The question of
whether Barack Obama’s second term will be a failure was answered in the
affirmative before his Berlin debacle, which has recast the question, which now
is: Will this term be silly, even scary in its detachment from reality?
Before Berlin,
Obama set his steep downward trajectory by squandering the most precious
post-election months on gun-control futilities and by a subsequent storm of
scandals that have made his unvarying project — ever bigger, more expansive,
more intrusive and more coercive government — more
repulsive. Then came Wednesday’s pratfall in Berlin.
There he vowed energetic measures against global warming (“the global
threat of our time”). The 16-year
pause of this warming was not predicted by, and is not explained
by, the climate models for which, in his strange understanding of respect for
science, he has forsworn skepticism.
Regarding
another threat, he spoke an almost meaningless sentence that is an exquisite
example of why his rhetoric cannot withstand close reading: “We may strike
blows against terrorist networks, but if we ignore the instability and
intolerance that fuels extremism, our own freedom will eventually be
endangered.” So, “instability and intolerance” are to blame for terrorism?
Instability where? Intolerance of what by whom “fuels” terrorists? Terrorism is
a tactic of destabilization. Intolerance is, for terrorists, a virtue.
It is
axiomatic: Arms control is impossible until it is unimportant. This is because
arms control is an arena of competition in which nations negotiate only those
limits that advance their interests. Nevertheless, Obama trotted out another
golden oldie in Berlin when he vowed to resuscitate the cadaver
of nuclear arms control with Russia. As though Russia’s arsenal is a pressing
problem. And as though there is reason to think President Vladimir Putin, who
calls the Soviet Union’s collapse “the
greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century,” is interested in reducing the arsenal that is
the basis of his otherwise Third World country’s claim to great-power status.
Shifting his
strange focus from Russia’s nuclear weapons, Obama said “we can . . . reject the
nuclear weaponization that North
Korea and Iran may be seeking.” Were Obama given to saying such stuff
off the cuff, this would be a good reason for handcuffing him to a
teleprompter. But, amazingly, such stuff is put on his teleprompter and, even
more amazing, he reads it aloud.
Neither the
people who wrote those words nor he who spoke them can be taken seriously.
North Korea and Iran may be seeking nuclear weapons? North
Korea may have such
weapons.
Evidently Obama still entertains doubts that Iran is seeking them.
In
Northern Ireland before going to Berlin, Obama sat next to
Putin, whose demeanor
and body language when he is in Obama’s presence radiate
disdain. There Obama said: “With respect to Syria, we do have differing
perspectives on the problem, but we share an interest
in reducing
the violence.” Differing perspectives?
Obama wants
to reduce the violence by coaxing Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, who is winning the
war, to attend a conference at which he negotiates the surrender of his
power. Putin wants to reduce the violence by helping — with lavish materiel
assistance and by preventing diplomacy that interferes — Assad complete the
destruction of his enemies.
Napoleon
said: “If you start to take Vienna — take
Vienna.”
Douglas MacArthur said that all military disasters can be explained by two
words: “Too
late.”
Regarding Syria, Obama is tentative and, if he insists on the folly of
intervening, tardy. He is giving Putin a golden opportunity to humiliate the
nation responsible for the “catastrophe.” In a contest between a dilettante and
a dictator, bet on the latter.
Obama’s
vanity is a wonder of the world that never loses its power to astonish, but
really: Is everyone in his orbit too lost in raptures of
admiration to warn him against delivering a speech soggy with banalities and
bromides in a city
that remembers John Kennedy’s “Ich bin ein Berliner” and
Ronald Reagan’s “Tear
down this wall”? With German Chancellor Angela Merkel sitting nearby, Obama began his
Berlin speech: “As I’ve said, Angela and I don’t exactly look like previous
German and American leaders.” He has
indeed said that, too, before, at least about himself. It was mildly amusing in Berlin in
2008, but hardly a Noel Coward-like witticism worth recycling.
His look is
just not that interesting. And after being pointless in Berlin, neither is he,
other than for the surrealism of his second term.
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