White House: Cairo speech inspired the Iran uprising
posted at 9:28 am on June 23, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
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No, I’m really not kidding about this. The Washington Post has the story:
But Obama’s shades-of-gray approach rejects comparison to an era when Communist bloc dissidents had virtually no access to the Western media and the world was more neatly divided between a pair of superpowers, not complicated by the set of ambitious regional powers such as Iran that the Obama administration is seeking to manage.
Since taking office, Obama has argued that reclaiming America’s moral authority by ending torture and closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay provides essential diplomatic leverage to influence events in such strategic parts of the world as the Middle East and Central Asia. The speech he delivered to the Islamic world in Cairo eights days before the June 12 Iranian election sought to do that by providing what the president saw as an unvarnished accounting of U.S. policy in Iran, Iraq, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“We’re trying to promote a foreign policy that advances our interests, not that makes us feel good about ourselves,” said a senior administration official who, like others, declined to be identified, citing the sensitivity of the issue.
Obama’s approach to Iran, including his assertion that the unrest there represents a debate among Iranians unrelated to the United States, is an acknowledgment that a U.S. president’s words have a limited ability to alter foreign events in real time and could do more harm than good. But privately Obama advisers are crediting his Cairo speech for inspiring the protesters, especially the young ones, who are now posing the most direct challenge to the republic’s Islamic authority in its 30-year history.
This is the most despicable, self-serving, and arrogant spin I’ve seen yet from this White House, and that’s saying something. Obama gave a speech, and suddenly the people of Iran discovered that they’re being ruled by tyrants? Never mind that two weeks passed between the speech and the uprising, and that the very obvious trigger for the unrest was the incompetent manner in which the mullahs rigged the election for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Never mind the fact that this President took a full week to even sound like a watered-down Nicolas Sarkozy, let alone the leader of the free world.
This is very obviously an attempt at damage control. Obama has gotten hammered for staying behind the curve of Western leaders in the defense of liberty, freedom, and human rights. He has preferred to stay on the sidelines in the hope that silence will make the mullahs like him enough to grant him an audience, while Sarkozy, Angela Merkel, and the Brits slam the mullahcracy for its brutal treatment of political opposition. Now, suddenly, Obama wants to claim credit for getting their first with his Cairo speech — which had nothing to do with overthrowing mullahs, and in fact had only a passing mention of democracy as an official US policy in the Middle East.
On the grand scale of things, I’d say that the establishment of democracy in Iraq had more influence on the Iranians than anything Obama’s managed to say, and I wouldn’t go so far to make it a proximate cause, or much more than a tertiary influence, after the stolen election and decades of repression by the mullahs.
Besides, how impressed do you think Iranians are with Obama’s open invitation to the mullahs for a 4th of July BBQ? Think that inspires them to demand liberty?
Despicable, and shame on the Washington Post for not calling them on it.
Update: I meant to write two weeks, not two months, between the Cairo speech (6/4) and the uprising. It’s fixed.
Update II: Jim Geraghty makes a great point:
Remember how it was important to recognize that these protests in Iran were triggered by ordinary Iranians’ response to the election, and it was important for the U.S. government to be quiet, soft-spoken, and understated in its response to evolving events? Remember when the most important thing was that the Iranians, and the world, conclude that this uprising was generated entirely by internal sources?
Yeah, apparently that’s no longer the case.
So now can we get a full-throated cry of support for freedom and liberty from the supposed leader of the Free World?
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Obama, he came, he spoke, he conquered.
fourdeucer on June 23, 2009 at 11:23 AM
Gee, and it’s not like protesters haven’t made some communication. If even ONE had cited Obama’s disgusting speech as motivation, then maybe we could lend credence to Obama’s imaginary greatness.
KittyLowrey on June 23, 2009 at 11:23 AM
it’s amazing how many seemingly formerly rational people, now have their lips shaped like Obama’s sphincter-muscle…..
this is a sad day for this country, and world…
Dale in Atlanta on June 23, 2009 at 11:24 AM
Deeply humiliating? Are you serious? Mildly embarrasing maybe, and not in any way Obama intended I’m sure.
You’re right nothing happens in a vacuum, and Iran is not one. It’s under pressure from Iraq and Afghanistan.
