Speaking to a huge and receptive audience today, Barack Obama could have performed a valuable service for our country. He professes to regard Afghanistan as the crucial battleground in the War on Terror. He must be aware that our European allies have, with a few commendable exceptions (of which Germany is not one), given the Afghan government only faint-hearted support. The main reason for that reticence is that European public opinion strongly favors doing nothing.
So here he was, in front of a crowd of 200,000 admirers and every television network on the continent – an unsurpassed opportunity to make the case for the Afghan campaign directly to Hans and Jacques. But he didn’t. Instead, he delivered a standard, gaseous campaign speech, complete with a cringe-inducing tribute to his personal genealogy and a vacuous “This is our moment” refrain. Afghanistan got one paragraph. As a paragraph, it was okay, but it did not lay out the reasons why what happens in that distant land is important to the future of the civilized world. The chance to open a crack in the wall of European indifference slipped away, maybe because Senator Obama did not know how to seize it, maybe because he wasn’t all that eager to try. He has never told us why he regards Afghanistan as vital and Iraq as a throw-away. What could he say to his fellow citizens of the world?
On the more positive and uplifting side, Jim Geraghty has discovered that Slick Barry has unexpected talents as a lyricist. Half of the following stanza is from that monument of 1980’s vacuity, “We Are the World”, the rest from the Siegessäule Oration. (Jim tells which is which, so I don’t have to.)
We can’t go on pretending day by day
That someone, somewhere will soon make a change.
This is the moment we must help answer the call.
But if you just believe there’s no way we can fall.
The world will watch and remember what we do.
Let us realize that a change can only come when we stand together as one.
We cannot afford to be divided.
These now are the walls we must tear down.
This is the moment when we must come together.
They’ll know that someone cares, and their lives will be stronger and free.
The lines almost hum themselves, whether or not the words make much sense.
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