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WORD COUNT
586
NOVEMBER 19, 2008
OBAMA
SHOULD THINK BIG ON FOREIGN POLICY – by John Feffer
During his campaign, Barack Obama the candidate played it safe. He gave
careful answers in the debates. He didn’t provide detailed foreign
policy proposals. He spoke of the need for change, but stressed
decisions he made in the past — like voting against the invasion of Iraq
— rather than the decisions he planned to make in the future.
As president, Obama may well attempt to steer a middle course on foreign
policy. His global affairs brain trust is filled with the usual
suspects, including his vice president Joe Biden, former Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright, and retiring Republican Senator Chuck Hagel.
Bipartisanship has been his creed. He has sought to reassure Washington
that he is more insider than game-changer.
After the Bush administration’s heavy-handed foreign policy, which
alienated many U.S. allies, a period of caution might be welcome. But
exercising too much caution, if it translates into maintaining the
status quo, would be a profound mistake. The sheer number of grave
crises confronting the new president requires a fundamental change in
the way that the United States approaches the world.
A global economic crisis will likely throw millions out of work and cast
many more into deeper poverty. A climate crisis threatens to disrupt
agriculture, trigger massive flooding, and wreak other kinds of havoc.
Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan present the United States with not one but
two quagmires. U.S.-Russian relations teeter on the edge of a new Cold
War, Arab-Israeli peace is as elusive as ever, North Korea still clings
to its nukes, and Africa remains convulsed by wars and disease.
Obama could view these crises as separate and attempt to solve them
through the same traditional methods that previous administrations tried
and failed. Or he could avoid the safe route and think big.
Thinking big must begin with the Pentagon. By cutting the U.S. defense
budget — which, at more than half a trillion dollars, represents nearly
half of all global military spending — the new president can immediately
find money to address both the economic crisis and climate crisis. A
“green” stimulus package financed by Pentagon cuts — achieved by
scrapping obsolete weapons systems, eliminating administrative waste,
and scaling back our overseas bases — could support alternative energy
sources. That would reduce our dependence on foreign oil and remove a
motive for the country to engage in wars to secure that oil.
One important Pentagon cut would be the woefully expensive and
technically challenged Star Wars program. Not only could a green
stimulus package potentially derive several billion dollars in funding,
but canceling Star Wars would vastly improve U.S. relations with both
Russia and China.
By reducing the U.S. military footprint around the world, President
Obama will discover that he will have greater standing to resolve
previously intractable conflicts in the Middle East and Northeast Asia.
By persuading our allies and adversaries alike to follow through with
their own cuts in military spending, the president can help create a
global green stimulus package. Our greatest crises are global, and they
require global responses.
Barack Obama is certainly no stranger to thinking big. After all, he
pursued a long-shot campaign to become the first African-American
president. And by running for president at such a difficult time in
world history, he obviously avoided the safe path of staying in the
Senate or carving out a position in the private sector.
Now that he’s won, it’s no time to rest on his laurels and play a
cautious, Washington-insider game. The world cheered his victory. The
world awaits his bold new plan.
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John Feffer is co-director of Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org)
at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC.
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