Where's Obama's foreign policy  spine?  
Feb. 24,  2009
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER , THE JERUSALEM POST 
 The Biden prophecy has come to pass. Our wacky veep,  momentarily inspired, had predicted last October that "it will not be six months  before the world tests Barack Obama." Biden probably had in mind an  eve-of-the-apocalypse drama like the Cuban Missile Crisis. Instead, Obama's  challenges have come in smaller bites. Some are deliberate threats to US  interests, others mere probes to ascertain whether the new president has any  spine. 
  
 Preliminary X-rays are not very encouraging.  Consider the long list of brazen Russian provocations:
(a)  Pressuring Kyrgyzstan to shut down the US air base in Manas, an absolutely  crucial NATO conduit into Afghanistan.
(b) Announcing the formation of a  "rapid reaction force" with six former Soviet republics, a regional Russian-led  strike force meant to reassert Russian hegemony in the Muslim belt north of  Afghanistan.
(c) Planning to establish a Black Sea naval base in Georgia's  breakaway province of Abkhazia, conquered by Moscow last summer.
(d) Declaring Russia's intention to deploy offensive Iskander  missiles in Kaliningrad if Poland and the Czech Republic go ahead with plans to  station an American (anti-Iranian) missile defense system. 
  
 President Bush's response to the Kaliningrad deployment - the  threat was issued the day after Obama's election - was firm. He refused to back  down because giving in to Russian threats would leave Poles and Czechs exposed  and show the world that, contrary to post-Cold War assumptions, the US could not  be trusted to protect Eastern Europe from Russian bullying.  The Obama response? "Biden Signals US Is Open to Russia  Missile Deal," as The New York Times headlined Biden's February 7 Munich  speech to a major international gathering. This followed strong messages from  the Obama transition team even before the inauguration that Obama was not  committed to the missile shield. And just to make sure everyone understood that  the Bush policy no longer held, Biden in Munich said the US wanted to "press the  reset button" on NATO-Russian relations. 
  
 Not surprisingly, the Obama wobble elicited a favorable  reaction from Russia. (There are conflicting reports that Russia might suspend  the Kaliningrad blackmail deployment.) The Kremlin must have been equally  impressed that the other provocations - Abkhazia, Kyrgyzstan, the rapid reaction  force - elicited barely a peep from Washington. 
  
 IRAN HAS been similarly charmed by Obama's overtures. A week  after the new president went about sending sweet peace signals via al-Arabiya,  Iran launched its first homemade Earth satellite. The message is clear. If you  can put a satellite into orbit, you can hit any continent with a missile, North  America included. 
  
 And for emphasis, after the roundhouse hook, came the poke in  the eye.  A US women's badminton team had been invited to Iran. Here was  a chance for "Ping-Pong diplomacy" with the accommodating new president, a  sporting venture meant to suggest the possibility of warmer relations.  On February 4, Teheran denied the team entry into Iran.  
  
 Then, just in case Obama failed to get the message, Iran's  parliament speaker rose in Munich to offer his response to Obama's olive branch.   Executive summary: Thank you very much. After you acknowledge  60 years of crimes against us, change not just your tone but your policies and  abandon the Zionist criminal entity, we might deign to talk to you.  
  
 WITH A grinning Goliath staggering about sporting a "kick me"  sign on his back, even reputed allies joined the fun. Pakistan freed from house  arrest A.Q. Khan, the notorious proliferator who sold nuclear technology to  North Korea, Libya and Iran. Ten days later, Islamabad capitulated to the  Taliban, turning over to its tender mercies the Swat Valley, 100 miles from the  capital. Not only will Shari'a law now reign there, but the democratically  elected secular party will be hunted down as the Pakistani army stands down.  
  
 These Pakistani capitulations may account for Obama's hastily  announced 17,000 troop increase in Afghanistan even before his various heralded  reviews of the mission have been completed. Hasty, unexplained, but at least  something. Other than that, a month of pummeling has been met with utter  passivity. 
  
 I would like to think the supine posture is attributable to a  rookie leader otherwise preoccupied (i.e. domestically), leading a foreign  policy team as yet unorganized if not disoriented. But when the State Department  says that Hugo Chavez's president-for-life referendum, which was preceded by a  sham government-controlled campaign featuring the tear-gassing of the  opposition, was "for the most part... a process that was fully consistent with  democratic process," you have to wonder if Month One is not a harbinger of  things to come. 
  
 - The Washington Post Writers Group