None of them knew what to do

January 8, 2009 by Gee Carol 

the-presidents
Former Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter, President-elect Barack Obama and President George W. Bush
all posed for a group picture in the Oval Office of the White House Wednesday. (White House photo by Eric Draper). It was a very momentous occasion, requested by President-elect Obama and hosted by our current president (OCP). First there was a private meeting at which reportedly, the old heads advised our new president-to-be on how he could avoid being caught in a White House bubble of group-think, and how a President Obama could make it more possible for his people to bring him bad news. At the end there was a dynamite photo-op for everyone, during which these distinguished gentlemen were discussing the current Oval Office rug.

In an escalating Israeli/Palestinian conflict, at the same time half way around the world, there were people working very hard to kill each other . The headlines had been very troubling for several days: The Raw Story: A Norwegian doctor reports that “Israel intentionally targeted civilians*” (1/5/09). McClatchy: “Airstrike kills 3 at Gaza school-UN*” (1/6/08). Informed Comment: “Israel/Gaza Cyberwar and parallels to Abu Ghraib*” (1/6/09). And recently, Informed Comment: Something Horrible has been Discovered*” (1/7/09) Cole’s post linked to The Telegraph/UK headline: “Gaza medics describe horror of strike which killed 70” (1/8/09).

Any talk of the Middle East? One could wonder whether the Oval Office occupants had anything to say in their meeting about how the United States has been forever unable to help generations of these determined combatants achieve a lasting peace. In turn each of these powerful “leaders of the free world” have been singularly unsuccessful as Middle East peacemakers. War-makers, yes; temporary agreements, yes; but peacemakers with permanence, no.

Madeleine Albright’s book, “Madam Secretary” recounts a great deal about how hard former presidents have tried for peace. About Carter, elected in 1976, she said,

President Carter was one of our most intelligent chief executives and one who showed a fierce  dedication to conflict prevention and individual human dignity both during and after his term in office. He was a proactive President who achieved much in foreign policy, including the historic Middle East Peace Accords at Camp David. . . . Politically, however he was unlucky.

About Bush 41, Albright observed, regarding her work in the Clinton administration in 1997,

People were worried about Saddam’s weapons and asking what we were going to do. . . No serious consideration was given to actually invading Iraq. The senior President Bush had not invaded when given the chance with hundreds of thousands of troops already in the region during the Gulf War.

In Albright’s Chronology of her diplomatic work are included these pertinent entries: 11/4/92 – Bill Clinton elected President. 6/26/93 – U.S. bombs Iraqi intelligence headquarters in retaliation for assassination attempt against former President George Bush. 9/13/93 – Israeli and Palestinian leaders sign Oslo Declaration of Principles. 1/23/97 – MKA sworn in as 64th secretary of state. 10/15/98 – Middle East talks result in Wye River Memorandum. 7/11-25/2000 – Middle East summit. 9/28/2000 – Israeli politician Ariel Sharon visits the Temple Mount/Haram alSharif, violence breaks out. January 2001 – Last efforts to negotiate Middle East settlement failed.

“More than meets the eye.” Following shortly after that we saw the Republicans take over. For a time the Middle East appeared to be quiescent. It was not of great concern to George W. Bush, until the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. That tragic loss of American life set the U.S. on a path in the Middle East that largely ignored the unsolved conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians. Walls went up, Israel withdrew from Gaza, Hamas won an election, Ariel Sharon left the picture and tensions grew. The war in Lebanon happened. In all of these things the U.S. efforts were absent or made relatively little difference. All eyes have been on Afghanistan and mostly, Iraq.

President-elect Obama has promised to turn attention form Iraq to Afghanistan and Pakistan. And he is not talking much about Israel and Palestine, reminding that “we have one president at a time.” At the end of last year an important article appeared on Steve Clemons’ blog, The Washington Note: Daniel Levy: What Next on Israel/Gaza? Why Should Americans Care?” (12/28/08). This brilliant thinker asked a number of important questions that should have prompted some actions or answers from the Republican administration or former Republican leaders or opinion makers.

But these are the stories that appeared. From at-Largely came this story, “John Bolton continues to have no clue but plenty of propaganda…*” (1/5/09). See also Think Progress: “Gaza Crisis Means We Should Attack Iran Now#” (1/1/09). And this appeared at ThinkProgress: Perino: Ground Invasion Will Help ‘Create A More Stable And Secure Area’ For People Of Gaza*” (1/5/09). AlterNet asks my question:Why Do So Few Speak Up for Gaza?*” (1/7/08). And now this Happy News — AlterNet: Israeli Militants Poised to Resettle Gaza After Assault*” (1/7/09).

I have not listened to the news today. Absolutely everything might have changed. It will not make any difference what the Bush administration does because, as Politico says:Gaza reshuffles [the] Israeli political deck” (1/8/09) for Barack Obama. And none of his predecessors in the Oval Office can tell him what to do, because they do not know. None of them figured out the magic formula. Perhaps there is none. But one thing upon which you can count is that our new President will give it his best. He sees the world with very different eyes than the people in the picture, and that is a good thing.

Hat Tip Key: Regular contributors of links to leads are “betmo*” and Jon#.

(Cross-posted at The Reaction.)

My “creativity and dreaming” post today is at Making Good Mondays.

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Comments

5 Responses to “None of them knew what to do”

  1. Alien Trucker on January 8th, 2009 4:03 pm

    Seems all of the pics I have seen of this momentous occasion show Jimmy standing away from the gaggle of other presidents. Like he didn’t want their brand of stink on him.

  2. betmo on January 8th, 2009 5:08 pm

    perhaps they gave him advice on how to eat broccoli and pretzels- or how not to get caught telling the truth or getting a blowjob in the oval office. somehow, i think carter would have felt better standing next to obama out of any of them. he hasn’t had a chance to choke on a pretzel or faint at a state dinner or deny having sex with ‘that woman’ yet. hopefully, he will follow carter’s lead more closely.

  3. CarolGee on January 9th, 2009 4:11 am

    Alien Trucker and betmo, the body language was unmistakable, particularly on television. A reporter said they arranged themselves for the photo. Each of the people who have held the office has accumulated some heavy baggage. And it will be painful to watch as Obama gets his own to carry. But I am optimistic that it will be minor stuff.
    Thanks for your reminding comments.

  4. Robb Willis on January 9th, 2009 12:22 pm

    Didn’t Carter bring everlasting peace to the mideast when he got Sadat and Begin to shake hands? Oh, that was in the good ol’ days when you could buy peace…

  5. Gee Carol on January 9th, 2009 12:40 pm

    Robb, it does seem like eons ago, doesn’t it? I believe that Carter is a genuine peacemaker at heart. It seems like he has devoted his life to it, risking physical danger to himself, and the wrath of Zionists for his last book.
    I do not think Peace Makers are the same thing as Mediators. Peace Makers come from their souls; Mediators come from their heads. It is a different frame. We seem to lack either brand for this current need. Thanks for your comment, Robb.

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