by Caroline Glick
The Obama administration is absolutely furious at Russia and China.  The two UN Security Council permanent members' move on Saturday to veto  a resolution on Syria utterly infuriated  US President Barack Obama,  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and UN Ambassador Susan Rice. And  they want us all to know just how piping mad they really are.
Rice  called the vetoes "unforgivable," and said that "any further blood that  flows will be on their hands." She said the US was "disgusted."
Clinton  called the move by Moscow and Beijing a "travesty." She then said that  the US will take action outside the UN, "with those allies and partners  who support the Syrian people's right to have a better future."
The  rhetoric employed by Obama's top officials is striking for what it  reveals about how the Obama administration perceives the purpose of  rhetoric in foreign policy.
Most US leaders  have used rhetoric to explain their policies. But if you take the Obama  administration's statements at face value you are left scratching your  head in wonder. Specifically on Syria, if you take these statements  literally, you are left wondering if Obama and his advisers are simply  clueless. Because if they are serious, their indignation bespeaks a  remarkable ignorance about how decisions are made at the Security  Council.
Is it possible that Obama believed  that Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin would betray Bashar Assad,  his most important strategic ally in the Middle East? Is it possible  that he believed that the same Chinese regime that systematically  tramples the human rights of its people would agree to intervene in  another country's domestic affairs? 
Outside  the intellectual universe of the Obama administration - where stalwart  US allies such as Hosni Mubarak are discarded like garbage and foes such  as Hugo Chavez are wooed like Hollywood celebrities - national  governments tend to base their foreign policies on their national  interests.
In light of this basic reality,  Security Council actions generally reflect the national interests of its  member states. This is how it has always been. This is how it will  always be. And it is hard to believe that the Obama administration was  unaware of this basic fact.
In fact, it is  impossible to believe that the administration was unaware that its plan  to pass a Security Council resolution opposing Assad's massacre of his  people - and so jeopardize Russian and Chinese interests - had no chance  of success. The fact that they had to know the resolution would never  pass leads to the conclusion that Obama and his advisers weren't trying  to pass the resolution on Syria at all.
Rather they were trying to pass the buck on Syria.
We  have two pieces of evidence to support the view that the Obama  administration has no intention of doing anything even vaguely effective  to end Assad's reign of terror that has so far taken the lives of  between five and ten thousand of his countrymen.
First,  for the past 10 months, as Assad's killing machine kicked into gear,  Obama and his advisers have been happy to sit on their hands. They  supported Turkey's feckless diplomatic engagement with Assad. They sat  back as Turkish Prime Minister Recip Tayep Erdogan employed the IHH, his  regime-allied terror group, to oversee the organization of a Muslim  Brotherhood-dominated Syrian opposition.
Second,  the administration supported the Arab League's farcical inspectors'  mission to Syria. That mission was led by Sudanese Gen. Muhammad al-  Dabi. Dabi reportedly was one of the architects of the genocide in  Darfur. Clearly, a mission under his leadership had no chance of  accomplishing anything useful. And indeed, it didn't.
AND  SO, after nearly a year, the issue of Assad's butchery of his citizens  finally found its way to the Security Council last month. Many in the US  expected Obama to use the opportunity to finally do something to stop  the killing, just as he and his NATO allies did something to prevent the  killing in Libya last year.
Ten months ago  Obama, Rice, Clinton and National Security Council member Samantha Power  decided that the US and its allies had to militarily intervene in Libya  to ensure that Muammar Gaddafi didn't have the opportunity to kill his  people as Assad is now doing. That is, to prevent the type of human  rights calamity that the Syrian people are now experiencing, Obama used  the UN as a staging ground to overthrow Gaddafi through force.
Sadly  for the people of Syria, who are being shot dead even as they try to  bury their families who were shot dead the day before, unlike the  situation in Libya, Obama has never had the slightest intention of using  his influence to take action against Assad. And faced with the rapidly  rising public expectation that he would take action at the Security  Council to stop the killing, Obama opted for diplomatic Kabuki.
Knowing  full well that Putin - who is still selling Assad weapons - would veto  any resolution, rather than accept that the Security Council is a dead  end, Obama had Rice negotiate fecklessly with her Russian counterparts.  The resolution that ended up being called to a vote on Saturday was so  weak that US Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the chairwoman of the House  Foreign Affairs Committee, issued a statement on Friday calling for the  administration to veto it.
