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The Strange Consensus on Obama's Nobel Address
I'm more interested in the fact that the set of principles Obama articulated yesterday was such a clear and comprehensive expression of his foreign policy that it's now being referred to as the "Obama Doctrine." About that matter, there are two arguably confounding facts to note: (1) the vast majority of leading conservatives -- from Karl Rove and Newt Gingrich to Peggy Noonan, Sarah Palin, various Kagans and other assorted neocons -- have heaped enthusiastic praise on what Obama said yesterday, i.e., on the Obama Doctrine; and (2) numerous liberals have done exactly the same. That convergence gives rise to a couple of questions:
Why are the Bush-following conservatives who ran the country for the last eight years and whose foreign policy ideas are supposedly so discredited -- including some of the nation's hardest-core neocons -- finding so much to cheer in the so-called Obama Doctrine?
How could liberals and conservatives -- who have long claimed to possess such vehemently divergent and irreconcilable worldviews on foreign policy -- both simultaneously adore the same comprehensive expression of foreign policy?
Let's dispense first with several legitimate caveats. Like all good politicians, Obama is adept at paying homage to multiple, inconsistent views at once, enabling everyone to hear whatever they want in what he says while blissfully ignoring the rest. Additionally, conservatives have an interest in claiming that Obama has embraced Bush/Cheney policies even when he hasn't, because it allows them to claim vindication ("see, now that Obama gets secret briefings, he realizes we were right all along"). Moreover, there are foreign policies Obama has pursued that are genuinely disliked by neocons -- from negotiating with Iran to applying some mild pressure on Israel to the use of more conciliatory and humble rhetoric. And one of the most radical and controversial aspects of the Bush presidency -- the attack on Iraq -- was not defended by Obama, nor was the underlying principle that produced it ("preventive" war).
But all that said, it's easy to understand why even intellectually honest conservatives -- including neocons -- found so much to like in "the Obama Doctrine," at least as it found expression yesterday. With the one caveat that Obama omitted a defense of the Iraq War, the generally Obama-supportive Kevin Drum put it this way:
I really don't think neocons have much to complain about even if Obama didn't use the opportunity to announce construction of a new generation of nuclear missiles or something. Given that he was, after all, accepting a peace prize, it was a surprisingly robust defense of war and America's military role in the world. Surprisingly Bushian, really . . .
Indeed, Obama insisted upon what he called the "right" to wage wars "unilaterally"; articulated a wide array of circumstances in which war is supposedly "just" far beyond being attacked or facing imminent attack by another country; explicitly rejected the non-violence espoused by King and Gandhi as too narrow and insufficiently pragmatic for a Commander-in-Chief like Obama to embrace; endowed us with the mission to use war as a means of combating "evil"; and hailed the U.S. for underwriting global security for the last six decades (without mentioning how our heroic efforts affected, say, the people of Vietnam, or Iraq, or Central America, or Gaza, and so many other places where "security" is not exactly what our wars "underwrote"). So it's not difficult to see why Rovian conservatives are embracing his speech; so much of it was devoted to an affirmation of their core beliefs.
The more difficult question to answer is why -- given what Drum described -- so many liberals found the speech so inspiring and agreeable? Is that what liberals were hoping for when they elected Obama: someone who would march right into Oslo and proudly announce to the world that we have a unilateral right to wage war when we want and to sing the virtues of war as a key instrument for peace? As Tom Friedman put it on CNN yesterday: "He got into their faces . . . I'm for getting into the Europeans' face." Is that what we needed more of?
Yesterday's speech and the odd, extremely bipartisan reaction to it underscored one of the real dangers of the Obama presidency: taking what had been ideas previously discredited as Republican or right-wing dogma and transforming them into bipartisan consensus. It's not just Republicans but Democrats that are now vested in -- and eager to justify -- the virtues of war, claims of Grave Danger posed by Islamic radicals and the need to use massive military force to combat them, indefinite detention, military commissions, extreme secrecy, full-scale immunity for government lawbreaking, and so many other doctrines once purportedly despised by Democrats but now defended by them because their leader has embraced them.
