Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The campaign's over, Obama; it's time to lead

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The campaign's over, Obama; it's time to lead

    Chicago Tribune, IL
    April 25 2009

    The campaign's over, Obama; it's time to lead

    John Kass
    April 26, 2009

    In Europe, he chastised America for what he called our "arrogance." In
    the Caribbean, he gave the dictator of Venezuela a warm smile and a
    handshake, and called him "amigo." Before the Saudi king, he bowed low
    and long.

    And just the other day, in a cynical nod to the generals of Turkey,
    the American president who campaigned for human rights quietly avoided
    the word "genocide" from a resolution marking the anniversary of the
    1915 Ottoman Turkish slaughter of more than a million Armenian
    Orthodox Christians.

    A few years after that slaughter, as he prepared to engage in his own
    genocide of the Jews, Adolf Hitler was credited with saying: "Who
    remembers the Armenians?" The United States may remember, but our
    president can't call it genocide.

    Still, President Barack Obama offers himself up to an adoring world --
    and the enraptured, Hopium-smoking American media that helped elect
    him -- as a leader more flexible than his hopelessly rigid
    predecessor, George W. Bush.

    And he's proved it, charming nations and their leaders, remaining in
    campaign mode, where he's most comfortable.

    But last week he bowed to his base in the hard political left by
    reversing himself, opening the door for the prosecution of Bush
    Justice Department officials who helped develop harsh interrogation
    policies for suspected terrorists.

    Some call it torture and legitimately oppose it. Others say harsh
    interrogation -- such as waterboarding -- was necessary after the
    Sept. 11 attacks to stop more bloodshed.

    But what Obama accomplished, by opening the possibility of political
    witch hunts, was to offer up one of his own eyes to his political
    supporters. He needs both eyes to see a dangerous world.

    The week began when Rahm Emanuel, Obama's chief of staff, appeared on
    ABC's "This Week" with George Stephanopoulos to reiterate Obama's
    pledge not to prosecute.

    "He believes that people in good faith were operating with the
    guidance they were provided," said Emanuel, no fool. "They shouldn't
    be prosecuted. ... It's time for reflection. It's not a time to use
    our energy in looking back in any sense of anger and retribution."

    Two days later, Obama abruptly changed course to please his anti-war
    base that demands a few severed political heads.

    "With respect to those who formulated those legal decisions, I would
    say, that is going to be more of a decision for the attorney general,"
    he told reporters. "I think there are a host of very complicated
    issues involved there."

    His critics used phrases such as "chilling effect" on intelligence
    gathering, but I call it the pucker factor. In all bureaucracies, it
    rolls down hill.

    News reporters are somewhat like intelligence gatherers. We don't
    waterboard politicians, but we're under pressure to get good
    information. So, let me tell you a story.

    In 1985, I was a kid in the news business, and our gossip columnist,
    Mike Sneed -- now at the Sun-Times -- got the story of the year:
    "Reform" Mayor Harold Washington had been secretly taped pressuring a
    fellow to get out of the 3rd Ward aldermanic race. It sounded like raw
    politics. It didn't sound anything like reform. And Washington was
    enraged.

    Jim Squires, our editor at the time, decided to publish transcripts
    from the tape but tell the readers that the tapes were leaked by
    Washington's white ethnic political opponents who wanted to embarrass
    him. Fair enough.

    But then he ordered me and another young reporter to find Sneed's
    exact source and walk back the cat. I didn't want to do it, but he was
    the boss and Sneed understood, and after a few days, he dropped his
    harebrained scheme.

    Yet for a long time afterward, sources worried they might be
    outed. Reporters were concerned their bosses might investigate their
    sources. And in the gathering of political intelligence, when sources
    start puckering up, they're not going to kiss you. You get scooped.

    And some editors shriek, "How did you get scooped?!" even when they
    knew that the boss made a decision that sent spasms through
    everything. More spasms ensue. The pucker factor multiplies
    exponentially.

    Obama isn't an editor. He's the president of a nation targeted by
    terrorists and constantly probed for weakness, even by our allies.

    His intelligence gatherers -- and others who give them the tools and
    the go-ahead -- can't spend their time wondering if he has their
    backs.

    His statements surely sent spasms through bureaucracies that are vital
    to his own success and America's safety. All because he wanted to
    campaign, rather than lead.

    Our president has a fine ear for language and nuance. Yet sometimes he
    shapes his principles to fit the moment, something anyone who watches
    Chicago politics understood years ago. The Democratic machine
    candidates he eagerly endorsed for re-election -- from Boss Daley II
    to Cook County Board President Todd Stroger to disgraced former
    Gov. Rod Blagojevich -- are testament to Obama's flexibility.

    But he must stop campaigning someday, and start thinking like a chief
    executive. And he'll need both eyes to see where he's got to go.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X