President Barack Obama vigorously defended his foreign policy record today, arguing that his cautious approach to global problems has avoided the type of missteps that contributed to a "disastrous" decade of war for the United States.
Obama's expansive comments came at the end of a weeklong Asia trip that exposed growing White House frustration with critics who cast the president as weak and ineffectual on the world stage.
The president and his advisers get particularly irked by those who seize on Obama's decision to pull back from a military strike in Syria and link it with virtually every other foreign policy challenge, from Russia's threatening moves in Ukraine to China's increasing assertiveness in Asia's territorial disputes.
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Summing up his foreign policy philosophy, Obama said it was one that "avoids errors."
White House advisers argue in part that Obama's approach puts him on the side of a conflict-weary American public, some of whom voted for him in the 2008 election because of his early opposition to the Iraq war.
Yet the president's foreign policy record of late has provided plenty of fodder for his critics.
It was Obama's own declaration that Syria's chemical weapons use would cross his "red line" that raised the stakes for a US response when Syrian leader Bashar Assad launched an attack last summer.
The Obama administration's own drumbeat toward a US strike only fueled the narrative that the president was indecisive or didn't have the stomach for an attack when he abruptly pulled back, first in favor of a vote in Congress, then to strike a deal with Syria and Russia that aimed to rid the Assad regime of its chemical weapons stockpiles.