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Dear Friends:
With the election of a new US President, everyone is focused on the "First
100 Days." How Obama transitions into the presidency impacts not just the U.S.
but the entire global system. What happens to U.S. relations with Iraq, Iran,
and Afghanistan? What's going to happen at Treasury and to all the programs
addressing the financial crisis? What's going to emerge from the next G20 summit?
You need to read the analysis below, written by my good friend George Friedman
at Stratfor. He details the immediate issues facing the president-elect, including
one of the stickiest: Europe's desire for a global banking regulatory regimen.
How will Obama respond to European pressure? George has built his company Stratfor
and its reputation on forecasting the future, and I'm amazed at how often he's
right -- on broad themes and specific events.
As we move into the next 100 days, George is way ahead of us with a book called The
Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century. I've read an advance
copy, and it's absolutely fascinating. In it, he maps out what geopolitical
changes the world will see in the next hundred years: the rise of Mexico
(and war with the U.S.!), Poland and Turkey returning to great-power status,
and a second Cold War, among others. I can tell you, his arguments are as
absolutely compelling as the conclusions are provocative.
George has arranged a special pre-publication offer for my readers. Click here to
take advantage of a Stratfor Membership that also includes a free copy
of George's new book. For insight into the next 100 days and the next
100 years, I'm relying on George Friedman and his team at Stratfor. I know
you'll find as much value in George's forecasts as I do.
John Mauldin

Obama's Challenge
November 5, 2008 | 1202 GMT
Related Special Topic Page
Barack
Obama has been elected president of the United States by a large majority
in the Electoral College. The Democrats have dramatically increased their
control of Congress, increasing the number of seats they hold in the House
of Representatives and moving close to the point where -- with a few Republican
defections -- they can have filibuster-proof control of the Senate. Given
the age of some Supreme Court justices, Obama might well have the opportunity
to appoint at least one and possibly two new justices. He will begin as one
of the most powerful presidents in a long while.
Truly extraordinary were the celebrations
held around the world upon Obama's victory. They affirm the global expectations
Obama has raised -- and reveal that the United States must be more important
to Europeans than the latter like to admit. (We can't imagine late-night
vigils in the United States over a French election.)
Obama is an extraordinary rhetorician, and as Aristotle pointed out, rhetoric
is one of the foundations of political power. Rhetoric has raised him to the
presidency, along with the tremendous unpopularity of his predecessor and a
financial crisis that took a tied campaign and gave Obama a lead he carefully
nurtured to victory. So, as with all politicians, his victory was a matter
of rhetoric and, according to Machiavelli, luck. Obama had both, but now the
question is whether he has Machiavelli's virtue in full by possessing the ability
to exercise power. This last element is what governing is about, and it is
what will determine if his presidency succeeds.
Embedded in his tremendous victory is a single weakness: Obama won the popular
vote by a fairly narrow margin, about 52 percent of the vote. That means that
almost as many people voted against him as voted for him.
Obama's Agenda vs. Expanding His Base
U.S. President George W. Bush demonstrated that the inability to understand
the uses and limits of power can crush
a presidency very quickly. The enormous enthusiasm of Obama's followers
could conceal how he -- like Bush -- is governing a deeply, and nearly evenly,
divided country. Obama's first test will be simple: Can he maintain the devotion
of his followers while increasing his political base? Or will he believe, as
Bush and Cheney did, that he can govern without concern for the other half
of the country because he controls the presidency and Congress, as Bush and
Cheney did in 2001? Presidents are elected by electoral votes, but they govern
through public support.
Obama and his supporters will say there is no danger of a repeat of Bush --
who believed he could carry out his agenda and build his political base at
the same time, but couldn't. Building a political base requires modifying one's
agenda. But when you start modifying your agenda, when you become pragmatic,
you start to lose your supporters. If Obama had won with 60 percent of the
popular vote, this would not be as pressing a question. But he barely won by
more than Bush
in 2004. Now, we will find out if Obama is as skillful a president as he
was a candidate.
Obama will soon face the problem of beginning to
disappoint people all over the world, a problem built into his job. The
first disappointments will be minor. There are thousands of people hoping
for appointments, some to Cabinet positions, others to the White House, others
to federal agencies. Many will get something, but few will get as much as
they hoped for. Some will feel betrayed and become bitter. During the transition
process, the disappointed office seeker -- an institution in American politics
-- will start leaking on background to whatever reporters are available.
This will strike a small, discordant note; creating no serious problems,
but serving as a harbinger of things to come.
Later, Obama will be sworn in. He will give a memorable, perhaps historic
speech at his inauguration. There will be great expectations about him in the
country and around
the world. He will enjoy the traditional presidential honeymoon, during
which all but his bitterest enemies will give him the benefit of the doubt.
