5 Quagmires President Obama (Probably) Won't Address in His Last SOTU
Messes for a legacy.


Barack Obama's election as president of the United States was supposed to be transformative.
After being officially nominated for president by the Democratic Party in the summer of 2008, he promised that "this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal," and that "this was the moment when we ended a war and secured our nation and restored our image as the last, best hope on Earth."
The war he was talking about was the Iraq War. Obama had called it a "dumb war" back in 2002 when running for Senate out of Illinois. The same basic idea continued in his presidential campaign. Obama ran on a platform of disengaging the U.S. from military operations in Iraq and refocusing on Afghanistan, a "good war" that, Obama argumued, was being ignored because the U.S. was being distracted by Iraq.
Barack Obama entered the Oval Office in January 2009 with the U.S. engaged in two wars and promising to bring both of them, at different paces, to a close. His administration phased out "war on terror" terminology in 2009, but not the policies.
His mention of foreign policy successes have become rarer and rarer with successive States of the Union. He will almost certainly not take credit one last time for ending the war in Iraq. He stopped doing so more than a year ago, as ISIS gained ground in post-war Iraq. At last year's address, Obama celebrated the end of the combat mission in Afghanistan. He almost certainly won't mention the complications with that narrative since then.
Just a year from leaving office, Obama is poised to leave his successor with the United States engaged in wars in at least three countries and with messes partially of America's making littering the world. It won't be part of the legacy he claims tonight.

1. Afghanistan
In his 2008 campaign, Obama promised to pivot from the war in Iraq to the war in Afghanistan, which he argued had been overshadowed by the distraction in Iraq. In the 2012 election, he campaigned on having ended the war in Iraq and, after ordering a "surge" of troop numbers in Afghanistan, on ending the war in Afghanistan by 2014. It didn't happen.
Now the U.S. plans to keep just under 10,000 troops in Afghanistan through the end of Obama's term, with Afghanistan's fragile government opening the door for an even longer stay. In 2012, the World Bank estimated 97 percent of the country's gross domestic product came from one form or other of international spending.
With the presidential candidates for 2016, when they discuss foreign policy, interested in talking up more intervention in Syria or how the Iraq war and/or subsequent withdrawal contributed to the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan threatens to continue to be both indefinite and ignored.

2. Iraq
In the 2008 election, Barack Obama promised to bring the Iraq War to an end. But at the time, the Bush administration was already negotiating a status of forces agreement (SOFA) with the government of Iraq that, because of Iraq's refusal to extend immunity to U.S. military personnel and contractors, ended up being a road map to end the war in Iraq by the end of 2011.
As the SOFA deadline approached, President Obama tried to extend it, attempting to negotiate for 10,000 U.S. troops to be permitted to remain in Iraq. The Iraqi government resisted, and President Obama was forced to stick to candidate Obama's stance on Iraq thanks to a deal struck by George W. Bush. That series of events didn't stop President Obama from taking credit for ending the war in Iraq when running for re-election in 2012.
And taking credit for ending the war in Iraq in the 2012 presidential campaign didn't stop Obama from calling it "bogus and wrong" to place the responsibility for ending the Iraq war on him when the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) started making significant territorial gains in Iraq. He made it clear he did not consider himself responsible for the decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq, even as he had taken credit for that decision in order to garner support in his re-election campaign. Obama also questioned the premise that a U.S. troop presence would have had an effect on the dysfunctional Iraqi politics he blamed for ISIS making gains in Iraq.
And that doubt about the usefulness of U.S. troops on the ground in Iraq in inducing stability in the country, in turn, didn't stop President Obama for recommitting military assets to Iraq. This June, the U.S. deployed 500 military personnel into Iraq as part of "Operation Inherent Resolve," the U.S.'s anti-ISIS military campaign. The war in Iraq never ended. And last month saw the first confirmed U.S. combat death in Iraq since 2011, with Defense Secretary Ashton Carter acknowledging U.S. troops were and would be participating in direct action on the ground that put them in harm's way. The Iraqi government responded by saying it didn't ask for, nor did it want, U.S. ground operations in its country. It's unlikely the U.S. will pull back from Iraq next year. Instead…

