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Obama Blunders Through Asia ("Nailed It!")
Weekly Standard ^ | 30 November 2009 | Ross Terrill

Posted on 11/22/2009 6:03:42 AM PST by AmericanInTokyo

Obama Blunders Through Asia Undoing Bush's years of deft diplomacy. by Ross Terrill 11/30/2009, Volume 015, Issue 11

Much dire rhetoric has been unleashed in liberal quarters about the damage done by George W. Bush's foreign policy. The alleged damage, however, is not evident in Asia. When Ken Lieberthal, a respected China specialist and Democratic loyalist, spoke at Harvard early this year, I asked him to name a single year in memory when Washington had as good relations with India, Japan, and China as under Bush. He changed the subject.

The White House stated as Obama left Asia for home last week: "Overall, American leadership was absent from this region for the last several years.'' Nonsense. Bush left office with U.S. relations with Asia's big four--China, India, Japan, and Indonesia--taken together, better than ever in history.

Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh many times remarked that President Bush was popular in India, and so was the United States. U.S.-Japan relations were excellent under Bush, in partnership with Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and two successors. Nor were U.S. relations with Australia ever as good as in the years when Bush presided in Washington and John Howard in Canberra. In Southeast Asia after 9/11 the U.S. position improved sharply with Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. And Bush drew Vietnam and, after 2007, South Korea, under its new president Lee Myung Bak, closer to the United States.

As for China, in his second Inaugural Address and his oration at Kyoto en route to Beijing in 2005, Bush treated the Chinese with respect but also as laggards in world-historical terms. "Free nations are peaceful nations," he said in Japan. "Free nations do not threaten their neighbors, and free nations offer their citizens a hopeful vision for the future."

Speaking hours before he was to reach Beijing, Bush was more explicit, yet still positive: "We encourage China to continue down the road of reform and openness, because the freer China is at home, the greater the welcome it will receive abroad.     As China reforms its economy, its leaders are finding that once the door to freedom is opened even a crack, it cannot be closed."

The irony is large. "Cowboy" Bush pulled off the feat of speaking boldly to Beijing about American values while also achieving a productive relationship with China. He secured solid support from Japan over Iraq, Afghanistan, and other issues without bowing down before the emperor.

Visiting China twice a year during the Bush administration, I watched the business sections of big-city bookshops grow. Typically, they offered Chinese translations of U.S. business titles, memoirs of successful American businessmen, and Chinese works applying U.S. entrepreneurial ways to local conditions. Never did I see any work by Al Franken, Michael Moore, or Garrison Keillor on offer in Chinese. Grassroots China was palpably pro-America and pro-Bush.

One hopes that continues, but it won't occur through apologies, embarrassment over U.S. power, and chatter about moral equivalence. In Shanghai on November 16 in front of hundreds of Chinese students, Obama touched on freedom only to say it is a challenge facing both the United States and China!

Obama's one-man "change" seems to have little bearing on our actual Asian relationships. The other day, the president encouraged North Korea to "rejoin the international community." When did it join? His claim to be "America's first Pacific president" overlooked Kennedy's and Bush père's service in the Pacific during World War II and Hoover's years as an engineer in Australia and China.

Viewed historically, the position of the United States in East Asia is favorable because of the sustained deployment of American power, the triumph of the American values of democracy and free markets, and the attractiveness of American popular culture. For most of the twentieth century, the United States had some difficulty in maintaining decent relations with Japan and China simultaneously. Since the 1970s, however, with the Vietnam war behind us, a stable balance between Japan and China has been secured by the superior strength of the United States and an equilibrium created by American leadership.

The U.S. military is still the linchpin of deterrence, keeping the peace in Korea, the Taiwan Strait, and elsewhere, as it has for half a century. But Obama is backing away from American leadership and proposing to reduce U.S. military strength in the hope that nasty regimes may do the same.