The press initially will adore him, but will begin writing stories about all
the positions he hasn't filled, the mistakes he made in the vetting process
and so on. And then, sometime in March or April, things will get interesting.
Iran and a U.S. Withdrawal From Iraq
Obama
has promised to withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq, where he does not intend
to leave any residual force. If he follows that course, he will open the
door for the Iranians. Iran's primary national security interest is containing
or dominating Iraq, with which Iran fought a long war. If the United States
remains in Iraq, the Iranians will be forced to accept a neutral government
in Iraq. A U.S. withdrawal will pave the way for the Iranians to use Iraqi
proxies to create, at a minimum, an Iraqi government more heavily influenced
by Iran.
Apart from upsetting Sunni and Kurdish allies of the United States in Iraq,
the Iranian ascendancy in Iraq will disturb some major American allies -- particularly
the Saudis, who fear Iranian power. The United States can't afford a scenario
under which Iranian power is projected into the Saudi oil fields. While that
might be an unlikely scenario, it carries catastrophic consequences. The Jordanians
and possibly the Turks, also American allies, will pressure Obama not simply
to withdraw. And, of course, the
Israelis will want the United States to remain in place to block Iranian
expansion. Resisting a coalition of Saudis and Israelis will not be easy.
This will be the point where Obama's pledge to talk to the Iranians will become
crucial. If he simply withdraws from Iraq without a solid understanding with Iran,
the entire American coalition in the region will come apart. Obama has pledged
to build coalitions, something that will be difficult in the Middle East if
he withdraws from Iraq without ironclad Iranian guarantees. He therefore will
talk to the Iranians. But what can Obama offer the Iranians that would induce
them to forego their primary national security interest? It is difficult to
imagine a U.S.-Iranian deal that is both mutually beneficial and enforceable.
Obama will then be forced to make a decision. He can withdraw from Iraq and
suffer the geopolitical consequences while coming under fire from the substantial
political right in the United States that he needs at least in part to bring
into his coalition. Or, he can retain some force in Iraq, thereby disappointing
his supporters. If he is clumsy, he could wind up under attack from the right
for negotiating with the Iranians and from his own supporters for not withdrawing
all U.S. forces from Iraq. His skills in foreign policy and domestic politics
will be tested on this core question, and he undoubtedly will disappoint many.
The Afghan Dilemma
Obama will need to address Afghanistan next.
He has said that this is the real war, and that he will ask U.S. allies to
join him in the effort. This means he will go to the Europeans and NATO, as
he has said he will do. The Europeans are delighted with Obama's victory because
they feel Obama will consult them and stop making demands of them. But demands
are precisely what he will bring the Europeans. In particular, he will want
the Europeans to provide more forces for Afghanistan.
Many European countries will be inclined to provide some support, if for no
other reason than to show that they are prepared to work with Obama. But European
public opinion is not about to support a major deployment in Afghanistan, and
the Europeans don't have the force to deploy there anyway. In fact, as the
global financial crisis begins to have a more dire impact in Europe than
in the United States, many European countries are actively reducing their deployments
in Afghanistan to save money. Expanding operations is the last thing on European
minds.
Obama's Afghan solution of building a coalition centered on the Europeans
will thus meet a divided Europe with little inclination to send troops and
with few troops to send in any event. That will force him into a confrontation
with the Europeans in spring 2009, and then into a decision. The United States
and its allies collectively lack the force to stabilize Afghanistan and defeat
the Taliban. They certainly lack the force to make a significant move into
Pakistan -- something Obama has floated on several occasions that might be
a good idea if force were in fact available.
He will have to make a
hard decision on Afghanistan. Obama can continue the war as it is currently
being fought, without hope of anything but a long holding action, but this
risks defining his presidency around a hopeless war. He can choose to withdraw,
in effect reinstating the Taliban, going back on his commitment and drawing
heavy fire from the right. Or he can do what we have suggested is the inevitable
outcome, namely, negotiate -- and reach a political accord -- with the Taliban.
Unlike Bush, however, withdrawal or negotiation with the Taliban will increase
the pressure on Obama from the right. And if this is coupled with a decision
to delay withdrawal from Iraq, Obama's own supporters will become restive.
His 52 percent Election Day support could deteriorate with remarkable speed.
The Russian Question
At the same time, Obama will face the
Russian question. The morning after Obama's election, Russian President
Dmitri Medvedev announced that Russia was deploying missiles in its European
exclave of Kaliningrad in response to the U.S. deployment of ballistic missile
defense systems in Poland. Obama opposed the Russians on their August intervention
in Georgia, but he has never enunciated a clear Russia policy. We expect
Ukraine will have shifted its political alignment toward Russia, and Moscow
will be rapidly moving to create a sphere of influence before Obama can bring
his attention -- and U.S. power -- to bear.
