George Friedman
STRATFOR does not normally
involve itself in domestic American politics. Our focus is on international
affairs, and American politics, like politics everywhere, is a passionate
business. The vilification from all sides that follows any mention we make of American
politics is both inevitable and unpleasant. Nevertheless, it’s our job to
chronicle the unfolding of the international system, and the fact that the
United States is moving deeply into an election cycle will affect American
international behavior and therefore the international system.
The United States remains the
center of gravity of the international system. The sheer
size of its economy (regardless of its growth rate) and the power
of its military (regardless of its current problems) make the United
States unique. Even more important, no single leader of the world is as
significant, for good or bad, as the American president. That makes the
American presidency, in its broadest sense, a matter that cannot be ignored in
studying the international system.
The American system was
designed to be a phased process. By separating the selection of the legislature
from the selection of the president, the founders created a system that did not
allow for sudden shifts in personnel. Unlike parliamentary systems, in which
the legislature and the leadership are intimately linked, the institutional and
temporal uncoupling of the system in the United States was intended to control
the passing passions by leaving about two-thirds of the U.S. Senate unchanged
even in a presidential election year, which always coincides with the election
of the House of Representatives. Coupled with senatorial rules, this makes it
difficult for the president to govern on domestic affairs. Changes in the
ideological tenor of the system are years in coming, and when they come they
stay a long time. Mostly, however, the system is in gridlock. Thomas Jefferson
said that a government that governs least is the best. The United States has a
vast government that rests on a system in which significant change is not
impossible but which demands a level of consensus over a period of time that
rarely exists.
This is particularly true in
domestic politics, where the complexity is compounded by the uncertainty of the
legislative branch. Consider that the healthcare legislation passed through
major compromise is still in doubt, pending court rulings that thus far have
been contradictory. All of this would have delighted the founders if not the
constantly trapped presidents, who frequently shrug off their limits in the
domestic arena in favor of action
in the international realm, where their freedom to maneuver is much
greater, as the founders intended.
The Burden of the Past
The point of this is that all
U.S. presidents live within the framework in which Barack Obama is now
operating. First, no president begins with a clean slate. All begin with the
unfinished work of the prior administration. Thus, George W. Bush began his
presidency with an al Qaeda whose planning and implementation for 9/11 was
already well under way. Some of the al Qaeda operatives who would die in the
attack were already in the country. So, like all of his predecessors, Obama
assumed the presidency with his agenda already laid out.
Obama had a unique set of
problems. The first was his agenda, which focused on ending the Iraq war and
reversing social policies in place since Ronald Reagan became president in
1981. By the time Obama entered office, the process
of withdrawal from Iraq was under way, which gave him the option of
shifting the terminal date. The historic reversal that he wanted to execute,
starting with healthcare reform, confronted the realities of September 2008 and
the American
financial crisis. His Iraq policy was in place by Inauguration Day while
his social programs were colliding with the financial crisis.
Obama’s campaign was about
more than particular policies. He ran on a platform that famously promised
change and hope. His tremendous political achievement was in framing those
concepts in such a way that they were interpreted by voters to mean precisely
what they wanted them to mean without committing Obama to specific policies. To
the anti-war faction it meant that the wars would end. To those concerned about
unilateralism it meant that unilateralism would be replaced by multilateralism.
To those worried about growing inequality it meant that he would end
inequality. To those concerned about industrial jobs going overseas it meant
that those jobs would stay in the United States. To those who hated Guantanamo
it meant that Guantanamo would be closed.
Obama created a coalition
whose expectations of what Obama would do were shaped by them and projected on
Obama. In fact, Obama never quite said what his supporters thought he said. His
supporters thought they heard that he was anti-war. He never said that. He
simply said that he opposed Iraq and thought Afghanistan should be waged. His
strategy was to allow his followers to believe what they wanted so long as they
voted for him, and they obliged. Now, this is not unique to Obama. It is how
presidents get elected. What was unique was how well he did it and the problems
it caused once he became president.
It must first be remembered
that, contrary to the excitement of the time and faulty memories today, Obama
did not win an overwhelming victory. About 47 percent of the public voted for
someone other than Obama. It was certainly a solid victory, but it was neither
a landslide nor a mandate for his programs. But the excitement generated by his
victory created the sense of victory that his numbers didn’t support.
