Obama’s foreign policy spin
By CAROLINE B. GLICK:
The failure of Obama’s foreign policies has been nowhere more evident than in the Middle East.
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Of course, the Middle East is not the only region where the deleterious consequences of Obama’s foreign policy are being felt. From Europe to Africa, from Asia to Latin America, Obama’s determination to embrace US adversaries such as Vladimir Putin and Hugo Chavez has weakened pro-US forces and strengthened US foes.
So how is that that while Carter was perceived by the majority of the American public as a foreign policy failure, a large plurality of Americans views Obama’s foreign policy as a success?
Obama’s success in hiding his failures from the American public owes to two related factors. First, to date the US has not been forced to contend directly with the consequences of his failures.
Carter’s failures were impossible to ignore because the blowback from them was immediate, unmistakable and harsh. His betrayal of the shah of Iran led directly to the takeover of the US Embassy in Tehran and the hostage crisis. Carter could not spin to his advantage the daily stories about the hostages. He could not influence CBS Evening News anchor Walter Cronkite’s decision to end every broadcast by reminding viewers how many days the hostages had been in captivity.
So, too, the consequences of Carter’s weakness in confronting the Soviet Union were impossible to ignore or minimize with images of Soviet tank columns invading Afghanistan dominating the news.
To date, Obama’s foreign policy failures have yet to explode in a manner that can make the average American aware of them.
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