The
Global Pottersville
Where
previous presidents fostered American strength, Obama revels in weakness.
By Victor Davis Hanson in National
Review
Director Frank Capra’s It’s a
Wonderful Life, set during the Depression, was a divine counterfactual thought
experiment designed to remind a suicidal George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart) that his
hometown, Bedford Falls, would have turned out to be a pretty miserable place
called Pottersville without his seemingly ordinary presence. Consider the Obama
administration’s first six years as a prolonged counterfactual take on what the
world might have been like for the last 70 years without a traditionally
engaged American president dedicating our country to preserving the postwar
Western-inspired global order. The what-if dream seems to be working to show
the vast alterations in a world that Westerners once took for granted. France,
a perennial critic of America, is suddenly an unlikely international activist.
For seven decades, the French harped about American hyperpuissance – on the
implied assurance that such triangulating would be ignored by an easily
caricatured, aw-shucks American George Bailey trying his best to keep things in
the global community from falling apart. RELATED: How the U.S. Lost the World’s
Respect But now the Johnny-on-the-spot American everyman is gone, and lots of
things have filled the vacuum. An overwhelmed France nevertheless intervened in
Mali to staunch Islamic extremism. It bombed Libya, and then discovered that
the United States’ new policy of “lead from behind” meant that America was no
more likely to clean up the ensuing post-Qaddafi mess than was France —
especially given that the new Mogadishu-on-the-Mediterranean was not far from
Marseilles, but an Atlantic Ocean away from New York and Washington. Some
present-day Americans relish the Schadenfreude of making the world step up to
the plate — or else. Just as Pottersville seemed to have its adherents, so some
present-day Americans relish the Schadenfreude of making the world step up to
the plate — or else. Obama supporters praise the new tough love, as if the
current American recessional was part of a brilliant plan to stop infantilizing
our allies and instead to make them grow up and accept responsibility for their
own defense. Unfortunately, the new isolationism in reality was not so much
designed to bulk up our friends as to ignore them and let other, less-benign
forces drive world currents. Of course, France used to ankle-bite the U.S. on
its Mideast policy, with the assurance that in the end American interests were
about the same as French interests — and were backed moreover by eleven carrier
groups. But now France has learned that the U.S. really does trust the
mendacious Iranian theocracy (soon to be “a very successful regional power”),
and that it wants a deal to restore a failed Obama legacy far more than it
worries that nuclear-tipped Iranian missiles might one day reach central
Europe, or that a nuclear Sunni-Shiite rivalry might characterize a brave new
Middle East. It was once easy for France, with its own volatile Muslim
population, to poke fun at neo-cons and an Israel-centric U.S. policy; it is
perhaps not so reassuring to appreciate that the Palestinian Authority and
Hamas are now considered by America as co-equals with or preferable to
democratic, Western Israel. RELATED: Why the Next President Will Face a
Dangerous Predicament Abroad Japan and South Korea more or less took for
granted the American nuclear umbrella. Not now, in the present Pottersville
dream. Japan is rearming — and wondering exactly how far American indifference
extends. South Korea has no idea what the current administration would do in
the case of Chinese or North Korean aggression other than issue a red line, a
deadline, or a step-over line. In comparison with the Obama nonchalance, the
old days of an engaged U.S. president no longer seem so bad. The Eastern
Europeans and the Baltic States rushed to join the West after the fall of the
Berlin Wall, if at times seeming prickly about the omnipresence of U.S. power.
By 2008 “Hope and Change” seemed a nice change from “Wanted: Dead or Alive.”
Now they are learning what life in Putinville is really like and suddenly
beefing up their defenses,while begging for the stationing of American troops
on their own soil. Good luck with that. RELATED: Decoding the Obama Doctrine
The West more or less thought the destruction of al-Qaeda in Anbar Province
during the Petraeus Surge of 2007–08 was a bit of an overreaction to the bad
idea of removing Saddam Hussein. But dream America away, and you get ISIS as a
Jayvee organization conducting video beheadings in the theater of the UNESCO
World Heritage Centre site of Palmyra, while Iranian-backed militias run Iraq,
Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, and the Gulf monarchies worry whether jihadists will
eventually cut off 40 percent of the world’s oil supply. Its a Wonderful
LifeIts a Wonderful Life The contra–George Bailey presidency has had
ramifications at home as well. It was easy to caricature past presidents for
deporting illegal aliens and enforcing the border. But no American in his right
mind ever considered a United States without a southern border at all, or an
end to the entire notion of “illegal” and “alien,” as northern Mexico and the
southwestern U.S. have blended together as a sort of new fusion homeland. In
Pottersville, expecting federal statutes to be enforced makes one racist, while
promoting ethnic chauvinism and exemption from the law proves one liberal.
RELATED: The Bogus Legal Case for Obama’s Amnesty Most recent presidents
considered Al Sharpton a rank demagogue with a history of defamation and of
inciting riot and mayhem. Now, in our present alternative universe, he is the
president’s closest adviser on racial matters. It was generally agreed that
proactive policing had lowered the violent-crime rate to levels unimaginable in
the crime-ridden 1970s; now the police are considered the enemies, and violent
crime is spiking, with the vast majority of its victims minority youths. Once,
presidents tried to calm tensions; now, in the present surreal dream, they
accuse the police of stereotyping, talk of their own racial affinities in
regard to ongoing criminal cases, traffic in mythologies like the Ferguson
concoction, and urge ethnic groups to punish shared enemies at the polls, as
racial polarization and violent-crime rates naturally rise in tandem. More
Barack Obama NYT Belatedly Admits Obama Hasn’t Frozen Iran’s Nuclear Program
Seriousness Test The Alarmist-in-Chief Rallies the Troops against Climate
Change Some were persuaded by Obama’s rhetoric of a U.S. post-9/11
overreaction, when on the campaign trail he trashed the American insistence on
labeling jihadists radical Islamist terrorists. But replace a centrist U.S.
president with one much father left, and you earn the make-believe world of
overseas contingency operations, workplace violence, man-caused disasters,
jihad as a personal odyssey, the Muslim Brotherhood as a secular organization,
Bowe Bergdahl as having an honorable record, and an Israeli president as the
chief threat to Middle East peace. The aim of Capra’s fable was to remind us
that the easily ridiculed, so-so status quo often hides Herculean efforts by
those whom we take for granted, and who, working in the shadows, guarantee
civilization instead of chaos. In the movie, the guardian angel Clarence can
make the dream go away and cure George Bailey of his suicidal melancholy, as
normalcy returns with the old Bedford Falls. In our version, we will learn soon
after November 2016 whether we awake from the temporary alternative universe of
a new Pottersville or whether it proves to be a depressing and continuing
reality.
—
NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution
and the author, most recently, of The Savior Generals.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/419153/global-pottersville-victor-davis-hanson
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/419153/global-pottersville-victor-davis-hanson
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