Three key lines in the speech illustrated the fundamentals underlying the Obama Administration’s foreign policy.
First, Obama indicated that he sees terrorism-sponsoring Islamist regimes as comparable to the communists of the Cold War. Both are primarily motivated by power and wealth and are open to mutually-beneficial deals. He said:
“If John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan could negotiate with the Soviet Union, then surely a strong and confident America can negotiate with less powerful adversaries today.”
This comparison overlooks the ideological differences between the two. If the Iranian regime had purely selfish interests, it would not engage in its self-injuring radical behavior. The preamble to its constitution would not state that its founding objective is “the establishment of a universal holy government and the downfall of all others.”
The second noteworthy line implies that anti-Americanism and Islamic radicalism is a reaction to Western domination and military actions. He said:
“I’ve imposed prudent limits on the use of drones—for we will not be safer if people abroad believe we strike within their countries without regard for consequence.”
Drone strikes are not carried out recklessly or without concern for civilian casualties. Anti-American fervors, whether they are aimed at drone strikes or another element of U.S. policy, are not based on a careful analysis. They are stoked by governments like our “allies” in Pakistan and Islamist provocateurs. Increased regulations on drone strikes, or even the complete abandonment of drone strikes, will do nothing to stem their incendiary rhetoric.
Thirdly, President Obama criticized “large-scale deployments that drain our strength and may ultimately feed extremism.”
This is one small step away from saying, “One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.” Again, President Obama argues that Islamic extremists are reacting to Western heavy-handedness.
Each individual’s radicalization can be prompted by many factors, and disagreement with Western policy may be one of them, but it is not the decisive factor. Yet, it is the factor that President Obama most references.
A recent example would be that of Terry Lee Loewen, a 58-year-old convert to Islam who was arrested after he was caught planning to bomb an airport in Wichita, Kansas. When he explained his thoughts to undercover FBI agents, he said:
“I have been studying subjects like jihad, martyrdom operations and Sharia law. I don’t understand how you can read the Quran and the sunnah of the Prophet and not understand that jihad and implementation of sharia is absolutely demanded of all the Muslim ummah.”
The same terrorists who target the U.S. support all sorts of despicable things that have nothing to do with Western foreign policy. Their grievances against the U.S. stem from an overall Islamist worldview that the Obama Administration does not recognize as the core problem.
This brings us to the statement, “From Tunisia to Burma, we’re supporting those who are willing to do the hard work of building democracy.” Because Islamism is not defined as the threat, Islamists that are not Al-Qaeda and vote are viewed as components of democracy. The result is that the U.S. has failed to capitalize on the anti-Islamist backlash in the region.
This is why Egypt went unmentioned in the speech. President Obama defended the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, but understands that mentioning its overthrow now will only offend the current Egyptian government.
The section of the State of the Union speech with the largest holes was about Iran.
Obama first misleadingly claimed the deal “has halted the progress of Iran’s nuclear program and rolled parts of that program back” and that “Iran has begun to eliminate its stockpile of higher levels of enriched uranium.”
He didn’t mention that the “rolled back” portions of the program are easily reversible. The Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister said, “We can return again to 20% enrichment in less than one day, and we can convert the material again.”
That’s not just bluster. Two credible nuclear experts write that the re-conversion of this material is technically feasible. It can be done quickly and possibly without Western intelligence knowing it has begun.
The progress of Iran’s program is not necessarily “halted” either. The deal does not cover Iran’s ballistic missile program, the training of scientists and other personnel or any nuclear work done in North Korea.
Notice President Obama’s careful word usage when he said, “[Iran] is not installing advanced centrifuges.” The Iranian regime is openly building them, though. Once completed, they will quicken the pace of uranium enrichment and shorten the time needed to make a nuclear bomb.
The term “rolled back” gives the public the impression that parts of the nuclear program are being dismantled. That is false. None of the infrastructure is being taken down. The Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister said, “the structure of our nuclear program is preserved” and the Foreign Minister boasted that Iran “did not agree to dismantle anything.”
One bright spot of the speech was in regard to Afghanistan. President Obama said that leaving entirely is an option if an agreement is not negotiated. It is important for the treacherous President Karzai to understand this.
His praise of the sacrifice of the troops is commendable and Americans need to be reminded of what they go through for us. What was missing was a narrative of success.
President Obama quickly mentioned that Afghan forces are taking the lead, but the world needs to know about the victories our troops have fought for. The capabilities of the Afghan forces have greatly increased and there are plenty of facts and stories that can be told as U.S. troops leave. The enemy’s propaganda needs to be confronted, but the word “Taliban” was not even mentioned.
The common thread tying all of these errors together is that the Islamist ideology is not pinpointed as the problem. Until the threat is accurately crystallized, American foreign policy will be flawed.
The Institute on Religion and Democracy contributed to this article.
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