PDA

View Full Version : Welcome to My World, Barack - SecState Rice Interview


Richard
11-17-2008, 08:24
On Jan. 20, Barack Obama will inherit a world very different from the one his predecessor found in January 2001. Over the past eight years, the Bush administration has faced great challenges and nurtured grand ambitions; it has tried hard to remake the world. Condoleezza Rice has been a central player in that effort since becoming the candidate Bush’s chief foreign-policy adviser in 2000, so we arranged to interview her at the State Department late last month. The interview turned into a wide-ranging discussion of where this government has taken the United States and what sort of world it will leave for the next president. The editors have culled the highlights of her remarks in the text that follows. We also spoke with other administration foreign-policy makers — Christopher Hill and Daniel Fried of the State Department and Gen. James L. Jones, former supreme allied commander, Europe — whose remarks supplement and illuminate those of Rice.

An interesting read.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

Welcome to My World, Barack
Interviews by HELENE COOPER and SCOTT L. MALCOMSON
November 16, 2008

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/16/magazine/16rice-t.html?ref=magazine&pagewanted=print

Excerpt:

WHY WE MAY BE LOSING IN AFGHANISTAN.

I think the first thing the next president will have to do is understand that Afghanistan is now part of a regional problem. Maybe four or five years ago it was about Afghanistan, but now it’s about Afghanistan and Pakistan, and you can’t deal with one without dealing with the other. So there is a regional aspect to this that I think we have to deal with. Secondly, I think it’s important for people to understand that Afghanistan is an international problem. It’s not a U.S. problem alone, as opposed to Iraq. . . . The U.N. is there; NATO is there; the E.U. is there; the World Bank is there; all the N.G.O.’s in the world; around 50 countries. So the question is with all of this capability there, why do we have the sense that we’re backsliding? The top of my list is the drugs and narcotics, which are, without question, the economic engine that fuels the resurgent Taliban, and the crime and corruption in the country. . . . We couldn’t even talk about that in 2006 when I was there. That was not a topic that anybody wanted to talk about, including the U.S. JAMES L. JONES Gen. James L. Jones has served as commandant of the Marine Corps, supreme allied commander in Europe and head of the U.S. military’s European Command. He was named a special envoy for Middle East security last year by Condoleezza Rice.

Five-O
11-17-2008, 08:29
Is it just me or is BHO like the dog chasing the car down the street...only he caught the car....

rubberneck
11-17-2008, 08:45
Is it just me or is BHO like the dog chasing the car down the street...only he caught the car....

For the first time in his public career President elect Obama is going to actually have to put his money where his mouth is. He will no longer be able to get away with voting present or wagging his finger at the decisions made by others who were forced by history to take a position. Somehow I suspect that he is going to find it much more difficult to govern than to play US Senator. God help us all.