That's exactly the process that led former Bush DOJ official Jack Goldsmith to giddily explain that Obama has actually done more to legitimize Bush/Cheney "counter-terrorism" policies than Bush and Cheney themselves -- because he made them bipartisan -- and Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin made the same point to The New York Times' Charlie Savage back in July:
In any case, Jack Balkin, a Yale Law School professor, said Mr. Obama’s ratification of the basic outlines of the surveillance and detention policies he inherited would reverberate for generations. By bestowing bipartisan acceptance on them, Mr. Balkin said, Mr. Obama is consolidating them as entrenched features of government.
"What we are watching," Mr. Balkin said, "is a liberal, centrist, Democratic version of the construction of these same governing practices."
Most of the neocons celebrating Obama's speech yesterday made exactly that point in one way or another: if even this Democratic President, beloved by liberals, announces to the world that we have the unilateral right to wage war and that doing so creates Peace and crushes Evil, and does so at a Nobel Peace Prize ceremony of all places, doesn't that end the argument for good?
Much of the liberal praise for Obama's speech yesterday focused on how eloquent, sophisticated, nuanced, complex, philosophical, contemplative and intellectual it was. And, looked at a certain way, it was all of those things -- like so many Obama speeches are. After eight years of enduring a President who spoke in simplistic Manichean imperatives and bullying decrees, many liberals are understandably joyous over having a President who uses their language and the rhetorical approach that resonates with them.
But that's the real danger. Obama puts a pretty, intellectual, liberal face on some ugly and decidedly illiberal polices. Just as George Bush's Christian-based moralizing let conservatives feel good about America regardless of what it does, Obama's complex and elegiac rhetoric lets many liberals do the same. To red state Republicans, war and its accompanying instruments (secrecy, executive power, indefinite detention) felt so good and right when justified by swaggering, unapologetic toughness and divinely-mandated purpose; to blue state Democrats, all of that feels just as good when justified by academic meditations on "just war" doctrine and when accompanied by poetic expressions of sorrow and reluctance. When you combine the two rhetorical approaches, what you get is what you saw yesterday: a bipartisan embrace of the same policies and ideologies among people with supposedly irreconcilable views of the world.
UPDATE: Obviously quite related to all of this, if I had to recommend one article for everyone to read this month, it would be Matt Taibbi's new, masterful account in Rolling Stone of how the Obama administration has aggressively ensured the ongoing domination of our government by Wall Street. I don't want to excerpt any of it because I want to encourage everyone to read it in its entirety; suffice to say, it makes many of the same arguments as those made here in the context of Obama's decisions in the financial and economic realms.
UPDATE II: One of the most recurring features of the Bush-follower mindset was the claim that the President's supreme duty -- one which the Constitution requires him to swear to -- is to "protect the country," a rhetorical sleight-of-hand suggesting that the Constitution somehow venerates national security above other values. As 23skiddo points out, Obama featured this exact claim in an even more misleading form yesterday when -- in explaining why King and Gandhi were too restrictive for him -- he described himself "as a head of state sworn to protect and defend my nation."
But as this Constitutional scholar surely knows, that is not what he swore to protect and defend when he took his oath of office. Article II of the Constitution actually requires that he swear or affirm that he "will to the best of [his] Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.'' That's a critical difference, now almost always overlooked/ignored/distorted, as it was yesterday.


106 Comments so far
Show AllThe Obama doctrine of just (in case) war is more like the Bush Hog's Dicktrain, starting with Cheney's. STILL on the WRONG TRACK!
Obama's rhetorical talent will result in unprecedented anti-Americanism around the globe. When Dubya was president, anti-American sentiments in many parts of the world could be quelled by the "Dubya stole the election" line that assured many around the world that Americans were actually good people with bad leaders.
The only logical conclusion to be drawn from Obama's America is that Americans are imperialists on a scale the world has never before seen.
"The only logical conclusion to be drawn from Obama's America is that Americans are imperialists on a scale the world has never before seen."
Or, this generation of Americans are the biggest dupes in many centuries. And the elite are taking advantage of this dupe-plicity to move the entire country towards "get rich fast" schemes as the entire world "gets poor fast."
