By Charles Krauthammer
Thursday, February 12, 2015
His secretary of defense says “the world is exploding all
over.” His attorney general says that the threat of terror “keeps me up at
night.” The world bears them out. On Tuesday, American hostage Kayla Mueller is
confirmed dead. On Wednesday, the U.S. evacuates its embassy in Yemen, cited by
President Obama last September as an American success in fighting terrorism.
Yet Obama’s reaction to, shall we say, turmoil abroad has
been one of alarming lassitude and passivity.
Not to worry, says his national security adviser: This is
not World War II. As if one should be reassured because the current chaos has
yet to achieve the level of the most devastating conflict in human history.
Indeed, insists the president, the real source of our metastasizing anxiety is
. . . the news media.
Russia pushes deep into eastern Ukraine. The Islamic
State burns to death a Jordanian pilot. Iran extends its hegemony over four
Arab capitals — Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad, and now Sanaa.
And America watches. Obama calls the policy “strategic
patience.” That’s a synonym for “inaction,” made to sound profoundly
“strategic.”
Take Russia. The only news out of Obama’s one-hour press
conference with Angela Merkel this week was that he still can’t make up his
mind whether to supply Ukraine with defensive weapons. The Russians have sent
in T-80 tanks and Grad rocket launchers. We’ve sent in humanitarian aid that
includes blankets, MREs, and psychological counselors.
How complementary: The counselors do grief therapy for
those on the receiving end of the T-80 tank fire. “I think the Ukrainian people
can feel confident that we have stood by them,” said Obama at the news
conference.
Indeed. And don’t forget the blankets. America was once
the arsenal of democracy, notes Elliott Abrams. We are now its linen closet.
Why no anti-tank and other defensive weapons? Because we
are afraid that arming the victim of aggression will anger the aggressor.
Such on-the-ground appeasement goes well with the
linguistic appeasement whereby Obama dares not call radical Islam by name. And
whereby both the White House and State Department spend much of a day insisting
that the attack on the kosher grocery in Paris had nothing to do with Jews. It
was just, as the president said, someone “randomly shoot[ing] a bunch of folks
in a deli.” (By the end of the day, the administration backed off this idiocy.
By tweet.)
This passivity — strategic, syntactical, ideological — is
more than just a reaction to the perceived overreach of the Bush years. Or a
fear of failure. Or bowing to the domestic Left. It is, above all, rooted in
Obama’s deep belief that we — America, Christians, the West — lack the moral
authority to engage, to project, i.e., to lead.
Before we condemn the atrocities of others, intoned Obama
at the National Prayer Breakfast, we shouldn’t “get on our high horse.” We
should acknowledge having authored the Crusades, the Inquisition, slavery, etc.
“in the name of Christ.”
In a rare rhetorical feat, Obama managed to combine the
banal and the repulsive. After all, is it really a revelation that all
religions have transgressed, that man is fallen? To the adolescent Columbia
undergrad, that’s a profundity. To a roomful of faith leaders, that’s an insult
to one’s intelligence.
And in deeply bad taste. A coalition POW is burned alive
and the reaction of the alliance leader barely 48 hours later is essentially:
“Hey, but what about Joan of Arc?”
Obama’s Christians-have-sinned dismissal of the West’s
moral standing is not new, however. It is just a reprise of the theme of his
post-inauguration 2009 confessional world tour. From Strasbourg to Cairo and
the U.N. General Assembly, he indicted his own country, as I chronicled at the time,
“for arrogance, for dismissiveness and derisiveness (toward Europe), for
maltreatment of natives, for torture, for Hiroshima, for Guantánamo, for
unilateralism, and for insufficient respect for the Muslim world.”
The purpose and the effect of such an indictment is to
undermine any moral claim to American world leadership. The line between the
Washington prayer breakfast and the Ukrainian grief counselors is direct and
causal. Once you’ve discounted your own moral authority, once you’ve undermined
your own country’s moral self-confidence, you cannot lead.
If, during the very week Islamic supremacists achieve
“peak barbarism” with the immolation of a helpless prisoner, you cannot take
them on without apologizing for sins committed a thousand years ago, you have
prepared the ground for strategic paralysis.
All that’s left is to call it strategic patience.
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