BARRY'S WAR WITHIN
BARRY'S WAR WITHIN by Maureen Dowd
The president looked exhausted as he met the press in St. Petersburg on Friday. The man elected because of his magical powers of persuasion had failed to persuade other world leaders at dinner the night before about a strike on Syria.
He said he had told his fellow leaders, “I was elected to end wars and not start them.”
But in life, and especially in Washington, people sometimes end up becoming what they start out scorning.
It is uncomfortable to watch the president struggle to reconcile his two conflicting identities as he weighs what he calls the unappetizing choices on Syria, and as he is weighed down by the malignant choices on the Middle East made by his predecessor.
In his head, is Barry at war with the commander in chief?
One side of him is Barry, the smooth consensus builder and community organizer, the former constitutional professor and the drive-by senator who must stand by the argument he made when he ran for president excoriating W.’s and Dick Cheney’s highhandedness: checks and balances must be observed. As he told Charlie Savage, then reporting for The Boston Globe, in 2007, “The president does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”
W. and Tony Blair were not honest about the imminent threat from Saddam. President Obama said in Russia Friday that “I put it before Congress because I could not honestly claim that the threat posed by Assad’s use of chemical weapons on innocent civilians and women and children posed an imminent, direct threat to the United States.”
When it came time to act as commander in chief, he choked and reverted to Senator Barry — even though many lawmakers in both parties privately wish the president had just gone ahead and hurled a few missiles, Zeus like, and not put them on the spot.
Now the president who saw no benefit in wooing Democrats on the Hill is desperate for their love. Nancy Pelosi, the San Francisco peacenik, will have to win Barry the right to bomb.
Those around him say that, after the British poodle slipped its leash, Obama faced a gut check on his decision to have a strike. He had to dig deep and decide “This is who I am,” and be true to himself. To be Barry, editor of the Harvard Law Review.
In some ways, his reaction reflects his tendency toward mixing high principles with low motives. He believes it is proper to get Congressional approval and let the people chime in. But he also wanted to make life difficult for Congressional Republicans who like to “snipe,” using his word, from the sidelines with no accountability. He wanted to call their blustery bluff.
But who is going to get bluffed?
Obama had to know that once he threw this into the Congress, it was likely done for. Congress now is a paralyzed domestic version of the U.N., with Republicans going “nyet” as often as the Russians, and Democrats acting like the don’t-look-at-us-for-help Chinese.
Many Republicans are trying to use this as an attempt to emasculate the president, but can they really send the message that the U.S. president is weak?
Obama has told Israel, when it has threatened to go it alone on striking Iran, to back off, guaranteeing the U.S. would use force if necessary to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. If Congress ratifies that there’s no appetite among Americans to police the Middle East, does it doom any chance of a U.S. pre-emptive strike on Iran and indicate that the U.S. won’t be there for Israel?
Barack Obama first made his mark as an Illinois legislator with a speech in 2002 about Iraq, which he warned would be “a rash war, a war based not on reason but on passion,” a war that would “distract” from our own problems with the economy and poverty.
Now agitated constituents at town halls across the country are asking why the president wants to distract from our own problems with the economy and poverty.
As Maryland Congressman Elijah Cummings said on NPR, a nurse at Johns Hopkins confronted him, saying: “Folks have been using chemical weapons for a long time. Do you realize when I took my son to school, they didn’t even have books for him to” learn from?
As commander in chief, Obama knows that if he doesn’t punish Bashar al-Assad, America and his presidency will be forever reduced. He thinks a limited strike — not a war, as some are calling it — is the right thing to do.
But as Barry talked to the press in St. Petersburg, his lack of enthusiasm came across. He was not thundering from the top of the moral ramparts. He made his usual nuanced, lawyerly presentation, talking about the breach of international “norms.” It’s a weak, wonk word.
Norms don’t send people to the barricades.
The president looked exhausted as he met the press in St. Petersburg on Friday. The man elected because of his magical powers of persuasion had failed to persuade other world leaders at dinner the night before about a strike on Syria.
He said he had told his fellow leaders, “I was elected to end wars and not start them.”
But in life, and especially in Washington, people sometimes end up becoming what they start out scorning.
It is uncomfortable to watch the president struggle to reconcile his two conflicting identities as he weighs what he calls the unappetizing choices on Syria, and as he is weighed down by the malignant choices on the Middle East made by his predecessor.
