Triage again

President Obama gave an intellectually vigorous response to his foreign policy critics today, in a commencement speech at West Point:

He made clear that the US would use military force, if necessary unilaterally, to defend its core interests.  But at the same time he made it clear that crises that do not directly threaten the US do not merit the same response.  Then, he suggests, nonmilitary efforts and multilateral military action are more appropriate and more effective.

Terrorism he identifies as the current top priority threat.  But he wants to deploy the US military less and partner more with the countries where terrorists find haven.  The now diffuse threat requires a more networked response, with other countries’ security forces taking the lead, as is soon to happen in Afghanistan.  He wants $5 billion for training and equipping others.  In Syria, he pledged to step up support to the neighbors and to the Syrian opposition, with the objective of reaching a political solution.  In undertaking direct strikes against terrorists, the President cites the need for a continuing imminent threat and near certainty of no civilian casualties, so as not to create more enemies than we eliminate.  He pledges to explain what we do publicly, asking the military to take the lead.

The second priority the President cites is protection of the international order, including multilateral international institutions.  World opinion and international institutions blocked a Russian invasion of Ukraine and gave the country a chance to elect a new president, with America “firing a shot.”  Sanctions on Iran, and the ongoing nuclear negotiations, are another example.  We hope to achieve something better than what could have been achieved using force.  These are signs of American strength and leadership, not weakness or hesistancy.  So too is strengthening the forces of countries that contribute to international peacekeeping.

Cybersecurity, the South China Sea and climate change require a multinational approach.  The President said we need to lead by example, subjecting ourselves to the same rules that apply to everyone else, including the still unratified Law of the Sea Convention.  America is made exceptional by affirming international law and its own values, not by flouting it.  This means closing Guantanamo and putting rules in place to regulate intelligence collection.

American leadership also requires acting in favor of human dignity.  This means support for democracy, open economies and human rights, even where security interests come first, as in Egypt.  Everyone’s best example these days is Burma (despite the many equivocal aspects of its still ongoing transition).  But the President also squeezed in helping with electricity in Africa and education in Nigeria.  “Human dignity” is a category that encompasses a lot of things.

It wasn’t a particularly stirring speech, but it was a logical one.  I still wish he would do more about Syria, which threatens to collapse the neighboring states and provide haven to international terrorists.  But he is into triage, not retreat, trying to limit American commitments and conserve America’s strength for whatever serious threats lie ahead.  That’s what any smart president would want to do.

 

 

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4 thoughts on “Triage again”

  1. The US government seems to be ccompletely lacking in principles save one. the famed “American Interests”

    Case in point… DISHONERABLE John McCain is effectively supporting Islamofascist terrorist attacks against christians in Syriza because he wants regime change..

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/blog/25276078.html

  2. Here is another example of how unprincipled and unethical the US govenment behaves

    In 1944 the US government not only supported Greece against Yugoslav communists but claimed no such ethnic group as “macedoniaans” exists.

    “This (US) government considers talk of Macedonian “nation”, Macedonian “Fatherland”, or Macedonia “national consciousness” to be unjustified demagoguery representing no ethnic nor political reality, and sees in its present revival a possible cloak for aggressive intentions against Greece” – US State Department Dec, 1944 (Foreign Relations Vol. VIII Washington D.C. Circular Airgram – 868.014/26)

    Today unethnical lowlifes in the US government (and some US polical pundits) not only play pretend those events didn’t happen (even washing all evidence of that support from the CIA onloine factbook)… but call the former Yugoslavians “real” Macedonians as they attempt to talk Greeks out of ethnic existence. (effectively clludind in a subtle attempted genocide against the Greek people)

    The US use to be a country of principled. It is slowly becoming an evil empire.

    1. I don’t know if the U.S. is an “evil” or “good” empire – and I generally don’t believe that things are that simple when it comes to international relations. But what I do know is that the U.S. is the natural empire, ideally positioned to control the world better than any other power.

      1. Its people, however, have little or no interest in the job, and are always on the verge of slamming the door shut and telling the rest of the world to take care of itself. We’ve been a trading nation since before we were a nation (it was easier to get to the Mediterranean by sea than to the interior of the country by non-existent roads), but the argument keeps coming up that we can trade with any kind of regime, there’s no need to try to remake the world in our image. As it is, we seem to have the responsibility for ensuring some kind of order in the world without being granted the right to enforce it without “international” (i.e., Russian and Chinese) permission.

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