Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

The Secret China Memos Bush Passed to Obama – Foreign Policy

As U.S.-China relations transition from an era of engagement to one of strategic competition, some in the Biden and former Trump administrations have claimed to be abandoning four decades of naive American assumptions about Beijing. Past U.S. policy, they say, was based on a futile view that engagement would lead to a democratic and cooperative China. This, however, is not only a misreading of past U.S. policies but also dangerous analytical ground upon which to build a new national security strategy.

As U.S.-China relations transition from an era of engagement to one of strategic competition, some in the Biden and former Trump administrations have claimed to be abandoning four decades of naive American assumptions about Beijing. Past U.S. policy, they say, was based on a futile view that engagement would lead to a democratic and cooperative China. This, however, is not only a misreading of past U.S. policies but also dangerous analytical ground upon which to build a new national security strategy.

The fact is that no administration since that of Richard Nixon has made U.S. security dependent on Chinese democratization. Every administration has combined engagement with strategies to counterbalance China through alliances, trade agreements, and U.S. military power. Throwing out all previous U.S. approaches to China would mean throwing out some of the most important tools the current administration relies on to compete with China. And the Biden administration will not get its China strategy right until it is clear about what has worked in the past.

Hand-Off: The Foreign Policy George W. Bush Passed to Barack Obama; Stephen J. Hadley, Peter D. Feaver, William C. Inboden, and Meghan L. OSullivan (eds.); Brookings Institution Press, 774 pp., $39, February 2023

Perhaps the most valuable peek inside what previous U.S. administrations really thought is the newly declassified set of transition memoranda prepared by the outgoing George W. Bush administration for the incoming Obama administration in late 2008 and early 2009. Recently declassified by former President Bush and edited by former National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, the collected analysis of the world as seen by the Bush National Security Council is available to the public from the Brookings Institution Press in Hand-Off: The Foreign Policy George W. Bush Passed to Barack Obama. (Note: We both served in the National Security Council during the Bush administration and co-wrote one of the chapters in the book.)

The transition memoranda on China and Asia knock down the assertion that Bush had a naive set of assumptions about China. Even at a time when China was materially weaker than the United States or even Japan, the White House was actively preparing the toolkit that might be needed should China turn in a more aggressive direction. The administration had already seen this possibility with the crisis caused by a Chinese Air Force collision with an EP-3 U.S. surveillance aircraft within the first months of the new Bush teams arrival. To be sure, there was less urgency to the China challenge than today. In the early 2000s, China still had a smaller economy and navy than Japan, whereas today, the Chinese economy and military power have eclipsed those of Japan and are challenging the United States. Nor were Chinese leaders Jiang Zemin or Hu Jintao anywhere near as aggressive as current leader Xi Jinping.

But the question of how China would use its growing power was still open to shaping, and not just because China had less material power at the time. Chinese leaders Jiang and Hu did not rebuff Bushs entreaties on human rights, religious freedom, or trade the way Xi and his officials do today. When Washington urged the release of political dissidents at summits in the early 2000s, Beijing often complied. When Bush spoke to Jiang or Hu about religious freedom, they listened and engaged, even if they did not agree. When the United States called for improvements in enforcing intellectual property rights or transparency about the SARS epidemic, there were small but positive changes. And Bush pulled no punches: He told Jiang and Hu that the United States would pursue a comprehensive, constructive, and candid dialogue, accompanied by regular meetings with the Dalai Lama, engagement with Chinese political dissidents, and frequent public references to the priority the United States gave to its democratic allies and its commitments under the Taiwan Relations Act. Chinese leaders would have preferred the more accommodating strategic partnership they had pursued with the Clinton administration, but that was no longer on offer.

Instead, the strategic partnerships that mattered to Bush administration were the same ones that form the basis of the Biden administrations approach to China today. Bush elevated Japans standing in U.S. diplomacy to a level it had not enjoyed since the Reagan presidency, with Bush counting Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi among his closest international confidants and friends. The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, or Quad, joining Australia, India, Japan, and the United States was launched in response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. And the Bush administration went through the painstaking bureaucratic work of clearing obstaclesmainly having to do with nuclear nonproliferationto a new strategic partnership with India. All of these were part of what Bushs Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called a balance of power that favors freedom. While the engagement side of U.S. policy is in disrepute today, Bush-era investments in alliances and new strategic partnerships like India have paid off for the Biden administration as it faces a more menacing China.