In his head, is Barry at war with the commander in chief?
One side of him is Barry, the smooth consensus builder and community organizer, the former constitutional professor and the drive-by senator who must stand by the argument he made when he ran for president excoriating W.’s and Dick Cheney’s highhandedness: checks and balances must be observed. As he told Charlie Savage, then reporting for The Boston Globe, in 2007, “The president does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”
W. and Tony Blair were not honest about the imminent threat from Saddam. President Obama said in Russia Friday that “I put it before Congress because I could not honestly claim that the threat posed by Assad’s use of chemical weapons on innocent civilians and women and children posed an imminent, direct threat to the United States.”
When it came time to act as commander in chief, he choked and reverted to Senator Barry — even though many lawmakers in both parties privately wish the president had just gone ahead and hurled a few missiles, Zeus like, and not put them on the spot.
Now the president who saw no benefit in wooing Democrats on the Hill is desperate for their love. Nancy Pelosi, the San Francisco peacenik, will have to win Barry the right to bomb.
Those around him say that, after the British poodle slipped its leash, Obama faced a gut check on his decision to have a strike. He had to dig deep and decide “This is who I am,” and be true to himself. To be Barry, editor of the Harvard Law Review.
In some ways, his reaction reflects his tendency toward mixing high principles with low motives. He believes it is proper to get Congressional approval and let the people chime in. But he also wanted to make life difficult for Congressional Republicans who like to “snipe,” using his word, from the sidelines with no accountability. He wanted to call their blustery bluff.
But who is going to get bluffed?
Obama had to know that once he threw this into the Congress, it was likely done for. Congress now is a paralyzed domestic version of the U.N., with Republicans going “nyet” as often as the Russians, and Democrats acting like the don’t-look-at-us-for-help Chinese.
Many Republicans are trying to use this as an attempt to emasculate the president, but can they really send the message that the U.S. president is weak?
Obama has told Israel, when it has threatened to go it alone on striking Iran, to back off, guaranteeing the U.S. would use force if necessary to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. If Congress ratifies that there’s no appetite among Americans to police the Middle East, does it doom any chance of a U.S. pre-emptive strike on Iran and indicate that the U.S. won’t be there for Israel?
Barack Obama first made his mark as an Illinois legislator with a speech in 2002 about Iraq, which he warned would be “a rash war, a war based not on reason but on passion,” a war that would “distract” from our own problems with the economy and poverty.
Now agitated constituents at town halls across the country are asking why the president wants to distract from our own problems with the economy and poverty.
As Maryland Congressman Elijah Cummings said on NPR, a nurse at Johns Hopkins confronted him, saying: “Folks have been using chemical weapons for a long time. Do you realize when I took my son to school, they didn’t even have books for him to” learn from?
As commander in chief, Obama knows that if he doesn’t punish Bashar al-Assad, America and his presidency will be forever reduced. He thinks a limited strike — not a war, as some are calling it — is the right thing to do.
But as Barry talked to the press in St. Petersburg, his lack of enthusiasm came across. He was not thundering from the top of the moral ramparts. He made his usual nuanced, lawyerly presentation, talking about the breach of international “norms.” It’s a weak, wonk word.
Norms don’t send people to the barricades.
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253 Comments
If by "forever reduced" you mean not rushing into armed conflict, and using might as a weapon before reason, please sign me up.
You are at your best as an organizer. How about using your bully pulpit to shock the Middle East warlords by amassing the military might of the US and the UN in a great show of Berlin Airlift-like force to alleviate the misery of the millions of refugees in the Middle East and assist those countries giving them asylum. Sell Bonds For Peace so every citizen in this country and those in others can show our humanity and stand up for stopping war.
Our world has become too small to keep on absorbing wars. You and Congress behind your bluff and bluster know this. Be the Leader who finally shouts, "Look the King has no clothes!"
A Vietnam Widow
Your device of belittling him by using his childhood nickname went stale years ago--the second time you employed it, to be exact.
Yeah. I'm with pa earlier, says who? Sounds like a Curtis LeMay follower in October of 1962...."Kennedy knows that if he doesn't punish Castro. America and his presidency will be forever reduced."
Thankfully, not what happened. JFK's presidency will forever be praised for the restraint he showed and the skill with which he did it. People don't have to "punish" or bomb other people to gain stature in history; they shouldn't have to.
Except for Norm Schwarzkopf.
Really? When did he say that? "All options are on the table" doesn't translate to "guaranteeing the US would use force if necessary".
the current state of Iraq,
the future state of Afghanistan, and
our total neglect of the fate of the Palestinian with Israel's continual belligerence since the president took office..,
how Obama thinks he can exact any form of real justice without a truly broad and diverse international coalition behind him.
Obama is yet again the victim of the world when they drew that red line. Poor Barry, he just can't catch a break. Obviously things were worse than he thought when he took office.
Wrong!
America will survive Obama's failures.
America is regrouping.
We are trying to find out what we want to be when we grow up.
Syria is a distraction from that important process.
Americans may not agree what we want to do, but we know that Syria isn't important to that process.
Your use of the designation "Barry" to refer to President Obama is genuinely weird. What does it mean? What are you saying by using the term? It seems to be intended as a show of disrespect, but I don't get it. If you believe the President deserves some measure of criticism, why not just lay out the case against him and let your words 'speak for themselves.' This sort of ad hominem attack is in very poor taste (not that you're a big proponent of good taste - there, an ad hominem attack for you), and is particularly unwelcome in the present rancid political atmosphere. I really wish you'd cut it out.
Could you do us New York Times readers a favor and stop calling President Obama "Barry". I don't know a single person except you who uses this name and I find it extremely irritating.
DvK
Americans would do well to take a look at European sites for information. The United States is not just being watched by the N.S.A., it has had its main media (tv especially) become an arm of governmental propaganda.
I voted for Obama, and Feinstein and Boxer ..... I wish I could take my votes back.
A "strike" is not a war? "Limited military action" is not an attack or war?
Who are the script writers in the White House cooking up this mumbo jumbo?
And in the same breath as you declare you will strike and punish - - you add in the over-used, worn, cliche, ...but "no boots on the ground". How weak. Let me translate that line for you: "America, this will be a cost free war, push-button war, none of our folks will be at risk." Really, a war without cost, a war we control?
Obviously, none of these people have been in a war.
The White House would do well to consult the writings on "just war" interventions" by Fr. Bryan Hehir of Harvard - - and if we had since 1990 sought to follow them as a tool to discern morally correct actions:
- we would have liberated Kuwait but not gone to Baghdad in 1990
- we would have intervened in Rwanda (we didn't, 600,000 perished)
- we would have intervened in Bosnia
- we would have intervened in Kosovo, for a time, bombing, but not forever
- we would have intervened in Afghanistan, but only to drive out Al Qaeda not stay
- we would not have intervened in Iraq in 2003
- we would not intervene and endlessly use drones in Yemen and Pakistan
- we would not have intervened in Libya
And most importantly, we would NOT now intervene in Syria as proposed...
A small measure of ground, humility and maturity in Washington would go a long way to ensuring we don't once again pursue a course of maximum stupidity. SF
But isn't the "strike" he's proposing literally "an act of war?" As well, a violation of international law against attacking another nation unless in self defense?
And if Iran, in retaliation for our "limited strike" against their important ally, retaliates against Israel or the US in some manner, are we not then engaged in war?
Seems like what he is proposing is like going out to whack a hornet's nest. How do we then control the events that follow?
Why don't we take the issue to the United Nations, and elicit a debate among the members to determine the best course of action, rather than trying to authorize our independent "act of war?" Isn't that what the United Nations was set up to do?
Just askin'.
How does that protect the US? I appreciate the dual-personality "Barry" you wrote about in the column but he's the president and with his team of "not rivals but lock-step followers" seems bent on not letting "Barry" look bad in front of the rest of the world.
I've got news for "Barry"; no matter what he does he already is looking pretty anemic. I might suggest he take his current lumps, forget about Syria and try not to worsen an already bleak situation.
Lastly, can't you guys write about something else? What happened to Egypt and the hand-wringing there? Seems military dictatorships aren't too bad as long as they oppress the right type of people, in Egypt's case, the "Muslim Brotherhood", a group I must admit I do not hold in high regard.
Next week should prove interesting with the centuries old, Hamlet-esque quote, "To bomb or not to bomb, that is the question"; let's hope "Barry" can make the right choice.
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