December 04, 2009
Does Obama Listen to Himself?
An ungracious chief executive.
By Mona Charen
Barack Obama is demonstrating bottomless reservoirs of gracelessness. A full 13
months after his election, in the course of justifying the deployment of 30,000
more troops to Afghanistan, President Obama could not spare a word of praise for
George W. Bush — not even when recounting the nation’s “unified” response to
9/11. To the contrary, throughout his pained recitation of the choices we face
in Afghanistan, he adverted at least half a dozen times to the supposed blunders
of his predecessor.
It’s beginning to sound whiny — and unpresidential. Enough about the terrible
mess he inherited. Let’s hear a little more about the tremendous honor that has
been bestowed on him. Ronald Reagan inherited a worse situation in 1980 —
inflation at 13.5 percent; the prime rate at 21 percent; the Soviets in
Afghanistan; American hostages in Tehran; Communist coups in ten new countries
over the previous decade — but Reagan never impugned his predecessor. As
biographer Lou Cannon noted, “Reagan . . . was generous to Carter in his public
statements even though he did not care for him.”
George W. Bush showed the same chivalry toward Bill Clinton, declining to
breathe a negative word about him — even when sorely tempted by the pardon
scandal that further tarnished an already clouded tenure. Even now, despite the
unremitting barrage from his successor, Bush keeps silent, true to his tradition
of civility toward opponents.
President Obama is so spiteful that he warps history to fit his prejudices.
Everything was going brilliantly in Afghanistan, he explains, until “the
decision was made to wage a second war, in Iraq.” Iraq took the lion’s share of
resources and ruined our international reputation, he argues. But in the next
sentence, without acknowledging the surge (much less the courage Bush
demonstrated in pursuing it despite tremendous political and military pressure
against it), Obama boasts that “we are bringing the Iraq War to a successful
conclusion” and “successfully leaving Iraq to its people.”
No doubt Obama’s “success” in Iraq is attributable, as he sees it, to the fact
that “I’ve spent this year renewing our alliances and forging new partnerships”
including “a new beginning between America and the Muslim world.” Oh yes, that’s
going so well. As the Taliban gains strength in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the
chief object of Mr. Obama’s flirtation, Iran, spat in the eyes of the U.S. and
the U.N. last week by announcing that it will build ten new nuclear-enrichment
facilities. This follows contemptuous brush-offs from Iran’s bosses. In
November, Ayatollah Khaminei again spurned Obama’s “many private approaches,”
saying it would be “perverted” to negotiate with the United States.
President Obama has been crystal clear that Bush’s “arrogance” led to disaster
for the United States. And once again he’s at pains to emphasize his new
approach. The president assured the Afghans that “America is your partner, never
your patron” (though a miserably poor and besieged country might like a patron
very much). The odd thing is that Obama’s tone toward our “partners” sounded
downright scolding in several places. “This effort must be based on performance.
The days of providing a blank check are over.” That is not exactly partnerish
talk. “We will be clear,” he continued, “about what we expect from those who
receive our assistance. . . . We expect those who are ineffective or corrupt to
be held accountable.”
It would be nice if that standard were applied to Washington, D.C., much less
Kabul. But this is the tone of his vaunted new diplomacy? Of Pakistan, the
president said, “In the past, we too often defined our relationship . . .
narrowly. Those days are over. Moving forward, we are committed to a partnership
. . . built on . . . mutual interest, mutual respect, and mutual trust.” But
then came the poke in the shoulder: “We have made it clear that we cannot
tolerate a safe haven for terrorists whose location is known and whose
intentions are clear.”
Well, perhaps President Obama doesn’t realize how he sounds. That must be it. He
had the gall, after kneecapping Bush, to demand a halt to “rancor” and
“partisanship.” But the greater outrage was his pious declaration that “we must
make it clear to every man, woman, and child around the world who lives under
the dark cloud of tyranny that America will speak out on behalf of their human
rights.” This from the man whose State Department told China early on that human
rights were not our priority; who has decided he can deal with the butchers of
Darfur; who averted his eyes from the bloody crackdown on protests in Iran; and
who tamely permitted the Chinese to censor his words during his visit.
But there’s no cause for self-examination. There’s still George W. Bush to kick
around.
— Mona Charen is a nationally syndicated columnist. © 2009 Creators Syndicate,
Inc.
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