DarkCurrent on June 23, 2009 at 11:25 AM
Obummer
My 2 cents.
saiga on June 23, 2009 at 11:26 AM
Never waste a good crisis…that’s their motto.
scalleywag on June 23, 2009 at 11:26 AM
The Iranian government blamed us for the uprising, Obama is just going with what they say. I mean come on, the Iranian government never lies!
oh wait . . .
Ingenue on June 23, 2009 at 11:26 AM
In all of the coverage I have watched I must have missed when the protestors shouted praise in Obama’s name. For the entire first week the majority of our media here praised Obama’s astute and subtle nuance. When it became apparent that the rest of America was disgusted with his tepid response, his media are now crowning him as the true champion of the revolt. Revolting to the nth degree. No wonder the trolls are speechless.
Bob in VA on June 23, 2009 at 11:28 AM
Damn; that’s just disgusting.
If anything, I’d think that watching Iraqis and Afghans vote just across their borders would be more inspiring that a speech that barely drew applause.
commenter on June 23, 2009 at 11:31 AM
‘Humiliating’ would have been if there had been much truth to it. ‘Infuriating’ is probably more appropriate for describing the response to that slander.
Count to 10 on June 23, 2009 at 11:31 AM
And you thought that: Obama’s Cairo speech: Surprisingly good?
Perhaps Obama is learning how to spin from you, Ed?
The lesson here, Ed, is that there is no need to spin a partisan hack’s speech, like Obama’s, for ANY reason, EVER, even if you thought that sounding agreeable was going to get you some brownie points!
The fact is, it never works as you have just learned.
One needs to be ever vigilant in criticizing our leaders, especially if they are political hacks like Obama.
ALL of the good sounding stuff Obama has said, are simply empty words with no meaning whatsoever, an effort to make him look good by his script writers and you of all people should know that.
Here’s hoping that you have learned the lesson.
Mcguyver on June 23, 2009 at 11:32 AM
If spewing bullshit was a WMD Obama would make everyone fear us.
gsherin on June 23, 2009 at 11:35 AM
I tell you what, you can have President Ipod, and we will trade you for Daniel Hannan!
You can keep Brown!
Look cuz, you are going to have a vastly different view of President Skateboard when his policies begin impacting Great Britain. Think Death Star type policies. My advice, begin replaying Maggie Thatcher’s greatest hits so you guys can remember what it was like when Britain kicked ass and rocked the world!
freeus on June 23, 2009 at 11:36 AM
If Obama’s Cairo speech was so effective, in starting a revolution, why isn’t his “speechifying working” in the U.S. on healthcare, where it is no longer a slam dunk to pass into law?
luvstotango on June 23, 2009 at 11:37 AM
Perhaps they are finally starting to worry about their own wallets. The Obama-math is becoming pervasive, in every situation..
Getting-a-clue has been know to give the brain a whiplash. Hence the temporary absence.
Yoop on June 23, 2009 at 11:38 AM
Did Obama’s Cairo speech also inspire this, then?
DDB on June 23, 2009 at 11:38 AM
Oppression inspired the Iran uprising!
These democraps in office are as low as you can get!
JihadKiller1s1k on June 23, 2009 at 11:43 AM
Pitiful is spot on in this pathetic attempt for Obama to claim credit for an uprising he chose to spend at the golf course while eating ice cream.
Baxter Greene on June 23, 2009 at 11:43 AM
Oh look Obama is now reversing course. Good for him.
A little late, but better than never.
Mr. Joe on June 23, 2009 at 11:44 AM
Funny how in any other context, unnamed anonymous MSM sources would be shouted down as unacceptable and a joke, but here, because they fit the ODS narrative, they are just hunky dory.
Funny if it wasn’t so pathetically transparent.
Grow Fins on June 23, 2009 at 11:44 AM
Sounds like a trial balloon to see how fast and furious is the outrage.
WELL, I’M OUTRAGED!
That Cairo speech supported the tyrants and the jihab wearers, not the people.
PattyJ on June 23, 2009 at 11:47 AM
The true believers will believe it – thankfully those numbers are dwindling, and in no small measure due to the growing distrust of the media.
Thank goodness we have access to international media who sees the big zero for who he is, AWOL on freedom.
Meanwhile WaPo headlines say that the SC Governor was ‘out of pocket’- oh horrors – it must be some deviant behavior because he made the egregious sin of hiking in summer. What a laughing stock the WaPo has become.
