Read the Washington Post article below comparing Obama's foreign policy to woodrow Wilson's foreign policy.  Do you think this is a valid comparison?  Why or why not?  Is being WILSONIAN a good thing or a bad thing, in your opinion?  Why? Please answer in a well thought out
Obama: Woodrow Wilson's Heir
By Robert Kagan
Sunday, June 7, 2009

President Obama likes to see himself as a pragmatist, but in foreign policy he is proving to be a supreme idealist of the Woodrow Wilson variety.

Like Wilson's, Obama's foreign policy increasingly seems to rest on the assumption that nations will act on the basis of what they perceive to be the goodwill, good intentions or moral purity of other nations, in particular the United States. If other nations have refused to cooperate with us, it is because they perceive the United States as aggressive or evil. Obama's job is to change that perception. From the outreach to Iran and to Muslims, to the call for eliminating all nuclear weapons, to the desire for a "reset" in relations with Russia, the central point of Obama's diplomacy is that America is, suddenly, different. It has changed. It is better. It is time, therefore, for other nations to cooperate.

But how has America changed? Obama's policies toward Iran, the Middle East, Russia, North Korea, China, Latin America, Afghanistan and even Iraq have at most shifted only at the margins -- as many in those countries repeatedly complain. So what, for instance, is the source of the "new beginning" in U.S.-Muslim relations that Obama called for in Cairo?

The answer, it seems, is Obama himself. In the speech, The Post reports, "Obama made his own biography the starting point for a new U.S. relationship with Islam." Or as the New York Times put it, while "the president offered few details on how to solve problems around the globe," his basic argument "boiled down to this: Barack Hussein Obama was standing on the podium in this Muslim capital as the American president."

Critics complain that Obama's speeches are too self-referential. If so, this is not a mark of vanity. It is a strategy. Obama believes that his story is a powerful foreign policy tool, that drawing attention to what makes him different, not only from George W. Bush but from all past American presidents, will persuade the world to take a fresh look at America and its policies and make new diplomatic settlements possible.

In Cairo, he emphasized his Muslim heritage to show Muslims around the world that he empathizes with them as no previous American president possibly could. His apologies for America's past behavior also highlight his uniqueness. He is not the first president to apologize. Wilson apologized to the peoples of the Western Hemisphere for the interventionist policies of his Republican predecessors (only to outdo them with his own interventions). Bill Clinton apologized to Africans for America's history of slavery. But Clinton accepted responsibility for America's sins as if they were his own.

Obama, on the other hand, does distance himself from America's past sins. His response to Daniel Ortega's long recitation of U.S. misdeeds in Latin America was to point out that he personally had nothing to do with them -- "I was three months old." When he admits American sins in relations with Iran, he wants Iran's revolutionary leaders to distinguish between America, which they hate, and America's new president, whom they can like and with whom they can do business.

Can this work even without fundamental change in the conduct and parameters of U.S. foreign policy? Obama obviously hopes so. Take the Israeli-Palestinian issue. Obama calls for a freeze on settlements, but the question for many Arabs and Palestinians is what he will do to force Israel to comply with his demands. Will he cut off aid? The answer is almost certainly no. But Obama must believe that the expression of his good intentions is enough.

Or take Obama's declared desire to eliminate all nuclear weapons. Of course he admits that he cannot make this happen. But he believes that by agreeing with American critics that the present American-dominated order is unjust, he can buy the international goodwill necessary to end Iran's and North Korea's nuclear weapons programs.

Finally, Guantanamo. Who knows when Obama will be able to close it, what he will be able to put in its place or whether, ultimately, he will be able to strike a fundamentally different balance between American security and the legal rights of detainees than was struck by Bush or by previous presidents in times of perceived national security threats? It probably won't be all that different. But Obama hopes that by displaying earnestness to change American practices, he can build an image of greater moral authority and that this in turn will produce diplomatic results that have hitherto eluded us.

It is conceivable that this theory may prove correct. Certainly, it will soon be tested. But let us not call it realism. The last president who sincerely pursued this approach was Woodrow Wilson. He, too, believed that the display of evident goodwill and desire for peace, uncorrupted by the base motives of national interest or ambition, gave him the special moral authority to sway other nations. And Wilson was as beloved around the globe as Obama is today, possibly more beloved, at least for a moment. Millions took to the streets in the great cities of Europe when he crossed the Atlantic in 1918. His gifts to persuade, however, proved ephemeral, and the results of his efforts were, from his own perspective, an utter failure. Not only the nations of Europe but his own United States proved more self-interested and less amenable to moral appeals. We will see whether Barack Obama, the most Wilsonian president in a century, fares better.


Robert Kagan, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, writes a monthly column for The Post.

