VDH:
How did Vladimir Putin — with his country reeling from falling oil prices, possessing only a second-rate military, in demographic free-fall, and suffering from an array of international sanctions — find himself the new play-maker of the Middle East?
Putin’s ascendency was not foreordained. It followed a series of major U.S. miscalculations and blunders of such magnitude that it almost seems they must have been deliberate.
What exactly was our road to perdition in the Middle East?
1. Reset with Putin
When Barack Obama came into office, the outgoing Bush administration had crafted a moderate response to Putin’s aggression in Ossetia. The U.S. had made missile-defense agreements with the Czech Republic and Poland. Some Georgian forces were airlifted by the U.S. from Afghanistan back home. Indeed, at the time, many liberals complained that America was too soft on Putin. Perhaps. But the Obama administration entered office claiming the exact opposite, suggesting that the Bush pushback was part of a needless American-caused estrangement from Russia.
Pushing the plastic reset button was Hillary Clinton’s sad gesture signaling Putin and his team that Bush was gone, that a new, more receptive administration was in power — and thus that relations must naturally improve. Putin was somewhat perplexed, given that he knew Russia was to blame for the new estrangement. Naturally, then, he saw the Obama–Clinton reset grandstanding as more critical of America’s past behavior than of Russia’s present aggression — a fact that fueled Putin’s further calculations that he could safely move into Crimea and Ukraine.
2. The Skedaddle from Iraq
The complete withdrawal from a mostly quiet Iraq at the end of 2011 was nonsensical. It was as if Eisenhower, up for reelection in 1956, had brought U.S. troops home from a quiet South Korea, while blaming Truman, out of office for four years, for getting us into Korea in the first place. After great losses in blood and treasure, Iraq was finally functioning. Al-Qaeda was mostly somnolent. The Maliki government was under constant U.S. pressure to share oil revenues equitably with the Sunni minority. Then the Obama administration abandoned Iraq (whose stability, according to Vice President Biden, was perhaps the administration’s “greatest achievement”) for a cheap 2012 reelection talking point of “ending the war in Iraq.” The geostrategic result was catastrophic. The remnants of al-Qaeda resurfaced as ISIS — only to be dismissed by a smug Obama as the “jayvees.” The Shiite government felt freed from American oversight and began ostracizing the Kurds and the Sunnis. The U.S. lost its strategic use of air bases at the most vital point in the Middle East. And, most importantly, Putin recognized that if the Obama administration wanted out of even a quiet Iraq after so much American investment, it was likely to want out of the Middle East altogether — confirming the aura of weakness implicit in its earlier reset outreach.
Note that the Obama administration proved clueless how to stop the primordial savagery of ISIS and more or less has renounced even trying — clearing the way for Putin to enter the region as the supposed aegis behind which nations of good will might rally to end this savage common threat. In truth, Putin has other, far grander interests.
3. The Red-Line Invitation into the Middle East
Putin was effectively invited into the Middle East when Obama sandbagged Secretary of State John Kerry’s claims that the need to bomb Assad was the moral issue of our time. Obama turned the administration’s red line about Syria’s use of chemical weapons quite pink. Embarrassed that Syria had dared Obama to enforce his own threats, in denial that Assad’s opponents were still being gassed, and reluctant to use force as threatened, given the impending November 2012 presidential election, Obama simply froze and abdicated responsibility. Putin quickly stepped in, offering his help in dismantling Assad’s WMD stockpile — chemical weapons, of course, have been used repeatedly by Assad well after Putin’s fix — and never quite left, as Russia’s prestige rose and ours sank.
4. The Iran Deal
What Putin saw in the Iran deal was not its cumbersome details or the inflated rhetoric about it, nor did he believe the administration’s claims about permanent non-proliferation. Rather, he appreciated the fact that the U.S. had walked back its initial promises to ensure anywhere, anytime spot inspections, zero enrichment, and snap-back sanctions. More importantly, upon the conclusion of the deal, the Iranians seemed defiant, the U.S. depressed — and America’s friends outraged. When Hillary Clinton compared the NRA to intractable Iranians, she inadvertently revealed how we had offered concessions and the Iranians had not. In Putin’s mind, Iran will become the regional hegemon, eventually going nuclear and playing the berserker part of North Korea to Putin’s China-like gatekeeper role.
