
When
On foreign policy in particular, Obama had been singing this tune for years.
No doubt partly out of a desire to distinguish himself from then-senators
At the time, it was an open question whether Obama's opposition was in fact driven by his sober-eyed and realistic assessment of the facts or whether it was driven by ideology and politics. On the one hand there was a good case to make against the war based on cold, hard-headed reasoning. But there was also cause to suspect that Obama -- a committed left-winger on foreign policy since college, who needed to differentiate himself from
Now don't get me wrong, I have no problem with being ideological. I do it every day. What sticks in my craw is lying about it to yourself or to the country. Insisting that you don't have an ideology is a great way to advance your ideological agenda without actually having to defend your ideology. That's why president Obama loves to say that he only cares about "what works" and what's best for the country. I mean, who is against policies that work? Who doesn't care about what's best for the country? According to the president, the answer is always clear: Anyone who disagrees with him.
Nearly six years since he took office, the shtick is getting old. But if you want to keep insisting that Obama's policies on health care, immigration, taxes and foreign policy have nothing to do with an ideological or political agenda, well, bless your little heart.
More to the point, what has this "non-ideological" foreign policy gotten us? Despite enjoying more global goodwill than any newly elected U.S. president in modern history, Obama has overseen a shocking decline in America's standing in the world. Everyone is mad at, or disappointed in,
Indeed, it is in this regard alone that Obama has made good on his repeated vows to be a force for global unity. Arabs and Israelis alike think he's feckless (as early as 2011,
Two years after the Benghazi attack, Islamists are doing cannonballs in our embassy's pool in
Personally, I think Obama's foreign policy is besotted with ideological and political considerations. But at this point it doesn't matter because it has failed on the only terms Obama claimed to value: it hasn't worked.
Comment by clicking here.
Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and editor-at-large of National Review Online.
