There’s something about those initials!
On the clueless side, here is Hillary Rodham Clinton, explaining “soft power” to a Russian audience:
So that’s what smart power means — take nothing for granted, ask all the questions you can possibly have, come up with the best answer that’s humanly possible, (inaudible) knowing that (inaudible) may not get 100 percent right, and then make the best decisions you can to implement them. So we are very committed to engaging in this smart power approach and doing everything we can to work with our partners around the world on (inaudible).
Thank heavens we no longer have national leaders whose philosophy was to take lots of things for granted, not ask questions, come up with mediocre answers that they assume are 100 percent right, and make not particularly good decisions to implement them!
On the other hand, the new regime of smartness has led to what must be the most futile nine months of foreign policy failures in American history. The dumb guys who preceded the Nobel Peace Prize winner in the White House must have just been lucky.
A different H.R.C. illustrates how wretchedly “smart power” has worked so far. That’s the U.N. Human Rights Council, which yesterday voted overwhelmingly to endorse the Goldstone Report: 25 yea, six nay, 11 abstaining, five refusing to vote at all. Central to the report is the accusation that Israel deliberately murdered civilians during its incursion in the Gaza Strip last winter. Indifferent though it has been toward Israeli interests, the Obama Administration recognized this libel for what it was and promised to stop the report from moving further. Blocking it in the Human Rights Council was unlikely, given that body’s antisemitic majority, but getting only five other “no” votes (Italy, Hungary, the Netherlands, Slovakia, Ukraine – and all honor to them) is pathetic. Among the abstentions and nonvoters were Belgium, Bosnia, Britain, France, Japan, Mexico, Norway, South Korea, Slovenia and Uruguay. Russia, apparently determined to prove that it gave absolutely no quid pro quo for our concessions on European missile defense, voted “yes”.
In his speech to the U.N. last month, the President held up joining the Human Rights Council as a sign of how much better he is than George W. Bush. The delegates applauded furiously. A lot of good that applause has done us and our closest Middle East ally.
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