Thursday, August 17, 2006

Dangerously Adrift

Gerard Baker has a disturbing piece in the London Times in which he analyzes the current state of US foreign policy. In many many respects, it sums up my current thoughts on the leadership of the Bush administration. The administration's recent handling of the Israel-Lebanon war has led me to believe that unless it retools its foreign policy, Bush's presidency could well go down in history as a failure--not because of Iraq per se, but on account of his rendering America as a force to brazenly scoff at rather than as force to fear and respect. Baker ends his column thus:
Now we have the worst of all worlds. Not only is the US despised around the globe, it can’t even make its supposed hegemony work.

It’s one thing to be seen as the bully in the schoolyard; it’s quite another when people realise the bully is actually incapable of getting anybody else to do what he wants. It’s unpleasant when people stop respecting you, but it’s positively terrifying when they stop fearing you.

What we have now is a situation in which the world’s only superpower, with the largest economic and military advantage any country has ever enjoyed on Earth, is pinned down like Gulliver, tormented by an army of fundamentalist Lilliputians.

Some will say that the US’s ineffectiveness is a direct result of the loss of its “soft” power. Alienating the rest of the world has weakened its ability to achieve its objectives. Idiocies such as Abu Ghraib and the brief flirtation with torture as a legitimate instrument undoubtedly hurt America’s image. But I don’t truly see how the failings in the Middle East could have been avoided by Washington’s being nicer to foreigners. What’s been missing is resolute leadership.

It is hard for me to recall a time when the world was such a scary place. No one should rejoice at America’s weakness. The world is scarier still because of it.

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