May 19, 2008

Bestowing legitimacy

John Bolton in today's WSJ:

At first glance, the idea of sitting down with adversaries seems hard to quarrel with. In our daily lives, we meet with competitors, opponents and unpleasant people all the time. Mr. Obama hopes to characterize the debate about international negotiations as one between his reasonableness and the hard-line attitude of a group of unilateralist GOP cowboys.

The real debate is radically different. On one side are those who believe that negotiations should be used to resolve international disputes 99% of the time. That is where I am, and where I think Mr. McCain is. On the other side are those like Mr. Obama, who apparently want to use negotiations 100% of the time. It is the 100%-ers who suffer from an obsession that is naïve and dangerous.

This is also of note:

When the U.S. negotiates with "terrorists and radicals," it gives them legitimacy, a precious and tangible political asset. Thus, even Mr. Obama criticized former President Jimmy Carter for his recent meetings with Hamas leaders. Meeting with leaders of state sponsors of terrorism such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Kim Jong Il is also a mistake. State sponsors use others as surrogates, but they are just as much terrorists as those who actually carry out the dastardly acts. Legitimacy and international acceptability are qualities terrorists crave, and should therefore not be conferred casually, if at all.

As much as the Palestinian vilify America in their media, they still desperately crave the legitimacy American contact confers upon them. The same applies to many other rogue regimes.

Posted by SoccerDad at May 19, 2008 6:13 AM | TrackBack
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Comments

Would Obama negociate with Osama Bin Laden? Of course not. Then why is he willing to speak with Ahmadinejad?

He seems to have trouble knowing who are real enemies are.

Posted by: Happy-Balagan at May 19, 2008 6:04 PM