Pod Save the World - Barack Obama, Worldo-in-Chief
Episode Date: December 16, 2020Tommy and Ben talk with former President and current Worldo Barack Obama about some of the biggest foreign policy challenges and accomplishments addressed in his book, A Promised Land. Those include t...he financial crisis and the rise of nationalism, the decision to send more troops to Afghanistan and tensions with the Pentagon leadership, the Cairo speech, dealing with Russia and Vladimir Putin, the politics of terrorism, including GITMO and the drone program, the rise of China and climate change, and some of the absurdities of traveling abroad as President.For a transcript of this interview, visit crooked.com/podsavetheworld.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back to Pod Save the World. I'm Tommy Vitor, and I'm alone recording this intro because we have a very special show this week.
On Monday night, Ben and I spent about an hour talking with former president Barack Obama about some of the foreign policy topics in his new book, A Promise Land.
It was a great conversation for a lot of reasons.
First and foremost, he's a former president of the United States, and it's a really smart guy and fun to talk to.
But also, I don't even think we said the name Donald Trump, which was just such a nice,
feeling. I somehow resisted the temptation to just reminisce about Iowa. And instead, we geeked out
on a bunch of foreign policy stuff. So, you know, we got into stuff like his decision to send
more troops to Afghanistan and his very candid account of the tensions that develop between
President Obama, the White House, and the senior Pentagon leadership during that time.
We talked about Russia's changing leadership in whether Vladimir Putin,
was always really pulling the strings or whether Dmitri Medvedev had more autonomy than he was often
given credit for. We got into his efforts to close Gitmo, and we talked about drones, and we talked
about the politics of terrorism and whether he felt like that constrained him. And then for all
you super foreign policy geeks out there, we talked about a brilliant playwright and Czech politician
named Baslav Havel, who appears several times in the book. And he offers warnings about
expectations and the rising forces of nationalism and the changing autocrat. And it was just interesting
to hear him really reflect on, you know, Havel and the people who inspired President Obama, you know,
when he was younger and deciding to get into politics. And then I think you'll all love Ben and
President Obama digging into the Cairo speech, the process, and that constant balance of when a
president should put forward a big vision versus, you know, trying to manage expectations for what's
possible. So the book is excellent.
The conversation, I mean, I loved it.
I hope you will too, even if Obama just absolutely butchered the name of this podcast,
brutally butchered the name of Ponte of the World.
And then he repeatedly taunted us about how much nicer it is in Hawaii right now versus
basically everywhere else.
But I don't think you'll find an interview with Obama where he talks about all of these
subjects.
And it was just really interesting and just fun to go full world out.
So little scheduling note, we're going to be off for the next two weeks.
So the next episode of Pod Save the World is going to come out on January 6th.
We're going to give everybody a little break.
But that's the day after the Georgia runoff Senate elections.
And if you want to help out with those elections before it's too late, head over to
Vote Save America.com slash Georgia.
You can find out stuff you can do right now.
You can sign up to adopt Georgia.
You can find volunteer activities.
You can find ways to donate.
You guys are doing incredible work to help out Asov and Warnock, the candidates down in Georgia.
There's even more you can do.
do, we're just incredibly grateful to everybody who's, who's pitching in here. So without further ado,
here's Ben in my conversation with former president Barack Obama. We are thrilled and honored to
welcome on our guest today. President Barack Obama, the author of the new book, A Promise Land.
President Obama is great to see you. It is great to see you. More importantly, the guy who
launched podcast The World. Let's face it.
I get no royal this, but I am proud of you guys.
Sir, the check is in the mail.
So I just wanted to first of all tell the listeners, so you know, you and Ben have been writing
together forever.
And so you've been reading each other's work.
I binged most of a promised land over the weekend.
And look, without blowing any smoke up either of your asses, it's a great read, right?
Like I was along for the ride for a lot of this journey.
Like the detail of exactly what you talked about during your dinner with Dmitri Medvedev is fascinating.
The consistently hilarious and insightful comments from Sasha and Malia, like just make the thing a joy to read.
So I really think people will like it.
And then look, for listeners to the show like foreign policy, the cool thing is you do a lot of basic history on big issues in a digestible way, right?
So if you want to understand why Israel and Palestine don't get along, there's a primer in there on the conflict.
before the talk. So just a plug for why people will learn a lot from this book because it's really
great. I appreciate that. Thank you, Tommy. Yeah, I mean, one of the goals was,
obviously, to make it readable, right? You want to make it a story so people want to turn the page,
especially when you're writing about something that most people can look up. You want to make it
a compelling narrative. But part of my goal was to
for a lay reader who's interested in some of the global forces that are shaping our world,
you know, I wanted them to have some context, as I said in the preface,
without having to refer to end notes or footnotes, right?
And to give people a little bit of background, you know, why is it that the Gulf Arabs
don't get along with the Iranians, right, even though they're both Muslim?
And what is it about, you know, some of the changes after the Berlin Wall that, you know, might lead some in eastern and central Europe to be skeptical about the EU and, you know, liberalism?
And so I'm glad you picked up on that because my hope is that not everybody's going to be following all of this, but it's actually,
a lot more coherent and understandable than I think sometimes news stories make it out to be.
You know, that if you just go back, in some cases, 20 years or 50 years or 100 years,
you can kind of see the outlines of what is it that's shaping a lot of foreign policy conflicts
that seem like they've been around forever.
Yeah, agreed. Yeah. So there's also a lot of great character.
And so, you know, Voslav Havel is a surprise star in this book.
And for those who don't know, Havel is a playwright.
He's a dissident.
He became the first president of the Czech Republic.