Economic statecraft backed the geopolitics. Progress with Beijing on Chinas predatory trade practices was modest, and the Bush administration and its allies knew that real progress would require the full leverage of the most powerful economies in the world. It was against this backdrop that the administration negotiated bilateral trade agreements with Australia, Singapore, and South Korea and began negotiations on what became the Trans-Pacific Partnership and discussions on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. These agreements combined would have brought the weight of almost two-thirds of the world economy to the table in demanding reciprocal agreements from China. Significant actors within the Chinese economy were ready to use that pressure to move away from an economic model dominated by state-owned enterprise to create dynamism that would benefit Chinese consumers and the private sector at home and abroad based on rules shaped by the United States and its major allies.

That obviously did not happen. One reason was the global financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, which Beijing wrongly interpreted as proof that the West was declining and the East is rising, as Chinas propagandists now put it. Perhaps more significant was the emergence of Xi, whose own penchant for autocratic rule, ideological struggle, and Chinese coercive dominance of the region signaled a shift that was not predicted even by Chinas own leading experts, many of whom are now living in fear of his rule. The global financial crisis also broke the political formula in Washington that had allowed successful trade agreements to underpin U.S. grand strategy. President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the TPP in 2017, and his successor, President Joe Biden, has made it clear he will never return.

The transition memos in Hand-Off did not predict any of these developments within Chinanobody didbut the memos did lay out a strategic framework for minimizing risk and maximizing the opportunities for peace and stability in what we now call the Indo-Pacific. To say this was naive would be to argue for a strategy of strangling China at a time in its development when engagement still had some traction and when, more importantly, U.S. allies and the American public, both of whom mainly saw China as a partner, would not have supported containment and decoupling.

What are the lessons from Hand-Off going forward?

The most important lesson is one the Biden administration already has right: Invest in allies and partners to maintain that balance of power that favors freedom. Biden has elevated the Quad meetings to a regular summit, and he graciously credited Bush for starting the Quad when the leaders first assembled in 2022. The Biden administration has also launched one of the most ambitious security partnerships of the past few decades with the Australia-United Kingdom-United States agreement (AUKUS) to help Australia deploy and build nuclear-powered submarines. The pact also aims to develop advanced technological capabilities bypooling resourcesand integrating supply chains for defense-related science, industry, and supply chains.

Second, the administration needs to reconstruct some form of the economic statecraft that underpinned U.S. strategies toward China in the past. Far from helping China compete, agreements like TPP were designed to force Beijing to play by the rules or lose hundreds of billions of dollars in trade as tariffs and market barriers among the rule-abiding economies went down. Now, sadly, it is the United States that is outside the TPP and suffering from lost access, while Beijing aggressively lobbies the signatories to let the Chinese economy into the agreement. The Biden administrations Indo-Pacific Economic Framework is something of a placeholder to show Washington cares, but it lacks market access or binding rules that would influence business behavior and get Beijings attention. Multilateral organizations like the World Trade Organization also matter in this context. The Bush administration probably could have done more within the WTO to address Chinas cheating on its commitments, but the Trump and Biden administrations have gone too far in allowing the dispute resolution mechanism of the WTO to wither at a time when U.S. allies still see it as an important tool to hold China to account.

Third, the Biden administration has left the world wondering how this all ends with China. French President Emmanuel Macrons craven comments on Taiwan after his visit to Beijing were short-sighted and very damaging to regional security. More responsible U.S. allies like Japan and Australia are signing on to deeper military and intelligence cooperation with the United States. But none of them have any clarity about Washingtons longer-term vision for the relationship with China. Xis constant attacks on the United States, democracy, and U.S. allies make it difficult to imagine a happy place in U.S.-China relations. But other than blunting Chinese aggression and coercion, what is this alignment between allies for? What kind of relationship or strategic equilibrium with China is the United States aiming to achieve? The Bush administration could answer that question to an extent that helped rally allies. Biden would do well to engage with U.S. allies on the proper answer in the current geopolitical environment.

Fourth, resources matter. Some blame the Global War on Terror for convincing the Bush administration it had to get along with China. The authors never heard those arguments in our time in the White House, nor is that alleged tradeoff even hinted at in the declassified memos in Hand-Off. The fundamentals of the Bush administrations China strategy did not change because of 9/11. What did change was the availability of resources. Even after the Obama administration pledged to pivot to Asia in 2011, resources did not flow into military and diplomatic efforts the way they should have. Continuing struggles in the Middle East, federal budget sequestration, and now Russias war on Ukraine have all slowed the long anticipated rebalance of forces to deal with China. Biden and the U.S. Congress need to resource their strategy of competition, and finally make the pivot from the Bush administrations war on terror real.

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The Secret China Memos Bush Passed to Obama - Foreign Policy

As EPA readies climate rule, Obama and Trump eras linger – Roll Call

Johnson and other Republicans said the renewables, broadly considered to be wind, hydropower and solar, are too unreliable to trust as stable power sources.

Though wind and solar are intermittent sources, large battery systems can store electricity for down periods, and renewables last year surpassed nuclear power as a larger source of electricity, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Renewables, which the EIA considers wind, hydropower, solar, geothermal and biomass, generated about 22 percent of electricity in the country last year, more than nuclear (18.2 percent) or coal (19.5 percent).

Rep. Tom Tiffany, R-Wis., said his home district, in the state's north, is not ideal for wind or solar power. "We're not in a windy region, and we don't have sun for a significant amount of the year," Tiffany said. "It just isn't the best place for these intermittent sources of power."

The areas of the country with the strongest potential for wind power are the regions that stretch from the U.S.-Canada border, through the Great Plains states and down to Texas.

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As EPA readies climate rule, Obama and Trump eras linger - Roll Call

Previously unseen photos show Obama White House at time of Bin Laden raid – The Guardian US

Barack Obama

Images show president plus Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and advisers focused on Afghanistan operation that killed al-Qaida leader

Almost exactly 12 years to the day since Barack Obama authorised the raid in Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden, a cache of previously unseen pictures of events in the White House around the raid was obtained by the Washington Post.

The images of Obama, his vice-president, Joe Biden, secretary of state Hillary Clinton and key military and civilian advisers underscored the high stakes of the operation, the tension as US special forces carried out the mission, and celebrations of its completion.

Bin Laden founded al-Qaida, the terror network which attacked New York and Washington on 11 September 2001, killing more than 3,000 people.

The US invaded Afghanistan in search of Bin Laden but he avoided capture for nearly 10 years before finally being tracked to a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Obamas official White House photographer, Pete Souza, took the new images of the night.

The Post also published a timeline of the raid, from approval on 29 April 2011 to completion and Obamas address to the nation shortly before midnight on 1 May.

It included a picture already widely known, of Obama, Biden, Clinton and other aides squeezed into a small White House room, watching the raid in progress.

With an unremarked echo of current investigations into Biden and former president Donald Trump over their handling of classified information, the paper said: At 4.05pm, Souza took the now iconic photo of Obama and his advisers intensely watching the video feed of the raid.

A document on the desk remains blurred in the version released by the Obama Library. The library withheld 307 photos describing their contents as national security classified information.

The images the library did release show discussions between Obama and aides also including Leon Panetta, then CIA director; James Clapper, director of national intelligence; Tom Donilon, national security adviser; and Bill Daley, White House chief of staff.

In 2020, Obama described deliberations over the raid in his memoir, A Promised Land.

Joe weighed in against the raid, Obama wrote of Biden, in a book released shortly after the former vice-president beat Trump for the White House.

As had been true in every major decision Id made as president, I appreciated Joes willingness to buck the prevailing mood and ask tough questions, often in the interest of giving me the space I needed for my own internal deliberations.

Biden was not the only adviser and Washington veteran to counsel against the raid. Obama wrote that he knew Joe, like Gates, had been in Washington during Desert One.

Ordered by President Jimmy Carter in April 1980, Desert One was an attempt to rescue US hostages in Iran that went badly wrong, resulting in the deaths of eight Americans in a helicopter crash and severe damage to Carters hopes of re-election. Obama was a year out from his own re-election campaign when he ordered the Bin Laden raid.

Robert Gates, the defense secretary and a holdover from the Bush administration which launched the hunt for Bin Laden, told Obama that no matter how thorough the planning, operations like this could go badly wrong.

Obama has said Panetta, the homeland security adviser John Brennan and the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Adm Mike Mullen, favoured mounting the raid. Clinton, Obama said, thought it was a 51-49 call but came down on the side of sending in the Seals.

Brennan later saluted Obama for one of the gutsiest calls of any president.

Pictures published by the Post also showed Obama working on the speech he made to announce Bin Ladens death. In one celebration shot, Biden and Mullen displayed rosary beads they carried while the raid played out.

