Re: It's Okay to Speak Nicely in Public
by
EarlyBird
06/16/2009, 2:31 PM #
Reagan's hard line and talk about "evil empire" was a necessary corrective to the mushy four years of Carter and the general malaise that had gripped the US and the Europeans. We looked defeated and insular after Vietnam; Carter was making arms reductions overtures from a point of weakness; basically gave Afghanistan to them, etc.
Reagan knew that the first thing he had to is get respect from the Soviets once again, put them on their heels and show some confidence.
Obama has a different problem with the Arab world and Iran. Rather than one government to deal with, he (or any president) must consider the whole broad variety of audiences he's interacting with, and in the context of following on eight years of American military action in their neigborhood.
It's not that speaking nicely will make our enemies like us more; it will make their supporters and would-be supporters like them less.
Outside pressure helps these tyrants consolidate and hold onto power. We don't need to constantly give their domestic PR machine fodder, by stating the obvious, that Islam as practiced in most countries is backwards and wretched, or that the Arab world is a dysfunctional mess. These people have an abundance of pride and fear, perhaps the two most overriding emotions they have.
Ahmadinejad has relied on this for years now. There is no better way to consolidate power, especially in a part of the world that is historically whiny and feels picked on and abused by history, to say, "See, if I am not in charge, the Great Satan will come in and mess with us again!" Same goes for extremist Islamist political parties and other groups, when it comes time to recruit new savages. Bush's bellicosity was the best thing that ever happened to the mullahs in Iran and elsewhere; Obama's softness really messes with their power over their people.
I think Obama has struck exactly the right tone for the situation we are in at this time.