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Foreign Policy to the rescue: How can foreign policy
become Obama's political salvation?
NJ.voices.com
Aref Assaf
November 3, 2010
I usually write about US elections to urge people to register
vote and to highlight the general issues facing Arab and Muslim
Americans. While presidential elections usually entail foreign
policy platforms, midterm congressional elections are all about
domestic concerns. While foreign policy pundits do not normally
concern themselves with domestic political affairs in the United
States, when the only global power is undergoing substantial
political uncertainty, that inevitably affects its behavior and
therefore the dynamics of the international system. Thus, we
have to address it, at least from the standpoint of U.S. foreign
policy. It become the more relevant when we learn from polls
that President Obama stands to face a political reversal.
Three points need to be state to situate our discussion of
what awaits president Obama. First, while Obama won a major
victory in the Electoral College, he did not come anywhere near
a landslide in the popular vote. In spite of the Democrats’
strength in Congress and the inevitable bump in popularity Obama
received after he was elected, his personal political strength
was not overwhelming. Over the past year, poll numbers
indicating support for his presidency have deteriorated to the
low 40 percent range, numbers from which it is difficult, but
not impossible, to govern.
Second, Obama entered the
presidency off balance. His early focus in the campaign was to
argue that the war in Iraq was the wrong war to fight but that
the war in Afghanistan was the right one. This positioned him as
a powerful critic of George W. Bush without positioning him as
an anti-war candidate. Politically shrewd, he came into office
with an improving Iraq situation, a deteriorating Afghanistan
situation and a commitment to fighting the latter war. But Obama
did not expect the global financial crisis. When it hit full
blast in September 2008, he had no campaign strategy to deal
with it and was saved by the fact that John McCain was as much
at a loss as he was. The Obama presidency has therefore been
that of a moderately popular president struggling between
campaign promises and strategic realities as well as a massive
economic crisis to which he crafted solutions that were a
mixture of the New Deal and what the Bush administration had
already done. It was a tough time to be president. Third,
while in office, Obama tilted his focus away from the foreign
affairs platform he ran on to one of domestic politics. In doing
so, he shifted from the area where the president is
institutionally strong to the place where the president is
institutionally weak. The Constitution and American tradition
give the president tremendous power in foreign policy, generally
untrammeled by other institutions. Domestic politics do not
provide such leeway. A Congress divided into two houses, a
Supreme Court and the states limit the president dramatically.
The founders did not want it to be easy to pass domestic
legislation, and tradition hasn’t changed that. Obama can
propose, but and unlike a king, he cannot impose.
He does
not, at the moment, have a great deal of public support to draw
on, and the level of vituperation from the extremes has reached
the level it was with George W. Bush. Where Bush was accused by
the extreme left of going into Iraq to increase profits for
Halliburton and the oil companies, Obama is being accused by the
extreme right of trying to create a socialist state. Add to this
other assorted nonsense, such as the notion that Bush engineered
9/11 or that Obama is a secret Muslim, and you get the first
whiff of a failed presidency. This is not because of the
prospect of midterm reversals — that has happened any number of
times. It is because Obama, like Bush, was off balance from the
beginning.
If Obama suffers a significant defeat in Congress
in the November elections, he will not be able to move his
domestic agenda. Indeed, Obama doesn’t have to lose either house
to be rendered weak. The structure of Congress is such that
powerful majorities are needed to get anything done. Even small
majorities can paralyze a presidency.
Under these
circumstances, the president would have two choices. The first
is to go into opposition. Presidents go into opposition when
they lose support in Congress. They run campaigns against
Congress for blocking their agenda and blame Congress for any
failures. Essentially, this was Bill Clinton’s strategy after
his reversals in 1994, and it worked in 1996. It is a risky
strategy, obviously. The second option is to shift from the weak
part of the presidency to the strong part, foreign policy, where
a president can generally act decisively without congressional
backing. If Congress does resist, it can be painted as playing
politics with national security. Since Vietnam, this has been a
strategy Republican presidents have used, painting Democratic
Congresses as weak on national security.
There is a problem
in Obama choosing the second strategy. For Republicans, this
strategy plays to their core constituency, for whom national
security is a significant issue. It also is an effective tool to
reach into the center. The same isn’t true for the Democrats.
Obama’s Afghanistan policy has already alienated the Democratic
left wing, and the core of the Democratic Party is primarily
interested in economic and social issues. The problem for Obama
is that focusing on foreign policy at the expense of economic
and social issues might gain him some strength in the center,
but probably wouldn’t pick him up many Republican votes and
would alienate his core constituency.
This would indicate
that Obama’s best strategy is to go into opposition, government
against Congress. But there are two problems with this. One of
the underlying themes of the Obama presidency is that he is
ineffective in getting his economic agenda implemented. That’s
not really true, given the successes he has had with health-care
reform and banking regulation, but it is still a theme. The
other problem he has is the sense that he has surged in
Afghanistan while setting a deadline for withdrawal and that his
Afghan policy is merely a political gesture. Obama can’t
escape national security issues. There are now two wars under
way. Obama can’t ignore them even if his core constituency has a
different agenda. Going into opposition against Congress could
energize his base, but that base is in the low 40s. He needs to
get others on board. He could do that if he could pass
legislation he wanted, but the scenario we are looking at will
leave him empty-handed when it comes time for re-election. His
strongest supporters will see him as the victim, but a
victimized president will have trouble putting together a
winning coalition in 2012. He can play the card, but there has
to be more.
