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Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’

A military attack is unthinkable

Once cast as part of the ‘axis of evil’, Iranians have shown they are real people, not collateral damage in waiting

So Dick Cheney was right. In the end, the Iraqi people did respond to American soldiers with flowers. The only trouble was, it was their shipping out, not their digging in, that the Iraqi people celebrated. Today, as US forces marked their formal withdrawal from the towns and cities they invaded more than six years ago, the Iraqi people showed the kind of spontaneous joy the former vice-president once imagined would welcome the 173rd Airborne Brigade. There were streamers and balloons, pop concerts in the park and, yes, flowers – garlanding the abandoned checkpoints of the US military in petals.

Now, as Iraq recedes, it is the country next door that looms ever larger. Handled the wrong way, Iran threatens to define Barack Obama the way Iraq defined George W Bush.

There are some who believe Bush’s mistake was not to have shifted his aim eastward: that if he was looking for an oil-rich state in the Persian Gulf with links to terrorism and dreams of weapons of mass destruction then Iran, not Iraq, should have been his target. That kind of talk makes others nervous. They fear that the US might one day repeat the Iraq calamity, with the ayatollahs cast in the role of Saddam Hussein.

Those worriers will hardly find it comforting that the men who agitated for invasion in 2003 are back on the warpath once more: Paul Wolfowitz castigated Obama in the Washington Post earlier this month for taking “a neutral posture” towards the street protesters in Iran, calling on the president to throw all his prestige behind the uprising and against the regime. He wasn’t calling for regime change in Tehran, exactly, but Wolfowitz spoke about Iran’s rulers the same way he once spoke about Saddam.

Is that a sign of things to come? Put simply, have the events of the last three weeks in Tehran made the prospect of US-led action against Iran – up to and including the use of military force – more or less likely?

At first glance, those advocating regime change seem to have had a boost. The world has just watched a three-week infomercial exposing the brutality of Iran’s leaders. If it’s not allegations of a stolen election, including the black comedy of Monday’s announcement from the Guardian Council that, yes, there had been an error in the count and therefore Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s vote would be revised upward – it’s the violence that has followed.

One western diplomat says opinion in the chancelleries of Europe has hardened, even among those once well-disposed towards Tehran: “They have seen the face of this regime – and it’s not pretty.”

What’s more, those eager for confrontation might find an all too willing partner in Iran’s rulers. Professor Ali Ansari, a noted authority on the country, predicts that a regime that now “suffers from a serious domestic legitimacy problem – and which knows it – will seek a foreign foe, something to rally the country around.” He predicts “acts of provocation”, and only hopes Israel is wise enough not to take the bait.

Above all, those pushing for regime change could find international public opinion more receptive than it would have been a month ago. Three weeks of YouTube footage, including the blood-spattered image of Neda Soltan, the female protester shot dead in cold blood, has surely created a well of public sympathy from which any advocate of action against the mullahs could draw. One can imagine the arguments as, in 2011, President Obama, backed by his loyal ally Prime Minister Cameron of Britain, addresses the United Nations demanding a united show of strength to save the benighted people of Iran.

But the events of the last few weeks could point in the opposite direction too. Officially the US and UK say they want a change in policy, not regime – and, despite everything, that door is not closed. Indeed, it’s possible that the supreme leader’s Mugabe-like attacks on Britain – casting London and the BBC as the puppet masters behind the uprising – are a diversionary tactic by an elite that does not want to attack the US. Yes, Ali Khamenei has slammed Britain – but he has pointedly failed to rebuff Obama’s outstretched hand. In other words, a policy change by Iran is still possible.

But the deeper point relates to public sentiment, especially in the US. Seven years ago, Bush cast Iran as part of the “axis of evil”, a faraway, abstract place clothed in black and bent on destruction. Now the world’s people have read Iranians tweeting, minute by minute, on their aching desire for freedom. They have heard that Tehranis climb each night on to their rooftops to shout “God is great” – a subversive reminder to Khamenei that he is outranked by another supreme leader. They have seen, at last, that Iranians have a human face.

In this, an unexpected but eloquent source has been, of all things, Comedy Central’s satirical Daily Show. Incredibly, the programme had its own correspondent in Iran. Brilliantly sending up the grammar of flak-jacketed TV reporters, he has been ushering real Iranians into American living rooms – listening in mock frustration as they refuse to conform to the stereotype, telling him: “We don’t hate Jews, we don’t hate Americans, we don’t hate anybody.” Even the goatherd in a remote village shows a stunning knowledge of US geography; a market trader correctly identifies the US speaker of the House. As anchor Jon Stewart put it on the eve of the election: “The evil, despotic, apocalyptic death cult we know as Iran appears to be one of the more vibrant democracies in the Middle East.”