No surprise and no reason to read this article. Stating the obvious and predictable.
Time to take and hold the Capital & the Pentagon until this shit is stopped.
What are they going to do with a million people who want in, kill all of us?
We can STOP these thugs.
But you obviously read it anyway - nyaahh nyahh!
Your eloquent rebuttal makes me wonder why you aren't writing your own op ed pieces - they would be so much better informed, yes?
"the set of principles Obama articulated yesterday was such a clear and comprehensive expression of his foreign policy"
I hate to break this to you Mr. Greenwald but President Obama has no foreign policy. He only has diplomacy. They are not one and the same.
And I'm surprised you don't know the difference.
Actually it is a policy, basically continue with Imperial domination, crush anyone who even dares to get in the way, and frame those who prove a nuisance for a preemptive strike. America, a soma-infused global tyranny.
"As a head of state sworn to protect and defend my nation" from the likes of people like King and Gandhi, as well as others who also have a right to protect and defend their nation from the likes of Obama.
Oh, goodness, poor Matt Taibbi is excoriated, for the most part, on HuffPo, where there are now two articles and two videos in the last two days, and a particularly snarky blog piece on Matt by Diane Tucker. The comments are far more interesting than her short, snarky blog where she attempts to discredit Taibbi by pointing to a blog on Salon by Charlie Gasparino, wherein Gasparino discredits Taibbi. I am trying to figure out why I should trust Gasparino over Taibbi. Now if someone like Spitzer came out and discredited Taibbi I would be more likely to listen. Just saying.
I am deeply suspicious of the Huffington Post.
There's a lot of schizophrenia that goes on over there, IMHO.
Huffington Post is just an internet tabloid.
The people at Huffington Post are party traitors.
Along with most of the major "progressive" blogs, HuffPo spread right-wing disinformation about Hillary during the primaries. This makes them party traitors in my book.
This just in:
The USA is neither officially nor Constitutionally in a State of Declared War with any nation in the known universe. And, technically, no Declared War, no Commander in Chief - just little old POTUS signing treaties and raising Party bucks...
Oh, right, sorry - as GG reminds, that Constitution thing is no longer operational because the nation with the deadliest, most powerful military on the planet is petrified of a few 'terrorists.'
Hopefully, after WE kill all the 'terrorists' in the whole wide world, said Constitution will again be in play... unless new and improved 'terrorists' show up at the after party...
"technically, no Declared War, no Commander in Chief"
right you are, frank.
the words "when in actual service" declare the truth in this.
However, á la Bush, we get from "President Barack Obama's remarks at the White House Friday on winning the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, as provided by the White House": "I am the commander in chief of a country..."*
* http://www.ndtv.com/news/world/text_of_obamas_speech_after_winning_nobel_prize.php
One US Global Emperor is the same as another.
And today we have Hillary Clinton telling South America who they are allowed to have diplomatic relations with...or else.
Meet the new boss; Same as the old boss.
What the Oslo address proves is the unilateral control of the US government and state by the military-industrial complex. They control the bulk of the federal budget, have been granted a monopoly on the legalized use of force, and quite frankly will find a way to remove anyone who gets in their way.
Poet
"Additionally, conservatives have an interest in claiming that Obama has embraced Bush/Cheney policies even when he hasn't..."
Mr. Greenwald confounds, along with the rest, it appears.
0 has embraced the dark side.
... yeah, in about, what, 1988?
Liberals are just noticing now though.
Obama is not as bad as Bush; he is worse than Bush.
More troops in combat than under Bush and many billions more wasted on the military.
At one time I was a registered Democrat and fell for the lesser of two evils line.
No longer.
In many ways it would have been better if McCain had won. At least the Dems in Congess might have shown some opposition to the wars, and we wouldn't have this corporaete giveaway disguised as healthcare reform.
Obama sucks!
Jeevee
WHY DO YOU CONSIDER ONLY THE "TWO" MAJOR PARTIES?
Actually I voted for McKinney.
The Oslo event provided a stage for the world to see what a fraud Obama is and how little has changed in US foreign policy since Bush.
It was not violence that killed Apartheid in South Africa, it was world-wide sanctions!
