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Dumb and Dumber: Obama's 'Smart Power' Foreign Policy Not Smart at All

Posted: 09/06/2012 9:45 am

Obama’s “Smart Power” Foreign Policy Not Smart at All

Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com

Barack Obama is a smart guy. So why has he spent the last four years executing such a dumb foreign policy? True, his reliance on “smart power” -- a euphemism for giving the Pentagon a stake in all things global -- has been a smart move politically at home.  It has largely prevented the Republicans from playing the national security card in this election year. But “smart power” has been a disaster for the world at large and, ultimately, for the United States itself.

Power was not always Obama’s strong suit. When he ran for president in 2008, he appeared to friend and foe alike as Mr. Softy. He wanted out of the war in Iraq. He was no fan of nuclear weapons. He favored carrots over sticks when approaching America’s adversaries.

His opponent in the Democratic primaries, Hillary Clinton, tried to turn this hesitation to use hard power into a sign of a man too inexperienced to be entrusted with the presidency. In 2007, when Obama offered to meet without preconditions with the leaders of Cuba, North Korea, and Iran, Clinton fired back that such a policy was “irresponsible and frankly naïve.” In February 2008, she went further with a TV ad that asked voters who should answer the White House phone at 3 a.m. Obama, she implied, lacked the requisite body parts -- muscle, backbone, cojones-- to make the hard presidential decisions in a crisis.

Obama didn’t take the bait. “When that call gets answered, shouldn’t the president be the one -- the only one -- who had judgment and courage to oppose the Iraq war from the start,” his response ad intoned. “Who understood the real threat to America was al-Qaeda, in Afghanistan, not Iraq. Who led the effort to secure loose nuclear weapons around the globe.”

Like most successful politicians, Barack Obama could be all things to all people. His opposition to the Iraq War made him the darling of the peace movement. But he was no peace candidate, for he always promised, as in his response to that phone call ad, to shift U.S. military power toward the “right war” in Afghanistan. As president, he quickly and effectively drove a stake through the heart of Mr. Softy with his pro-military, pro-war speech at, of all places, the ceremony awarding him the Nobel Peace Prize.

Obama’s protean abilities have come to the fore in his approach to what once was called “soft power,” a term Harvard professor Joseph Nye coined in his 1990 book Bound to Lead. For more than 20 years, Nye has been urging U.S. policymakers to find different ways of leading the world, exercising what he termed “power with others as much as power over others.”

After 9/11, when “soft” became an increasingly suspect word, Washington policymakers began to use “smart power” to denote a menu of expanded options that were to combine the capabilities of both the State Department and the Pentagon. "We must use what has been called 'smart power,' the full range of tools at our disposal -- diplomatic, economic, military, political, legal, and cultural -- picking the right tool, or combination of tools, for each situation," Hillary Clinton said at her confirmation hearing for her new role as secretary of state. "With smart power, diplomacy will be the vanguard of foreign policy."

But diplomacy has not been at the vanguard of Obama’s foreign policy. From drone attacks in Pakistan and cyber-warfare against Iran to the vaunted “Pacific pivot” and the expansion of U.S. military intervention in Africa, the Obama administration has let the Pentagon and the CIA call the shots. The president’s foreign policy has certainly been “smart” from a domestic political point of view. With the ordering of the Seal Team Six raid into Pakistan that led to the assassination of Osama bin Laden and “leading from behind” in the Libya intervention, the president has effectively removed foreign policy as a Republican talking point. He has left the hawks of the other party with very little room to maneuver.

But in its actual effects overseas, his version of “smart power” has been anything but smart. It has maintained imperial overstretch at self-destructive expense, infuriated strategic competitors like China, hardened the position of adversaries like Iran and North Korea, and tried the patience of even long-time allies in Europe and Asia.

Only one thing makes Obama’s policy look geopolitically smart -- and that’s Mitt Romney’s prospective foreign policy. On global issues, then, the November elections will offer voters a particularly unpalatable choice: between a Democratic militarist and an even more over-the-top militaristic Republican, between Bush Lite all over again and Bush heavy, between dumb and dumber.

Mr. Softy Goes to Washington

Mr. Softy went to Washington in 2008 and discovered a backbone. That, at least, is how many foreign policy analysts described the “maturation” process of the new president. “Barack Obama is a soft power president,” wrote the Financial Timess Gideon Rachman in 2009. “But the world keeps asking him hard power questions.”

