Can anyone name an achievement to justify the adulation of our secretary of state?
By BRET STEPHENS
The Wall Street Journal
http://israel-commentary.org/?p=4074http://israel-commentary.org/?p=4074
Suddenly we’re supposed to believe that Hillary Clinton is a great secretary of state.
Eric Schmidt of Google calls her “the most significant secretary of
state since Dean Acheson.” A profile in the New York Times runs under
the headline “Hillary Clinton’s Last Tour as a Rock-Star Diplomat.”
Another profile in the current issue of Foreign Policy magazine is
titled, wishfully, “Head of State.” The two articles are so similar in
theme, tone, choice of anecdote and the absence of even token criticism
that you’re almost tempted to suspect one was cribbed from the other. (Or put out by the Bubba/Hillary PR machine)
The Hillary boomlet isn’t a mystery. She never lost her political
constituency. In the cabinet she looks good next to Janet Napolitano and
bright next to Joe Biden. She looks even better next to her boss.
Democrats belong to the party of hope, and Barack Obama is hope’s
keenest disappointment.
So Mrs. Clinton is back, resisting appeals for her to run in 2016 the
way Caesar rejects the thrice-offered crown. No doubt she would have
made a better president than Mr. Obama. But is that saying much? No
doubt she’s been a hard-working and well-briefed secretary. But that
isn’t saying much, either.
What achievements justify the adulation of our secretary of state?
What would make Mrs. Clinton a great secretary of state is if she had
engineered a major diplomatic breakthrough, as Henry Kissinger did. But
she hasn’t. Or if she dominated the administration’s foreign policy,
the way Jim Baker did. But she doesn’t. Or if she had marshaled a great
alliance (Acheson), or authored a great doctrine (Adams) or a great plan
(Marshall), or paved the way to a great victory (Shultz). But she falls
palpably short on all those counts, too.
Maybe it’s enough to say Mrs. Clinton is a good secretary of state. But she isn’t that, either.
Mrs. Clinton is often praised for her loyalty to her boss, even when
she loses the policy argument — as she did over maintaining a troop
presence in Iraq.
Loyalty can be a virtue, but it is a secondary virtue when it
conflicts with principle, and a vice when it’s only a function of
ambition. Cyrus Vance resigned as Jimmy Carter’s secretary of state when
the president, facing a primary challenge from Ted Kennedy, authorized a
disastrous rescue operation in Iran. Would that make Vance a lesser
public servant than Mrs. Clinton?
Mrs. Clinton is also given high marks for her pragmatism. But
pragmatism can only be judged according to the result. Is the reset with
Russia improving Moscow’s behavior vis-à-vis Syria? Has a “pragmatic”
approach to China moderated its behavior in the South China Sea? Is the
administration’s willingness to intervene on humanitarian grounds in
Libya but not Syria a function of pragmatism or election-year
opportunism?
What about the rest of the record? It would be nice to give Mrs.
Clinton full marks for the Libya intervention, except she was an early
skeptic of that intervention. It would be nice to give her marks for
championing the Syrian opposition, except she has failed to persuade
Russia, China or Mr. Obama to move even an inch against Bashar al-Assad.
It would be nice to give her marks for helping midwife a positive
transition in Egypt. But having fecklessly described Hosni Mubarak as a
“friend of my family” in 2009, it’s no wonder Egyptians take a dim view
of the Obama administration.
Then there’s Iran. In the administration’s fairy tale/post-facto
rationalization, the U.S. was getting nowhere internationally with Iran
under George Bush. Then Mr. Obama cunningly offered to extend his hand
to the mullahs, knowing that if they rejected it the U.S. would be in a
better position to act internationally.
Nearly everything about that account is false. The Bush
administration was able to win three U.N. Security Council votes
sanctioning Iran, against only one for this administration. The
“crippling” sanctions Mr. Obama now likes to brag about were signed
against his wishes under political duress late last year. Since then,
the administration has spent most of its time writing waivers for other
countries. Even now, negotiations with Tehran continue: They serve the
purposes of a president who wants to get past November without a crisis.
They also serve the mullahs’ purposes to gain time.
Now Iran is that much closer to a bomb and the possibility of a regional war is that much greater. The
only real pressure the administration has exerted thus far has been on
Israel, whose prime minister is the one foreign leader Mrs. Clinton has
bawled out. (Has had the chutzpa to ball out because she knows the Jews in NY will vote for her no matter what her actions against Israel) She should try doing likewise with Vladimir Putin.
Ultimately, Mrs. Clinton cannot be held accountable for the failures
of a president she understood (earlier and better than most) as a
lightweight. But the choice to serve him was hers, and the
administration’s foreign policy record is hers, too. It’s a record that looks good only because it is set against the backdrop that is the Obama presidency in its totality.
2 comments:
While I agree with you, that Hillary is a cow, personally I think about her as a white trash, we have to remember, that together with three other airheads (Power,Slaughter, and Rice) she has a great influence on US foreign policy, besides it took her only to days to dismantle Israel's governing coalition, I would'nt dismiss her
not bad for a woman, who,s onlly qualification for an office is, that her husband cheated on her
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