NOVANEWS

US President Barack Obama with French President Francois Hollande (R) during a greeting ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 11, 2014. (Photo: AFP- Alain Jocard)
The “box” – mentioned by Rhodes, but left undefined – from which Obama seeks to escape however, is made explicit in a further Obama comment: “With respect to Israel, the interests of Israel…are actually very closely aligned with the interests of the Sunni states.” To this, we (CF) could add that both European, American and most think-tank elites, too, have very much aligned to the interests of Sunni states (and Israel) – and have unconsciously absorbed and uncritically adopted the narrative of Sunni “victimhood” in respect to the Shia “resurgence”. As a consequence, there is considerable anger directed at his Iran policy, which Obama implicitly acknowledges.
For much of the 20th century, successive US Presidents have sought to prevent any single country from dominating the centers of strategic power in Europe and Asia. The Carter doctrine simply refocused this basic principle of foreign policy specifically onto the Middle East, where no power that was not friendly to the US (or Israel) would be entertained, or permitted.
But as one philosopher noted more than two thousand years ago, the “hero” of virtue and the pursuer of a mission civilisatriceultimately becomes mired in its own ambiguities. Why? Because, as the CFRresearchers were advocating, America had set itself the aim of achieving “doing good” as an object. Once America came to see “the good” as some “thing” to be attained, it becomes involved in a division from which there is no escape: between the present in which America is not yet in possession of what it seeks; and the future, in which Americans believe they will get what they desire – a future made present by their efforts to eliminate evil.