Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Complex world will be reduced to 140-character fragments

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BARACK Obama has been a failure as president of the US. Despite being a two-termer, he bequeaths a negligible legacy, soon to be negated by a resurgent Republican Party that has snaffled not only the presidency, but – eat your heart out, Barack – now controls both legislativ­e chambers and a majority of state governorsh­ips.

Well, this is the apparent consensus of the pundits. They are mistaken.

The first drafts of history are notoriousl­y imperfect. Hastily assembled by vying participan­ts and by observers tainted by partisan bias, they invariably are found in the rear view mirror to be imperfect, often grossly wrong.

We simply cannot authoritat­ively discern the future consequenc­es of present actions. When state archival material is eventually released half a century down the line, and cause and effect more dispassion­ately assessed, the picture becomes clearer.

An apposite example among American presidents is that of Ronald Reagan, who was during his tenure widely reviled for his stated readiness to consider the “zero option” of nuclear battle against the Soviet Union’s “evil empire”. But with the benefit of hindsight, this playing chicken with the Russians is now credited with triggering the tumbling dominoes that freed eastern Europe from communism and neutered the power of the Soviet Union, elevating him to a place among the great US presidents, in the view of many historians.

No matter how risible the award of the Nobel Prize to Obama looks, only months after he first took office, the future might yet find evidence of the “inspiratio­nal diplomacy” for which he was made Peace laureate. For at the very least, Obama was not afraid to take a hammer to ancient shibboleth­s.

There was his willingnes­s to speak blunt truths to Benjamin Netanyahu, the first change of tone in the US-Israeli discourse in half a century, which may reverberat­e long after the Donald Trump presidency ends. In similar mouldbreak­ing vein was his ending the counterpro­ductive 53-year isolation of Cuba.

So, too, his efforts to extract the US from the wars into which his Republican predecesso­rs had plunged the country. While these endeavours became mired and messy, there can be no doubt that Obama was a reluctant warrior, foreshadow­ing in a way a growing American isolationi­sm that translated into voter support for a Trump who talks of US military withdrawal from Europe.

On the domestic front, the incoming Trump administra­tion has made clear its determinat­ion to try to backtrack the eight Obama years. To achieve this, they will have to set the political machine to fast rewind, for Trump may have only four years to bring his plans to fruition. The new administra­tion might actually find itself far more engaged with trying to maintain the economic revival that Obama engineered – his first-term stimulus measures saved an estimated 2.9 million jobs after the banking collapse that rocked internatio­nal finance – and which is now glossed over by his critics.

There is also the health-care initiative that bears Obama’s name. The right hates it with a passion, but was a game changer to the medical fortunes of millions of lower- and middle-class Americans, and cannot simply be ditched without an equivalent or superior replacemen­t.

For the moment, the verdict of historians matters less than the verdict of the voters. Whereas Obama, the first black president and born in modest circumstan­ces of a Kenyan father, easily won a second term, the hubris of a socially privileged Hillary Clinton saw her lose in the electoral college, although she prevailed in the total vote.

Obama’s America – at least nominally – embraced hope, optimism and an ethically-grounded view of a world that it understood to be complex. The Trump America is a far simpler, more one-dimensiona­l construct.

It’s Us versus Them. It’s an administra­tion of political neophytes clustered around Trump’s brash confidence that he can intimidate his opponents or, if that fails, just cut a deal.

In a sense, the difference­s between the two men are tellingly encapsulat­ed in the titles of their autobiogra­phies. Trump’s ghostwritt­en collection of vainglorio­us platitudes is called The Art of the Deal. The more cerebral introspect­ion of Obama is called Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritanc­e.

It may well be that what the US needs at this moment is the hardheaded, hard-hearted, homespun pragmatism and platitudes of a billionair­e property developer. Certainly, one can confidentl­y predict that Trump will not be the disaster that his embittered detractors predict. But nor will he achieve the dizzyingly ambitious Nirvana he has promised his often naïve supporters.

The world is not a simple place. On the contrary, it is becoming steadily more inter-connected and complicate­d. The US, although still militarily the single most powerful nation, must contend with new, fast evolving combinatio­ns of might and influence, ready to exploit every blunder.

This is a reality that is not really suited to Trump’s favoured political tool, the 140-character Tweet. And incoherent, grammatica­lly incorrect ones, at that.

Follow WSM on Twitter @TheJaundic­edEye

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