Another problem was that he
had no programmatic preparation for the reality he faced. September 2008
changed everything in the sense that it created financial and economic
realities that ran counter to the policies he envisioned. He shaped those
policies during the primaries and after the convention, and they were based on
assumptions that were no longer true after September 2008. Indeed, it could be
argued that he was elected because of September 2008. Prior to the meltdown,
John McCain had a small lead over Obama, who took over the lead only after the
meltdown. Given that the crisis emerged on the Republicans’ watch, this made
perfect sense. But shifting policy priorities was hard because of political
commitments and inertia and perhaps because the extremities of the crisis were
not fully appreciated.
Obama’s economic policies did
not differ wildly from Bush’s — indeed, many of the key figures had served in
the Federal Reserve and elsewhere during the Bush administration. The Bush
administration’s solution was to print and insert money into financial
institutions in order to stabilize the system. By the time Obama came into
power, it was clear to his team that the amount
of inserted money was insufficient and had to be increased. In addition, in
order to sustain the economy, the policy that had been in place during the Bush
years of maintaining low interest rates through monetary easing was extended
and intensified. To a great extent, the Obama years have been the Bush years
extended to their logical conclusion. Whether Bush would have gone for the
stimulus package is not clear, but it is conceivable that he would have.
Obama essentially pursued
the Bush strategy of stabilizing the banks in the belief that a stable
banking system was indispensible and would in itself stimulate the economy by
creating liquidity. Whether it did or it didn’t, the strategy created the
beginnings of Obama’s political problem. He drew substantial support from
populists on the left and suspicion from populists on the right. The latter,
already hostile to Bush’s policies, coalesced into the Tea Party. But this was
not Obama’s biggest problem. It was that his policies, which both seemed to
favor the financial elite and were at odds with what Democratic populists
believed the president stood for, weakened his support from the left. The
division between what he actually said and what his supporters thought they
heard him say began to widen. While the healthcare battle solidified his
opposition among those who would oppose him anyway, his continuing response to
the financial crisis both solidified opposition among Republicans and weakened
support among Democrats.
A Foreign Policy Problem
This was coupled with his foreign
policy problem. Among Democrats, the anti-war faction was a significant bloc.
Most Democrats did not support Obama with anti-war reasons as their primary
motivator, but enough did make this the priority issue that he could not win if
he lost this bloc. This bloc believed two things. The first was that the war in
Iraq was unjustified and harmful and the second was that it emerged from an
administration that was singularly insensitive to the world at large and to the
European alliance in particular. They supported Obama because they assumed not
only that he would end wars — as well as stop torture and imprisonment without
trial — but that he would also re-found American foreign policy on new
principles.
Obama’s
decision to dramatically increase forces in Afghanistan while merely
modifying the Bush administration’s timeline for withdrawing from Iraq caused
unease within the Democratic Party. But two steps that Bush took held his
position. First, one of the first things Obama did after he became president
was to reach out to the Europeans. It was expected that this would increase
European support for U.S. foreign policy. The Europeans, of course, were enthusiastic
about Obama, as the Noble Peace Prize showed. But while Obama believed that
his willingness to listen to the Europeans meant they would be forthcoming with
help, the Europeans believed that Obama would understand them better and not
ask for help.
The relationship was no better
under Obama than under Bush. It wasn’t personality or ideology that mattered.
It was simply that Germany, as the prime example, had different interests than
the United States. This was compounded by the differing views and approaches to
the global financial crisis. Whereas the Americans were still interested in
Afghanistan, the Europeans considered Afghanistan a much lower priority than
the financial crisis. Thus, U.S.-European relations remained frozen.
Then Obama
made his speech to the Islamic world in Cairo, where his supporters heard
him trying to make amends for Bush’s actions and where many Muslims heard an
unwillingness to break with Israel or end the wars. His supporters heard
conciliation, the Islamic world heard inflexibility.
