Symptoms of the Bush-Obama Presidency: The Saved and the Sacked
Is it too soon to speak of the Bush-Obama presidency?
The record shows impressive continuities between the two
administrations, and nowhere more than in the policy of “force
projection” in the Arab world. With one war half-ended in Iraq, but
another doubled in size and stretching across borders in Afghanistan;
with an expanded program of drone killings and black-ops assassinations,
the latter glorified in special ceremonies of thanksgiving
(as they never were under Bush); with the number of prisoners at
Guantanamo having decreased, but some now slated for permanent
detention; with the repeated invocation of “state secrets”
to protect the government from charges of war crimes; with the Patriot
Act renewed and its most dubious provisions left intact -- the
Bush-Obama presidency has sufficient self-coherence to be considered a
historical entity with a life of its own.
The significance of this development has been veiled in recent
mainstream coverage of the national security state and our larger and
smaller wars. Back in 2005-2006, when the Iraqi insurgency refused to
die down and what had been presented as “sectarian feuding” began to
look like a war of national liberation against an occupying power, the
American press exhibited an uncommon critical acuteness. But
Washington’s embrace of “the surge” in Iraq in 2007 took that war off
the front page, and it -- along with the Afghan War -- has returned only
occasionally in the four years since.
This disappearance suited the purposes of the long double-presidency.
Keep the wars going but normalize them; make them normal by not
talking about them much; by not talking about them imply that, while
“victory” is not in sight, there is something else, an achievement more
realistic and perhaps more grown-up, still available to the United
States in the Greater Middle East. This other thing is never defined
but has lately been given a name. They call it “success.”
Meanwhile, back at home...
The usual turn from unsatisfying wars abroad to happier domestic
conditions, however, no longer seems tenable. In these August days,
Americans are rubbing their eyes, still wondering what has befallen us
with the president’s “debt deal” -- a shifting of tectonic plates
beneath the economy of a sort Dick Cheney might have dreamed of, but
which Barack Obama and the House Republicans together brought to
fruition. A redistribution of wealth and power more than three decades
in the making has now been carved into the system and given the stamp of
permanence.
Only a Democratic president, and only one associated in the public
mind (however wrongly) with the fortunes of the poor, could have
accomplished such a reversal with such sickening completeness.
One of the last good times that President Obama enjoyed before the
frenzy of debt negotiations began was a chuckle he shared with Jeff
Immelt, former CEO of General Electric and now head of the president’s
outside panel of economic advisers. At a June 13th meeting of the
president’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, a questioner said he
assumed that President Obama knew about the difficulties caused by the
drawn-out process of securing permits for construction jobs. Obama
leaned into the microphone and offered a breezy ad-lib:
“Shovel ready wasn’t as, uh, shovel-ready as we expected” -- and Immelt
got off a hearty laugh. An unguarded moment: the president of “hope and
change” signifying his solidarity with the big managers whose worldly irony he had adopted.
A certain mystery surrounds Obama’s perpetuation of Bush’s economic
policies, in the absence of the reactionary class loyalty that
accompanied them, and his expansion of Bush’s war policies in the
absence of the crude idea of the enemy and the spirited love of war that
drove Bush. But the puzzle has grown tiresome, and the effects of the
continuity matter more than its sources.
Bush we knew the meaning of, and the need for resistance was clear.
Obama makes resistance harder. During a deep crisis, such a nominal
leader, by his contradictory words and conduct and the force of his
example (or rather the lack of force in his example), becomes a subtle
disaster for all those whose hopes once rested with him.
The philosopher William James took as a motto for practical morality: “By their fruits shall ye know them, not by their roots.”
Suppose we test the last two and a half years by the same sensible
criterion. Translated into the language of presidential power -- the
power of a president whose method was to field a “team of rivals” and
“lead from behind” -- the motto must mean: by their appointments shall ye know them.
