Posted By Daniel W. Drezner Share

In an excerpt from his forthcoming book The Escape Artists, Noam Scheiber has a behind-the-scenes story in The New Republic about how the Obama administration mostly botched the debt ceiling negotiations with Republicans last year. I'm guessing that Scheiber's best sources were the Treasury folk, because they come off looking the best -- advising Obama to cut a deal with the Republicans in December 2010, telling him to not negotiate policy concessions to get a debt ceiling boost, and so forth. Obama did not listen to them, and we all know what happened. Scheiber goes on to note that after the debt ceiling drama of the summer, Obama learned to attack conservatives rather than compromise with them, thereby improving his political fortunes.

He closes the essay with the following:

For voters contemplating whether he deserves a second term, the question is less and less one of policy or even worldview than of basic disposition. Throughout his political career, Obama has displayed an uncanny knack for responding to existential threats. He sharpened his message against Hillary Clinton in late November 2007, just in time to salvage the Iowa caucuses and block her coronation. He condemned his longtime pastor, Jeremiah Wright, just before Wright’s racialist comments could doom his presidential hopes. Once in office, Obama led two last-minute counteroffensives to save health care reform. But, in every case, the adjustments didn’t come until the crisis was already at hand. His initial approach was too passive and too accommodating, and he stuck with it far too long.

Given the booby traps that await the next president—Iranian nukes, global financial turmoil—this habit seems dangerously risky. Sooner or later, Obama may encounter a crisis that can’t be reversed at the eleventh hour. Is Obama’s newfound boldness on the economy yet another last-minute course-correction? Or has he finally learned a deeper lesson? More than just a presidency may hinge on the answer.

There are two big problems with this kind of formulation. The first is that, for all of Obama's stumbles and bumbles on the debt ceiling issue, it's hard to argue in retrospect that he lost that political fight. Since the debt ceiling dispute, Obama's approval numbers have moved north while Congress has become historically unpopular. The improving economy likely explains some of this -- but if that was the only part of the story then Congress' numbers should be rising as well.

It's not that Obama handled the debt ceiling talks terribly well -- it's just that Scheiber misses the point that the Republicans made an even bigger hash of things. Obama came off as someone willing to deal and the House GOP came off as a group of people looking forward to the apocalypse. Looking more reasonable that one's adversaries occasionally matters in domestic politics -- and it's not in Scheiber's account (full and fair disclosure: I would have been in agreement with Scheiber six months ago).

The more interesting question is whether there's any validity to Scheiber's larger point -- that Obama's initial passivity in responding to political crises suggests he's ill-prepared for handling global crises. Does Scheiber's pattern of how Obama responded to domestic political challenges match up with his foreign policy?

I think Scheiber has half a point. As I've noted in the past, the administration's first set of foreign policies were predicated on the same basic impulse that Obama had domestically: deals and bargains were possible in many parts of the globe. However, as the administration found itself rebuffed and frustrated by various international actors (Iran, China, etc.) it quickly pivoted to a more aggressive -- and more fruitful -- counterpunching approach. Similar to how the debt ceiling negotiations play out, Obama has benefited from his initial outreaches; he can say he tried the olive branch before turning to the stick. When it comes to global actors that Obama perceives as enemies or rivals, his administration has been pretty ruthless.

Where Scheiber might have a point is with how Obama has handled America's friends and allies. Obviously, these countries should have more common interests with the United States, so by and large they should be less obstreperous. When issues have flared up, however -- with Israel on housing settlements, with Europe on the sovereign debt crisis, with post-reset Russia on anything, and with G-20 allies on quantitative easing -- the administration seems slow-moving, awkward, and occasionally shocked that these countries might have interests that diverge from the United States.

Pressuring and cajoling allies is a tricky and delicate business. One would be hard-pressed to argue that the Bush administration did a great job of it. Still, as the latest iteration of the Eurocrisis plays out, Scheiber might have hit on the Achilles heel of Obama's foreign policy acumen.

What do you think?

 

BLUE13326

5:42 PM ET

February 11, 2012

On the larger point about the

On the larger point about the debt reduction talks, that as head of government he has a responsibility to forge a deal that will address the crisis, he failed.

Politically, failure may have been a good move for him, but it was a bad outcome for the country.

I can't get inside his head, so I don't know why he failed (it may be that like many of the left he really doesn't think the debt is a big deal), or it may be illustrative of a character flaw. If it is an examplo of his timidity,that may be just what we need right now internationally. Without any serious plan to address energy secuiry (and gas creeping back up to $4/g), do we really want to confront oil-rich Russia? Intervene again in the Middle East, etc?

 

UMESHGEETA

6:45 PM ET

February 11, 2012

Indeed something is there....

Before I go to my point - 'BLUE13326' I do not think your statement that 'as a head of state he has responsibility to make a deal' has a meaning. If that is the criteria what you are saying is Obama should not have bothered to even negotiate and take whatever GOP led Congress was asking - $4Trillion Dollars of deficit all addressed through 'spending cut' and continued tax cuts for rich. What kind of governance is that? You have been having that policy in effect for entire Bush term and we know how much long lasting wealth generation / general prosperity happened because of that. How biased your opinions are!

Obama was ready for $0.8 Trillion Tax increase and $3.2Trillion spending cuts and Boehner could not bring his caucus for even that. Hence the deal fell through. He risked everything for that - even die hard Obama backers (including myself) felt he was 'selling our' house bringing our old people on road. Still that kind of accommodating deal could not please Tea Party and rest is History.

It is unbelievable that reasonable thinking people make all these non-nonsensical statements just because of their pure hatred of Obama...

Having cleared this 'responsibility garbage' out of the way, it is absolutely fair to criticize Obama that after the fiasco of Debt Ceiling he has not put forward any genuine offer to deal with Deficit and Tax Reforms. As the head of state, it is absolutely his responsibility to articulate and put forward a viable policy on table for Congress to take - this one or next Congress. Need and responsibility is to have a live policy proposal for taking; for which he actively campaigns. On that, he has given up and that is a classic incident of Obama allowing to fester the crisis....

The other point to support that argument (that Obama allows crisis to fester and that is hugely risk) is after TARP & Stimulus; he pivoted too quickly to Health Care instead of focusing on some fundamental re-engineering of American Economy (Tax Reforms, institution of Industry Policy and foundational changes to Mortgage & Housing Sector). Rahm Emmanul famously argued that Obama wanted to 'fire on all cylinders' simultaneously instead of taking bit of a 'serialized' approach. He allowed core problems of economy to fester...not that GOP has been, and even now, offering any clues. They are simply 'clueless' bunch interested in dancing to the Obama Hate Tune with single minded political lust to capture the power at any rate; if that means bringing our economy down, then so be the case; that kind of thinking is prevalent with GOP.

Again, you do Politics but keep it away from certain areas when you are already elected - and that area means to be always clairvoyant of crisis coming, keeping you powder dry for that and keeping plans ready. Obama indeed seems to punt on that.

 

USMAN714

7:33 PM ET

February 13, 2012

I agree with UMESHGEETA

UMESHGEETA! I agree with all what you are saying. That's all I have to say here. :-|

 

PEARPANDAS

10:09 PM ET

February 16, 2012

I also agree

This is a really good argument for a complex issue. I was going to comment but Umeshgeeta beat me to it.

 
 

Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

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