According to this scenario, Obama made quiet overtures to North Korea, and Pyongyang responded by testing a nuclear weapon. The president went to Cairo and made an impressive speech in which he said, among other things, “we also know that military power alone is not going to solve the problems in Afghanistan and Pakistan.” But individuals and movements in the Muslim world -- al-Qaeda, the Taliban -- continued to challenge American power. The president made a bold move to throw his support behind nuclear abolition, but the nuclear lobby in the United States forced him to commit huge sums to modernizing the very nuclear complex he promised to negotiate out of existence.

According to this scenario, Obama came to Washington with a fistful of carrots to coax the world, nonviolently, in the direction of peace and justice. The world was not cooperative, and so, in practice, those carrots began to function more like orange-colored sticks.

This view of Obama is fundamentally mistaken. Mr. Softy was a straw man created from the dreams of his dovish supporters and the nightmares of his hawkish opponents. That Obama avatar was useful during the primary and the general election campaign to appeal to a nation weary of eight years of cowboy globalism. Like a campaign advisor ill-suited to the bruising policy world of Washington, Mr. Softy didn’t survive the transition.

Consider, for example, Obama’s speech in Cairo in June 2009. This inspiring speech should have signaled a profound shift in U.S. policy toward the Muslim world. But what Obama didn’t mention in his speech was his earlier conversation with outgoing president George W. Bush in which he’d secretly agreed to continue two major Bush initiatives: the CIA’s unmanned drone air war in Pakistan’s tribal borderlands and the covert program to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program with computer viruses.

Obama didn’t just continue these programs; he amplified them. The result has been an unprecedented expansion of U.S. military power through unmanned drones in Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan as well as Somalia and Yemen. The use of drones, and the civilian casualties they’ve caused, has in turn enflamed public opinion around the world, with the favorability rating of the United States under Obama in majority Muslim countries falling to a new low of 15% in 2012, lower, that is, than the rock-bottom standard set by the Bush administration.

The drone campaign has undermined other smart power approaches, including that old standby diplomacy, not only by antagonizing potential interlocutors but also by killing a good number of them. Along with the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, often cited as one of Obama’s signal accomplishments, the drone war has by now provoked a slow-motion rupture in relations between Washington and Islamabad.

The covert cyber-war initiative against Iran’s nuclear program, conducted with Israeli cooperation, produced both the Stuxnet worm, which wreaked havoc on Iranian centrifuges, and the Flame virus, which monitored its computer network. Instead of vigorously pursuing diplomatic solutions -- such as the nuclear compromise that Brazil and Turkey cobbled together in 2010 that might have defused the situation and guaranteed a world without an Iranian bomb -- the Obama administration acted secretly and aggressively. If the United States had been the target of such a cyber attack, Washington would have considered it an act of war. Meanwhile, the United States has set a dangerous precedent for future attacks in this newest theater of operations and unleashed a weapon that could even be reverse-engineered and sent back in our direction.

Nor was diplomacy ever actually on the table with North Korea. The Obama team came in with a less than half-hearted commitment to the Six Party process -- the negotiations to address North Korea’s nuclear program among the United States, China, Russia, Japan, and the two Koreas, which had stalled in the final months of George W. Bush’s second term. In the National Security Council, Asia point man Jeffrey Bader axed a State Department cable that would have reassured the North Koreans that a U.S. policy of engagement would continue. “Strategic patience” became the euphemism for doing nothing and letting hawkish leaders in Tokyo and Seoul unravel the previous years of engagement. After some predictably belligerent rhetoric from Pyongyang, followed by a failed missile launch and a second nuclear test, Obama largely dispensed with diplomacy altogether.

Hillary Clinton did indeed move quickly to increase the size of the State Department budget to hire more people and implement more programs to beef up diplomacy. That budget grew by more than 7% in 2009-2010. But that didn’t bring the department of diplomacy up to even $50 billion. In fact, it is still plagued by a serious shortage of diplomats and, as State Department whistleblower Peter van Buren has written, “The whole of the Foreign Service is smaller than the complement aboard one aircraft carrier.” Meanwhile, despite a persistent recession, the Pentagon budget continued to rise during the Obama years -- a roughly 3% increase in 2010 to about $700 billion.  (And Mitt Romney promises to hike it even more drastically.)

