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d-23349House OversightOther

Generic overview of Barack Obama's foreign policy initiatives (Nov 2011)

The passage provides a broad, publicly known summary of President Obama's foreign‑policy actions with no new specifics, transactions, or allegations. It lacks actionable leads, novel information, or d Mentions troop surge in Afghanistan, New START treaty, Libya intervention, Iraq withdrawal, China tr Describes Obama as having shifted from anti‑war senator to a more conventional, sometimes hawkish,

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #031955
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a broad, publicly known summary of President Obama's foreign‑policy actions with no new specifics, transactions, or allegations. It lacks actionable leads, novel information, or d Mentions troop surge in Afghanistan, New START treaty, Libya intervention, Iraq withdrawal, China tr Describes Obama as having shifted from anti‑war senator to a more conventional, sometimes hawkish,

Tags

barack-obamachina-tradeafghanistaniraqlibyanew-starthouse-oversightforeign-policy

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Article 5. Foreign Policy Barack Obama's Foreign Policy November 16, 2011 Foreign-policy credentials: As president, Obama has taken on a number of major foreign-policy initiatives, including a renewed troop surge in Afghanistan, the negotiation of the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia, the NATO intervention in Libya, the withdrawal from Iraq, ongoing trade negotiations with China, and of course, the killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. Overview: Obama is a much different candidate today from the senator who distinguished himself by his opposition to the "dumb war" on his way to the presidency in 2008. Obama has turned out, in many ways, to have pursued a fairly conventional, at times, hawkish foreign policy. He has had some notable successes, such as the bin Laden raid and this year's withdrawal from Iraq -- albeit on a timetable negotiated by his predecessor -- and the successful overthrow of Muammar al-Qaddafi. All the same, "apology tours" and "leading from behind" -- referring to an unfortunate description of Obama's diplomatic strategy by a White House staffer -- have already become buzzwords for Republican candidates. He has also faced heavy criticism on the left for a sometimes inconsistent approach to international law in counterterrorism operations. But with a significant economic recovery appearing unlikely and fewer domestic achievements to point to than he might have expected, coupled with the international inexperience of his opponents, Obama may make his foreign-policy wins the centerpiece of his reelection strategy.

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