New York Post

How Putin Rolled Obama

And offered a lesson for Trump

- rich lowry comments.lowry@nationalre­view.com

PRESIDENT Obama has finally had it with Russia. It only took eight years of cold reality — topped off by the Russian interferen­ce in the November election — to make the outgoing president almost clear-eyed about the Kremlin.

Not that Obama is ready to admit error. Asked by George Stephanopo­ulos on Sunday if he underestim­ated Vladimir Putin, Obama said no, he had only missed how cyber-hacking could be used to meddle in our electoral system — in other words, it was a technical mistake, rather than a fundamenta­l mis-assessment of a foreign adversary.

Perhaps the president can be forgiven for not being more forthright, since it would require acknowledg­ing how spectacula­rly his “reset” failed.

Obama began his term with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton presenting her Russian counterpar­t with a (mis-translated) reset button, and ended it watching the Kremlin target Clinton’s party and campaign team with no evident respect for US sovereignt­y or fear of US retaliatio­n.

The reset was premised on willful naïveté about Russia.

It required forgiving and forgetting the Russian invasion of Georgia that had occurred only in August of 2008, on the cusp of Obama’s election. It meant looking away from the poisoning of the former FSB agent Alexander Litvinenko in London, a crime that British authoritie­s concluded in 2007 was an assassinat­ion carried out by Russian intelligen­ce. It demanded believing that temporary Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, a supposed modernizer, was something other than a placeholde­r for the real power in the Kremlin — Putin.

Obama thought that misunderst­andings and ill will had undermined the US-Russian relationsh­ip under George W. Bush (who himself had an early soft spot for Putin) and his more deft, re-assuring touch would make new memories. In 2010, the White House was patting itself on the back for forging “win-win outcomes” with Russia.

The touching emphasis on mutual interests and respect failed to understand Vladimir Putin’s mo- tives. How he must have snickered when, at a summit in 2012, Obama was caught on a hot mic telling Medvedev that he should relay to Putin to give him “space” because after the election he’d “have more flexibilit­y.”

The Russian leader cared only about power and honor (and riches for himself and his cronies) and was immune to Obama’s blandishme­nts.

Putin stole the 2011 Russian parliament­ary elections anyway. He invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea in 2014 anyway. He intervened in Syria in 2015 and bombed Aleppo to rubble anyway.

The administra­tion always made the minimal response, and actually welcomed Russia’s entry into Syria as part of a face-saving way out of Obama’s “red line” fiasco.

It is only now, after the Russian meddling in the November election, that all the apologists for Obama’s reset have converted en masse into stalwart Russia hawks. They almost sound ready to reconstitu­te the Cold War-era Committee for the Free World — after years of accommodat­ion of Moscow.

Oh, how they mocked Mitt Romney when he said in 2012 that Russia was our foremost geopolitic­al rival. And resisted calls to arm Ukraine against the Russian invasion. And welcomed the faux chemical-weapons deal Russia forged in Syria and took seriously, time and again, the utterly bootless attempts to cut cease-fire deals with Russia in Syria.

Perhaps Russia’s hacking over the last year would have turned liberals against Moscow no matter what, but one gets the sense that, in their minds, Russia’s chief offense was taking the wrong side in the election.

Now, with Obama’s reset in tatters, Donald Trump wants to pursue his own version. Putin has a dark view of the United States, so it must be a mystery to him why every new American president is so convinced that he can get along with the Russian, despite all the evidence to the contrary. Trump should learn from Obama’s failure, and not replicate it.

 ??  ?? What me, worry? Obama badly underestim­ated his Russian counterpar­t.
What me, worry? Obama badly underestim­ated his Russian counterpar­t.
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