Carolina Kat on June 23, 2009 at 11:48 AM
This just in;
Obama plans speech for July 21st in order to take credit for the 1969 moon landing on its 40th anniversary. Apparently that was the day that Barack gave a motivational speech to his neighborhood friend to get a hit by taunting the opposing pitcher with, “we want a pitcher, not a belly-itcher!”. Subsequently, emboldened by Obama’s speech, both Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were able to summon the courage to take those first steps out of the protection of the lunar module Eagle. Diane Sawyer is scheduled to give a 1 hour one-on-one interview with President Obama documenting the momentous events.
————
I expect nothing less from this fraud. Obama has a form of Costanza Disease, where every single thing he does is the exact opposite of good policy and the right thing to do…
Just sit back and smile as we get to view the fall of the greatest nation ever to exist. Once nationalized healthcare gets put into place, its all over (they won’t even need to pursue Cap-n-Trade, its just pouring salt into the wounds).
Geministorm on June 23, 2009 at 11:50 AM
I heard Obama also created the Internet.
In fact the created the Universe. Just ask him!
CrazyFool on June 23, 2009 at 11:52 AM
Asshat
skatz51 on June 23, 2009 at 11:56 AM
The British expel diplomats… we invite them over for the 4th of July.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8115358.stm
Upstater85 on June 23, 2009 at 11:56 AM
Heh!!
Obama’s sheep see this as so pathetic that they have to attack the use of Anonymous sources that they relied on for 8 years in making up bogus accusations and conspiracy theories one after another.
This is not an anonymous source trying to insert themselves into being part of a Revolution:
(Obama)
Of course there is a possibility for change.That is why they voted dumba$$.It had nothing to do with some pandering speech.
That is some “robust debate” going on there genius.
Home invasions,shooting and beating people in the streets.
Yea,real intellectual Obama is.
Talk about pathetic.
Baxter Greene on June 23, 2009 at 11:59 AM
Geeze! So now what?
We pay for , and erect a grand statue of Obama in armor, atop a horse, wielding his sword? What a tool, and what a tool the WaPo is for even considering publishing this, let alone actually publishing this drivel.
capejasmine on June 23, 2009 at 12:03 PM
He got 70% of the high school dropout vote. No other candidate had ever done that.
Del Dolemonte on June 23, 2009 at 12:05 PM
In other news….
A reporter for the NY Times (name withheld by request) was injured during the press conference today at the White House when a rainbow colored skittle ricocheted off the President’s columned backdrop and struck the reporter in the eye.
A review of the footage shows that President Obama, obviously bothered by someone’s perfume,
accidentallysneezed on purpose. Almost immediately, a ‘pffft’ sound can be heard and a rainbow skittle can be seen clearly exiting the President’s butt and eventually striking the reporter’s right eye.All was made well though when the reporter was healed after President Obama immediately mentioned the injury in his speech.
Chris Matthews, veteran CNBC reporter and first to break the news on cable television, commented on the event. “Personally, I got a little thrill up my leg when he sneezed. I wish he’d do that more often.”
Thunderstorm129 on June 23, 2009 at 12:07 PM
what’s the surprise??? it’s always been a massive PR campaign.
thedude on June 23, 2009 at 12:08 PM
Believe it or not, Senor is married to the noted Leftist CNN airhead Campbell Brown.
Del Dolemonte on June 23, 2009 at 12:08 PM
Oh come on. This isn’t like it’s some sort of wild unsourced scandal accusation.
This completely fits in with everything we’ve come to know about this impotent and narcissistic administration.
Chuck Schick on June 23, 2009 at 12:10 PM
F**k him. He’s not MY POTUS and never will be.
Now that we got that out of the way, your concern-trolling is not that aggressive, and you might really be sincere, but I don’t think you have any understanding of the culture here or what Obama is trying to do to this country.
Obama has more in common with the current Iranian regime as opposed to the protesters. Obama is for consolidating power centrally under himself as opposed to liberty.
His speech is weak because if he speaks out FOR the protesters strongly, it will come back to haunt him when he tries to use ACORN and other groups to build his empire here.
You have to remember that as Americans, we more than any other people on the planet LIKE FREEDOM and want to keep what we have and expand it.
What the Iranians need is the 2nd Amendment so they can fight the tyranny of a blatantly rigged election.
