U.S. President Barack Obama at the 11th East Asia Summit.
By Charles
Krauthammer Opinion writer
September 8 at 7:27
PM
The president of the United States lands with all the
majesty of Air Force One, waiting to exit the front door and stride down the
rolling staircase to the red-carpeted tarmac. Except that there is no rolling staircase. He
is forced to exit — as one China
expert put it rather undiplomatically — through “the ass” of
the plane.
This happened Saturday at Hangzhou airport. Yes, in China. If the Chinese
didn’t invent diplomatic protocol, they surely are its most venerable and
experienced practitioners. They’ve been at it for 4,000 years. They are the
masters of every tributary gesture, every nuance of hierarchical ritual. In a
land so exquisitely sensitive to protocol, rolling staircases don’t just
disappear at arrival ceremonies. Indeed, not one of the other G-20 world
leaders was left stranded on his plane upon arrival.
Did President Xi Jinping directly order
airport personnel and diplomatic functionaries to deny President Obama a proper
welcome? Who knows? But the message, whether intentional or not, wasn’t very
subtle. The authorities expressed no regret, no remorse and certainly no
apology. On the contrary, they scolded the media for even
reporting the snub.
No surprise. China’s ostentatious
rudeness was perfectly reflective of the world’s general disdain for Obama. His
high-minded lectures about global norms and demands that others live up to their
“international obligations” are no longer amusing. They’re irritating.
Foreign leaders have reciprocated by taking
this administration down a notch knowing they pay no price. In May 2013,
Vladimir Putin reportedly kept the U.S. secretary of state
cooling his heels for three hours outside
his office before deigning to receive him. Even as Obama was hailing the
nuclear deal with Iran as a great
breakthrough, the ayatollah vowed “no
change” in his policy, which remained diametrically opposed to “U.S. arrogant system.”
The mullahs followed by openly conducting illegal ballistic missile tests —
calculating, correctly, that Obama would do nothing. And when Iran took prisoner 10
American sailors in the Persian Gulf, made them kneel
and broadcast the video, what was the U.S. response? Upon
their release, John Kerry publicly thanked Iran for
its good conduct.
Why should Xi treat Obama with any greater
deference? Beijing illegally expands
into the South China Sea, meeting only the most perfunctory pushback
from the U.S. Obama told CNN that he
warned Xi to desist or “there will be consequences.” Is there a threat less
credible?
Putin annexes Crimea and Obama crows
about the isolation he has imposed on Russia. Look around. Moscow has become Grand
Central Station for Middle East leaders seeking outside help in
their various conflicts. As for Ukraine, both the French
president and the German chancellor have hastened to Moscow to plead with Putin
to make peace. Some isolation.
Iran regularly harasses our
vessels in the Persian Gulf. Russian fighters buzzed a U.S. destroyer in the Baltic Sea. And just
Wednesday, a Russian fighter flew within 10 feet of an American military jet.
The price they paid? Being admonished that such provocations are unsafe and
unprofessional. An OSHA citation is more ominous.
Add to that American acquiescence not just
to ransoming hostages held by Iran, but to delivering the loot by
unmarked plane filled with stacks of cold (untraceable) cash, like a desert drug
deal. Why the stealth? Obviously to conceal the manner of the transaction from
Congress and the American public. Some humiliations are so grotesque that even
the Obama team can’t miss it.
Now the latest. At the G-20, Obama said he spoke to Putin
about cyberwarfare, amid revelations that Russian hackers have been interfering
in our political campaigns. We are more technologically advanced, both
offensively and defensively, in this arena than any of our adversaries, said
Obama, but we really don’t want another Cold War-style arms race.
Instead, we must all adhere to norms of
international behavior.
It makes you want to weep. This KGB thug
adhering to norms? He invades Ukraine, annexes Crimea, bombs hospitals in
Aleppo — and we expect him to observe cyber-code
etiquette? Rather than exploit our technological lead — with countermeasures
and deterrent threats — to ensure our own cyber-safety?
We’re back to 1929 when Secretary of State
Henry Stimson shut down a U.S. code-breaking
operation after it gave him decoded Japanese telegrams. He famously explained
that “gentlemen do not read each other’s
mail.”
Well, comrade, Putin is no gentleman. And
he’s reading our mail.
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