Let us examine Obama, then, by the standard of his cabinet members,
advisers, and favored influences, and group them by the answers to two
questions: Whom has he wanted to stay on longest, in order to profit
from their solidity and bask in their influence? Which of them has he
discarded fastest or been most eager to shed his association with? Think
of them as the saved and the sacked. Obama’s taste in associates at
these extremes may tell us something about the moral and political
personality in the middle.
The Saved
Advisers whom the president entrusted with power beyond
expectation, and sought to keep in his administration for as long as he
could prevail on them to stay:
1. Lawrence Summers: Obama’s chief economic
adviser, 2009-2010. As Bill Clinton’s secretary of the treasury,
1999-2001, Summers arranged the repeal of the New Deal-era
Glass-Steagall Act, which had separated the commercial banks -- holders
of the savings of ordinary people -- from the speculative action of the
brokerage houses and money firms. The aim of Glass-Steagall was to
protect citizens and the economy from a financial bubble and collapse.
Demolition of that wall between savings and finance was a large cause of
the 2008 meltdown. In the late 1990s, Summers had also pressed for the
deregulation of complex derivatives -- a dream fully realized under
Bush. In the first years of the Obama era, with the ear of the
president, he commandeered the bank bailouts and advised against major
programs for job creation. He won, and we are living with the results.
In 2009-2010, the critical accessory to Summers’s power was Timothy
Geithner, Obama’s treasury secretary. Most likely, Geithner was picked
for his position by the combined recommendations of Summers and Bush’s
Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson. The latter once described Geithner as
“a very unusually talented young man,” and worked with him closely in
2008 when he was still president of the New York Fed. At that time, he
concurred with Paulson on the wisdom of bailing out the insurance giant
AIG and not rescuing Lehman Brothers. Obama for his part initiated several phone consultations
with Paulson during the 2008 campaign -- often holding his plane on the
tarmac to talk and listen. This chain is unbroken. Any tremors in the
president’s closed world caused by Summers’s early departure from the
administration have undoubtedly been offset by Geithner’s recent reassurance that he will stay at the Treasury beyond 2011.
Postscript: In 2011, Summers has become more reformist than Obama. On The Charlie Rose Show on July 13th, he criticized
the president’s dilatoriness in mounting a program to create jobs. Thus
he urged the partial abandonment of his own policy, which Obama
continues to defend.
2. Robert Gates: A member of the permanent establishment in Washington, Gates raised to the third power
the distinction of massive continuity: First as CIA director under
George H.W. Bush, second as secretary of defense under George W. Bush,
and third as Obama’s secretary of defense. He remained for 28 months
and departed against the wishes of the president. Gates sided with
General David Petraeus and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral
Mike Mullen in 2009 to promote a massive (called “moderate”) escalation
of the Afghan War; yet he did so without rancor or posturing -- a style
Obama trusted and in the company of which he did not mind losing. In
the Bush years, Gates was certainly a moderate in relation to the
extravagant war aims of Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, and their neoconservative circle. He worked to
strengthen U.S. militarism through an ethic of bureaucratic
normalization.
His approach has been endorsed and will be continued -- though
probably with less canniness -- by his successor Leon Panetta. Without a
career in security to fortify his confidence, Panetta is really a
member of a different species: the adaptable choice for “running things”
-- without regard to the nature of the thing or the competence
required. Best known as the chief of staff who reduced to a semblance of
order the confusion of the Clinton White House, he is associated in the
public mind with no set of views or policies.
3. Rahm Emanuel: As Obama’s White House chief of
staff, Emanuel performed much of the hands-on work of legislative
bargaining that President Obama himself preferred not to engage in.
(Vice President Joe Biden also regularly took on this role.) He thereby
incurred a cheerless gratitude, but he is a man willing to be disliked.
Obama seems to have held Emanuel’s ability in awe; and such was his
power that nothing but the chance of becoming mayor of Chicago would
have plucked him from the White House. Emanuel is credited, rightly or
not, with the Democratic congressional victory of 2006, and one fact
about that success, which was never hidden, has been too quickly
forgotten. Rahm Emanuel took pains to weed out anti-war candidates.
