The Daily Caller

The Daily Caller

The end of a Kumbaya foreign policy?

Patrick Basham
Director, Democracy Institute

While pushing Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a loyal American ally, out of office, Obama failed to appreciate that the political vacuum in Cairo would be filled by Islamists whose illiberal, chauvinistic agenda threatens both regional stability and the security of Egypt’s religious minorities.

Shortly thereafter, and from a safe distance, the U.S. joined its N.A.T.O. allies in taking sides in the Libyan civil war, which ultimately ensured dictator Muammar Gadhafi’s demise. Of course, little consideration was given to what or who would replace Gadhafi.

It’s Obama’s dangerous desire to pick winners and losers in the Middle East that first led one of his advisers to describe the president’s Libyan policy as “leading from behind.”

The tragedy in Benghazi, the Muslim Brotherhood’s ascension to power in Egypt, and the Syrian regime’s killing of tens of thousands of its citizens are only three of the developments that to date illustrate the Arab Spring’s sad failure.

Farther afield, Obama has tried to induce expansionist China to be a responsible stakeholder in world affairs. He has continued Bush’s policy of concession and inducement to Beijing. But Obama hasn’t fared any better than his much-maligned predecessor: U.S.-China relations remain tetchy, at best.

Obama conspicuously “reset” relations with Russia but, so far, to little avail. American concessions on missile defense haven’t been reciprocated, most notably in Russia’s continuing opposition to Western efforts to halt Iran’s nuclear program and her continuing support for the Assad regime in Damascus.

This “let’s talk this out” approach exemplifies how Obama implicitly adheres to the contemporary Western European view that parochial, unsophisticated America has done its best foreign policy work when its energies and instincts are suitably moderated and appropriately channeled by worldly, sage allies.

Consequently, under Obama’s “leadership” the U.S. has morphed from the dangerous, thankless, and at times counterproductive role as global policeman, to the idealistic and naïve role as global social worker. Obama has presented himself less as the nation’s commander-in-chief and more as the nation’s apologist-in-chief. It’s an increasingly unseemly sight.

The president has hurt America’s interests abroad, along with those of her allies. Ever the liberal idealist, Obama still hasn’t learned that neither America’s friends nor her enemies respond particularly well to empty rhetoric. But, they do respond to strength and to clarity of purpose.

A very long week from now, voters decide whether the president’s failed experiment with Kumbaya foreign policymaking continues down its dangerous path. Or, do they exchange feel-good group hugs on a multilateral mountain-top for a more traditional, adult foreign policy?

They may choose the latter approach, as it possesses a singular advantage. It exists in the real world.

Patrick Basham directs the Democracy Institute, a London- and Washington-based think tank, and is a Cato Institute adjunct scholar.