Thursday, October 2, 2008

THE OVAL OFFICE IS NO PLACE FOR OBAMA'S NAIVETE

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A WELCOME MAT FOR AHMADINEJAD
By Jeff Jacoby
The Boston Globe
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to the United States last week was everything he could have hoped for.
At the United Nations, the Iranian president delivered a speech laced with undiluted anti-Semitism, denouncing "people called Zionists" who dominate the world's "financial and monetary centers" and control "the political decision-making centers" in the West through "deceitful, complex, and furtive" means. His remarks were greeted not with jeers or stony silence, but with lusty applause from the delegates and a hug from the president of the General Assembly.
Miguel D'Escoto Brockmann Picture
Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann, president of the UN General Assembly,
hugs Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after the Iranian president’s address at
the United Nations on September 23. (Getty Images)
Then CNN provided the hatemongering head of state with another high-profile soapbox -- an interview with Larry King, who warmly shook the Iranian president's hand and tossed him a series of fatuous softballs: *Where in the US would you like to travel? Would you like to meet Sarah Palin, since you’re both former mayors? You don't wish the Jewish people any harm, do you?*
On Thursday, at New York’s Grand Hyatt Hotel, Ahmadinejad was the guest of honor at a dinner and "dialogue" hosted by several left-wing Christian organizations, including the American Friends Service Committee, the Mennonite Central Committee, and the World Council of Churches. The US Commission on International Religious Freedom had urged the organizers not to honor someone who "has manipulated such dialogues repeatedly into a platform for spreading hatred," and warned that lionizing Ahmadinejad would only "burnish the Iranian leader's legitimacy." To no avail. The dinner went ahead despite the protests, amid pious invocations of "engagement" and "discussion." Intoned Mark Graham of the American Friends Service Committee: "You can't just engage with people with whom you agree on all issues. That leads to a very myopic view of the world."
But the high point of Ahmadinejad's week must have been Friday night, after his return to Iran. That was when John McCain and Barack Obama met in Mississippi for their first debate, and Obama reiterated once again his determination to meet Ahmadinejad "without preconditions" if he is elected in November.
"We . . . have to, I believe, engage in tough direct diplomacy with Iran," Obama insisted. "And this is a major difference I have with Senator McCain. This notion -- by not talking to people we are punishing them -- has not worked."
Obama first adopted this stance in July 2007, when he was asked in a Democratic Party debate whether he would agree to meet the rulers of Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Cuba, and North Korea without preconditions and promptly answered: "I would." His website reinforces that message, promising "direct presidential diplomacy with Iran without preconditions." During Friday's debate, Obama claimed that even Henry Kissinger, a McCain adviser, "just said that we should meet with Iran -- guess what -- without precondition."
Obama was wrong about Kissinger, who rejected Obama's view in a statement after the debate. And he is wrong on the broader issue, for at least three reasons:
First, as McCain argued, an American president's unconditional willingness to negotiate with the head of an outlaw regime gives that regime "more credence in the world arena." The more Ahmadinejad and the mullahs who back him flout fundamental standards of civilized behavior -- by fomenting terrorism, by murdering US peacekeepers, by convening Holocaust-denial conferences, by threatening Israel's extermination -- the more they crave international legitimacy. “You’ll sit down across the table from them,” McCain told Obama, “and that will legitimize their illegal behavior.” Face-to-face talks with the US president can only enhance Ahmadinejad's stature at home and bolster his authority abroad.
Second, far from persuading international villains to end their barbaric behavior, presidential negotiations would embolden them to prolong it. After all, if such behavior can lead to a coveted presidential invitation, it stands to reason that even more rewards can be reaped from behaving even worse.
Third, no-strings-attached negotiations consume time -- an invaluable asset to a government like Iran's as it pursues a nuclear bomb. "After five years of negotiations with the Europeans," John Bolton wrote last May, "the only result is that Iran is five years closer to having nuclear weapons."
As a general rule, talking with critics and competitors makes sense, in diplomacy as in daily life. But Obama, like the UN delegates who applauded Ahmadinejad and the Christian groups that invited him to dinner, seems to believe that the welcome mat should always be out. That more dialogue is always called for. That no regime or head of state is ever so abhorrent as to deserve only ostracism. On the campaign trail, such naiveté is distressing. In the Oval Office, it would be alarming.
(Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for The Boston Globe.)

All of this inevitably raises the question: "Is Barack Hussein Obama a reincarnation of England's
Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, who infamously met in face-to-face negotiations with
Adolf Hitler in Munich in 1938 and sold out the Czech Republic by giving Hitler the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia thereby enabling Hitler to take over the whole country in just a few short months. Neville Chamberlain returned from Munich to London and famously declared as he disembarked from the airplane: "I have achieved peace in our time."
The Second World War started one year later.

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