Blind Alley

Published in Neues Deutschland
(Germany) on 31 January 2012
by Olaf Standke (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Ron Argentati. Edited by Alyssa Goulding.
In view of the gigantic economic and social problems with which the United States is currently plagued, foreign policy played only a marginal role in Obama's State of the Union speech. But the president didn't ignore the problem of Iran. In addition to the formula that all options were on the table, he also left open the possibility of preemptive attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities. After all, his Republican opponent in November may bring up foreign policy, where Iran will take center stage: Obama has been too lax in his dealing with Iran; much more aggressive tactics are needed because Iran's supposed effort to build nuclear weapons is America's number one threat.

That and the negotiated IAEA visit in Tehran formed the backdrop for the recent television interview with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta. The Pentagon chief not only stirred up fear of a potential Iranian atomic bomb that could be developed as early as one year from now, he also threatened to use military force to prevent that from happening. During the presidential campaign over the coming months, the question will be whether Obama is allowing himself to be driven into a political blind alley where the sword is seen as the only solution to untying the Gordian knot.


Sackgasse
von Olaf Standke
31.01.2012



Außenpolitik spielte in Barack Obamas jüngster Rede zur Lage der Nation angesichts der riesigen wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Probleme der Supermacht nur eine vergleichsweise marginale Rolle. Am Thema Iran allerdings kam der USA-Präsident nicht vorbei. Und mit der Formel, alle Optionen seien auf dem Tisch, hat auch er die Möglichkeit eines Militärschlags gegen iranische Atomanlagen nicht ausgeschlossen. Denn wenn ihn die republikanische Seite im Wahljahr 2012 auf dem Feld der internationalen Politik angreift, dann spielt Iran dabei die Hauptrolle. Zu lasch sei sein Umgang mit Teheran, man müsse viel aggressiver vorgehen, sei Irans angebliches Streben nach Nuklearwaffen doch die größte Bedrohung für die USA.

Das und die nach zähem Ringen vereinbarte aktuelle Visite von Inspektoren der Internationalen Atomenergiebehörde in Teheran bilden den Hintergrund für das jüngste Fernsehinterview mit Leon Panetta. Darin schürt der Pentagon-Chef nicht nur die Angst vor einer iranischen Atombombe, die viel schneller als bisher gedacht, nämlich schon in einem Jahr, kommen könne; er droht auch mit militärischen Mitteln, um die Bombe zu verhindern. So steht in den nächsten Wahlkampfmonaten auch die Frage, ob sich Obama in eine politische Sackgasse drängen lässt, in der am Ende nur noch das Schwert in Frage zu kommen scheint, um den gordischen Knoten zu lösen.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Austria: There Is Still Some Check on the US Administration

Saudi Arabia: Will the Race to the Moon Create Conflicts in Space?

South Korea: A Free Pass for Violence: The ‘Triple Collusion’ of Ronaldo, Trump and FIFA

Pakistan: Setting the World on Fire

Pakistan: Hardening the Frontier

Topics

Japan: National Guard Shooting in US Capital: Misguided Incitement of Anti-Foreign Doctrine

Spain: Cartoons in the Pentagon*

Egypt: America’s New Security Playbook: How Trump’s 2025 Strategy Redraws US Power and Purpose

Saudi Arabia: ‘Either Donald Trump or Benjamin Netanyahu’

Taiwan: The Slow Spread of Anti-American Sentiment Affecting Taiwan

Austria: There Is Still Some Check on the US Administration

India: Washington Attack: Why Pakistan Will Want Trump To Get Entangled in Afghanistan

Kenya: Peace in the Great Lakes Region Now Made Possible

Related Articles

Germany: The Epstein Curse Continues To Loom Large

Germany: Donald Trump vs. James Comey: A Legal Vendetta

Germany: Unfortunately, Reality Comes to Those Who Wait

Germany: A Software for Authoritarian Restructuring

Russia: The Issue of Weapons Has Come to the Forefront*