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Obama Should Follow His Own Advice on the 'Moral Force' of Non-Violence

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Better Believe It Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-20-11 11:36 AM
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Obama Should Follow His Own Advice on the 'Moral Force' of Non-Violence

Obama Should Follow His Own Advice on the 'Moral Force' of Non-Violence
by Medea Benjamin and Charles Davis
May 20, 2011

Were we unfamiliar with his actual policies – more than doubling the troops in Afghanistan, dramatically escalating a deadly drone war in Pakistan and unilaterally bombing for peace in Libya – it might have been inspiring to hear a major head of state reject violence as a means to political ends. Instead, we almost choked on the hypocrisy.

Cast beforehand as a major address on the Middle East, what President Obama offered with his speech on Thursday was nothing more than a reprisal of his 2009 address in Cairo: a lot of rhetoric about U.S. support for peace and freedom in the region contradicted by the actual – and bipartisan – U.S. policy over the past half-century of supporting ruthless authoritarian regimes. Yet even for all his talk of human rights and how he “will not tolerate aggression across borders” – yes, a U.S. president said this – Obama didn't even feign concern about Saudi Arabia's repressive regime invading neighboring Bahrain to put down a pro-democracy movement there. In fact, the words “Saudi Arabia” were never uttered.

It was that kind of speech: scathing condemnations of human rights abuses by the U.S.'s Official Enemies in places like Iran and Syria and muted criticism – if any – of the gross violations of human decency carried out by its dictatorial friends in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Yemen.

In his speech called the war in Iraq, which conservatively speaking has killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, “costly and difficult” – and, grotesquely, “well intended” – but that was as much an acknowledgement as he was willing to make of the deadly failure of U.S. policy toward the region in recent decades. Indeed, Obama argued it was not a failure of policy but merely a failure of rhetoric, a “failure to speak to the broader aspirations of ordinary people” that had prompted the “suspicion” the U.S. pursues its own interests at the expense of those living in the countries it invades or whose dictators it supports.

Read the full article at:

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/05/20-0
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Tierra_y_Libertad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-20-11 12:08 PM
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1.  That speech could have been titled "American Exceptionaliksm in the Middle East".
Or a lesson plan for "Hypocrisy, and How to Sell It".
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