And in the book, we first encounter him during this stop in Prague on one of your foreign trips.
You guys have a brief meeting.
And I remember I was on that trip.
And I remember that meeting so well because I had read summer meditations in college.
And I brought along my copy of the book right here with me on the trip because I naively
thought that spokespeople on foreign trips with the president have time to read books. That is
not how it works. But Havel is prescient in the way he warns you about the double-edged sort of high
expectations and then how autocrats had evolved and how the economic crisis was strengthening the
forces of nationalism. And then you mentioned him again in the context of the Cairo speech.
And then again, after your conversation with Prime Minister Singh about Hindu nationalism
and anti-Muslim sentiment in India. And so I guess my question to you is just, what drew you
to Havel. And did you find it depressing talking with him about the rise of nationalism and how
easy it was to predict and get so difficult to prevent? Well, look, what drew me to him was
what had drawn you to him. I had read his works in college. And as I as I write about,
he was the example of someone who had grown out of a mass movement, a social movement from the
bottom up, had been entered politics and his soul had remained intact, right? So, you know,
there were a handful of political leaders that I looked to as an example. Because as I described,
my inspiration wasn't JFK or some other elected official.
My inspiration was Gandhi and Lexa and the civil rights workers in SNCC.
And it took me a while to feel comfortable with the idea that you could bring about change through electoral politics.
because I had the sort of skepticism that I think a lot of young people, at least growing up in America, had towards politicians.
And so when I see Habel and Mandela, really those were the two where I thought, oh, you can make that transition,
retain some sense of connection to the mass movement that produced you and still enter into government.
So that was why I was keen on meeting him.
It's interesting when I met him, it was early enough in my presidency that I found the meeting inspiring, but not depressing.
Because I thought that the caution he gave me, which was that you're going to be burdened by high expectations, people thinking that you're going to wave a moment.
magic wand and suddenly a lot of these historical forces are going to go away. But also his
warning that there was an illusion that somehow after the Berlin Wall came down, that somehow
all issues of nationalism and conflict in Europe were gone. Those were things that I understood
intellectually, but I think it was early enough in my presidency where I felt like, yeah, I see
that, but I'll be able to overcome those things. And the reason I think that it recurs as a theme
throughout the book is because I keep on coming back to it and I start saying, yeah, this is
harder and deeper. And there's more stubborn resistance to a vision of a,
a inclusive, democratic, liberal order than maybe I had anticipated. And so that becomes sort of
a marker for me that I find myself drawn back to in a number of circumstances throughout
my presidency. Well, you know, one of the areas where you mentioned how well is the Cairo speech,
and I thought it would be kind of a cool opportunity to talk to you about a speech that we
worked on together. And you describe, you know, beautifully and perfectly kind of the objective of
that speech after the difficulty of the Bush years and with all of the history that the U.S.
has had in the Middle East of, you know, speaking some hard truths, but allowing us to see each other,
allowing Americans to see Muslims, particularly in that part of the world and allowing them to
see us. You say, have a great line. You say hearing such basic history from the mouth of a U.S.
president would catch people off guard, you know, calling out essentially the indifference we'd had
to repression, but also calling out the fact that, you know, the Islamic fundamentalism in the region
wasn't the answer to that. And obviously, you know, that speech in the moment, you drew a lot of
praise. You know, I think there was a feeling that it was a different kind of message from U.S.
president. And from you, someone who had a different perspective on power than anybody who's ever
held the office, not just as the first black president, but as someone who, you know,
lived in Indonesia and been on the other end of, you know, a CIA-sponsored coup that had led to
huge violence. But you posed this question, you know, I've gotten in a miniature what I'm
sure you've gotten a lot, which is, well, look at the Middle East and, you know, wasn't that
speech naive to give, you know, some things you talked about. Actually, we did make progress
on removing troops or Iran-Nuclear deal, but obviously the Arab-Israeli conflict and the repression
in the region continues. And you raise this question, you know, how useful is it to describe the
world as it should be when efforts to achieve that are bound to fall short. And you don't really
answer the question. You kind of leave it to the reader to answer themselves. But it's interesting
because, you know, at the same time that I can see the lack of progress, you know, I still meet young
people from time to time from that part of the world who trace their founding of an NGO to hearing
that speech or their entrance into movement politics to that. And I'm wondering how do you evaluate
the impact of a speech like that.
Is it something that is measurable by developments in countries?
Is it something that's measurable in the kind of intangible inspiration that you pass
on to others?
Do you regret any pieces of it?
I mean, how do you judge something like the Cairo speech that is more a statement of belief
than it is a policy?
Yeah, I think these are a couple of separate issues involved in this that I struggle with, right?
One is when you deliver a speech, are you, and you paint a portrait of what's possible.
Is that useful if you know that you're not likely to get there to arrive at the promised land?
Is the vision itself worthwhile?
And then the second question is the work that comes behind the speech, right?
how well does it match up to what you've said? And I think it remains useful to paint a vision,
you know, what scripture says, right, without a vision that people will perish. For me, at least,
I continue to believe that people need to hear some image out there of what might be possible.
and what we tried to describe in the Cairo speech was a circumstance in which the United States and, by extension, the West, appreciates Muslim culture, can understand the angers and resentment that might exist on the street of Muslim countries in terms of how in a blunderbuss fashion we've sometimes operated.
And at the same time, the Muslim youth in particular can say to themselves, look, we are in possession of what's necessary to change our countries.
We can be allies with NGOs and folks from the outside and multilateral organizations.
But at the end of the day, it's our responsibility to face up to some hard truths inside our own country, which would include.
I think trying to reconcile modernity with their religious faith and the faith of their countries, right?
