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To: unclewest who wrote (423005)4/21/2011 8:12:49 PM
From: Nadine Carroll2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793917
 
U.S. Strategic Fatigue Worries Israel

Monday, April 18, 2011
Efraim Inbar And David M. Weinberg
Special To The Jewish Week

Israel needs a strong America, engaged and projecting power in the Middle East, especially at this time of great political instability. But what if the United States doesn’t want to lead? What if the U.S. is downsizing its involvement in the region? What if America is befuddled by a confused foreign policy prism? These would be troublesome developments.

Unfortunately, the current American administration seems to have no clue how to deal with the Mideast, even as successive Arab regimes crumble and the regional architecture cries out for direction. That is the worrying conclusion that emerged from a high-level American-Israeli conclave held at the end of March in New York. Co-sponsored by the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, a prominent Israeli think tank, and Columbia University's Saltzman Institute on War and Peace and the School of International and Public Affairs, the strategic dialogue left the two sides far apart.

The Israeli strategists were advocating American resolve and leadership in a rapidly changing Middle East. A strong and confident U.S. posture in the region, BESA Center’s research associate, professor Eytan Gilboa, told the opening of the conference, is critical to confronting the growing power of Iran and radical Islam.

Only an engaged U.S. that is prepared to commit political, financial and military resources to the task, he said, can provide a modicum of strategic stability to the fast-shifting Middle East. Only an engaged America can combat the rise of Iranian hegemony. Only an engaged America can retard the ascendance of Islamist parties from Morocco to the Gulf.

However, American participants in the dialogue were very reserved. In effect, they yawned and said: No thanks. [Some of the American participants in the dialogue were William Quandt, Richard Murphy, Jonathan Rhynhold and Robert Shapiro.]

The top-level Columbia and Harvard academics, diplomats and former administration officials expressed awe at the changes in the region, but made it clear that America prefers to lower the profile of its involvement in the Middle East.

In fact, America wants out of the Middle East, they suggested. Out of Iraq; out of Afghanistan; and to a certain extent, out of Israeli-Palestinian affairs, too. The U.S. certainly has no zitzfleish, or stamina, for truly confronting a nuclear Iran.

You could almost feel the exhaustion in the room. America is overextended, we heard. While the tenor of the discussion was not isolationist, the positions expressed indicated an inclination to disengage from overseas commitments. Call it strategic fatigue.

Even more disturbing was the hint that America’s withdrawal from the Middle East stems from a deeper, more ideological place. It’s not just fatigue. It was hard to shake the feeling that American foreign and defense policy practitioners — at least those close to the current administration — no longer want to project American power in the Middle East because they no longer believe in the justness of doing so.

President Obama’s difficulty in openly identifying with American exceptionalism is well known. He seems embarrassed by, has often apologized for, the exercise of American power. The shadow of such feckless thinking seemed to loom over the conference.

Yet, strategic fatigue and ideological indolence were only one part of the pictured we Israelis were presented with in New York. We also found policy confusion.

Take, for example, the current burst of American military activism in Libya. This confused both the Americans and the Israelis at the conference, but for different reasons.

Americans fed up with foreign adventures were obviously suspicious of this new military engagement. They were, to some extent, relieved when the responsibility for the operation was transferred to NATO, which confirms the strategic fatigue syndrome. At the same time they were listening to an American media largely mobilized to assist the Obama administration, portraying the assistance to the rebels in Libya as a stopgap humanitarian effort. Americans have an ingrained passion to spread democracy and fight tyranny, which is morally laudable, but often strategically problematic.

In contrast, Israeli participants were bewildered by the attempt to unseat Kaddafy, an Arab leader who has cooperated with the U.S. since 2003. It bemused Israeli strategists to see Libyan rebels naively portrayed as pro-democracy freedom fighters. We Israelis, who are concerned with America’s standing in the region, fear that America is backing the losing side in this Libyan civil war — a cardinal sin in realpolitik terms.

Simply put, Washington’s behavior makes no strategic sense. First, it stabbed its ally Hosni Mubarak in the back; then it sought to block Saudi intervention in Bahrain, which was necessary to forestall an Iranian-backed Shiite victory; and now it has intervened in a civil and tribal war in which the rebels might well be radical Islamists or subsumed by Islamists.