As Ros-Lehtinen put  it, the draft resolution "contains no sanctions, no restrictions on  weapons transfers, and no calls for Assad to go, but supports the failed  Arab League observer mission," and so isn't "worth the paper it's  printed on."
She continued, "The Obama  administration should not support this weak, counterproductive  resolution, and should also reconsider the legitimacy that it provides  to the Arab League - an organization that continues to boycott Israel -  when it comes to the regime in Damascus."
But  instead of vetoing it, the administration backed it to the tilt and then  expressed disgust and moral outrage when Russia and China vetoed it.
The  lesson of this spectacle is that it we must recognize that the Obama  administration's rhetoric hides more than it reveals about the  president's actual policies.
THE FIRST place that we should apply this lesson is to the hemorrhage of administration rhetoric about Iran.
For  the past several weeks we have been treated to massive doses of  verbiage from Obama and his senior advisers about Iran. The most notable  of these recent statements was Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's  conversation with The Washington Post's David Ignatius last week.
Panetta  used Ignatius to communicate two basic messages. First, he wanted to  make clear that the administration adamantly opposes an Israeli strike  on Iran's nuclear installations. And second, he wanted to make clear  that if Iran strikes Israeli population centers, the US will come to  Israel's defense.
The purpose of the first  message is clear enough. Panetta wished to increase pressure on Israel  not to take preemptive action against Iran's nuclear weapons program.
The  purpose of the second message is also clear. Panetta spoke of the US's  obligation to Israel's defense in order to remove the justification for  an Israeli attack. After all, if the US is obliged to defend it, then  Israel mustn't risk harming US interests by defending itself.
When  taken together, Panetta's message sounds balanced and responsible. But  when examined carefully, it is clear that it is not. 
It  is far from responsible for the US government to tell its chief ally  that it should be willing to absorb an attack on its population centers  from Iran. No government can be expected to sit back and wait to be  attacked with nuclear weapons because if it is, the Americans will  retaliate against its attacker. 
Panetta's message was not just irresponsible. It was obnoxious.
And  this leaves the first message. Since Obama was elected the US has  devoted most of its energies not to preventing Iran from acquiring  nuclear weapons, but to pressuring Israel not to prevent Iran from  acquiring nuclear weapons. And Panetta's remarks to Ignatius were  consistent with this mission.
Some have argued  that the US's stepped-up naval presence in the Persian Gulf is evidence  that the US is itself gearing up to attack Iran. But as retired US naval  analyst J.E. Dyer explained in an essay last month at the Optimistic  Conservative blog, the US posture in the Persian Gulf is defensive, not  offensive.
The US has not deployed anywhere  near the firepower it would need to conduct a successful military  campaign against Iran's nuclear installations. The only thing the US  deployment may serve to accomplish is to deter Israel from launching a  preemptive air strike against Iran's nuclear installations.
It  is true that to a certain extent, Israel has brought this escalating  American rhetorical storm on itself with its own flood of rhetoric about  Iran. Over the past week nearly every senior Israeli military and  political official has had something to say about Iran's nuclear  program.
But this stream of words does not  reflect a change in Israel's strategic timetable. Rather it is a  function of the rather mundane calendar of Israel's annual conference  circuit. It just so happened that the annual Herzliya Conference took  place last week. It is standard fare for Israel's security and political  leadership to bloviate about Iran's nuclear program at Herzliya. They  do it every year. They did it this year.
And in  truth, no one said anything at the conference that we didn't already  know. We learned nothing new about Iran's program or Israel's  intentions. Had there been no conference last week, there would likely  have been no flood of Israeli statements.
We  only know three things for certain about Iran. It is getting very late  in the game for anyone to take any military actions to prevent Iran from  developing nuclear weapons. Iran will not stop its nuclear weapons  program voluntarily. And Obama will not order US forces to take action  to stop Iran's nuclear project.
What remains  uncertain still is how Israel plans to respond to these three  certainties. The fact that Israel has waited this long to strike  presents the disturbing prospect that our leaders may have been confused  by the Obama administration's rhetoric. Perhaps they have been  persuaded that the US is on our side on this issue and that we don't  have to rely only on ourselves to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear  power.
But as the foregoing analysis of the  administration's very angry words on Syria and very sober words on Iran  demonstrates, Obama and his deputies use rhetoric not to clarify their  intentions, but to obfuscate them. Just as they will do nothing to  prevent Assad from continuing his campaign of murder and terror, so they  will do nothing to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2012/02/obamas-rhetorical-storm.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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