By Mona Charen
Friday, November 20, 2015
Throughout the last third of George W. Bush’s presidency,
opinion leaders were obsessed with the question of mistakes. Among most members
of the press and among Democratic office holders (even, or perhaps especially,
those who had voted to approve the Iraq war), the appetite was strong to hold
President Bush in a half-nelson until he admitted that the war had been a
terrible mistake. When Jeb Bush entered the presidential race, he was quickly
charged with fraternal guilt in the matter.
It isn’t unfair to ask policymakers to reflect on their
misjudgments — or those of their predecessors — but there is a studied lack of
interest in mistakes made by our current president.
Republicans have all been asked: “Knowing what we know
now, was it a mistake to go into Iraq?” That’s an unserious way of putting the
question. No decision is made with benefit of hindsight (“Knowing what you know
now, Mrs. Lincoln, would you have attended the theater on April 14?”).
Perhaps President Bush was wrong to topple Saddam
Hussein. I don’t think the verdict is clear. But excepting the original
decision to invade, Mr. Bush’s errors were recognized and corrected before he
left office. Barack Obama’s mistakes, by contrast, have been far more consequential
and far more threatening to world order and American security than George W.
Bush’s were. There is zero evidence that Mr. Obama even recognizes them, let
alone that he plans to correct them. Nor have the Democratic candidates been
asked about them.
The Iraq that President Obama inherited was, by his own
reckoning, “sovereign, stable, and self-reliant.” Obama used those words when
announcing the complete American withdrawal of forces in 2011. He went on to
say that Iraq had “a representative government that was elected by its people.”
Not quite. There was a free and fair election in 2010, in
which a moderate Sunni alliance led by a secular Shiite received a plurality.
But the loser, Nouri al-Maliki, hijacked the election and took power. President
Obama looked the other way, perhaps because he wasn’t interested in Iraq’s
fate, or more likely because Maliki was Tehran’s man, and President Obama has
consistently leaned toward Iran’s interests in the Middle East.
Obama stuck to his determination to withdraw every
American from Iraq, thereby radically diminishing U.S. influence in the most
explosive part of the globe. He also failed on the diplomatic front. He and
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who had boasted so often that they would
use “smart power” and “soft power” and wouldn’t “do stupid [stuff],” were
guilty of something that looks a lot like stupidity in their handling of
Maliki. As the Brookings Institution’s Kenneth Pollack told The Atlantic:
The message sent to Iraq’s people and politicians alike was that the
United States under the new Obama administration was no longer going to enforce
the rules of the democratic road. . . . [This] undermined the reform of Iraqi
politics and resurrected the specter of the failed state and the civil war.
What came next was even worse. Acquiescing in the stolen
election, Obama then backed Maliki even as Maliki brutalized Iraq’s Sunni
minority. Jobs and salaries promised to Sunni groups who had cooperated against
al-Qaeda when Bush was in office were never paid by Maliki. Dozens of Sunni
leaders, many of them moderates, were driven from office, others were arrested,
and some, including the staff of Iraq’s vice president, were tortured. Shiite
militias were permitted free rein in Sunni regions of Iraq, committing rapes,
murders, and arson. As one Sunni activist told the New York Times, he didn’t
like ISIS, but “ISIS will be the only Sunni militia who can fight against the
Shiites.”
All the while, President Obama could not bestir himself
to utter a word of condemnation or warning to Maliki. On the contrary, he
praised “Prime Minister Maliki’s commitment to . . . ensuring a strong,
prosperous, inclusive, and democratic Iraq.”
Nor would Mr. Obama consider steps that would unseat
Syria’s Bashar Assad — again, probably because Assad is Tehran’s man. And so
ISIS has metastasized — a direct outgrowth of Obama’s decisions.
The Sunnis are key to defeating ISIS. They cooperated
with the U.S. under President Bush. It was called the Sunni Awakening. Now they
can read the signs — America is siding with the Shiites in Iraq, Syria, and
Iran. That blunder has fed and nurtured ISIS to become something al-Qaeda could
only dream about. If it weren’t for the Iran nuclear deal, we’d say it was
Obama’s most catastrophic error.
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