3. Syria
After the Iraqi government expressed opposition to U.S. troops being deployed in the country, the U.S. announced it would be sending "fewer than 50" special ops forces into Syria.
The U.S. sent 400 troops in the spring to train Syrian rebels to fight ISIS. The goal was to train more than 5,000 rebel soldiers a year for three years. The $500 million effort has yielded "four or five" active fighters. The Defense Department is seeking $600 million more to train rebels.
And a year ago last September the U.S. started bombing ISIS targets in Syria. That came a year after the Obama administration tried, but failed, to commit the U.S. to military action against the government of Bashar Assad in Syria, who the U.S. insists must be replaced for peace to be achieved in Syria. The U.S.'s official opposition to Assad continues even as its focus has shifted toward ISIS, which launched a coordinated series of terrorist attacks in Paris.
In September, Russia, Assad's most powerful ally, started launching airstrikes in Syriameant to shore up Assad's government, and, Russia insisted, attack ISIS positions. A few weeks before the Paris attacks, an ISIS bomb took down a Russian commercial jet over Egypt. Anne Patterson, the assistant secretary of state for near east affairs, told the House Foreign Affairs Committee that up to 90 percent of Russian airstrikes in October were against moderate factions of Syrian rebels. Nevertheless the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, Gen. Joseph Dunford, insisted Russia was not targeting the Free Syrian Army, the primary U.S.-backed rebel group, when Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) asked whether the U.S. would support the rebels it backed if they were attacked by Russia.
Late last month, the U.S. and Russia agreed to regulations on aircraft and drone flights in Syria, since they're both operating in the air over that country. Earlier this week, Turkey shot down a Russian fighter jet it said had crossed into Turkish airspacde. Russia's got troops on the ground in Syria, like the U.S., as does Iran. Russia and Iran, and Iraq and Syria, are also cooperating on anti-ISIS operations in Iraq and Syria, but the U.S. has largely aligned with other regional powers, like Jordan and Saudi Arabia, ensuring continued involvement in the ongoing Syrian conflict.

4. Yemen
As recently as September 2014, President Obama was pointing to U.S. counterterrorism operations in Yemen as a model of success for the campaign against ISIS. Since then, Houthi rebels drove the government of Abd Rabbuh Al-Hadi, out of the capital city of Sanaa. Al-Hadi had replaced long-time President Ali Saleh, who stepped down after pressure from "Arab spring" protests. A proxy war broke out between the Iranian-backed rebels, who hold Sanaa, and the ousted government, backed by Saudi Arabia and the U.S., which operates out of the city of Aden. The Obama administration provided support as Saudi Arabia launched airstrikes against rebel positions in Yemen.
Since 2002, the U.S. has launched up to 225 drone strikes in Yemen, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, with up to 1215 people, and 167 civilians and 18 children, killed in those strikes, with the most recent confirmed strike coming in September. The U.S. suspended its counterterrorism operations in Yemen, briefly, at the beginning of the year. Before the outbreak of war, there were concerns by the U.S. that the Yemeni government was using U.S. drone strikes to target local enemies. Now elements of Al-Qaeda in the Arabic Peninsula are reportedly fighting against the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels that Saudi Arabia and the U.S. are also working to dislodge. President Obama's "model of success" in the war on terror has become anything but.

