To millions of people around the world, Barak Obama is the
messiah, a visionary with the message of ‘hope’ and
‘change’, whose mere image portrays a new America in
the quest for peace. Barack Obama may possess John
F. Kennedy’s youthful ambition and Ronald Reagan’s
communication skills, but his foreign policy
doctrine bears a striking resemblance to Neville
Chamberlain’s appeasement policy towards Nazi
Germany. Obama follows the path of enlightened
left-leaning intellectuals, whose Weltanschauung or
world view is deeply rooted in the ‘culture of
reason’ of the Western liberal tradition. This
world view is naïve at best and disastrous in
consequence under the worst circumstances.
World peace has been the eternal dream of great thinkers
since the time of antiquity; it has yet remained an
illusion due to conflicting interests of
self-interested individuals and states, and the
inability of world bodies to enforce international
laws. While some world leaders continue to pursue
their Wilsonian vision of world peace with reforms
of existing and the creation of new international
organizations, others are engaged in ideological
battles and proxy wars against Western values and
civilization. In essence, those who provide
financial, logistic and military support to
terrorist organizations, such as Hamas in Gaza,
Hezbollah in Lebanon and Al-Qaida affiliated
organizations worldwide, are not remotely interested
in peace.
Barack Obama’s foreign policy disregards these fundamental
principles, as Americans, who in the immediate
aftermath of September 11, 2001 rallied behind their
president in the global war against terror, have
become weary of counting their dead and wounded
veterans. As in the case of many left of center
politicians, Barack Obama speaks with an eloquent
and convincing voice to people around the world with
a populist message of dialogue and negotiation
within an international framework. His dovish
vision of world peace is far from reach in today’s
political landscape where dialogue with terrorist
sponsoring states eventually helps terrorists to
plan their next major attacks.
In the new era of 24x7 news media, Barack Obama
utilizes his eloquence in public speaking and superb
communication skills to galvanize the masses with
populist themes and moral arguments which often
provide the target audience with instant
gratification. The problem lies in the fallacy of
the argument on how to deal with those who threaten
Western values and civilization.
War on Terror: Unconventional &
Asymmetrical
Warfare
Over the past few years, the phrase ‘war on
terror’ has become synonymous with the George W.
Bush doctrine, an interventionist policy to secure
and defend the
United States’ national interests against countries
that harbor or give aid to terrorist groups by all
means necessary, including preventative wars,
deposing foreign leaders and regime change in rouge
states.
The war on terror is unconventional and asymmetrical
in nature. As the world media airs sounds and
images from front lines in Afghanistan and Iraq, the
war on terror is fought on multiple (i.e. military,
economic, intelligence, information, etc.) fronts.
With memories of the Vietnam war haunting the
American psyche, terrorists groups, i.e. Hamas,
Hezbollah and Al-Qaida, use asymmetric strategies,
such as sporadic bombings and IEDs (or
Improvised Explosive Devices)
against Western targets, to gain strength and
undermine the American will. In the struggle
against Western values and civilization, terrorist
sponsoring states and organizations have discovered
Americans’ angst towards their country’s long term
military commitment half way around the world.
George W. Bush deserves high praise for recognizing threats
from rouge states, namely Syria, Libya, Iraq, Iran
and North Korea, and affiliated terrorist
organizations. The 43rd president of the
United States has yet lacked essential communication
skills to explain the complex elements and nature of
war on terror beyond the American presence in
Afghanistan and Iraq. Now, Barack Obama has no
intention to redefine the objectives of war on
terror as a timeless fight against terrorist regimes
and organizations. Obama cares little about the
long term outcome of war on terror, while he is
determined to create a personal legacy as the first
black American president to realize world peace,
albeit at the superficial level. To this end,
Barack Obama pursues the dangerous policy of
appeasement.
Historic Lesson
Historian Keith Eubank defines the origin of the term
‘appeasement’ in conjunction with attempts to reduce
“international tensions between states through the
removal of the causes of friction”[ii].
Eubanks describes that in the immediate aftermath of
World War I appeasement “meant concessions to
disgruntled nations in the hope that the concessions
would alleviate their grievances and lessen their
tendency to take aggressive actions” ii.
At the time, many Britons, who viewed World War I as
entirely avoidable and accidental, nurtured
appeasement policies with concessions towards Nazi
Germany. The appeasers had developed strong guilt
feelings over the Treaty of Versailles despite
warnings and objections from the French.