5. Estrangement from Our Friends
For the past six years Obama has made it clear that the old pillars of America’s Mideast policy — unwavering support for Israel and protection for the so-called moderate Sunni states in the Gulf, Jordan, and Egypt — were no longer relevant. Perhaps these friends did not appear sufficiently revolutionary or authentic to Obama. Perhaps they did not appreciate Obama’s unique multicultural resonance with the world’s dispossessed. Perhaps he wanted an end to the privileged powers and wished to spread the wealth of the region. Whatever his reasons, the result has been that none of our allies can count on U.S. protection or even much sympathy.
An excellent analysis of how this individual has screwed up the Middle East and beyond.
Obama seemed to believe that words would do the trick, so that actions would not ever be needed.
He cribbed a speech from Deval Patrick to get elected in 2008, his ”words, just words,” speech.
Deval was A-OK with being robbed if it meant a friend would be in the White House.
But the world doesn’t work based on the right words.
We once had a leader who rightly said, ”speak softly but carry a big stick.”
He was right, Obama is wrong.
This is the new flexibility Obama spoke of prior to the last election.
@another vet: so true and he’s making it worse daily. He is almost completely ignorant of how to proceed
Wow, just watching Dim debate. I knew the Dims were bad, but had no idea they were so totally incompetent. I’m gonna have to change standards for Dims. Lower them quite a bit.
This is what happens when the policy is no policy at all. Our allies there need to be cajoled, they need to be led. Instead, Obama has done is put lit match to the fuse leading to the powder keg. What Putin has done is one better, lighting the fuse closer to the powder keg. It is a matter of time before the whole region blows.
@another vet –
Victor Davis Hanson, pre-eminent war historian. His analyses are very often on-point. If you have an opportunity to hear him speak, you’ll be impressed. Heard him once a few years ago, speaking about the difficulties in Iraq, the pre-Sunni awakening days, he was quite prescient in saying we will need to be patient to bring around the Sunni Iraqis before going on the offensive there. When he teaches at Army War College, his classes are SRO as those not registered in them often come to listen.
@another vet, #1:
The current situation has resulted from our “preemptive” attack on Iraq, which will likely go down in history as one of the most monumentally stupid geopolitical moves ever made by an American president. It would be far better if we had focused our attention like a laser beam on the Taliban, on al Qaeda, and on the stabilization of Afghanistan.
@Greg:
Eggzackly the direction GW Bush had us headed when he turned it over to Obozo who immediately started stumbling around in the dark and excusing deserters.
@Redteam, #6:
Unfortunately by that point Bush was six years late, one terrorist leader short, and had added a second unstable Middle Eastern state to the mix, all in the context of a crashing national economy. Enter Barack Obama, on whom all the blame is immediately pinned.
Sorry. It just doesn’t stand up to close inspection.
@Greg: Inspection by you Greg? Iraq was moving in the right direction when Obama pulled out all of the troops. Obama screwed up! Then he proceeded to screw up in Libya, Egypt and Syria. He supports Turkey bombing the Kurds in Iraq and Syria instead of ISIS. If you take off your Obama colored glasses and carefully look at facts instead of leftist propaganda, you may understand what happened and what is likely to happen in the future as a result of Obama’s incompetence.
@Greg: Now Obama has sent an invasion force into Cameroon. I’m sure the US has a lot of interests there. Is that where Obama was born? Do they have weapons of mass destruction? I can just see the escalation, thousands of troops then tens of thousands of troops. We’ll be bogged down in an internal war for years,, maybe decades. And for what? To prevent Cameroon from invading the US? Obama’s war, he’ll have to live with it for decades.