Obama Is Lazy Like A Fox
By: Rachel Marsden
President Obama has demonstrated leadership qualities ranging from poor to
nonexistent. But is a president who lacks visible leadership qualities really
such a bad thing? Or is he lazy like a fox? A lack of leadership -- whether
deliberate or accidental -- can have a surprising upside, as none other than the
French have historically exemplified. (And no, I'm not being facetious.)
As a conservative whose heart leans firmly right, I would have thought the idea
crazy until I moved to France four years ago, gaining insight into the
mysterious French mind-set. I came to realize that there is a more covert way to
get things done without placing your neck onto the chopping block. It may not
constitute leadership, but it can be just as effective. "Going in with the back
of the spoon," as the French call it.
In the outster of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi,
Obama let NATO allies run the operation along with contractors, proudly taking
credit for the success of the mission while bragging that it was executed
without any official American boots on the ground. Against Bashar al-Assad in
Syria, Obama seems satisfied to let Turkey do the staging, let Qatar and Saudi
Arabia do the funding, and let eventual al-Qaeda drone bait do the fighting
against a swamp of unsavory opponents, including Iranian proxies, the Al-Nusra
Front (Syrian al-Qaeda) and pro-Assad forces.
Obama recently said of the bloody situation in Egypt: "We want Egypt to succeed.
We want a peaceful, democratic, prosperous Egypt. That's our interest. But to
achieve that, the Egyptians are going to have to do the work." Meanwhile, what
the world is seeing is not merely an indiscriminate bloodbath, but rather, as
Obama presumably understands, a crackdown on Islamic extremists in the Muslim
Brotherhood by the Egyptian military, which has traditionally enjoyed the
support of the people and America's financial generosity.
What does all this have to do with the French? There's a reason why French power
is universally considered a "hard target" in espionage, along with the more
obviously difficult-to-penetrate North Korea, Iran, Russia and China -- and it
has a lot to do with the covert nature of French behavior, including leadership
style (or lack thereof). The problem with this style is that it's not very
comforting to those who want to know what's going on. In Obama's case, this
means the American people.
But the flipside is that when the average American can decipher what's
happening, so can the enemy. While it might be comforting for everyone to feel
they're on the same page, it's also comforting to the opponent. American WWII
General George Patton famously captured the feeling of discomfort: "I would
rather have a German division in front of me than a French one behind me."
The history of French action in recent decades is largely one of discreet
operations under massive smokescreens, with the French appearing inept,
unreliable or simply benign.
President Ronald Reagan was shocked when Socialist French President Francois
Mitterrand -- whom Reagan feared would include Communists in his administration
-- offered up intelligence on Communist infiltration of American research and
development, gleaned from France's Operation Farewell.
A French political friend of mine likes to joke that former French President
Jacques Chirac spoke more informally with Saddam Hussein than he did with his
own wife, Bernadette, even as his government was participating in discussions of
Saddam's ouster at the United Nations.
Yet getting discreetly down and dirty does comes with increased benefits -- like
access. As the French newspaper Le Monde reported in 2007, a highly classified
DGSE (French foreign intelligence) memo in January 2001 indicated Osama bin
Laden's intention to hijack an American airplane: "During the month of October
2000, Osama bin Laden attended a meeting in Afghanistan during which the
decision in principle to conduct this operation was sustained." Would this
intelligence, obtained from Muslim-majority Uzbekistan's intelligence service,
have existed had the French been unambiguously more hostile toward Islam?
Even the details of France's recent Operation Serval in Mali -- comparatively
public and universally regarded as an exemplary military victory -- largely
remained off French President Francois Hollande's lips in public between the
mid-January incursion announcement and the late-May television appearance during
which he rightfully called the operation a success and discussed it openly.
Reagan authorized the same kind of bamboozling in Afghanistan during the Cold
War while pretending to know nothing about it -- ultimately to America's
benefit.
The French style is certainly less comforting than the more overt leadership of
Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, who called out America's problems by name
-- "Axis of Evil" being one example -- and explained aloud to the world exactly
what his plans were. Personally, I prefer that straightforward and honest style,
but it's hard not to acknowledge the merits of acting like a smoke machine for
the fog of war, as Obama is doing. At least until it's time for him to claim
credit for the spoils of victory.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN