Thursday, December 3, 2009 - 5:17 PM
Whatever numbers you hear about the cost of Obama's escalation in Afghanistan are bound to be low. Once you add in veterans' benefits, the long-term costs of medical treatment for wounded soldiers, replacement costs for the equipment they will use up and wear out, etc., you end up with a lot more than the extra $30 billion that Obama mentioned in his speech on Tuesday. If you want to be prudent, assume that the true costs are at least twice what you've heard. Together with the money already allocated, it's going to be well in excess of $100 billion per year. Keep that in mind the next time you pass a rusting bridge, or when your local School Board has to cut its budget and lay off a few more teachers.
But there is another cost to digging in deeper in Afghanistan. Obama has now bet the future of his presidency on being able to achieve something he can describe as "success" there, and he has only 18 months to do it. He's shackled with a sluggish economy that is unlikely to turn around soon, so there are going to be plenty of disaffected voters by 2012. The Dems are going to lose a bunch of seats in the midterms, making it even tougher to pass domestic legislation that might win broad voter approval. And having alienated a lot of the people who worked their butts off for him in 2008 (because they thought he would be different), he's going to have a hard time generating the sort of grass roots enthusiasm that won him the White House in the first place. Progressive Dems won't switch sides, but some of them will stay home. He may even have trouble getting Shepard Fairey's endorsement if Afghanistan doesn't turn around fast.
All this means that Obama will have to devote a lot of time and attention and political capital to the war in Afghanistan, an impoverished land-locked country of modest strategic importance. Meanwhile, life will go on in the rest of the world, and U.S. relations with a number of far more important countries will not receive the attention they should. Here are three examples.
1. The new Japanese government is actively rethinking its security partnership with the United States, and while I don't think we should rush to accommodate all of their concerns, we certainly ought to be paying very close attention. But having just returned from a quick Asian trip, Obama is likely to put relations with Japan (and other key Asian allies) on the back burner. That would be a mistake, because a significant erosion in the U.S. position there would have far more significant effects than the outcome of the Afghan campaign. Mapping out a long-term security strategy for Asia will take time and attention, and that's precisely what Obama doesn't have right now.
2. The democratic government of Turkey has been carving out a more independent and influential position at the crossroad of Europe and Asia. Its recent decision to reject Israeli participation in a scheduled NATO military exercise (which led to the exercise being canceled) is one sign of this new independence, as is its more active engagement with Syria and Iran. This development is not necessarily a bad thing, if Turkey uses its growing influence constructively. But it is a new feature of the global scene that calls for sustained attention and a nuanced U.S. response, and I'll bet it doesn't get either.
3. Brazil is becoming a more independent and less deferential power here in the Western hemisphere. President Lula da Silva has opened more than 30 embassies around the world since 2003, remains on good terms with Venezualan strongman Hugo Chavez, has defended Iran's nuclear research program, and recently hosted Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Brasilia. Obama and Lula have exchanged letters on some of these issues, and Brasilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim has said there is "no crisis" between the two countries. But he has also said that the two countries "are in different latitudes" and "must get used to disagreeing." A stronger and more assertive Brazil will also create new diplomatic opportunities for other Latin American countries (who have long resented U.S. dominance in the Western hemisphere), as well as opportunities for other great powers. And might this herald a gradual erosion of the Monroe Doctrine?
None of the developments poses an immediate threat to vital U.S. interests, but all could use some adroit attention on Washington's part and a sophisticated strategy for dealing with them. But my guess is that they will get short shrift, because Obama's attention and a lot of the intellectual oxygen in Washington will be sucked up by the endless debate on AfPak.
You might reply that I'm being too pessimistic, because Obama has a talented administration that is deep in foreign policy expertise and nobody expects the President to do everything himself. He can turn these problems over to DoD, the NSC staff, and the State Department while he focuses laser-like on Central Asia (and the economy).
