By Alan Caruba
Recently, in the wake of
another diplomatic disaster for the Obama regime, Secretary of State John Kerry
said, “We are not blind and I don’t think we’re stupid.” He and the President may not think they’re
stupid, but the leaders of nations around the world most certainly do.
In a recent Wall Street
Journal commentary by Brett Stephens, titled the “Axis
of Fantasy vs. Axis of Reality”, he cited the French rejection of the
negotiations with the Iranians, saying “the French also understand that the
sole reason Iran has a nuclear program is to build a nuclear weapon…This now
puts the French at the head of a de facto Axis of Reality, the other prominent
members of which are Saudi Arabia and Israel. In this Axis, strategy is not a
game of World of Witchcraft conducted via avatars in a virtual reality.”
Stephens said of Kerry’s
remark on Meet the Press, “When you’ve reached the ‘don’t call me stupid’ stage
of diplomacy, it means the rest of the world has your number.”
The Secretary of State
carries out the President’s foreign policies, but when both are ideologically
blind to reality and both harbor a deep disdain for an American history of
global leadership since the end of World War Two, they are going to initiate
and stumble around in ways that convince other nations to seek leadership
elsewhere or to pursue they own interests without looking to the U.S. for
support.
John Kerry has one of the
worst records imaginable to be our Secretary of State. I have always regarded
him as a moron with strong anti-American beliefs. I shudder to think he was the
Democratic Party’s candidate for President in 2004, losing to George W. Bush
who thankfully had previously defeated Al Gore. Two worse candidates for the
presidency are hard to imagine.
Kerry first came to my
attention and that of most Americans when he testified on April 22, 1971 before
the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, claiming that American veterans of
the Vietnam War had committed war crimes that were “not isolated incidents but
crimes committed on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at
all levels.” Kerry had, at that point, become a spokesman and organizer for the
group, Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Towards that end, he was working
closely with people, many of whom could only be described as revolutionary
Communists.
A lot of my generation
opposed the Vietnam War in the belief it was the wrong war in the wrong place,
mostly the result of Lyndon Johnson’s bad judgment. It would cost our nation
more than 50,000 lives of those who were sent into that grinder. We did not see
it as an excuse to lie about their participation, comparing them to barbarian
hordes. Kerry said at the time, “We cannot fight Communism all over the world
and I think we should have learned that lesson by now.” The U.S., however, did not stop resisting Communism and, in
1991, the Soviet Union would collapse as just one result of the resolve.
Like most liberals, Kerry
has a long record of embracing the worst dictators of the modern era. As early
as May 1970 Kerry met with North Vietnamese/Viet Cong delegations at the Paris
Peace talks to discuss various proposals, an action even Kerry acknowledged was
“on the borderline of private individuals negotiating, etc.” It was, in fact,
conduct prohibited by the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Now, as Secretary
of State he gets to negotiate for the U.S.; most recently with the Iranians.
In a commentary, “Kerry: Stay
Home”, Prof. Israel Hayom, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic
Studies and a fellow at the Middle East Forum, wrote “the prism of the Obama
administration on the Middle East and global affairs is fundamentally flawed.
An American policy that supports the Muslim Brotherhood, estranges its
traditional Arab allies such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia, allows Iran to get
closer to the bomb, sees in Turkey’s Erdogan a great friend of the West, and
insists that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can be ended in nine months is
dangerous and does more damage than good. Similar complaints about poor U.S. political judgment are abundantly voiced by America’s friends in Asian and Eastern European capitols.”
“It is the enemies
of the U.S. who rejoice in President Barack Obama’s foreign
policy and who relish in America’s perceived decline in world affairs.”
A recent example of the
fumbling that passes for foreign policy by the President and the Secretary of
State was seen in Obama’s threat to attack Syria in the wake of its use of poison gas. It is useful
to know that Kerry had met with Syria’s dictator, Bashar Assad, on more than one occasion
and, as a Senator, had worked to undermine the Bush administration’s efforts to
isolate Assad.
In February 2009, days after
Obama’s inauguration, Kerry was sent to Syria to establish a new relationship. He would make five
trips there between 2009 and 2011. After a passionate speech on August 30
advocating the President’s proposed military action against Syria, Obama decided to seek congressional approval before
taking any action. Kerry looked every bit the fool he was and is. As it turned
out, it was the Russians that saved their bacon, stepping in to expedite the
destruction of the Syrian poison gas arsenal.
Suffice to say, Kerry and
Obama are wrong on virtually every aspect of foreign relations currently
confronting the nation. One cannot finish this brief review, however, without
noting Kerry’s view that “climate change” is “as dangerous as any of the sort
of real crises that we talk about.” He has been a longtime advocate of
“cap-and-trade” programs to reduce so-called greenhouse gas emissions. There is
no “global warming” and the Earth has been a cooling cycle since around 1998.
This capacity to ignore the
facts, whether it is about the idiotic belief that humans can or should do
anything about the climate or that the Iranians will say anything to continue
their pursuit of nuclear weapons that makes Kerry a very dangerous, world class
doofus in charge of implementing Obama’s equally foolish foreign policies.
Smarter men than the
obsequious John Kerry have abandoned their allies and even started wars. He is
in a position to do a great deal of harm, not just to the U.S., but worldwide.
© Alan Caruba, 2013
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