Wednesday, April 29, 2009

On Obama.

I know you probably think it’s ridiculous that I’m going to try to capture President Barack Obama in one little column here, and I’m gonna have to go ahead and agree with you on that.  So I won’t.  Instead, I’ll try to capture a snapshot of his first 100 days in office.

WHAT’S GOING ON?

It’s Obama’s 100th day in office today, and that means…not much, actually.  A lot of media outlets are making a big deal out of a totally artificial benchmark.  I just want to use the moment to help us get a grasp on what he’s tried to do so far.  I’ll try not to assume it means anything…

ON FOREIGN POLICY…

So far, Obama’s administration has made it a point to reach out to most of America’s “enemies.”  He’s advocated direct diplomatic talks with Iran, something the U.S. hasn’t done since Iranian revolutionaries held 52 U.S. diplomats hostage for 444 days in 1979-1981.  He’s shaken hands with Hugo Chavez (see “On Hugo Chavez", below).  He’s relaxed the trade embargo with Cuba (albeit only to make it easier for Cubans to get American money and to see American news).  The elephant in the room, of course, is North Korea – any efforts Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have made to start talking about talks have been met with more and more North Korean rebellion.

ON THE ECONOMY…

Obama’s domestic policy thus far has been highlighted on his willingness – nay, his need – to spend 787 billion dollars stimulating a broken U.S. economy, after spending $350 billion saving banks from their own mistakes.  Later, the administration gave tens of billions to GM and Chrysler as an effort to help them avoid bankruptcy; these loans to the car companies have turned into possible socialization of the industry, with GM submitting a plan in the last week to turn over majority ownership of the company to the government and to the unions.   Such drastic government spending has been the biggest strike against Obama domestically, with groups rallying in tea parties against such government spending, and governors (of southern states, mainly) speaking out against the package and even rejecting the stimulus money.  This anti-bailout mentality is captured fairly well (and fairly humorously) at the site www.bankofobama.org.

ON WASHINGTON…

Obama’s campaign platform was one of reform, of pledges to totally revamp the way Washington does business, and to do away with the politicization of certain policies.  On this, his success is markedly mixed – his stimulus package barely passed, and only did so after countless trade-offs and political concessions took the sting off for a couple Republicans.  On the other hand, however, he lifted several scientific restrictions (the most famous of which is probably the ban on stem-cell research) with the idea that politicians should stick to politics and scientists should stick to science.

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It’s obviously too early to tell whether any of his plans will come to fruition, but it’s not too early to see the basic path he’s trying to follow – one of reaching out across country lines, while not reaching very well across party lines.  But with an approval rating of 65%, the highest 100-day approval rating in 40 years, Obama is clearly liked by the American public…for now.  

Monday, April 27, 2009

On Mr. bin Laden

If there’s one man people in the West associate with Islam, it’s Osama bin Laden.  A 52-year-old son of the 10th wife of a wealthy Saudi businessman, bin Laden could have turned into one of the world’s richest men, or perhaps one of the foremost clerics of his religion.  But 22-year-old Osama, unfortunately, took the road less traveled, and joined Afghan militants in their fight against the Soviet Union, eventually staying there and becoming the face of Al Qaeda.

WHAT’S GOING ON?

There’s news out today that Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari has announced that the U.S. and Pakistan have been unable to locate Osama bin Laden, that “[The CIA] obviously feel that he does not exist anymore but that’s not confirmed, we can’t confirm that.”  Doesn’t exist anymore?  Does that mean that Osama bin Laden might be dead???

WHY DO WE CARE?

If it’s true, if bin Laden truly “does not exist anymore,” then what?  I mean, bin Laden attacked us, and we attacked back, all over the world.  But didn’t WWII end (basically) when Hitler killed himself?  Doesn’t that mean this “war on terrorism” should be over now?

Sadly, not at all, no matter how we’re measuring success in this fight.  If we entered this war as a way to show our strength and get back at our September 11 attackers, then we haven’t yet done that – leaving bin Laden to die of (presumed) natural causes doesn’t exactly show our enemies that we have the power and the ability to get to anyone, anytime.  WE didn’t get him, Father time did.

On the other hand, if we entered the war on terrorism to eradicate terrorism from the face of the planet, we’ve basically gotten absolutely nowhere.  Our fight in Iraq has made terrorist networks bigger and harder to trace.  Our fight in Afghanistan has somehow enabled a resurgent Taliban (the bad guys in the very beginning, the “enablers” of bin Laden) to regain their footing and start making plays for big parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR THE FUTURE?

I expect Zardari’s announcement was not one of actual futility – Pakistan’s President admitting ignorance to international media doesn’t ring true to me.  Instead, I suspect it was a simple play of showing Al Qaeda exactly what they want to hear, because there’s nothing they’d like more now than to prove us wrong.  I definitely foresee them filming a new video either of bin Laden himself, or of bin Laden’s successor and his call to arms.  Either way, Al Qaeda gets to feel like they have the upper hand, when they’re actually simply giving us more data, more chatter over the terrorist networks we listen in on.  Besides, cocky adversaries are the most likely to make mistakes.

Let’s see what happens here... 

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

On Hugo Chavez.

