THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Friday, February 6, 2015

THREE MARTINI LUNCH: FEBRUARY 6, 2015

National Review's Jim Geraghty and Radio America's Greg Corombos discuss current events. Today's topics: Tom Brokaw is "furious" at Brian Williams, President Obama tells Christians to get off their "high horse" and calls his international ineptitude... "strategic patience."



Chuck Todd: Where is Obama's national security strategy?
Er, would that be Professor Barack Obama? I understand he's giving a lecture on medieval times at Medieval Times in Baltimore. Perhaps one might joust with him a bit there over it. And as soon as Obama finishes taking care of the eleventh century, he'll step right up and answer Chuck Todd's question.
Actually, Todd wanted Susan Rice to provide the answer, which says something about Obama's lack of performance on this score (note: this aired before Susan Rice's speech):
At 1:00 pm ET today at the Brookings Institution, National Security Adviser Susan Rice will deliver remarks on the Obama administration's national security strategy. This event will prompt many of the administration's critics — and even some of its supporters — to ask: "Is there really a strategy?"
It shouldn't come as a surprise that more Americans approve of Obama's handling of the economy (49%) than handling of foreign policy (37%), according to last month's NBC/WSJ poll. (It wasn't that long ago when those numbers were reversed.) To be sure, the administration has had one foreign-policy success, sort of — getting Europe to economically isolate Russia, but it's an incomplete success since the sanctions haven't actually CHANGED Putin's behavior. As a whole, the administration's strategy looks more like crisis management than an actual strategy. A lot of that has to do with the Iraq war, of course. This administration and its advisers are incredibly gun-shy about getting dragged into quagmires.
They don't seem to mind starting quagmires, though. The Obama administration took down the Qaddafi dictatorship in Libya with no strategy for what followed afterward there, either. Instead, Libya has become a failed state on the Mediterranean, giving Islamist terror networks a strategic base of operations against Europe. We almost did the same thing with Egypt, but the Egyptian military seized control from the Muslim Brotherhood to prevent it from turning the country into a radical Islamist stronghold.
Now we have Yemen falling completely today into the hands of Shi'ite extremists.
The Hadi government formed after the U.S. and Saudi Arabia pressured the previous Saleh dictatorship into withdrawing in November 2011, at the waning of the Arab Spring. Supposedly, this was supposed to accelerate self-determination, even though Yemen had both al-Qaeda (Sunnis) and the Houthis (Shi'ite) competing for terrorist supremacy. The result is another failed state, one this time managed mostly by Shi'ites with ties to Iran. That will allow Tehran even more power in the region.
In fact, to the extent that this administration has a strategy in the Middle East, it appears to be tilting toward Tehran. Obama pulled entirely out of Iraq, against the advice of his Defense secretaries, allowing Nouri al-Maliki to push the Sunnis and Kurds out of the military and government and tilt decisively toward Tehran. That created an opening for al-Qaeda in Iraq to roar back to life as ISIS from the midst of the Syrian civil war and made the Iraqi army impotent to stop it. Now we're fighting the enemies of Bashar al-Assad, Iran's closest ally, while setting up Yemen to fall under Tehran's orbit.
Now we're negotiating a nuclear-power treaty with Iran on the hope that they will exercise more hegemony in the region. The Washington Post editorial board is aghast.
The tilt toward Iran, which has become so apparent that Israel has begun openly complaining about it as American policy allows Iranian power to expand, seems motivated by Barack Obama's attempt to hit a home run and set his foreign-policy legacy. He insisted during the 2008 campaign that he could succeed in getting Iran to negotiate reasonably, part of his "Bush is a cowboy" rhetoric before and during that campaign. He scoffed at the notion that Iran was a threat seven years ago, calling it a tiny country compared to the old Soviet Union (the newer iteration of which Obama has failed to counter effectively as well).
Six years into his presidency, Obama hasn't been able to get the Iranian leadership to act reasonably, because they're an extremist clique with extremist goals of regional domination. Instead of coming to his senses, Obama is becoming more and more desperate to prove himself correct, to the point of actually begging Iran to become the regional hegemon, in part due to Obama's feckless policies in Iraq and during the Arab Spring. The nuclear deal outlined above isn't designed to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon — it's designed to delay it until his successor takes office so that Obama won't get the blame for it.
It's appeasement, and nothing more. The only things missing are the piece of paper and the umbrella.
Also read:

Jihadis 14, Crusaders 2

Whose High Horse?

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