In God We Trust

When a bow is not deep enough

 

By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com

A deep bow to our “friends” in the Middle East no longer satisfies Barack Obama’s White House. His new ambassador-to-be to the United Nations has a better idea. Samantha Power thinks the president should take a deferential knee. (It worked for Al Jolson, paying tribute to Mammy.)

Al Jolson

Mzz Power is nothing if not flexible, and admires “flexibility” in presidents paying court to the nation’s adversaries and enemies. This president just hasn’t bowed deeply enough to suit her.

A decade ago, when Mzz Power was a learned perfessor at Harvard, she set out a few guidelines for how an American president could earn the respect of the squalid and the corrupt, envious as they are of American pelf and power.

She held up the example of German Chancellor Willy Brandt, who in 1970, eager to expiate the sins of the Nazis, went to one knee on a street in the old Warsaw ghetto, scene of one of the great atrocities of World War II, to apologize for the unspeakable and the unforgivable.

“A country has to look back before it can move forward,” she wrote of the gesture in New Republic magazine. “Instituting a doctrine of the mea culpa would enhance our credibility by showing that American decision-makers do not endorse the sins of their predecessors. When [Willy] Brandt went down on one knee in the Warsaw ghetto his gesture was gratifying to World War II survivors, but it was also ennobling and cathartic for Germany. Would such an approach be futile for the United States?”

“Futile” is not the word for such a gesture. “Sick” is the word. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S Truman, who led the coalition of the civilized in World War II, were neither Nazis nor evil-doers, nor were the 291,000 Americans who shed their blood to liberate Europe and the Pacific from the embrace of Nazis and their journeymen in evil.

Mzz Power’s infamous essay – for which she has apologized, though for getting caught at saying it, not for thinking it – was titled, “Why do they hate us?” In it, she concedes that George W. Bush was right about “some” America-bashers when he rightly and accurately said “they hate our freedoms – our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each other.” But Mzz Power thinks her adopted land deserves the abuse of the bashers and malicious malcontents. “U.S. foreign policy has to be rethought,” she wrote. “It needs not tweaking but overhauling. We need: a historical reckoning with crimes committed, sponsored or permitted by the United States.”

Mzz Power was born in Ireland, which is odd. It’s hard to imagine anyone from the auld sod approaching her enemy with hat in hand, bound in sackcloth and ashes, begging for forgiveness. She’s the wife of Cass Sunstein, who has been President Obama’s “information czar,” and who has, among other things, advocated abolishing marriage – understandable, maybe, but not very gallant toward Samantha.

But it’s Samantha Power who deserves a long look by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which must determine whether to advise the full Senate to confirm her as the ambassador to the United Nations. Tempting it may be to dismiss concerns over the appointment; the U.N. is something of a bad joke, not to be taken seriously by serious people. Mzz Power will no doubt enjoy the congenial banter of the delegates’ lounge, where barb and insult are polished before launch against America and the West.

The president is entitled to Susan Rice, who leaves the U.N. for the White House, where she can supply the president with the attitudes and pious platitudes of the third world on which the left so happily feeds. Every president is entitled to the advice he wants, even if it’s bad, and if the rest of us have to suffer the consequences and take it out on his congressional allies in November 2014.

But just as everyone is entitled to his opinions but not to his own facts, so a representative at the U.N. represents all of us, and the Senate has the right and responsibility to advise and consent. Mzz Power, with her scorn for the deeply held convictions of Americans and her disdain for America’s true friends, deserves the back of the hand of every senator. America needs no ambassador to take a knee before its enemies. The president already does that.

Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington Times.