History highlights fundamental weaknesses of British
appeasement policy towards Nazi Germany, as in 1938
Neville Chamberlain secured short term peace with
Hitler’s signature under the Munich agreement which
allowed
Germany to increase the size of its navy, army, and
air force, to reoccupy the Rhineland, and annex
Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
Chamberlain and many others in the British political
establishment believed the
annexation of Sudetenland would address Germany’s
grievances. However, according to Keith Eubank, “the
appeasers did ignore one important fact: a policy of
appeasement could end only with Germany restored to
its former strength” ii.
The appeasers ignored warnings from seasoned
statesmen like Winston Churchill who had advocated a
strong military policy for Britain and had foreseen
threats of Nazi Germany as a re-emerging military
power in Europe. In Churchill’s autobiography,
Martin Gilbert quotes Churchill’s conversation with
Chamberlain’s predecessor, Stanley Baldwin, in
1934. Churchill “warned Mr Baldwin that the Germans
had a secret Air Force and were rapidly overhauling
ours [i.e. Britain’s Air force]… [Churchill] gave
definite figures and forecasts. Of course, it was
all denied with all [the] weight of official
authority”[iii].
This was not Churchill’s first or last warning which
was disregarded.
The appeasers were idealists and optimists who
wanted to trust Hitler. In the end, British
appeasement policy allowed Nazi Germany to further
strengthen its military might leading to the
annexation of Austria in 1938 and the break out of
WWII with the invasion of Poland in September 1939.
Today, history books recall atrocities and war
crimes that may have been prevented with Britain’s
stronger stand against Nazi Germany.
Don’t Trust the Enemy
History is a constant reminder of struggles between
civilizations. Although idealists from the left and
the right of political spectrums underscore values
and interests that unite people across continents,
the future of the human race is threatened by
exaggerated confidence in the power of reason and
the underestimation of fanatic forces in the West.
In his book “The Suicide of Reason: Radical Islam’s
Threat to the West”, Lee Harris examines the worst
case scenario, namely - the
destruction of the West by radical Islam. Western
leaders are victims of a curious illusion that “has
created and maintained rare islands of reason in a
world otherwise ruled by the law of the jungle”[iv].
Western thinkers have nurtured scientific theories
based on the ‘fanaticism of reason’ which is both
overly optimistic and fatal. They are by-products
of a culture of reason; a culture that views humans
as rational actors. This perception is
fundamentally wrong and fatal, as humans are
primarily self-interested tribal actors. This
phenomenon is clearly visible in the ‘us versus
them’ mindset of radical Muslims and communists
(also operating as socialists in various regions)
around the world.
Radical Muslims, socialists and communists pose the
single biggest threat to the West and the survival
of the human race. These groups view the
destruction of Western values, culture and standards
as the key to their cultural survival. To destroy
the West, they resort to any means, tactics and
strategy. Regimes in oil rich states such as Iran,
Libya, and Venezuela direct millions of petro-dollars
to an ideologically driven propaganda and proxy wars
against Western interests. These regimes have no
interest in their nation’s future; they simply
pursue an ideological struggle. To this end, the
coalition between radical Muslims and the extreme
left is the means to an end.
Terrorist sponsoring regimes in Iran, Libya and
Venezuela often fuel the ideological hatred in other
countries, such as Syria and Lebanon, and provide
financial support for the purchase of nuclear and
conventional military technology from North Korea.
They provide financial, logistic, ideological and
political support to terrorist organizations, such
as Hamas, Hezbollah and Al-Qaida, who return the
favor with hit and run attacks against Western
interests. Together, they pose major threats
against the human race, as forces of fanaticism move
closer to nuclear proliferation.
Most recently, Barack Obama has presided over a
session of the UN Security Council which adopted a
US-drafted resolution to realize the president’s
vision for a world without nuclear weapons. This
resolution has passed unanimously following Obama’s
remarks on fundamental threats of nuclear weapons.
According to the Washington Post, “Obama is pressing
for a new worldwide treaty to halt production of
weapons-grade uranium and plutonium and strengthen
the global non-proliferation treaty, which has
limited the spread of nuclear weapons for decades
but now is in danger of fraying”[v].
Obama’s noble vision falls in line with the naïve
dovish attitude of the left-leaning political elite
whose idealism blinds them towards the dangers of
realpolitik. These idealists view de facto leaders
in many terrorist sponsoring states and their proxy
allies in terrorist organizations as reasonable
actors with whom they may negotiate as equal
partners within an international framework. This is
a naïve and wrongful assumption, as the destruction
of Western values and civilization is the raison
d’être for terrorist regimes in Iran, Syria, Libya,
Venezuela, North Korea, etc. and their terrorist
allies (i.e. Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Qaida). In
short, the leaders of terrorist sponsoring states
and organizations are neither reasonable nor are
interested in peace. For them, negotiations are the
means to an end. The means is the delaying tactic,
and the end is the acquisition of weapons of mass
destruction for the purpose of the final
annihilation of Western values and civilization.
