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Obama Pivots Pragmatic, Anything But Bush Gone

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  • Obama Pivots Pragmatic, Anything But Bush Gone

    OBAMA PIVOTS PRAGMATIC, ANYTHING BUT BUSH GONE
    By David Paul Kuhn

    RealClearPolitics
    http://www.realclearpoliti cs.com/articles/2009/06/01/obama_pivots_pragmatic_ anything_but_bush_gone_96765.html
    June 1 2009

    The illusions appear gone. On the world stage, the idealistic candidate
    has become the pragmatic president.

    George W. Bush took five years to pivot away from neo-conservative
    idealism. Obama has turned away from his tepid idealism in a matter of
    months. The words will remain grandiose. But the gauntlet before Barack
    Obama has compelled him to be practical. Marriages of convenience
    are again dominating U.S. foreign policy.

    Obama flies off to Saudi Arabia and Egypt this week, ahead of traveling
    to Europe to commemorate the 65th anniversary of D-Day. We recall
    D-Day as a big moment of last century's big moral war. Good and evil
    were clear and we were good. But we were also willing to ally with
    Joseph Stalin's repressive regime to face down the far greater evil.

    Today's Middle East politics offer more shades of grey. But democracy,
    as with World War II, is not this president's chief concern. At
    this point, it's the avoidance of war from East Asia to the Middle
    East. Obama has responded to rapid escalation with a rapid, and
    healthy, turn towards full-on pragmatism.

    Every new administration has a learning curve on international
    affairs. In recent decades, there has been a pattern of a new White
    House attempting the opposite of its predecessor.

    George W. Bush's early strategy was ABC (Anything but Clinton). Clinton
    engaged North Korea so Bush would not. Clinton tried a shotgun
    wedding on Palestine and Israel. Bush left the fraught relationship
    alone. Clinton conveyed the image of consensus on treaties like
    Kyoto. Bush scuttled them. Clinton tolerated a Saddam Hussein who
    stayed within his borders, and Bush, well we know what happened there.

    Obama initially attempted an ABB (Anything but Bush) policy. Bush
    spoke in Manichean terms about national security threats. Obama would
    do nuance. Obama directed the Pentagon to trash the term "Global
    War on Terror" in favor of "Overseas Contingency Operation." It was
    rhetorical de-escalation. He pledged to close the detention center
    at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as a bold stroke to symbolize his turn
    away from Bush (though Bush eventually moved towards that policy as
    well). Obama publicly reached his hand out to Iran, where Bush only
    finally resigned himself to quiet efforts. Obama is engaging the
    Israel-Palestine issue early and hard.

    But Obama has kept more Bush than he intended. Obama has rankled his
    left flank by continuing Bush's military tribunals for Guantanamo
    detainees despite calling them an "enormous failure" nearly a year
    ago. Elsewhere, citing Bush's argument that national security requires
    secrecy, Obama has defended warrantless wiretapping and withheld
    photos depicting prisoner abuse.

    Obama's talk in Prague of a world without nuclear weapons has given
    way to the concern that Iran and North Korea could spark a nuclear
    arms race in East Asia and the Middle East.

    Obama's open-ended promises for a "new beginning" on Iran now carry
    a caveat. Obama recently set a year-end deadline for significant
    diplomatic progress.

    Last month, Obama sat beside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
    and decided not to give him the full-court press. Obama did not say
    all settlement building must stop. But last week, Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton did. "Not some settlements, not outposts, not natural
    growth exceptions," she said.

    This White House initially shied away from setting diplomatic
    trip-wires for North Korea, relying on consensus and containment. But
    just this weekend, following North Korea's latest nuclear test, Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates offered the first explicit red line. Gates
    said the Obama administration intends to hold North Korea "fully
    accountable" should it sell or transfer any nuclear material.

    Obama's early decision to flip on his pledge to call the Armenian
    genocide, genocide, now appears to be a harbinger of a full-turn toward
    pragmatism. Even U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is walking lockstep.

    The woman who in 1991 unfurled a banner in Tiananmen Square that read,
    "to those who died for democracy in China" and attempted to push
    a human rights petition to President Hu Jintao, was mostly mum on
    human rights during her recent visit to China. The visit came only
    days before the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

    Obama has more immediate needs from China: a partner on the economic
    recession, North Korea and environmental policy.

    Bush also shifted by the winter of his presidency. He quietly engaged
    North Korea and Iran. His good-and-evil language faded as he came to
    work with all but the most hardened adversaries in Iraq. Bush came
    to mildly push for a two-state solution in the Middle East and even,
    to the chagrin of Dick Cheney, moved to close the Guantanamo detention
    center. Bush realized hard power was not enough.

    Obama is now adding some hard to his soft power. It's this move to
    have realism reign over idealism that frames Obama's speech in Cairo
    Thursday, a heavily anticipated address to the Muslim world. Few
    expect a sequel to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's 2005 speech
    in Cairo, when she recanted a policy that put stability before "the
    democratic aspirations of all people."

    Democracy is not the ends for Obama in his Middle East. It's
    peace. More immediately, the absence of war between Israel and
    Iran. Jordan exemplifies why some monarchs are better for peace, just
    as Hamas' 2006 victory demonstrated that elections can undercut peace.

    Bush attempted in his last years to walk back his commitment to
    "ending tyranny in our world." But it's the Democrat who has ended
    the democracy agenda. Obama heads to authoritarian Egypt with more
    pressing problems on his mind than tyranny.

    David Paul Kuhn is the Chief Political Correspondent for
    RealClearPolitics and the author of The Neglected Voter. He can be
    reached at [email protected]
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