Best Candidate ...Obama's Departure
20 November 2016
By Salman Al-dossary
Who is best for the region, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton or Republican
candidate Donald Trump?
Who will win? Is it the lady who participated, planned and implemented Barack
Obama's administration policies, or is it the first presidential candidate who
out speaks about his rivalry with many Americans, antagonizes Muslims,
immigrants, people with special needs and Mexicans and is proud of his sexual
harassments?
This question, which has been asked repeatedly during the past weeks, will be
answered the moment results of the U.S. presidential elections are announced
at Wednesday's dawn, GMT timing.
Maybe the two candidates are lucky for competing against each other; if Trump
was competing against another Democratic candidate, he would have had better
chances to win and vice versa.
When it comes to issues concerning the Middle East, debates between Clinton
and Trump, which have reached an unprecedented immoral level, haven't
discussed any solution or clarified the two parties' opinions and plans in
this regard.
For example, on the nuclear deal with Iran, Trump did not propose any clear
substitute for what he has repeatedly attacked whereas Clinton defended this
deal then admitted that Iran's regime poses a threat and hinted the use of
military power in case of breach of the deal, but she still did not submit any
detailed proposal to counter it.
Moreover, the two candidates neglected bringing up Syria and its catastrophic
humanitarian crisis in modern history. This means that they both will carry on
with Obama's policy that could be described as the ''indifference strategy.''
Also, debates on Iraq, the U.S. invasion in 2003 then withdrawal in 2011 were
futile.
Unfortunately, most of the debates between Trump and Clinton addressed
previous stances instead of discussing detailed new policies.
They also did not mention any of what the elected president will explain for
his/her people in the inaugural speech, except for what was leaked to public
by the two candidates' teams, and those are not conclusive policies that can
be built upon in their strategies in the future.
In my opinion, everyone in the Middle East describe Obama's policy as hesitant
and misleading, starting from his well-known speech in Cairo's University in
2009, to the heinous lie on Bashar al-Assad's use of chemical weapons and the
nuclear deal with Iran, which turned out to be a reward for a regime that
supports terrorism, according to the U.S..
Keeping in mind that Clinton has been one of Obama's tools and is a partner
inside Obama's administration, whether in her advisory role or her post as his
Secretary of State, and the fact that Washington's management for the region's
files during the so-called ''Arab Spring'' has led to the burst of many
internal wars in some regional countries, it is normal not be optimistic when
it comes to thinking that Clinton will undertake a policy different from the
one that she has adopted during the past years.
Meanwhile, the only positive thing about what Clinton could hold for the
Middle East is that she will not come up with anything worse than what is
happening nowadays.
On the other hand, no politician can bet that an unsteady character as Trump
could be less vile than President Obama.
In contrast, we might wake up to the election of a harassing U.S. president
and a new terrible world led by the United States.
Certainly, Trump fits to be an evil president; therefore, knowing that Arab
states still do not know Trump's approach towards them, and they are not sure
whether his policies will be positive or worse than the current
administration, they cannot specify what is possible and what is not possible
during his rule.
If President Barack Obama's administration has adopted the policy of
communicating with the opponents more than boosting relations with partners
during the past eight years, then the next White House resident will be very
aware of the fact that abandoning the region is not an option.
Or as Hillary Clinton was quoted saying: ''The U.S. would commit a grave
mistake if it abandons its responsibilities or gives up the reins of
leadership.''
Regardless of who will reside in the White House, the region is in desperate
need for the departure of the current one once and for all, especially that
his policies have affected the region negatively like no others.
Salman Aldosary is the editor-in-chief of Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper.
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