Meet the Flimflam Man Behind Obama's Foreign Policy 'Narrative' | PJ Media
By
Claudia Rosett May 6, 2016
Deputy National Security Adviser For Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes speaks to the media during the daily briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2016. White House announced that President Barack Obama and the First Lady will travel to Cuba on March 21st, and he will be the first U.S. President since CalvinCoolidge in 1928 to visit Cuba.
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When it comes to foreign policy, President Obama has spent more than seven years now living the dream. And I mean
dream, as in fantasy -- a trip to an alternate universe. Never mind the dangerous and in some cases deadly realities that increasingly beset the rest of the planet. For the White House, it's been one glorious fiction after another. Russia was a "reset." Libya was a success. So was the pivot to Asia. The tide of war is receding. There was a red line in Syria (until there wasn't). The Iran nuclear program is now "exclusively peaceful." America's standing in the world is now -- according to a White House tally of nameless surveys -- higher than when Obama took office.
Remarkable. But don't credit Obama alone for the creative talent behind these fictions. In a story just posted by
The New York Times Magazine, veteran reporter David Samuels brings us a long, appalling and masterfully reported look behind the scenes at influential White House senior staffer Ben Rhodes, "
The Aspiring Novelist Who Became Obama's Foreign Policy Guru." Rhodes, 38, serves as assistant to the president, deputy national security advisor for strategic communications and speechwriting, and oversees, as the
White House web site tells us, "President Obama's national security communications, speechwriting and global engagement."
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