Barack Obama's historic victory and his foreign policy challenges
By Richard Falk
ccun.org, TFF, November 12, 2008
Introduction by Jan Oberg
It is a new beginning! But what will be in the
middle and what will turn out to be the end of the Obama Presidency
remains yet to be seen.
It takes more to change the US, the
Empire and the MIMAC - the Military-Industrial-Media-Academic Complex
than to be just better than Bush and McCain and state different
priorities from them.
Neither must we forget that with 46% of
the U.S. citizens voted for McCain, meaning they actually did not vote
that convincingly for change. There is hatred, and it is not easy to see
how Obama will be able to keep his own promise on the night of the
election - that he will be the President also for all those who did not
vote for him.
There seem to be basically two main scenarios with
some space for variations and mixes, of course:
One, Obama will
use his power and the world citizens' enthusiasm as well as the
Democratic majority in the House and Senate to push through radical
changes domestically and in US foreign policy - but that will increase
the risk that he will be killed.
Two, he may stepwise give in to
the parametres of the factors that create so much evil for America and
the world: the MIMAC, the Empire and the idea of law-defying
exceptionalism - in short, the structures of the behind-the-scene
undemocratic military and economic power factors, the pervasive
unilateralist view of the world that translates into militarism,
nuclearism and imperialism and, finally, of the mind-set of being a
Chosen People instead of one among a family.
While enthusiastic
about the election result and the values embodied in Barack Obama,
several TFF Associates find it wise to be cautiously optimistic. Obama
takes over at a time that is also historic for the depths of its crisis.
Perhaps Richard Falk in his analysis below expresses the sentiment
of the situation with great precision:
"It will be important to
lower expectations so as to avoid cynicism and despair. At the same time
critical independent voices must continue to call attention to these
deeper challenges."
***
A sort of global election and enthusiasm
This historic victory by Barrack Obama is the first truly global
election that has been celebrated by people around the world as if they
had been voting participants. The reelection of George W. Bush in 2004
was also a national election with global reverberations, but it only
aroused widespread feelings of fear and resentment around the world, and
no sense of participation. What we are slowly learning is that the
United States is the first global state, and as such, its elections
become a global, as well as a national, event. From this perspective it
is not surprising that peoples throughout the world follow American
presidential campaigns and either cheer or lament their outcome.
What may be still unappreciated is that for many societies these
American elections seem to generate more interest and enthusiasm than do
elections in their own country. Barrack Obama’s landslide victory in the
United States was without doubt an impressive achievement. It also
restored international confidence in the health of the American body
politic. It is worth noting that if peoples throughout the world
had been enfranchised to vote in the American elections, the outcome
would have been far more one-sided in Obama’s favor. Perhaps, someday
the realities of political globalization will extend worldwide American
voting rights, conferring actual rights as the foundation of an emergent
‘global democracy,’ but such a moment seems far off.
There are
many reasons for most Americans to affirm Obama’s victory. It does
represent a remarkable threshold of achievement for African Americans
who have long borne the cruel burdens of racism. Beyond this Obama’s
signature claim to lead the United States derived initially from his
principled opposition to the Iraq War from its onset. His unconditional
commitment to end American combat involvement in Iraq was extremely
popular with voters, and will be tested in the months ahead as the
politics of disengagement and withdrawal unfolds. Obama’s campaign
effectively championed the theme of change and hope countering the mood
of despair associated with the disillusionment after eight years of
George W. Bush’s presidency as recently intensified by the sharp
economic downturn.
The Obama victory, above all, signaled to the
world an American willingness to repudiate Bush militarist and
unilateralist approaches to global policy. It is also clearly expressed
a willingness to address the financial meltdown and its economic fallout
with policies helpful to the mass of Americans, and not just to Wall
Street. This meant a long overdue reassertion of regulatory authority
over markets and banks.