Which so that, for example, in my mind at least, and I say in the speech, it is time to update
certain practices that would allow women to fully participate in Muslim societies.
And that side of it, I don't make any apologies for.
I think when you're the President of the United States, though, you are then tested by the work that's done afterwards.
And you are always going to take a risk by saying, all right, here's where we need to go.
no matter how many caveats you set up that look we're not going to get there all the way we're not going to resolve every
you know conflict that may exist between sunni and shia or you know we're not going to be able to completely
undo the corruption and and challenges to you know the economy in a place like egypt that's been stagnating for decades.
we're not going to be able to unravel that entirely in a few years.
You're always then going to be subject to the accusation potentially that, well,
big talk, but look, nothing happened.
And I guess that's sort of a risk that you have to take,
knowing that it will then subject you to the possibilities of,
of accusations that you fell short, you didn't follow through, or you're potentially hypocritical.
The one thing I felt good about, and I thought I made this clear in the Cairo speech, is that
we set a course for what we thought U.S. policy should be.
I don't feel any, I don't feel as if we did not shoot for that vision in all.
of our policies. I mean, we genuinely did try to take the interests of the Muslim population
into account. We did try to promote human rights in the region where we could. We did do our best
to try to broker a peace deal between the Israelis and the Palestinians. And for that matter,
We tried to get the Iranians to talk to the Saudis in a way that would lessen sectarian conflict in the region.
What we could not do, I think, is overcome all the deep-rooted fears and interests that existed and had preceded us and would continue on after I had left office.
That doesn't mean, though, that the effort wasn't worth it.
And I am skeptical.
Typically, I guess, I think the criticism of something like the Cairo speech comes from two places,
either from the left, in which case they'll point to, well, the fact is, is that you were still carrying on counterterrorism,
or you were still doing business with the Saudis despite what they were doing in Yemen or, right, on and on.
And that criticism I take to heart, but I try to explain in the book that we couldn't remake U.S. policy out of whole cloth.
There are still factors that we had to take into account in terms of our own security interests and so forth.
But that doesn't mean we were ignoring everything we said or we didn't believe what we said.
The criticism of the right, which is essentially that we shouldn't even try to promote human rights, for example, because that lets the lid off things and makes our authoritarian allies nervous, that I do not buy.
And there's nothing that happened subsequently where I said, oh, you know what?
we should have let Mubarak roll tanks into Tahrir Square and kill a whole bunch of kids the way they did in Tiananmen.
And that would have resulted in a better outcome.
You know, we should have never said anything about the Arab Spring because, you know, the fact of the matter is is that it was never possible for us to have a pluralistic democracy.
in the region.
That kind of cynical take, when I look at the sweep of history, I don't get any sense that
the outcomes end up being better.
If you foreclose the possibility of greater freedom, greater equality, greater prosperity,
and so forth.
Yeah.
Speaking of deep-rooted conflicts that predated you, I mean, you spend a lot of time in the book
talking about the war in Afghanistan, you spend a lot of time in your, you spend a lot of time
in your first term, you know, working on the war in Afghanistan. In 2009, in particular,
the White House conducted two separate reviews of the policy, one of which was quite extensive.
It was cheered by you personally, and you ended up sending additional troops to Afghanistan twice
that year. So two questions for you. I mean, first, you're very candid in the book about
tensions that develops between you and the White House and Pentagon leadership during that process,
especially Bob Gates and Admiral Mike Bowlin. And I was hoping you could tell the story of
that contentious Oval Office meeting and maybe just what it felt like in the moment to feel,
I think, jammed as the word that was used most often by the Pentagon as a decision as significant
as sending more troops into harm's way. And then second, I mean, when we sit here today and we look
at the war in Afghanistan and how it's going, you know, 11 years after you took office, which was well
after the war started, is there part of you that wonders whether, you know, we could have sent fewer
troops into battle and the conditions would be the same. We could have further resisted some of the
demands from the Pentagon for more, more, more. Well, the tension was, I think, well-meaning on all sides.
Afghanistan was a tough problem. And I think, as I describe in the book, a lot of the tensions
arose out of the fact that Washington policymakers had embarked on a bad policy policy in Iraq,
diverted a huge amount of resources from Afghanistan.
And so by the time we get in, we've essentially, I won't say lost six years,
but six years in which it might have been possible immediately after driving the Taliban out
to make a big investment in Afghanistan, to essentially do some nation building there,
so that you could consolidate some of the gains that had been made in terms of development
and education and anti-corruption efforts.
That's not what had happened.
What had occurred, though, in Iraq was because of some of the screw-ups by folks like
Bremer and Rumsfeld and others.
essentially the Bush administration had turned over the keys to the generals.
And they had done a pretty extraordinary job just of stabilizing Iraq.
And, you know, Petraeus genuinely did make significant gains in stemming the bloodshed,
in part with the assistance of folks like Ryan Crocker and the diplomatic work and the broken.
of deals with Sunni tribal leaders in Iraq and so forth.
But what happens is more and more the Pentagon essentially is making policy,
sometimes in conjunction with the CIA,
but you have less civilian control of the policy-making apparatus in Iraq.
Those habits built up.
So by the time we come in, in some ways the path has been charted for Iraq,
Right? There's going to be a wind down. And the question for me is just how do we execute and implement and stay on track with that.
But in Afghanistan, now the impulse, I think, is to duplicate what from the Pentagon's view at least worked in Iraq, which is let's just put more in.
And we will double down. And, you know, as you guys will recall,
the phrase that was repeated again and again was,
you know,
you got to listen to the generals on the ground.
They know better, write them a check and get out of the way.
That's what I was resisting.
