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Obama and the press: After four years, is the honeymoon finally ending?

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  • Obama and the press: After four years, is the honeymoon finally ending?

    Obama and the press: After four years, is the honeymoon finally ending?

    The Daily Caller

    Mark K. Lewis
    3/4/2013

    Excerpt:

    On the heels of the Bob Woodward affair, it is becoming clear that the move for mainstream journalists who want to make news and call attention to themselves is to turn against Obama. (When 99 percent of your colleagues are carrying Obama’s water, this becomes a quick and cheap way to separate yourself from the pack.)

    This has been a long time coming, but it’s not entirely unexpected. Having held their collective tongues long enough for Obama to be re-elected, it’s now time to have some fun — and make a name for themselves, once again. This will be rare, as their are still consequences to speaking out against the lame duck president. But the lure of attention and buzz will surely tempt more and more people to go rogue — even if just to dip their toes in the water.

    Bill Keller’s New York Times op-ed, “Obama’s Fault,” is a good example of the recent shift in coverage. Surely journalists aren’t finally getting around to noticing that Obama likes to play politics! — yet it seems to be a brand new discovery for many.

    Speaking of playing politics, if you haven’t seen the latest Foreign Policy column about President Obama (or the New York Times story about it), it’s worth a read.

    Essentially, Vali Nasr, whom the Times describes as “a former senior State Department policy expert” became disillusioned while working for Obama.

    Here are a couple key graphs from the FP story:

    One could argue that in most administrations, an inevitable imbalance exists between the military-intelligence complex, with its offerings of swift, dynamic, camera-ready action, and the foreign-policy establishment, with its seemingly ponderous, deliberative style. But this administration advertised itself as something different. On the campaign trail, Obama repeatedly stressed that he wanted to get things right in the broader Middle East, reversing the damage that had resulted from the previous administration’s reliance on faulty intelligence and its willingness to apply military solutions to problems it barely understood.

    Not only did that not happen, but the president had a truly disturbing habit of funneling major foreign-policy decisions through a small cabal of relatively inexperienced White House advisors whose turf was strictly politics. Their primary concern was how any action in Afghanistan or the Middle East would play on the nightly news, or which talking point it would give the Republicans. The Obama administration’s reputation for competence on foreign policy has less to do with its accomplishments in Afghanistan or the Middle East than with how U.S. actions in that region have been reshaped to accommodate partisan political concerns.


    (Emphasis ...
    Matt K. Lewis)

    Nasr’s column is perhaps even more concerning than the rest, inasmuch as the potential consequences are so serious. Still, it seems to fit into the new narrative about Obama’s lack of leadership and penchant for putting politics ahead of governing. During the second term, presidents have a harder time keeping even their friends in line.
    .......................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://dailycaller.com/2013/03/04/ob...inally-ending/
    Last edited by bsteadman; 03-05-2013, 08:01 PM.
    B. Steadman

  • #2
    The Dispensable Nation: American Foreign Policy in Retreat [Hardcover]

    Vali Nasr (Author)


    http://www.amazon.com/The-Dispensabl...dp_kinw_strp_1

    Book Description

    Release date: April 23, 2013


    Former State Department advisor for Afghanistan and Pakistan and bestselling author Vali Nasr delivers a sharp indictment of America's flawed foreign policy and outlines a new relationship with the Muslim world and with new players in the changing Middle East.

    In this essential new book, Vali Nasr argues that the Obama administration had a chance to improve its relations with the Middle East, but instead chose to pursue its predecessor's questionable strategies there. Nasr takes readers behind the scenes at the State Department and reveals how the new government's fear of political backlash and the specter of terrorism crippled the efforts of diplomatic giants, like Richard Holbrooke and Hillary Clinton, to boost America's foundering credibility with world leaders. Meanwhile, the true economic threats, China and Russia, were quietly expanding their influence in the region. And a second Arab Spring is brewing-not a hopeful clamor for democracy but rage at the United States for its foreign policy of drones and assassinations. Drawing on his in-depth knowledge of the Middle East and firsthand experience in diplomacy, Nasr offers a powerful reassessment of American foreign policy that directs the country away from its failing relationships in the Middle East (such as with Saudi Arabia) toward more productive, and less costly, partnerships with other foreign allies (such as Turkey). Forcefully persuasive, Vali Nasr's book is a game changer for America as it charts a course in the Muslim world, Asia, and beyond.
    Last edited by bsteadman; 03-05-2013, 08:02 PM.
    B. Steadman

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    • #3
      The Inside Story of How the White House Let Diplomacy Fail in Afghanistan

      "My time in the Obama administration turned out to be a deeply disillusioning experience."

      Foreign Policy Magazine

      Vali Nasr
      March/April 2013

      Excerpt:

      It was close to midnight on Jan. 20, 2009, and I was about to go to sleep when my iPhone beeped. There was a new text message. It was from Richard Holbrooke. It said, "Are you up, can you talk?" When I called, he told me that Barack Obama had asked him to serve as envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan. He would work out of the State Department, and he wanted me to join his team. "No one knows this yet. Don't tell anyone. Well, maybe your wife." (The Washington Post reported his appointment the next day.)

      I first met Holbrooke, the legendary diplomat best known for making peace in the Balkans and breaking plenty of china along the way, at a 2006 conference in Aspen, Colorado. We sat together at one of the dinners and talked about Iran and Pakistan. Holbrooke ignored the keynote speech, the entertainment that followed, and the food that flowed in between to bombard me with questions. We had many more conversations over the next three years, and after I joined him on Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign in 2007, we spoke frequently by phone.

      Now, making his sales pitch, Holbrooke told me that government is the sum of its people. "If you want to change things, you have to get involved. If you want your voice to be heard, then get inside." He knew I preferred to work on the Middle East and in particular Iran. But he had different ideas. "This [Afghanistan and Pakistan] matters more. This is what the president is focused on. This is where you want to be."

      He was persuasive, and I knew that we were at a fork in the road. Regardless of what promises candidate Obama made on his way to the White House, Afghanistan now held the future -- his and America's -- in the balance. And it would be a huge challenge. When Obama took office, the war in Afghanistan was already in its eighth year. By then, the fighting had morphed into a full-blown insurgency, and the Taliban juggernaut looked unstoppable. They had adopted a flexible, decentralized military structure and even a national political organization, with shadow governors and district leaders for nearly every Afghan province. America was losing, and the enemy knew it. It was a disaster in the making.

      ...............................................

      View the complete article at:

      http://www.foreignpolicy.com/article...istan?page=0,0
      B. Steadman

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      • #4
        Vali Reza Nasr

        Wikipedia


        Excerpt:

        Vali Reza Nasr (Persian: ولی* رضا نصر‎, born 20 December 1960 in Tehran) is a leading expert on the Middle East, a best-selling author, Dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C., Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy at Brookings Institution, and contributor to Bloomberg View.

        He taught at the The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University, University of San Diego and the Naval Postgraduate School and was a Senior Fellow at the Belfer Center at Harvard University, as well as Stanford University and University of California, San Diego prior to being appointed dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in March 2012.[1]

        Nasr is a member of the State Department's Foreign Affairs Policy Board, and served as senior advisor to the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Ambassador Richard Holbrooke between 2009 and 2011, and is a Life Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
        - (bold and color emphasis added)
        .........................................

        View the complete post at:

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vali_Nasr
        B. Steadman

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