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Obama's lost face
American Thinker ^
| December 27, 2009
| J.R. Dunn
Posted on 12/26/2009 11:42:58 PM PST by neverdem
Why did Chinese premier Wen Jiabao choose to publicly humiliate Barack Obama at Copenhagen? In their eyes, and those of much of the world, he has lost face, and with it, power and influence. While getting widespread play overseas, this story has been kept very quiet by our disinterested, nonpartisan media (I haven't seen it mentioned in any major U.S. outlet).
After promising to meet the Messiah at 7:00 p.m., Premier Wen stiffed him in favor of a meeting with the leaders of India, South Africa, and Brazil. Rather than wait, a no-doubt infuriated Obama stalked into the room in question and demanded, "Are you ready to see me, Premier Wen?" No word on Wen's reaction, though he did submit to a discussion on the spot that evidently sealed the release of the immortal and glorious Copenhagen Quasi-Agreement on Climate Change.
So with Barack Obama, we've reached the point where the leader of record of the most powerful state in history has become a man you can casually stand up. But the question remains, why?
There are a number of reasons why the Chinese might take a cavalier attitude toward an American leader. China is the chief foreign holder of American debt, which may well have created an impression of the U.S. as a beggar nation on the level of a failed African republic. (I strongly suspect that words were exchanged on this topic during Obama's recent visit to China, though we're unlikely ever to learn about them in detail.)
There's also the matter of race. As is true of most Asians, the Chinese sense of racial superiority is cultural and innate. This is a people who refer to Caucasians as "ghost shadows"; what they think of American blacks is probably best not dwelt upon.
Then there's the deep aura of unseriousness that Obama has generated around himself. Though essentially incalculable, this factor is undeniable and will grow in importance and impact as time passes.
But there's one event in particular that very likely played a part -- the fact that, only a few weeks before, Obama publicly and notoriously bowed to the emperor of Japan.
Japan and China have a lengthy history, very little of which can be termed benign. They have always been rivals, often acting at cross purposes and usually at sword's point. But the past century of Sino-Japanese relations has been little short of horrendous.
Japan's militarist government occupied Manchuria in 1931 and proceeded to menace the Republic of China for several years afterward. In June 1937, as a result of a contrived confrontation known as the "Marco Polo Bridge Incident", Japan escalated to open conquest. Occupying Nanking in December of that year, the Japanese army carried out a city-wide massacre that in little more than a month resulted in over 250,000 deaths. So brutal were Japanese actions that they could not, in a pre-Auschwitz world, be referred to directly in news accounts. Sixty years passed before the story was completely told in Iris Chang's
The Rape of Nanking (Chang, a less than stable personality in the first place, was so deeply affected that she later committed suicide, after telling friends that she could not get the images of the killings out of her mind.)
For nearly a decade Japan occupied vast areas of China, a period marked by further massacres, atrocities, and casual violations of the human spirit. It's safe to say that, but for the even viler activities of the Nazis, the Japanese occupation would stand as one of the peak moments of human cruelty in the modern era. (It's undeniable that Japanese human experiments in their Chinese and Manchurian prison camps were fully as loathsome as those of the Nazis.)
Though the Chinese don't discuss the matter, their attitude toward Japan and the Japanese can easily be imagined. Particularly since Japan, unlike Germany, has only in recent years reached the point of admitting to "irregularities" in its occupation, much less issuing an apology or offering reparations.
So here comes Obama, as ignorant of all this as a little lamb.
Many will recall the uproar that surrounded Ronald Reagan's 1985
visit to a German cemetery at Bitburg, instigated by the existence of SS graves within line of sight of the ceremony. The attitude of the Chinese to Obama's bow must be similar. From that point of view, Wen's behavior should be taken as a rebuke, not to the United States so much as to Obama personally.
Which only goes to underline the reason why diplomatic protocol exists in the first place -- to exclude through ritual actions all possibilities that error, misunderstanding, or personal pique might interfere with matters of state. Obama has yet to learn this. His insistence on winging it, on reinventing established practice on his own terms, is potentially far more than simply embarrassing. It could be actively dangerous. His refusal to go by the rules may well have cost him the opportunity to pose as Savior of Gaia in Copenhagen. It may cost him -- and the country -- far more at some future time.