I wish I could believe that, but I haven't seen much evidence of a smoothly running foreign policy apparatus so far. What I read suggests that the White House holds tight control on the main lines of policy, and apart from the president himself (who does show occasional flashes of strategic vision), I still can't figure out who's in charge of the big picture. So in addition to the human and financial costs of the decision to escalate in Afghanistan, throw in the opportunity costs. There are only 24 hours in a day and seven days in a week, and a lot of important issues are going to get less attention than they deserve.
MANPREET ROMANA/AFP/Getty Images
EXPLORE:CENTRAL ASIA, EAST ASIA, LATIN AMERICA, AFGHANISTAN, JAPAN, MILITARY, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION, U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Neoliberal control of the Obama administration
Stephen Walt: "I still can't figure out who's in charge of the big picture."
That's easy to figure out: the same neoliberals and pro-Israel activists in the Democratic Party and Obama White House who supported the Iraq War. Rahm Emanuel, Richard Holbrooke, Dennis Ross, et al.
Af-Pak and Iran. Latin American and Africa ignored again
I have to agree with Dr. Walt on this. President Obama has put his entire presidential legacy on the line with his Afghan escalation. This is now HIS WAR, not George W. Bush's or Dick Cheney's. HE chose to push another 30,000 troops into Afghanistan in the hopes of dampening the Taliban insurgency; HE has decided to take responsibility over Afghan policy; and HE has decided to escalate at a time when Americans are already deeply tired over war. We should all support the President in his efforts and hope U.S. objectives are achieved. However, I am afraid this will not happen in 18 months. We could not change the situation in the last eight years, so the prospects for achieving this same goal in the next year and a half are quite slim.
Here is my prediction. The President will most likely split up the foreign-policy agenda. He and the generals will take full charge in Afghanistan, Secretary Clinton will probably be dealt the responsibility of controlling Iranian policy, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates will be burdened with the task of finding ways to withdraw troops from Iraq- the war most Americans seem to have forgotten. Notice how I left out the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
As usual, Africa and Latin-America get left in the dust. Central and South America will increasingly look towards Brazil for guidance, and the African continent will continue to be engulfed in a combination of violence, political turmoil, government corruption, and human rights violations. And who knows what the status of North Korea, Syria, and Venezuela will be in the next few years. Hell of a change.
http://depetris.wordpress.com
Walt asks who's in control in The White House
The answer is: The Israel lobby, and I think Mr. Walt should have made that thought himself, given some of his recent author-ships.
It is simply a question of money - good grief, am I gonna teach a Harvard professor about how the American capitalist system works?
You see, people have invested in Mr. Obama in the firm belief that he won't harm Israels key interests. And that's how business works - that's how the whole system works: It's based on trust. They have given this money to the campaign - in many cases prompted to do so by Mr. Rahm-bo. And the latter promised them that Israels key interests wouldn't be compromised. This is the typical quid pro quo formula that tha majority of the members of this segment adhers to. Nothing knew in that.
And for Afghanistan: the Israeli - and by extension the Israel lobby's position is that the more 'extreme Muslims' you can kill, the better. They can't bother whether some of this action increases the risk to Americans or Europeans. After all this is a threat-environment that Israel has known since its inception, and really they couldn't care less if others were to taste the same medicine. They would even think that was quite fair, cause it might prompt the wider world to share Israeli concerns and strategies - well, that was how the sick rationale used to go anyway. Israel and everything associated is sick. The greatest security peril the world has ever known. It is on the verge of dragging everyone down.
****************
Take a look at my new website , which has just been updated with the latest casualties figures in Helmand and Kandahar.
And you will find MP3-recordings of Mr. Pillar and Walt's speeches at the Rand convention on Capitol Hill on October 29 as well, and the corresponding transcripts. This is the first time this has been done in the world.
It's all about igniting World War IV/Clash of Civilizations
For the neocons and neolibs, the more friction between America (and "the West") and Muslims the better. With enough friction they may be able to push the entire world into a global holy war between the United States and Islam. Immediate policy objective: destabilize Pakistan, and perhaps create the pretext and opportunity to seize Pakistani nukes by force. Larger policy objective: create a distraction which will provide Israel the opportunity to continue to expand and secure the borders of Eretz Yisrael.
