maxparrish
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2005
- Messages
- 2,262
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Basic Beliefs
- Libertarian-Conservative, Agnostic.
Six months ago Obama's lassitude and lethargy on foreign policy reached a new high. ISIS, "the JVs", caught Obama flat-footed and unprepared, in spite of six months to year of warning. Like the Ukraine crisis, (as Panetta and Hillary have politely confirmed) Obama's cultivated obliviousness is part of his interest in doing as little as possible, and risking little. His resolve to do nothing began to yield after being harassed by public outrage and the press to do something to check an ongoing genocide of Christian sects. After a few "humanitarian" missions and a few air strikes his strategy remained a mystery culminating with his Aug 28th announcement: “We don’t have a strategy yet.”
Interestingly, Obama's strategy is neither a victory nor an exit strategy - it is a "just enough" strategy to contain ISIS, hoping the hapless Iraqi's and out-gunned "moderate Syrians (whoever they are)" can turn it around. Yet, the administration has yet to negotiate a final set of training sites, and are yet to vet any potential recruits.
As Rubin of the Washington Post recently observed:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...t-last-obama-is-delusional-on-foreign-policy/
In the meantime, it was just announced that UAE has pulled out of the coalition.
So much for leading from behind.
Interestingly, Obama's strategy is neither a victory nor an exit strategy - it is a "just enough" strategy to contain ISIS, hoping the hapless Iraqi's and out-gunned "moderate Syrians (whoever they are)" can turn it around. Yet, the administration has yet to negotiate a final set of training sites, and are yet to vet any potential recruits.
As Rubin of the Washington Post recently observed:
If there is one thing the right and left, Democrats and Republicans, politicians and experts could all agree on, it was that President Obama’s take on the world is shockingly delusional. The most common question seems to be: Could he believe what he was saying?
On MSNBC Andrea Mitchell said flat-out that the president has a “credibility problem”: “It’s really hard to see what the progress has been against ISIS in Syria for sure, and in Iraq. He will say there is now a government in Iraq and that there is a more secular government in Iraq, a more inclusive government in Iraq. But to claim progress against ISIS and against terrorism, especially on a day when Yemen is fraught with the possibility of collapse and we’ve got a new hostage video from ISIS with Japanese hostages, is really hard to fathom.” Over on NBC, foreign reporter Richard Engel declared that the president’s insistence that we are winning against the Islamic State was fictional. “It sounded like the president was outlining a world that he wishes we were all living in but is very different from the world that you just described,” he said. Obama’s assertion that we have stopped the Islamic State’s advances “just isn’t the case . . . There was a general tone . . . of suspended disbelief when he was talking about foreign policy.” ...
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said it was “delusional” to claim success on the same day (that) Yemen — the country Obama previously claimed as an example of the rightness of his foreign policy — fell to Iranian-backed rebels.
...Bloomberg’s foreign policy investigative reporter, Josh Rogin, “translated” the president’s absurd statements. As for his boast his foreign policy is “smarter,” Rogin wisecracked that this really meant: “I campaigned on the idea that we needed to restore America’s image in the world and I’m going to claim that this has happened and is yielding benefits, without specifying what exactly those benefits are....
But Rogin (“I’m prepared to call anybody who is for sanctions a warmonger, whether it’s a Republican or a Democrat. You’ll probably do it anyway, but I’ll try to make it as painful as possible.”) and others reserved their harshest criticism for the president’s misleading and nonsensical comments about Iran....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...t-last-obama-is-delusional-on-foreign-policy/
In the meantime, it was just announced that UAE has pulled out of the coalition.
So much for leading from behind.
