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Monday 9 January 2017

Nine things Obama will be remembered of

As Barack Obama prepares to leave office on 20th January 2017
things his presidency may be remembered for:
– Making history –
If historians were to write only one thing about Barack Hussein Obama,
they would likely note that — 143 years after slavery was abolished —
a young Illinois senator became the first black president of the United
States.
Obama, just 47 at his 2009 inauguration, harnessed magisterial oratory
to rally a diverse electoral coalition behind a message of “hope and
change.”
In office, Obama sometimes struggled to turn that poetry into the prose
of governance. Racial tensions — underscored by police shootings of
unarmed black men and conspiracy theories about his birthplace —
persisted.
But the very fact of his election confirmed monumental changes in
American society.
– Too big to fail –
Obama’s first term in office was dominated by economic freefall.
A real estate crisis spawned a financial meltdown that torpedoed Wall
Street banks and lenders, and was metastasizing into an economic crisis
of global proportions.
Outgoing president George W. Bush and the Federal Reserve had kicked
off the government’s first panicked efforts at containment, but Obama
faced down ideological opposition to large fiscal stimulus, extending
government spending by $831 billion and providing ballast to the
economy.
As he leaves office, the political and social aftershocks of that financial
cataclysm are still being felt, but the economy has added jobs for 75
straight months.
– ‘Justice has been done’ –
“Tonight, I can report to the American people and to the world that the
United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden.”
With those words on May 2, 2011, Obama exorcised the anger and
frustration of millions of Americans — that the most powerful country
on earth could not hold the man accountable for the 9/11 attacks.
The risky special forces operation was also illustrative of Obama’s
controversial drone-and-raid approach to counterterrorism. As he leaves
office, Al-Qaeda offshoots and affiliates remain potent, but their
leadership in Afghanistan and Pakistan has been decimated.
– Legislative toil –
“It’s one of the few regrets of my presidency — that the rancor and
suspicion between the parties has gotten worse instead of better,”
Obama said in his final State of the Union address.
From the moment Obama was elected, Republics in Congress vowed to
oppose him tooth and nail.
Efforts to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay and enact gun controls
— even after the massacre of young students at Sandy Hook, the
emotional nadir of his presidency — would fall victim to partisan
rancor.
– A deal with a half-life –
For more than two decades, the United States had rolled out sanctions
and covert actions to prevent arch foe Iran from obtaining a nuclear
weapon. Obama tried a different tack, engaging in secret talks with the
Islamic Republic.
That gambit ultimately yielded a deal that saw Iran halt its sprint toward
a nuclear weapon, in return for substantial sanctions relief and a dollop
of international legitimacy.
The pact would strain US relations with Iran’s enemies Israel and Saudi
Arabia, but prevented a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and defused
tensions between Iran and the United States that have simmered since
the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
– No turnabout on Syria –
No international crisis tested Obama’s foreign policy or his high bar for
US military intervention like Syria.
Even when Bashar al-Assad defied Obama’s red line on chemical
weapons use and killed countless thousands of civilians — along with
Russian and Iranian forces — the man who came to office on an anti-
war ticket rejected calls to step in.
Syria will likely be in crisis for years to come.
Critics will long argue about whether Obama’s policy was sensible and
to what degree his decision damaged America’s reputation, allowed the
Islamic State group to grow, fueled an immigration flow that destabilized
Europe and allowed Russia and Iran to extend influence in the region.
– Change the climate –
After the climate skepticism of Bush, Obama’s eight years in office
resulted in a tidal wave of environmental legislation, protecting marine
ecosystems, curbing carbon emissions and boosting renewable energy.
In a bid to engrain environmentalism into America’s body politic, Obama
hiked Alaskan glaciers, snorkeled at Midway Island and rushed through
ratification of the Paris Climate Accord.
But Obama’s environmental agenda is likely to come under sustained
assault from his successor, putting the durability of that legacy into
question.
– A very big deal –
Democrats had tried and failed for decades to provide Americans with
universal health care. Obama wasn’t quite able to do that but he
extended insurance coverage to tens of millions of citizens who
previously had none.
Republicans decried the “Obamacare” plan as socialism incarnate, at
one point claiming it would even create “death panels.” But they failed
to stop it from passing. They may yet have a crack at repealing it under
Donald Trump’s watch.
– Meet the neighbors –
Obama’s trip to Cuba may be remembered in the same way as Richard
Nixon’s visit to China, but in truth it was the capstone of a much
broader effort to improve US relations with Latin America.
Resurgent left wing populists in the region had rekindled past memories
of “yanqui imperialism” — US-led coups, death squads and heavy-
handed intervention.
Barely 100 days after Obama took office, he told regional leaders at a
Summit of the Americas that the United States had changed. The
approach was to deny leaders like Hugo Chavez any excuses for
sideshow anti-Americanism.
He shook Chavez’s hand, met Nicaraguan firebrand Daniel Ortega and
visited the tomb of a popular Salvadoran priest killed by US-linked death
squads.
Obama alluded to “mistakes” in a coup that installed dictator Augusto
Pinochet in Chile, released documents about involvement in Argentina’s
dirty war and, of course, visited Havana.

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