limits on carbon
emissions for new and existing power plants—the cornerstone of U.S. pledges
in the international climate change deal—is widely opposed by Republicans in
Congress and is being challenged in court by more than 20 states.

The year since Mr. Obama announced he was restoring U.S. ties with Cuba has
progressed slowly. Although both countries reopened embassies in each
other’s capitals and officials announced last week Americans will soon be
able to take commercial flights to Havana, Congress hasn’t lifted the U.S.
embargo on Cuba.

Mr. Obama, who is likely to travel to Cuba next year, has both bipartisan
support and opposition to the policy.
<http://topics.wsj.com/person/T/Donald-Trump/159> Donald Trump and Kentucky
Sen.  <http://topics.wsj.com/person/P/Rand-Paul/6142> Rand Paul are the only
GOP presidential candidates who support it; Florida Sen.
<http://topics.wsj.com/person/R/Marco-Rubio/6882> Marco Rubio has said he
would reverse it.

Still, Cuba appears to be the most solid piece of Mr. Obama’s legacy. Former
Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, who served in the George W. Bush
administration and supports Mr. Obama’s Cuba policy, said at this stage it
is hard to imagine any president closing down the U.S. embassy in Havana.

“The risk is that a future president will not advance the policy, and it
will just remain stagnant,” Mr. Gutierrez said. “But I think there’s a very
low likelihood that it will be reversed or undone.”

The Iran deal has faced more criticism from Republicans. It won no GOP
support in Congress and only advanced after Republicans failed to amass a
veto-proof majority for rejecting the deal.

Mr. Trump last week called it an “absolutely incompetent deal,” and Texas
Sen.  <http://topics.wsj.com/person/C/Ted-Cruz/7753> Ted Cruzhas said he
would pull out of it immediately after taking office. But other presidential
candidates, such as former Florida Gov.
<http://topics.wsj.com/person/B/Jeb-Bush/8217> Jeb Bush, have said that is
not a realistic option.

Iran has so far complied with the deal, U.S. officials have said. But
Tehran’s other actions, including recently testing ballistic missiles
capable of delivering atomic weapons, have prompted GOP calls for a stronger
response from the White House.

“Failure to impose any consequences on Iran for its violations of
<http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-n-experts-say-iran-missile-firing-violated-sa
nctions-1450210189> U.N. Security Council Resolutions and other
destabilizing actions sets a dangerous precedent before implementation of
the nuclear agreement, when sanctions are lifted and the leverage shifts to
Iran,” said Tennessee Sen.  <http://topics.wsj.com/person/C/Bob-Corker/6000>
Bob Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Prem Kumar, a former adviser to Mr. Obama on the Middle East who is now
senior vice president of Albright Stonebridge Group, said further
implementation will make it harder to roll back.

“The future of the deal depends on the action of the Iranians but I would
argue that in the past few months the likelihood that the deal will endure
has increased,” Mr. Kumar said.

Write to Carol E. Lee at  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

 

 

 

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