The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

While Putin takes action, Obama gives tedious lectures

- The National Review Jonah Goldberg Readers may write to Jonah Goldberg via email at goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com.

If the humiliatio­n of the Obama administra­tion continues at this rate, you should soon expect to see Secretary of State John Kerry on all fours at the United Nations, getting paddled by the Russian foreign minister and shouting, “Thank you, comrade! May I have another?”

Last Monday, President Obama and Vladimir Putin had a meeting at the United Nations. All Putin wanted from it was a photo of the two men huddling together. The Russian president needed to show his people that he’s still a major player on the world stage, a big man driving events. Obama, who spent much of the last year trying to isolate the butcher of Ukraine, gave Putin exactly what he wanted.

What was Obama’s price for granting Putin this PR windfall? The leader of the free world made the Russian autocrat listen to another tedious lecture about how Putin doesn’t understand his country’s interests as well as Obama does. While Obama droned on about the importance of cooperatio­n and communicat­ion, Putin was probably counting the minutes until he could get back to reviewing Syrian targets for his bombers.

It didn’t take long for Putin to reveal what he thinks of Obama’s sermons on the importance of communicat­ion. On Wednesday, a three-star Russian general marched into the U.S. embassy in Baghdad and issued a démarche — a fancy diplomatic word for a formal, non-negotiable declaratio­n. The general reportedly instructed U.S. officials that Russia would commence airstrikes within the hour and that American forces had better clear out.

A State Department spokesman later said, “We’ve seen media reporting that has suggested Russian missions have begun.”

There’s a nice irony here in that Obama has often said that he only learned about the failures of his administra­tion from media reports. So perhaps Putin thought this was the way Obama liked to be informed of unfortunat­e events.

Regardless, Putin’s planes started their bombing runs. Russia claimed they were targeting the Islamic State, but the bombs landed where intended: on U.S.backed Syrian rebels. Russia’s confidence was well-founded. Upon hearing the news that our allies on the ground were being slaughtere­d, Kerry met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the U.N.

Kerry issued this less-than-blistering denunciati­on: “I relayed and reiterated the concerns that I expressed in the course of the U.N. Security Council meeting which was led by Russia today: concerns that we have about the nature of the targets, the type of targets and the need for clarity with respect to them. [...] We’re concerned, obviously, if that is not what is happening.”

No doubt our friends are reassured by the news that if Russia bombs them, America will immediatel­y respond by expressing our “concerns.”

At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Ash Carter convened a press conference. He did say that he takes the Russians “at their word.”

“My problem isn’t that I don’t understand what they’re doing,” Carter said. “I think my problem is that I think what they’re doing is going to backfire and is counterpro­ductive.”

This is the Obama doctrine in a nutshell. The president’s favorite rhetorical trope is to justify withdrawin­g from the world on the grounds that the “internatio­nal community” will fill the vacuum created by our abdication. Our president responds with mournful words that doing so is not in the villains’ interests.

Having made his pronouncem­ent, the ostrich buries his head back in the sand.

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