John Kerry
Related: About this forumThoughtful NYT article on Kerry as SoS
Obviously, if I am not complaining it is a pretty positive article. One interesting tidbit is that they say that JK was promised he would be consulted on all major foreign policy issues.
Here is an interesting account of Kerry interacting with the PM of Turkey:
Mr. Kerrys hands-on approach was evident during a March visit to Turkey. After Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan appeared to undermine the prospects for an Israeli-Turkish entente by casting Zionism as a crime against humanity at a United Nations meeting, Mr. Kerry sought to defuse the controversy.
To make the point that Zionism was a valid nationalist movement and avoid turning the dispute into a test of wills, Mr. Kerry, who has known Mr. Erdogan since he was the mayor of Istanbul in the 1990s, took out an iPad and ran a Web search on the term.
For several minutes the two sides pored over the definition in Turkish and English, and the minicrisis was smoothed over.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/23/world/following-a-star-kerry-applies-personal-touch.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
politicasista
(14,128 posts)balanced article.
This may be off the mark, but wonder if he or the administration decided to put him/himself out there on the NSA drama? He has taken some heat (not surprising from the usuals, but the ones who are normally partial to him) for the "consequences" comment.
If this sounds concern trollish lol, will delete this, but he didn't say nothing wrong. It's a joke that "they" booed Pelosi at NN for just saying what she thought. They need to be booing Congress, especially the house over trying to take our rights away.
karynnj
(59,989 posts)Last edited Wed Jun 26, 2013, 04:42 PM - Edit history (2)
I think what he said was the message the US government wanted to convey. I also think there is a bit of theatre happening here. It is seriously ironic that Putin, the former head of the Russian spy organization, the KGB, is playing the role of the purer than snow statesman here. It has to be a frustrating mess for Obama and everyone.
In the case of both China and Russia, SNOWDON, not Kerry, may have hurt our relationship. My guess is that neither country was genuinely surprised by the revelations. First of all, the overall concept was already out there and second they know what they do. What it did was to give both the high ground - on issues where we and the west have always been seen as having the high ground. China expressed it well by referring to tearing the mask of sanctimony off the US.
Obama was and is in a no win situation on this. If he would have NOT led an effort to demand Snowden back, he would have been called careless with national security. However, doing so - he (and Kerry) are ridiculed or condemned for making the case against Snowden. Politically, Snowden has harmed our diplomacy. Russia already had the upper hand as we wanted them to act on various things more than they wanted anything from us. This further strengthens their hand.
Also, Kerry had a better relationship with his counterpart than other people had with their Russian counterparts - making him an obvious point man. In addition, he was high enough to make it clear that it was official without using President Obama. In addition, some are twisting that comment to mean what they want it to mean. He spoke of consequences to the relationship. There are ALWAYS consequences to relationships when someone acts in a way that either helps or harms you. Note that Kerry and Obama thanked Putin for his intelligence help on the Boston bombers. With both Russia and China, we were (and likely still are) in a process of building trust on both sides. China has been concerned that the highly touted, but never really laid out, "pivot to Asia" was designed to constrain them. We want them to act on currency manipulation, intellectual property, human rights and climate change - and they hold a lot of our debt. Anyone watching Kerry's full statements would note that even as he spoke of consequences, he immediately spoke of not wanting it to harm the relationship - and Putin and his Foreign Secretary mirrored the same sentiment.
My take on relationships between governments is that one should assume that they are acting in what they see as their national interest. There is no way, no matter how charming or persuasive a diplomat is, that another country will change to do what we want just to make that statesman happy. The only way they would change is if there is some reciprocity on something else they want more or they can be persuaded that it is in their interest. However, a diplomat who is willing to listen to concerns and find a REAL common ground solution and who is personally respectful and liked by counterparts might be able to do that persuading, but it is possible only if they can see it as in their interest. (To me, this is why someone like Susan Rice, however brilliant and however loyal to Obama, was not a good choice as SoS, unless the plan was that her portfolio not include a lot of personal diplomacy. )
As to Kerry saying Snowden was a traitor - that is exactly what I would have expected him to say. It now appears that Snowden took the BAH job with the goal of stealing documents. He took an oath to get the clearance he got - and he was lying even at that moment. I know he is a libertarian/left hero, but can we really accept a situation where EVERY programmer/analyst etc can disregardful the classifications? Not to mention, Snowden speaks of what HE could do with the data. This is not the same as what the NSA IS doing with the data.
