Friday, March 11, 2011

Obama: 'It Would be so Much Easier to be President of China'... Wishful thinking or Showing his weakness?

President of China?

Obama's lament.

By WILLIAM KRISTOL

“Mr. Obama has told people that it would be so much easier to be the president of China. As one official put it, ‘No one is scrutinizing Hu Jintao’s words in Tahrir Square.’”

Obama Seeks a Course of Pragmatism in the Middle East,” The New York Times, March 11, 2011.

Mr. Obama is right.

If you’re president of China, people around the world who are fighting for freedom don’t really expect you to help. If you’re president of China, you don’t have to put up with annoying off-year congressional elections, and then negotiate your budget with a bunch of gun-and-religion-clinging congressmen and senators. If you’re president of China, you can fund your national public radio to your heart’s content. And if you’re president of China, when you host a conference on bullying in schools, people take you seriously.

Unfortunately for him and us, Barack Obama is president of the United States. That job brings with it certain special responsibilities. It’s a tough job—maybe tougher than being president of China. But Barack Obama ran for president of the United States. Maybe he should start behaving as one.

(Story continues below)
Do you feel GOOD about where America is going?

We are working to help inform people, to let them see what is going on and then become motivated enough to do something about it.

Readers, the reason we are asking for support is WE NEED your support. Your small monthly donation is what will drive us forward.

Can you make a Monthly Donation? Small or large, it is a great help!

$20, $35, $50, $75, $100

Obama: 'It Would be so Much Easier to be the President of China'

By DANIEL HALPER

The president has wistfully been thinking about how easy it would be to be the leader of the People's Republic of China, the New York Times reports. And one unnamed official told the Times's reporters that "No one is scrutinizing [Chinese leader] Hu Jintao's words in Tahrir Square."

The quotations are part of a piece aimed at explaining the president's thinking on the crisis in the Middle East. And his envy for the Chinese leader is meant to demonstrate the difficulty of balancing so-called "pragmatism" with "idealism."

The Times writes: 

This emphasis on pragmatism over idealism has left Mr. Obama vulnerable to criticism that he is losing the battle for the hearts and minds of the Arab street protesters. Some say he is failing to bind the United States to the historic change under way in the Middle East the way that Ronald Reagan forever cemented himself in history books to the end of the cold war with his famous call to tear down the Berlin Wall.

“It’s tempting, and it would be easy, to go out day after day with cathartic statements that make us feel good,” said Benjamin J. Rhodes, the deputy national security adviser, who wrote Mr. Obama’s soaring speech in Cairo to the Islamic world in 2009. “But ultimately, what’s most important is achieving outcomes that are consistent with our values, because if we don’t, those statements will be long forgotten.”

But what the deputy national security advisor is displaying is cognitive dissonance. After all, the Obama administration has done nothing but issue statements about the Middle East. There has been no hurry to quell the violence tyrannical regimes are using on their own citizens. The administration has not aimed to institute a no-fly zone in Libya -- or anything of the sort -- where Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi is murdering his own people. The president offered no aid beyond several statements to the Egyptian people, who bravely overthrew their dictator, Hosni Mubarak.

On Libya's Qaddafi, the president "stated that when a leader's only means of staying in power is to use mass violence against his own people, he has lost the legitimacy to rule and needs to do what is right for his country by leaving now," according to the White House.

Never mind that Obama's statement was undermined directly by his director of national intelligence, who yesterday said that it is his belief that Qaddafi will remain in power. The president told Qaddafi to leave. And as President Lyndon Johnson reportedly said, "Don't tell a man to go to hell unless you intend to send him there."