About Get Alerts Login
September 08, 2010
Browse by Regions and/or Topics

Obama's Folly: Courting Our Enemies and Criticizing Ourselves

Joshua Muravchik | 05 May 2009
World Politics Review

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint

The first hundred days is an artificial benchmark for assessing presidential performance. In foreign policy, Barack Obama has not had time to do much, and the moves he has made have yet to produce clear consequences. He has, however, set a tone. It is reminiscent of the approach George W. Bush proposed in his 2000 campaign debate with Al Gore when he said, "If we're an arrogant nation, they'll resent us. If we're a humble nation . . . they'll welcome us."

Whether Mr. Bush's foreign policy would have embodied that prescription had Osama bin Laden's minions not struck the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, we'll never know. As things turned out, after 9/11, Mr. Bush's declaration and prosecution of a global war on terror, with its bellicose rhetoric and military action unblessed by the U.N. Security Council, struck many non-Americans as the very opposite of Bush's earlier formula. ...

subscribe to World Politics Review

WPR

Subscribers receive:

  • Access to in-depth feature articles
  • Regular Strategic Posture Reviews
  • Regular WPR Special Reports
  • Access to our Document Center
  • Access to WPR’s entire archives
  • Enhanced search across the entire site
  • Participation in our discussion section

Click here to subscribe »
Click here to take a free trial »
Already a subscriber? Login here.

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint