A slew of bipartisan reports
are hoping to push the former secretary of state to increased military action
in the Middle East, particularly Syria
"D.C. foreign policy
elite are giddy that hawkish Barack Obama will be replaced by much more hawkish
Hillary Clinton."
—Zaid Jilani, The Intercept
—Zaid Jilani, The Intercept
Though the hawkish stance of
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has been too often ignored this
election season, new
reporting on Thursday highlights how her presumed win in November will
likely usher in a more aggressive, bipartisan foreign policy in the Middle East
and beyond.
"The Republicans and
Democrats who make up the foreign policy elite are laying the groundwork for a
more assertive American foreign policy via a flurry of reports shaped by
officials who are likely to play senior roles in a potential Clinton White
House," the Washington Post's White House correspondent Greg Jaffe
reports.
One such study, published Wednesday
by the Center for American Progress (CAP)—which is run by president Neera
Tanden, policy director for Clinton's presidential campaign—recommends the next
administration step up its "military engagement" amid a more
"proactive and long-term approach to the Middle East."
This includes, among other
things: building "on the Obama administration's campaign to defeat the
Islamic State and Al Qaeda militarily by deepening multilateral cooperation
with regional partners and taking steps to help create a regional security framework;"
as well as being "prepared to use airpower to protect U.S. partners and
civilians in certain parts of Syria."
The latter recommendation is
seemingly a direct regurgitation of Clinton's repeated
call for a "no-fly zone" in that region—one she reiterated during
Wednesday's presidential debate.
Jaffe also highlights an
upcoming report by the Brookings Institution, due out in December, which has
been produced by a "team of top former Clinton, Bush, and Obama
administration officials," as well as one authored by a bipartisan
group led by former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on behalf of
the Atlantic Council.
"Taken together,"
Jaffe reports, "the studies and reports call for more-aggressive American
action to constrain Iran, rein in the chaos in the Middle East and check Russia
in Europe. The studies, which reflect Clinton's stated views and the direction
she is likely to take if she is elected, break most forcefully with Obama on
Syria."
"Virtually all these
efforts," he continues, "call for stepped up military action to deter
President Bashar al-Assad's regime and Russian forces in Syria."
Jaffe further notes that
"in the rarefied world of the Washington foreign policy establishment,
President Obama's departure from the White House—and the possible return of a
more conventional and hawkish Hillary Clinton—is being met with quiet
relief."
Or, as The Intercept journalist
Zaid Jilani put it,
"D.C. foreign policy elite are giddy that hawkish Barack Obama will be
replaced by much more hawkish Hillary Clinton."
Indeed, Jaffe's attempt to
paint Obama as "doveish" was ridiculed by journalist Glenn Greenwald
and others who have worked to highlight the president's ongoing secret drone
war and military operations across the Middle East and Africa.
Jaffe writes that "[t]he
disagreement over Syria policy reflects a broader rift between the Obama White
House and the foreign policy establishment," of which Clinton is a
member.
The reporting comes in the
final weeks of the presidential campaign, during which Obama has campaigned
aggressively on behalf Clinton, turning his back on any of these tensions. But
Jaffe quotes a "senior administration official who is involved in Middle
East policy" who said of the call for a no-fly zone: "You can't
pretend you can go to war against Assad and not go to war against the
Russians."
To which Greenwald and Jilani
quipped:
Obamas administration is cautioning
Hillary Clinton is risking war with Russia, behind anonymous quotes.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/washington-foreign-policy-elites-not-sorry-to-see-obama-go/2016/10/20/bd2334a2-9228-11e6-9c52-0b10449e33c4_story.html?postshare=771476985034353&tid=ss_tw …pic.twitter.com/mADdicyKNy
You're ruining all the nice
feelings by bringing up stuff like this. https://twitter.com/ZaidJilani/status/789178926660583425 …
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