An unmistakable sense of unease has been growing in capitals around the world as the
While each of the factors
may be unrelated to the direct exercise of US foreign policy, taken together
they give some allies the sense that Washington is not as firm as it used to be
in its resolve and its financial capacity, providing an opening for China or
Russia to fill the void, an Asian foreign minister told a group of journalists
in New York this week.
Concerns will only deepen
now that President Barack Obama canceled travel this weekend to the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum in Bali and the East Asia Summit in Brunei . He
pulled out of the gatherings to stay home to deal with the government shutdown
and looming fears that Congress will block an increase in US borrowing power, a
move that could lead to a US
default.
The US is still a pillar of defense for places in
Asia like Taiwan and South Korea , providing a vital security umbrella
against China .
It also still has strong allies in the Middle East, including Israel and the Gulf Arab states arrayed against
al-Qaida and Iran .
But in interviews with
academics, government leaders and diplomats, faith that the US will always
be there is fraying more than a little.
“The paralysis of the
American government, where a rump in Congress is holding the whole place to
ransom, doesn’t really jibe with the notion of the United
States as a global leader,” said Michael McKinley, an
expert on global relations at the Australian
National University .
The political turbulence
in Washington and potential economic bombshells still to come over the US
government shutdown and a possible debt default this month have sent shivers
through Europe. The head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, worried
about the continent’s rebound from the 2008 economic downturn.
“We view this recovery as
weak, as fragile, as uneven,” Draghi said at a news conference.
“At the moment, Washington is fighting
over the budget and nobody knows if the country will still be solvent in three
weeks. What is clear, though, is that America is already politically
bankrupt,” it said.
Obama finds himself at
the nexus of a government in chaos at home and a wave of foreign policy
challenges.
He has been battered by
the upheaval in the Middle East from the Arab Spring revolts after managing to
extricate the US from its
long, brutal and largely failed attempt to establish democracy in Iraq . He is
also drawing down US forces from a more than decade-long war in Afghanistan
with no real victory in sight. He leads a country whose people have no interest
in taking any more military action abroad.
As Europe worries about
economics, Asian allies watch in some confusion about what the US is up to with its promise to rebalance
military forces and diplomacy in the face of an increasingly robust China .
Global concerns about US policy came to a head with Obama’s handling
of the civil war in Syria
and the alleged use of chemical weapons by the regime of President Bashar
Assad. But, in fact, the worries go far deeper.
“I think there are a lot
of broader concerns about the United
States . They aren’t triggered simply by Syria . The
reaction the United States
had from the start to events in Egypt
created a great deal of concern among the Gulf and the Arab states,” said
Anthony Cordesman, a military affairs specialist at the Center for
International Studies.
Kings and princes
throughout the Persian Gulf were deeply unsettled when Washington
turned its back on Egypt ’s
long-time dictator and US ally Hosni Mubarak during the 2011 uprising in the
largest Arab country.
Now, Arab allies in the
Gulf voice dismay over the rapid policy redirection from Obama over Syria , where rebel factions have critical money
and weapons channels from Saudi Arabia ,
Qatar and other Gulf states . It has
stirred a rare public dispute with Washington ,
whose differences with Gulf allies are often worked out behind closed doors.
Last month, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal warned that the renewed
emphasis on diplomacy with Assad would allow the Syrian president to “impose
more killing.”
After saying Assad must
be removed from power and then threatening military strikes over the regime’s
alleged chemical weapons attack, the US
is now working with Russia
and the UN to collect and destroy Damascus ’
chemical weapons stockpile. That assures Assad will remain in power for now and
perhaps the long term.
Danny Yatom, a former
director of Israel ’s Mossad
intelligence service, said the US
handling of the Syrian crisis and its decision not to attack after declaring
red lines on chemical weapons has hurt Washington ’s
credibility.
“I think in the eyes of
the Syrians and the Iranians, and the rivals of the United States , it was a signal of
weakness, and credibility was deteriorated,” he said.
The Syrian rebels, who
were promised US arms, say they feel deserted by the Americans, adding that
they have lost faith and respect for Obama.
The White House contends
that its threat of a military strike against Assad was what caused the regime
to change course and agree to plan reached by Moscow
and Washington
to hand its chemical weapons over to international inspectors for destruction.
That’s a far better outcome than resorting to military action, Obama
administration officials insist.
Gulf rulers also have
grown suddenly uneasy over the US
outreach to their regional rival Iran .
Bahrain Foreign Minister
Sheik Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa said Gulf states “must be in the picture” on
any attempts by the US and Iran to open sustained dialogue or reach settlement
over Tehran’s nuclear program. He was quoted Tuesday by the London-based Al
Hayat newspaper as saying Secretary of State John Kerry has promised to consult
with his Gulf “friends” on any significant policy shifts over Iran — a message
that suggested Gulf states are worried about being left on the sidelines in
potentially history-shaping developments in their region.
In response to the new US
opening to Iran to deal with its suspected nuclear weapons program, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the UN General Assembly that his country
remained ready to act alone to prevent Tehran from building a bomb. He
indicated a willingness to allow some time for further diplomacy but not much.
And he excoriated new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani as a “wolf in sheep’s
clothing.”
Kerry defended the
engagement effort, saying the US would not be played for “suckers” by Iran.
Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful energy production, while the
US and other countries suspect it is aimed at achieving atomic weapons
capability.
McKinley, the Australian
expert, said Syria and the US budget crisis have shaken Australians’ faith in
their alliance with Washington.
“It means that those who
rely on the alliance as the cornerstone of all Australian foreign policy and
particularly security policy are less certain — it’s created an element of
uncertainty in their calculations,” he said.
Running against the tide
of concern, leaders in the Philippines are banking on its most important ally
to protect it from China’s assertive claims in the South China Sea. Defense
Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said Manila still views the US as a dependable ally
despite the many challenges it is facing.
“We should understand
that all nations face some kind of problems, but in terms of our relationship
with the United States, she continues to be there when we need her,” Gazmin
said.
“There’s no change in our
feelings,” he said. “Our strategic relationship with the US continues to be
healthy. They remain a reliable ally.”
But as Cordesman said,
“The rhetoric of diplomacy is just wonderful but it almost never describes the
reality.”
That reality worldwide,
he said, “is a real concern about where is the US going. There is a question of
trust. And I think there is an increasing feeling that the United States is
pulling back, and its internal politics are more isolationist so that they
can’t necessarily trust what US officials say, even if the officials mean it.”
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