Monday, March 30, 2009

Gallows humor

President Obama has had a rough few months. As the global economy continues its slide, what the crisis means for global trade and financial regulation will dominate discussions in London on Thursday. Rightfully so. After the economy, North Korea's impending missile launch and Afghanistan's gradual decline into disarray dominate any foreign policy discussions. With so much on his plate, not to mention health care reforms and an understaffed Administration, Iraq has fallen by the wayside. The President has admitted as much.


But lest we forget how perilous the gains we've made in Iraq are, Tom Ricks is happy to remind us:
The Maliki government is putting the screws to the Awakening movement (for those who just arrived, that's a mainly Sunni group of about 100,000 people, many of them former insurgents, who in late 2006 and 2007 arrived at ceasefires with the U.S. military presence in Iraq). The American plan was to integrate 20,000 members...into Iraqi security forces, and help the rest find other work...But the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government never really like the idea. Indeed, the first deals were cut by U.S. officials behind the back of the Iraqi government...I think Maliki's gambit is to crack down on the Sunnis while American forces are still available in sufficient numbers to back him up. This is turning into a test of strength, Sunni vs. Shiite.
Sound familiar? 

The President may be better served to focus on actually shoring up our international standing, rather than just paying lip service to the notion while using our current crisis environment to push big government, domestic programs that most independent voters hoped he would avoid.

2 comments:

Rory Doyle said...

what is "big government"?

Nicholas Lembo said...

well, for better or worse, it doesn't mean much anymore.

by the context I used it here, I simply meant the creation or expansion of a large-scale, government funded program, such as health care or social security, that requires significant new expenditures.

these institutions certainly need reform in the long run but, for me, the timing is all wrong.