September 22, 2009 11:09 AM

The Obama Method

By
CBSNews
(The New Republic)  Jonathan Chait is a senior editor at The New Republic.

The thing that people haven't figured out about President Obama's conduct of foreign policy is that it's the same as his conduct of domestic policy. Obama believes in the power of negotiation and public dialogue to split his adversaries--Republicans at home, Islamists abroad--and strengthen his own position. Obama's speech in Cairo to the Muslim world was simply the foreign analogue of his dealings with the GOP.

Obama's method begins with attempts to find common ground, expressions of respect for the adversary's core beliefs, and profuse hope for cooperation. In his iconic 2004 speech to the Democratic National Convention, Obama famously announced that Democrats, too, "worship an awesome God." In his Cairo speech, Obama pointed to the contributions and freedoms of American Muslims. In both speeches, Obama signaled cultural respect by adapting the other side's own rhetorical formulations--invoking "a belief in things not seen" (2004) or calling the Middle East the region where Islam "was first revealed" (Cairo).

This rhetoric removes the locus of debate from the realm of tribal conflict-- red state versus blue state, Islam versus America--and puts it onto specific questions--Is the American health care system fair? Is terrorism justified?-- where Obama believes he can win support from soft adherents of the opposing camp.

Naturally, Obama's pacific expressions tend to alarm the more hawkish elements of his own camp, who interpret his idealistic rhetoric as naivete or weakness. A few months before the 2008 presidential primary, columnist E.J. Dionne reported, "Several Democrats also said Clinton's claim that she can deal with the Republican 'attack machine' rings truer to an angry party than Obama's call for an end to partisan polarization."

Democratic partisans think the enemy is vicious and must be met with uncompromising force. That's exactly how conservative foreign policy hawks feel about the world. Unsurprisingly, the right-wing foreign policy critique of Obama today sounds eerily like the partisan Democratic critique of Obama during the primary.

In January 2008, Obama told a newspaper editorial board that Ronald Reagan provided a "sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing." Paul Krugman complained, "Where in his remarks was the clear declaration that Reaganomics failed?" Likewise, in his Cairo speech, Obama touted the historic role of Muslims in the United States. Conservative pundit David Frum complained: "One of the most disturbing things about the Cairo speech is the persistent misrepresentation of history. It is really absurd to say that Islam for example has 'always been a part of America's story.'"

Obama probably realizes that Muslims have played a marginal role in American life throughout most of its history. He also probably believes that the U.S. economy in the 1970s suffered primarily from oil shocks and irresponsible monetary policy rather than from the absence of a Reaganesque cheerleader for entrepreneurship. But Obama's method entails small acts of intellectual dishonesty in the pursuit of common ground.

Critics such as Krugman and Frum are correct that surrendering intellectual ground comes at a cost. Our most successful presidents articulate clear, forceful public rationales for their beliefs --think of Roosevelt or Truman excoriating reactionary Republicans at home, or Truman, Kennedy, or Reagan standing up to the Soviets internationally. It is a mistake, however, to view Obama's strategy as an act of submission.

Consider how Obama explained his approach toward Iran during a recent interview with Newsweek:

Now, will it work? We don't know. And I assure you, I'm not naive about the difficulties of a process like this. If it doesn't work, the fact that we have tried will strengthen our position in mobilizing the international community, and Iran will have isolated itself, as opposed to a perception that it seeks to advance that somehow it's being victimized by a U.S. government that doesn't respect Iran's sovereignty.

This is a perfect summation of Obama's strategy. It does not presuppose that his adversaries are people of goodwill who can be reasoned with. Rather, it assumes that, by demonstrating his own goodwill and interest in accord, Obama can win over a portion of his adversaries' constituents as well as third parties. Obama thinks he can move moderate Muslim opinion, pressure bad actors like Iran to negotiate, and, if Iran fails to comply, encourage other countries to isolate it. The strategy works whether or not Iran makes a reasonable agreement.

The results remain to be seen. But it eerily resembles the way Obama has already isolated the GOP leadership. Obama began his presidency by elaborately courting the opposition party. Republicans in Congress believed that, by flamboyantly withholding cooperation, they could deny Obama his stated goal of bipartisan harmony and thus render him a failure. Instead, they wound up handing Obama the alternative victory of appearing to be the reasonable party. Polls showed that the public, by overwhelming margins, believed that Obama was trying to work with Republicans and that Republicans were not reciprocating.

Likewise, by defusing the complaint among Islamists that the United States disrespects their religion, Obama can more easily force the Iranian leadership to negotiate on the terms of its stated goals. This is actually "a hard-nosed tactic of community organizers," as American Prospect editor Mark Schmitt wrote in 2007. "One way to deal with that kind of bad-faith opposition is to draw the person in," Schmitt explained, "treat them as if they were operating in good faith, and draw them into a conversation about how they actually would solve the problem."

