The
American Century Is so over: Obama’s Rudderless Foreign
Policy Underscores America’s Waning Power
Writers Articles And Opinions
30 May 2010
By Dilip Hiro
Irrespective of their politics, flawed leaders share a
common trait. They generally remain remarkably
oblivious to the harm they do to the nation they lead.
George W. Bush is a salient recent example, as is
former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. When it
comes to foreign policy, we are now witnessing a
similar phenomenon at the Obama White House.
Here is the Obama pattern: Choose a foreign leader to
pressure. Threaten him with dire consequences if he
does not bend to Washington's will. When he refuses to
submit and instead responds vigorously, back off
quickly and overcompensate for failure by switching
into a placatory mode.
In his first year-plus in office, Barack Obama has
provided us with enough examples to summarize his
leadership style. The American president fails to
objectively evaluate the strength of the cards that a
targeted leader holds and his resolve to play them.
Obama's propensity to retreat at the first sign of
resistance shows that he lacks both guts and the
strong convictions that are essential elements
distinguishing statesmen from politicians. By pursuing
a rudderless course in his foreign policy, by
flip-flopping in his approach to other leaders, he is
also inadvertently furnishing hard evidence to those
who argue that American power is on the decline -- and
that the downward slide of the globe's former "sole
superpower" is irreversible.
Those who have refused to buckle under Obama's initial
threats and hardball tactics (and so the impact of
American power) include not just the presidents of
China, a first-tier mega-nation, and Brazil, a rising
major power, but also the leaders of Israel, a
regional power heavily dependent on Washington for its
sustenance, and Afghanistan, a client state -- not to
mention the military junta of Honduras, a minor
entity, which stood up to the Obama administration as
if it were the Politburo of former Soviet Union.
" Flip-Flop on Honduras
By overthrowing the civilian government of President
Manuel Zelaya in June 2009, the Honduran generals
acquired the odious distinction of carrying out the
first military coup in Central America in the
post-Cold War era. What drove them to it? The
precipitating factor was Zelaya's decision to have a
non-binding survey on holding a referendum that
November about convening a Constituent Assembly to
redraft the constitution.
Denouncing the coup as a "terrible precedent" for the
region and demanding its reversal, President Obama
initially insisted: "We do not want to go back to a
dark past. We always want to stand with democracy."
Those words should have been followed by deeds like
recalling his ambassador in Tegucigalpa (just as
Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and
Venezuela did) and an immediate suspension of the
American aid on which the country depends. Instead,
what followed was a statement by Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton that the administration would not
formally designate the ouster as a military coup "for
now" -- even though the United Nations, the
Organization of American States, and the European
Union had already done so.
This backtracking encouraged the Honduran generals and
their Republican supporters in Congress. They began to
stonewall, while a top notch public relations firm in
Washington, hired by the de facto government of the
military's puppet president Roberto Micheletti, went
to work.
These moves proved enough to weaken the "democratic"
resolve of a president who makes lofty speeches, but
lacks strong convictions when it comes to foreign
policy. Secretary of State Clinton then began talking
of reconciling the ousted president and the Micheletti
government, treating the legitimate and illegitimate
camps as equals.
Having realized that a hard line stance vis-à-vis
Washington was paying dividends, the Honduran generals
remained unbending. Only when Clinton insisted that
the State Department would not recognize the November
presidential election result because of doubts about
it being free, fair, and transparent did they agree to
a compromise a month before the poll. They would let
Zelaya return to the presidential palace to finish his
term in office.
That was when rightwing Republican Senator Jim DeMint,
a fanatical supporter of the Honduran generals, swung
into action. He would give Republican consent to White
House nominees for important posts in Latin America
only if Clinton agreed to recognize the election
results, irrespective of what happened to Zelaya.
Clinton buckled.
As a result, Obama became one of only two leaders --
the other being Panama's president -- in the 34-member
Organization of American States to lend his support to
the Honduran presidential poll. What probably appeared
as a routine trade-off in domestic politics on Capitol
Hill was seen by the international community as a
humiliating retreat by Obama when challenged by a
group of Honduran generals. Other leaders undoubtedly
took note.
A far more dramatic reversal awaited Obama when he
locked horns with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
" Wily Netanyahu trumps naïve Obama
On taking office, the Obama White House announced with
much fanfare that it would take on the intractable
Israeli-Palestinian dispute right away. On examining
the 2003 "road map" to peace backed by the United
Nations, the United States, Russia, and the European
Union, it discovered Israel's promise to cease all
settlement-building activity.
