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Monday, April 14, 2008
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
Summer Soldiers and Sunshine Patriots
by Rich Galen
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For everyone who thinks the US foreign policy has had no effect, consider this: In the summer of 2003, prior to my posting to Iraq, I went to Kuwait to cover its national elections. The shorthand as I wrote on July 4, 2003, was this:

There are about 2.1 million people here, of whom about 1 million are citizens but only about 120,000 of those are permitted to vote. No women are among them.

Got that? 2003. 2.1 million people. No women could vote. Pretty typical of the Persian Gulf States back in the day.

Since that time, women have been granted the right to vote in Kuwait (as well as most of the other countries) and, more that than, women have been appointed Ministers of Cabinet-level Departments.

I bring this up because on Friday I was invited to attend the swearing-in ceremony of a career Foreign Service Officer to be the new US Ambassador to Kuwait.

The new Ambassador's name is: Deborah K. Jones.

Five years ago, the suggestion that the United States - or any other nation - would dare to send a female Ambassador to a Gulf State would have been laughable.

AMB Jones was the subject of a previous Mullings. I met her in April of 2006 when she was the US Consul-General in Istanbul, and of whom I wrote: Counselor Jones is a delight. A Turkish delight. She has been in the service of our nation for coming up on 25 years in posts which include South America and just about every caravan stop in the Middle East. She is brilliant, forthcoming, attractive, and witty.

The ceremony was held at the State Department. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte spoke words. Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Ruth Bader Ginsberg administered the oath. There were, maybe 200 colleagues, friends, family and (like me) hangers-on.

Because AMB Jones is largely a Middle East hand, a number of her colleagues from that section of the Foreign Service were in attendance. I had served with many of those same patriots during my time in Iraq.

During the heat of the unpleasantness in Fallujah two of them went there from Baghdad to see if they could bring some sanity to an insane situation. I wrote in 2004 about those two senior State Department Foreign Service Officers: They didn't go to Fallujah in morning suits and bowler hats. They went in body armor and Kevlar helmets. It was, perhaps, the bravest single act I have personally witnessed since I have been here.

In her remarks - which she specifically addressed to the younger members of the Foreign Service Corps in attendance - Ambassador Deborah Jones quoted Thomas Paine:

These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.

The patriots who make up America's Foreign Service Corps are, short of war, the people who accept the responsibility for projecting our nation's foreign policy to every corner of the planet.

Some get to do it in places like Paris or London. Most get to do it in places like Kampala, Uganda or Sanaa, Yemen or Dhaka, Bangladesh.

These are most definitely NOT summer soldiers nor sunshine patriots. Through every season and in all weather conditions the members of America's Foreign Service are true patriots.

Ambassador Deborah Jones is surely one of them. But she is most assuredly not the only one of them.

As has happened so often in my life, I was once again blessed to be in the presence of American heroes.

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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Pastafarian

Rrrrrrrriiiiiiing.

You're welcome.

I wonder
who they are allowed to vote for? (your answer here)

Not much different than here.

Is this clown serious?
This convoluted attempt to justify the disaster of Bush's Iraq invasion by claiming that it has accelerated the women's rights movement in the Muslim world is hilarious.

This is priceless!

Talk about overdosing on the neocon koolaid!

Soon Galen will inform us N.O.W. intends to open up chapters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, or Iraq.

On second thought, Kim Gandy wearing a burka does have a certain appeal. I could go for that.

Not in Galen's world, but in the world of reality, the decision to assign a representative of the United States to a Muslim nation ought to be based upon merit, knowledge, familiarity with the nation's customs and traditions, and, last but not least, fluency in the nation's language.

To place a woman in such a position based exclusively or even partly on gender, simply to send some socio-politically correct half baked message, is ludicrous, and more broadly, simply extends the disgusting doctrine in this nation of selecting persons on the basis of race, creed, sex...rather than on merit.

And Galen thinks of himself as a conservative.

