Two Low-Risk US Foreign Policy Decisions, One Hopeful World
        
		
        By Ben Tanosborn
		ccun.org, December 13, 2008
		
        
 
Are Americans so concerned about Obama’s centrist image as he 
		is about to take the reins of the nation that they force him to look 
		right when he should be looking forward, straight ahead?  If they 
		do, they’ll come out as unquestionable fools, for never will there be a 
		better opportunity to make amends with the entire world for past 
		bullying behavior without having to play their hand adding pride and 
		dignity to their bet. 
 
By making two foreign policy decisions 
		within a week after assuming power, two far-reaching decisions yet 
		domestically of low political risk, Obama could single-handedly open up 
		the floodgates of goodwill.  And it could simply take the form of 
		an assertive general statement made after two brief phone calls to 
		Havana and Moscow.  Two short conversations made in candor, and one 
		press release unequivocal in meaning, even if lacking in details.
 
		Two policy decisions that will affect not just Russia and Cuba, but the 
		entire world!
Two policy decisions that indirectly could pave the way 
		for a cease of violence in the entire Middle East; an unnecessary 
		confrontation between the Muslim World and a West that insists on 
		maintaining the upper hand, never mind Palestine or the sentiments of a 
		billion people who against their morals and good judgment could be 
		influenced to believe that maybe their struggle, their fight for 
		existence, rests in a jihad to the end, even at the expense of  
		having their counter-crusaders dubbed as terrorists.     
		
 
Desisting from the deployment of interceptor missiles in 
		Poland, and an advanced radar station in the Czech Republic, might be 
		considered a military-political policy decision, but it far exceeds 
		that: it is, unquestionably, a key foreign policy decision, one likely 
		to resonate throughout the world and erase most, if not all, damage 
		brought about by an imperially-bred post-Cold War Pentagon aided by a 
		reckless two-term presidency of the biggest inane fool ever domiciled in 
		the White House.  Vladimir Putin has let it be known already that 
		the line has been freed for Barack Obama to make the critical call that 
		would put an end to an already ignited new cold war.
 
And Fidel 
		Castro has, similarly, made a genteel gesture for the new American 
		president to bring about a change in relations with Cuba, and his 
		brother Raul’s government; one that would affect not only the well-being 
		of 12 million residents of the “the pearl of the Antilles” but one that 
		would substantially decrease the tension in the present state of discord 
		affecting Pan-American relations, and the distrust of the US in Latin 
		America.  
 
Lifting both the trade embargo and all sanctions 
		which have existed, or have been added to during almost five decades, 
		with little purpose other than political amity towards a vengeful, 
		self-serving – and up to now politically influential – group of Cuban 
		exiles, is not just the right political thing to do, but the moral thing 
		to do.  And Obama’s proclamation of such request to the Senate, to 
		do away with unnecessary punitive measures, would certainly suffice; a 
		Senate, this time, surely eager to comply.
 
In both cases, there 
		must not be a quid-pro-quo exacted, either explicit or implied, in these 
		actions by President Obama, for any exchange of goodwill will take place 
		of its own accord without the unmerited call for the hypocritical 
		enactment of rules of behavior in which American leaders always appear 
		to take the call to arms in “noble defense” of democracy and human 
		rights.  
 
Although Obama has intimated “a need” for the 
		Cuban government to release 219 jailed political prisoners, he should 
		desist from echoing voices of those around him and, as he assumes power, 
		let out his own fresh voice.  Let human rights be invoked by those 
		people who themselves have a pure heart, and let the cry for that 
		assertion of human rights come from an international body which 
		admonishes and monitors the denial of said human rights, and not a 
		nation with a prejudicial outlook as to what represents the existence or 
		the curtailment of such rights, pointing to nations as compliant or 
		aberrant according to its own selfish interests.
 
It’s in Obama’s 
		hands to signal, and do so immediately, that the United States is 
		changing course in foreign policy.  And he can do it with little 
		political risk to himself or to his administration.  And this can 
		be done without taking his eyes away from the principal problem 
		confronting his presidency: an inherited economic depression that will 
		replace the old-standard inherited by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933; and 
		one that is sure to be entrenched for years… even if optimal economic 
		weapons are used to combat it.
 
Will Obama prove to be a true 
		leader, his own man?  It won’t be long before we find out as he is 
		put to the test.
 
Ben Tanosborn
		www.tanosborn.com
		www.tanosborn.com
 
		
      
      
      
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