boneyard bill
Veteran Member
When I was in college I got a summer job as a camp counselor. Before the campers arrived, the head counselor addressed the rest of us.
"Before long," he said, "you will get a camper who is very talkative and disruptive. And you're going to point to him and you're going to say, 'I don't want to hear another word.'
Well," he went on, "You're going to hear another word. And then what do you do? So don't put yourself in that position."
Obama is continually putting himself in exactly that position. If you draw a "red line" and then don't follow through on it, you look weak. If you make threats and then follow up with useless gestures, you look weak.
My point here is not that Obama should follow through on his threats. I'm not saying that he should enforce the red lines he has drawn. The mistake is in making the threats. His mistake is in drawing the red lines in the first place.
He should memorize Kissinger's lines. He would always say something like, "This could create a very grave situation." No threats, nothing specific, no commitments that you need to back down from.
So Obama threatens "sanctions" against Russia and what do we get. A few oligarchs are banned. This is the diplomatic equivalent of "unfriending" someone on Facebook. "Ooh, ooh, I'm scared," Putin has to be saying to himself.
And what has Putin threatened? Nothing with regard to Ukraine. But with respect to sanctions, he's threatened to bring down the dollar and has actually followed through on it by announcing that Russia will sell oil for rubles. Will that bring down the dollar? Very likely, though it may take a few years.
Obama has encouraged and abetted the overthrow of Ukraine's democratically-elected government and has inherited a bankrupt country that is also a political and economic basket-case. Putin has encouraged and abetted the secession of Crimea, (although it's questionable that he even needed to given the mess in Kiev).
Meanwhile, while that government massacres its own Russian-speaking citizens, Putin has threatened nothing even though Russia has claimed the right to protect Russian-speaking citizens in former Soviet states. Instead he offers negotiations and compromise.
Does he need to make threats? No. If he decides to intervene, he will simply do it. Why box yourself in? Why tip your hand?
Obama is weak, not because he actions are weak (on the contrary, they are forceful to the point of recklessness). He looks weak because he talks a tougher game than he can play. And John Kerry is even worse. In fact, one could argue that John Kerry's mouth is what makes Obama hand look so weak.
"Before long," he said, "you will get a camper who is very talkative and disruptive. And you're going to point to him and you're going to say, 'I don't want to hear another word.'
Well," he went on, "You're going to hear another word. And then what do you do? So don't put yourself in that position."
Obama is continually putting himself in exactly that position. If you draw a "red line" and then don't follow through on it, you look weak. If you make threats and then follow up with useless gestures, you look weak.
My point here is not that Obama should follow through on his threats. I'm not saying that he should enforce the red lines he has drawn. The mistake is in making the threats. His mistake is in drawing the red lines in the first place.
He should memorize Kissinger's lines. He would always say something like, "This could create a very grave situation." No threats, nothing specific, no commitments that you need to back down from.
So Obama threatens "sanctions" against Russia and what do we get. A few oligarchs are banned. This is the diplomatic equivalent of "unfriending" someone on Facebook. "Ooh, ooh, I'm scared," Putin has to be saying to himself.
And what has Putin threatened? Nothing with regard to Ukraine. But with respect to sanctions, he's threatened to bring down the dollar and has actually followed through on it by announcing that Russia will sell oil for rubles. Will that bring down the dollar? Very likely, though it may take a few years.
Obama has encouraged and abetted the overthrow of Ukraine's democratically-elected government and has inherited a bankrupt country that is also a political and economic basket-case. Putin has encouraged and abetted the secession of Crimea, (although it's questionable that he even needed to given the mess in Kiev).
Meanwhile, while that government massacres its own Russian-speaking citizens, Putin has threatened nothing even though Russia has claimed the right to protect Russian-speaking citizens in former Soviet states. Instead he offers negotiations and compromise.
Does he need to make threats? No. If he decides to intervene, he will simply do it. Why box yourself in? Why tip your hand?
Obama is weak, not because he actions are weak (on the contrary, they are forceful to the point of recklessness). He looks weak because he talks a tougher game than he can play. And John Kerry is even worse. In fact, one could argue that John Kerry's mouth is what makes Obama hand look so weak.