RazorMC
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Why Obama Failed in the Middle East
From the Arab Spring, to Syria, to Iran, to the peace process, President Barack Obama's actions have yet to live up to his high-flying rhetoric.
BY AARON DAVID MILLER | APRIL 2, 2013
Interesting article about Obama's mideast policies. I personally feel that he was sworn in at possibly the most dangerous moments in the region: possible nuclearization of Iran, Israel's concerned and the GCC felt only a ripple of the Arab Spring.
These were difficult issues to deal with in the first place, but his popular drawdown from Iraq and Afghanistan will probably overshadow his mideast miseries.
[Quoted article has been edited]
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Read the full article here: Source
From the Arab Spring, to Syria, to Iran, to the peace process, President Barack Obama's actions have yet to live up to his high-flying rhetoric.
BY AARON DAVID MILLER | APRIL 2, 2013
It is the cruelest of ironies that President Barack Obama's legacy in the Middle East -- a signature issue for many U.S. presidents -- now lies in the hands of two of his most intractable adversaries: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. It also probably doesn't make him sleep any easier that the third major player is a man with whom he has a famously dysfunctional relationship: Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu.
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The comparisons to the end of the Cold War are perhaps a bit unfair. The president was indeed on the right side of history in the early acts of the Arab Spring: He recognized the inevitability of the end of America's authoritarian friends in Tunisia, Egypt, and Yemen -- and to his credit, he was proactive in helping get rid of Libyan autocrat Muammar al-Qaddafi.
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Had the Arab Spring moved in the right direction, Obama would have been hailed as a strategic genius for his smart, low-cost management from the sidelines. Sadly, it has moved the other way -- toward instability, violence, and dashed hopes. As a result, what people saw -- certainly those in the Middle East, where it's easy to blame somebody else for your troubles -- is a president who became strangely disconnected and who at best just seemed to have other things to do. At worst, he seemed to have simply stopped caring.
Interesting article about Obama's mideast policies. I personally feel that he was sworn in at possibly the most dangerous moments in the region: possible nuclearization of Iran, Israel's concerned and the GCC felt only a ripple of the Arab Spring.
These were difficult issues to deal with in the first place, but his popular drawdown from Iraq and Afghanistan will probably overshadow his mideast miseries.
[Quoted article has been edited]
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Read the full article here: Source