Two Views: Obama and America's perception overseas

 
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WhiteHouse I'll let you decide which is accurate, but I liked the way these two opinion pieces completely refute each other. Slate:
When it comes to foreign policy, Obama's accomplishment has been less tangible but hardly less significant: He has put America on a new footing with the rest of the world. In a series of foreign trips and speeches, which critics deride as trips and speeches, he replaced George W. Bush's unilateral, moralistic militarism with an approach that is multilateral, pragmatic, and conciliatory. Obama has already significantly reoriented policy toward Iran, China, Russia, Iraq, Israel, and the Islamic world. Next week, after a much-disparaged period of review, he will announce a new strategy in Afghanistan. No, the results do not yet merit his Nobel Peace Prize. But not since Reagan has a new president so swiftly and determinedly remodeled America's global role.
Fouad Ajami writing in the Wall Street Journal:
"He talks too much," a Saudi academic in Jeddah, who had once been smitten with Barack Obama, recently observed to me of America's 44th president. He has wearied of Mr. Obama and now does not bother with the Obama oratory. He is hardly alone, this academic. In the endless chatter of this region, and in the commentaries offered by the press, the theme is one of disappointment. In the Arab-Islamic world, Barack Obama has come down to earth. He has not made the world anew, history did not bend to his will, the Indians and Pakistanis have been told that the matter of Kashmir is theirs to resolve, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the same intractable clash of two irreconcilable nationalisms, and the theocrats in Iran have not "unclenched their fist," nor have they abandoned their nuclear quest. There is little Mr. Obama can do about this disenchantment. He can't journey to Turkey to tell its Islamist leaders and political class that a decade of anti-American scapegoating is all forgiven and was the product of American policies—he has already done that. He can't journey to Cairo to tell the fabled "Arab street" that the Iraq war was a wasted war of choice, and that America earned the malice that came its way from Arab lands—he has already done that as well. He can't tell Muslims that America is not at war with Islam—he, like his predecessor, has said that time and again.
Well, both can't be true, so which is it? I commend a full reading of both articles to you.
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Comments

@Slate: Indeed he has transformed American policy towards Russia, Iran, China and Israel. The only question is, has it been transformed to something better or worse? Russia received concessions on missile defense and other issues-the "Reset Button" set us to lower, rather than stronger footing in dealing with a country that is not necessarily the adversary it once was, but not necessarily an ally either. Iran's response with regards to their nuclear program? They are opening more reactors and stepping up their efforts...hardly a diplomatic success given that this would seem to be the opposite of what we would consider in the best interest of our security. China was flaunted by the White House as unprecedented, yet a Saturday Night Live sketch received rave reviews from both sides of the aisle for exposing the flaws and botched strategy in that interaction. Israel, a solid if troublesome ally in the Middle East, if for no other reason than being an example of a reasonably successful true democracy in that region, is feeling isolated and distanced from us. We have chilled relations with that country rather than strengthed a traditional ally.

Yes, it can't be argued that he has transformed the image of America on a global stage. I would ask the question again however, has it been transformed into something more positive, or are we just becomming a different kind of joke than under George Bush?

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News from the World of Military and Veterans Issues. Iraq and A-Stan in parenthesis reflects that the author is currently deployed to that theater.