'Essentially, Barry was right about what he said in Norway,"A nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler's armies. Negotiations cannot convince al-Qaida's leaders to lay down their arms," '
Wow, I didn't know Al-Queda was moving tank columns into the Sudetenland to rescue the oppressed Muslims there.
BHO: "As someone who stands here as a direct consequence of Dr. King's life work, I am living testimony to the moral force of non-violence. I know there's nothing weak -- nothing passive -- nothing naive -- in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King, but as a head of state sworn to protect and defend my nation, I cannot be guided by their examples alone."
23 skiddo: "It is the Constitution he's sworn to "protect and defend," isn't it?"
It's a good point 23skiddo. The Constitution is just a piece of paper to them, none of the people who have seized power and who now head, work for or promote the MIC/F.I.R.E. industries take it seriously. It seems to actually stand in the way of their grand schemes. It is just a piece of history that was saved from back in the day. It is constantly being revised and ratified as democracy in the United States is being replaced with something else. I don't think Barack Obama is President as a direct consequence of Dr. King's life work because only part of the work has been done, it hasn't yet been fully realized because we are still fighting against the machine that he is now steering.
And what would the "moral force of non-violence" have done for Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Iraq or Afghanistan? What does it do for those in our overstocked prisons?
It is not just that Obama inappropriately labeled and thinks of himself "as a head of state sworn to protect and defend my nation," instead of the constitution, but that he thinks his nation is the corporatocracy, i.e. Wall Street, the MIC, big oil, pharmaceuticals, insurance, and the rest of the elite corporate predators.
Kivals, thanks for this, it makes sense and I notice that they don't like to give it a name or call it by its name: corporatacracy.
Could not agree more. A hugely disppointing speech, but even more disappointing reaction from the world to the "left". This is not a "just" war, it is just war. If you are right, and I think you are, it is a very disturbing development for our country and the world.
Obama, the scholar, doesn't bother with Augustine of Hippo "Just War" stuff.
He's more of a Thrasymachus guy: Might is right.
"Pentagon spokesperson, Lt.Barack Obama, yesterday delivered President McChrystal's acceptance speech to the committee in which he outlined the president's plan for permanent war."
Part of the liberal love of Obama's warmongering speech just has to do with reflections from the U.S. press core. An Agence France article posted today on Common Dreams makes that clear.
As for loyalist Dem voters, they really don't care what the policies are, so long as a Democrat is in office. Obama is Bush policy-wise, but emotionally, he's FDR, JFK, RFK and MLK to them. He's even MLK when Obama explicitly denounces MLK's pacifism, as he did in the speech. To loyalist Dems practiced in doublethink, this is no contradiction.
Back when Clinton was spouting "free trade" rhetoric, I told one of my coworkers what a disaster it would be for the country. She didn't believe my simple explanation that when you outsource whole industries, you lose jobs at home. Instead, she said, "That's ridiculous, what could be wrong with free trade?" She was a fiercely loyal Democrat.
Today, loyal Dems think of Clinton as the good guy, instead of the right-wing corporatist that fucked them over. It'll be the same faulty memory after Obama finishes handing over the commonwealth to the insurance companies, Wall Street and the military industrial complex. It's a national disease.
-TIA
Seems that since most amerikas with their elitist attitude- {what! the u.s. carry out terrorism !? } that is the true downfall- the failure of the fascist amerika empire ! Too many think obomber is special. He is a polished up deadly liar, war criminal- no better than never elected war criminals bush and cheney ! But the deluded masses live in the state of denial ! More TRUTH- fascist amerikas invasion and slaughter of over 2 million people in Iraq, Afpak ARE TERRORIST acts ! There is no end in sight of amerikan imperialism; until the empire comes crashing down- soon !
tioche; Mexico
But this is what liberalism IS-this is not an abberation of liberalism, but rather its essential hypocrisy. Liberalism has always been the "pretty, intellectual, liberal face" on the ugly reality of capitalism and its method of controlling the world-imperialism. Obama is just the latest manifestation of this phenomena. Liberal political leaders and intellectuals are a contradictory but neccessary component of the capitalist class-they are brought up on the Enlightenment ideals of liberty, freedom, secularism and egalitarianism but in order to maintain the system the benefits them they must either implement or support mass murder and exploitation. Years of indoctrination through both the media and our so-called higher education system enable many functionally intelligent people to genuinely believe they are doing the right thing, or at least willfully ignore the blood splattered around them. It is so effective that even someone from a Third World background like Barack Obama can thoroughly internalize the hegemonic ideology of corporate imperialism.