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Previously unseen photos show Obama White House at time of Bin Laden raid - The Guardian US

Brandon Johnson Reveals the Advice He Received From Former President Obama – NBC Chicago

Chicago mayor-elect Brandon Johnson is set to take office next month, and he says he received some advice from arguably the most famous living politician who hails from the city.

Johnson was speaking at an event Thursday when he revealed the somewhat-surprising guidance he was given by former President Barack Obama, who along with former first lady Michelle Obama famously raised two daughters while serving his two terms in the Oval Office.

We spent a lot of time talking about our families, Johnson said. Heres someone that was president of the United States, was an organizer and worked as a legislator, (but) he raised his family too.

That wasnt the only household-happiness advice the former president gave Johnson.

His advice to me was to make sure that you spend as much time with the kids as possible, and to take the trash out, he said.

The counsel echoes what earlier reports had indicated about the conversation between the two men. According to Lynn Sweet of the Chicago Sun-Times, Obama called Johnson after his victory earlier this month, giving him advice on family and also offering assistance and support as the new mayor takes office.

Johnson has two sons and a daughter with his wife Stacie, and has said he still plans to take as active a role as he can in their lives even as he moves into his offices at City Hall.

The new mayor-elect will take the oath of office on May 15.

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Brandon Johnson Reveals the Advice He Received From Former President Obama - NBC Chicago

Duct tape can’t stop Drew Barrymore. She scoots in on Michelle Obama – Los Angeles Times

Daytime talk show host-with-the-most, Drew Barrymore, is known for getting up close and personal with guests, but is her intimate interview style too much for a former first lady?

On Mondays episode of The Drew Barrymore Show the host addressed the internet fodder regarding her touchy-feely persona with a gimmick involving duct tape and the Secret Service.

In her opening segment, Barrymore sat in her armchair with a nervous expression as her Drews News co-host Ross Mathews and two Secret Service agents approached wielding yellow tape ahead of her interview with former First Lady Michelle Obama.

Hey, Drew. These are my friends from the Secret Service, Mathews said. They saw the memes about how close you get to people youre interviewing and they just want to make sure you arent gonna pounce on our special guest today, so Im gonna go ahead and strap you down.

Barrymore gave rueful nods as Mathews taped her to her seat. Oh gosh, I get it, she said. Look, Im in on the joke, I know that I get too close to people and Im too much, but what do you expect with the guest we have coming out?

Who wouldnt want to be close to [her]? ... Ill tell you one thing I have to be myself, she said before busting herself free from the constraints.

Barrymore welcomed Obama onto the show to discuss her new book, The Light We Carry: Overcoming in Uncertain Times, saying that, at night, shed hold the book to her chest wishing the former first lady were her family, mom, sister.

In the follow-up to Obamas acclaimed bestseller Becoming, Obama discusses strategies for staying hopeful and balanced in an era of uncertainty. The book also takes a deeper look at issues around race, gender, and visibility, as well as practical wisdom and advice for working through fear, finding strength in community, and living life with boldness.

Barrymore asked Obama how to live a big life and remain grounded and connected.

Its a deep, very good question, because its not just for people who are living the stereotypic big life because no matter how far weve gone I still see myself the way you see yourself, the former first lady said.

I am Michelle Robinson. Nobody knew who we were until we were in our 40s. I mean, who is Barack Obama? Weve spent the majority of our lives living as a lovely, loving married couple on the South Side of Chicago, we had great jobs, we got engaged in service, we had these two little girls, and then my husband decided to run for president and I was like, What is wrong with you? We have a nice life here.

So what I say about the White House, the White House doesnt change you, who you are, it reveals who you are, she continued. And if you were raised to be grounded and humble, you practice that, that is who you are. And so for me, I was raised on the South Side of Chicago by Marian and Fraser Robinson, and they taught us to respect people, to work hard, to treat each other as we would want to be treated.

Drew Barrymore holds hands with Michelle Obama on The Drew Barrymore Show on Monday.

(The Drew Barrymore Show / Ash Bean)

Barrymore almost made it to the end of the interview without doing her famous chair scoot, but when Drew revealed that shed once seen Obama at a gala and felt too intimidated to walk over and greet her, the former first lady encouraged her to cross hard rooms, and Barrymore caved and inched toward the former first lady to hold her hands.

Get close, girl! Obama said, laughing

OK, so I need to cross the room? Barrymore asked.

You have to cross the room. Especially if its me, Obama replied. Do it.

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Duct tape can't stop Drew Barrymore. She scoots in on Michelle Obama - Los Angeles Times