Sapwolf on June 23, 2009 at 12:10 PM
One
Bad
Ass
Mistake,
America
Seen on a car with (gasp) Massachusetts license plates this morning.
Del Dolemonte on June 23, 2009 at 12:10 PM
America got a boob job when he was implanted in the WH.
Akzed on June 23, 2009 at 12:11 PM
He got 100% of the dead vote and cartoon character vote.
Daggett on June 23, 2009 at 12:11 PM
…a Ship of TOOLS….
Dale in Atlanta on June 23, 2009 at 12:18 PM
What’s worse?
Obama pathetically trying to take credit for this, by citing his Cairo speech.
Or
Obama’s continued silence on the matter.
lorien1973 on June 23, 2009 at 12:21 PM
People standing up and dying for Liberty.
A word that is mysteriously absent from President Obama’s vocabulary.
Yet he will step in and take credit for ‘inspiring’ others to do fight and die for something he can’t talk about.
Are we sure the Egypt speech wasn’t a signal that the ‘Chicago Way’ was the way to go for elections, instead? The Iranian regime sure did turn out the dead in a number of cities to get 100%+ showing up at the polls.
ajacksonian on June 23, 2009 at 12:21 PM
Whatever… Taking credit where credit is DOO (s-word)… Sounds just like the Clenis….
CynicalOptimist on June 23, 2009 at 12:23 PM
He is taking the credit in a non-meddling way.
sonofdy on June 23, 2009 at 12:29 PM
Excellent point, Ed!!!
I’ve seen reports that some of the ayatollahs in Iran have disagreed with Khomeini’s (and Khamenei’s) interpretation of Shiite law whereby the supreme Ayatollah acts as the Mahdi or “messiah” and imposes his political will on the people of a Shiite theocracy. Traditional Shiite law normally holds that the ayatollahs dictate the spiritual conduct of the faithful, but do NOT meddle in politics or government.
Some of the dissenting ayatollahs in Iran have been looking to Ayatollah al-Sistani in Karbala, Iraq, who is considered the wisest ayatollah by Shiites, for their ultimate guidance. During the Iraq war, al-Sistani was instrumental in calling for calm among Iraqi Shiites and resisting political influence from Iran in Shiite southern Iraq, and for resisting the radical faction loyal to al-Sadr.
But who gave al-Sistani the possibility to urge Iraqi Shiites to passive, non-violent resistance without his followers being massacred by Saddam Hussein? A certain George W. Bush, with David Petraeus providing the strategery? The Big O could never give THEM credit, could he?
Meanwhile, we should keep our eyes and ears on al-Sistani. Some of the Iranian ayatollahs openly favor Mousavi, and may have second thoughts about their “Supreme Leader” supporting a government that shoots its own people for political reasons, when a Shiite leader is supposed to act OUTSIDE of politics. Al-Sistani, from his now-safe haven in Iraq, could lead some Iranian ayatollahs to a tipping point.
Steve Z on June 23, 2009 at 12:30 PM
Geministorm on June 23, 2009 at 11:50 AM
if it was not so horribly sad, I would be ROFLMAO.
kayo on June 23, 2009 at 12:31 PM
Fauxbama is talking now, and he keeps saying “As I said in Cairo…”
Can he NOT get past himself?
Enoxo on June 23, 2009 at 12:35 PM
Let them just keep on telling the Emperor-with-no-clothes how great he looks in that empty suit. This is the kind of stuff that comes with people who truly believe they know what is best for you and there is no need for you to have any input. We’ve seen it over and over in the last 6 months.
Remember this report the day after the elections in Iran when the protest first began?
The inspiration for change in Iran, regardless of the extent of that change, is because of President Bush.
Texas Gal on June 23, 2009 at 12:35 PM
I predicted two days ago that Obama would start taking credit for the uprising. Expect this angle to be played up in the press if the protesters succeed, and to be quickly dismissed as unofficial speculation if they don’t. It’s the audacity of sitting on the fence and calling it ‘leadership’.
Socratease on June 23, 2009 at 12:35 PM
HotAir logic at work:
Obama should say something to support the protestors! His words can make all the difference!
(…but what he said in Cairo was meaningless and his words had no effect whatsoever)
Now that’s an impressive mental contortion you’ve found for yourself!
