By Andrew Cline on 5.14.09 @ 6:09AM
Is he finally putting his vaunted "thoughtfulness" to good use?
President Obama's decision not to release photos of detainees
abused while in U.S. custody in Iraq and Afghanistan is
potentially representative of an important change in the way this
administration handles politically sensitive subjects.
Until very recently, the president has displayed a tendency to
make decisions on weighty matters by instinct. For all of his
hyped "thoughtfulness," as president, Obama has been less than
intellectual in his approach.
When it came to crafting a stimulus bill, the White House could
hardly be bothered to check the details. That was left to the
Democratic leadership in the House. The president was Billy Mays,
out there selling the thing with a huge smile and a glimmer in
his eye. But unlike Mays, he hadn't even tested the product he
was pitching. In fact, he pitched it before he even saw it.
The president announced major decisions on stem cell research and
abortion funding as if he were announcing that he'd decided to
have soup for lunch instead of a sandwich. There was not even an
attempt to show that serious thought had gone into the matters.
The stated reasoning behind the stem cell decision was so
convoluted that clearly no serious thought had gone into it,
other than to pick the right political jargon.
The president's knee-jerk reaction on AIG bonuses was so
ridiculous that he had to take it back almost immediately.
But lately, it seems that we've begun to see a shift away from
the instantaneous application of reactionary liberal positions
and toward a more pragmatic approach.
The General Motors bailout, which started as shoot-from-the-hip
leftism, was the second instance of Obama's, shall we say, more
nuanced governing.
During the campaign, Obama attacked John McCain for supporting
policies that "shipped jobs overseas." In one ad that ran in
Pennsylvania last September, the Obama campaign mentioned a local
plant closing and said "Washington sold them out." Based on his
campaign rhetoric, the president should have been absolutely
adamant that no GM jobs would be lost over the border. But GM
owner Obama faces a reality that candidate Obama never had to
face. He has to actually make GM profitable. So the president has
not stated opposition to a recommendation from his auto task
force to have GM make more cars in Mexico. Outsourcing is bad in
principle, Obama claimed during the campaign. Now that he has to
actually oversee a company struggling for survival, it's smart
business.
On the issue of detainee treatment, the president released CIA
memos that described particular interrogation techniques. It was
a knee-jerk liberal reaction, and a costly one. It was costly to
the United States and costly to the president politically. It was
joined by another knee-jerk decision: to release photos of abused
detainees.
Tellingly, Obama decided to release the detainee photos before he
had even seen them, according to news reports. That's not the
sign of a thoughtful executive. But after the scolding he got on
the CIA memos, he seems to have given the issue some actual
consideration. As a result, he reversed course and decided to
keep the photos sealed.
"The publication of these photos would not add any additional
benefit to our understanding of what was carried out in the past
by a small number of individuals," he said. "In fact, the most
direct consequence of releasing them, I believe, would be to
further inflame anti-American opinion and to put our troops in
greater danger."
The exact same thing could have been said of the CIA memos. In
that case, the president doesn't seem to have given his decision
a great deal of consideration. Perhaps he did. He supposedly
listened to a lot of advice on the matter. But his decision was
the same as it would have been had he listened to no one.
The start of this pragmatic trend probably was the rescue of ship
captain Richard Phillips. Clearly, Obama's instinct was not to
use deadly force. He waited two days after the kidnapping before
he authorized the Navy to kill the pirates. His decision was a
pragmatic one reached via deliberation, not gut reaction. It not
only worked, it was politically beneficial as well.
Perhaps these decisions signal the beginning of Obama's slow
transition from candidate to president. As a candidate, Obama was
free to indulge in all sorts of moral posturing. Shipping jobs
overseas is bad! Government secrecy, even on national security
matters, is bad! Shooting our enemies instead of talking to them
is bad! As president, he is finding that reality is not so black
and white. If it helps save a company, outsourcing is beneficial.
If it will protect our national security, keeping secrets is a
good idea. If our enemies are pointing guns at us and refusing to
listen, shooting them hardly makes us barbaric.
Maybe these are just isolated incidents that don't signify a
trend. But let's hope they do. A pragmatic Obama engages that
much-touted brain more than an ideological Obama does. Which
means that he makes much better decisions.
topics:
Barack Obama, Stimulus Package, Torture