Shadow Government
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Canceling the Asia trip is Obama’s opportunity to show some humility

Perhaps I am guilty of piling on, but I think there is one more important thing to add to Will Inboden’s timely observations. Obama’s unfortunate, if understandable, decision does provide the administration with an opportunity to do something that the 2008 campaign promised but the administration has yet to deliver: A change in tone. President ...

SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

Perhaps I am guilty of piling on, but I think there is one more important thing to add to Will Inboden's timely observations. Obama's unfortunate, if understandable, decision does provide the administration with an opportunity to do something that the 2008 campaign promised but the administration has yet to deliver: A change in tone. President Obama could give brief, rueful remarks apologizing that he and his spokespeople made political hay criticizing President Bush for "ignoring Asia" and boasting that "America is back" and now they are even more guilty on this very score than Bush ever was.  

Perhaps I am guilty of piling on, but I think there is one more important thing to add to Will Inboden’s timely observations. Obama’s unfortunate, if understandable, decision does provide the administration with an opportunity to do something that the 2008 campaign promised but the administration has yet to deliver: A change in tone. President Obama could give brief, rueful remarks apologizing that he and his spokespeople made political hay criticizing President Bush for "ignoring Asia" and boasting that "America is back" and now they are even more guilty on this very score than Bush ever was.  

This critique was always nonsense because the Bush administration pursued a nuanced regional strategy that showed exceptional results with a record of good relations simultaneously with Japan, India, and China that no other administration matched. (To be fair, the record was far more mixed with respect to North Korea, but no worse than Obama’s thus far.)

The only "evidence" that critics could tout — and tout they did, even the serious Obama players who knew better — was a decision to downgrade the delegation to a few regional meetings and to cancel a trip. If memory serves, one of those was justified by the need to stay in Washington to defend General Petraeus and ambassador Crocker, who were facing particularly nasty partisan attacks over the Iraq surge in September 2007. 

Democrats have never really apologized for the shabby treatment of Petraeus and Crocker and I don’t expect them to do so now. But wouldn’t it be classy for President Obama and his foreign policy team to admit that their criticism of Bush’s Asia policy was unwarranted? Or, if they want to hold onto it, wouldn’t it be classy for them to admit that the critique now applies in spades to themselves?

This is a real "mote and beam" moment for the Obama administration. If they were to seize it and actually offer genuine contrition, the earth and waters might not begin to heal, but they would surely honor what was the most popular as-yet-unfilled promise they offered. And doing that would be the most politically smart and useful thing the White House could do — at a time when they need all the good news they can generate. 

Peter D. Feaver is a professor of political science and public policy at Duke University, where he directs the Program in American Grand Strategy.

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