The President kept if brief (thank goodness) because he had very little to say. I don't have the votes, so let's postpone the vote. While the President very cogently laid out why Assad's atrocity does have real consequences, he did not lay out how a small military strike would send the right message. Putin is calling the shots and that is not a place where we want to be.
Even if there is an agreement it is going to take weeks to set up the protocols for the inspectors. And not to mention there is a civil war raging in Syria. This isn't the NFL where the officials can call a time out to review the play.
Dazed and Confused
If your foreign policy has to be rescued by a dictator, you are doing it wrong.
President Obama is either a master foreign-policy strategist or making it up as he goes along.
Photo by Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Photo by Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Give President Obama credit: He has done such a good job of acting
unpredictably in the lead-up to his proposed military strikes on Syria
that no one knows what he will do next. He has successfully confused
ally and enemy alike. Sun Tzu would be proud.
But President Obama cannot take all the credit for sowing confusion.
Secretary of State John Kerry also has the unique distinction of
becoming the first chief American diplomat whose offhand quip at a press conference
launched a last-minute, global diplomatic initiative to disarm a
murderous dictator. Kerry never thought that he was making a bold bid to
avert military strikes that his president’s party and public had no
interest in supporting. He simply suggested that if Bashar al-Assad
handed all of his chemical weapons over in a week, that might stave off
an impending U.S. attack—and of course, Assad wasn’t going to do that.
The State Department rushed forward to clarify that Kerry wasn’t
floating an actual proposal—he was just speaking rhetorically.
You know, riffing. To say that the Obama administration is freelancing
when it comes to foreign policy is an insult to freelancers.
Still, Vladimir Putin knows an opportunity when he sees it. The
Kremlin pounced on Kerry’s diplomatic spitballing. So now, everyone—the
French, the British, the Chinese, the Obama administration—is hoping
that the Russians can craft a verifiable plan for Assad’s regime to hand
over its chemical stockpile. For the West, a price can be exacted from
Assad, while the dangerous unpredictability of military strikes can be
avoided. Meanwhile, Russia and China can keep their man in Damascus.
The sigh of relief from Capitol Hill was audible last night when
Obama said that the Russian plan offered a potential breakthrough.
Incredibly, Obama had turned to Congress to support his planned
strikes—something presidents almost never do—when he didn’t have
anything approaching a lock on the votes. It would have been a clever
way of forcing Congress to share the blame for acting or not acting in
Syria, if it weren’t for the fact that having his foreign policy
neutered by Congress would be such a debilitating defeat. If the
president thought his own party had his back, he was mistaken. No one
believes that the House of Representatives (and maybe even the Senate)
was going to sign off on the authorization of force in Syria. But
Putin’s late-breaking gambit has prevented Democrats from having to
eviscerate their own president’s foreign policy. Putin is providing
President Obama political cover that even his own party wouldn’t
supply.
But if your foreign policy has to be rescued by a dictator, you are
doing it wrong. That’s where President Obama finds himself today. Putin
is providing Obama an out he couldn’t find for himself.
Of course, Syria has not yet pledged to hand over its chemical
weapons. If it does, it would truly be one of the happiest accidents of
this entire episode. (Whatever the administration says about its
threatened use of force, this outcome was unforeseen.) Never mind that
the United States has no idea where Assad has squirreled away his
chemical munitions. For now we will engage the likely fiction that Assad
will self-disarm his most potent weapon for ensuring his future
survival—the only thing a dictator craves—because it allows all sides to
stand down. The argument will now turn to how credible the Russian plan
truly is, whether any agreement can be backed by a future use of force,
and whether Assad will comply.
If Putin’s maneuver doesn’t pan out, Obama’s foreign policy will
still likely fall victim to the vicissitudes of a dictator. Because one
message is already clear in Damascus: The Obama administration will do everything in its power to do nothing at all.
If Assad finds himself up against the wall, he will likely gas his
fellow Syrians again. Maybe he will reduce the scale and scope, but it
is doubtful that he will abandon the weapons. How will President Obama
respond then? It is hard to say. Because no one knows what the president
is doing. At least he has the element of surprise.
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