Some good news is that America's China policy has been fundamentally stable since the Nixon-Mao opening of 1971-72. This continuity has resulted from four enduring factors: Washington is markedly more powerful than Beijing, and Chinese political and military leaders know it. China, unlike the United States, faces multiple potent neighbors; challenges other than from Washington can and do rear up. Third, for Chinese leaders, domestic development and stability is a higher priority than foreign policy goals. Finally, successive American presidents have seen no net benefit in again tangling militarily with China, as the United States did in Korea and Vietnam.

The age of globalization locks in this stability. We are no more dependent on China for buying U.S. Treasury bills than the Chinese are dependent on us for buying their apparel and electronics. This mutuality should prevent any collapse in China policy, whatever the Obama administration does; mutuality on such a scale seldom breaks down suddenly.

The bad news about Obama and China is that his China policy resembles a pack of cards that is reshuffled to suit the occasion.

In February, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that "issues such as Tibet, Taiwan and human rights     can't interfere with the global economic crisis, the global climate change crisis, and the security crisis." This is one of the worst statements by any secretary of state in memory.

The Taiwan issue is about whether 23 million people will live in a democracy or under the Chinese Communist party. As Bush said, "Free nations are peaceful nations," and China threatens Taiwan. Taiwan's future is also about the balance of power in Asia. But Clinton averts her eyes and thinks, Don't let threats to Taiwan "interfere" with talking about global warming in Copenhagen! Obama declined to see the Dalai Lama before his trip to China, because that would displease Beijing. He will see the Tibetan after the trip to China: Who does that please?

Freedom is about whether the Chinese people will get news of the world unfiltered or only what the Communist party chooses for them to have. Freedom is about whether American products will get the access to Chinese markets that Chinese products have here. Freedom is about whether American scholars doing research in China are allowed the unfettered access that Chinese scholars working in the United States have. Freedom is not a card to pull out or whisk away as the occasion may require.

Obama on November 14 welcomed "the rise of a strong, prosperous China" as a "source of strength for the community of nations." Unlike Bush, he did not say a "free" or "democratic" China. Here is change we must denounce. There is a world of difference between China as an unfree superpower and China as a democratic superpower. Obama ducks the issue. Yet to see East Asia's U.S.-led security system replaced by an authoritarian Chinese leadership would undermine the interests of Washington and numerous capitals in the region.

While in China, Obama let Hu take the lead on how the visit was handled and on how the issues were framed. The mention of Taiwan in the joint Obama-Hu statement favors China by implying that sovereignty is the heart of the issue (meaning Taiwan ultimately belongs to China). No mention that any change in Taiwan's status should be with the Taiwan people's agreement or that stability in Asia would be upturned by Taiwan's disappearance as a separate nation.

The joint statement also talks condescendingly about India as part of a problem (with Pakistan) that Obama and Hu must together assess. But India is a partner no less important for Washington than China; would Obama condescend to China by jointly pontificating with India on China's relations with the appalling regimes of Burma and North Korea? It is simply not the case that China is Washington's global partner, with democratic India down at a lower rank.

A Los Angeles Times editorial asserted in January, "Obama assumes the presidency in a multipolar world." Not so. The United States was easily the world's only superpower on January 20, 2009. The danger is that Obama's "changes" will bring on a multipolar world: Talk with everybody about nothing and with nobody about anything. Slight the notion of clashes of interest among nations. Soft-pedal the idea of evil in the world. Such mushiness could soon shrink U.S. power.

In East Asia, moral example may or may not be effective in disarming rogues, but deterrence has worked. In this respect, 9/11 changed Asia less than it changed other parts of the world. Obama is not required to "reset" our relations with Asia. Rather, he should maintain the balance between Japan and China that has facilitated peace and economic development in East Asia since the 1970s. He should tell friend and foe alike that the United States considers democracy and free markets superior to authoritarianism and command economies, and give top priority to deepening America's relationships with its democratic friends, including Japan, India, South Korea, Australia, and other smaller powers. The U.S.-Japanese tie is central. Japan is with us; China is a question mark.