And so, you know, the tensions I had with Bob Gates and Mike Mullen,
in part also growing out of statements made by Dave Petraeus
and General McChrystal and others,
as I say in that chapter, I didn't doubt their sincerity, right?
They genuinely believed that we had to initiate what was called a coin strategy,
a full coin strategy in Afghanistan to be successful,
meaning a counterinsurgency strategy, a lot more resources,
a lot more troops, a lot more money.
The problem was that those habits of,
not having civilian interference and asking questions, hey, you know, this is going to cost us an extra
$10, $20, $30 billion. What does this mean we can't do with respect to our national security if we're
making that huge of a commitment in Afghanistan? Those kinds of questions hadn't been asked for a while.
And so the assumption was once the generals made a decision, then that was sort of the end of the conversation.
that's what I resisted.
What I try to reflect in that chapter is not any ill will on anybody's side,
but as you point out, there does come a point in which I call in Gates
and I call in Mullen, and I say to him, listen, when I ask for a deliberative process
to figure out what we're going to do on this very difficult strategy,
I don't expect it to be litigated in the press.
and to some degree that helped stop that.
But as I record in a later chapter,
I think General McChrystal still had those habits.
And he was an extraordinary warrior, you know,
who had taken over in Afghanistan,
had done some incredible work in Iraq.
I actually thought very highly of him.
But when, you know, he does this Rolling Stone article,
revealing this general skepticism towards all civilian restraint or control. I had to relieve him
of his duties, and that was a very difficult decision. As far as the substance of Afghanistan,
look, at the time, I had to ask myself to question, how much of a difference will these additional
troops make? So I continue to ask that question. My instinct,
is that things were perilous enough, tenuous enough at the time, that if we had not put in more
resources at that time, we're talking about 2009, 2010, 2011, that the Taliban really would have
or could have overrun the major urban areas in Afghanistan. And that outcome at the time,
was not tolerable given the fact that al-Qaeda was still active and the prospect of
Afghanistan once again being a base for terrorist activity against the homeland
what was not a position that i was willing to take what i think always made the decision difficult
was that i knew even with those additional troops we were not going to remand
remake Afghanistan. But it did purchase us the time to engage in the strategic defeat of al-Qaeda
and to some degree stabilize Afghanistan enough, where if, in fact, we now start drawing down
troops all the way, there is at least the possibility, the prospect that Afghan security forces
can maybe engage enough with the Taliban and other forces there to get a stalemate
and to keep terrorism from rebossping in that region.
But nowhere is the uncertainties of the presidency greater than when you're talking about
a situation like Afghanistan.
in terms of seeing how it's going to play out and trying to engage in counterfactuals
about what would have happened if you had made a different decision at any given point.
So just moving through some of the foreign policy of the book,
I was struck by how much, you know, one of the things that you only fully appreciate
in government is the extent to which who the leaders of other countries are matter.
You know, when Yitzik Rabin is the prime minister of Israel, you can get a peace deal.
And Bibi Nainoa is, it's harder.
And one of the countries that jumps out in here, and I think you deliberately make the point in the book, is Russia, where in the time in this book, Dmitri Medvedev is president.
And I'm struck by how many things we got done.
You know, to read this, you know, the New START Treaty, and we're resupplying our troops through Russia.
The Iran sanctions that basically led to the nuclear deal to require Russian cooperation and on and on.
And you have a pretty remarkable juxtaposition of the two leaders on your trip to Russia, where you describe a,
dinner with Medvedev that was very familiar to you. You know, he's talking about his workout
routine. He's talking about, you know, the U.S. rock music that he likes. He's a deep purple fan and
Michelle's there and, you know, the wives are getting along. And, you know, it sounds like a normal
evening. And I remember just, I was reading that and just thinking, I can't imagine Vladimir Putin
having that evening with you. I don't want to paint too rosy a picture of Medvedev, because as you
point out, you know, he's a participant in a corrupt system. He tolerates it. He's, he's, he's, he's
surfed it in many ways. But then you described Putin and your first meeting with Putin and it's just a
45-minute, you know, grievance-filled, you know, rant of sorts about the wrongs done to Russia.
And, you know, it kind of foreshadows, obviously, the kind of nationalism that he pursued when he
came back to the presidency. One question that I've always had in mind, I just want to get your view of,
is when Medvedev was president and Putin was prime minister, and we were making all that progress.
And it did seem that here's this kind of Western-oriented.
character of Medvedev, who represents, you know, one part of Russia. How much do you think
Medvedev was getting out ahead of Putin? You know, our assumption, I think, had been that Putin
must have been signing off on this, but like, given how different they are and given how different
things were, you know, after Putin came back, do you think that there was more going on underneath
the surface in terms of Medvedev pushing out ahead of Putin? And as we just think about Russia,
what do those two characters tell us about the different mindsets and size? And, you know,
of Russia. Medvedev is this kind of more, again, a corrupt figure. I don't want to sugarcoat it,
but, you know, kind of a Western-oriented guy. And then Putin is obviously this very kind of
almost czarist figure. Like, how do you read the two of them in terms of what they say about Russia?
Well, look, as I point out, and I'm not the first to say this, it's not particularly original,
but I think Russia has always had this sort of Janus face quality to it, right?
It both looks west and east and has these strains of culture where in certain moments,
you know, it will get Peter the Great and they're very much oriented towards, you know,
let's show the Europeans how civilized and how modern we are and we'll embrace, you know, whatever the
latest trends are. And then there are other times where, look, that's not us. Mother Russia,
you know, operates along a different system and, you know, has a different soul. And, you know,
some of these things are stereotypical. I think that a lot of the differences between Medev and Putin,
and I try to describe these, are biographical and generational, right? I mean, Putin,
is much more of a creature who comes up through the ranks of the Soviet system and is a well-established
and, you know, reasonably powerful mid-level official at the time that the Berlin Wall falls.
