In Cairo, Pompeo blasts Obama’s Middle East policies

In Cairo, Pompeo blasts Obama’s Middle East policies

by Joseph Anthony
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks to students at the American University in Cairo, Egypt, January 10, 2019. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Pool via REUTERS

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused Barack Obama on Thursday of sowing chaos in the Middle East by failing to adequately confront Islamist militants in a blistering critique of the policies of President Donald Trumpโ€™s predecessor.


Speaking in Cairo, where Obama gave a major speech in 2009 in the first year of his presidency, Republican Trumpโ€™s chief diplomat took on Obama by arguing that the Democratic former president had in effect misread and abandoned the Middle East.

The comments raised eyebrows in the United States and abroad not the least because Trump himself is being criticized for his ambiguous plan announced last month to pull U.S. troops out of Syria. While that decisionโ€™s timing is unclear, it is widely seen as abandoning the region and benefiting U.S. rivals Russia and Iran.

โ€œWe learned that when America retreats, chaos often follows. When we neglect our friends, resentment builds. And when we partner with our enemies, they advance,โ€ Pompeo said in a speech at the American University in Cairo in which he did not mention Obama by name but called him โ€œanother Americanโ€ who gave a speech in the capital of the Arab worldโ€™s most populous nation.

Pompeo is touring the region to try to explain U.S. strategy after Trumpโ€™s surprise announcement of an abrupt withdrawal of all 2,000 U.S. troops from Syria, which rattled allies and shocked top U.S. officials, prompting U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis to resign. [nL1N1YO0YK] [nL1N1YP2B9]

It is highly unusual for an American secretary of state to deliver a speech in a foreign capital attacking a former U.S. president. But Trump has frequently sought to belittle his predecessor and has reversed Obama policies on international issues such as the Iran nuclear deal, trade agreements and the Paris climate change accord as well as domestic policies.


Describing the United States as a โ€œforce for goodโ€ in the Middle East, Pompeo sought to reassure allies that Washington remained committed to the โ€œcomplete dismantlingโ€ of the threat posed by the Islamic State militant group despite Trumpโ€™s decision to withdraw troops from Syria.

Pompeo also faulted what he called Obamaโ€™s โ€œdesire for peace at any costโ€ that led him to strike the 2015 nuclear deal under which Iran agreed to curtail its nuclear weapons program in exchange for easing of international economic sanctions.

Trump this year abandoned that deal, pursuing instead what his administration has called a policy of โ€œmaximum pressureโ€ on Iran to try to force it to limit its nuclear program, curtail its ballistic missile activities and cease supporting proxy forces in Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Lebanon.

โ€˜SELF-INFLICTED AMERICAN SHAMEโ€™

โ€œThe good news is this: The age of self-inflicted American shame is over. And so are the policies that produced so much needless suffering. Now comes the real new beginning,โ€ Pompeo added.


In his June 2009 speech at Cairo University, Obama called for better mutual understanding between the Islamic world and the West and said both should do more to confront violent extremism. As a result, Republicans have long accused Obama of apologizing to the world for U.S. actions abroad, a point that Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney emphasized during his 2012 attempt to unseat Obama.

Pompeoโ€™s speech drew immediate criticism from Middle East experts as well as officials who served under Obama who accused the secretary of state of violating the American tradition that โ€œpolitics stops at the waterโ€™s edge.โ€

โ€œIt feels a little bit as if the approach is to โ€˜talk loudly and carry a small stick,โ€™โ€ said Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East program at Washingtonโ€™s Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank.

โ€œThere is a lot of ambitious language, but very little actual commitment of U.S. resources. You could read this as obscuring a continued U.S. retrenchment from Middle Eastern commitments,โ€ Alterman added.

On Twitter, Martin Indyk, who served in the Obama administration, called the speech โ€œshameful Obama-bashing.โ€


Pompeo directly repudiated Obamaโ€™s 2009 Cairo speech, which was an overture by the then-new president to the Islamic world.

โ€œRemember, it was here in this city that another American stood before you. He told you that radical Islamist terrorism does not stem from an ideology. He told you that 9/11 (the Sept. 11, 2001, al Qaeda attacks on the United States) led my country to abandon its ideals, particularly in the Middle East,โ€ Pompeo said.

โ€œHe told you that the United States and the Muslim world needed, quote, a new beginning, end of quote. The results of these misjudgments have been dire,โ€ Pompeo added. โ€œIn falsely seeing ourselves as a force for what ails the Middle East, we were timid in asserting ourselves when the time and our partners demanded it.โ€

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