Barack Obama came into the White House in a cloud of glory and
optimism.
He defined the problems that the nations faced in
his first inaugural address. First, the nation was at war with a network of
violence and hatred. Second, our economy was badly weakened. Homes were lost,
and businesses shuttered. Health care was too expensive. Schools failed their
students. And finally, "less measurable, but no less profound, is a
sapping of confidence across our land; a nagging fear that America's decline is
inevitable." Obama promised that he and the country would meet these
challenges head on.Eight years later, as Obama prepares to depart the White House, he leaves the nation in a cloud of disappointment, recrimination, and even paranoia. None of the wars Obama inherited are truly over, and he has started, or joined America to several more. If anything, the sense of America's decline is even more palpable than before.
For a sense of that decline, look at the pathetic tantrums that the Obama administration is throwing in its last days. After the White House received some criticism from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others in the media for letting a non-binding resolution condemning Israeli settlements pass at the UN, Secretary of State John Kerry let fly with a speech on Israel and its settlements at a bewildering length. He scolded Israel for having the "most right-wing [government] in Israeli history, with an agenda driven by the most extreme elements." It was petty and unnecessary. Letting the resolution pass said everything that the administration hoped to express. Nattering on just evidenced the impotent frustration of the administration, particularly since it will not ratchet down foreign aid or military aid to Israel.
This minor meltdown also invited critiques from America's allies.
U.K. Prime Minister Teresa May fired
a shot at Kerry. So too did the
Australian government. Obama's state department replied to these remarks by
saying, "We are grateful for the strongly supportive statements in
response to Secretary Kerry's speech from across the world, including Germany,
France, Canada, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates,
and others." Invoking Qatar and Saudi Arabia as a character witness for
the United States' defense of human rights and building of peace is
contemptible, considering that conversion to Christianity is a capital crime
there.
Next there is the way the Obama administration has treated Russia
as a newly menacing and strangely omnicompetent rival. Last week the Obama
administration expelled 35 Russian diplomats and their families in retaliation
for their government's supposed hacking. But when the Obama administration
presented its evidence for Russian hacking to the public, it was so weak and
circumstantial, it almost invited those perusing it to disbelieve the
administration's claims:
"Instead of providing smoking guns that the Russian government
was behind specific hacks, it largely restates previous private-sector claims
without providing any support for their validity. Even worse, it provides an
effective bait and switch by promising newly declassified intelligence into
Russian Kerry's speech from across the world, including Germany, France,
Canada, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates,
and others." Invoking Qatar and Saudi Arabia as a character witness for
the United States' defense of human rights and building of peace is
contemptible, considering that conversion to Christianity is a capital crime
there.
These tantrums are not without reason. One prefers to lash out at
an enemy beyond the border than to look at one's own failures square in the
face.The Obama administration has fallen far short of the soaring aspiration in which it began. The wars have not ended. Obama is the first two-term president to be in one war — the war in Afghanistan, the war that even his own "surge" could not end — for his entire presidency. And it's a war in which the Taliban has been making a comeback. Obama hands off American involvement in Libya, Yemen, Iraq, and a humiliating wind down of its five-year covert intervention in the Syrian Civil War.
Other inaugural promises have come to naught as well. More people
have health care, yes, but more people also pay more to get the health care
they want. And American health-care costs have not gone down to meet the
standards set by the rest of the world. Our education system still fails people
at the same desultory rates as before. And our respectable allies feel more
empowered than ever to denigrate us.
And the political promise is spent as well. Obama was hailed as a genius and political savior. Now his own Democratic Party has fallen to new lows in the state legislatures and governors' mansions across the country. Instead of handing on the executive branch to an ordained successor, he is passing it onto the man who questioned his birth certificate.
If you had left your country and party in such a state, you'd be acting like a petulant jerk, too.
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