In his first meeting with Netanyahu in mid-May 2009,
Obama demanded a halt to the expansion of Jewish
settlements in the West Bank and occupied East
Jerusalem, already housing nearly 500,000 Jews. He
argued that they were a major obstacle to the
establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
Netanyahu balked -- and changed tack by stressing the
existential threat that Iran's nuclear program posed
to Israel.
Obama slipped into the Israeli leader's trap. At their
joint press conference, he linked the
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks with the Iranian
nuclear threat. Then, to Netanyahu's delight, he gave
Tehran "until the end of the year" to respond to his
diplomatic overtures. In this way, the wily prime
minister got the American president to accept his
linkage of two unrelated issues while offering nothing
in return.
Later, Netanyahu would differentiate between the
ongoing expansion of present Jewish settlements and
the creation of new ones, with no compromise on the
former. He would also draw a clear distinction between
the West Bank and East Jerusalem which, he would
insist, was an integral part of the "indivisible,
eternal capital of Israel," and therefore exempt from
any restrictions on Jewish settlements.
Reflecting the Obama administration's style, Clinton
offered a strong verbal riposte: "No exceptions to
Israeli settlement freeze". These would prove empty
words that changed nothing on the ground.
When Netanyahu publicly rejected Obama's demand for a
halt to settlement construction in the West Bank,
Obama raised the stakes, suggesting that Israeli
intransigence endangered American security.
On October 15th, after much back-channel communication
between the two governments, Netanyahu announced that
he had terminated the settlements talks with
Washington. Having said this, he offered to curb some
settlement construction during a later meeting with
Clinton. This won him the secretary of state's
effusive praise for an "unprecedented" gesture, and a
call for the unconditional resumption of the
Palestinian-Israeli peace talks.
The Palestinians were flabbergasted by this American
volte-face. "I believe that the U.S. condones
continued settlement expansion," said stunned
Palestinian government spokesman Ghassan Khatib.
"Negotiations are about ending the occupation and
settlement expansion is about entrenching the
occupation."
In December, Netanyahu agreed to a 10-month moratorium
on settlement building, but only after his government
had given permission for the construction of 3,000 new
apartments in the occupied West Bank. Sticking to
their original position, the Palestinians refused to
revive peace talks until there was a total freeze on
settlement activity.
On March 9, 2010, just as Vice-President Joe Biden
arrived in Jerusalem as part of Washington's campaign
to kick-start the peace process, the Israeli
authorities announced the approval of yet more
building -- 1,600 new homes in East Jerusalem. This
audacious move, meant to underline Israel's defiance
of Washington, left Biden -- as well as Obama --
fuming.
With the House of Representatives adopting his health
reform bill on March 24th, Obama was on a domestic
roll when he met Netanyahu in Washington the next day.
He reportedly laid out three conditions for defusing
the crisis: an extension of the freeze on Jewish
settlement expansion beyond September 2010; an end to
further Jewish settlement projects in East Jerusalem;
and withdrawal of the Israeli forces to the positions
held before the Second Intifada in September 2000. He
then left Netanyahu at the White House to consult with
his advisers and get back to him if "there is anything
new." Again, however, as with the Honduran generals
Obama's tough talk remained just that: talk.
The purpose of all this activity was to get the
Palestinians to resume peace negotiations with Israel,
which they had broken off when that country attacked
the Gaza Strip in December 2008. Netanyahu was
prepared to talk as long as no preconditions were set
by the Palestinians.
In the end, he got what he wanted. He met neither
Palestinian preconditions nor those of the Obama
administration. Simply put, it was Obama who bent to
Netanyahu's will. The tail wagged the dog.
The hapless officials of the Palestinian Authority
read the writing on the wall. After some ritual
huffing and puffing, they agreed to participate in
"proximity talks" with the Netanyahu government in
which Washington's Middle East envoy, George Mitchell,
would shuttle back and forth between the two sides.
These started on May 9th. Over the next four months,
Mitchell's tough task will be to try to narrow the
yawning differences on the terms of Palestinian
statehood -- when both sides now know that Obama will
shy away from pressuring Israel where it hurts.
" Spat With China, Then a Sudden Thaw
Obama's problems with the People's Republic of China (PRC)
began in November 2009 when, to his disappointment,
the Chinese government failed to accord him the royal
treatment he had expected on his first visit to the
country.