All this reinforces the Israeli view that Washington has lost it. A mix of strategic weariness and naïve ideology supporting a half-baked doctrine of sporadic intervention for humanitarian reasons is a recipe for growing uncertainty about American wisdom and leadership. Many Middle Eastern states will distance themselves from an unreliable U.S., especially if its leaders appear to be misguided amateurs.

A confused and unpredictable America is even more frightening than a tired superpower. A Middle East without clear and strong American leadership is a very unruly place, especially for Israel.

Israelis still see America as a great and ennobling world power. America is not and need not be in decline. Thus we hope that the U.S. will snap back to its solid global performance and responsibilities quickly. The world — especially the Middle East — needs a strong America with strategic prescience.

Professor Efraim Inbar is director, and David M. Weinberg is director of public affairs, of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University (www.besacenter.org).

thejewishweek.com



To: unclewest who wrote (423005)4/21/2011 8:14:22 PM
From: Nadine Carroll4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793917
 
Here we go again. Obama must think he can win this war with aircraft.


Win? Who said anything about 'win'? This is about kicking the can down the road long enough for Libya to drop out of the headlines. Obama is just waiting an opportune moment to pull out.



To: unclewest who wrote (423005)4/21/2011 8:16:07 PM
From: skinowski1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793917
 
Afghanistan made sense back then since it would be absurd to allow al Qaeda to control a large nation.... Iraq took a lot of arguing and soul searching; technically we were at war with Saddam Hussein, and he did not comply... in both those campaigns there were mistakes made and there was "mission drift". In both cases, at any rate, there was some seriousness present and some strategic thinking involved. Now, what is this business with Libya? A humanitarian mission - in which Nato is already running out of ammunition? And now, it's US armed drones.

Looks like as time goes by Qaddafi gets stronger. Probably, the clans friendly to his ruling clan have figured out on which side their bread is buttered.



To: unclewest who wrote (423005)4/21/2011 9:25:48 PM
From: greenspirit12 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793917
 
Obama is a complete fool. His latest round of speeches demonstrate a complete lack of leadership. No matter how aggressive the MSM is in promoting his Presidency, he will lose big time in the next election.

Conservatives have nothing to be afraid about. They should be going after the serial liar at every opportunity. I'm supporting the conservative women for President, either Sarah Palin or Michelle Bachman. Conservatives should unite behind the women early and go after Obama with everything they have. Both Palin and Bachman have demonstrated an appeal to the grass root Tea Party movement, can raise money on Obama's level, can articulate core conservative principles, and have the fire in their belly to take it to Obamatrons. I'm sick of the inside the beltway, I don't want to be too rough on Obama men, who want to play nice with the marxist wing of the Democrat party.

Palin had it right when she said Republicans in Congress need to learn how to fight like girls. This election will determine whether we'll save the country from financial ruin.

If we elect a go with the flow, get along with the spendaholics nice guy, we'll doom our country and turn it into a modern version of Britain.



To: unclewest who wrote (423005)4/22/2011 8:59:01 AM
From: carranza211 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793917
 
You might know that I think that the war in Afghanistan is a waste of blood and treasure. This definitely does not mean that those who fight should not be honored.

A video of a fallen Marine's funeral taken by a state trooper's in-dash camera. This the patriotic Deep South for you:

stumbleupon.com

I understand the Westboro Baptist Church idiots planned to protest the funeral, harass the grieving family. Country boys took care of the problem:

nafoom.yuku.com

A couple of days before, one of them ran his mouth at a Brandon gas station and got his ass waxed. Police were called and the beaten man could not give much of a description of who beat him. When they canvassed the station and spoke to the large crowd that had gathered around, no one seemed to remember anything about what had happened.

Rankin County handled this thing perfectly. There were many things that were put into place that most will never know about and at great expense to the county.

Most of the morons never made it out of their hotel parking lot. It seems that certain Rankin county pickup trucks were parked directly behind any car that had Kansas plates in the hotel parking lot and the drivers mysteriously disappeared until after the funeral was over. Police were called but their wrecker service was running behind and it was going to be a few hours before they could tow the trucks so the Kansas plated cars could get out.

A few made it to the funeral but were ushered away to be questioned about a crime they might have possibly been involved in. Turns out, after a few hours of questioning, that they were not involved and they were allowed to go on about their business.

Rankin deserves a hand in how they handled this situation."