Obama would have known this, and admired the man who carried it off.
Whether Emanuel pursued a similar strategy in the 2010 midterm elections
has never been seriously discussed. The fact that the category
“anti-war Democrat” hardly exists in 2011 is, however, an achievement
jointly creditable to Emanuel and the president.
4. Cass Sunstein: Widely thought to be the president’s most powerful legal adviser. Sunstein defended and may have advised Obama on his breach of his 2008 promise (as senator) to filibuster any new law that awarded amnesty to the telecoms that illegally spied
on Americans. This was Obama’s first major reversal in the 2008
presidential campaign: he had previously defended the integrity of the
Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act against the secret encroachment of
the National Security Agency (NSA).
At
that moment, Obama changed from an accuser to a conditional apologist
for the surveillance of Americans: the secret policy advocated by Dick
Cheney, approved
by President Bush, executed by NSA Director Michael Hayden, and
supplied with a rationale by Cheney’s legal counsel David Addington. In
his awkward public defense of the switch, Obama suggested
that scrutiny of telecom records and their uses by the inspectors
general in the relevant agencies and departments should be enough to
restore the rule of law.
When it comes to national security policy, Sunstein is a particularly
strong example of Bush-Obama continuity. Though sometimes identified as
a liberal, from early on he defended the expansion of the national
security state under Cheney’s Office of the Vice President, and he
praised the firm restraint with which the Ashcroft Justice Department
shouldered its responsibilities. “By historical standards,” he wrote
in the fall of 2004, “the Bush administration has acted with
considerable restraint and with commendable respect for political
liberty. It has not attempted to restrict speech or the democratic
process in any way. The much-reviled and poorly understood Patriot Act,
at least as administered, has done little to restrict civil liberty as
it stood before its enactment.” This seems to have become Obama’s view.
Charity toward the framers of the Patriot Act has, in the Obama
administration, been accompanied by a consistent refusal to initiate or
support legal action against the “torture lawyers.” Sunstein described
the Bush Justice Department memos by John Yoo and Jay Bybee, which
defended the use of the water torture and other extreme methods, in
words that stopped short of legal condemnation: "It's egregiously bad.
It's very low level, it's very weak, embarrassingly weak, just short of
reckless." Bad lawyering: a professional fault but not an actionable
offense.
The Obama policy of declining to hold any high official or even CIA interrogators accountable for violations of the law by the preceding administration would likely not have survived opposition by Sunstein. A promise not to prosecute, however, has been implicit in the findings by the Obama Justice Department -- a promise that was made explicit by Leon Panetta in February 2009 when he had just been named President Obama’s new director of the CIA.
As head of the president’s Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, with an office in the White House, Sunstein adjudicates
government policy on issues of worker and consumer safety; yet his title
suggests a claim of authority on issues such as the data-mining of
information about American citizens and the government’s deployment of a
state secrets privilege. He deserves wider attention, too, for his 2008 proposal
that the government “cognitively infiltrate” discussion groups on-line
and in neighborhoods, paying covert agents to monitor and, if possible,
discredit lines of argument which the government judges to be extreme or
misleading.
5. Eric Holder: Holder once said
that the trial of suspected 9/11 “mastermind” Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in
a New York City courtroom would be “the defining event of my time as
attorney general.” The decision to make KSM’s a civilian trial was,
however, scuttled, thanks to incompetent management at the White House:
neither the first nor last failure of its kind. The policy of trying
suspected terrorists in civilian courts seems to have suffered from
never being wholeheartedly embraced by the administration’s inside
actors. Local resistance by the New York authorities was the ostensible reason
for the failure and the change of venue back to a military tribunal at
Guantanamo. No member of the administration besides Holder has been
observed to show much regret.
