Whitewashing Defeat: Obama’s
Indecisiveness Defines His Presidency
by Ramzy Baroud
He
may still possess the poise of a confident leader and an eloquent
intellectual, but the presidency of Barack Obama is now suffering its
most difficult phase to date.
Certainly,
Obama cannot solely be blamed for all the factors that have stifled his
country’s chances of recovery from the failures of the Bush era. But
the man who promised the moon has now extended the abhorrent and morally
unjustifiable tax cuts for America’s wealthiest class. The “sweeping”
$858 billion tax bill was signed into law on December 17.
It includes an
$801 billion package of tax cuts, extending Bush’s tax break for the
rich for two more years – at a time when the majority of Americans are
reeling under the weight of a failing economy and persistently high
unemployment.
Still,
the tax bill was presented by the self-assured president as “real money
that’s going to make a real difference in people’s lives.” The cuts
will help stimulate an ailing economy, he claims, despite it being the
rich who gambled with American wealth to increase their own, stimulating
a market crash that led to millions losing their small investments and
savings.
All we know for sure is that the cuts will add a gigantic chunk
to an already impossible deficit of $1.3 trillion, another Obama battle
that is likely to be lost to the Republicans early next year.
But
this concession, and its presentation as a victory for America’s middle
classes says more about Obama’s style than the weakening of the
Democrats since the midterm elections. Even in his foreign policy
management, Obama’s approach seems to teeter between giving face-lifts
to ugly realities and postponing urgently needed action. The agent of
change has become the quintessential American politician, who is more
consumed with his chances of reelection than with bringing about the
kind of long-term change that can really benefit his country, and the
world at large.
Obama’s
handling of the shortly-lived peace talks between the Palestinian
Authority and Israel’s rightwing government is another example of a
striking failure followed by whitewash. Although he adamantly demanded a
halt to Israel’s construction of illegal settlements in East Jerusalem
and the West Bank, Obama soon began capitulating before an obstinate
Benjamin Netanyahu. The Israeli leader, supported by much of the US
Congress and backed by a strong Israel lobby in Washington, finally
forced Obama into a humiliating retreat. Even a generous bribe to win a
limited Israeli moratorium on settlement construction failed. Obama
administration officials finally declared that the US would abandon its
efforts to halt Israeli settlement expansion, effectively signaling an
American exit from the ‘peace process.’
Instead
of laying the blame squarely on Israel, the Obama administration delved
into the same long-discredited rhetoric that only Palestinians and
Israelis are capable of accomplishing peace without any outside
intervention. That was the core message of Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, who argued that it was up to Israel and the Palestinian
leadership to “settle their conflict”. It signaled a complete shift in
US foreign policy, which Israel has naturally welcomed, for the
US-financed military occupier prefers to be left to its own devices in
this very unbalanced conflict.
Afghanistan
is another example. The eagerly anticipated strategy assessment of the
war in Afghanistan was released on December 16, with illusory talk of
“gains” and warnings of al-Qaeda threats. It suggests that the US will
continue to fight a pointless war for years to come, with no clear goals
or end in sight.
“The
unclassified version of the secret review said U.S. military operations
have disrupted the Pakistan-based al-Qaida terrorist network over the
last year and halted the momentum of the Taliban insurgency in southern
Afghanistan,” reported the Kansas City Star.
What
the review and much of the media fail to report is that the war on
Afghanistan hardly concerns al-Qaeda, which is more widespread and
mobile than ever. Its future operation does not hinge on the ongoing
battles in Afghanistan either. One must also remain skeptical of the
“gains” reportedly made in the south. Taliban is known for avoiding open
warfare, a style they have mastered after nine years of practice. The
recoil – if that is even the case - of the Taliban is probably
temporary, and a spring resurgence is assured by past experiences. But
what is most important to note is that the action of NATO and US
soldiers, government corruption and the brutality of local militias have
allowed the Taliban to extend its presence to northern provinces,
including Kunduz and Takhar, which were, until recently, uncharted
territories for the strong and resourceful Pashtun fighters.
According
to an editorial in the Lebanese Daily Star, “Obama’s long-awaited
Afghanistan strategy review amounts to little more than a whitewash of
the seemingly intractable problems that have trapped the mighty American
military in a quagmire.” Worse, this crisis is likely to be compounded.
“The failures of General Stanley McChrystal, who resigned in June, and
Richard Holbrooke, who died suddenly this week, are symbolic of the
crumbling of the twin pillars, both military and civilian, of Barack
Obama's counterinsurgency strategy. The US has now…entered a violent
stalemate,” wrote James Denselow in the British Guardian.
Obama’s
response was yet another attempt to distance himself from the looming,
if not ongoing failure. US priority, he said, is “not to defeat every
last threat to the security of Afghanistan, because, ultimately, it is
Afghans who must secure their country. And it’s not nation-building,
because it is Afghans who must build their nation.”
One
would agree with the president were it not for the fact that the US
invasion was what has impeded the security of Afghanistan, destroyed any
chance of nation-building and installed a corrupt government. But Obama
will not accept responsibility. His cautious assessments are emblematic
of his overall political style: avoiding or perpetuating the problem,
and distancing himself from it once failure is assured. This is as true
of his domestic policy as of his foreign policy.
It
is easy to see why Obama’s popularity has plummeted among those who
once believed in his ability to bring change to a scarred and
traumatized country. And his irresolute leadership has also empowered
his political opponents, who will not cease to demand more from a feeble
and ever-willing president.
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Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated
columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is
My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press,
London), now available on Amazon.com.