Luana
8/12/2012 01:04:44 am

I believe that Obama is the most Wilsonian President we've had and that by comparing his foreign policies to Wilson's, we are accentuating his popularity, his peaceful and idealist traits, the goodwill image he wants to provide for other countries for them not to see America as an enemy anymore, but as a provider and good to other nations. Obama's expiation strategies for all the U.S. has done in the past with the other presidents is working and we can finally see that in the way he appeals to Muslims by being part Muslim, by being the first black President America's had, etc. By getting the American troops out of Iraq as he had promised and by claiming to wanting to eliminate all nuclear weapons just for American critics to appeal with his goodwill are some of the Wilsonian strategies to, for example, eliminate Iran and North Korea's nuclear weapons. Some may see U.S.'s and Obama's foreign policies now a little too "unrealistic", but in my opinion he won't fail like Wilson did at the end because I think he knows exactly what he's doing by wanting America to look "good" and change people's perception on us, by turning past American history around and building one of his own that will be beneficial for us as well.

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Jason Short
13/12/2012 04:43:55 am

Obama is certainly the most Wilsonian president we have had. Both presidents acknowledged that they couldn't force the changes to their country that they wanted, but they preached the ideals of morality and goodwill still. Wilson's 14 points were rejected by the very country he lead, but his idea still influenced other European countries to create the League of Nations; he couldn't change his own country, but his ideas and morality still had an effect on international relations in Europe. Obama's appeal to Muslims is another example of wanting to change people's perception of the US to a more positive, moral, and good place when it comes to international relations. Neither of them wanted America to be seen as an isolationist policy or as an enemy of the world. In my opinion however, being Wilsonian creates means for war in the world to continue. Increasing foreign affairs and creating international ties along with ideas like collective security is what brought WW1 into being in the first place. If countries weren't so concerned with gaining power over one and other and creating alliances, and isolated themselves, any motivation for war is hard to find. In my eyes, being Wilsonian is accepting the idea of collective interventionalism and only leads to foreign entanglements that drag countries into wars that they have no reason to be in other than having that international obligation to one and other.

-Jason Short

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Pedro Oliveira
16/12/2012 04:24:31 am

In my opinion, to be Wilsonian is to pursue cooperation of the United States with the rest of the globe, while promoting an image of being open- minded and innovative. For this reason, Obama is considered by many people as the most Wilsonian president the United States ever had. He is "Wilsonian" because like Woodrow Wilson, Obama wants to change the opinion of othr countries about America. He wants to give America an image of a cooperative and concerned country instead of being seen as an evil, dominating nation. This is why Obama says that he looks forward so many changes in foreign policy even though some changes are absurd and he knows that they won´t happen. This is the case of Guantanamo, nuclear weapons, and the Israeli-palestinian conflict. His belief is that if he shows to be the president of a new age in America, countries will start to trust America and this will bring prosperity.

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Arda Kanberoglu
16/12/2012 11:52:41 pm

Obama by far is the most Wilsonian President we've had in the history of the United States government. His foreign policies to Wilson's, was what made him such a popular leader to the eyes of many Americans, his common traits of peace and ideas to Wilson and the image in which he wants to provide for other countries to see America as a provider rather than an enemy. Obama's appeal to the Muslim race is another example of wanting to change people's perception of the US a more diverse accepting place. When it comes to international affairs, Obama being the first black President America's had, he has been trying to bring the American troops out of Iraq as he had promised and by saying to the American people to put an effort to eliminate all nuclear weapons so that the American see his goodwill and taste in politics is the same as of Wilsonian strategies as well. Obama has been trying to eliminate Iran and North Korea's nuclear weapons. Some may see U.S.'s and Obama's foreign policies as impossible or out of reach however Obama has high motivation to Improve the Worlds relations with one another that I cannot see him failing like Wilson did at the end because Obama is well aware what exactly he needs to do and make America to look strong to others and change people's perception on US foreign policies by making the past the past and the future the new US everyone wants to see.

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Gabriel Araújo
17/12/2012 11:38:56 am

Yes, I think that Obama’s foreign policy to woodrow Wilson’s foreign policy is a valid comparison. As shown in the text, written by Robert Kagan, both of them think in a similar way and there are examples that prove that. Some of them are Obama’s policies regarding Iran, Russia, North Korea, China, Afghanistan, Latin America, the Middle East and Iraq show how he perceives that nations acts on goodwill and always with good intentions; thoughts really similar to Wilson’s, in the Fourteen Points. Other examples of both presidents’ similarity regarding foreign policies are that they have already apologized other countries for U. S. previous actions towards this country (Obama apologized to Muslims, while Wilson to the people of the Western Hemisphere). Being Wilsonian, in my opinion, has its negative and positive sides. The idea of acting with goodwill and good intentions is something positive; however, you can’t think everyone will act with good intentions always. Also, having only goodwill is not enough to solve issues, actions need to be taken in order to solve problems.

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