Liberals have a long history of cheering imperialism and justifying it for allegedly progressive reasons, going at least back as far as the 19th century when liberal luminaries such as John Stuart Mill were extolling the virtues of British colonialism in India while British economic policies there were literally starving millions of people to death.
Or, as a much more recent example, take the liberal advocacy of 'humanitarian intervention', or as the "liberal" Czech president Vaclav Havel described it, 'humanitarian bombing'. With the demise of the Soviet Union, this became the new, improved reason for the United States Empire to rampage into other countries. Of course, it was always about protecting US strategic and/or business interests, but liberal intellectuals fond of deluding themselves squealed with delight when the Clinton administration bombed and/or invaded Somalia, Haiti, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan.
When any criticism was raised, the liberals would roar their denunciation and claim that anyone who didn't sign up for their noble crusade were either apologists for Third World despots or didn't "care" about genocide.
The fact that liberal luminaries didn't seem to care about the Kurds being mass murdered in Turkey, Palestinians and Lebanese being killed by Israel or East Timorese being slaughtred by Indonesia-all who just happened to be the victims of US-backed client states- was not up for discussion. Much less the suggestion that by their standards the United States should be bombed by Russia or China because of the mass murder of 2-3 million Vietnamese or 300,000 people in Central America. No, because humanitarian just war is a divine right reserved for the chosen nation only. Obama, like a preacher, thunders for this divine right from the pulpit and the liberal punditocracy cheer it like the intellectual prostitutes they really are.
Saint 0-gustine.
interesting love\hate thing those in office must have with the constitution...
hate the fact that it purports to give as many rights to the populace as it does, along with supposed checks and balances between the branches...
love it because it provides no mechanism for the populace to oust anyone other than 'voting'...
all censuring is in-house (no pun intended), like judges and cops...how cozy...
in fact, if those currently serving are not defending the constitution, who is? If no one, does that expose the limitations of the document, itself, that it cannot provide for its own defense? once all three branches are corrupt, is the game over?
Now it's becoming painfully clear as to why Obummer has been so concerned about what the republicanazis think of him and his policy. He *IS* a republicanazi...this couldn't be any more clear.
Greenwald again demonstrates a great ability to concisely get to the heart of the matter. After reading Obama's speech I couldn't quite place a finger on what bothered me about it - but found a precise summation here -
"Like all good politicians, Obama is adept at paying homage to multiple, inconsistent views at once, enabling everyone to hear whatever they want in what he says while blissfully ignoring the rest."
The fact is, a permanent state of war will define the US for the forseeable future and there is and always has been a bipartisan consensus on that.
jeffc sez: "After reading Obama's speech I couldn't quite place a finger on what bothered me about it ..."
***
What bothered me was that it read like Bush with a few diction lessons.
a permanent state of war has always defined the US.
And he does it in every speech, at least the ones that I've heard -- and they are getting few and far between. I find Obama's voice now as grating as Bush's.
Jeevee
DOES ANYONE OUT THERE CONSIDER THE REALITY OF THE LAW OF KARMA?
I try to live my life, the part of this crazy world I have (some) control over, with as much love and compassion for friends, family and strangers, that I can.
(I just hit this site to get that suicidal feeling back.)
I love it!Tony
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power there will be peace in the world"
Jeevee
DOES ANYONE OUT THERE CONSIDER THE REALITY OF THE LAW OF KARMA?
I have seen the law of karma work in my own life. If it applies to nations then a nuclear attack upon the U.S. is a given.
Obama, in connecting his name to the wars of Terror, reminds me of Slim Pickens in Dr. Strangelove riding the bomb to oblivion. History will record how much of the United States he takes with him.