During his 30-month tenure, in keeping with Obama’s willingness to
overlook the unpleasant history of CIA renditions and “extreme
interrogations,” Holder has made no move to prosecute
any upper-level official of any of the big banks and money firms
responsible for the financial collapse of 2008. His silence on the
subject has been taken as a signal that such prosecutions will never
occur. To judge by public statements, the energies of the attorney
general, in an administration that arrived under the banner
of bringing “sunshine” and “transparency” to Washington, have mainly
been dedicated to the prosecution of government whistle-blowers through a
uniquely rigorous application of the Espionage Act of 1917. More peoplehave been accused under that law by this attorney general than in the entire preceding 93 years of the law’s existence.
Again, this is a focus that Bush-era attorney generals John Ashcroft,
Alberto Gonzales, and Michael Mukasey might have relished, but on which
none would have dared to act on so boldly. Extraordinary delays in
grand jury proceedings on Army Private Bradley Manning,
suspected of providing government secrets to WikiLeaks, and Julian
Assange, who ran that website, are said to have come from a protracted attempt to secure a legal hold against one or both potential defendants within the limits of a barbarous and almost dormant law.
6. Dennis Ross: Earlier in his career, Obama seems
to have cherished an interest in the creation of an independent
Palestinian state. In Chicago, he was a friend of the dissident Middle
East scholar Rashid Khalidi; during his 2007 primary campaign, he sought
and received advice from Robert Malley, former special assistant to
President Clinton for Arab-Israeli affairs, and Zbigniew Brzezinski,
former national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter. Both were
“realist” opponents of the expansionist policy of Israel’s right-wing
coalition government, which subsidizes and affords military protection
to Jewish settlements on the occupied West Bank.
Under pressure from the Israel lobby, however, Obama dissociated himself from all three chosen advisers.
Ross, as surely as Gates, is a member of Washington’s permanent
establishment. Recruited for the Carter Defense Department by Paul
Wolfowitz, he started out as a Soviet specialist, but his expertise
migrated with a commission to undertake a Limited Contingency Study on
the need for American defense of the Persian Gulf. An American
negotiator at the 2000 Camp David summit, Ross was accused of being an unfair broker, having always “started from the Israeli bottom line.”
He entered the Obama administration as a special adviser to Hillary
Clinton on the Persian Gulf, but was moved into the White House on June
25, 2009, and outfitted with an elaborate title and comprehensive
duties: Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for the
Central Region, including all of the Middle East and the Persian Gulf,
Afghanistan, Pakistan and South Asia. Ross has cautioned Obama to be “sensitive” to domestic Israeli concerns.
In retrospect, his installation in the White House looks like the
first step in a pattern of concessions to Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu that undid Obama’s hopes for an agreement in the
region. Here, caution precluded all inventiveness. It could have been
predicted that the ascendancy of Ross would render void the two-state
solution Obama anticipated in his carefully prepared and broadly advertised speech to the Arab world from Cairo University in June 2009.
7. Peter Orzag: Director of the Office of Management
and Budget from January 2009 to August 2010, Orzag was charged with
bringing in the big health insurers to lay out what it would take for
them to support the president’s health-care law. In this way, Orzag --
along with the companies -- exerted a decisive influence on the final
shape of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010. In
January 2011, he left the administration to become vice chairman of
global banking at Citigroup. A few days out of the White House, he
published an op-ed in the New York Times
advising the president to extend the Bush-era tax cuts for the top 2%
of Americans -- adding that Obama should indicate that the cuts would
continue in force only through 2012. Obama took the advice.
8. Thomas Donilon: National Security Adviser and
(after the departure of Gates) Obama’s closest consultant on foreign
policy. Donilon supported the 34,000 troop-escalation order that
followed the president’s inconclusive 2009 Afghanistan War review. He
encouraged and warmly applauded Obama’s non-binding “final orders” on
Afghanistan, which all the participants in the 2009 review were asked
formally to approve. (The final orders speak of
“a prioritized comprehensive approach” by which the U.S. will “work
with [Afghan President Hamid] Karzai when we can” to set “the conditions
for an accelerated transition,” to bring about “effective sub-national
governance,” and to “transfer” the responsibility for fighting the war
while continuing to “degrade” enemy forces.)
