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MBS

(9,688 posts)
Thu Sep 15, 2016, 05:43 AM Sep 2016

NYT editorial: "America's Mr. Diplomacy"

Last edited Thu Sep 15, 2016, 06:48 AM - Edit history (1)

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/15/opinion/americas-mr-diplomacy.html?ref=opinion&_r=0

Since becoming secretary of state more than three years ago, John Kerry has been a man on a mission — multiple missions, in fact — relentlessly traveling the globe in search of diplomatic solutions to the world’s toughest problems.

His efforts have been daring and, at times, quixotic. He was no more successful than his predecessors in securing a lasting Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. But without his persistence, the Iran nuclear deal in 2015 and last December’s global climate change agreement in Paris would almost certainly have been unattainable.
. . .
. . .there has been something honorable, even heroic, about the persistence, hard work and faith in diplomacy that this decorated Vietnam veteran and former head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has brought to his search for peaceful solutions.

Even as President Obama sought to keep America out of new military entanglements, Mr. Kerry has been determined to keep the nation engaged diplomatically and lead the world toward constructive results, despite times when the problems seem intractable. At 72, he is unlikely to run for office again, which gives him a certain freedom to swing for the diplomatic fences, although it may end in failure.
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NYT editorial: "America's Mr. Diplomacy" (Original Post) MBS Sep 2016 OP
Looks interesting. underpants Sep 2016 #1
Wow .. and from the NYT karynnj Sep 2016 #2
I TOTALLY agree with this: MBS Sep 2016 #3
President Obama and Secretary Kerry praising each other on commitment to the environment karynnj Sep 2016 #4
Wow, what a wonderful tribute to his work. MBS Sep 2016 #5

karynnj

(59,923 posts)
2. Wow .. and from the NYT
Thu Sep 15, 2016, 08:46 AM
Sep 2016

The sentences you took really tell the whole story.

The first paragraph is one of the few times I have seen a MSM comment that notes Kerry was indispensable on Iran and climate change. On both of what are Obama's two biggest foreign policy successes, beyond tirelessly working to achieve them, Kerry persuaded Obama to put his political capital behind two important goals that conventional wisdom said were unlikely to succeed. With the Iran deal, he made a war with Iran that was rather likely change to unlikely. The Paris Climate Accord that hopefully will go into affect this year is a tremendously important agreement that would not have happened without him.

If I had one little quibble with that sentence, it was not just his persistence, but that he persuaded Obama to allow him to make that effort and incredible intelligence, creativity and ability to really work with others. On Iran, it may have been his more than willingness to work side by side with Secretary Moniz as a team that together were incredibly able to define solutions to problems.

On climate change, it was not just persistence, but his long personal role in climate summits that meant he both knew the issues and had people who knew and trusted him in places like China among their negotiators. Even the Bush administration in Senate and House hearings thanked Kerry for his work in Bali. As to persistence, he was willing to spend his political capital, time and energy and wanted to make this a signature issue even though at the point that he became Secretary of State, the administration was not convinced that anything could be done diplomatically. (They were using EPA etc domestically)

Kerry speaking at the opening of a new international studies at IU, said:

To be honest, when I became Secretary of State, I was told that climate change was not likely to be a promising area for diplomacy. And China was a big part of the reason, because we had been completely opposed to each other at the last global meeting on climate in Copenhagen, and China was leading the charge of 77 nations to say your responsibility, not ours. China and the United States are now the two largest emitters of greenhouse gases in the world, just shy of 50 percent of all the gases. But earlier efforts at cooperation were nonstarters.

So shortly after I was sworn in in that February date that the president mentioned, I think I went to China in late March, early April. And I had called them two weeks earlier, called my counterpart and said, “Look, here’s what we need to do. We need to come together. We’ve got to find a way to work on this. And when I come, I have a plan. We’re going to lay it down, and let’s see if we can do this.” I proposed the start of regular, formal discussions with China that could break down the barriers and begin to build up our capacity to work together, and laid out every aspect of the issue in a systematic way.