Washington-Beijing relations cooled further when the
Obama administration greenlighted the sale of $6.4
billion worth of advanced weaponry to Taiwan,
including anti-missile missiles, and Obama met the
Dalai Lama, Tibet's spiritual leader, at the White
House. The PRC regards Taiwan as a breakaway province
and Tibet as an integral part of the republic.
Senior U.S. officials described the moves as part of
Obama's concerted drive to "push back" at China which,
in his view, was punching above its weight. Along with
these moves went unrelenting pressure on Beijing, in
private and in public, to revalue its currency, the
yuan. The administration repeatedly highlighted a
legal provision requiring the Treasury Department to
report twice a year on any country that has been
manipulating the rate of exchange between its currency
and the American dollar to gain unfair advantage in
international trade. That the next due date for such a
report -- a preamble to possible sanctions -- was
April 15th was repeated by U.S. officials ad nauseam.
In mid-April, Obama was convening an international
summit on nuclear security in Washington. He was eager
to have as many heads of state as possible attend. At
the very least, he wanted the leaders of the four
nuclear powers with U.N. Security Council vetoes --
Britain, France, Russia, and China -- present.
That provided Chinese President Hu Jintao with a
powerful card to play at a moment when a White House
threat to name his country as a currency manipulator
hung over his head. He refused to attend the
Washington nuclear summit. Obama blinked. He postponed
the Treasury Department's judgment day. In return, Hu
came and met Obama at the White House.
That tensions existed between Beijing and Washington
did not surprise China's leaders, a collective of
hard-nosed realists. Their attitude was reflected in
an editorial in the official newspaper, the China
Daily, soon after Obama's inauguration. "U.S. leaders
have never been shy about talking about their
country's ambition," it said. "For them, it is
divinely granted destiny no matter what other nations
think." The editorial went on to predict that "Obama's
defense of U.S. interests will inevitably clash with
those of other nations." And so they have, repeatedly.
Such realism contrasted starkly with the mood
prevalent at the White House where it was naively
believed that a few well scripted speeches in foreign
capitals by the eloquent new president would restore
U.S. prestige left in tatters by George W. Bush's
policies. What the president and his coterie seem not
to have noticed, however, was an important Pew
Research Center poll. It showed that, following
Obama's public diplomacy campaign, while the image of
the U.S. had indeed risen sharply in Europe, Mexico,
and Brazil, any improvement was minor in India and
China, marginal in the Arab Middle East, and
nonexistent in Russia, Pakistan, and Turkey.
Stuck in its self-congratulatory mode, the Obama team
paid scant attention to the full range of options that
other powers had for retaliating to its pressure. For
instance, it did not foresee Beijing threatening
sanctions against major American companies supplying
weapons to Taiwan, nor did it anticipate the stiff
resistance the PRC would offer to revaluing the yuan.
Some attributed Beijing's behavior to a rising Chinese
nationalism and the fears of its leaders that bending
under pressure from "foreigners" would play poorly at
home. But the real reasons for Chinese resistance had
more to do with hard economics than popular sentiment.
In the wake of the Great Recession of 2008-09,
symbolized by the collapse of the gigantic Lehman
Brothers investment bank, China's leaders noted
tectonic changes occurring in the international
economic balance of power -- at the expense of the
hitherto "sole superpower."
While the U.S. and European economies contracted,
Beijing quickly adopted policies aimed at boosting
domestic demand and infrastructure investment. This
resulted in impressive expansion: 9% growth in the
gross domestic product in 2009 with a prediction of
12% in the current year. This led Goldman Sachs'
analysts to advance their forecast of the year when
China would become the globe's number one economy from
2050 to 2027.
For the first time since World War II, it was not the
United States that pulled the rest of the world out of
negative growth, but China. The U.S. has emerged from
the financial carnage as the most heavily indebted
nation on Earth, and China as its leading creditor
with an unprecedented $2.4 trillion in foreign
reserves.
Its cash-rich corporations are now buying companies
and future natural resources from Australia to Peru,
Canada to Afghanistan where, last year, the Congjiang
Copper Group, a Chinese corporation, offered $3.4
billion -- $1 billion more than the highest bid by a
Western metallurgy company -- to secure the right to
mine copper from one of the richest deposits on the
planet.
" Karzai the Menace Becomes Karzai the Indispensable
On assuming the presidency, Obama made no secret of
his dislike for his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai.
To circumvent his central government's pervasive
corruption, senior American officials came up with the
idea of dealing directly with Afghan provincial and
district governors. In the presidential election of
August 2009, their preference for Abdullah Abdullah, a
serious rival to Karzai, was widely known.
