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04 Jun 2009 07:56 am
Humility Or Humiliation?
There's a brilliant and penetrating post from Marc Ambinder on the strengths of an Obama administration conceding American mistakes and faults while seeking to advance Western interests. Money quote:
In Obama's mind, these apologies, concessions, or what-not may, on
their surface, seem to many Americans to be the proffering of a weak
hand. But if it is in America's interests for -- to put it plainly --
the Muslim world to trust us more (to help combat Islamism, a nuclear
Iran, terrorism) -- then it is not out of line to project a less
bullying, less patronizing image of America. There is some realism in
this.
Frankly, I think the last decade or so has shown the extreme limits of hard power and the desperate need for more public diplomacy, national re-branding and some shrewd maneuvering to advance the interests of the West and to help avoid what could be a catastrophic era in global politics. I still believe in the prudent use of military force, and the need to keep a threat of such force in diplomacy. But the great challenge of the war against Jihadist terror is shifting the psyches of countless young Muslims, from Pakistan to Morocco. That we have chance to do that with this president is itself testimony to democracy's capacity for correcting mistakes and the strength of its ethnic and cultural diversity in appealing to the wider world.
This was one core reason, after all, that many of us supported him - because we realized we couldn't win this war with the brutal, polarizing tactics of the past:
What does [Obama] offer? First and foremost: his
face. Think of it as the most effective potential re-branding of the
United States since Reagan. Such a re-branding is not trivial—it’s
central to an effective war strategy. The war on Islamist terror, after
all, is two-pronged: a function of both hard power and soft power. We
have seen the potential of hard power in removing the Taliban and
Saddam Hussein. We have also seen its inherent weaknesses in Iraq, and
its profound limitations in winning a long war against radical Islam.
The next president has to create a sophisticated and supple blend of
soft and hard power to isolate the enemy, to fight where necessary, but
also to create an ideological template that works to the West’s
advantage over the long haul. There is simply no other candidate with
the potential of Obama to do this. Which is where his face comes in.
Consider this hypothetical. It’s November 2008. A young Pakistani
Muslim is watching television and sees that this man—Barack Hussein
Obama—is the new face of America. In one simple image, America’s soft
power has been ratcheted up not a notch, but a logarithm. A
brown-skinned man whose father was an African, who grew up in Indonesia
and Hawaii, who attended a majority-Muslim school as a boy, is now the
alleged enemy. If you wanted the crudest but most effective weapon
against the demonization of America that fuels Islamist ideology,
Obama’s face gets close. It proves them wrong about what America is in
ways no words can.
The other obvious advantage that Obama has in facing the world and
our enemies is his record on the Iraq War. He is the only major
candidate to have clearly opposed it from the start. Whoever is in
office in January 2009 will be tasked with redeploying forces in and
out of Iraq, negotiating with neighboring states, engaging America’s
estranged allies, tamping down regional violence. Obama’s interlocutors
in Iraq and the Middle East would know that he never had suspicious
motives toward Iraq, has no interest in occupying it indefinitely, and
foresaw more clearly than most Americans the baleful consequences of
long-term occupation.
This latter point is the most salient. The act of picking the next
president will be in some ways a statement of America’s view of Iraq.
Clinton is running as a centrist Democrat—voting for war, accepting the
need for an occupation at least through her first term, while
attempting to do triage as practically as possible. Obama is running as
the clearer antiwar candidate. At the same time, Obama’s candidacy
cannot fairly be cast as a McGovernite revival in tone or substance. He
is not opposed to war as such. He is not opposed to the use of
unilateral force, either—as demonstrated by his willingness to target
al-Qaeda in Pakistan over the objections of the Pakistani government.
He does not oppose the idea of democratization in the Muslim world as a
general principle or the concept of nation building as such. He is not
an isolationist, as his support for the campaign in Afghanistan proves.
It is worth recalling the key passages of the speech Obama gave in
Chicago on October 2, 2002, five months before the war:
I don’t oppose all wars. And I know that in this crowd today, there is
no shortage of patriots, or of patriotism. What I am opposed to is a
dumb war. What I am opposed to is a rash war … I know that even a
successful war against Iraq will require a U.S. occupation of
undetermined length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined
consequences. I know that an invasion of Iraq without a clear rationale
and without strong international support will only fan the flames of
the Middle East, and encourage the worst, rather than best, impulses of
the Arab world, and strengthen the recruitment arm of al-Qaeda. I am
not opposed to all wars. I’m opposed to dumb wars.
The man who opposed the war for the right reasons is for that reason
the potential president with the most flexibility in dealing with it.
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