It is true that an excellent programmer could target an individual and pull everything that involves him and then intelligently process that to get a picture of that person's life. However, only with a warrant could and would the NSA do this -- and then, they are doing EXACTLY what I want them to do. Example - I expect that this was done for the two brothers who bombed the marathon. For a rogue programmer or analyst to do this without warrant is almost certainly against the code of conduct and grounds for immediate firing. ( This would have been the equivalent of telephone operator decades ago listening into the calls she placed. This was not just a SNL skit - and it was grounds for firing. The programmer needs more skill to access the details that he is not suppose to get, but it boils down to the same thing.)
Here is a fantastic essay by David Simon, the man behind THE WIRE - http://davidsimon.com/we-are-shocked-shocked/
What did people think Kerry meant in 2004 when he spoke of using international intelligence and policework to get the terrorists? Then, the media thought of it as weak compared to invading countries.
politicasista
(14,128 posts)especially about the consequences and so on.
He was speaking from the diplomatic side, especially for peace; and given the chilly room pictures between Obama and Putin during the G8 Summit, Putin seems really sneaky.
Haven't commented much on Snowed-in, but it is very, very offensive that people would compare his actions to MLK. MLK never left a country on the run or put the US and their foreign allies' friendships at risk.
Great post.
Mass
(27,315 posts)It would be shocking he would take any other position, considering the DOJ charged Snowden with espionage.
You can agree or not with the decision, but there should be no surprise that Kerry (particularly abroad) would defend this decision. So, I am unclear what your point is here.
To go back to the question itself, I had two reflections:
=Last week-end, the tone was so nefarious that I wondered for a while whether I had ventured on RedState by mistake. People worried that Snowden would be tortured or killed by the govt. That is plain silly. And sadly, DU seems to have reverted to a silly mode. Sad because each time you want to start an intelligent, issue based conversation, on things that effectively affect people (like poverty, or women's rights, or), it is now absolutely impossible.
= I have little sympathy for Snowden. However, I think this will have ONE effect. People should wonder how much they value the notion of privacy, both at the state and corporate level. What is it we are ready to tolerate. Is it OK that Google sells your private information (including searches you make) to private companies. With the War on Terror, we have lost a degree of privacy and it is no surprise that, as this notion slowly disappears, we see women's rights, who largely deal with privacy, be more and more challenged. So, if would be great if we could forget the entertainment complex and deal with the issues.
The other question that should be asked is about the role of government. Is it normal that functions like Snowden's are outsourced to private companies and that these people are paid huge salaries (Snowden was reportedly paid $200,000). What ironically transpired from this story (and was most likely not Snowden's goal) is that there is a huge intelligence complex that makes big money on our paranoia. Should this not be an issue as well?
BTW, I also think it is striking that Kerry foresaw this in 2004 and said we had to get back to a state where terrorism would be a police issue. He was hammered for that, but truly, are we going to be in a state of war forever (because there will always be terrorists)
politicasista
(14,128 posts)and very much agree with SOS Kerry and the DOJ's decision. (See post above)
Haven't come to DU on weekends in a while, and have stayed out of the whole Snowed-in fray. With all that is happening with the VRA ruling and DOMA today, and women's rights in Texas; this MSM poutrage scandal is slowly losing steam. Was venting about this yesterday, but it will always be impossible to have productive talk on DU, especially in the summer silly season. Hence, FP.com US media already calling Pres. Obama's African trip a failure before he arrives. Good Grief.
edit "here" to "on DU"