President Obama Must Not Complete a Disastrous Deal
With Iran
Forget Churchill—Obama Isn't
Measuring up to Neville Chamberlain
With the US on the brink of signing
an agreement that will lift the crippling economic sanctions on Iran in
exchange for alleged guarantees that Iran will limit its nuclear ambitions to
peaceful means, the Observer urges President Obama not to place his personal
hunger for a legacy issue ahead of his most solemn duty – protecting America’s
national security.
Barack Obama has been compared to
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain , who concluded the ill-fated Munich
Pact with Hitler in 1938. But Chamberlain acted out of a sincere belief that he
was avoiding a greater evil. Chamberlain was not thinking of his place in
history. He was thinking only of the Britain that he loved, a Britain that was
all but disarmed, exhausted, and vulnerable. He was dealing with a nation that
had been decimated by the Great War, a nation whose “best and brightest” five
years earlier had declared in the infamous Oxford Oath that they would not
fight for king or country, and a nation that was as materially unprepared for
war as Germany was prepared to fight. Chamberlain dealt from a position of
weakness, one that Hitler continually exploited in the negotiations, even by
changing the time and place to make it more inconvenient for the British leader
to attend them.
In sharp contrast, Mr. Obama is
acting out of personal aggrandizement. He believes he is replicating President
Richard Nixon’s historic opening of China. For Mr. Obama, the Iranian nuclear
arms deal is about his place in history. Mr. Obama is dealing from a position
of strength that he refuses to use. The sanctions have hurt Iran. Falling oil
prices only add to Iran’s vulnerability. Instead of using the sanctions to
pursue his original promise that Iran would not get the bomb, Mr. Obama has
moved the goal post. Iran would not get the bomb immediately. It would be
permitted to enrich uranium well beyond the 5 percent need for generating
nuclear energy and be left with a breakout capacity to create a bomb.
Meanwhile, Iran is refusing surprise
inspections, the hallmark of any such agreement, and has ruled its military
facilities, such as the enrichment plant at Fordo, off limits to any
inspections, period. Iran continues to showcase public displays of Israel being
obliterated by an Iranian nuclear bomb, and even in the midst of negotiations
government-orchestrated mass rallies cry out, “Death to America.”
If Chamberlain possessed America’s
strength and was dealing with Iran’s weakness, would he be negotiating as Mr.
Obama is? Would he be more concerned about a Jew building an extra bedroom in
Jerusalem than an Iranian building a bomb at Fordo?
Before becoming prime minister,
Chamberlain held two ministerial portfolios. He was considered a thoughtful and
effective cabinet member. Upon becoming Prime Minister in 1940, Winston
Churchill appointed Chamberlain to the new War Cabinet.
History has debated whether
Chamberlain was the reckless appeaser that he is stereotyped as or the man who
dealt from a position of extreme weakness against a foe he was unprepared to go
to war against and who sacrificed part of Czechoslovakia to buy Britain time to
rearm. Even Churchill, who filleted Chamberlain with his famous “choice between
war and dishonor and now will get both” zinger, understood that Chamberlain was
acting in good faith and kept his vanquished predecessor in his War cabinet.
It is unrealistic to hope that Mr.
Obama could emerge as a modern Churchill in this chaotic and dangerous chapter
in human history. But even Chamberlain would not have made the disastrous agreement
that Mr. Obama seems so eager to conclude. Mr. Obama is an amateur who is
enthralled with the sound of his own voice and is incapable of coming to grips
with the consequences of his actions. He is surrounded by sycophants,
second-rate intellectuals, and a media that remains compliant and uncritical in
the face of repeated foreign policy disasters. As country after country in the
world’s most dangerous region fall into chaos—Libya and Yemen are essentially
anarchic states, even as Syria and Iraq continue to devolve—Mr. Obama
puzzlingly focuses much of his attention and rhetoric on Israel, childishly
refusing to accept the mandate its people have given their prime minister in an
election that, by the way, added three additional seats to the country’s Arab
minority.
