A weblog for Pete Ellertsen's mass communications students at Benedictine University Springfield.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

COMM 337: Another type of op-ed column, a balanced foreign policy appraisal by an overseas academic observer

In Friday's issue of The Guardian (a broadsheet newspaper in the U.K.), Brian Williams of the universities of London and Oxford offers his appraisal of U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration. Unlike happy warriors like William Safire and Peggy Noonan, who have clear partisan loyalties, Williams assesses both the pros and cons of President Obama's approach to foreign policy.

Williams' lede notes, accurately enough, that Obama's approach to the revolution in Libya has played out very well so far:
President Obama's latest foreign intervention in Libya reflects an evolution of the American way of war and the crystallisation of the "Obama Doctrine". Gone are the "shock and awe", trillion-dollar campaigns of the Bush era – right on cue, the president has followed Thursday's news of Muammar Gaddafi's death with Friday's announcement of the final pullout of US troops from Iraq by the end of 2011. In this age of austerity and public fatigue with foreign exploits, the Obama White House has diligently combined military force, technology, intelligence assets and patience to rack up an unassailable list of "wins" for the president on foreign affairs.
He compares Obama's foreign policy to former President George W. Bush's, and adds, "The Bush Doctrine played right into Osama bin Laden's hands; the Obama Doctrine killed Bin Laden."

Compare American pundits like the New York Times for example, which headlined a Libya story "Successes Overseas Are Unlikely to Help Obama at Home." Or Ken Walsh's Washington blog U.S. News and World Report, "Success in Libya Unlikely to Aid Obama's Re-election Chances."

Perhaps because he's British and doesn't have to spend all of his waking hours analyzing next year's U.S. election, Williams sees complex issues at play in what he calls the "Obama Doctrine." Even more amazing, he discusses them:
The methods behind the Obama Doctrine are just as important as the thinking. We are witnessing an evolution in the American way of war. The broad-brush "global war on terror" of Rumsfeld and Bush is being replaced by a far more sophisticated mix of ingredients. Unmanned aerial vehicles have replaced boots on the ground. This effort concentrates on gathering intelligence on opponents and then using the American technological advantage to eliminate enemy leadership. Under President Obama, the use of drones has more than tripled. While such a policy raises moral, ethnical and legal issues, the effectiveness in decimating the al-Qaida network and Taliban leaders is hard to dispute.
I think he means it raises "ethical ... issues" (since "ethnical" isn't a word and wouldn't fit the context even if it were), and I'd have to agree.

On a more pragmatic note, Williams questions "new US approach to active intervention where the US seemingly plays a secondary role to allies," but he adds, "not being the obvious lead nation is a vote winner in the US." I'm not so sure about that - the Republican primary candidates certainly don't sound like they think it's a winner! Even in the context of Libya, Williams adds:
The euphoria over Gaddafi's fall, we should remember, may prove shortlived. How secure is the National Transitional Council's authority, and will it prove capable of making the transition to a legitimate, democratic form of government? What if, in fact, Islamic extremists emerge as a major force? Or what if, perhaps, another military junta seizes power? Will we think the mission a success if, over coming months, the country decays into civil war? Can the US and its Nato allies stay out of Libya if the security situation deteriorates? All of these questions remain to be answered. Until we see how Libya pans out, the validity of the Obama Doctrine remains questionable.
And there's always Iran to think about:
The recently revealed Iranian plot to assassinate the Saudi Arabian Ambassador to Washington, coupled with continued intransigence on their nuclear weapons programme, and interference in Afghanistan, all mean that the president will be pressured to make a tough call in the near future. If and when he does decide to act, however, it will likely not be the brash, all-guns-blazing policy of the last decade. Such an intervention will be based on covert operations and the use of technology to deliver tightly targeted military action.

But Iran is not Libya, as the US national security team is well aware, and the pragmatism of the Obama Doctrine may very well avoid conflict in favour of strategic patience. After all, given the president's foreign policy scorecard, why give in to Republican bellicosity on Iran in the run-up to the 2012 election?

11 comments:

Kaitlyn Keen said...

I am somewhat naiive of the current United States political happenings. However, it is nice to see an unbiased article written by somebody who can look both at the pros and cons of a few very political issues. I love the quote he made about the Bush Doctrine vs. the Obama Doctrine referencing Osama bin Laden. I think he hit that right on target.

kdowis said...

I agree with Kaitlin, I feel like this as balanced as you can get when discussing things like US politics and policy. There are always three sides to every story, person one, person two and the truth! I appreciate the objectiveness used in this article that attempts to simply analyze policy and forecast outcomes.

Kris10 said...

I completely agree with the naiive part on our local and country's ways of government right now. It is a good thing to see pros and cons not just picking a side and demolishing the other because of opinion.

Tbock said...

Its always a plus to not see an article that is biased to one side and not the other. it needs to be a good balance, but we have seemed to have lost total track of that and don't realize that we need to understand both sides and not always lean toward one.

Dylanh14 said...

I like how this piece is unbiased but i think that in American we are forced to go to one side or the other. We never really choose what we write about.

Allie Cat 2007 said...

I think this is definitely newsworthy and that it provides information and comparision to the past campaigns of the presidency. And even though I'm not a fan of politics, this is interesting to read and it's important to get both sides of the story, but it's hard to choose one.

jhaskell1186 said...

It's refreshing to see an article that isn't biased either way. It was very balanced and showed both sides of the story.

RSeaver said...

Quotes make a story more lifelike and real. They also add emotion and personalization to a story. Often when reading a story it's the quotes that I'll remember along with the gist of it, rather than remembering the writer’s use of words.

RSeaver said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
dave maziarz said...

i havent read many articles like this one where a writer just calls it like they see it. he evaluated the pros and cons rather than just defending his side and bashing the hell out of the other side

Tyler Lewis said...

I liked this article because it was was actually fair and balanced. Unlike Fox News which claims to also be fair and balanced but clearly are not. I agree with @Kato, I am also pretty naive when it comes to politics in our country.

I agree and disagree with some of both parties views. I was glad to see that both sides of the spectrum were covered and represented as fair as possible.

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About Me

Springfield (Ill.), United States
I'm a retired English, journalism and cultural studies teacher at Springfield College in Illinois (acquired by Benedictine University and subsequently closed). I coordinate jam sessions for the "Clayville Pioneer Academy of Music" at Clayville Historic Site and the Prairieland Strings dulcimer club, and I sing in the choir and the contemporary praise team at Peace Lutheran Church in Springfield. On Hogfiddle I post links and video clips for our sessions and workshops on the mountain dulcimer (a.k.a. "hog fiddle"), as well as research notes on folklore and cultural studies, hymnody and traditional Anglo-Celtic and Scandinavian music. I also posted assignments and readings in my interdisciplinary humanities classes. The Mackerel Wrapper (now on hiatus), carried assignments and readings for my mass comm. students. I started teaching b/log when I chaired SCI-Benedictine's assessment committee, and reopened it as the privatization of public schools grew increasingly troubling and closer to home.