Look, the Cairo speech isnt what caused the Iranian revolt. I agree that the advisers who are privately making a strong connection are going off on a limb. But it’s silly for you to say that he’s leaving the Iranian protestors in a lurch by not supporting them (which would actually make it more likely for the regime to accelerate their violent suppression of the resistance), but say that the Cairo speech had no effect.
If the words he’s not saying now could be such powerful weapons, surely the words he did say could also have effects. Pick a side and go with it.
orange on June 23, 2009 at 12:42 PM
Our village idiot is on tv now with this news conference. I can’t even find myself able to unmute the tv.
His absolute arrogance is the most astonishing thing I have ever witnessed in my 54 years on this planet.
Will our White House press corp find their balls, wake up, and remember they are journalists? Naw, they are participating in their own bubble DC alternate reality. A pox on them all.
karenhasfreedom on June 23, 2009 at 12:45 PM
Oh, and you claim that Obama only made a “passing mention of democracy” in his speech. That’s clearly false. Here is what he said:
That’s several paragraphs, not a “passing mention”. You can make your point without lying about Obama’s speech, cant you?
orange on June 23, 2009 at 12:45 PM
So if Obama is responsible for the uprising, then he’s responsible for all the civilian deaths in Iran. Shouldn’t the World Court be putting him on trial or something??
Sorry, thinking like a liberal is hard work… or hardly works???
taznar on June 23, 2009 at 12:46 PM
The hypocricy of this man is nauseating. I am ashamed of him. Ashamed Obama is president.
Terrye on June 23, 2009 at 12:48 PM
So a private, anonymous comment from some adviser does not count as quiet, soft-spoken, or understated? Good grief. This was a little off-the-record comment some staffer made. It honestly shouldnt have even been included in the report unless the advisor was willing to have it attributed to them. You guys are going off the deep end on this.
orange on June 23, 2009 at 12:49 PM
Oooh, the foxnews guy just asked Obama what took him so long to express that he was “appalled and outraged” and asked him what took him so long. Immediately Obama said Major Garret was not paying attention and that Obama had been VERY CLEAR and consistent. Really?
At least Major Garrett seems to remember he has some balls.
karenhasfreedom on June 23, 2009 at 12:52 PM
orange:
It was a passing mention in that Obama made it plain that kissing butt with the powers that be was number one. If he had his way Saddam would still be feeding old ladies to starving dogs. He made a point of putting distance between himself and George Bush’s push for liberty. He wanted no part of that. And then realizing that as an American president he had to at least pay lip service to democracy, he adds on a couple of paragraphs in an effort to have it both ways.
Nothing changes the fact that he has been distancing himself from these protestors for weeks. He has offered them no support, and then when it people call him on it, he claims credit for the whole thing. The man is a hypocrite.
Terrye on June 23, 2009 at 12:52 PM
Does anyone else get the feeling that Obama’s Image is more important to him than his country?
If we could only convince Prez B. O. that he looks stupid acting like a dove, that hawks have greater legacies…
Doug on June 23, 2009 at 12:52 PM
Ooooh, Major is also asking Obama if the Iranian diplomats are still going to be welcome at the White House party on the 4th of July. HeHe
Obama is telling him that the US is interested in “healing the wounds” of the past 30 years and the Iranians are responsible for making this first move.
karenhasfreedom on June 23, 2009 at 12:53 PM
healing the wounds my ass. These people are still having their death to America rallies.
On one hand Obama wants to apologize because the US supposedly got rid of a pro Soviet Iranian government more than a half century ago. On the other, when there is an obvious stealing of an election in Iran right now..he can not decide what side to get on.
Terrye on June 23, 2009 at 12:55 PM
Deep end? Oh, the deep end is coming….. on 7/04 & 9/11 – I suggest that all you ogabe sniffing dingle-berries stay at home & pray to your master comrade soetoro.
After all, these will be PRO-AMERICAN rallies, with tons of USA flags, scads of dangerous right wing radicals, enlisted folks, and gasp, small government people who PAY TAXES (and pro lifers who actually think our babies are citizens). You kooks stay in the a/c and sip your juice box.
Ris4victory on June 23, 2009 at 12:57 PM
Iranian students succumbed to pneumbratic emanations from Zero’s ass in Cairo.
