By Joseph Shattan on 5.5.09 @ 6:08AM
Will anyone dare call it the Obama Doctrine?
Although it is still too early to speak of an "Obama Doctrine,"
four trends, already apparent, will define the Obama
administration's approach to foreign affairs in the years ahead.
They are: Cosmopolitanism, Soft Power, Appeasement and Global
Meliorism.
Cosmopolitanism: In his final book, Who Are
We?, the late Samuel Huntington defined the "Cosmopolitan"
approach to foreign affairs as one in which "the activities of
Americans would more and more be governed not by the federal and
state governments, but by rules set by international authorities,
such as the United Nations, the World Trade Organization,
customary international law and global treaties and regimes."
That is, instead of leaving the rest of the world alone unless
the United States, or its allies, are directly threatened (the
conservative/nationalist approach to world affairs), or trying to
make the rest of the world more like the United States (the
Wilsonian /Bush approach), Cosmopolitan elites, "who increasingly
identify with global institutions norms and rules rather than
national ones," try to make the United States more like the rest
of the world.
That Barack Obama is America's first Cosmopolitan President is
already evident from his trips abroad. Obama behaved not like an
American President determined to justify America's ways to a
skeptical world, but like a global citizen who just happens to be
America's President, and who shares the world's skepticism. Such
an individual is more than ready to identify America's faults
(real or alleged) and apologize for them, but has little to say
in defense of American virtues, unless they begin with "multi" --
as in multi-racial, multi-ethnic and multi-cultural. The Obama
administration has already announced that the U.S. will run for a
seat on the United Nations' viciously-biased Human Rights
Council. Look for a great deal more involvement with the United
Nations in the future.
Soft Power: The Kennedy School's Joseph Nye, who
coined the term "soft power" and wrote a book about it, defines
it as "the ability to get what you want through attraction rather
than coercion or payments. It arises from the attractiveness of a
country's culture, political ideals and policies. When our
policies are seen as legitimate in the eyes of others, our soft
power is enhanced."
Obviously, Cosmopolitan elites are attracted to theories of Soft
Power, as it enables them to argue that by abandoning unilateral
actions in favor of a multi-lateral, U.N.- centered approach to
national security, we are actually strengthening America (by
making our policies "legitimate"), and not, as virtually our
entire political tradition asserts, weakening America by tying
its hands. And Soft Power doesn't just mean giving the U.N. a
larger say in our affairs; it also means making America a better
place by lightening our "carbon footprint" and becoming
"greener," by pursuing greater economic "justice" and
redistributing wealth, and by abandoning arrogant notions of
American "Exceptionalism" and becoming a decent, non-threatening
Social Democracy -- a Sweden writ large. These actions, it is
argued, will so increase our Soft Power that our foes will
realize the errors of their ways and will "buy into" our values,
thus enabling us to regain our "world leadership" without firing
a shot.
Of course, all this is pure moonshine. But as Angelo Codevilla
points out in Advice
to War Presidents, Soft Power "is not about empowering
America but about making Americans do what people like Joseph Nye
want -- people such as [those who] meet at the Davos World
Economic Forum, teach at places like Harvard's Kennedy School,
and rule the prestigious media…" And, one might add, people such
as currently occupy the White House.
Appeasement: In his March message to the people
and leaders of Iran, President Obama offered "the promise of a
new beginning" and declared that "the United States wants the
Islamic Republic of Iran to take its rightful place in the
community of nations," -- a striking departure from the Bush
Administration, which wanted the Islamic Republic of Iran
overthrown. The European Union's foreign policy chief, Javier
Solana, called President Obama's appeal "very constructive,"
which means, of course, that it's actually very destructive.
Should Obama's initiative result in serious American-Iranian
negotiations, look for Tehran to put forward a long list of
grievances, which the Obama administration, conscious of the many
wrongs we have supposedly committed against Iran, will duly set
out to appease. The difficulty, however, will be to accord
Shi'ite Iran its "rightful place" in the international community
without unduly alienating our traditional Sunni "allies," Egypt
and Saudi Arabia, both of whom loathe and fear Iran. Fortunately,
both Sunnis and Shi'ites hate Israel, so look to the Obama
administration to bash Israel as a way of appeasing Sunnis and
Shi'ites alike.
Global Meliorism: This is a truly bi-partisan
American tradition, which historian Walter McDougall has defined
as "the socio-economic and cultural expression of an American
mission to make the world a better place." President Truman
embraced Global Meliorism when he launched the Point Four program
in 1949 -- "a bold new program [Truman said] for making the
benefits of our scientific advances and industrial progress
available for the improvement and growth of underdeveloped
areas," and President Eisenhower also endorsed Global Meliorism
in 1957, when he declared that "the freedom of nations can be
menaced not only by guns but by the poverty that communism can
exploit." The United States has been devoted to Global Meliorism
ever since, and while such critics as the late British economist,
P.T. Bauer, have denounced American foreign aid programs as doing
more harm than good, look to the Obama administration to step up
foreign aid to anti-American regimes in the hope of winning their
friendship through bribery. That this approach will fail goes
without saying -- ideological enemies must be defeated, not
co-opted -- but in the meantime, President Obama and his team
will be hailed for their bold new thinking, their willingness to
discard the stale orthodoxies of the past, and their readiness to
take risks for peace and face up to the realities of a new
century.
Look to these four approaches -- the essence of an emerging Obama
Doctrine -- to win our President a Nobel Peace Prize, even as the
world itself descends into chaos and war.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Multilateralism, Soft Power