Of course, educated folk will insist they have long been familiar with Iran’s human face. They will point to art exhibitions such as Made in Iran, now in London, or Iran Inside Out in New York, movies including the new Shirin and the much-admired Persepolis, or memoirs such as Reading Lolita in Tehran. What’s different about the last few weeks, however, is that this exposure to the complexity, variety and sheer humanness of Iran’s people has become mainstream.

This could cut both ways. Some Europeans and Americans might feel such empathy for the green revolutionaries that they join the neocon call and demand their governments act to rescue the Iranians from tyranny. But it’s more likely that many would recoil from a shock and awe bombardment that would kill thousands of the very people for whom they now have a strong affinity. There was, alas, too little feeling for the peoples of Iraq and Afghanistan: they were always faceless, even in death.

All of which leaves Obama engaged in delicate diplomatic footwork. He must stand up for democracy, condemning the suppression in Iran as “outrageous”, even as he gives the ayatollahs no excuse to crack down on the protesters as foreign agents, and all the while ensuring the western offer to Iran of rapprochement in return for compromise remains on the table. It is subtle work. But now that the world’s people have seen the human face of Iran, nothing less will do. The street protesters of Tehran may have failed to topple their rulers. But in this – in showing the world that the people of Iran are human beings, not collateral damage in waiting – they have been a glorious success.

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Pressure on Honduran government

• Roberto Micheletti sworn in as new president
• Zelaya meets leftist allies in Nicaragua
• Obama administration condemns Zelaya’s overthrow

Honduras was increasingly isolated tonight as the international community lined up to denounce a coup which ousted President Manuel Zelaya.

Latin America, the United States, the United Nations and the European Union piled diplomatic pressure on the new government to quit just a day after the Honduran army seized the president in his pyjamas and bustled him into exile.

The capital, Tegucigalpa, remained tense with soldiers and armoured vehicles ringing the presidential palace but making no effort to clear nearby barricades manned by about 200 pro-Zelaya protestors.

The leftwing leader was ousted early on Sunday in a joint move by the army, judiciary, congress and disaffected members of his own party.

The architects of central America’s first military overthrow in 16 years said it was a necessary and legitimate action to remove a power-hungry president who had broken the constitution.

Congress swore in its speaker, Roberto Micheletti, as the new interim president. He urged the international community to respect Honduran sovereignty and said he would step down after presidential elections in November: “We respect everybody and we only ask that they respect us and leave us in peace because the country is headed toward free and transparent general elections. I’m sure that 80% to 90% of the Honduran population is happy with what happened today.” He said outsiders had no right to interfere. “Nobody scares us.”

Zelaya met leftist allies at an emergency summit in neighbouring Nicaragua. The summit depicted his downfall as a plot by rightwing elites to row back socialism in the region.

“If the oligarchies break the rules of the game as they have done, the people have the right to resistance and combat, and we are with them,” said Hugo Chávez, Venezuela’s president.

The presidents of Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua were expected to join Venezuela’s leader in the Nicaraguan capital Managua.

The Obama administration, conscious of the US’s long history of supporting coups against Latin American leftists, condemned the overthrow. The secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said Washington’s top priority was to restore full democratic and constitutional order in Honduras. Zelaya’s removal had “evolved into a coup”, she said.

The United Nations invited Zelaya to New York to report directly to members of the General Assembly. The head of the 35-member Organisation of American States said it would accept no Honduran president other than Zelaya. The European Union offered to mediate.

Zelaya, 56, a rich and flamboyant landowner, was elected in 2006 as a conservative but then embraced Chávez’s form of “21st century socialism”. He was popular among many of Honduras’s poor but his overall approval ratings hovered at 30%.

He angered the country’s institutions by trying to hold a non-binding referendum about changing the constitution to allow presidential terms beyond a single, four-year term. Opponents accused the president, who was due to leave office in January 2010, of plotting to perpetuate his power.

Just before the coup Zelaya fired the armed forces chief, who refused to cooperate in the referendum, and defied a supreme court ruling to abandon the vote.

