How the world views Obama at one year
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| Paris
If there was anything Germans wanted most from Barack Obama in the first year of his presidency, it was action at the climate summit in Copenhagen, Denmark. They knew the new American president represented change.
That鈥檚 why some 300,000 Germans gathered near Berlin鈥檚 Brandenburg Gate when candidate Obama gave his main foreign-policy speech there in July 2008. (President Bush鈥檚 last state visit to Germany a month earlier was ghostlike 鈥 a media-free visit outside Berlin.)
Last summer, Germans cheered President Obama when he agreed at the Group of 8 summit to a limit of 2 degrees C on global warming. Green Party adviser Bastian Hermisson quipped it was 鈥渁 giant leap for the US and one small step for mankind.鈥
Yet in the hapless aftermath of Copenhagen, German attention fixated not on a US president failing to spin a miracle deal, but on China鈥檚 ability to control the outcome. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao鈥檚 repeated 鈥淣o鈥 in the key meetings was seen by many in Berlin as a historic shift 鈥 to a world in which transatlantic power is constrained and rising powers from Brazil to South Africa have new clout.
A year after the ebullient inauguration of America鈥檚 first president of color, the perception abroad of Obama is tempered by a recognition of the limits on his power. On Nov. 4, 2008, Obamamania reached such planetary peaks that it was widely felt he was elected president of the world. Dominique Moisi, a leading French intellectual, called it a 鈥淐opernican shift鈥 in perceptions about the United States.
Indeed, as a symbolic figure, Obama remains, a year later, an inspiration, a 鈥渞ock star,鈥 a Jack Kennedy with African roots. He isn鈥檛 particularly liked in Israel and Russia. But his approval ratings in Africa, Europe, and Asia are strong. Obama鈥檚 poll-sapping criticism inside America from 鈥渢ea party鈥 Republicans doesn鈥檛 get great mention abroad.
In global surveys, he edges out Angela Merkel and the Dalai Lama as the No. 1 admired figure. In the past year, respect for the US has spiked, too. A GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media survey in December, conducted in 20 nations, showed the US moving from 7th to 1st among admired countries.
鈥淲hile most nations鈥 reputations do not undergo major change from year to year, the US has clearly bucked the trend,鈥 notes Xiaoyan Zhao, director of the GfK Roper study.
Despite growing criticism in some quarters, Obama is lauded for 鈥渃hanging the tone鈥 of US foreign policy. Many experts view him as speaking to a global public in a new way on universal values. America鈥檚 鈥渞eset鈥 on Russia is one of many policy changes by Obama designed to challenge old beliefs or conditions: In Cairo Obama said the US is not an enemy of Islam. In Prague, Czech Republic, he called for an end to nuclear weapons. At his Nobel acceptance speech he stated that 鈥淎merica cannot insist that others follow the rules of the road if we refuse to follow them ourselves.鈥 In Shanghai he told students that a US-China confrontation is not destiny.
He鈥檚 given credit abroad for handling a US economy in sluggish recovery. Nightmare scenarios of a world dragged into depression, a palpable fear a year ago, have somewhat receded.
鈥淭here鈥檚 logic in the fact that Obama first took to restoring America鈥檚 image ... by adopting a radically new tone towards the outside world,鈥 says former French Foreign Minister Hubert V茅drine, 鈥渋n particular the Arab-Islamic world and Russia, where the Bush team was stuck in a deadlock.鈥
The Chinese watched Obama walk off Air Force One in Shanghai in heavy rain, holding his own umbrella, alone. The image flashed to netizens across the country who marveled at the world鈥檚 most powerful man dealing with the rain by himself, not swarmed by aides. 鈥淗e鈥檚 charming and elegant,鈥 notes a former diplomatic translator in Beijing. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 not to like?鈥
In Paris, they loved the way Obama and the first lady visited the kitchen and hotel staff, shaking hands and smiling, countering notions that he is cold or merely cerebral.
Still, the global view in early 2010 is hardly idyllic. Obama鈥檚 grades on manifold hard problems are incomplete. Most analysts agree he was dealt a difficult hand. But, in the past half year, some experts and foreign leaders use terms like 鈥渄isappointing,鈥 鈥渘aive about Iran,鈥 鈥渋ndecisive on Afghanistan,鈥 or 鈥渢oo fast on Israeli settlements.鈥
Critics have called him weak, a Jimmy Carter figure relying too much on American 鈥渟oft power.鈥 Human rights groups from Hong Kong to London decry the difference between candidate Obama and President Obama.