And that is a traumatic experience for him to see the world and the system he had operated under Crumble before his eyes.
Medvedev, who's younger than I am, he's experiencing these changes as a young man and is probably seeing opportunity, right?
And an opening and awakening.
And so I think that some of the differences have to do both with their temperaments and personalities, but also how they came up.
As I point out, Medvedev was also relatively privileged coming up,
whereas Putin is much more somebody who had to scrap and claw his way into power.
And that probably accounts for some of those differences as well.
And it also meant that Putin was probably more attuned to the sense of anger,
resentment, aggrieved, you know, feelings of others taking advantage
of a weak Russia and so forth in a way that Medvedev didn't embody. Now, as I point out,
you know, Medvedev operated as Putin's consigliary and chief of staff and advisor. And we assumed
early on that all the work that Medvedev was doing with us was signed off on by Putin.
I'm not sure to this day that that is wrong. As I point out, it's really,
And this is an example of how sometimes contingent you get a sense history may be.
A couple of things happen.
Only one of the things that happens first occurs in volume one of my book.
And some of the other factors play a prominent part in volume two.
What happens towards the end of volume one midway through my presidency is Libya.
And I do think that that may be a circumstance where Putin,
I can't imagine that Putin agreed to have the UN ambassador from Russia to the UN sign on to a broad mandate to protect citizens who were at risk of being slaughtered in Benghazi.
but you do get a sense that perhaps Putin said,
let me give Medvedev enough rope to hang himself on that issue, right?
And that's the first time where you start seeing at least a public divide.
And Putin's sensing that perhaps Medvedev is too comfortable
with the Americans or Europeans or the West sort of dictating terms.
terms of how the international order should operate.
What happens later, and you see this at the end of my first term, so we're talking 2012,
as you may recall, Putin has to run for re-election. And right around 2012, his polling drops significantly.
Now, for an American or Western politician,
His poll numbers are still pretty darn high, right?
They drop down to like 60% or something,
but I think they had dropped 10, 15% from his high watermark.
He's running for re-election now.
He's decided I'm going to take back the presidency.
Medvedev is shunned aside.
And when you look at the transcripts of the speeches,
it's in the run-up to that re-election.
Because you'll also recall,
that's when you start getting actually thousands of people,
people in Moscow protesting against Putin and the regime.
And so I think that what happens is that Putin starts suddenly feeling that, you know what,
I've let a little, I've been too loose on the reins here, and I could lose everything.
He yanks that back, finds that it is convenient politically to play up Russian nationalism,
to oppose more vocally and in much harsher terms, U.S. policy, to set us up as a boogeyman.
And then the third factor that I think we all recall is that suddenly Ukraine decides we want to leave the Russian orbit.
and you get the entire situation in Crimea.
All of which, by the way, as I'll describe in volume two,
this notion that somehow Putin had this all planned out
while he was worrying about whether there was enough snow in Sochi
is just not the case, right?
That's an example of something happening
where he sees suddenly Ukraine following a path
that some of the other satellite states or former satellite states of the Soviet Union
had followed with the various color revolutions.
And at that point, I think, is when you see a sharp divide.
And Putin himself makes a decision.
So it's not clear to me that Putin, from the beginning,
was so convinced of the necessity of following a path different from Medvedev,
as much as it is that Putin, whose main concern was self-preservation,
started changing his orientation in response to various events that he thought might weaken his grip on power.
God, I'll never forget, this isn't in the book, but I'll never forget that last, like May 2012, G8,
camp David when Putin had just taken over, but he sent Medvedev instead. And it was like their last
hurrah. And I remember being in the bar with Jay Carney and some staffers. So midvedev people walked in.
I was in. I was in the back. And someone in the bandstaff was like, so are you going to go work for
President Putin now to one of Medvedev's aides? And Jay Carney was like, that's not,
that's not really how it works. And then I think Medvedev's team ordered like 37 hamburgers to
his house at one in the morning. And I'm sure the Marines were, we're thrilled about that.
But I digress.
So in reading the book, there were lots of nostalgia, lots of, like, interesting points.
The chapter that made me the most frustrated all over again, like I was reliving it, was the section on Gitmo.
And the quick and dirty version for listeners is that closing the president in Guantanamo Bay went from issue with bipartisan support to this bizarro political reality where Republicans started acting like it wasn't safe to try terrorists in Article III courts.
or how's Gitmo detainees in a supermax prison in the middle of nowhere in Illinois.
And, you know, in other words, like 11 years after 9-11, the politics of terrorism was still
completely irrational. And I thought about that part. And then I thought about a passage later in
the book where you were talking about U.S. counterterrorism policies and the young men who become
terrorists. And you said you wanted to save them or send them to school, but quote, and yet the world
they were part of and the machinery I commanded more often had me killing them instead.
And that made me wonder if you felt like the politics of terrorism were so broken that it almost
forced your hand to continue controversial policies and you didn't have the choice to say,
like fully scrap the drone program. Yeah. Well, look, I mean, let's separate out Gitmo from
counterterrorism more broadly.
With respect to Gitmo, I absolutely had a choice.
I chose to close Gitmo, and Congress stopped me.
And Congress stopped me, by the way, on a bipartisan basis.
And what struck me as I was writing the book was the reminder of how fast
get more politics pivoted.
I mean, we were only in like six months
when suddenly, you know,
not just Republicans,
but conservative Democrats like Jim Webb,
and then later even a bunch of liberal Democrats
suddenly said,
the idea of housing terrorists on U.S. soil,
that worries us.
