Obama's Jimmy Carter Image Creates Problems
for US
By B. Raman
During the US
Presidential primaries last year, I had
expressed my misgings that Barack Obama
might turn out to be another Jimmy Carter,
whose confused thinking and soft image paved
the way for the success of the Islamic
Revolution in Iran .The subsequent Iranian
defiance of the US and his inability to deal
effectively with the incident in which some
Iranian students raided the US Embassy in
Teheran and held a number of US diplomats
hostage led to the disillusionment of
sections of the US electorate with him and
his failure to get re-elected in 1980. The
strong line taken by him against the
invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet troops
towards the end of 1979 did not help him in
wiping out the image of a soft and confused
President.
2. The defiant
action of North Korea in testing a
long-range missile with military
applications last month and its latest act
of defiance in reportedly carrying out an
underground nuclear test on May 25, 2009,
can be attributed----at least partly, if not
fully--- to its conviction that it will have
nothing to fear from the Obama
Administration for its acts of defiance. It
is true that even when George Bush was the
President, North Korea had carried out its
first underground nuclear test in October
2006. The supposedly strong policy of the
Bush Administration did not deter it from
carrying out its first test.
3. After Obama
assumed office on January 20, 2009, whatever
hesitation was there in North Korea's
policy-making circles regarding the likely
response of the Obama Administration has
disappeared and its leadership now feels it
can defy the US and the international
community with impunity.
4. A series of
actions taken by the Obama Administration
have created an impression in Iran, the Af-Pak
region, China and North Korea that Obama
does not have the political will to
retaliate decisively if they act in a manner
detrimental to US interests and to
international peace and security. Among such
actions, one could cite the soft policy
towards Iran, the reluctance to articulate
strongly the US determination to support the
security interests of Israel, the ambivalent
attitude towards Pakistan despite its
continued support to anti-India terrorist
groups and its ineffective action against
the sanctuaries of Al Qaeda and the Taliban
in Pakistani territory, its silence on the
question of the violation of the human
rights of the Burmese people and the
continued illegal detention of Aung San Suu
Kyi by the military regime in Myanmar, and
its silence on the Tibetan issue. Its
over-keenness to court Beijing in order to
seek China's support for dealing with the
economic crisis and its anxiety to ensure
the continued flow of Chinese money into the
US for investment in the US Treasury Bonds
have also added to the soft image of the US.
5. President
Obama cannot blame the problem States of the
world such as Iran, Pakistan, Myanmar and
North Korea if they have come to the
conclusion that they can take liberties with
the present Administration in Washington DC
without having to fear any adverse
consequences. North Korea's defiance is only
the beginning. One has every reason to
apprehend that Iran might be the next to
follow.
6. Israel and
India have been the most affected by the
perceived soft policies of the Obama
Administration. Israel is legitimately
concerned over the likely impact of this
soft policy on the behaviour of Iran. South
Korea and Japan, which would have been
concerned over the implications of the soft
policy of the Obama Administration, had no
national option because they had no
independent means of acting against North
Korea. Israel will not stand and watch
helplessly if it concludes that Iran might
follow the example of North Korea. I have
said it in the past and I say it again that
Israel will not hesitate to act unilaterally
against Iran if it apprehends that it is on
the verge of acquiring a military nuclear
capability. It will prefer to act with the
understanding of the US, but if there is no
change in the soft policy of the Obama
Administration, it will not hesitate to act
even without prior consultation with the US.
7. India too has
been noting with concern the total confusion
which seems to prevail in the corridors of
the Obama Administration over its Af-Pak
policy. Some of the recent comments of
Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State,
about alleged past incoherence in the US
policy towards Pakistan and about the
part-responsibility of the US for the state
of affairs in the Af-Pak region have given
comfort to the military-intelligence
establishment and the political leaders in
Pakistan. Obama's new over-generosity to the
Pakistani Armed forces and his reluctance to
hold them accountable for their sins of
commission and omission in the war against
terrorism have convinced the Pakistani
leaders that they have no adverse
consequences to fear from the Obama
Administration. India would be the first to
feel the adverse consequences of this
newly-found confidence in Islamabad
vis-a-vis its relations with the US.
8. India also has
reasons to be concerned over the definite
down-grading by the Obama Administration of
the importance of the USA's strategic
relationship with India. This down-grading
has given satisfaction to Pakistan as well
as China.
9. Jimmy Carter
took a little over three years to create the
image of the US as a confused and soft
power. Obama is bidding fair to create that
image even in his first year in office. The
North Korean defiance is the first result of
this perceived soft image. There will be
more surprises for the US and the
international community to follow if Obama
and his aides do not embark on corrective
actions before it is too late.
(The writer is Additional
Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai. He is also associated with the
Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)