Amazing.

going native in the deserts
One of the problems with the State Department is that eventually much of the corps who go to the middle east is that they go native.
They are no longer pro-US (or God-forbid, not anti Israel) but are absolutely pro royalty, pro shiekdom, and in the robes of the very people they are supposed to be telling about US policy.
Yes it is interesting that Jones was named ambassador to Kuwait (who, lest we forget, we saved with our money and our troopers) and maybe she can quietly remind the royals that they owe us more than $4 gasoline and beheadings and support of terrorists.
But that would be even more interesting.

jerabaub
So sayeth jerabeelzebub:
"Not in Galen's world, but in the world of reality, the decision to assign a representative of the United States to a Muslim nation ought to be based upon merit, knowledge, familiarity with the nation's customs and traditions, and, last but not least, fluency in the nation's language.

To place a woman in such a position based exclusively or even partly on gender, simply to send some socio-politically correct half baked message, is ludicrous, and more broadly, simply extends the disgusting doctrine in this nation of selecting persons on the basis of race, creed, sex...rather than on merit."

Amazing you'd be saying this. I mean, assigning a rep to a Muslim country I think would pale in comparison to the presidential race here, yet am I to infer you think such qualifications as "merit, knowledge, familiarity with the nation's customs and traditions..." is important to elect the former but not the latter?

jerabaub
Seems like you are more the clown.

This could be an effort to show the advances women have made in some Arab countries, and the ability to now have women appointed to those posts by foreign governments.

Only someone with BDS would see anything here that tries to use this issue to justify the invasion.

Pastafarian
What is BHODS?

BHODS
I think he means Barack H Obama Derangement Syndrome...

ivory1029
That's a long way to go for that, thanks.

We should
pay more attention to Adolf Obama & send him as a rep., since he is an honorary member and in good standing with the terrorist groups.
The "good" musims have backed him.

Hawk
Save your fingers,honey. Jeraboob thinks that a point is that sharp thingy on a pencil.

Nice column praising our mainly ignored diplomats.

I've always visited the embassy or consulate in countries visited.

Charming ,courteous, and intelligent people.


Hawk
Are you suggesting Hillary is in a position to run for presidency of the U.S. by virtue of her gender?

Maybe so.

I am not a fan of Hillary, by the way. I am leaning toward McCain.

I do know the breakdown of votes in the primaries have disproportionate numbers of women voting for Hillary. Perhaps she would not be where she is in the electoral process if not for women voting for a woman. Perhaps you need to have a talk with your "sisters" on this matter. I still cling to merit as the criterion. Guess I am old fashioned.

Your observation comparing a female running for the presidency and a female officer assigned overseas to represent the interests of the U.S., is muddled.

My only point was that merit ought to be the criterion in the selection process. If the selection results in a female, fine.

You may think we have some right from God to impose our values and beliefs on the Muslim world.

I find that view rather arrogant.

Muslims must evolve on their own. If tolerance is to occur, it must emanate from within them. It cannot be imposed.

An officer of the U.S. should be assigned to a nation, be it a muslim nation or otherwise, on the basis of merit, not on the basis of making some kind of statement.

By the way, I still think Kim Gandy of N.O.W. would look fetching in a burka.

Whadda ya think?

good work
Very sublime. I love how you bridged the span of time from our country's founding to modernization in the Arab world with the ideas of Thomas Paine.

I am grateful for the contributions of people like the good ambassador who are making this a better world.

I also did not appreciate how enlightened Kuwait was until I went there. It was definitely worth saving from Saddam Hussein.

Jerebaub and false assumptions
jerebaubs arrgogant complaint about a woman being the ambassador to kuwait is
***********
'My only point was that merit ought to be the criterion in the selection process. If the selection results in a female, fine.
************

here we see his min at work. I doubt very many people reading this know Ambassador Jones. But yet Jerabaub is going to automatically assume she is not qualified or the most qualified for the job.

The article by Mr Galen does not support affirmitive action anywhere in the article. It mearly commends the fact that a fully qualified woman, that is held in high regard by the author that KNOWS her and her record, can now be assigned to a place such as Kuwait.

Unfortunately the Bush hating of some, takes away from the point of the Article, which is the important service of our State Department in unglamorous places throughout the world. The article in my opinion was well written praise for AMB Jones and those who serve the way she does.

Tinsldr2@yahoo.com

Tinsldr
Nope.

I did not even mention Ambassador Jones.

