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d-29294House OversightOtherGeneric commentary on Obama administration foreign policy and European crisis
Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #031960
Pages
1
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0
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Summary
The passage provides broad, well‑known statements about U.S. foreign policy under President Obama with no specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations. It lacks novel or actionable l Mentions Obama’s stance on Libya, Syria, Egypt, and potential Nigeria involvement. References a possible return of Vladimir Putin to the Russian presidency. Comments on Obama’s support for European e
This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.
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20
Medvedev, but relations with Russia may only get tougher, with
Vladimir Putin's likely return to the Russian presidency.
Arab Spring: After a slow start, the Obama administration
eventually came around to calling for Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak to step down, joining the NATO intervention in Libya, and
supporting stricter sanctions against Syria. The president has been
less outspoken about other Persian Gulf allies, including Bahrain,
which hosts a key U.S. naval base. Obama has urged Egypt and
Tunisia to "set a strong example through free and fair elections, a
vibrant civil society, accountable and effective democratic
institutions, and responsible regional leadership."
Other issues: Although he once described himself as a George H.W.
Bush-school realist, in the past year Obama has learned to embrace
humanitarian intervention, both in Libya and in central Africa, where
military advisors have been sent to aid in the fight against the long-
running insurgency by the Lord's Resistance Army. There's
speculation that Nigeria may be next. It's a measure of how much
things have changed in the last four years that Republicans are now
attacking the Democratic president for trying to spread democracy
and human rights at the barrel of a gun.
As the European economic crisis has worsened, Obama has been
speaking out more in support of strong measures to protect the
common currency. "Ultimately what they are going to need is a
firewall that sends a clear signal we stand behind the European
project and we stand behind the euro," he said during his recent trip
to Australia.
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