Obama: Weak Like JFK

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Posted May 26, 2008 | 12:09 PM (EST)



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Two prominent op-eds this week criticize Barack Obama's position that he is willing to negotiate with the leaders of America's enemies, including Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran. Both authors write in breathless tones about the disastrous June 1961 Vienna summit between John F. Kennedy and Nikita Krushchev. They recall an intelligent but naïve JFK being lectured at and humiliated by his grizzled Soviet counterpart, laying the groundwork for subsequent communist aggression in Berlin and Cuba. The supposed takeaway: talking with your enemies is a dangerous game, even for smooth operators like JFK and Obama.

Even for armchair historians this analysis is remarkably myopic, focusing as it does on the instant reaction to a single meeting as opposed to the sequence of events that followed. Kennedy may not have scored immediate points in Vienna, but just over a year later he stood resolutely in the face of a Soviet effort to install nuclear missiles in Cuba. During the two weeks of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Kennedy pledged that he would not tolerate a nuclear presence on Cuba; that he would immediately order a full embargo of the island; and that any missile launch from Cuba would be regarded as an attack by the Soviet Union itself. These were the tensest days since World War II, but Krushchev's eventual capitulation marked the single greatest American strategic victory of the Cold War. Images of Soviet cargo ships pulling aquatic u-turns away from Cuba signaled to the world that JFK was not just eloquent and idealistic, but also steadfast and tenacious.

It goes to show that a willingness to talk to your enemies doesn't make you naïve, or a wussy. A good president can both negotiate and stand at the brink. Indeed, an adversary's knowledge that a president is willing to negotiate on reasonable terms will make him take notice if and when the president eventually takes a hard line. For all George W. Bush's posturing toward Iran, they don't take our threats seriously. And why should they? We're overstretched in Iraq and Afghanistan and we've been shouting the same curses at them since the Axis of Evil speech.

The risks of failing to engage our adversaries can be far graver than the abstract costs of holding a meeting. While we've been shunning Iran over the past eight years, it has marched forward with its nuclear weapons program. And it has risen to new heights of influence in the greater Middle East, from the violent slums of Baghdad and the flashpoints of the Gaza Strip to larger Shiite Iraq and Southern Lebanon, from which the Iranian-backed Hizbullah militia rained down 4,000 Katyusha rockets on Israel in 2006. Our Iran policy is an astonishing failure. The high-minded notion that we shouldn't even talk with bad guys like Ahmadinejad is cold comfort to the hundreds and thousands of victims of Iran's aggression by proxy during the Bush administration.

Obama needs to remind people that a willingness to talk is not the same as an inclination to appease. No one wants to cave in to outrageous Iranian demands or countenance their appalling anti-semitism. But Iran might just act differently if it feels it has a chance to sit at the big boys' table. And if it doesn't, taking a tough stand will appear in the Middle East and beyond to be all the more justified...and credible. If JFK's multi-act dance with Krushchev taught us anything, it's that you can negotiate and also lead from strength. So as for the historical analogies, bring 'em on. There's worse things than being compared to a Kennedy.

 
 

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- altohone See Profile I'm a Fan of altohone permalink


Look, I realize you are supporting Obama, but that doesn't give you the right to repeat unproven neocon assertions.

"...it has marched forward with its nuclear weapons program"

Forgive me for wanting PROOF!
Our own intelligence agencies say you are wrong for peet's sake.

Unlike the Soviet Union, Iran has neither weapons nor delivery systems to pose an existential threat.
The whole comparison is bunk.

As for "cold comfort to the hundreds and thousands of victims of Iran's aggression by proxy", either your definition of "victim" is very broad, or you are blaming Iran for the victims of our war in Iraq.
I believe there were around 136 "victims" from rockets in the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah. No PROOF has been presented to show Iranian involvement in Iraq despite endless assertions.

We seem to be on the same side, but I'd appreciate a little more accuracy... less inflammatory rhetoric and exaggeration using neocon tactics. Thanks.

Of course, if you have proof, please share.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 PM on 05/26/2008
- mcole See Profile I'm a Fan of mcole permalink

"..Indeed, an adversary's knowledge that a president is willing to negotiate on reasonable terms will make him take notice if and when the president eventually takes a hard line."

well said, and we see that happening right now, with Castro and the Cuban dissidents and Nigerian oil militants already responding to Obama's proposed policiies and he's not even the nominee yet. The world is sitting up and taking notice..i bet you Castros peeps are already holding meetings on how to negotiate with the Obama administration. Negotiate, not retaliate. Even with just their responses, whether in agreement or not, these developments have already shifted the current tide towards dialogue and engagement.

Gotta luv it, m8

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 PM on 05/26/2008
- speechteach See Profile I'm a Fan of speechteach permalink

Many Americans thought George W. Bush displayed resolve and strength while name calling (axis of evil, thugs, etc.) from the security of the White House or the Capitol building, It takes much more strength to be willing to meet world leaders face to face in order to avoid another senseless war. Take a look at where "cowboy diplomacy" has gotten us. McCain sounds as if he will take the same path.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 05/26/2008
- usrads See Profile I'm a Fan of usrads permalink

McCain is cravenly appealing to the Bush "base". He (and Bush) conveniently forget that Ronald Reagan made strong statements (e.g., the "Evil Empire") about our adversaries, but then was perfectly willing to sit down with them to negotiate when it made sense (i.e., in our interest) to do so. McCain's unequivocal and un-nuanced attacks on willingness to negotiate once again demonstrate that voting for McCain is the equivalent of voting for four more years of George Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 05/27/2008
- robXdion See Profile I'm a Fan of robXdion permalink

JFK was also very ill during that meeting (Addison's Disease). Krushchev thought he could bully Kennedy because he had a son about the same age. Obama seems to take on the role necessary depending on who he's dealing with. That's why you can't say he'll be soft against McCain like he is with Hillary. Obviously, that is not the case.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 05/26/2008
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