Donilon comes from the worlds of business, the law, and government in
about equal measure: a versatile career spanning many orthodoxies. His
open and unreserved admiration for President Obama seems to have counted
more heavily in his appointment than the low opinion of his qualifications apparently
held by several associates. As Assistant Secretary of State for Public
Affairs during the Clinton administration, he helped arrange the
eastward expansion of NATO after the Cold War: perhaps the most
pointless and destructive bipartisan project of the epoch. He was
Executive Vice President for Law and Policy at Fannie Mae, 1999-2005.
The Sacked
Advisers and nominees with views that were in line with Obama's
2008 election campaign or his professed goals in 2009, but who have
since been fired, asked to resign or step down, or seen their
nominations dropped:
1. General James Jones: Former Marine Corps
Commandant and a skeptic of the Afghanistan escalation, Jones became the
president’s first National Security Adviser. He was, however, often
denied meetings with Obama, who seems to have looked on Gates as a
superior technocrat, Petraeus as a more prestigious officer, and Donilon
as a more fervent believer in the split-the-difference war and
diplomatic policies Obama elected to pursue. Jones resigned in October
2010, under pressure.
A curious point: Obama had spoken to Jones only twice before
appointing him to so high a post and seems hardly to have come to know
him by the time he resigned.
2. Karl Eikenberry: Commander of Combined Forces in
Afghanistan before he was made ambassador, Eikenberry, a retired
Lieutenant General, had seniority over both Petraeus and then war
commander General Stanley McChrystal when it came to experience in that
country and theater of war. He was the author of cables to the State Department
in late 2009, which carried a stinging rebuke to the conduct of the war
and unconcealed hostility toward any new policy of escalation. The
Eikenberry cables were drafted in order to influence the White House
review that fall; they advised that the Afghan war was in the process of
being lost, that it could never be won, and that nothing good would
come from an increased commitment of U.S. troops.
Petraeus, then Centcom commander, and McChrystal were both disturbed
by the cables -- startled when they arrived unbidden and intimidated by
their authority. Obama, astonishingly, chose to ignore them. This may
be the single most baffling occasion of the many when fate dealt a
winning card to the president and yet he folded. Among other such
occasions: the 2008-2009 bank bailouts and the opening for financial
regulation; the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and the opportunity
for a revised environmental policy; the Fukushima nuclear plant
meltdowns and a revised policy toward nuclear energy; the Goldstone
Report and the chance for an end to the Gaza blockade. But of all these
as well as other cases that might be mentioned, the Eikenberry cables
offer the clearest instance of persisting in a discredited policy
against the weight of impressive evidence.
Ambassador Eikenberry retired in 2011, and Obama replaced him with
Ryan Crocker, the Foreign Service officer brought into Iraq by Bush to
help General Petraeus manage the details and publicity around the Iraq
surge of 2007-2008.
3. Paul Volcker: Head of the Federal Reserve under
Presidents Carter and Reagan, Volker had a record (not necessarily
common among upper-echelon workers in finance) entirely free of the
reproach of venality. A steady adviser to the 2008 Obama campaign, he
lent gravity to the young candidate's professions of competence in
financial matters. He also counseled Obama against the one-sidedness of
a recovery policy founded on repayment guarantees to financial outfits
such as Citigroup and Bank of America:
the policy, that is, favored by Summers and Geithner in preference to
massive job creation and a major investment in infrastructure. "If you
want to be a bank,” he said,
“follow the bank rules. If Goldman Sachs and the others want to do
proprietary trading, then they shouldn’t be banks.” His advice -- to
tighten regulation in order to curb speculative trading -- was adopted
late and in diluted form. In January 2010, Jeff Immelt, CEO of General
Electric, which paid no federal taxes that year, replaced him.
