ObamaCare for Arms Control
The Iran nuclear deal has the same
political weaknesses as the Affordable Care Act.
By Daniel Henninger in the Wall Street Journal
The Iran nuclear deal is going to be
the ObamaCare of arms-control agreements—a substantive mess undermined by a
failure to build adequate political support.
Next Tuesday is the deadline for
completing the “political” terms of an agreement with Iran. “Technical” details
arrive in June. From news reporting on the negotiations, it appears the
agreement is turning into a virtual Rube Goldberg machine, a patchwork of fixes
that its creators will claim somehow limits Iran’s nuclear breakout period to
“a year.” Which is to say, it’s going to be another ObamaCare, a poorly
designed mega-project others will have to clean up later.
Just as ObamaCare was a massive
entitlement program enacted with no Republican support (unlike Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid), the administration’s major arms-control agreement is
bypassing a traditional vote in the Senate. Instead, it will get rubber-stamp
approval by, of all things, the U.N. Security Council.
Can anyone feign surprise that this
has produced a political reaction in the Senate? The heavily bipartisan
Corker-Menendez bill, which would require the deal to be submitted to Congress
and which the White House has denounced, is a few votes away from a veto-proof
majority.
Political legitimacy is the coin of
the realm in the American system. It is why every U.S. president in the postwar
era, except this one, has worked so hard to assemble opposition support for his
projects. Without it, any initiative will remain politically vulnerable.
In a letter last weekend to Sen. Bob Corker, chairman
of the Foreign Relations Committee, White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough
doubled down on Barack Obama’s general
theory of American politics—my way or the highway. He wrote that other arms
agreements haven’t gone through the Senate and that Mr. Corker and his Senate
colleagues should step away from the Iran deal.
In fact, Presidents Kennedy, Nixon
and Reagan all submitted major arms-control treaties and agreements for Senate
approval. They did so to give their work political credibility with the
American people and indeed the world. But somehow Mr. Obama believes he has an
exemption from the basics of U.S. politics. So we wake up one day to find he is
substituting the judgment of the Security Council, with such famous allies as
Russia and China, for consent from the U.S. Senate. Result: an arms deal as
politically flaccid as ObamaCare.
After the Affordable Care Act became
a one-party law, many governors refused to participate. A mirror-image opt-out
from the Iran deal is emerging now among the most significant nations of the
Middle East.
Earlier this week, Prince Turki
al-Faisal, Saudi Arabia’s former intelligence chief, told the BBC, “I’ve always
said whatever comes out of these talks, we will want the same.” He wasn’t
talking about forsaking the nuclear option. Elaborating, he said, “If Iran has
the ability to enrich uranium to whatever level, it’s not just Saudi Arabia
that’s going to ask for that. The whole world will be an open door to go that
route without any inhibition.” By the “whole world” he of course means Egypt,
Turkey, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. Are all these countries opposed to
the Iran deal because they “hate Obama?”
On March 5 at the deal’s 11th hour,
Secretary of State John Kerry flew to
Saudi Arabia to reassure King Salman about the Iran deal, which is at least
more time than Mr. Obama gave doubting U.S. governors on his health-care plan.
The result was the same: no political buy-in. Emirates commentator Mishaal
al-Gergawi told The Wall Street Journal: “A lot of the Gulf countries feel they are being thrown
under the bus.” Welcome to the club.
Whether in domestic or foreign
policy, Mr. Obama’s modus operandi is the same: Structure the issue as a choice
between what he wants to do and an unacceptable extreme. The result, not
surprisingly, is to choke off any possibility of building useful political
coalitions from the outset.
With health care, the whole of GOP
alternatives was “nothing new.” With Iran, it’s Mr. Obama’s deal or a “rush to
war.” You get two political options: Salute or shut up.
As important as the constitutional
issues raised by Mr. Obama’s unilateral authority is the political damage
he has done to traditional relationships between the presidency and the
institutions his methods have marginalized.
The Obama presidency has sucked the
oxygen out of politics in Washington and indeed the world. But politics abhors
a vacuum. The Senate letter to Iran more than anything is the system bursting
outside its normal channels. Desperate Ukraine, abandoned to Russia by the
U.S., has pathetically asked the U.N. to send blue-helmeted peacekeepers to
eastern Ukraine.
No serious person can be shocked if
what happens after the Iran nuclear agreement looks a lot like the ObamaCare
rollout—a shambles of half-done details. With ObamaCare, America’s courts and
bureaucracies are available to clean up the mess. But you may not like the
cleanup crew that shows up for the ObamaCare of arms-control deals.
Poster’s comments:
1) Effective diplomacy is always backed up with
some kind of military threat. Anything less than that is often just words.
2) Today,
presently, we have an all-volunteer military force. That method has been in use
since the early 1970s in the USA.
3) So how
willing are you to submit (like cough up your kids) to a force able military
and WWII type draft if that happens to come about?
4) Now the
answer to that question is a votable or a Civil War type question to many.
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