Like most Democratic politicians, Obama has been acutely aware that hard power is a way of establishing political invulnerability in the face of Republican attacks. But the use of hard power to gain political points at home is a risky affair. It is the nature of this "dumb power" to make the United States into a bigger target, alienate allies, and jeopardize authentic efforts at multilateralism.

A Kinder, Gentler Empire

Despite its rhetorical flexibility, “smart power” has several inherent flaws. First, it focuses on the means of exercising power without questioning the ends toward which power is deployed. The State Department and the Pentagon will tussle over which agency can more effectively win the hearts and minds of Afghans. But neither agency is willing to rethink the U.S. presence in the country or acknowledge how few hearts and minds have been won.

As with Afghanistan, so with the rest of the world. For all his talk of power “with” rather than “over,” Joseph Nye has largely been concerned with different methods by which the United States can maintain dominion. “Smart power” is not about the inherent value of diplomacy, the virtues of collective decision-making, or the imperatives of peace, justice, or environmental sustainability. Rather it is a way of calculating how best to get others to do what America wants them to do, with the threat of a drone strike or a Special Forces incursion always present in the background.

The Pentagon, at least, has been clear about this point. In 2007, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates argued for “strengthening our capacity to use soft power and for better integrating it with hard power.” The Pentagon has long realized that a toolbox with only a single hammer in it handicaps the handyman, but it still persists in seeing a world full of nails.

At a more practical level, “smart power” encounters problems because in this “integration,” the Pentagon always turns out to be the primary partner.  As a result, the work of diplomats, dispensers of humanitarian aid, and all the other “do-gooders” who attempt to distinguish their work from soldiers is compromised. After decades of trying to persuade their overseas partners that they are not simply civilian adjuncts to the Pentagon, the staff of the State Department has now jumped into bed with the military. They might as well put big bull’s eyes on their backs, and there’s nothing smart about that.

“Smart power” also provides a lifeline for a military that might face significant cuts if Congress’s sequestration plan goes through. NATO has already shown the way. Its embrace of “smart defense” is a direct response to military cutbacks by European governments. The Pentagon is deeply worried that budget-cutters will follow the European example, so it is doing what corporations everywhere attempt during a crisis. It is trying to rebrand its services.

Always in search of a mission, the Pentagon now has its fingers in just about every pie in the bakery. The Marines are doing drug interdiction in Guatemala. Special Operations forces are constructing cyclone shelters in Bangladesh. The U.S. Navy provided post-disaster relief in Japan after the Fukushima nuclear meltdown, while the U.S. Army did the same in Haiti. In 2011, the Africa Command budgeted $150 million for development and health care.

The Pentagon, in other words, has turned itself into an all-purpose agency, even attempting “reconstruction” along with State and various crony corporations in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is preparing for the impact of climate change, pouring R & D dollars into alternative energy, and running operations in cyberspace. The Pentagon has been smart about its power by spreading it everywhere.

Dumb vs. Dumber

As president, Obama has shown no hesitation to use force. But his use of military power has not proven any “smarter” than that of his predecessor. Iran and North Korea pushed ahead with their nuclear programs when diplomatic alternatives were not forthcoming. Nuclear power Pakistan is closer to outright anarchy than four years ago. Afghanistan is a mess, and an arms race is heating up in East Asia, fueled in part by the efforts of the United States and its allies to box in China with more air and sea power.

In one way, however, Obama has been Mr. Softy. He has shown no backbone whatsoever in confronting the bullies already in America’s corner. He has done little to push back against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his occupation policies. He hasn’t confronted Saudi Arabia, the most autocratic of U.S. allies. In fact, he has leveraged the power of both countries -- toward Iran, Syria, Bahrain. A key component of “smart power” is outsourcing the messy stuff to others.

Make no mistake: Mitt Romney is worse. A Romney-Ryan administration would be a step backward to the policies of the early Bush years. President Romney would increase military spending, restart a cold war with Russia, possibly undertake a hot war against Iran, deep-six as many multilateral agreements as he could, and generally resurrect the Ugly American policies of the recent past.

But President Romney wouldn’t fundamentally alter U.S. foreign policy. After all, President Obama has largely preserved the post-9/11 fundamentals laid down by George W. Bush, which in turn drew heavily on a unilateralist and militarist recipe that top chefs from Bill Clinton on back merely tweaked.