The challenges are daunting,
beyond the capacity of any leader
There will be broad
support among the American people for moving in these reformist
directions, but the path will also be blocked at every stage by special
interests that benefit from keeping things as they are. The joy of the
moment risks becoming the disappointment of the hour as the pain,
tensions, and intractability of this economic crisis become clear to the
citizenry. The opportunities for this new president are exciting, and
seem attainable given his inspirational qualities of leadership. And yet
we must realize that the challenges are daunting, perhaps beyond the
capacity of any leader to meet successfully, at least in the short run.
Time will tell, but what now prevails is an unprecedented mood of high
and happy expectations. This will certainly bring a reformist resolve to
Washington, but such a mood is fraught with peril. It can quickly give
way to a sense of bitter disappointment, and can even give rise to
charges of betrayal.
Facing the challenge of Iraq
The most immediate foreign policy issues concern the war on
terror, how to withdraw from Iraq and achieve stability in Afghanistan.
Obama will undoubtedly do his best to end the American combat role in
Iraq as soon as possible, more or less in accord with his promise of
completing the process in 16 months. The success of this effort will
depend heavily upon what recently semi-dormant Iraqi insurgent forces do
during the initial stages of this withdrawal process, and this is
impossible to foresee. Withdrawal is likely to go relatively smoothly if
the contending forces in Iraq realize that the alternative to
power-sharing accommodations and compromises would be a long and bloody
civil war, but such an optimistic outlook may never materialize, and
then what.
The rapid removal of American troops is quite likely
to lead to an immediate escalation of Iraqi violence as anti-government
forces are tempted to test the will and capability of the Maliki
government in circumstances where it losing American support. If this
latter scenario unfolds, it would exert considerable pressure on Obama
to halt further withdrawals, or even reverse course. Under these
conditions Obama would likely seek to avoid being charged with
responsibility for a costly defeat in Iraq. Republican critics
undoubtedly will allege that such regression in Iraq would have been
averted had the Bush/McCain policy of indefinitely prolonging the
military engagement continued to guide American policy. As is always the
case with foreign intervention in an unresolved struggle for national
self-determination, uncertainty pervades any policy choice.
Obama’s opposition to the undertaking the Iraq War has long been
vindicated, but whether his advocacy of rapid extrication is feasible
under current conditions will remain uncertain during the months ahead.
In light of these risks, Obama’s advisors may be tempted to pursue a
more ambiguous policy path in Iraq by appearing to withdraw, but
actually redeploying most of the American troops in the region,
including the retention of a large military presence in Iraq. If Obama
opts for such caution it may temporarily calm some conservative critics
in Washington and the media but he will encounter sharp criticism from
his legions of young supporters who did so much to elect him. How Obama
decides to walk this tightrope between the political mainstream and his
grassroots movement will shape the early months of his presidency,
especially in foreign affairs.
Obama’s different line on
Afghanistan and the War on Terror
Obama is
simultaneously being challenged by a deteriorating security situation in
Afghanistan that includes the revival of the Taliban, a weak central
government in Kabul, and the mounting political difficulties of dealing
with hostile cross border forces located in Pakistan. During the
presidential campaign Obama pursued a centrist line on the war on terror
by advocating an enhanced involvement of American military forces in
Afghanistan without ever questioning whether this underlying ‘war’
should be ‘undeclared,’ and terrorism treated as elsewhere in the world,
as a matter for law enforcement and intelligence operations, and taking
full advantage of inter-governmental cooperation.
Both Obama and
McCain favored augmenting American troops on the ground in Afghanistan
by at least 32,000. Obama contended that such a shift could be achieved
without further straining the overstretched military by assigning some
of the departing American forces from Iraq to Afghanistan.
The logic of dealing with Iraq and Afghanistan and the War on
Terror
What is at stake here is Obama’s double view of
the two wars, that the Iraq War was a wrong turn, whereas the
Afghanistan War was a correct response to 9/11 but was not properly
carried to completion primarily due to the diversion of attention and
resources to Iraq. Obama wants to correct both mistakes of the Bush
presidency, but at the same time he appears to subscribe to the major
premise that declaring ‘a war on terror,’ at least on al Qaeda, was the
right thing to do, and that Afghanistan is a necessary theater of
military engagement, including insisting upon and managing Afghan regime
change. Obama has also made some threats about carrying out attacks in
Pakistan, even without the consent of Islamabad, if reliable
intelligence locates Osama Bin Laden or al Qaeda sanctuaries.