The European response to Obama
the president as opposed to Obama the candidate running against George Bush
slowly reverberated among his supporters. Not only had he failed to end the
wars, he doubled down and surged forces into Afghanistan. And the continued
hostility toward the United States from the Islamic world reverberated among
those on the Democratic left who were concerned with such matters. Add to that
the failure to close Guantanamo and a range of other issues concerning the war
on terror and support for Obama crumbled.
A Domestic Policy Focus
His primary victory,
health-care reform, was the foundation of an edifice that was never built.
Indeed, the reform bill is caught in the courts, and its future is as uncertain
as it was when the bill was caught in Congress. The Republicans, as expected,
agree on nothing other than Obama’s defeat. The Democrats will support him; the
question is how enthusiastic that support will be.
Obama’s support now stands at
41 percent. The failure point for a president’s second term lurks around 35
percent. It is hard to come back from there. Obama is not there yet. The loss
of another six points would come from his Democratic base (which is why 35 is
the failure point; when you lose a chunk of your own base, you are in deep
trouble). At this point, however, the president is far less interested in
foreign policy than he is in holding his base together and retaking the middle.
He did not win by a large enough margin to be able to lose any of his core
constituencies. He may hope that his Republican challenger will alienate the
center, but he can’t count on that. He has to capture his center and hold his
left.
That means he must first focus
on domestic policy. That is where the public is focused. Even the Afghan war
and the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq are not touching nerves in the center. His
problem is twofold. First, it is not clear that he can get anything past
Congress. He can then argue that this is Congress’ fault, but the Republicans
can run against Congress as well. Second, it is not clear what he would
propose. The Republican right can’t be redeemed, but what can Obama propose
that will please the Democratic core and hold the center? The Democratic core
wants taxes. The center doesn’t oppose taxes (it is merely uneasy about them),
but it is extremely sensitive about having the taxes eaten up by new spending —
something the Democratic left supports. Obama is trapped between two groups he
must have that view the world differently enough that bridging the gap is
impossible.
The founders gave the United
States a government that, no matter how large it gets, can’t act on domestic
policy without a powerful consensus. Today there is none, and therefore there
can’t be action. Foreign policy isn’t currently resonating with the American
public, so any daring initiatives in that arena will likely fail to achieve the
desired domestic political end. Obama has to hold together a coalition that is
inherently fragmented by many different understandings of what his presidency
is about. This coalition has weakened substantially. Obama’s attention must be
on holding it together. He cannot resurrect the foreign policy part of it at
this point. He must bet on the fact that the coalition has nowhere else to go.
What he must focus on is domestic policy crafted to hold his base and center
together long enough to win the election.
The world, therefore, is
facing at least 14 months with the United States being at best reactive and at
worse non-responsive to events. Obama has never been a foreign policy
president; events and proclivity (I suspect) have always drawn him to domestic
matters. But between now and the election, the political configuration of the
United States and the dynamics of his presidency will force him away from
foreign policy.
This at a time when the
Persian Gulf is coming to terms with the
U.S. withdrawal fromIraq and the power
of Iran, when
Palestinians andIsraelis are facing another crisis over U.N. recognition, when the future
of Europe is unknown, when North Africa is unstable and Syria
is in crisis and when U.S.
forces continue to fight in Afghanistan. All of this creates opportunities
for countries to build realities that may not be in the best interests of the
United States in the long run. There is a period of at least 14 months for
regional powers to act with confidence without being too concerned about the
United States.
The point of this analysis is
to try to show the dynamics that have led the United States to this position,
and to sketch the international landscape in broad strokes. The U.S. president
will not be deeply engaged in the world for more than a year. Thus, he will
have to cope with events pressed on him. He may undertake initiatives, such as
trying to revive the Middle East peace process, but such moves would have large
political components that would make it difficult to cope with realities on the
ground. The rest of the world knows this, of course. The question is whether
and how they take advantage of it.
George Friedman, September 20,
2011, republished with permission of STRATFOR.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário
Não publicamos comentários de anônimos/desconhecidos.
Por favor, se optar por "Anônimo", escreva o seu nome no final do comentário.
Não use CAIXA ALTA, (Não grite!), isto é, não escreva tudo em maiúsculas, escreva normalmente. Obrigado pela sua participação!
Volte sempre!
Abraços./-