Opinionmakers and diplomats overseas remain divided. After 365 days, the consensus is still a hefty 鈥渨ait and see鈥 on new American leadership. Year 1 with Obama at the helm brought no instant utopias, rainbows, unicorns, or millenarian reconciliations between lions and lambs in the world鈥檚 far-flung hot spots. Few expected this; but in Planet Hollywood, some of the global citizenry were hoping for it after the storybook election.
鈥淚t is undeniable that Obama鈥檚 remarkable speeches and his engagement policies have helped reduce Middle East tensions significantly, albeit temporarily,鈥 notes French intellectual Karim Emile Bitar, contacted in Lebanon. But he adds that while 鈥渢he Lebanese still support Obama by a 3-to-1 margin, skepticism is growing. The dichotomy between words and deeds is becoming more obvious by the day.鈥
Yet publics can be fickle. Europeans spent eight years bitterly complaining about US policy. But now with a president who has 77 percent approval in much of Europe, little is being done to help Obama with issues from Russia to disarmament to Afghanistan. 鈥淥bama has already more than met our expectations of change,鈥 notes Constanze Stelzenmuller at the German Marshall Fund in Berlin. 鈥淵et Europe has not risen to the occasion.鈥
Chinese elites know Obama sees the Middle Kingdom as a high priority, which draws mixed reaction: Obama has moved away from an all-defining antiterror policy that Beijing had grown comfortable with after 9/11. Cai Jiahe of the Johns Hopkins-Nanjing Center in Nanjing, China, finds it unusual for Sino-American relations to start so smoothly with a new US president.
鈥淭he US has made apparent adjustments in its diplomatic policy,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is intentionally dwarfing itself and thinking twice when dealing with China, which is actually a condition of winning Chinese cooperation in the future.鈥
New administrations make gaffes overseas. Obama鈥檚 is no exception. Poles, for example, turned apoplectic when the US announced on Sept. 17 that it wasn鈥檛 going ahead with a missile shield promised by Mr. Bush. Sept. 17 is the date in 1939 of the Soviet invasion of Poland. The White House quickly dispatched envoys to reassure Warsaw.
鈥淩elations are restored,鈥 says Bartosz Weglarczyk, foreign editor at the Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza. 鈥淏ut it looked like Poland and East Europe were taken for granted by America and that makes Poles angry. It鈥檚 a pride thing.鈥
For the most part, the 鈥渨ait and see鈥 consensus on Obama abroad falls roughly into two camps: a 鈥渕ore time is needed鈥 camp, and a 鈥渢ime is running out鈥 camp.
The more-time theorists argue it is unrealistic to set ambitious goals on intractable problems 鈥 and expect quick results. Mr. Moisi argues that when you look at his progress on healthcare, stewardship of the economy, and overseas agenda, 鈥淏arack Obama has done more in one year than any US president.鈥
Much discussed in Europe and the Middle East is a new Foreign Affairs article by Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter鈥檚 national security adviser, called 鈥淔rom Hope to Audacity.鈥 It lays out nine agendas Obama is pursuing, from treating China as both political and economic partner to starting talks with Cuba to affirming that a 鈥済lobal war on terror鈥 does not define America鈥檚 role to being an honest broker in the Middle East to shifting ties with Russia.
鈥淚n less than a year, [Obama] has comprehensively reconceptualized US foreign policy,鈥 Mr. Brzezinski writes.
Yet as Moisi also comments, 鈥淔or a president who wants to make history with his action, and not only speeches, there are objective limits to the power of the word.鈥
For the 鈥渢ime is running out鈥 camp, Obama鈥檚 inexperience is outweighing his intelligence. Perhaps the biggest disappointment is in the Arab world. Expectations were high after Obama鈥檚 speech in Cairo and his demand to freeze Israeli settlement activity. But the president鈥檚 backpedaling on settlements, combined with administration critiques of the UN Goldstone report, which called for an investigation into war crimes by the Israeli army in Gaza, brought widespread disaffection among Arabs.
Mamoun Fandy, a Middle East expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, who spent Christmas in Damascus, Syria; and Cairo, says the feeling in both cities is that Obama 鈥渢alks the talk but doesn鈥檛 walk the walk. Expectations after the Cairo speech were very high ... but he now looks status quo American 鈥 nothing different but color and the color isn鈥檛 coming out.鈥 He adds: 鈥淗ere people think Osama will outlast Obama.鈥
Still, others urge patience before pillorying him. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 make a serious analysis of a president after one year 鈥 not with Kennedy, not with Reagan,鈥 says Mr. V茅drine. 鈥淏ut many of us in Europe feel it will be a tragedy for the world if Obama does not succeed.鈥 蟻