The time for muscular communitarianism has come. In his second year,
President Obama best reveal that his communitarianism is not powerless,
but indeed has muscles of its own, although these have so far been
rarely exercised.
The president has gone the extra mile to show that he is willing to
talk, consult, and collaborate with allies and foes alike -- foreign
and domestic. Nor has this form of kumbaya communitarianism been
without results. Russia and China are supporting sanctions against
Iran. The fever of anti-Americanism overseas has subsided some.
But, all said and done, Obama's soft communitarianism has yielded
relatively little. Iran continues to thumb its nose at his
solicitations; the GOP is mocking it; and the business elites are
paying out their bonuses using taxpayer dollars, as if Obama never
railed against them. Obama can maintain his positive posture, continue
to refuse to hector nations whose regimes are different from ours, and
even keep extending an olive branch to the business elites. But he
would be much more effective if he would show that communities whose
norms and leaders are ignored can twist the arms of, even give a kick
in the pants to, those who refuse to collaborate.
A good place to start is with AIG. It has openly thumbed its nose at
Obama by paying bonuses to executives using bailout money and by
lobbying against pay curbs on top executives. Indeed, its CEO went as
far as to announce that the US government was no match for him, as his
anatomy had a bigger part than that of Washington. At the same time,
AIG is still teetering and is dependent on scores of billons of dollars
of federal help. This help should not be granted unless AIG mends its
ways, posthaste. If it fails at this point, given the scope of the
recovery abroad and in the US, there is little reason to believe the
rest of the system will spin out of control. However, AIG's demise
would send a message to one and all that the Obama administration's
good will is not boundless..
On the international level, Iran is an obvious candidate for the lesson
that communitarians are not chumps. However, before the US can proceed,
it may well need more Russian collaboration. The Russians quite openly
consider Obama a soft touch. Whatever concessions the US has made to
"reset" the tone, the Russian leaders have pocketed and rushed to
demand more. The place to show Russia that the US is not a patsy is in
the negotiations over the extension of the START treaty, which the
Russians are much keener to conclude than we ought to be. Hence, if
they do not help much more in ensuring that Iran will not develop
nukes, we should not rush to reduce our nuclear forces to the levels
they prefer.
There are surely other ways to show some muscle than those I just
suggested, and without leaving a horse's head in the beds of Senators
Lieberman and Nelson. However, Obama better back up his good cheer with
some powerful acts, or he will soon have little leverage left from his
blessed communitarianism.


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