After many months at home, President Obama is taking back-to-back
foreign trips that represent a pivot from new foreign policy challenges
to old ones.
He is currently on a 10-day tour of developing
democracies in Asia, where the same forward-looking words keep showing
up in his speeches: growth, arrival and emergence. Next week, he attends
a NATO summit in Lisbon, Portugal, where the challenge is reinvention
and relevance for a 20th century institution trying to find its role in
the 21st century.
In Jakarta on Tuesday, the president described
his childhood home of Indonesia as a nexus of 21st century challenges
and opportunities — ranging from climate change to religious diversity
to economic development.
"Indonesia is going to have a seat at
the table and its leadership is going to be absolutely critical," he
said.
A day earlier, the president was at the heart of another
quickly growing Asian democracy. In New Delhi, Obama said he believes
India should have a seat on the United Nations Security Council.
"In
just decades," he said, "you have achieved progress and development
that took other nations centuries."
Old Meets New
Those
nations that took centuries to develop in old Europe will be the focus
of Obama's next foreign trip — his visit to Portugal for the two-day
NATO summit. Obama will shift from a booming continent of emerging
democracies trying to find their place in the world to a decades-old
alliance of established democracies trying to stay relevant.
"NATO
has to continue to transform to remain effective," NATO
Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in a speech last month
about the future of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
At
next week's meeting in Lisbon, NATO member countries will agree to a new
Strategic Concept for the first time since 1999. It's effectively a new
mission statement.
As Rasmussen said in his speech, a lot has
changed. Armies are no longer threatening to invade Europe; terrorists
and computer hackers are. "There are fewer military threats to our
territory, but more challenges to our security from every direction,
including cyberspace," he said.
Steve Clemons of the New
America Foundation describes these back-to-back presidential trips as
"an old river of foreign policy problems meeting a new river." Clemons,
who writes about foreign policy at The Washington Note blog, describes
the convergence as "a bit chaotic."
That merge is evident in an
area like the conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan. NATO has thousands
of troops in Afghanistan, while India shares a border with Pakistan.
Clemons
believes the United States must keep a foot in each world for the good
of America's national security and its economy.
"Working with
these emerging powers and going to where the growth is, is a better way
to reinvent America as the Google of countries rather than just being
the General Motors of countries," he says.
Building New
Alliances, Strengthening Old
"We used to look at issues
in stovepipes: national security, economic, human rights," says Rudy
deLeon, a former deputy defense secretary now at the Center for American
Progress, a think tank. "What we now know is that all of these issues
are interconnected, and you really can't solve one type of problem in
any one location or with any one country."
For example, NATO countries such as Great Britain are cutting their
defense budgets because of the bad economy. Britain might bounce back by
selling more goods and services to fast-growing Asian countries.
So
national security and economics, Europe and Asia, old world and new,
are actually bound tightly together. Obama's travel this month reflects
that.
"We've had a theory since we came to office that we need to
broaden the circle of countries that we're partnering with," said White
House spokesman Ben Rhodes, speaking aboard Air Force One as the
president flew from Indonesia to South Korea.
"I think that they
provide a bookend in many ways, this trip and the NATO summit, to our
view of foreign policy," Rhodes added. "We still need to strengthen and
cultivate our core alliances, but we also need to build out from those
alliances."
But Richard Fontaine of the Center for a New American
Security, who was a foreign policy adviser to Sen. John McCain,
believes this is just the state of reality, no matter who is running the
country. "Any American president, I think, would be pulled more in the
direction of the dynamic of political, economic and military blocs that
are in Asia."
A president in 2010 cannot afford to ignore old
allies or new ones, he says. As the past year has shown, economic
decisions made in Greece can be as critical to American well-being as
currency decisions in China, or actions by the Federal Reserve in
Washington.