Analysis: Obama Seeks to 'Turn the Page' on Iraq
Updated: 27 minutes ago
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Joseph
Schuman Senior Correspondent
AOL News
(Sept. 1) -- Twice during his Oval Office speech, President
Barack Obama's emotions seemed to upstage the words he was addressing to the
nation about the formal end of U.S.
combat operations in Iraq.
Obama's familiar professorial tone Tuesday night dropped somberly when he paid
tribute to the more than 4,400 American service members who lost their lives
there, and it leaped when he declared with more than a hint of exasperation
that "it is time to turn the page."
If his most repeated theme was praise and gratitude for troops whose mission is
"completed" in Iraq, the speech, less than 20 minutes in length, was
all about transitions: from a military focus on Iraq to one aimed at ending the
threat of al-Qaida in Afghanistan and Pakistan; from being a nation at war to
one focused on the "most urgent task" of restoring the economy; from
confronting U.S. enemies through war to a strategy grounded in diplomacy that
includes this week's new push for peace in the Middle East.
There was little new in the announced end to the American combat
mission in Iraq
itself. The last combat-oriented brigade left the country in August. The formal
change in mission doesn't mean the 50,000 U.S.
soldiers, Marines, sailors and airmen in Iraq are done fighting insurgents
of one stripe or another. Iraqi forces, with an uncertain political leadership,
have not yet shown they can secure the country on their own. And no one expects
an end to American casualties there.
But considering the gravity of the subject and venue of the speech -- the
second Oval Office oration of his presidency -- Obama's goal may still have
been to tell Americans that something has changed.
More than 19 months into his presidency -- and two months before an election
that could shake up the House and Senate -- Obama may be trying to move beyond
the agenda he inherited from President George W. Bush.
The White House announced earlier in the day that Obama called Bush from Air
Force One while en route to meet with veterans of Iraqi combat at Fort Bliss, Texas,
but provided no details of their brief conversation.
"It's well known that he and I disagreed about the war from its
outset," Obama said, before complimenting Bush's "support for our
troops or his love of country and commitment to our security."
Obama noted that much had changed since the night 7 1/2 years ago when Bush
announced from the Oval Office that the U.S.
was leading an invasion of Iraq.
"A war to disarm a state became a fight against an insurgency. Terrorism
and sectarian warfare threatened to tear Iraq
apart," Obama said, reminding Americans of why Iraq had become such a source of
national bitterness and one of the factors in his election. "Thousands of
Americans gave their lives; tens of thousands have been wounded. Our relations
abroad were strained. Our unity at home was tested."
Obama congratulated the American troops and civilians who fought and worked
since the war began to give Iraq
"the opportunity to embrace a new destiny, even though many challenges
remain."
But "the United States
has paid a huge price to put the future of Iraq in the hands of its
people," he noted. "We have sent our young men and women to make
enormous sacrifices in Iraq
and spent vast resources abroad at a time of tight budgets at home."
By withdrawing from Iraq,
the U.S. has been able to
shift resources to the border region of Afghanistan
and Pakistan, where "as
we speak, al-Qaida continues to plot against us, and its leadership remains
anchored," Obama reminded his audience, adding that even the bolstered
deployment in Afghanistan
is only temporary and scheduled to started winding down next year. "Make
no mistake -- this transition will begin, because open-ended war serves neither
our interests nor the Afghan people's."
And returning to a key theme of his election campaign, Obama said U.S. leadership
on the global stage must start "within our own borders," where
"we must tackle those challenges at home with as much energy and grit and
sense of common purpose as our men and women in uniform who have served
abroad."
Citing the urgency of putting back to work the millions of Americans who lost
their jobs in the recession he confronted on taking office, Obama again tacitly
laid the blame on his predecessor, and the "trillion dollars" spent
on war during a decade when "we have not done what is necessary to shore
up the foundation of our own prosperity."
But if the speech and its importance for Obama is all about "turning the
page," what's far from clear is whether he can.
A day earlier, Obama talked about the persistently ailing economy and weak job
market in remarks that left the impression his administration has run out of
ideas for a quick turnaround.
Stability in Afghanistan may
be one of the key goals of a counterterrorism strategy that has shifted back to
where the 9/11 attacks were planned, but there's little evidence yet that a
stable democracy has taken root there, or that the U.S. and its allies are defeating
the al-Qaida-allied Taliban. Pakistan,
perhaps an even more important theater in the fight against al-Qaida, remains a
mess when it comes to the kind of governance Washington considers necessary for taming
the Islamist threat.
And as Israeli, Palestinian and other Middle Eastern leaders convene in
Washington for meetings at the White House and State Department, the Obama team
has offered no concrete reasons to believe that it will fair better than
previous administrations at forging a two-state solution agreeable to all the
players.
This is, Obama said, "an age without surrender ceremonies," when
clean breaks with past conflicts at home or abroad are hard to distinguish.
And if Iraq now represents a
new kind of mission for the U.S.,
the global challenges facing Obama are not all that different from those he
found on taking office.