J.R. Dunn is consulting editor of American Thinker.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhochina; bhovisit; china; comeuppance; copenhagen; jiabao; obama; snub; wenjiabao
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"Are you ready to see me, Premier Wen?"I wish that quote could be confirmed with a link.
1
posted on
12/26/2009 11:43:00 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
"Why did Chinese premier Wen Jiabao choose to publicly humiliate Barack Obama at Copenhagen?" Because Dear Leader squats to pee?
2
posted on
12/26/2009 11:50:10 PM PST
by
Jim Robinson
(Join the TEA Party Rebellion!! May God and TEA save the Republic!!)
To: neverdem
Great article - thanks for posting this.
3
posted on
12/26/2009 11:51:53 PM PST
by
dagogo redux
(A whiff of primitive spirits in the air, harbingers of an impending descent into the feral.)
To: Jim Robinson
4
posted on
12/26/2009 11:53:29 PM PST
by
BellStar
(Be strong ........Joshua 1:6)
To: neverdem
5
posted on
12/26/2009 11:53:49 PM PST
by
americanophile
(Merry Christmas!)
To: neverdem
Actually, Obama lost face in China during his trip....the MSM glossed over it....Copenhagen was too big to ignore.
To: neverdem
Obama is an absolute fool, and everyone in the world knows it, except for media and the left wing of this country, who essentially were the only ones dumb enough to vote for this court jester in the first place.
7
posted on
12/26/2009 11:54:47 PM PST
by
chris37
To: neverdem
8
posted on
12/26/2009 11:55:44 PM PST
by
americanophile
(Merry Christmas!)
Comment #9 Removed by Moderator
To: Jim Robinson
If you haven't seen this you might find it funny.
http://www.hulu.com/watch/110317/saturday-night-live-china-cold-open
10
posted on
12/27/2009 12:02:33 AM PST
by
USNBandit
(sarcasm engaged at all times)
To: neverdem
Barack Obama started his presidential campaign by invoking Lincoln; everybody thought he meant Abraham Lincoln, but with all this bowing he's been doing, it's obvious he meant Lincoln Perry.
11
posted on
12/27/2009 12:05:27 AM PST
by
Bernard
(One if by Land, Two if by Sea, Three if by Government)
To: pandoraou812
Then there's the deep aura of unseriousness that Obama has generated around himself.That really underlies everything with the Won. Ice cream scooping and community agitation (aka. scamming gov grants for grifters like Rezko) aren't good qualifications to be POTUS. He's small change and neither the Chinese or the Russians nor anyone else is going to take him seriously.
12
posted on
12/27/2009 12:07:29 AM PST
by
TigersEye
(Tar & feathers! Pitchforks and torches! ... Get some while supplies last.)
To: neverdem
To: neverdem
To: Jim Robinson
Because Dear Leader squats to pee? LOL! If it was Sarah Palin, then I probably wouldn't have a problem. I hope you had a Merry Christmas. Happy New Year!
P.S. Thanks a lot for FReeRepublic.com!
15
posted on
12/27/2009 12:11:12 AM PST
by
neverdem
(Xin loi minh oi)
To: Bernard
Maybe Ubama meant Lincoln Hayes?
To: BurbankKarl
...the MSM glossed over it....Copenhagen was too big to ignore.You know when he left Japan the media was talking about how he would stop in Burma and talk to the junta there about freeing Aung San Suu Kyi. Since then there hasn't been a word about it. I don't know if he even went to Burma. They must have told him where to stick it.
17
posted on
12/27/2009 12:15:52 AM PST
by
TigersEye
(Tar & feathers! Pitchforks and torches! ... Get some while supplies last.)
To: TigersEye
This is interesting for sure.
18
posted on
12/27/2009 12:19:00 AM PST
by
pandoraou812
(Merry Christmas!)
To: Lancey Howard
19
posted on
12/27/2009 12:19:51 AM PST
by
neverdem
(Xin loi minh oi)
To: neverdem
My business experience in Asia (20+ years) tells me the worst insult out there you can inflict on some one is to make them lose face. Worse than a physical attack.
And UsamaBinBama and his state dept. idiots are too stupid to know theh have been slammed.
Look for more of this from the ChiComs with out fear of the Great Satin
20
posted on
12/27/2009 12:23:11 AM PST
by
llevrok
(Drink your beer, damnit. There are sober people in Africa!)
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