On particular matters, Obama must rouse the Democratic majority in Congress to end its disgraceful failure to seal a free trade agreement with South Korea. In Burma, U.S. diplomats should not be content to take one more cup of tea with Aung San Suu Kyi, but should say to the Burmese military dictatorship and the world that next year's elections will mean nothing unless Aung San Suu Kyi is fully free to campaign. On the Korean Peninsula--one place in Asia where the Bush administration achieved little--Obama ought to end the farce by changing the agenda of the Six-Party talks from terminating North Korea's nuclear program (near-impossible to agree on, impossible to verify) to moving toward the reunification of Korea (which would end the Pyongyang regime step by step and so solve the nuclear problem).

Of course, Obama might also, in a video message to Copenhagen, with an upraised arm and a slight frown, demand an end to global warming in Asia, and in his thank you notes to his nearly all male hosts on the Asia trip instruct them to roll back 5,000 years of oppression of Asian women by Asian men. The president shouldn't let Hu take the lead on everything.

Ross Terrill is an associate in research at Harvard's Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies. His latest book, Myself and China, will be published in Chinese in January.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Japan; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: amateurs; asia; asiantripfailure; bho44; china; diplomacy; japan; obama; obowma
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To: quantim

The soldier third from the left of Obama looks like he wants a personal service visit with the Zero.


21 posted on 11/22/2009 6:53:44 AM PST by capydick (''Life's tough.......it's even tougher if you're stupid.'')
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To: AndrewB

OMG! SNL DID SEX TO 0BAMA!

You gotta start a new thread with this clip.

They REAMED 0bama. This is a social milestone.

HAW HAW HAW!!! Hilarious.

Gotta see it.


22 posted on 11/22/2009 6:54:09 AM PST by paulycy (Demand Constitutionality.)
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To: capydick
Hilarious thread!

23 posted on 11/22/2009 7:05:23 AM PST by quantim (Victory is not relative, it is absolute.)
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To: yoe
"he is viewed as a 'loose cannon' "

This article is written by a NeoCon at the NeoCon Weekly Standard.

The world and most Americans perceive the NeoCons to be the loose cannons.

We know this to be true because the NeoCon controlled GOP went thru two campaign bloodbaths in 2006 and 2008.

NeoCon campaigner John McCain lost to Realist campaigner Obama.

24 posted on 11/22/2009 7:06:19 AM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: AndrewB

It was GREAT ....can’t understand why it is not getting any play in the Media today !!

Media .........the TRUTH HURTS !!


25 posted on 11/22/2009 7:07:54 AM PST by W-Girl
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To: EmilyGeiger
Now comes word in the Japanese press in Sankei News to be exact, in just the last 90 minutes, that a Major General (羅援少将 to be exact) of a hardline faction in the Chinese People's Liberation Army has given a talk at an event in Beijing, here he calls Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeoh to task and says that "peace will break down" between Taiwan and Mainland China if it insists on the status quo of the "Threes". a) Will not go independent, b) Will not reunited with the Mainland, c) Will not resolve (matters) through military means.

This is essentially a war threat, and the Japanese article says talk like this is rare.

Really great going, Obama. Brilliant.

26 posted on 11/22/2009 7:11:04 AM PST by AmericanInTokyo (1945--Japanese SHOCKED at Emperor not bowed to; 2009--Americans SHOCKED at Emperor overbowed to)
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To: quantim

Thanks! Funny stuff there - hadnt seen it.


27 posted on 11/22/2009 7:14:46 AM PST by capydick (''Life's tough.......it's even tougher if you're stupid.'')
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To: AndrewB

That...was freakin hilarious.


28 posted on 11/22/2009 7:18:55 AM PST by Vigilantcitizen
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To: Vigilantcitizen

Yes, but #26 isnt....


29 posted on 11/22/2009 7:21:19 AM PST by AmericanInTokyo (1945--Japanese SHOCKED at Emperor not bowed to; 2009--Americans SHOCKED at Emperor overbowed to)
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To: AmericanInTokyo
"In Southeast Asia after 9/11 the U.S. position improved sharply with Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. And Bush drew Vietnam and, after 2007, South Korea, under its new president Lee Myung Bak, closer to the United States"

SE Asia never suffered from BDS.

