Wednesday, May 18, 2011

"Obama's 'major address' will connect Arab aspirations with America's 'enduring interests vis-a-vis Israel"

"In what's being billed as a major address, President Obama will give a foreign policy speech at the State Department Thursday. He is expected to outline his vision of the sweeping changes under way in the Middle East and North Africa and what they mean for the United States. The address will also herald the closing of the tumultuous decade following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, as the war in Iraq winds down and war against terrorism recedes from center stage in the wake of Osama bin Laden's killing.
Obama "views the situation in…the Middle East and North Africa as a real moment of opportunity for America and for Americans," (new Polls showing that America is even less popular than it was before the revolts, notwithstanding!) White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters aboard Air Force One Wednesday in response to questions about tomorrow's speech.
"In the last decade, our focus in the region was largely on Iraq, which was a military effort, and on the hunt for Osama bin Laden and the fight against al Qaeda," Carney continued.
While the fight against al Qaeda continues, Carney said, "there is an opportunity in that region to focus on advancing our values and enhancing our security, and that's what the president looks forward to discussing tomorrow in his speech."
Even the choice of venue for the speech—the seat of U.S. diplomacy—signals the Obama administration's emphasis on a more diplomatic, less militarized U.S. engagement with the region. Obama is also supposed to propose significant U.S. and international economic assistance to support fledgling Arab democracies, in particular in Egypt and Tunisia.
The speech is expected to be a forum for the administration "to say, look, this is an opportunity to finally turn the page on the post-9/11 decade," said Marc Lynch ...
Lynch also predicted Obama would emphasize that the popular uprisings of the Arab Spring, which displaced repressive regimes in Tunisia and Egypt, while sparking similar pro-democracy protests throughout Arab world—are "being driven by the people of the region. It's not about us."...
In the context of the Arab Spring, "one of the biggest challenges of the speech will be explaining to Americans that this is not primarily about us," agreed Heather Hurlburt, a former Clinton administration speechwriter. "It is about aspirations we recognize," said Hurlburt, who is now executive director of the progressive National Security Network, "but it is not going to happen on our timetable." Hurlburt suggests that Obama will use his remarks to "connect what is about us—our security and values, and our enduring interests vis a vis Israel ... ... ... ... (Okay, I believe we've heard enough!)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

US economic assistance for Egypt and Tunisia is the worst thing that can happen to the people of those two countries.