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Honduras president arrested in coup

• Leftist president Manuel Zelaya exiled to Costa Rica
• Obama calls for calm after troops strike at dawn

The army in Honduras has ousted and exiled its leftist president, Manuel Zelaya, , in Central America’s first military coup since the cold war, after he upset the army by trying to seek another term in office.

Barack Obama and the EU expressed concern after troops came at dawn for Zelaya, an ally of Hugo Chávez, Venezuela’s socialist president, and took him away from his residence.

Speaking on Venezuelan state television, Chávez, who has long championed the left in Latin America, said he would do everything necessary to reverse the coup against his close ally. He said he would respond militarily if his envoy to Honduras was attacked or kidnapped.

“I have put the armed forces of Venezuela on alert,” he said on state television.

Chávez said Honduran soldiers took away the Cuban ambassador and left the Venezuelan ambassador on the side of a road after beating him during the coup.

If a new government was sworn in it would be defeated, Chávez said. “We will bring them down, we will bring them down, I tell you,” he said.

Rafael Correa, Ecuador’s president, said he would support military action if his country’s diplomats or those of its allies were threatened.

A military plane flew Zelaya to Costa Rica. CNN’s Spanish language channel said he had asked for asylum there.

Pro-government protesters burned tyres in front of the presidential palace in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, and two fighter jets flew over the city.

Honduras, an impoverished country, had been politically stable since the end of military rule in the early 1980s, but Zelaya’s move to change the constitution to allow him another term split the country’s institutions.

Zelaya sacked the military chief, General Romeo Vásquez, last week for refusing to help him run an unofficial referendum, due to be held today, on extending the four-year term limit on Honduran presidents. Zelaya told Venezuela-based Telesur television station that he was “kidnapped” by soldiers and called on Hondurans to resist the coup peacefully.

The EU condemned the military action and Obama called for calm. Honduras was a staunch US ally in the 1980s when Washington helped Central American governments fight leftwing guerrillas.

“As the Organisation of American States (OAS) did on Friday, I call on all political and social actors in Honduras to respect democratic norms, the rule of law and the tenets of the Inter-American Democratic Charter,” Obama said in a statement. “Any existing tensions and disputes must be resolved peacefully through dialogue free from any outside interference.”

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a senior US administration official told reporters during a conference call yesterday: “We recognise Zelaya as the duly elected and constitutional president of Honduras. We see no other.” A second official on the same conference call said the US backed OAS efforts to forge a resolution condemning Zelaya’s ousting, and calling for him to be reinstated.

At a meeting of the OAS in Honduras this month, Zelaya condemned America’s refusal to support Cuba’s return to the 34-member group. The OAS suspended Cuba in 1962 after Castro’s revolution.

The Honduran congress last night voted in the congressional president Roberto Micheletti as the new leader to replace Zelaya, citing constitutional articles that say the head of congress assumes the presidency in such cases.

Congress earlier had approved a supposed letter of resignation from Zelaya, but Zelaya said the document was false.

The country’s supreme court last week ordered Zelaya to reinstate Vásquez as military chief. The court said it had told the army to remove the president.

“It acted to defend the rule of law,” the court said in a statement read on Honduran radio.

Honduras, with a population of 7 million is a major drug trafficking transit point. The economy depends on coffee and textile exports as well as money sent back by Honduran workers abroad. There was no immediate sign that the unrest would affect coffee production. Reuters

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Jackson doctor hires ‘bad ass’ lawyer

The doctor who was with Michael Jackson when he died has hired a notoriously aggressive lawyer and is insisting he has done nothing wrong as the singer’s death appeared to open rifts between his family and other players in his complicated life.

The lawyer, Matt Alford, described on his own website as an “intimidating bad ass” who goes about his work “with a scorched-earth mentality”, went on television with an impassioned defence of his client, Conrad Murray, underlining that he was just a witness and not a suspect.

LA police issued a brief statement after talking to Murray on Saturday, saying he had been cooperative and provided “information which will aid the investigation”.

Murray was with Jackson when he suffered a heart attack at his home in Los Angeles on Thursday. His lawyer said the doctor found Jackson in his bed with a faint pulse, but not breathing, so he immediately began administering CPR. An official postmortem failed to determine the cause of death, pending toxicology tests that could take four to six weeks.

The Jackson family hired a private pathologist to conduct a second postmortem examination over the weekend and hinted that they might use the results to press for criminal charges – something the official police investigation has ruled out for the moment.

