海角大神

The big lie that Obama can't lead is crumbling

Prizing bravado, we鈥檝e undervalued President Obama's brand of quiet competence.

鈥淚f you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it,鈥 instructed the Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, 鈥減eople will eventually come to believe it.鈥

For 2-1/2 years, the big lie repeated about President Obama has been that he鈥檚 not a real leader. Responsible critics called him diffident, spineless, and rudderless. Irresponsible critics called him a socialist, a Muslim, and not an American. Now, even after his brilliant planning and direction of the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, detractors are complaining that he didn鈥檛 have the guts to release photos of Mr. bin Laden鈥檚 corpse.

Outdated notions of leadership

Some of this maligning simply reflects the same savage partisan attacks leveled against every president (except Ronald Reagan) since Watergate. Some of it reflects darker bigotry toward Mr. Obama. But it also shows our outdated and wrongheaded notions of leadership.

American culture mistakenly prizes bravado and arrogance as sure signs of leadership. Public showmanship 鈥 like donning a flight suit in front of a 鈥淢ission Accomplished鈥 banner 鈥 is easy. Quiet, cool, competence that gets results 鈥 like pulling together an international coalition to protect civilians in Libya in record time 鈥 is hard.

It鈥檚 a bias we learn as kids. Our history books lionize war heroes, yet are often silent about the diplomats who prevented conflict.

Accomplishments

Let鈥檚 recall the herculean tasks Obama has already accomplished:

  • He stabilized the worst economy since the Great Depression. Though unemployment remains stubborn, the stock market is basically back to where it was before the global economic meltdown. His stimulus bill kept America humming and saved hundreds of thousands of jobs, while his rescue of General Motors saved an industrial icon.
  • His administration kept thousands of over-extended Americans from losing their homes by laboring mightily to forestall foreclosures.
  • In spite of ferocious opposition, he passed long-overdue reforms of our health-care system that had eluded the reach of many past presidents.
  • He signed into law a bold package of regulations to boost consumer protection and restrain Wall Street鈥檚 greed.
  • He negotiated a historic nuclear-arms reduction treaty with Russia鈥檚 Dmitry Medvedev.

Forgetting these and other accomplishments, the public has regrettably bought into the corrosive and dishonest campaign to degrade Obama. Goebbels-style nihilism that rejects anything Obama does as odious remains a powerful narrative.

The good news is that Obama鈥檚 shrewd and calculated management of the hunt for bin Laden shows how hollow these critiques are.

For months, Obama discreetly oversaw the raid. He should be praised for concealing US intentions from the Pakistanis, who seemed willfully blind about bin Laden鈥檚 whereabouts.

Compare Obama鈥檚 stealth with his predecessor鈥檚 search for bin Laden. George W. Bush was embarrassingly gullible dealing with the Pakistanis. According to Bruce Riedel, a former CIA officer and senior adviser to four presidents on the Middle East, Bush 43 was too easily 鈥渄azzled鈥 by Pakistan鈥檚 former president, Pervez Musharraf.

In 2002, Mr. Musharraf assured Washington that bin Laden was almost certainly dead. Later, Musharraf鈥檚 government hinted to the Bush administration that bin Laden was on a kidney dialysis machine, half dead in a cave in Afghanistan.

In his book 鈥淒eadly Embrace,鈥 Mr. Riedel quotes former Afghan Foreign Minister Abdallah Abdallah saying, 鈥淢usharraf skillfully played the American administration, throwing 鈥榙ust in Bush鈥檚 eyes.鈥 鈥

Good taste

Good taste is another facet of leadership. Contrast the way the Bush administration orchestrated a public trial and execution of Saddam Hussein, turning it into a vulgar spectacle, with Obama鈥檚 shrewd refusal to publish photos of bin Laden鈥檚 body. His announcement of bin Laden鈥檚 death was restrained and sober, not at all celebratory 鈥 the right note to conclude a sensitive military operation. Obama鈥檚 later visit to ground zero was a fitting bookend to a sad chapter in United States history.

Obama鈥檚 hawkish critics chide him for allegedly 鈥渟itting on the sidelines鈥 during recent uprisings in Yemen, Tunisia, Bahrain, Egypt, Libya, and Syria. Take it from someone who has reported from across the Middle East: Sitting out potential Arab civil wars isn鈥檛 abdication of leadership; it is wisdom.

And yet, when facing near-certain humanitarian disaster, Obama wisely and rapidly put together a broad NATO coalition to deal with the Libyan revolt while keeping American involvement to a minimum 鈥 no boots on the ground and no dead Americans.

It鈥檚 true that Obama hasn鈥檛 made tackling the debt a priority. But when Republicans controlled the White House and Congress for much of the past decade, US debt exploded. On that issue, the public will have to lead.

A friend, a center-right voter, told me recently, 鈥淭he reason I voted for Obama is because he has no hatred in him.鈥 In another era of divisive bitterness, Lincoln preached, 鈥淸w]ith malice toward none, with charity toward all.鈥 It鈥檚 worth noting how closely Obama鈥檚 philosophy of leadership approaches that.

Walter Rodgers, a former senior international correspondent for CNN, writes a biweekly column.

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