President Obama, seeing the last few months of his time in the White House slip away, finally admitted what he believes his biggest mistake is, and it’s not what you’re probably thinking.
From CNN:
President Barack Obama said the worst mistake of his presidency was a lack of planning for the aftermath of the 2011 toppling of Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
“Probably failing to plan for the day after what I think was the right thing to do in intervening in Libya,” he said in a Fox News interview aired Sunday.This is not the first time in recent weeks he has talked about Libya and the NATO-led intervention which resulted in Gadhafi’s death in October of that year, months after NATO first intervened.In a profile published last month in The Atlantic, the President told author Jeffrey Goldberg that British Prime Minister David Cameron became “distracted by a range of other things” after the operation.Cameron, along with former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, took the brunt of Obama’s criticism.Although Obama said he thinks the intervention went as well as it could, he views Libya today as a “mess.”Privately, according to the article, he refers to the troubled state as a “sh*t show.”In a statement to CNN, a National Security Council spokesman tried to qualify Obama’s remarks and reassure that the alliance between the United Kingdom and United States remains strong.“Prime Minister Cameron has been as close a partner as the President has had, and we deeply value the UK’s contributions on our shared national security and foreign policy objectives which reflect our special and essential relationship,” NSC spokesman Ned Price said.In The Atlantic, Obama said he had more faith in Europeans “being invested in a follow-up” given their geographical “proximity” and largely blames their inaction for the “mess.”On Libya, Price said Obama has previously said and continues to believe that “all of us — including the United States — could have done more in the aftermath of the Libyan intervention.”Price said that the UK has “stepped up on a range of issues,” including pressing fellow NATO members to increase defense spending.
Leave a Comment