Friday, October 9, 2009

What Has Obama Done? (pt. II)

Obama’s Peace Prize: The World Bets on American Leadership
By Peter M. Shane (from executivewatch.net)

It’s a safe bet that President Obama’s first words this morning were something akin to, “I won what??” This is, after all, the man who conceded that Arizona State had a point in thinking an honorary degree might be premature. President Obama – whom I admire deeply – has been in office under 10 months, and the menu of world conflicts seems pretty much as long as last January.

In short, it also seems a safe bet that, in choosing President Obama for the Nobel Peace Prize, the Committee wanted to send a larger message.

As I read it, that message is, “America, we need you.”

The Birthers and Teabaggers will likely say that the Nobel Prize is testament to Obama’s overarching allegiance to European, rather than American values. Nothing could be farther from the truth.

President Obama has so captured the world’s imagination because he so strikingly embodies an America that the world yearns for – an energetic, diverse, inclusive America that is determined to lead the world, but with the world’s interests in mind.

As the Nobel Committee said, President Obama’s “diplomacy is founded in the concept that those who are to lead the world must do so on the basis of values and attitudes that are shared by the majority of the world’s population.”

This statement takes as a given the fact that the President of the United States is “to lead the world.” It just says how the world hopes he or she will do so.

This international yearning for enlightened American leadership should come as no surprise.

There will not be a meaningful international anti-nuclear proliferation regime without American leadership.

There will not be a rapprochement between the West and Islam without American leadership.

There will not be lasting peace in the Middle East without American leadership.

There will not be measurable progress against global warming without American leadership,

There will not be worldwide progress in the protection and expansion of human rights – and perhaps, most especially, women’s rights – without American leadership.

These are things for which people around the world yearn. They do not want America to shed its position of leadership; they want America to abandon unilateralism – the idea that America can lead with indifference to the “values and attitudes that are shared by the majority of the world’s population.”

As an American, I have to say I am grateful and slightly amazed that the eight Bush-Cheney years did not utterly kill the American brand abroad. An agonizing “what if?” question will always be, “What if, on September 12, 2001, America had embraced a less unilateral vision of world leadership?” How much closer would we be to the imperative international objectives we now seek?

Because time only moves in one direction, however, Americans should be delighted by the award today bestowed upon our President. The award is a bet not just on Obama’s future, but on ours. It is a bet that we can be the America that the world sees in Barack Obama.

8 comments:

Emily said...

Love it... love it.... love it!

Love you, too!

P.S. - I'm thinking of taking the GMAT just because I'm bored. Wanna take it with me?

Soxy Pirate said...

If I were bored, I would do it.

Whatever you do, do not take the LSAT.

Lauren said...

Well said hun I couldn't of said it better myself ;-)

Lauren said...

Even though we both know you were definitely on the fence earlier today...I wouldn't of hated you if you'd stayed that way! Promise!

Soxy Pirate said...

Now dear...

I didn't say I was on the fence.

I just find it peculiar that yesterday 99.9% of Americans had no opinion whatsoever with respect to the Nobel Peace Prize, and, more than likely, couldn't have cared less about it.

But today it seems like the .1% who gave a poo yesterday has grown to about 25% who can't go on living in a world where a Kenyan communist Muslim can win the award.

...forget the fact that past winners have actually been Kenyan, communist, or Muslim.


--------
(Note to anyone who just read that and thought about replying "hey, I'm not mad Obama got it because he's a Kenyan communist Muslim, I'm mad because he hasn't done anything!"

Well, he's not a Kenyan communist Muslim (but who cares if he was?), so duh. It's sarcasm. I was only making fun of you.)

Hehe.

Kirsty said...

Awesome. And I love your commentary after too. I would bet my firstborn that all the people bleating about this on facebook have NO IDEA who won the last Nobel Peace Prize. But lose an opportunity to freak out about Obama taking over the world for his evil purposes under the very noses of his blind and stupid supporters? Never!!!

Mesmerizing to me, that people can take what is ultimately an incredible honour for their country, and turn it into an outrage. Talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face.

I wish everyone would just get a freaking life already. Really.

Soxy Pirate said...

I think more than anything, the idea of an American President causing NO HARM (or at least no MORE harm) makes Obama worthy of the honor.

Some people have to do something great to be a peacemaker.

Others just have to break the trend of their war-mongering predecessors.

Soxy Pirate said...

...that's all moot, however, considering Obama was nominated before he ever became president.

The thought is worth entertaining, though.