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Wednesday, April 08, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Too Much Humility in the Age of Obama
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- President Obama set great expectations for himself on his first European diplomatic trip to test his new get-along-by-going-along foreign policy. And it was a complete success, according to the gushing reports from the news media.

Not everyone agreed with that assessment. Obama certainly proved "that he can work smoothly and productively with a wide range of foreign leaders -- provided that he allows them to set the agenda," remarked the Washington Post's foreign-policy analyst Jackson Diehl.

Obama went to Europe to persuade the major European powers and other countries who make up the world's richest G-20 to pump more money into their financial markets to help pull the global economy out of its recession. They agreed to come up with more than $1 trillion, most of which went into the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. But they said no to plunging their countries further into debt as he was doing here at home.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel flatly dismissed his bigger spending request, saying, "That is not a bargaining chip." French President Nicolas Sarkozy said his own demands for imposing more regulations over the financial markets were "nonnegotiable."

Then it was on to the NATO summit where Obama hoped to talk the military powers into sending thousands of combat troops to help the United States fight the Taliban terrorists in Afghanistan. He got weak commitments from the NATO alliance and other countries of a mere 5,000, mostly for noncombat roles.

He said he came to Europe to listen and not to lecture. The days when great world leaders like Roosevelt and Churchill sat "in a room with a brandy" and led the Free World against tyranny were over, Obama said. Did he miss his U.S. history classes where FDR, Truman, Churchill, Stalin and a host of other allies joined together to defeat Germany and Japan in World War II?

But this is the Age of Obama, a time when we had to "show some element of humility and recognize that we may not always have the best answer."

Well, humility can take you only so far in a still-very-dangerous world where Iran, North Korea and other rogue nations consider humility a sign of weakness and indecision.

While Obama was practicing international humility in Europe, Defense Secretary Robert Gates was unveiling the overhaul (some are calling it a dismantlement) of America's military arsenal, including worrisome cuts in U.S. missile-defense programs.

It was an unfortunate coincidence that Gates was laying out the plan to cut back on U.S. missile testing at a time when North Korea was firing an intercontinental ballistic missile over Japan's airspace and across much of the Pacific Ocean in what their military said was an attempt to put a satellite into orbit. It apparently did not achieve orbit, but the test firing showed that North Korea was inching ever closer to having the capability of hitting our allies and, eventually, the United States.

Congressional lawmakers reacted with alarm this week at the combined news of North Korea's latest provocative action and Obama's planned defense cuts, especially on long-range missile-defense technology. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Re: Hysterical Historians
"And, what happened to them since it became the American War?"

It became an American War only to the extent that weak South Vietnam leadership after the US/JFK approved coup and murder of President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1963 forced the US to take on more of the responsibility for the war.

As for our allies, they remained in country wih us until Nixon began the process of withdrawing US troops and Vietnamization of the war starting in 1969

The allies of the US during the Vietnam War were: South Korea with the second largest contingent of troops in South Vietnam, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines. Members of SEATO.

Canada made military hardware that was used in Vietnam including large amounts of Agent Orange. The Canadian soldiers that fought in the war were part of the US troops.

Re: Diplomacy 101
"So you are saying that it is better to hold hands with King Abdullah the way GW did? I am no diplomat, just asking."

Holding hands shows equality of position, it is a reciprocal jesture; bowing indicates subservience.

"Neville Chamberlain was also a conservative that gave whole countries away so today's diplomacy is some improvement."

No, Neville Chamberlain practiced the diplomacy of humility, just like Obama. His excuse was trying not offend Hitler, thinking his nice gestures would be reciprocated. Having lived through WWI Chamberlain believed that "making nice" could avoid another European "bloodbath".

Unfortunately he was humble at a time arrogance was needed.

I do know how todays diplomacy is an improvement when Syria for all intents and purposes runs Lenbanon; Warlord control Somali; the Pakistanis can't or wont control the Hindu Kush area of the country; Russia can invade suvereign Georgia at will and occupy portions of that country with impunity, and Communist China can invade and occupied the Kingdom of Tibet for over 50 years without the World do anything about it.
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