What is most troublesome about according renewed attention to
Afghanistan is its seemingly uncritical reliance on counterinsurgency
doctrine to promote American interests in a distant foreign country.
General David Petraeus has reformed counterinsurgency doctrine and
practice in intelligent ways that exhibit a more sensitive appreciation
of the need of American military forces to win over the population and
be respectful toward the indigenous culture and religion, but it is
still counterinsurgency. That is, it remains an intervention in internal
political life by foreign military forces, which is inevitably an
affront to sovereign rights in a post-colonial era of international
relations.
In practical terms, this means that a substantial
portion of the Afghan people will probably view the American undertaking
in their country with suspicion and hostility, and are likely to be
supportive of resistance efforts. There is no doubt that the former
Taliban regime was oppressive, as was Saddam Hussein’s regime, but it
still remains highly questionable whether a sustainable politics of
emancipation can be achieved by military means, and the effort to do so
is at best extremely costly and destructive, and often lands intervening
forces in a quagmire. This is the overriding lesson of the American
defeat in Vietnam, which has yet to be learned by the foreign policy
establishment. What has been attempted over and over again is to tweak
counterinsurgency thinking and practice so as to make it succeed.
It will be tragic if the Obama presidency traps itself on the
counterinsurgency battlefields of Afghanistan. It would be far more
understandable to mount a limited challenge to the al Qaeda presence in
Afghanistan and Pakistan, but quite another to undertake the political
restructuring of a foreign state.
It should be chastening to
reflect upon the fact that the British Empire, and even the Soviet state
with its common border, failed in their determined attempts to control
the political destiny of Afghanistan. It will be so sad if the promise
of the Obama presidency is squandered as a result of a misguided and
unwise escalation of American ambitions in Afghanistan.
Next, how to deal with Iran
A third immediate concern
for the Obama presidency will be Iran. Obama was much criticized during
the presidential campaign for his announced readiness to meet with
leaders of hostile states, including Iran, without preconditions. It
remains to be seen whether Obama will risk his currently strong
international reputation by arranging an early meeting with President
Ahmadinejad, especially devoted to ensuring that Iran’s nuclear program
does not end up producing nuclear weapons.
Such diplomacy would
represent a gamble by both parties. If successful, it will demonstrate
the wisdom of Obama’s approach, and could be the start of an encouraging
regional approach to peace and security in the Middle East, especially
if the Iraq withdrawal goes forward successfully, and even more so, if
it comes Iran helps to keep Iraq stable during the removal of American
forces. But if such an initiative falters, as seems far more probable,
then it will erode Obama’s capacity to bring about an overall change in
American foreign policy, and it could even lead to heightened regional
tensions, risking a widening of the war zone.
Nuclear
disarmament should now become a priority
One golden opportunity for the Obama presidency is to reopen the
question of nuclear disarmament. The atomic attacks on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in 1945 frightened world leaders about the future and created a
momentary resolve to find ways to ensure that these weapons would never
be developed further or used again. This resolve was soon dissipated by
the Cold War rivalry, which expressed itself in part by a superpower
arms race, as well as by the gradual acquisition of nuclear weaponry by
additional countries. Not since the end of World War II has there been
such a realization as at present that the future of world order is
severely threatened by the existence and spread of these ultimate
weapons of mass destruction.
Favoring nuclear disarmament in the
early 21st century is no longer just a peace movement demand that is not
taken seriously in governmental circles. Nuclear disarmament has been
recently endorsed by several eminent and conservative American political
figures: Henry Kissinger, former Republican Secretary of State George
Shultz, former Democratic Secretary of Defense William Perry, and former
chair of the Senate Armed Forces Committee Sam Nunn. Their reasoning is
set forth in two jointly authored articles published in the Wall Street
Journal that are premised on realist approach to global security and
shaped by a preoccupation with fulfilling American national interests.