We come back to foreign policy as a place where
Obama will have to focus whether he likes it or not. He takes
his bearings from Franklin Roosevelt, and the fact is that
Roosevelt had two presidencies. One was entirely about domestic
politics and the other about foreign policy, or the Depression
and then World War II. This was not a political choice for
Roosevelt, but it was how his presidency worked out. For very
different reasons, Obama is likely to have his presidency
bifurcated. With his domestic initiatives blocked, he must turn
to foreign policy.
Here, too, Obama has a problem. He ran his
campaign, in the Democratic tradition, with a vague anti-war
theme and a heavy commitment to the American-alliance structure.
He was also a strong believer in what has been called soft
power, the power of image as opposed to that of direct force.
This has not been particularly successful. The atmospherics of
the alliance may be somewhat better under Obama than Bush, but
the Europeans remain as fragmented and as suspicious of American
requests under Obama as they were under Bush. Obama got the
Nobel Prize but precious little else from the Europeans. His
public diplomacy initiative to the Islamic world also did not
significantly redefine the game. Relations with China have
improved but primarily because the United States has given up on
revaluation of the Yuan. It cannot be argued that Obama’s
strategy outside the Islamic world has achieved much. It could
be claimed that any such strategy takes time; Obama’s problem is
that he is running out of political maneuvering room.
That
leaves the wars that are continuing, Iraq and Afghanistan. I
have argued that Afghanistan is the wrong war in the wrong
place. It is difficult to know how Obama views it, given his
contradictory signals of increasing the number of troops but
setting a deadline for beginning their withdrawal. We have
argued that a complete withdrawal from Iraq without a settlement
with Iran or the decimation of Iran’s conventional forces would
be a mistake, but we don’t know, obviously, what Obama’s view on
this is. We do not know his view of the effect of the Afghan war
on U.S. strategic posture or on Pakistan, and we do not know his
view of the impact of U.S. withdrawal from Iraq on Iranian
influence in the Persian Gulf.
Let’s assume that he has clear
views, which is likely for a president, and he is playing a long
and quiet game. This would not be a bad strategy if he were
stronger and had more time. But if the polls hold he will be
weaker and running out of time. It would therefore follow that
Obama will come out of the November election having to turn over
his cards on the only area where he can have traction — Iraq,
Iran and Afghanistan. The question is what he might do.
One
option is to solve the Iraq problem by attacking Iran’s nuclear
facilities. This carries the risk of Iranian retaliation in the
Strait of Hormuz and a massive hit on the Western economic
revival. In that sense, a strike against Iranian nuclear targets
alone would be the riskiest. Far safer is a generalized air
campaign against both Iran’s nuclear and conventional
capability. But launching a new war, while two others go on,
is strategically risky. From a political point of view, it would
alienate Obama’s political base, many of whom supported him
because he would not undertake unilateral military moves. The
Republicans would be most inclined to support him, but most
would not vote for him under any circumstances. Plus, brilliant
military strokes have the nasty habit of bogging down just as
mediocre ideas do. That would end the Obama presidency.
Clinton’s war in Kosovo was not an easy option for him
strategically or politically.
That leaves another option, one
that would appeal both to Obama’s sensibility and to his
political situation: pulling a Nixon. In 1971, Richard Nixon
reached out to China while Chinese weapons were being used to
kill American soldiers in Vietnam. Roosevelt did the same with
the Soviets in 1941. There is a tradition in the United States
of a diplomatic stroke with ideological enemies to achieve
strategic ends.
Diplomatic strokes appeal to Obama. They also
would appeal to his political base, while any agreement with
Iran that would contribute to an American withdrawal from Iraq
and perhaps from Afghanistan would appeal to the center. The
Republicans would be appalled, but Obama can’t win them over
anyway so it doesn’t matter. Indeed, he can use their hostility
to strengthen his own base. What the settlement with Iran
might look like is murky at best. Whether Iran has any interest
in such a settlement is murkier still. But if Obama gets
hammered in the midterms, his domestic agenda will be frozen. He
doesn’t have the personal strength and credibility to run
against Congress for two years and then get re-elected. He
retains his power in foreign affairs but he has not gotten
traction on a multilateral reconstruction of America’s global
popularity. He has two wars ongoing, plus a major challenge from
Iran. Attacking Iran from the air might or might not work, and
it could weaken him politically. That leaves him with running
against Congress or addressing the Middle East with a diplomatic
masterstroke.
It has long been argued that presidential candidates
make promises but do what they want if elected. In foreign
policy, presidential candidates make promises and, if elected,
do what they must to get re-elected.It is difficult to know the ways of
presidents, particularly one who has tried hard to be personally
enigmatic. But it is easier to measure the political pressures
that are confronting him and shaping his decisions.
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