Last fall, I visited – I invited the Chinese state councilor to my hometown of Boston to talk about what more our nations could do together in order to tackle the problem. And then in January, after we’d laid the groundwork, President Obama went to Beijing for further talks. The result was a spectacle that few expected: The American and Chinese presidents standing side-by-side in the Great Hall in Beijing to announce their nations’ respective – their agreement to announce their nations’ respective greenhouse gas emissions targets for the years to come.

The substance mattered. It was a dramatic moment of transformation, where China and the United States joined together, and it took away the excuse from less-developed countries. And the symbolic breakthrough of this coordination was bigger than many of us maybe even anticipated. Since then, every major economy in the world and 150 nations have come forward with their own set of targets or, in the case of India, unveiled a plan to make massive new investments in alternative energy.
http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2015/10/248257.htm

The later sentences quoted are even more interesting from the NYT. It is very clear from their many articles that they agree with the 51 dissenters and Ash Carter on Syria. As such, it is impressive that they do see someone working against their own preferred policy as "honorable" and "heroic" and credit him with working for constructive results. I am immensely impressed that Obama took the risk of backing Kerry on this rather the cynical position of those concerned that stopping the killing helps Assad or Russia. (It is interesting given that the NYT was very quick through the years of negotiations on Iran to cast doubt, that Iran is unambiguously cited as a success.)

This is likely as positive as the NYT could ever be. They will position - up front - that he did not get a peace settlement on Israel/Palestine even though it was never likely and in retrospect even less likely than could have been seen at the time. Yet his diligent work there may allow Obama to argue that his administration did all that could be done. Still, doing two nearly impossible things is not diminished by not finding a path - that may not exist - to resolve a third.

There is no doubt that Secretary Kerry has used his position as Secretary of State to make the world more peaceful and on a path to deal with environmental issues - whether the big climate deal or the Oceans conferences that he started. He really is and was the real deal we believed him to be.

MBS

(9,688 posts)
3. I TOTALLY agree with this:
Thu Sep 15, 2016, 05:40 PM
Sep 2016
". . .but that he persuaded Obama to allow him to make that effort and incredible intelligence, creativity and ability to really work with others. On Iran, it may have been his more than willingness to work side by side with Secretary Moniz as a team that together were incredibly able to define solutions to problems.

On climate change, it was not just persistence, but his long personal role in climate summits that meant he both knew the issues and had people who knew and trusted him in places like China among their negotiators. Even the Bush administration in Senate and House hearings thanked Kerry for his work in Bali. As to persistence, he was willing to spend his political capital, time and energy and wanted to make this a signature issue even though at the point that he became Secretary of State, the administration was not convinced that anything could be done diplomatically. (They were using EPA etc domestically)"


Thanks also for that wonderful excerpt of Kerry's speech at IU. That is SO JK, from stem to stern! Someday he is really going to get the credit her deserves.

And, yes, this article, albeit more positive about Kerry than usual for the NYT, is weirdly mixed, reflecting, I think, the mix of viewpoints that you identified.

And, yes, he is the real deal, for sure!

karynnj

(59,923 posts)
4. President Obama and Secretary Kerry praising each other on commitment to the environment
Thu Sep 15, 2016, 09:18 PM
Sep 2016

at the Oceans summit happening today and tommorow.

Speaking today at the State Department at the “2016 Our Ocean Conference,” President Barack Obama said that a “healthier planet” is vital to U.S. “national security” and that he has conversations about climate change “in the Situation Room.”

“But one thing that we all owe to [Secretary of State] John [Kerry] is his conviction that a healthier ocean and a healthier planet are about more than just our environment; they are also vital to our foreign policy and to our national security,” said Obama. “So he has elevated the profile of climate change, ocean protection to the point where we have conversations about this not just in the Oval Office, but in the Situation Room.”


http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/cnsnewscom-staff/obama-we-have-conversations-about-climate-change-situation-room

The link has Kerry introducing Obama -- and they are both wonderful.

MBS

(9,688 posts)
5. Wow, what a wonderful tribute to his work.
Fri Sep 16, 2016, 03:59 AM
Sep 2016

Yes, climate change is a topic for the Situation Room, and Kerry does deserve credit for connecting the dots between foreign policy and ocean and planet ecosystem health.
Will now go look at that video.

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