Advice for Obama

For those of you looking for some foreign policy ideas that are a bit more innovative than, say, Hillary Clinton’s recent Senate testimony, the smart people at MIT’s Center for International Studies have released an interesting set of memos offering “Advice for President Obama.” Some highlights: Start building a “regional security community” in Asia, modeled ...

Walt-Steve-foreign-policy-columnist20
Walt-Steve-foreign-policy-columnist20
Stephen M. Walt
By , a columnist at Foreign Policy and the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
589486_090115_Advice_Obama_1.15_resized2.jpg
589486_090115_Advice_Obama_1.15_resized2.jpg

For those of you looking for some foreign policy ideas that are a bit more innovative than, say, Hillary Clinton’s recent Senate testimony, the smart people at MIT’s Center for International Studies have released an interesting set of memos offering “Advice for President Obama.” Some highlights:

  • Start building a “regional security community” in Asia, modeled on the OSCE in Europe, as a long-term substitute for the current “hub-and-spoke” network of U.S. alliances.
  • Push NATO to appoint a European as Supreme Allied Commander, in order give Europeans a bigger stake in NATO’s performance and increase their incentive to create more effective fighting forces.
  • In Afghanistan, “embark on negotiations with whatever groups of the Taliban are willing to reciprocate.”
  • In the Middle East, replace the current peace process with “American pressure — not a dirty word — based on the Arab peace initiative” (this from Anat Biletzki of Tel Aviv University, former chair of the Israeli human rights group B’tselem).
  • Revise U.S. border control policy with Mexico to concentrate “on the smaller number of high-risk subjects…[and] radically expand the number of people permitted to cross the border without search.”
  • “Triple funding for the Fulbright Program to bring more bright foreign students to United States,” and “reconfigure media efforts like Al-Hurra along a C-Span type model.”
  • Focus counter-terrorism efforts on “disrupting the slowly forming networks of disaffected youths,” and avoid large-scale military operations that stimulate rather than dampen terrorist recruitment.

The memos contain a lot of outside-the-box but eminently practical advice, and I hope someone on the Obama team takes notice. Maybe the reported new head of Policy Planning?

PAUL J. RICHARDS/Getty Images 

Stephen M. Walt is a columnist at Foreign Policy and the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University. Twitter: @stephenwalt

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