5. Libya
Even where the Obama administration's military interventions have managed to be as limited in scope as envisioned, limited engagement on the part of the United States doesn't guarantee limited consequences.
In 2011, President Obama committed the U.S. military to intervention in Libya's burgeoning civil war, based on a United Nations Security Council resolution Obama said he pushed along with U.S. allies at the behest of the Arab League, which wanted an intervention that would "save lives in Libya."
While the U.S. insisted regime change wasn't a goal of the U.S.-backed intervention in the Libyan civil war, Hillary Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time, took credit for the Libyan leader Col. Qaddafi's ouster. Now, as the Democratic presidential frontrunner, Clinton defends the Obama administration's decision to intervene in Libya, even as its left Libya on the brink of being a failed state and helped to destabilize the wider regions, with Libyan weapons and fighters joining conflicts from Syria to Nigeria. The U.S. is involved on both sends of that impact zone, with President Obama announcing the deployment of 300 troops to Cameroon to assist a regional force battling Nigeria's Boko Haram less than two weeks after announcing the deployment of special ops forces in Syria.
President Obama may have abandoned the term "global war on terror" when he entered office, but he's leaving his successor with one in everything but name.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"The $500 million effort has yielded "four or five" active fighters. The Defense Department is seeking $600 million more to train rebels."
That should give us 5-6 more. Worthwhile investment.
We're stimulating the economy! The more inefficient, the better! Next we'll spend $1.2 billion teaching one dude to load a magazine.
Don,
Apart from that, the article missed something when it said Obama changed terminology but not anti-Terror policies in '09. Along with dropping "terror" as much as possible in documentation, thus confusing our efforts to some degree, he made the PC idea of removing anything referring to Islam from our anti-terror (whatever it was now being called - man caused harm? Extremism?).
So, interviewing Mosque personnel, surveilling Mosques, pursuing Islamic related investigations that would otherwise by obvious were now off the table. This was a huge change, and most media, including this article writer, missed it for a long time.
You cosmos couldn't go just one goddamn day without talking about Obama, could you?
Can you believe a political magazine is talking about the President on the day of the State of the Union!?
CLARITY!
Break this war up pls.
Why is Ed such a racist?
No mention of Trump, i see. Why are you shilling for Big Donald, Ed?
For the $hill bucks, of course
Redeemable for fantastic Trump Steaks. The best, juiciest, most flavorful steaks you will ever taste.
And they're 'uuuge!
But you have to go to AC to cash them $hill bucks in though.
/shudder
that is what she said
$hill bucks? So...how much we talkin'....?
Uh, asking for a friend.
Some of your friends, i assume, are good people.
He would still be better off talking about those things instead of the U.S. economy.
Maybe he'll change things up and do a Q&A
http://humanevents.com/2016/01.....ll-plants/
he definitely won't mention the military blockade of Yemen which imports 80-90% of their food. over 15 million Yemenis are experiencing hunger with 7 million in the most severe stage. We could actually see President Peace Prize be complicit in the deaths of more people than the holocaust.
And you definitely won't hear our first black president talk about his support for the ethnic cleansing and genocide of black Africans in Libya. The rebels used lock the black Africans in cages of the zoo and humiliate them before execution. Entire black villages in Libya have disappeared
Americans don't care about hungry Yemenis, what with all the food deserts here and all those unfortunate children with food insecurity.
Another home run for you Krayewski. I bet you don't get a lot of invitations to cocktail parties. I am going to go back and look at some more of your stuff Ed.
I posted a similar corny as hell comment in another post for a different reason than I am posting it now:
Missing from the pages of history are countless names of politicians, philosophers, and pundits who filled their sails with the prevailing winds. Cemeteries are filled with these nameless, voiceless ghosts from cocktail parties past.
Those with the courage to tack against the wind whom we remember. Pilots who guided us away from rocky shores.
Holy shit that is awful.
How do you un-post?
Hey! Everyone lookit ol Suthernboy talkin' all purdy like one a'dem big city sissy boys.
Prolly gots him one o dem fancy color teevees.
A scalawag through and through!
You use your tongue prettier that a $20 whore!
It's just embarrassing.
You been readin' them 'books,' boy?
I put 'em under my pillow at night.
Do them 'books' have picture of nekked ladies? Asking for a friend.
Cissy
"Those with the courage to tack against the wind whom we remember. Pilots who guided us away from rocky shores."
You deserve to have someone beat you up and stick you in a locker.
I can't deny that.
There's that fag talk again.
Blah blah blah blah blah, typical libertarian isolationism poppycock.
With the right people in charge, and with the correct strategy, I think we can win all of these wars, and maybe a few others as well.
Ed counts five quagmires. Barry, secretly, counts five new states voting Democrat in 2016! Surprise bitches, empire!
Well Crusty, we actually could.
Whether or not we want to or should is another matter altogether.
OT: ATF is all over those Seattle grease dumpers!
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/.....rease-dump
Someone will be held accountable, right?
Anything to stop the spread of Sandy and Danny.
Very confusing. The ATF seems to confirm it is in fact putting up cameras for a "criminal investigation" but I can't verify the source of the grease-dumping.
What are "grease dumpers" and what do their activities have to do with Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms?
I can't believe people are still writing stuff - with a straight face - like "people were crying and hugging in the streets" (found in one of today's links).
Barack Obama entered the Oval Office in January 2009 with the U.S. engaged in two wars and promising to bring both of them, at different paces, to a close.
Do you know who else was engaged in two wars and promised to bring both of them to a close?
Well, that guy, you have to give him credit for actually following through.
The Senate and People of Rome, in the consular year of Scipio Amelianus and Lucius Mummius?
Corporal Ted Bronson and Woodrow Wilson Smith?
You left out O-care.
5 quagmires Obama won't address and not a goddamn giggity in sight. I am ashamed of you people.
In our defense we were a might bit distracted by Suthenboy's flowery prose.
Bush's fault!
Bush's fault!
Bush's fault!
Bush's fault!
Bush's fault!
In all seriousness, I do blame Bush for Obama, so in a way...yeah.
I blame that dude who touched the monolith. He started this shit.
ruh-rohhhh
sanders up double-digits over clinton in new hampshire
Live free or Die!
But I have to say it... you know who else polled well in New Hampshire?
Daniel Webster?
Spoilsports, they removed the editor's comment.
Start making cash right now... Get more time with your family by doing jobs that only require for you to have a computer and an internet access and you can have that at your home. Start bringing up to $8012 a month. I've started this job and I've never been happier and now I am sharing it with you, so you can try it too. You can check it out here...
Open This Link For more Information.........
??????? http://www.Wage90.Com
Right wingers love to repeat this, but the internal quote is badly out of context:
"After being officially nominated for president by the Democratic Party in the summer of 2008, he promised that "this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal,"."
The fuller quote is far less messianic:
"But I also face it with limitless faith in the capacity of the American people. Because if we are willing to work for it, and fight for it, and believe in it, then I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal; "
Well, slightly less messianic.
That's in the eye of the beholder. But it certainly was not a "promise" as the poster says.
My last pay check was $9500 working 12 hours a week online. My sisters friend has been averaging 15k for months now and she works about 20 hours a week. I can't believe how easy it was once I tried it out. This is what I do..
Clik This Link inYour Browser....
? ? ? ? http://www.workpost30.com