Obama has mentioned, sotto voce, that Mr. Softy might resurface if the incumbent is reelected. Off mic, as he mentioned in an aside to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev at a meeting in Seoul last spring, he has promised to show more “flexibility” in his second term. This might translate into more arms agreements with Russia, more diplomatic overtures like the effort with Burma, and more spending of political capital to address global warming, non-proliferation, global poverty, and health pandemics.

But don’t count on it. The smart money is not with Obama’s smart power. Mr. Softy has largely been an electoral ploy. If he’s re-elected, Obama will undoubtedly continue to act as Mr. Stick. Brace yourself for four more years of dumb power -- or, if he loses, even dumber power.

John Feffer, a TomDispatch regular, is an Open Society Fellow for 2012-13 focusing on Eastern Europe. He is the author of Crusade 2.0: The West’s Resurgent War on Islam (City Lights Books). His writings can be found on his website johnfeffer.com. To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which John Feffer discusses power -- hard, soft, smart, and dumb -- click here or download it to your iPod here.

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Obama’s “Smart Power” Foreign Policy Not Smart at All Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com Barack Obama is a smart guy. So why has he spent the last four years executing such a dumb ...
Obama’s “Smart Power” Foreign Policy Not Smart at All Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com Barack Obama is a smart guy. So why has he spent the last four years executing such a dumb ...
 
 
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09:34 AM on 09/11/2012
Fom a European perspecive, mr Feffer is completely wrong. All the damage was done by Bush, Rove, Cheney and Rumsfeld and Obama has done much to heal the wounds and restore US authority around the world.
He should at least get support from his own, so stand up behind him and stop the tomfoolery.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
06:22 AM on 09/07/2012
The MIC runs our foreign policy. And it's all about money and power, what else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
03:54 AM on 09/07/2012
That's poor President Obama's fate - attacked from both the left and the right.  I'm definitely on the left, and I agree with most of the President's foreign policies, except for doubling down on Afghanistan.  Afghanistan is Vietnam II.
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SportyJim
procrastination app coming soon
05:29 AM on 09/07/2012
I see by your wish for President, that you and I would probably disagree on many, many things. We are, however, in complete agreement about Afghanisatan.
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urbancitygirl
Making it through the world as a moderate...
02:43 AM on 09/07/2012
Paragraph 9 is where the titile of the article is addressed. The lede is completely buried. You don't like Obama's smart defense. Paragraph 33, Romney is worse. I won't get those minutes back that I took to read this...
Skizzel
No Tea, Koolaid. or Koch for me,
04:43 AM on 09/07/2012
I like paragraph 11 "buy my book here".
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urbancitygirl
Making it through the world as a moderate...
11:23 AM on 09/07/2012
Exactly!
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John Feffer
11:07 AM on 09/07/2012
The entire argument of the article is in the first paragraph. If you want more condensed articles, there's always Twitter...
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ajm36
So I says to him, I said "Get your own monkey!"
02:34 AM on 09/07/2012
Really? This was just one big, long, self-promoting book advertisement? Terrible.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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parlimentMike
It's not un-American to investigate 4 crimes.
12:00 AM on 09/07/2012
"Foreign overreach at self-destructive expense," now that's a nicely turned phrase.

We have to vote a third way to get things turned around.
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linmarco
11:54 PM on 09/06/2012
How do you stop a nation from developing a nuclear weapon, without force which isn't a guarantee, if it's hell bent on doing it? That's what no one ever says. People post with all of this huff and puff talk about what we should or shouldn't do to this or that nation. One suspects in case of an actual war the average one of them couldn't fight their way out of a paper bag. The president is referred to as being soft. His predecessor was tough and where did that get us? Israel hasn't attacked Iran yet. Why? It knows something that it dares not say. To all of you jingoists out there war may be diplomacy by other means but it isn't necessarily being sensible. So it goes.
02:33 AM on 09/07/2012
well said.

Obama/Biden 2012
Vote for Democrats across this nation..local..state...and federal!
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Rosalee Harris
09:51 PM on 09/06/2012
There is really no pleasing some people. They have expectations that NO PresidENt can possibly live up to. I guess one need these expectations to remain relelvant.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:17 PM on 09/06/2012
As you say, Romney would be disastrously worse. He want's to increase our already EMPIRE level war spending of 54% of our f taxes, and more than the rest of the world combined.

Our CIA killed Kennedy, and Obama has had that hanging over his head the whole time.

