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Relax, Obama—foreign policy’s stalled at the moment
November 11, 2008 in Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Biden, Bush, democrats, Iraqi war, Joe Biden, Obama, Republican | Tags: Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, Baghdad, Barack Obama Guantanamo, Bay of Pigs, Clinton administration, Condi Rice, Dmitry Medvedev, foreign policy, George W. Bush, Guantanamo, iran, Israel, JFK, korea, national security, North Korea, Nuclear, Obama Guantanamo, Palestinians, President Chavez, rice, Russia, troops, Venezuela | Leave a comment

Barack Obama toured Iraq with Gen. David Petraeus in July of this year.
American elections are a powerful drug: they bring delusions of omnipotence. All that talk of “change” and “hope” brings demands for swift action: “Do it now,” “first six months,” “hundred days.” The economic crisis may indeed demand speed, but in foreign policy the reality is that, on the afternoon of Jan. 20, President Obama will face the same challenges that President Bush did that morning. And none presents much opportunity for bold new initiatives.
That’s fortunate. Incoming presidents making big decisions in a hurry is a surefire recipe for error. Think JFK and the Bay of Pigs. More recently, George W. Bush’s reflexive ditching of the Clinton administration’s strategy on North Korea was a misstep it has taken years to retrieve.
The foreign-policy and national-security inbox shows that, even on pressing issues, Obama has the luxury of time. A quick overview:
Iraq. Obama has pledged to withdraw U.S. troops. But that’s already getting under way. At issue still: the pace of the drawdown, a date for final disengagement and the number of U.S. troops who should then remain as last-ditch guarantors of a democratic government in Baghdad. No Iraqi politician is going to be able to engage seriously on those topics until after their own elections next fall.
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