Maquis on June 23, 2009 at 12:57 PM
Geministorm, that’s it…my sister is afflicted with Costanza Disease too! My sister is doomed, so goes Obama.
luvstotango on June 23, 2009 at 1:07 PM
This administration is the most delusional there’s ever been. Hillary is a big disappointment. She’s supposed to rein in the kiddies. It’s all a political playground, while the young die in Iran. For shame!
All they have for a spine is jello, then they brag about a vacuous speech.
Schadenfreude on June 23, 2009 at 1:13 PM
You said it, Ed.
As for this:
They make a grave error. People like to feel good about themselves. They want to, and they (we) deserve to.
That’s what was good about Reagan. Whatever he was saying, he always made Americans feel good about themselves, and feel there was always hope, lots of hope, that things are good and would get better. REAL hope. Not whatever crap Obama was babbling on about.
People don’t like to be lectured to, or made to feel bad about themselves. People don’t like it when other people run around apologizing for them to others, apparently for being so bad.
It’s human nature. Plus, we aren’t bad, and we want to feel good about ourselves, and we deserve to, probably more than any other country in the world.
I don’t know what kind of cynical contrast this is supposed to be, between “feeling good about ourselves,” as opposed to “advancing our interests.” Because it is precisely in our interests (and that of other countries) to believe in ourselves and what we stand for.
This is going to backfire on them – all this business about Obama standing there like some God/father figure, lecturing us and everyone else about all our faults.
People will next go for someone who really does love America, and Americans, and offers realistic and optimistic hope – not this grim, mea culpa stuff Obama keeps shoveling.
People will go for someone who really does represent democracy and freedom and the dignity and worth of all individuals – not someone who stands at the side in some kind of moral relativism, refusing to meddle; and more importantly, not someone who frowns and looks stern and tries to remind us and the rest of the world how flawed and awful America is.
People will replace Obama with someone who does make us feel good about ourselves, as well we should. It’s just not an either/or.
Alana on June 23, 2009 at 1:23 PM
Who couldn’t see this coming?
capitalist piglet on June 23, 2009 at 1:27 PM
Alana, that would be Sarah Palin!
luvstotango on June 23, 2009 at 1:34 PM
Yet, somehow, none of the young Iranian protesters mentioned the Tyro in Cairo as their inspiration to rise up. Maybe you’re lying, again, Barry, to cover up yet another EPIC FAIL?
Christien on June 23, 2009 at 1:39 PM
You mean they are starting to lower again. He had them so sucked up into his stomach I thought he had forgotten he had some.
cjs1943 on June 23, 2009 at 1:40 PM
So it’s back to “realism” again. James Baker, please call your answering service. Sheesh.
smellthecoffee on June 23, 2009 at 1:52 PM
I didn’t watch the propaganda but can probably guess he has a lot to say except he offered no solutions for anything. The boy king is a clueless used car salesman.
bluegrass on June 23, 2009 at 2:02 PM
One young protestor held up a sign, “Don’t leave us alone”.
Heartbreaking.
This is so much worse than the impotence of the Carter years. Watching the hooded American hostages on tv, then go off to a Mother’s Day luncheon…there was always a pit in your stomach.
Just like now, living with fear, afraid of your government.
luvstotango on June 23, 2009 at 2:06 PM
Nothing like the Muslim nation to rise up and bring death and destruction to the masses of people caught up in their BS. You go O . You can do it.
bluegrass on June 23, 2009 at 2:09 PM
As the polls go down down down we are going to see ever more pathetic attempts to spin themselves out of the grave they are digging for themselves.
This is the most corrupt group of lying slime balls in the History of our fine Nation.
Hillary is a useless windsock. Barry and the Clintons are destroying capitalism.
Geochelone on June 23, 2009 at 2:13 PM
I Fear our Government. The power Pigs in DC fear Palin.
Geochelone on June 23, 2009 at 2:15 PM
Big Brother Barry says is responsible for the uprising because of the fact he was elected President and his speech in Cairo. That is so far from the truth, there has been so much unrest in Iran from the younger generation for years, it has just been suppressed. If anything it was President Bush’s vision for the Middle East that made this happen. By starting democracies in Afghanistan and Iraq, he has literally sandwiched Iraq by Democracy. The younger generation of Iran are seeing what is possible right next door and are now taking steps to make it happen. Obama needs to help them, just like Reagan did with Poland. The seed of Democracy lies within the protests, Obama better learn quick how to make that seed grow.