The family questioned whether the doctor had carried out resuscitation attempts properly, pointing out that on the tape of the emergency call requesting an ambulance he was described as “pumping” Jackson on a bed, not on the floor or another hard surface.

However, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source close to the investigation as saying the police had completed an “extensive interview” on Saturday night with the doctor and that detectives found “no red flag” during discussions about the death. “There was no smoking gun,” the source told the paper.

As tributes to the star flooded in, White House adviser David Axelrod said Barack Obama had written a letter to Jackson’s family expressing his condolences.

He told NBC: “The president obviously believes that Michael Jackson was an important and magnificent performer and obviously he led a sad life in many ways as well, but his impact is undeniable.”

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Police question Jackson’s doctor

The doctor who was with Michael Jackson when he died has hired a notoriously aggressive lawyer and is insisting he has done nothing wrong as the singer’s death appeared to open rifts between his family and other players in his complicated life.

The lawyer, Matt Alford, described on his own website as an “intimidating bad ass” who goes about his work “with a scorched-earth mentality”, went on television with an impassioned defence of his client, Conrad Murray, underlining that he was just a witness and not a suspect.

The LA police issued a brief statement after talking to Murray on Saturday, saying he had been cooperative and provided “information which will aid the investigation”.

Murray was with Jackson when he suffered a heart attack at his home in Los Angeles on Thursday. An official postmortem failed to the determine the cause of death, pending toxicology tests that could take four to six weeks.

The Jackson family hired a private pathologist to conduct a second postmortem examination over the weekend and hinted that they might use the results to press for criminal charges – something the official police investigation has ruled for out for the moment.

The family questioned whether the doctor had carried out resuscitation attempts properly, pointing out that on the tape of the emergency call requesting an ambulance he was described as “pumping” Jackson on a bed, not on the floor or another hard surface.

However, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source close to the investigation as saying the police had completed an “extensive interview” on Saturday night with the doctor and that detectives found “no red flag” during discussions about the death. “There was no smoking gun,” the source told the paper.

As tributes to the star continued to flood in from across the world, the White House adviser David Axelrod said President Barack Obama had written a personal letter to Jackson’s family expressing his condolences.

He told NBC: “The president obviously believes that Michael Jackson was an important and magnificent performer and obviously he led a sad life in many ways as well, but his impact is undeniable.”

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Obama stumbling? The hell he is

On Iran, gay marriage and the economy, the president is taking flak. But critics ignore the profound changes he is delivering

It’s a handy rule of thumb in Washington: a president’s fortunes can be divined by the way the White House press corps treats him. Think of George W Bush. At the height of his powers in 2003, reporters jockeyed for his favour, which he expressed by bestowing nicknames and sharing wisecracks. By the time Iraq and Katrina had ruined his presidency, the same hacks competed to see who could most effectively humiliate the president before a live audience.

So it was an ominous sign for Barack Obama last week when he appeared in the White House for a press conference that was his most uncomfortable to date. Reporters who had thus far treated him with deference and even admiration treated him with something close to disrespect. Obama, as the New York Times put it, “has rarely experienced as combative and contentious an hour on live television as he did on Tuesday afternoon”. Had his response to Iran, one asked, been “timid and weak”? Another tweaked the president’s “Spock-like language” about healthcare reform. One even grilled an increasingly irritated president about his furtive smoking habits. The treatment left Obama a bit testy. “I got it,” he groused. “You’re pitching, I’m catching.”

Indeed he has been catching – catching flak, that is, from critics on left and right and over both his foreign and domestic agendas. As he approaches the six-month mark of his presidency, his job has become less glamorous and more gruelling. Allies in Congress are restive and for the first time, the whiff of failures and defeats is in the air. Thus the new tone from the White House press corps, which, like animals in the wild, preys on the weak. But don’t be fooled by this dark patch. Obama’s long-term prospects remain bright.

Start on the domestic front. Here, Obama faces two titanic challenges. The first is the economy. An unexpected spike in jobless claims announced last week doused hopes that the economic downturn had finally reached an inflection point. With unemployment now approaching 10%, higher than the administration had predicted, Republicans are rallying around the argument that Obama’s $787bn stimulus bill passed in February isn’t working and amounts to a massive, deficit-swelling waste. “With all the spending that’s gone on, where are the new jobs?” asked House Republican leader John Boehner. Lately, some of Boehner’s colleagues are even fantasising about riding such talk to retake the House of Representatives in the 2010 midterm elections. (The Senate is a steeper climb for Republicans.)

