CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Obama ‘sees Mideast a wasting asset’

Published: 02 Dec 2013 - 06:56 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 07:52 pm


Jim Hoagland delivering a lecture on the GU-Q campus.
Doha: The Middle East represents a glass half empty to US President Barack Obama, as opposed to the half full glass that seemed to capture former president George W Bush’s attention, according to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jim Hoagland.
Delivering a public lecture, ‘The Glass Half-Empty: Barack Obama and the Middle East’ on the Georgetown University Qatar (GU-Q) campus recently, Hoagland shared his perspectives on the political landscape Obama encountered in the beginning of his term in office, challenges that brought, and the policy shift that took place over the course of his presidency.
“My job is to have opinions,” began the journalist who started his illustrious career covering history-changing events of the civil rights movement and Vietnam for The Washington Post. 
He used the image of a glass containing liquid as a way to understand the way attitudes are shaped, and as a metaphor for conflicting perceptions of US presidents. 
“Half empty means it’s drained, a wasting asset, that will not return to its full abundant state.
“I’ll explain why President Obama sees the region this way — a wasting asset — and seeks to create a new containment policy in the Middle East.”
He described Obama’s world view as one that seeks to limit engagement and risks in his Middle East foreign policy agenda, as increasingly complex domestic issues present further distractions. 
Hoagland said Obama should re-launch his foreign policy efforts with an eye to approaching regional issues through a more strategic global agenda, one in which the cup, or opportunity for positive outcomes, is half full instead of empty.
“To see this university putting forward the commonality of human experience, in teaching studying living here, you all live part of that global change. 
“I speak to you as a historical optimist, something that has supplied my own ‘glass is half full’ frame of reference,” concluded Hoagland.
He was introduced by Omar Hashem, a GU-Q International Economics student who is pursuing a certificate in the university’s new Media and Politics programme.
“It’s a personal privilege for me, as it is a rare pleasure as a media minor to have such a professional as Mr Hoagland here,” said Omar.
The lecture is one of many educational events GU-Q organises to bring the expertise and experiences of global leaders to the Qatari community.
Reporting from Kenya, Hoagland won the first of his two Pulitzer Prizes for covering the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa in 1971, resulting in the apartheid government’s banning him from the country.
He won his second Pulitzer Prize in 1991 for covering events that led up to the Gulf War, and the failures of Gorbachev’s leadership. 
Hoagland continues to work at The Washington Post as Contributing Editor.
The Peninsula