And as I point out in the book, there was a distinction between high value, you know, leaders within al-Qaeda who were housed in Guantanamo and that releasing them would have been a serious problem.
But nevertheless, there was no reason why we could not imprison them in U.S. prison.
because, in fact, there were other high-value targets
who had been tried by the Bush administration
and were also housed without incident in U.S. prisons.
And a whole bunch of Gitmo prisoners, though,
were basically low-level fighters that had been swept up.
And the Bush administration itself had released,
like, 500 of them and sent them back home.
We were trying to deal with the last 200.
But the degree to which the boogeyman of terrorism, as I described in the book, the notion that these were somehow super villains, that if you brought them on U.S. soil, who knows what might happen, I think caught fire in Congress very quickly.
And legislatively, they prevented us from doing everything that we needed to do.
And later on, they would not even let us try some of these folks in Article III courts.
And that had support within the Democratic Party.
So, yes, I think it's fair to say that we underestimated, not just the complexity of how to try many of these Gitmo prisoners who, as I described, you know, it wasn't like there were these great –
you know, court or records of their, you know, capture and evidence and chains of evidence and so forth.
I mean, you know, their files were a shambles. So from a legal perspective, trying them in Article
3 court was difficult. But what we also underestimated was the power of fear. And that was
still operating significantly.
But,
Gitmo was never a situation
where I was struggling with what the right
thing to do was.
It was just how to navigate Congress
to actually do it. And
I think that
you can make an argument
and sometimes I've wondered
what would have happened if rather
than saying we're going to have a year-long
process in
the first month, I just,
issued an order. Close that down, move these folks, put up some security perimeter in one of our existing
military facilities and house them there until we figure out a more permanent solution, whether that
might have worked. It's hard for me to imagine that that would not have triggered a freak out
while we were obviously doing other things like trying to save the economy from a great depression.
But you could make an argument that maybe if we had just moved more quickly without worrying about process,
that maybe we could have gotten more done on that front.
At the end of the day, I probably don't think so, but it's something I think about.
with respect to counterterrorism generally,
that is a hard issue
because the fact of the matter is, as you guys know,
because you were part of the administration
and had access to various levels of intelligence
that was coming through the transom,
there were folks who would happily blow up
New York subway if they could.
and had no hesitation in killing all kinds of innocent civilians if they had the capacity.
And because they're non-state actors, they are embedded in countries and remote areas,
but populated areas where had we sent in additional troops, for example, into the FATA,
We've got not only more collateral damage, but we're risking now a complete breach with a nuclear power in Pakistan that we also depend on for supply lines into Afghanistan.
And so you then look at, is there a way to use drones effectively to target those individuals while as much as possible avoiding
death or the killing of civilians who are in close proximity.
And I talk more about this again in volume two because what happened with the drone program
was my awareness, not that there was more quote unquote collateral damage,
which is a bloodless way of saying innocent people being killed.
with the drone program than there would have been
if we had sent in troops.
In fact, the statistics and data that we collected
actually showed pretty consistently
that you get a lot more civilian death
when you have conventional forces
or air power going after these networks
than you do with drones.
What I discovered
and ultimately led to us
trying to reform how we were using drones was the bloodlessness of it, the degree to which it was,
it felt antiseptic, even the way it was talked about within the national security apparatus,
led me to conclude that there was a danger there of people not understanding what exactly
we're doing when we order a kinetic shot, even if it's well targeted, and that we have to
have to have some controls on this thing and understand this is still war, even if we're not
deploying our own troops. We're still firing missiles at people. And there is a moral element to
that has to be taken into account.
That doesn't mean, by the way,
that at some point, an American president
doesn't have to make that choice.
And sometimes, I think,
critics of counterterrorism
seem to think that there is some binary choice,
either you're engaging in the drone program
or you're not,
and there's some other way
in which you can engage
in some, you know, law enforcement operation in the FATA that arrests people the way you might,
you know, engage in a raid on a house, you know, in Baltimore or in, you know, Des Moines.
Those options were not available.
And so you then have it, you have to decide, all right, are we going to,
allow this network, let's say the bomb maker, Al-Syri and Yemen, are you going to allow him to make
and design more and more sophisticated bombs that he can somehow plant on cargo ships or planes or
trains or what have you? Or are we going to try to take him out? And if we are going to try to take
him out, then what has to be acknowledged and sometimes I think is not,
is that there is no clean, simple, effective way of doing that
without some risk that you may miss
or there's somebody who's in the vicinity.
And that is heartbreaking.
It is morally something that I wrestled with,
and I think a lot of folks in our administration wrestled with,
but sometimes it's something that I don't hear critics wrestle with as well-intentioned as
they are, right?
So their moral impulse is correct that it's terrible if even one drone shot hits somebody
who has meant no harm to the United States.
And yet what is also horrible is if a bomb goes off and a hundred people in a city are killed.
And that is a question that you have to wrestle with if you are in that position.
If you're not, then it's easier to speak more theoretically about it.
So just I'll wrap here with, you know, a question about Copenhagen.
I'm actually going to put two questions in this.
It won't be one of those five-parters from a press conference.
But I wanted to give you a chance to talk about the light.
Tommy knows all about it.
Yeah, exactly.
Every White House correspondent knows of this trick.
Is that Major Garrett down there?
All right, here we go.
Yeah.
But I love that you obviously included the Copenhagen scene, the climate talks there.
you know, for a couple reasons. I mean, one, because I think people need to read this and understand that when you hear about the Paris Agreement, the birthplace of that agreement was in Copenhagen, right? Because that was the first time we're able to kind of agree upon at least a framework where everybody was doing something to reduce their emissions, including China and India and obviously the U.S. as well as.