Sven on June 23, 2009 at 2:49 PM
Big John on June 23, 2009 at 3:06 PM
Like I said yesterday, Obama can in no way claim credit for any success in Iran. I would have thought they would have waited a little longer to start the victory parade in Obama’s honor, but I guess I underestimated their disgraceful chutzpah. This guy just can’t get enough of himself, can he?
I think Ed’s got it right when he says Iraq probably has more to do than a stupid speech with inspiring thoughts of democracy. It’s not a straight line from one to the other, but I think the influence is there.
Wellsy on June 23, 2009 at 3:14 PM
“But privately Obama advisers are crediting his Cairo speech…”
So some people in a back room are privately taking too much credit, so now this (according to you) is the official White House position? As usual, reading comprehension and any sense of proportion totally escapes you jokers.
Constantine on June 23, 2009 at 3:18 PM
Ergo; The White House is responsible for the violence and deaths!
Cybergeezer on June 23, 2009 at 3:39 PM
Shameless, disgusting bastards. This is becoming the most epic fail of an administration since Jimmy Carter. Even worse.
ronsfi on June 23, 2009 at 4:04 PM
Breathtaking. What a bunch of wankers.
Mason on June 23, 2009 at 4:21 PM
When barry starts shooting protestors in the streets do you think he will charge the families for the bullets that cut them down? Tea Parties are being cancelled for lack of a venue. Atlanta Ga. and Greenville, SC are two I am aware of. Just a coincidence or are we seeing the transparent one in action? As usual the pubbies are invisable and mute. You do understand that we need to be bipartisan.
chicken thief on June 23, 2009 at 4:26 PM
What I don’t understand is, Obama is assumed to be intelligent, right?! Yet, he chooses to call Iran’s tyrannical brutality against it’s citizens yearning to speak their individual and collective minds “vigorous debate.”
If he were blind he’d have an excuse, but since he isn’t he has absolutely none!
kscheuller on June 23, 2009 at 5:47 PM
This from Huffpo:
One would think, before engaging in such ridiculous fantasy, the NYT and the White House would first make sure that the speech was actually heard in Iran.
Wolf Howling on June 23, 2009 at 6:03 PM
I’ve had some flak for defending Obama, but its all been reasonably stated and fair. So in that spirit, I’ll try and clarify what I’m getting at.
I’m aware that Obama is very polarising, and I’m concerned about what he has done to the economy in the US. I do not feel that Obama is a messiah and personally would have voted for John McCain had I not been a Brit.
But, because I can see things from an outsiders point of view, I have to say that Obama’s softly-softly approach may have worked. For one thing the Iranians are trying to blame Britain more than the US for the uprising. Obama just doesn’t seem the kind of guy who would instigate a riot in another country, and that is exactly the kind of image that works well in these situations. The best thing Obama can do right now is to let the Iranian ruling elite bring shame and disrepute on themselves, and the easiest way to do that is to watch from the sidelines.
Now don’t misunderstand me: I liked President Bush. Over here in the UK that puts me in a minority of one. I thought he was a good, misunderstood man, and I think history will judge him kindly. But by the same token I am prepared to give his successor a fair chance too. I think Obama has been made poor decisions on the US economy, but on Iran I think he’s done okay so far. We can only hope his economic decisions work out well, too.
The real question is: what does he do now. He’s taken a harder line, but how far can he push?
I really, really want the US to come out well in the next few years. I can’t stand the thought of China being a superpower. So even if you don’t like Obama and think he’s making all the wrong decisions you should still be hoping with all your heart that he proves you wrong. By all means criticise him, but stay rooting for him, too, because he’s all the free world has got right now.
America has to win through. So back your President, even if it galls you. For all our sakes!
A final thought: if everyone in the UK is drinking Obama Kool Aid, then maybe a few of them Iranian students are drinking it, too.
dcpolwarth on June 23, 2009 at 6:25 PM
It’s clear that nothing is going to interfere with Omama’s fantasy of negotiating an agreement with the mullahs. He’s now backed himself into a corner, He will look like a complete fool unless he gets his agreement. And he will.
It will be hailed as the greatest thing since the invention of the wheel. But it will be a total sham.
Basilsbest on June 23, 2009 at 6:25 PM
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