We can debate whether we should ever
have been in Iraq, but Mr. Obama’s hasty withdrawal to make good on a campaign
promise created the power vacuum filled by the Islamic State. In Syria, he
vacillated over the enforcement of red lines and whom to arm. There too, he
created a vacuum filled by the Islamic State.
In Egypt, he withdrew support for
President Hosni Mubarack, who for thirty years kept the peace with Israel and
turned Egypt into a stable and reliable ally. Obama permitted the tyrannical
Muslim Brotherhood to come to power failing to realize that one election, one
time, resulting in a tyranny is not democracy.
In Libya, President Muammar
al-Gaddafi, once an international pariah, had reversed course as far back as
1999 and attempted to reenter the community of nations, even giving up his
nuclear program. Libya was a stable dictatorship that was willing to engage in
economic and diplomatic relations with the West. Its revolutionary ambitions of
pan-Arabism and its expansionist tendencies had abated. When revolutionary
forces rose up against Gaddafi, Mr. Obama not only verbally supported the
revolutionaries, he sent NATO war planes to assist them. Gaddafi was defeated
and murdered. Libya is now in chaos and another hot house for Islamic extremism.
The deal with Iran follows in the
wake of these foreign policy disasters. Among our traditional Sunni allies in
the region, it is seen as a betrayal not simply because it advances Iran’s
nuclear ambitions but also because it encourages Iran’s support for the Houthi
Shiite militia in Yemen and Iran’s adventurism in Iraq. The lifting of
sanctions means more resources for Iran to transfer to its meddlesome proxies
like Lebanon’s Hezbollah, the assassin of Lebanon’s democratic
aspirations. The nuclear deal gives Iran an unacceptable nuclear
umbrella that will compel the Gulf State Sunnis to launch their own nuclear
programs, setting off a disastrous proliferation in the region.
The Iran deal is a march toward the
nuclear abyss hand-in-hand with the world’s largest exporter of terrorism– the
patron of Hezbollah, Hamas, Houthi militias in Yemen, Shiite militias in Iraq,
and operatives killing Jews in Argentina. Regrettably, a naïve, petulant
President Obama sees this as a crowning part of his legacy and nothing will
stand in his way.
Until Mr. Obama released a 1987
classified report detailing Israel’s nuclear program, we believed that the
president’s Iranian policy was motivated by a different vision of America’s
interests in the Middle East. Admittedly, it is one that would be difficult to
dissect, let alone to explain.
But Mr. Obama’s latest petulant act
shows that this is not a president motivated by policy but by personal
feelings. He sacrificed the security of our close ally and its seven million
citizens because he felt slighted. How else does one explain that Israel’s
nuclear program is made public while the report’s description of the programs
of our NATO partners is redacted?
We might call for Mr. Obama to find
his inner Churchill and walk away from this tragedy, but we would be happy if
he would simply find the character of the “real” Neville Chamberlain, who when
dealing from a position of America’s strength would never have signed a deal
with the devil. Ultimately, this deal will come back to haunt Mr. Obama’s
legacy far more than Munich haunted Chamberlain’s.
Read more at http://observer.com/2015/03/president-obama-must-not-complete-a-disastrous-deal-with-iran/#ixzz3W4n0wvyU
Poster’s comments:
1)
Iran is relatively a small country, so why are we even dealing
with them in any kind of serious way?
2)
Time to get ready for hard times in the new world USA it seems.
3)
In the meantime around the world, including the new world USA, let
us, “we the people” try contain this coming Middle East war (in our own ways of
course) to a regional war, and not a World War. After all, it really is a
regional war of sorts. It is the down range impacts that do worry me a lot.
Said another way, the consequences will be decades in ending.
4)
In the meantime in our new world USA please do remember how we
would grow our own food at home (usually in gardens) in order to better support
our Farmers who raised the food that fed our soldiers who did fight overseas.
5)
Just suppose the present leaders in Iran and its allies, which
include North Korea, should try bring devastation upon us? Then what will we do?
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