Copenhagen ends up being the foundation stone on which we are then able eventually to achieve Paris.
Even though at the time Copenhagen was viewed by and understandably by a lot of climate activists as a failure,
we actually snatched this little nugget, this basic principle that then over successive years we're able to use as a lever to engage the Chinese.
eventually the Indians and finalize a Paris agreement towards the end of my second term.
Yeah.
And Christiana Figueras, you know, who was the U.N. top climate negotiator, described it to me
as the most successful failure in history of the United Nations.
But, you know, because of the basic formula, everybody commits to emissions reductions.
It's going to be different in different countries.
The richer countries are kind of paying into a fund to help the poorer countries develop
cleaner energy.
You know, the formula has led to Paris.
But when I read it again, the thing that struck me, and it's such a great scene, which I'll get to in a second, but it's actually the international order, you know, a term that's thrown around a lot, that we live with for eight years is very evident because we show up, the conference has fallen apart. The reason it's fallen apart is because the Europeans are basically trying to negotiate, you know, the Kyoto Protocol, which is the 90s version of a climate agreement. The Chinese controlled most.
More votes in America did by the time, you know, we showed up.
And it's because all the developing countries were just siding with them because their position was the developing world, which includes us, doesn't have to do anything.
And you described the remarkable meeting where you walk in and the Chinese premier, premier when is essentially chairing a meeting with India, Brazil, South Africa, and Russia, you know, emblematic of the, you know, countervailing block to the west.
And they're not just chairing the meeting, but they're all.
also dodging me.
Yeah, they're dodging you. And there's a great scene. So, you know, we, we were trying to get
meetings with the Chinese and the Brazilians and the Indians. We couldn't find them. We finally
heard that there was this meeting going on. You walk through this scrum of Chinese security
to get in the meeting. I was pummeled in that scrum, like literally physically thrown to
the ground. And you walk in and say, you know, are you ready for me, Premier when? Let's make a deal.
But the question I had, there's a serious part and then a lighter part.
The serious part is that, okay, wait, this is kind of the emerging world order where you can't
solve a problem with just the U.S. and Europe and a room figuring it out.
The Chinese have their say and they have their stake, but we need them to do more, just like
we need India and others to do more.
Another interesting part, what you have in your book, is the Europeans were grumpy about
this, but the person you could go to to solve that was Angle Merkel, right?
So no offense to our British friends, but, you know, she's, Berlin is kind of the leader.
She herself, the leader.
It kind of foreshadowed a lot of the progress you made in foreign policy was like, try to get the Chinese to move forward, work with Merkel to bring along the Europeans, take the developing world seriously, see them, hear their concerns.
And so I wonder what is, you know, because Paris is this unique agreement that comes out of Copenhagen where everybody's in on the
the deal. There are 200 countries in it now that we're back in. Everybody's got to do something,
but it's going to be different. And the Chinese relationship to that is complicated, but they need
to be in. And I'm just wondering, you know, what is that, what is that, how would you describe
how that international order, which is still kind of unfamiliar to Americans, the idea that we
can't just go around and tell people what to do, the idea that it's not just us in Europe,
the Chinese have to be a part of it, the idea that, you know, Europe needs to now.
navigate amongst itself. What did you learn from Copenhagen about the world that actually was
in terms of what the international order was? And the lighter point is you have a great,
so many great stories, you know, Reggie telling you that that was some gangster shit,
you know, that summit was crazy. It was a shopping center where I remember where the staff
office was. I wanted to give you one chance at the end of the interview just, you have some great
light moments in this book about the absurdity of foreign trips too. So a very serious question
about the international order implications of Copenhagen.
And the latter point of just, you clearly made a point in the book to lift up kind of what
you and I used to joke about and top ten lists and things like that of the kind of absurdities
of foreign travel for president.
I wanted to how much Copenhagen was a part of that as well.
Well, I'll take the second question first.
You know, all of us have some pretty great stories about,
foreign travel and bilaterals and summits.
Part of the point that I try to communicate in the book is this stuff looks fancier
and it has a bunch of flags and, you know,
limousines driving up with kings and prime ministers,
et cetera, getting out of cars, et cetera.
But oftentimes it's organized like a trade show or a
convention, right? You know, you've got the, you know, the big round table in our case, but, you know,
you've got the, you know, the pen and the pad, you know, commemorative pens and some of them don't
work that well. Some of them are really nice. The Chinese always had the fanciest stuff because they
were trying to show off through how nice their pens and pads were. And, you know, you've got the
mince and sometimes there's snacks, sometimes not so much. And, you know, you've got the photo with
everybody and with the cheesy wave and, and, but I think, as you guys will acknowledge,
at least during my presidency, what was still true.
And I think this is what was lost during the Trump presidency, and I think will be a challenge,
a necessary challenge for the Biden-Harris administration.
to confront, we still set the agenda in these meetings. And if we didn't set the agenda,
there wasn't a, nobody else had the combination of technical skill, bandwidth, diplomatic experience,
relationships, trust, and power to be able to stitch together various interests to arrive at
something like a Paris Accord.
And, you know, I think what Copenhagen showed, and, you know, I talk about how Ban Ki-moon,
who was then the U.N. Secretary, kept on nagging me about how I needed to go.
And me trying to put him off because it wasn't clear that we were actually going to be able
to get any kind of deal of the sort that people wanted.
At the time, everybody wanted a binding treaty of the sort that had happened in Kyoto, except
America had never signed up for it.