This apparent paradox is one reason Obama's political identity has eluded easy definition. On the one hand, you have a disciple of the radical community organizer Saul Alinsky turned ruthless Chicago politician. On the other hand, there is the conciliatory post-partisan idealist. The mistake here is in thinking of these two notions as opposing poles. In reality it's all the same thing. Obama's defining political trait is the belief that conciliatory rhetoric is a ruthless strategy.

By Jonathan Chait:
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic

The New Republic
Add a Comment See all 24 Comments
by xlib June 27, 2009 10:58 AM EDT
Just love all the posts about those who do not agree with the messiah are racists. Goodness but that is getting old.
How's this, how about I personally just disagree with his white half? How's that?
I take issue with the blind faith you all have in this guy.
I'd say wake up before it's too late but it already is too late.
I don't think you lemmings will like the new America.
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by xlib June 27, 2009 10:46 AM EDT
I found his remarks to the government of Iran interesting. There he was, teleprompter at the ready, ripping them a new one about "silencing dissent". Wow, that caught me.
Here's a guy, a Chicago thug (to quote bill clinton) railing about silencing dissent when he goes after FOX news, conservative radio,etc, etc. And he has the AUDACITY to chastise Iran?? He sure has a set of gonads on him.
For those who don't see this, well, you are probably members of the pitchfork set, union members, or just plain lemmings.
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by speakinup22 June 25, 2009 2:11 PM EDT
Jonathan Chait - yeah - I see how this is working so well with Kim.


As far as BArry splitting the Muslim population - do you REALLY think he had that effect on the Iranians ?

Gee, and all along I thought it was the cheating in the election in their country.


(Sheese, some folks will do ANYTHING except face reality to make Barry look good.)
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by ihatetheO June 25, 2009 1:45 PM EDT
wake up america, he is an instrument to destroy America why do you think that he is spending all this money?????????? we are about to form the North American Union dah!!!! We will have a NEW currency very very soon. the dollar will be worthless!!! No more U.S. DOLLAR Our new currency---AMERO. Why do you think our border is open and illegals are pouring in. Why is Mexico "cleaning" up their drug cartels? At least getting some kinda order before the Union comes into being. I hate the NEWS!!! It's all a pack of lies. OBAMA IS A BRAND there should be a trademark by his name. HE IS CORPORATE FACISM nobody cares about the American people it's all about POWER AND MONEY our government doesn't care about mexicans their just using them to get what they want---cheap labor, destroy america, destroy the healthcare system, destroy our national sovernty, where is the fight?
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by ihatetheO June 25, 2009 1:32 PM EDT
i hate the obama he is antichrist he is demon dog
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by dartplayer501 June 25, 2009 3:05 PM EDT
i hate the ihatetheO. Some people just shouldn't have been born with fingers to type with.
by newerdeal June 25, 2009 11:29 AM EDT
Things are not going so good. The BBC has been reporting torture in Afg. They are saying Obama has the right to take people from anywhere in the world to Afg. and keep them there without charging them with a crime and they are being tortured. They keep on killing civilians too, by accident of course.

In Iraq right before the US pullout it is starting to look real bad.

In Iran, Obama wants to be friends real bad but the Republicans are making that harder and now I hear his new friends from Iran won't be coming to the 4th of July party.

And his health care show last night. That didn't look like a love fest at all. I thought it was to be a love fest ?

Sometimes when you try to do everything at the same time you screw everything up.
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by newerdeal June 25, 2009 11:38 AM EDT
Trying to do everything at once and not doing anything right is the Obama method ?
by dartplayer501 June 25, 2009 3:04 PM EDT
Sometimes when you try to do everything at the same time you screw everything up.

That's better than trying to do nothing and screwing everything up like the previous boob did.
by rdupuy11 June 25, 2009 10:07 AM EDT
I think the analysis is largely correct, but its not simply Repub vs. Democrat, or even America vs. Iran...think secularism vs. Islam.

Obama is also trying to redefine Islam itself. Actually this started with Bush, and perhaps now finally finding an expert practitioner, I guess one could think it started with Obama...but Bush bumbled down this road, I remember some of the rhetoric starting then.


The rhetoric that fundamentalist Islam doesn't represent true Islam, but the tiny minority of secularist 'Islam light' practitioners, do in fact, represent true Islam, is well under way.

And frankly, many in the Islam world know the attack on Islam has been joined in earnest - despite all their complaining, *for the first time* this fight as been joined- and they are powerless to do anything about it.

I don't see how they will stop it, short of a full confession by Obama that he's trying to manipulate their religion.

Forget about it, Islam is doomed as a fundamentalist religion, it will survive in a modified form only. And whats great about it, is the practioners themselves will demand the changes.
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by rpbohman June 25, 2009 12:33 AM EDT
A very thoughtful article. I think it reflects well on President Obama's skills as a "diplomat". True diplomacy, whether foreign or domestic, consists of defining your strategic goals, analyzing the other players, and tailoring your tactics accordingly to achieve the maximum achievable results.
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by davy99us1 June 24, 2009 10:38 PM EDT
ABC is State run like Iran with its media- what do you think? NEDA Lives
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by onesword June 24, 2009 5:57 PM EDT
Brilliant
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