Hugo Chavez is many things.  His supporters know him as President, Humanitarian, and the “Savior of Venezuela”.  Opponents call him other things, however, like Dictator, or a “Threat to Democracy”.  Whichever side is right doesn’t mean he’s not an important player in the drama of the world today: TIME Magazine named him one of the 100 Most Influential People in 2006, with good reason.  His Socialist agenda has changed the face of Venezuela, and his outspoken rhetoric has polarized the globe.

WHAT’S GOING ON?

At the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago this last week, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez shook hands with U.S. President Barack Obama.  Big deal, you might say, and you’d be right.  This IS a big deal.  Chavez has put so much energy into bashing the U.S. over the past few years that some have said the sole reason for his successful reelection campaigns has been his Anti-Americanism.  But now he’s shaking hands with Obama?  Something’s got to give.

WHY DO WE CARE?

This single, simple handshake is an immediate illustration of the sea change in America’s status in its detractors’ eyes since the 2008 Presidential election—not to mention a drastic shift in America’s own foreign policy.  In August 2005, tensions were so tight between Chavez and the US’s right wing that televangelist Pat Robertson went so far as to advocate that the U.S. assassinate Chavez as a cheaper way of unseating the “strong-arm dictator” than a “$200-billion war.”

A year later, at the UN General Assembly, Chavez spoke one day after then-President George W. Bush, and referred to that fact in his speech.  “The devil came here yesterday," he said, “and it smells of sulfur still today.”

Obama’s critics, such as former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney (in an interview on Fox News), say that the handshake— among other Obama encounters with U.S. opponents—“sets the wrong standard.”  Cheney goes on to say that the meeting might show other countries that they’re now “dealing with a weak president or one who is not going to stand up and aggressively defend America's interests.”

I’ll go out on a limb here and say that maybe Cheney doesn’t have the best perspective when it comes to seeing how other countries view the United States.

WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR THE FUTURE?

Obama and Chavez are already in talks to reinstate the embassies to each other’s countries—a move in which I see almost no downside.  Embassies mean communication, and communication with Venezuela, one of the U.S.’s largest oil suppliers, can pay big dividends for both countries.

But there’s a bigger picture as well—that of the whole world.  For Iran and North Korea to see that one of George W. Bush’s greatest foes is now willing to talk, smile, and shake hands with the new American President is a huge step in the right direction.  This new guy must be worth talking to.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

On Piracy.

I think it’s ironic that this latest piracy “crisis” in Somalia comes less than two years after America got its last fix of Captain Jack Sparrow, and only six years after our first hit of the smarmy swashbuckler.  We spend the last 6 years falling in love with the romance of piracy, but now we can’t stand it?

WHY DO WE CARE?

Even though modern piracy has been around for decades, we never heard about it until Richard Phillips heroically sacrificed himself to save his crew, and was held hostage for four days until a dramatic, straight-out-of-the-movies SEAL/Sniper rescue operation.  Life suddenly became a video game of good vs. evil.  Again.

WHAT DO WE DO NOW?

I hear that we can’t treat pirates as terrorists because their attacks often come against ships built by a company in one country, sailing under the flag of another, with multi-national crews.  If a pirate attack is an act of war, who is it against?  Who’s responsible for defending the Gulf of Aden, since Somalia doesn’t have any kind of government to help?

So instead of treating pirates as terrorists, we treat them as criminals.  But which country’s laws should they be processed under?  Yesterday, a Canadian naval destroyer sailing for NATO helped thwart an attack and actually caught seven of the pirates responsible, but couldn’t do anything because Canadian law mandated the attack to either be on a Canadian ship (it was Norwegian) or against Canadian citizens (they were not).  So the pirates were released hours after their capture.

HOW DO WE FIX IT?

Right now, the immediate problem is that the area to be covered is simply too large to govern effectively.  Thousands of square miles can’t be covered simultaneously without thousands of ships, which would be ridiculous.  But what if the merchant vessels – the targets – all band together as they enter the gulf and sail as one unit, under the protection of one or more naval vessels, to a checkpoint at the far end of the danger zone, where the ships could split off in relative safety?  The pirates are (for good reason) terrified to go close to the big warships, so if the civilian vessels never get out of visual range, there’s a good chance that the pirates wouldn’t even come close.

WHAT’S THE SILVER LINING?

I see piracy as a perfect excuse to form more multi-national alliances, to get countries working together that never would have before.  I mean, NATO is working together in apparently harmony nowhere NEAR the north Atlantic.  As I write this, Arab countries in the area are considering how they can best protect their interests that pass through the Gulf.  Why not join the countries already there?  Why not have one huge, multi-national fleet working together, with one goal in mind?

On the news.

There’s a lot of news today.  Hugo Chavez shakes hands with Obama!  Ahmedinejad fights for reporter’s rights!  Suri Cruise turns three!

So many random headlines, so little time.  A few years ago, I just stopped caring.  I was one of the (probably) millions who just got the news from the Daily Show, only caring about what could make me laugh.

Nowadays, though, I find myself caring more.  A daily regimen of Reuters news has forced me to make connections where there were none, see the paths created by events months apart, and zoom out to discover how each story fits into the big picture.

So that’s why I’m here.  Someone needs to put all these little pieces together into one big tapestry of human nature, and it might as well be me.