And we didn't have the votes in the Senate to have a binding treaty like that,
nor did we think we should have a binding treaty that in which China, India,
the fastest growing emitters had no responsibility.
So we knew we couldn't get that.
So there was an instinct, I think, on the part of a lot of us in the administration,
to say, well, we shouldn't send the president to something that we know is not going to work.
And the UN's trying to organize with 194 countries.
And they all have delegates.
And poor Denmark is being asked to work with the UN to somehow hammer agreement.
And as I point out, Denmark and all the Scandinavian countries, they punch above their weight.
I mean, they're terrific.
They're smart.
They're humane.
They're thoughtful.
But they're still tiny countries.
China's not going to be muscled by Denmark into a deal it doesn't want.
at the end of the day, even though it was last minute,
we are the ones who come up with a plausible formula
and then have the muscle both to say to the Europeans,
this is as good as we're going to do right now.
Let's go ahead and take this quarter of a loaf and build on it.
And then to say the Chinese, listen, if you don't take this deal,
we are going to do everything we can to make sure everybody knows that you didn't take the deal.
You're the reason that we didn't have an agreement and the prospect of potentially providing
mitigation and adaptation financing for poor countries and island nations that are being swallowed up by the oceans.
That's going to be on you, not on us.
We're the ones who are able to see and then broker that kind of deal.
Now, what that I think points to is the fact that sometimes we have in our foreign policy thinking this on and off switch where we think either the U.S. is this dominant hegemon and everybody has to fall in line to whatever it is that we want to do, right? If you're not part of the coalition of the willing, then we're not going to do business with you. We're going to punish you. We're going to muscle you.
as the attempt the Bush administration made during the Iraq war, that's one view.
And then the second view is that we're just one nation among many nations, and we shouldn't
be arrogant in that way. And our role is simply to try to see if we can arrive at global
consensus. Well, the fact, what Copenhagen showed is you're not going to get global
consensus with 194 countries. The fact is some countries, in the case of climate change, some
countries are the big emitters. Some countries are the bigger economies. You're going to have
to get agreement from them first. And in a multipolar world, what you have to do is to still
assert American leadership, but that leadership is exercised in a different way. The leadership is
exercised by example, right? So we start taking steps ourselves to deal with climate change so that we can
then go to other countries and say, see, we're taking this seriously. You need to also. It involves
understanding what the other big countries are thinking, right? So I can't have a conversation with the
Chinese about climate change if I don't acknowledge that they still have 300 million people
who are in extreme poverty and that the central committee in China is constantly obsessed with
the destabilization if they cannot stay on a 6% growth rate or 7% growth rate because they're not
going to be able to employ all those folks who are coming in from the countryside.
And I have to understand that India has to figure out how to electrify huge swathes
of the country, hundreds of millions people who just don't have basic electricity.
And I have to understand the Europeans view that they have already made investments in clean energy.
And so they're trying to figure out, well, why is it, if we're doing it, why is the bigger emitter is doing anything?
Right.
So the role ends up being one of convener, agenda setter, persuader, example setter,
But that's still leadership.
It's not as if you then pull back.
America's still central to getting the kind of international cooperation on big issues like nuclear proliferation or climate change or disaster relief or dealing with a pandemic.
We're still central to that process, but how we exercise that power is it's critical.
to be able to persuade and understand the perspectives and dynamics in these other countries.
It is not, here's what we're going to do and everybody else has to fall in line, because
the time in which we had that kind of power, which, by the way, is always overstated.
Otherwise, we wouldn't have had Vietnam. We would not have had, you know, OPEC, right?
I mean, there are all kinds of things that happened even at the Z.
of American power. The world was always messier than we understood. But what we have to recognize
is that other countries caught up. And the anomaly was that period right after World War II,
let's call it, you know, the fall of the Berlin Wall or a few years after the fall of the Berlin Wall,
in which, you know, you have a huge swath of the world behind an iron curtain.
You've got China and India that are basically still at the early stages of development.
And you've got Japan and Korea and most of Europe in rubble.
Well, yeah, we had more power than obviously that changes once China.
starts to grow and India begins to grow and suddenly all that power is unleashed behind the iron curtain.
But that doesn't mean that American leadership doesn't still matter. And what we've seen over the last
four years is when we're not exercising that leadership, where we're not presenting an agenda
and a vision that is infused with democratic values and at least some consideration of human rights
and thinks about generational challenges like climate change, nothing has. Nothing has.
happens. It's not as if China filled that void and or wants to fill that void. And, you know,
the combination of humility in understanding that other countries matter and they have their own
imperatives, but also a certain bold confidence in saying, you know what, we have the ability
because of our unique position in the world, even today, to lead, you know, that's the combination
that I think, you know, we need to be looking for. And the good news is that I think there are going to be
a lot of veterans of our administration working inside the Biden-Harris administration, who will have
learned some of these lessons. It doesn't mean that all the choices are going to be easy.
They'll get their share of criticism just like we did.
But I do think they understand the essential role America continues to play in the world and shouldn't.
Well, there are so many more things we could have asked you about in the book.
There's the bin Laden operation, the Arab Spring, the Middle East peace talks.
There is great just family stuff.
There's Reggie stories.
Couldn't get enough of those.
There's Iowa.
But you have been incredibly gracious with your time, President Obama.
Thank you so much.
Everyone should check out a Promise Land.
It was great to talk to you.
It was fun.
Thank you, guys.
Pazade of the World is a crooked media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our associate producer is Jordan Waller.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Segglin is our sound engineer.
Special thanks to Quinn Lewis for production support.
And thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Nar Malkonian, and Milo Kim,
who film and share our episodes as videos every week.