I'm not happy with Obama/s drone war crimes. But the GOPT Bush Romney war crimes dwarf Obama's.
07:42 PM on 09/06/2012
I couldn't read all of this article; how does one make a compelling case when he constantly refers to the President as "Mr. Softy"?
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parlimentMike
It's not un-American to investigate 4 crimes.
12:01 AM on 09/07/2012
Would you have preferred Shrub II?
07:23 PM on 09/06/2012
"In 2007, when Obama offered to meet without preconditions with the leaders of Cuba, North Korea, and Iran, Clinton fired back that such a policy was “irresponsible and frankly naïve.”

And the President now knows that, Iran jerks everyone around just like North Korea . . . it's just a waste of everyone's time to negotiate with them.
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Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
03:58 AM on 09/07/2012
It is a great move in terms of coalition building, which is what it takes to make an effective embargo.  Grow up.
06:58 PM on 09/06/2012
Yeah, liberating nations from dictators and spreading democracy makes us ugly americans. Ok
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rich07
High Hopes Indeed...
10:49 PM on 09/06/2012
In case you have not been paying attention the so called "democracy" we are spreading is not turning out well for us...I think it time to stay home and take care of this country.
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pixeloid
Reality has a liberal bias.
11:35 PM on 09/06/2012
Perhaps the US would have a better reputation if it didn't help dictators come to power in the first place.
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Lili Q
12:25 PM on 09/06/2012
Obama was elected on the Chamberlain appeasement plattorm and Obama happily skipped from rendezcous to rendevous to meet face to face with enemies and bow gratuitiously and deeply and often and gut the one element of US Military might that distinguishes The United States from its enemies, NASA. Dumb could not be dumber than an Obama. The only thing Obama has not done is admit the dismantling of all things American in favor of his 'unification' with third world nations.
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Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
04:01 AM on 09/07/2012
USA USA OBL KIA!
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gutenmorgen
a.k.a. crowsnest
11:43 AM on 09/06/2012
The statements made by General Dempsey in London are known as "trumpeting of existing policies for effect". Why now and what was the intended effect? Look at the price of gas at the pump. It rose among others because of the uncertainty about the threatened military actions of Israel against Iran as well as by the international embargo. Every cent I must pay more for a gallon of gas is siphoned off from my spendable at small businesses. The Obama administration panicked because that will eventually trigger another economic downturn or additional stall of an anemic recovery. The fact that the Obama administration had not taken action earlier to warn about the unavoidable rise of gas prices and take action to soften its blow confirms that it is utterly inept. This was too little too late.
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fredrdr
Let us dare to read, think, speak and write.
05:54 PM on 09/06/2012
Gas prices are up because of Issac, the hurricane. After the completion of the Keystone pipeline the prices will go up in the mid-west 10 to 15 cents a gallon, at a minumum. Gas prices went up because the Mississippi was too low for barge traffic. Gas prices went up because of the refinery fire in California. The President has little or no effect on gas prices. Always has been, always will be.
07:33 PM on 09/06/2012
Obama has no problem with rising energy prices.
"Under my plan... electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket." "So if someone wants to build a coal powered plant, they can; it's just that it will bankrupt them."
Energy secretary Chu "somehow we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe."
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Lynwood Walker
11:36 AM on 09/06/2012
when you argue "Make no mistake: Mitt Romney is worse.", you make many blanket statements about Romney and do not back it up with the same thoughtful messaging underlying the rest of your article.

If as you said, Obama increased the military budget, then how can Romney increasing it be worse?" Are you arguing that Romney would increase it at greater percentages, and can you back that up? Why exactly do you see war with Iran as more likely with Romney than Obama if, as you admit, Obama has intensified the convert war against Iran begun by Bush, and started war in Libya with explicit congressional disapproval?

Yo do pay homage to a trend of increased belligerence in foreign policy, linear across both parties' tenure, so I fail to see dumb vs. dumber. Isn't it more dumb vs dumb, or a good cop/bad cop to similar ends?

The most important is where you state that they both want to achieve the same ends, world dominance, but the debate is over how to market the process of achieving those ends. Rampant militarism with a smiley face is still rampant militarism.

a great analysis but the conclusion is lacking. Dumb vs. dumber seems only a mental construct produced to convince yourself and others that your vote counts, that you have a choice in the matter, and voting for one of our perpetual binary choices will result in a world more sane when your own analysis refutes such an assessment.