The potential impact on American interests? Catastrophic.
Barack Obama is too weak a personality to stand up to the neolibs and neocons who have hemmed him in on every side.
Disclaimer: American spelling is used
American spelling is used in the transcripts. This includes writing: "Emphasize" and "Organize" instead of what is used by the majority of the worlds English speakers. And "favor" instead of the correct term: "favour".
Sigh. The fact that you have time to make multi-media rants does not make you right. Please stick to your website for tirades that don't further debate. If the masses want you, they will find you. Foreign Policy is, I hope, aiming for something more substantial than racial or national profiling. You're wasting my time.
I wouldn't term Turkey a democracy just yet. A democratic state maybe, but it still needs a bit more. An end to military coups and the threat of them, an end to parties that take power promising to end corruption and military dictatorships and then end up authoritarian and corrupt, an end to a lot. Still, I'd say that the prospects for Turkish democracy are much better than anywhere else in the region right now.
Who's in charge of the large Picture?.
I suppose, the one whom ends up with the small placard on the desk, saying "the Buck Stops Here", is accountable for the whole picture big and small.
Up till now, President Obama has shown a distinct success in the style of delivey of his rhetoric, and very much nothing else. Now, the US President has been in office for about a year, and he just might yet against all odds, manage to change all those challenges presented by Prof.Walt into opportunities. That however requires the mind of a visionary and not the mind, of just a humble lesser mortal politician. So are the US foreign policy fundamentals, which Americans and others have become accustomed to, bigger than President Obama himslef, and the office of the Presidency?, and are the American internal imperatives beyond any creative experimentation by the President?.
I don't know if President Obama sess himself in the role of a visionary, or sees himself as just another US president whom has been successful in winning elections, but ultimately, he has the chance of setting a new deal of sorts, on the arena of international relations, as well as with the American people, and then perhaps, we can all see that, challenges may well be best dealt with, when they are conceived of as opportunities. This is admittedly not for the faint-hearts, or the traditionalists of conventional US foreign policy outlook, and those accustomed to the usual US political party differences in internal matters. Will this fit the discription of revolution in the way America conducts its affairs?, why not, America was created in a revolution after all.
In the mean time, I think it is unfair to blame President Obama yet, for the failings of a visionary, since he hasn't shown any signs yet for being so. But we can all colletively blame him, if he misplaces the placard on his desk.
khairi janbek.paris/france
Snap your fingers and make it go away.
Withdrawal would take a lot of attention to manage as well. A lot. And it wouldn't be costless in dollars either.
I disagree neither with Dr. Walt's assessment of President Obama's national security team nor with his assertion that there are going to be opportunity costs resulting from the choice Obama has made on Afghan policy.
Based on what I know, I still think it would be unwise to place ourselves in the position of beginning a withdrawal from Afghanistan now, when the enemy can claim plausibly that it was driving us out, and the critics of Obama's course do not offer better alternatives. However, Walt deserves credit for being honest about the price of the course Obama has embarked on, and Obama himself should look for ways to reduce that price.
C'mom...Democracy 101 on policy issues, please
Dr Walt of course makes great arguments, but let's not get silly. The DoD as a policy generating arm? Just because they dominate Iraq and have interns in all of the 535 congressional offices doesn't mean that they actually have the keys to the castle just yet. A lot of the smoke coming from 50 year old retired generals is just that: smoke. Policy generation is a lot more than spending money, and the Obama machine is showing depth and substance here. DoD is contributing-as it should- but god help us all when they are considered part of the foreign policy arm of the Unite States.
Stephen Walt: Keep that in mind the next time you pass a rusting bridge, or when your local School Board has to cut its budget and lay off a few more teachers.
So the reason school boards have to cut their budgets is due to the war in the middle east? This is laughable. Or is this a test as to how closely we are reading his posts?
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
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