When Karzai resorted to massive vote rigging to ensure
his reelection and turned a deaf ear to Washington's
exhortations to clean up his administration, Obama
decided to use a stick to bring Washington's latest
client regime in line. In a dramatic gesture, he
undertook an air journey of 26 hours -- from
Washington to Kabul -- over the last weekend in March
to deliver a 26-minute lecture to Karzai on the
corruption and administrative ineptitude of his
government. The Afghan leader had few options but to
listen in stony silence.
When, however, Karzai read a news story in which an
unnamed senior American military official suggested
that his younger half-brother, Ahmed Wali, the power
broker in the southern province of Kandahar, deserved
to be put on the Pentagon's current list of drug
barons to be killed or captured, his patience snapped.
An incensed Afghan president responded by claiming
that the U.S. was deliberately intensifying and
widening the war in Afghanistan in order to stay in
the region and dominate it. He added that, if
Washington's pressure continued, he might join the
Taliban. (He had, in fact, been a significant
fundraiser for the Taliban after they captured Kabul
in September 1996.)
Obama reacted as he had done in the past. When facing
a serious challenge, he retreated. From being a stick
wielder he morphed into a carrier of carrots during a
Karzai visit to Washington early this month (that, in
March, administration officials were threatening to
postpone indefinitely).
The high point of the wooing of Karzai -- worthy of
being included in a modern version of Alice in
Wonderland -- was a dinner Vice-President Joe Biden
gave for the Afghan dignitary at his residence. At the
very least Karzai must have been bemused. In February,
Biden had staged a dramatic walk-out halfway through a
dinner at the Afghan president's palace after Karzai
denied that his government was corrupt or that, if it
was, he was at fault.
Despite the Obama administration's "red carpet
treatment" and "charm offensive," Karzai was boldly
honest at a joint press conference with Obama when he
described Iran as "our bother country, our friend."
The same sentiments would soon be expressed by another
leader -- in Brazil.
" President da Silva thumbs his nose at Obama
Ever since assuming the presidency of Brazil in 2003,
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has, when necessary, not
hesitated to challenge U.S. policy moves. He has
clashed with Washington on world trade (the Doha
round), global warming, and continuing U.S. sanctions
against Cuba.
In December 2008, he chaired a meeting of 31 Latin
American and Caribbean countries, which excluded the
United States, at the Brazilian tourist resort of
Sauipe. The next month, instead of going to the World
Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, da Silva
attended the Eighth World Social Forum at Belem at the
mouth of the Amazon River.
He was critical of the way Obama compromised democracy
in Honduras, and, despite the Obama administration's
dismay and opposition, he invited Iranian president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Brasilia in November 2009 for
talks on the Iranian nuclear program, his first
attempt at high-profile international diplomacy. (A
week earlier he had warmly received Israeli president
Shimon Peres in the Brazilian capital.) Six months
later, he paid a return visit to Tehran -- and made
history, much to the chagrin of Washington.
Acting in tandem with Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, da Silva revived a putative October
2009 nuclear agreement and brokered an unexpected deal
with Ahmadinejad. Iran agreed to ship 1,200 kilograms
of its low-enriched uranium to Turkey; in return,
Russia and France would provide 120 kilograms of 20%
enriched uranium for a medical research reactor in
Tehran.
Taken by surprise and rattled by the success of Brazil
and Turkey in the face of American disapproval, the
Obama administration reverted to the stance of the
Bush White House and demanded that Iran suspend its
program to enrich nuclear fuel. It then moved to push
an agreement on further U.N. sanctions against Iran,
as if the Brazilians and Turks had accomplished
nothing.
This refusal to register reality was myopic at best.
The blinkered view of the present White House ignores
salient global facts. The influence of mid-level
powers on the world stage is on the rise. Their
leaders feel -- rightly -- that they can ignore or
bypass the Obama administration's demands. And, on the
positive side, they can come together on certain
international issues and take diplomatic initiatives
of their own with a fair chance of success.
By now, from Afghanistan to Honduras, Brazil to China,
global leaders large and small increasingly sense that
the Obama administration's bark is worse than its
bite, and though the U.S. remains a major power, it is
no longer the determinative one. The waning of the
truncated American Century is by now irreversible.
-- Dilip Hiro is the author of many books on the
Middle East, including The Iranian Labyrinth. His
latest book, After Empire: The Birth of a Multipolar
World (Nation Books), has just been published. From
January 22nd to February 4th, he will be in the US on
his book tour.