They argue that the gradual erosion of the Nonproliferation Regime
makes the possession and existence of nuclear weapons by the United
States far more dangerous than are the risks associated with their
elimination by way of negotiated and monitored reductions. Both Obama
and McCain expressed general support for a world free from nuclear
weapons, but without proposing any specifics. Many observers of the
international scene since the Soviet collapse have worried about such
weapons falling into the hands of political extremists via the black
market or through theft, especially given the ‘loose nukes’ contained in
Russia’s poorly guarded arsenal of nuclear weapons. Similar worries have
accompanied speculations that the government of nuclear Pakistan might
be taken over by political elements with strong links to extremists.
There is little doubt that an Obama call for a major conference of
nuclear weapons states for the purpose of achieving total nuclear
disarmament over a period of one or two decades would generate strong
endorsements from most governments and great enthusiasm at the
grassroots. Of course, achieving a consensus among the eight nuclear
weapons states will not be easy, but the effort to do so if genuinely
promoted by the United States, would be worthwhile. It would at the same
time help Obama sustain his footing on the moral high ground of world
affairs even should the effort become bogged down by disagreements.
Putting nuclear disarmament high on the American policy agenda would
also provide global civil society with an activist cause with wide
transnational appeal.
Regaining the paradigm of a
multipolar world and global co-operation
There is at
present lots of commentary acknowledging the changing geopolitical
landscape: the rise of China and India, a resurgent Russia, the
collective force of the European Union, and the leftward tilt of Latin
America. Clearly the unipolar moment of the 1990s has passed, and it
seems likely that the Obama presidency will go out of its way to affirm
its recognition of a multipolar world. It will also exhibit a far more
active reliance on the mechanisms of international cooperation than has
been the case in recent years.
The Obama leadership will also
hopefully do its best to avoid pressures to revive the Cold War, as were
evident in the neoconservative call for the defense of Georgia last
August, or in its warning of the start of a new phase of international
relations based on great power rivalry.
A generally hopeful
trend in world affairs, pioneered by Europe, is the rise of regionalism
in Asia, Latin America, and Africa, which could produce new forms of
cooperation and peacekeeping that might encourage Washington to accept a
more modest global presence, which in turn would begin the difficult
process of acknowledging that America’s existing overseas commitments
had so far outrun its capabilities that it could no longer meet the
domestic needs of its own population.
It is likely that
this renewal of multilateralism will express itself in a more
constructive approach to the United Nations as well as a determined
effort to achieve a shared global strategy on climate change. Here, too,
rhetorical promise may not be accompanied by corresponding action. The
Obama presidency is likely to give an immediate priority to domestic
issues, especially in view of the sharply falling economy that has
already caused a credit crisis, housing foreclosures, widespread
unemployment, huge fiscal deficits, and a declining national product. As
a result, it would be almost currently impossible for any political
leader to summon the political will needed to commit sufficient
resources to deal effectively longer range global challenges.
The United States needs structural changes – but does Obama
see it?
The overall American situation increasingly requires some serious
structural moves, as well as crucial readjustments of policy. At
present, there is no indication that either Obama or his advisors are
thinking along these lines.
There is no way that the United
States can live up to the Obama promise, or more modestly, free itself
from its current difficulties without at least taking the following
fundamental steps:
• Reducing its military expenditures by 50%,
which means closing many foreign military bases;
• Reducing
drastically its global naval presence;
• Ending its program of
nuclear defense and the militarization of space;
• Going all out
for nuclear disarmament;
• Abandoning the belief in
counterinsurgency and preemptive/preventive war doctrines;
• And
finally it would require an abrupt shift in economic policy from a
reliance on capital-oriented neoliberalism to a people-oriented return
to Keynesianism.
Given the unlikelihood of moving decisively in
these directions during this first Obama presidential term, it will be
important to lower expectations so as to avoid cynicism and despair.
At the same time critical independent voices must continue to call
attention to these deeper challenges.
http://www.transnational.org/Resources_Treasures/2008/Falk_ObamaPresidencyChallenges.html
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