Obama does not have a clue.

Ten Bucks says Hillary is setting this punk up.

Next time tell Obama to stay home.

30 posted on 11/22/2009 7:26:39 AM PST by expatguy (Support "An American Expat in Southeast Asia" - DONATE)
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To: expatguy
Ten Bucks says Hillary is setting this punk up.

What you said.

31 posted on 11/22/2009 7:28:35 AM PST by Vigilantcitizen
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To: Scotsman will be Free

http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/clips/china-cold-open/1178451/


32 posted on 11/22/2009 7:30:34 AM PST by ExTexasRedhead (clean the sewer in 2010 and 2012)
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To: AndrewB

Great SNL skit....too bad the media won’t ask the same questions


33 posted on 11/22/2009 7:32:24 AM PST by Las Vegas Ron (Oath keepers + The NRA = FReeRepublic (.com baby))
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To: TexasFreeper2009
Obama has blundered through his entire presidency.

Reality check - he's still working on his first year of four. God help us. This is not yet 25% of the damage he will do to us.

And you know that if God does have mercy on us in 2012, in 2013 his flunkies will be busy prying every “P” (for Palin) keys out of every keyboard in the White House before they leave.

34 posted on 11/22/2009 7:34:24 AM PST by Cheburashka ("Allahu Akbar!" translates as "Kill me and stuff bacon in my mouth!")
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To: Cheburashka

They will totally raze the place first few weeks of January 2013, making “Looter Guy” look like Mother Teresa. I know this type that currently occupies the White House, OUR house. They will, out of resentment and spite following a loss to President Palin, take everything out of our house that is not nailed down, for their own use in California, New York, Chicago, Detroit or whatever else sewer these Obamanoids crawled up out of and occupied the Executive Mansion.


35 posted on 11/22/2009 7:40:04 AM PST by AmericanInTokyo (1945--Japanese SHOCKED at Emperor not bowed to; 2009--Americans SHOCKED at Emperor overbowed to)
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To: AndrewB

HAHA!!

“Do you want to kiss me? Because I like to be kissed BEFORE YOU DO SEX TO ME!”

Captured it perfectly.


36 posted on 11/22/2009 7:47:12 AM PST by autumnraine (You can't fix stupid, but you can vote it out!)
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To: paulycy

Yep, that was beyond superb. I think they are capturing the mood of the country, even if the MSM doesn’t want to admit it.


37 posted on 11/22/2009 7:48:36 AM PST by autumnraine (You can't fix stupid, but you can vote it out!)
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To: AmericanInTokyo; maikeru; Dr. Marten; Eric in the Ozarks; Al Gator; snowsislander; sushiman; ...
Hope-n-Change Asian Tour 2009:

Boiler-plate empty rhetoric, embarassingly deep bow to Akihito, pulled plug on "town hall" packed with Chicom Yute Corps, being lectured by Chicoms on economic policy, confesses irresponsible debt levels to FoxNews, etc, etc.

Thanks AiT!

日本*ピング* (kono risuto ni hairitai ka detai wo shirasete kudasai : let me know if you want on or off this list)

38 posted on 11/22/2009 8:54:08 AM PST by DTogo (High time to bring back the Sons of Liberty !!)
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To: quantim

Funny with that Chinese naval cadet looking queerly (photoshopped I believe) at 0bama our queerly acting president


39 posted on 11/22/2009 9:10:36 AM PST by dennisw (Obama -- our very own loopy, leftist god-thing.)
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To: DTogo

embarassingly deep bow to Akihito......

Just as stupid was bowing and shaking Emperor’s hand at the same time. The Empress had a bemused look on her face. She immediately knew Japan was dealing with a numbskull.


40 posted on 11/22/2009 9:14:51 AM PST by dennisw (Obama -- our very own loopy, leftist god-thing.)
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