1. The list above shows messed-countries and messed-up outcomes, so that part's consistent, but what's inconsistent is the level of effort by the US to change the outcome. Whether the US did relatively little like in Syria or a lot like in Libya, things didn't go well.
For Egypt in particular, the US has done everything right AFAICT since the beginning of the Arab Spring and it made no difference to the final outcome. It might have helped save Egyptian students from a massacre in 2011, and that's not nothing, but it's not permanent change either.
Overall I think the lack of results counsels in favor of less interference. I'd also say it might support defensive support over aggressive support. Stopping Qaddaffi from massacring people in Benghazi is good, as is stopping ISIS aggression in Syria. OTOH, helping what appears to be Shiite militias in Iraq with little government control attempt to take over a major Sunni city sounds like a situation to stay away from, at least until government control and Sunni support become real and not fig leafs.
2. One thing Obama did that has turned out fantastically well is in making his Syria red line comment. Before the comment, Syria had lots of chemical weapons, and now they're gone. I'm still incredulous that people call it a loss for the US, including in the current issue of The Economist.
A good thought experiment is to imagine what an honest answer from Assad would be, as to whether the hundreds of millions of dollars Syria spent over the decades on chemical weapons turned out to be money well spent. Or imagine whether some tinpot dictator in some other country thinking about establishing a chemical weapons program to be deployed on his own or neighboring people would be encouraged or discouraged by what happened with chemical weapons in Syria. Yet many people who think they're qualified to discuss foreign policy would prefer that Obama had ignored any chance to consult Congress and blow up a few air bases in Syria, and count that a better outcome.
I could see an argument that the US was lucky in how it turned out, but there's no question that the world's in a much better shape with how it happened.
3. An accountability moment for myself - in early 2012, when things were going really well in Libya, I offered a bet over Libya's long-term future:
So, Freedom House gave Libya the worst possible ratings in 2010 on a scale of 1 to 7, with a 7 for political rights and 7 for civil rights. I predict at the end of 2013 there will be at least three grades of improvement, e.g. political rights could improve to at least 5 and civil to at least 6, but it could be in other combinations. My guess is that it'll be more like four or five (and one has already happened), but I think three grades clearly represent a benefit to the country.No one took the offer. Somewhat strangely, I would've won. Things weren't that bad in 2013 but got much worse starting in 2014 - although Freedom House still gives Libya slightly better ratings than under Qadaffi. I don't think a technical victory from my perspective is much of a vindication.
FWIW, I think Libya still has a shot at a much better future than the past it had under Qadaffi or the pretty-rotten present.
Obama has been a little better than bush, but Syria is a complete screw up. I don't buy that chemical weapons "benefit", it's pure bs on your part. The USA is bound to fail because it interferes too much very far away from home, has zero human rights compass, , fails to engage close to home, and is bound in chains by the Israel lobby.
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid the American people won't figure out what's going on until the country self destructs just like prior imperial powers.
I would point out that Libya is so far looking like an EU failure. Look at the starting position - a country with a small population, factions generally separated into well-separated cities, some chance of keeping border control, generally hopeful of a transition to something better. We [as in the EU] should have gone in in numbers, with, ideally, somewhere like Norway taking a visible lead.
ReplyDeleteInstead we just left them to it. Now we have militants in place, boat people turning up, all the usual stuff.
I too don't buy no-chem-weapons as a major success. A minor one, yes, but no more.
ReplyDeleteForeign policy posts risk running into climatology these days
ReplyDeletehttp://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2015/06/o-what-beautiful-world
The problem is drought.
ReplyDeleteAt constant rain, if temperature goes up, then there is drought.
At constant temperature and precipitation, if there are more sheep and goat grazing, then there is drought.
People can smell rain far, far away. In the old days, many of the tribes were nomadic - they went where the rain was. Now they cannot.
All that is needed for a war is hungry young men.
For a while, oil money bought food. Now, two generations later, there are more hungry young men.
As for Ukraine, it is much better farmland than most of what Russia has, and anyone with a surplus of food has many friends in the Middle-East.
In a time of global warming; food, and the water to grow it is the bottom line.
Guess I should clarify re the red line comment - no it's not a victory comparable to Tunisia's democratization, but compared to the scale of the problem it faced, which was the potential reintroduction of chemical weapons as useful weapon of war, it was a tremendous victory.
ReplyDeletePeople who say Obama's statement was a mistake and that the aftermath went poorly for the US or the world are completely failing to examine the issue.
I'd rate the defusing of Qaddafi's effort to clone Pakistan's nuclear program ahead of dismatling what he got up to on CBW.
ReplyDeleteHe paid A.K.Khan a lot of money, and even more land