My post had to do with the apparent support Galen had for staffing American to Muslim nations to represent the interests of our Beloved Republic.

If the decision is due to their qualifications, merit and ability, fine. No problem.

If, however, the decision is based upon some misguided and half-baked conviction that it sends a "message" to Muslim communities concerning what we deem to be the proper role of women in their societies, then I think it a bit presumptuous.

I am all for liberalizing the muslim world.

I think it would be a hoot for a N.O.W. chapter to open up in Baghdad.

But I am old school, and think we should staff government positions from the standpoint of merit, not to send a message.

If the woman has the merit, fine.


get real
Are you kidding ? ?
This is a joke.

Like it or not, the culture in the Middle
East still has no respect for a woman in
any position like that, and it never will.
More importantly, it is an insult to them,
and one of the main reasons this
war has dragged on for so long.

When she walks into a room for a
meeting with any official in any
of the mideast counties, you can be
sure nothing constructive will happen.
Photo ops, and political posturing.

Just like Cond. Rice and Mad. Albright;
Disastrous failures........


note on 2nd paragraph
Correction:

"staffing American women to Muslim nations", rather than "staffing American to Muslim nations". Paragraph 2.

Bulldog, altho I never mentioned that in my posts, you have a point.

Purposely staffing a woman to a Muslim nation to represent our interests, simply due to gender and in order to make some "statement", certainly is counterprodutive.

But if the woman were the best qualified, I would still send her.

Because I don't believe any nation, Muslim or otherwise, gets to decide whom we send to represent us.

But your point about needlessly stomping on their sensibilities is right-on.


Remember
There are NO democracies in the Middle East beside Israel.

Ron ROTFLMAO

Women to Muslin countries
is fine with me if they are qualified and if they represent ducorum sometimes not seen in former Sec. of State Albright. I often wondered how seriously they took her as she was photographed sitting amongst them in short skirts showing her rather fleshy legs.

jerabaub Pt 2
jerabaub, your whole argument is based on a presumption.

Mr Galen writes about the ambassadors qualifications and makes the undoubtedly true assertion that 5 or 6 years ago a woman could not hold the post. Now a woman can, and a very competent and capable woman is going to do so. Mr Galen points out what everyone that believes in equality knows is a good sign that the first woman Ambassador to the mid-east is getting the job.

Republican Party since its inception has always believed in equality and freedom and that is what his post is about.

Nowhere does Mr Galen suggest that we should be 'Purposely staffing a woman to a Muslim nation to represent our interests, simply due to gender and in order to make some "statement",

He suggests that it is an accomplishment that the highly respected woman who has the background to represent us can get the job.

When you state that "To place a woman in such a position based exclusively or even partly on gender, simply to send some socio-politically correct half baked message, is ludicrous." I merely point out that someone reading YOUR words would believe that meant the person selected was unqualified. No where does Mr Galen suggest staffing 'UNQUALIFIED' women to the job.

If you agree, like YOU said that the best qualified person, regardless of gender, get the job and that it is good that Females can even be considered for it equally alongside males, then you agree with article.

Also notice nowhere does Mr Galen say this justifies the initial invasion. Do you find any statement in the article that supports your conclusion in your first posting?


Sharkfighter
Galen's first four paragraphs draw a conclusion that our foreign policy, i.e. the invasion of Iraq, has resulted in a change of atmosphere in Kuwait on the issue of women's suffrage.

And later Galen opines that "five years ago, the suggestion the U.S. would send a female ambassador to a Gulf state would have been laughable".

Again the implication is that Bush foreign policy, the Iraq invasion, has had a spillover effect in promoting "tolerance" of Arab regimes to female ambassadors.

It is not a stretch to conclude, given that mindset, that Galen would like the U.S. to encourage this socalled "tolerance" by selecting females to represent our nation to Arab governments.

My only point, which I still maintain, is that the selection ought to be done in terms of merit, not gender.

I have no doubt the female ambassador of whom Galen spoke so highly is eminently qualified.

I would just not want the selection to ever be done from the standpoint of making a "statement", or sending a "message", or encouraging this or that development.

It should be made on merit, period.

But I appreciate your post.

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