It’s true that if the economy fails to recover within the next year, no amount of hope and change can save Obama’s presidency. But those 2010 elections, the first real referendum on his performance, are still 16 months away. That leaves plenty of time for the economy to pick up steam. Moreover, polls show that most Americans still blame the economic doldrums on Bush. And while stimulus dollars have been frustratingly slow to be distributed, that will soon change, with the stimulative effect likely to kick in well before the midterms, dashing the hopes of many a Republican candidate.

Obama’s second domestic trial will be healthcare. Anyone who recalls Bill and Hillary Clinton’s attempt to cover America’s 40-plus million uninsured citizens in 1994 understands that, if mishandled, the issue can cripple a presidency. Congress is beginning to craft a healthcare plan with Obama’s guidance and the early going hasn’t been pretty. Proposals have carried eye-popping price tags ($1.6 trillion, according to one preliminary estimate by a Senate finance committee), while covering a disappointingly small number of Americans. Nor have the Democrats quite settled on how they will pay for a massive expansion of care. Last week, a prominent House Democrat pronounced that “healthcare reform is on life support”.

Don’t be surprised if Obama resuscitates it. Although many Democrats are nervous about his plan’s cost, it remains quite popular with the voters to whom those Democrats answer. Moreover, Republicans and business lobbies have been slow to organise against Obama’s plan or present credible options, something GOP strategists call crucial to victory. As for the money, it can always be found (deficits can be tackled another day) and the plan’s ambitions can be reduced if necessary. As White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel has said about healthcare: “The only thing non-negotiable is success.” And the current Democratic majorities in Congress are large enough that Emanuel will not have to eat his words.

Obama is tiptoeing around other domestic land mines. The only thing that makes his congressional Democratic allies more nervous than supporting sweeping and expensive healthcare reform is the grand climate-change plan, passed by the House on Friday. However urgent it may be to fight global warming, public support for environmentalism drops dramatically in times of economic distress. But look for Obama to settle for a modest plan – a symbolic victory – rather than accept a stark political defeat. He can return to climate if need be. That may upset liberals, who are already fuming at him for not doing more to support gay marriage or the prosecution of people who authorised torture in the Bush era. But when push comes to shove, will such critics abandon Obama? Not likely.

Foreign policy is harder to predict and Obama is still learning on the job. Take the recent uprising in Iran. Obama first said little to encourage the protesters, then strongly condemned the regime. It was undeniably an uncertain response, hence the “timid and weak” charge. On the bright side, the world has witnessed the brutal face of the regime, which should make it easier for Obama to win tough international sanctions in the (likely) case that planned diplomatic attempts to talk Iran out of a nuclear bomb go nowhere.

Then there are Afghanistan and Pakistan. Thus far, Obama has been in crisis-management mode, trying to keep the government in Islamabad from falling apart and firing his top general in Afghanistan for poor management of the war effort there. But conditions may soon improve in both countries; the Pakistani military is finally cracking down on Islamic radicals. Meanwhile, Obama has ordered 21,000 more American troops to Afghanistan. But many analysts think that, much like the Iraq surge, the fight against the Taliban is eminently winnable if there are enough troops and the right counterinsurgency strategy is adopted.

So imagine, then a possible world of June 1 2010. The economy has rebounded and Obama, citing his stimulus package, is claiming the credit. A major (if not perfect) healthcare reform bill has passed, handing Obama a historical policy achievement in his first year. Iran is being squeezed hard by a disgusted international community, led forcefully by Obama, perhaps prompting a new reformist uprising against the clerics. The Taliban are at last on the run in Pakistan and Afghanistan. And, oh, by the way, the US is substantially pulling out of Iraq.

It will take luck – and more than a little political skill – for Obama to achieve such stellar results. But he’s never wanted for either. It will also take something else, however: the firm support of his fellow Democrats. There are signs that some in Obama’s party have studied the polls and the economic figures and may be wondering whether their self-interest may soon diverge from that of the president. But in fact, the Democrats’ fate is inextricably tied to Obama’s success.

Without him, the party is not particularly popular. These nervous Democrats should remember that moving an agenda as big as Obama’s was never going to be easy. But that even in difficult moments like these, his popularity remains durable and his prospects for success are better than they may appear. Perhaps Obama should propose a new motto for his party: Together we stand, divided we fall.

• Michael Crowley is a senior editor of the New Republic Magazine

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