4. Dennis Blair: As Director of National
Intelligence, Blair sought to limit the expansion of covert operations
by the CIA. In this quest he was defeated by CIA Director Leon Panetta
-- a seasoned infighter, though without any experience in intelligence,
who successfully enlarged the Agency’s prerogatives and limited
oversight of its activities during his tenure. Blair refused to resign
when Obama asked him to, and demanded to be fired. He finally stepped
down on May 21, 2010.
Doubtless Blair hurt his prospects irreparably by making clear to the
president his skepticism regarding the usefulness of drone warfare: a
form of killing Obama favors as the most politic and antiseptic
available to the U.S. Since being sacked, Blair has come out publicly
against the broad use of drones in Pakistan and elsewhere.
On his way out, he was retrospectively made a scapegoat for the
November 2009 Fort Hood, Texas, killing spree by Army psychiatrist Major
Nidal Hasan; for the “underwear” bomber’s attempt to blow up a plane on
its way to Detroit on Christmas day 2009; and for the failed Times
Square car bombing of May 2010 -- all attacks (it was implied) that
Blair should have found the missing key to avert, even though the Army,
the FBI, and the CIA were unable to do so.
5. James Cartwright: As vice-chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, General Cartwright passed on to Obama, and interpreted
for him, a good deal of information that proved useful in the
Afghanistan War review. Their friendship outlasted the process and he
came to be known as Obama’s “favorite general,”
but Cartwright stirred the resentment from both Petraeus and Mullen for
establishing a separate channel of influence with the president. Like
Eikenberry, he had been a skeptic on the question of further escalation
in Afghanistan. His name was floated by the White House as the
front-runner to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs after the retirement
of Mullen. Informed of the military opposition to the appointment,
Obama reversed field and chose Army Chief of Staff General Martin
Dempsey, a figure more agreeable to Petraeus and Mullen.
6. Dawn Johnsen: Obama’s first choice to head the
Office of Legal Council, a choice generally praised and closely watched
by constitutional lawyers and civil libertarians. Her name was
withdrawn after a 14-month wait, and she was denied a confirmation
process. The cause: Republican objections to her writings and her public
statements against the practice of torture and legal justifications for
torture.
This reversal falls in with a larger pattern: the putting forward of
candidates for government positions whose views are straightforward,
publicly available, and consistent with the pre-2009 principles of
Barack Obama -- followed by Obama’s withdrawal of support for the same
candidates. A more recent instance was the naming (after considerable
delay) of Elizabeth Warren as a special advisor to organize the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, followed by the decision in July not to nominate her as the first director of the bureau.
Avoidance of a drag-out fight in confirmation hearings repeatedly
seems to be the recurrent motive here. Of course, the advantage of such a
fight, given an articulate and willing nominee, is the education of
public opinion. But in every possible instance, President Obama has been
averse to any public engagement in the clash of ideas. “Bottom line is
that it was going to be close,” a Senate Democratic source told
ABC’s Jake Tapper when Johnsen’s name was withdrawn. "If they wanted
to, the White House could have pushed for a vote. But they didn't want
to 'cause they didn't have the stomach for the debate."
Where the nomination of an “extreme” candidate might have hardened
the impression of Obama as an extremist, might not a public hearing have
helped eradicate the very preconception that a frightened withdrawal
tends to confirm? This question is not asked.
7. Greg Craig: For two years special counsel in the
Clinton White House, he led the team defending the president in the
impeachment proceedings in Congress. Craig’s declaration of support for
Obama in March 2007 was vital to the insurgent candidate, because of his
well-known loyalty to the Clintons. Obama made him White House
Counsel, and his initial task was to draw up plans for the closing of
Guantanamo, a promise
made by the president on his first day in the Oval Office. But once the
paper was signed, Obama showed little interest in the developing plans.