Obama will again turn to the Europeans to create a coalition to resist the
Russians. But the Europeans will again be divided. The
Germans can't afford to alienate the Russians because of German energy
dependence on Russia and because Germany
does not want to fight another Cold War. The British and French may be
more inclined to address the question, but certainly not to the point of resurrecting
NATO as a major military force. The Russians will be prepared to talk, and
will want to talk a great deal, all the while pursuing their own national interest
of increasing their power in what they call their "near abroad."
Obama will have many options on domestic policy given his majorities in Congress.
But his Achilles' heel, as it was for Bush and for many presidents, will be
foreign policy. He has made what appear to be three guarantees. First, he will
withdraw from Iraq. Second, he will focus on Afghanistan. Third, he will oppose
Russian expansionism. To deliver on the first promise, he must deal with the
Iranians. To deliver on the second, he must deal with the Taliban. To deliver
on the third, he must deal with the Europeans.
Global Finance and the European Problem
The Europeans will pose another critical problem, as they
want a second Bretton Woods agreement. Some European states appear to
desire a set of international regulations for the financial system. There
are three problems with this.
First, unless Obama wants to change course dramatically, the U.S. and European
positions differ over the degree to which governments will regulate interbank
transactions. The Europeans want much more intrusion than the Americans. They
are far less averse to direct government controls than the Americans have been.
Obama has the power to shift American policy, but doing that will make it harder
to expand his base.
Second, the creation of an international regulatory body that has authority
over American banks would create a system where U.S. financial management was
subordinated to European financial management.
And third, the Europeans themselves have no common understanding of things.
Obama could thus quickly be drawn into complex EU policy issues that could
tie his hands in the United States. These could quickly turn into painful negotiations,
in which Obama's allure to the Europeans will evaporate.
One of the foundations of Obama's foreign policy -- and one of the reasons
the Europeans have celebrated his election -- was the perception that Obama
is prepared to work closely with the Europeans. He is in fact prepared to do
so, but his problem will be the same one Bush had: The
Europeans are in no position to give the things that Obama will need from them --
namely, troops, a revived NATO to confront the Russians and a global financial
system that doesn't subordinate American financial authority to an international
bureaucracy.
The Hard Road Ahead
Like any politician, Obama will face the challenge of having made a set of
promises that are not mutually supportive. Much of his challenge boils down
to problems that he needs to solve and that he wants European help on, but
the Europeans are not prepared to provide the type and amount of help he needs.
This, plus the fact that a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq requires an agreement
with Iran -- something hard to imagine without a continued U.S. presence in
Iraq -- gives Obama a difficult road to move on.
As with all American presidents (who face midterm elections with astonishing
speed), Obama's foreign policy moves will be framed by his political support.
Institutionally, he will be powerful. In terms of popular support, he begins
knowing that almost half the country voted against him, and that he must increase
his base. He must exploit the honeymoon period, when his support will expand,
to bring another 5 percent or 10 percent of the public into his coalition.
These people voted against him; now he needs to convince them to support him.
But these are precisely the people who would regard talks with the Taliban
or Iran with deep distrust. And if negotiations with the Iranians cause him
to keep forces in Iraq, he will alienate his base without necessarily winning
over his opponents.
And there is always the unknown. There could be a terrorist attack, the Russians
could start pressuring the Baltic states, the Mexican situation could deteriorate.
The unknown by definition cannot be anticipated. And many foreign leaders know
it takes an administration months to settle in, something some will try to
take advantage of. On top of that, there is now nearly a three-month window
in which the old president is not yet out and the new president not yet in.
Obama must deal with extraordinarily difficult foreign policy issues in the
context of an alliance failing not because of rough behavior among friends
but because the allies' interests have diverged. He must deal with this in
the context of foreign policy positions difficult to sustain and reconcile,
all against the backdrop of almost half an electorate that voted against him
versus supporters who have enormous hopes vested in him. Obama knows all of
this, of course, as he indicated in his victory speech.
We will now find out if Obama understands the exercise of political power
as well as he understands the pursuit of that power. You really can't know
that until after the fact. There is no reason to think he can't finesse these
problems. Doing so will take cunning, trickery and the ability to make his
supporters forget the promises he made while keeping their support. It will
also require the ability to make some of his opponents embrace him despite
the path he will have to take. In other words, he will have to be cunning and
ruthless without appearing to be cunning and ruthless. That's what successful
presidents do.
In the meantime, he should enjoy the transition. It's frequently the best
part of a presidency.
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