Columnists

Some leading this is

Leading from behind. A White House official coined that phrase in 2011 to describe President Obama's Libyan policy. His political opponents quickly seized on that characterization as an apt metaphor for how the president conducts foreign policy.

While the administration pushed back, liberal pundits embraced the phrase--at least initially. "If leading from behind brings the success of the Libyan intervention . . . 'lead me from behind,' Mr. President," cheered New York Times columnist Roger Cohen.

The Daily Beast's Michael Tomasky purred, ". . . this Libya operation is, so far, not only a big success, but also a historic accomplishment in American history."

That was then. Libya today is a hell hole. No serious observer of foreign policy regards that operation as a success. Indeed, the world today is littered with spectacular U.S. foreign policy failures.

Remember the Russian reset? Dialogue and a nuclear arms treaty that let Moscow stand pat while we reduced our arsenal were going to lead to a new era of understanding. Instead, Ukraine is under attack, and relations between Washington and the Kremlin are worse than any time since the Cold War.

Pulling out of Iraq according to a timetable rather than the situation on the ground? That opened the door for ISIS to get a strong foothold. Today, it controls a third of Iraq and much of Syria.

Speaking of Syria, our dabbling in its civil wars has done little or nothing to curb the slaughter of innocents. Meanwhile, Islamist extremists are rampaging across half of North Africa.

The White House has nothing to show for years of shuttle diplomacy trying to broker an Israeli-Palestinian peace. In fact, the two sides seem farther apart than ever.

What about November's big climate deal with China? It's mostly a joke. As National Review's Jillian Kay Melchior noted: "Beijing hasn't actually agreed to much: It will try to 'stop increasing' carbon emissions by 2030--which is a slanted way of saying its emissions will continue to grow for another 16 years . . ."

As for our allies, the administration has managed to antagonize virtually all of them. Canada, for example, is angry over the Keystone pipeline. Israel is apoplectic over White House leaks of sensitive military information. Many traditionally friendly nations in Latin America, the Middle East and Central Europe feel neglected.

Even our staunchest ally, Great Britain, is miffed. While it has backed President Obama's play in Libya and elsewhere, he has been all wobbly in supporting the U.K. on issues like retaining control of Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands.

Today, the only foreign policy initiatives the president can cite as "progress" are dubious at best. Engaging with dictatorial human-rights abusing regimes like Cuba and Iran is a sad spectacle for the world's leading democracy--one that many look to as a beacon of freedom.

All that said, it is not fair to label Mr. Obama's approach as "leading from behind." He often takes the initiative to address foreign policy problems. It's just that what he is doing is not working. What's worse, he appears to believe that his way of doing things will somehow turn out fine. That means more of the same. Is it rational to expect that two more years of Mr. Obama's foreign policy will produce better results than the first six?

By 2016, both Democratic and Republican presidential hopefuls will be running away from Obama's foreign policy. And they won't even need a slur like "leading from behind" to describe it.

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James Jay Carafano is vice president of Defense and Foreign Policy Studies for The Heritage Foundation.

Editorial on 01/30/2015

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