Others were more passionate. Dick Cheney worked on a susceptible
populace to resurrect old fears. The forces against closure rallied and
spread panic, while the president said nothing. Craig was defeated inside the White House by the “realist” Rahm Emanuel, and sacked.
8. Carol Browner: A leading environmentalist in the
Clinton administration, Browner was given a second shot by Obama as
director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy.
She found her efforts thwarted within the administration as well as in
Congress: in mid-2010 Obama decided that -- as a way to deal with global
warming -- cap-and-trade legislation was a loser for the midterm
elections. Pressure on Obama from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to heed
business interests served as a strong incitement
in forcing Browner’s resignation after the democratic “shellacking” in
midterm elections, a result that his quiet abandonment of cap-and-trade
had failed to prevent. The White House had no backup plan for addressing
the disaster of global warming. After Browner’s resignation in March
2011, her position was abolished. Since then, Obama has seldom spoken of
global warming or climate change.
Moral and Political Limbo
The Obama presidency has been characterized by a refined sense of
impossibility. A kind of suffocation sets in when a man of power floats
carefully clear of all unorthodox stimuli and resorts to official
comforters of the sort exemplified by Panetta. As the above partial list
of the saved and the sacked shows, the president lives now in a world
in which he is certain never to be told he is wrong when he happens to
be on the wrong track. It is a world where the unconventionality of an
opinion, or the existence of a possible majority against it somewhere,
counts as prima facie evidence against its soundness.
So alternative ideas vanish -- along with the people who represent
them. What, then, does President Obama imagine he is doing as he backs
into one weak appointment after another, and purges all signs of thought
and independence around him? We have a few dim clues.
A popular book on Abraham Lincoln, Team of Rivals, seems to
have prompted Obama to suppose that Lincoln himself “led from behind”
and was committed to bipartisanship not only as a tactic but as an
always necessary means to the highest good of democracy. A more wishful
conceit was never conceived; but Obama has talked of the book
easily and often to support a “pragmatic” instinct for constant
compromise that he believes himself to share with the American people
and with Lincoln.
A larger hint may come from Obama’s recently released National Strategy for Counterterrorism, where
a sentence in the president’s own voice asserts: "We face the world as
it is, but we will also pursue a strategy for the world we seek." If the
words "I face the world as it is" have a familiar sound, the reason is
that they received a trial run in Obama’s 2009 Nobel Prize speech. Those
words were the bridge across which an ambivalent peacemaker walked to
confront the heritage of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King with the
realities of power as experienced by the leader of the only superpower
in the world.
Indeed, Obama’s understanding of international morality seems to be
largely expressed by the proposition that "there's serious evil in the
world" -- a truth he confided in 2007 to the New York Times
conservative columnist David Brooks, and attributed to the theologian
Reinhold Niebuhr -- combined with the assertion that he is ready to
"face the world as it is." The world we seek is, of course, the better
world of high morality. But morality, properly understood, is nothing
but a framework for ideals. Once you have discharged your duty, by
saying the right words for the right policies, you have to accommodate
the world.
This has become the ethic of the Bush-Obama administration in a new
phase. It explains, as nothing else does, Obama’s enormous appetite for
compromise, the growing conventionality of his choices of policy and
person, and the legitimacy he has conferred on many radical innovations
of the early Bush years by assenting to their logic and often widening
their scope. They are, after all, the world as it is.
Obama’s pragmatism comes down to a series of maxims that can be
relied on to ratify the existing order -- any order, however recent its
advent and however repulsive its effects. You must stay in power in
order to go on “seeking.” Therefore, in “the world as it is,” you must
requite evil with lesser evil. You do so to prevent your replacement by
fanatics: people, for example, like those who invented the means you
began by deploring but ended up adopting. Their difference from you is
that they lack the vision of the seeker. Finally, in the world as it is,
to retain your hold on power you must keep in place the sort of people
who are normally found in places of power.
Copyright 2011 David Bromwich