The Obama administration fails to learn from Bill
Clinton’s foreign policy mistakes towards North
Korea. Since the 1990s, the communist government in
North Korea has pursued an aggressive nuclear
proliferation strategy. While conservative hawks
have persistently advocated a pre-emptive military
response, Bill Clinton opted for negotiation and
appeasement during his presidency. Clinton relied
on President Carter to appease the Marxist-Stalinist
regime in Pyongyang which in return used delaying
tactics and American aid to build its nuclear
program. As a nuclear power, North Korea poses the
biggest threat to regional stability in East Asia
with an aggressive arms race on the Korean peninsula
and the sale of nuclear technology to Iran as well
as other rouge states.[vi]
The Solution
In his famous State of the Union Speech on January
29, 2002, George W. Bush coined the phrase ‘axis of
evil’ in reference to governments that help
terrorism and seek weapons of mass destruction.
Although George W. Bush identified Iran, Iraq and
North Korea as states that posed the greatest
threats to American interests, he failed to
distinguish between de facto governments and people
in the aforementioned countries.[vii]
As a result, George W. Bush’s foreign policy
was only partially successful, as it prevented a
second wave of terrorist attacks on American soil
following 9/11. However, successive American
administrations have failed to communicate the need
for a multi-tiered approach towards rouge states.
First, rouge states need to be redefined as ‘rouge
regimes’ which would include de facto regimes in
Iran, North Korea, Libya, Syria, Venezuela, etc.
Second, the United States must lead the world
community in supporting ‘regime change’ to replace
dictatorships with democracy. Third, it is vital to
support democratic forces in their non-violent
struggle against terrorist governments to facilitate
regime change by peaceful means. Once again, the
United States can take the lead in bringing together
opposition groups to lead velvet revolutions. This
tactic may be applied in countries, such as Iran,
Venezuela and Cuba, where opposition groups share a
common enemy but have historically struggled to
unite along shared common values. Fourth, current
and future American administrations can use nuclear
capabilities of the United States to deter nuclear
proliferation plans by the governments of North
Korea, Iran and other terrorist sponsoring
countries. Fifth, the world community must act
united in cutting financial ties between terrorist
sponsoring regimes and organizations. Finally,
various forms of economic and military actions may
be used as the last resort to protect Western values
and civilization against terrorist regimes and
organizations.
In short, the United States needs to learn from the
mistakes of its recent past and find pragmatic
solutions to foreign policy challenges of our time.
The ‘war against terror’ is an asymmetric struggle
that requires new innovative strategies. This is
nothing like the Vietnam, first and second Persian
Gulf wars, or in fact any other conventional
battlefield-based conflict. Hence, the Obama
administration bears the moral responsibility to
take existing and emerging threats from rogue
regimes and organizations seriously.
Appeasement must yield to regime change on a broad
scale by different ways and means. Barack Obama
should stop playing the dangerous game of
appeasement, as to paraphrase Sir Winston Churchill
the crocodile (in this case terrorist regimes and
organizations) does not necessarily eat the appeaser
(i.e. the United States) last. In other words,
terrorist sponsoring states and organizations will
use prolonged negotiations to acquire weapons of
mass destruction, or some forms of ‘dirty bombs’,
and prepare their next attacks on Western targets at
the time of their choosing.
[i]
Humes, James C. The Wit & Wisdom of Winston
Churchill. New York : HarperPrennial, 1995.
p. 7.
[ii]
Eubank, Keith. World War II: Roots and Causes.
[book auth.] Appeasement and Appeasers. World
War II: Roots and Causes. Lexington : D. C.
Heath and Company, 1992, pp. 129 - 135.
[iii]
Gilbert, Martin. Churchill: A Life. New
York : Henry Holt and Company, 1992. p. 606.
[iv]
Harris, Lee. The Suicide of Reason: Radical
Islam's Threat to the West. New York : Basic
Books, 2007. p. 79.
[v]
Sheridan, Glenn Kessler and Mary Beth.
Washington Post. [Online] September 24, 2009.
[Cited: September 26, 2009.]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/24/AR2009092401721.html.
[vi]Smith,
Charles R. North Korea Nukes Clinton Legacy.
Newsmax.com. [Online] Newsmax.com, January
8, 2003. [Cited: September 26, 2009.] http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/1/7/164846.shtml.
[vii]C-SPAN:
STATE OF THE UNION TRANSCRIPT. C-SPAN.
[Online] C-SPAN, January 22, 2002. [Cited:
September 26, 2009.] http://www.c-span.org/executive/transcript.asp?cat=current_event&code=bush_admin&year=2002.