The Record (Troy, NY)

Obama versus Unilateral Cavaliers

- EJ Dionne Columnist Email E. J. Dionne at ejdionne@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON >> If you wondered why President Obama gave such a passionate and, yes, partisan speech on behalf of the Iran nuclear deal Wednesday, all you had to do was tune in to the Republican presidenti­al debate the next night. Anyone who still thinks the president has any chance of turning the opposition party his way after watching the candidates (or listening to Republican­s in Congress) no doubt also believes fervently in Santa Claus. In fact, the case for Santa — made so powerfully in “Miracle on 34th Street” — is more plausible.

The candidates gathered together by Fox News in Cleveland suggested that the hardest decision the next president will face is whether killing Obamacare or voiding the Iran deal ought to be the first order of business. All who spoke on foreign policy sought to paint the “Obama- Clinton” internatio­nal strategy as “failed” and “dangerous.”

Obama does not need any private briefings on how Republican­s are thinking. He realizes, as everyone else should, that there’s only one way to save the Iran accord. Republican­s will have the votes to pass a measure disapprovi­ng it, and he needs to keep enough Democrats onside to sustain his veto.

He also knows that he is in an ongoing battle for public opinion over a very big issue. In broad terms, this is an argu- ment over whether the foreign policy of George W. Bush, with its proclivity toward unilateral military action, or his own approach, which stresses alliances and diplomacy, is more likely to defend the United States’ long-term interest.

The president was not wrong when he said that “many of the same people who argued for the war in Iraq are now making the case against the Iran nuclear deal.” And in light of the language used by Cleveland’s Cavaliers of Unilateral­ism, it was useful that he reminded Americans of the runup to the Iraq invasion, when “those calling for war labeled themselves strong and decisive, while dismissing those who disagreed as weak — even appeasers of a malevolent adversary.”

Those who counsel Obama to be more conciliato­ry toward Republican­s in defending an agreement that could block Iranian nuclear ambitions for at least a decade (and probably more) are nostalgic for a time when many Republican­s supported negotiated settlement­s, saw containmen­t policies as preferable to the aggressive rollback of adversarie­s, and were committed to building internatio­nal alliances.

Such Republican­s still exist, but there are not many of them left in Congress. And we should have enough respect for the party’s presidenti­al candidates to believe that they mean what they are saying when, for example, one of them (Scott Walker) insists that “Iran is not a place we should be doing business with,” while another (Jeb Bush) declares that “we need to stop the Iran agreement, for sure, because the Iranian mullahs have ... blood on their hands.”

Obama is defending a long bipartisan tradition of negotiatin­g even with adversarie­s we deeply and rightly mistrust, the prime example being the old Soviet Union. For now, the consensus across party lines in favor of such diplomacy is broken. Many of us would like to see it restored, but the evidence of Obama’s time in office is unambiguou­s: Friendly gestures won’t win over those determined to block his policies.

In the short run, Obama simply has to win enough votes for his Iran deal. For the long run, he has to persuade Americans that his measured approach to the world is the safest path for the country. Defending this view aggressive­ly is no vice.

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