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She Ain't Heavy, She Is My Secretary of State: The Unbearable Lightness
of Being 'Condi'
by
Leon Hadar by
Leon Hadar
Back
in the 1950's comedienne Carol Burnett made her name as a nightclub
performer with a song called "I Made a Fool of Myself Over
John Foster Dulles."
Americans
had a big laugh over the spectacle of a celebrated entertainer singing
a love song about US President Dwight Eisenhower's Cold War Secretary
of State and not only because the portly Dulles wasn't exactly your
typical matinee idol.
In
the minds of most Americans, secretaries of state like George Marshall,
Dean Acheson, or Dulles were larger-than-life father figures who
exuded statesmanship, class, and intellect. And silly young girls
weren't expected to have a crush on these gentlemen.
Indeed,
as someone who has always been interested in international affairs,
I've always regarded US secretaries of state very highly, in the
same way that an amateur basketball player would worship Michael
Jordan.
It's
true that Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski
were loathed by those who disagreed with their policies. But even
those critics agreed that the two had the personal skills needed
to deal with affairs of state. You didn't fall in love with them
– but you were overpowered by their intellect and charisma.
But
we have come of a long way from Dulles and Kissinger. If you follow
the media coverage of Frequent Flier and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice you sometimes get the impression that US foreign policy is
being conducted by Paris Hilton on one of those television reality
shows.
"Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice arrived at the Wiesbaden Army Airfield
on Wednesday dressed all in black," is how the Washington
Post reported recently about one of her many visits to Europe.
"She was wearing a black skirt that hit just above the knee,
and it was topped with a black coat that fell to mid-calf,"
the Post noted, adding that "the coat, with its seven
gold buttons running down the front and its band collar, called
to mind a Marine's dress uniform or the save humanity ensemble worn
by Keanu Reeves in The
Matrix."
Now,
before someone bashes me – one of those guys who just can't deal
with a strong and high-profile woman – let me stress here that there
is nothing wrong with America's top diplomat trying to look a little
stylish. Even nerdy Dr. Kissinger aspired to be a media star, dating
Hollywood film stars and was mentioned quite frequently by American
gossip magazines. And he had spent much of his eight years in the
White House and State Department flying around the world more than
any other secretary of state.
As
a frequent flier myself, I certainly don't envy Dr. Rice for being
in the air for so many hours. It's true that in this day and age
one could probably manage much of America's diplomatic business
without leaving home. But face-to-face encounters can sometime make
a difference, as Kissinger demonstrated in his successful (secret)
efforts to reestablish US ties with China and his "shuttle diplomacy"
in the Middle East after the 1973 War.
But
it's not clear that Rice's globe-trotting diplomacy is producing
anything more than a lot of hot air. Every trip she makes to China
is followed by rising Sino-American diplomatic tensions. And after
her recent trip to the Middle East that was aimed at helping Israelis
and Palestinians move towards peace, the two sides seemed to be
even less inclined to reach any agreement while violence in Israel/Palestine
flared up.
Like
Rice, Kissinger also has a Ph.D. in international relations. But
I'm quite confident that he wouldn't have told an American audience
– as Rice has done – that in American-occupied Germany, SS officers,
called werewolves, "engaged in sabotage and attacked both coalition
forces and those locals cooperating with them – much like today's
Ba'athist and Fedayeen remnants (in Iraq)."
As
anyone with even a basic knowledge of post-World War II Germany
would tell you, unlike the Iraqis, the Germans were ready to work
with the American victors, while there was no sign at all of the
resistance which the Allies had expected in the way of "werewolf"
units and nocturnal guerrilla activities.
That
the former provost of Stanford University is willing to engage in
this kind of historical revisionism reflects either ignorance or
a willingness to misinform American and foreign audiences.
Moreover,
Rice, serving at the time as President George W Bush's national
security adviser, was responsible for much of the advice reaching
the White House before 9/11 and in the months leading to the war
in Iraq. She had failed to coordinate the Bush Administration's
preparation for the postwar occupation of Iraq. The outcome of that
failure is evident in what is happening in Iraq today.
But
like many of the architects of the war in Iraq, Rice was rewarded
with an even more exalted position, to serve as a successor to Kissinger,
Brzezinski, and Dulles. Someone clearly made a fool of himself over
Dr. Rice.
July
16, 2005
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is Washington correspondent
for the Business Times of Singapore
and the author of the forthcoming Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan).
Copyright
© 2005 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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