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ashington October S. 2012
Talking tough — without specifics on the
Middle East
By Editorial Board
AFTER REPEATEDLY FUMBLING on foreign policy during his campaign, Mitt Romney
delivered Monday a coherent and forceful critique of President Obama's handling of the
upheavals in the Middle East. Arguing that a fateful struggle is playing out across the region, he
said the United States is "missing an historic opportunity" because of Mr. Obama's failure to
more aggressively support liberal forces against dictators and Islamic extremists. "It is the
responsibility of our president to use America's great power to shape history — not to lead from
behind, leaving our destiny at the mercy of events," Mr. Romney said.
That analysis of Mr. Obama's policies is one we largely agree with. As we have argued
frequently, the president has been too cautious and slow in supporting secular liberals in Egypt
against Islamists and the military. He left Iraq open to destabilization by failing to agree with its
government on a continued U.S. military presence. He led the Middle East peace process into a
blind alley through his wrongheaded quarreling with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
— a point Mr. Romney harped on.
Worst, Mr. Obama has stood by — or pursued feckless diplomatic initiatives — while Syria has
descended into a maelstrom of massacres, opening the way to a sectarian civil war that could
spread across the region. "The president is fond of saying that `the tide of war is receding,' " Mr.
Romney noted. "But when we look at the Middle East today — with Iran closer than ever to
nuclear weapons capability, with the conflict in Syria threatening to destabilize the region, with
violent extremists on the march, and with an American ambassador and three others dead, likely
at the hands of al-Qaeda affiliates — it is clear that the risk of conflict in the region is higher now
than when the president took office."
So how would Mr. Romney remedy these errors? That's where the weakness of his speech lay: It
was hard to detect what tangible new steps the challenger would take. On Syria, Mr. Romney
said he would "ensure" that "those members of the opposition who share our values ... obtain
the arms they need." The Obama administration is coordinating some materiel help to the rebels;
Mr. Romney hinted that, unlike Mr. Obama, he would support supplying the rebels with anti-
aircraft weapons. But he did not mention Turkey's call for the creation of protected zones on
Syria's territory — a measure that would be more likely to end the war on terms favorable to the
West.
Mr. Romney said he would prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapons "capability," in
theory a more stringent red line than Mr. Obama's vow to prevent the actual construction of a
bomb. But his means to that end sounded identical to those of the current administration. Having
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criticized Mr. Obama for failing to support Iran's "green movement," Mr. Romney said nothing
about encouraging popular resistance to the regime.
In all, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Mr. Romney, like Mr. Obama, is avoiding the
embrace of a more robust Mideast policy out of fear of offending voters weary of international
conflict or of dividing his own advisers. Mr. Obama's campaign released a new ad calling Mr.
Romney's foreign policy "reckless." In fact, this was a too-cautious response to a too-cautious
policy.
O The Washington Post Company
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