Doug Schoen  
 - FOXNews.com 
 - September 01, 2009
Obama's Foreign Policy: Abandon Democracy.







Obama Plays Dangerous Political Game with Our National Security

THE FACTS : 
"Prime Minister Pham Van Dong called on me and, in the presence of Premier Chou 
En-lai, swore in the name of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam that the latter 
would always respect the land frontiers as well as all islands belonging to the 
"Kingdom of Cambodia" March 1970 by Sihanouk . Wilfred Burchett book "The China 
Cambodia Vietnam triangle " P-176-177
CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.
UN Passes Strong Resolution on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses 
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 abstentions.

Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote 
of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces 
from Cambodia. 
IT'S IMPERATIVE FOR VIETNAM TO COMPLY WITH THIS UN RESOLUTION







With health care dying, Obama declares war on the CIA.







Cheney: Statement on CIA Investigation
 Ajami: Obama's Summer of Discontent
 NYT: Guantanamo Detainee Released
 AP: WH Projects Bigger Deficits, Debt
 Feingold: No Obamacare Before Christmas
 

CIA: No More Airing Secrets
Agency defies court deadline, saying it can't turn over more interrogation 
papers without spilling classified info
 

There has been a fundamental change in American foreign policy under President 
Obama-- a change that until now, has been little recognized. One of the core 
principles of American policy, that has guided presidents of both parties over 
the past fifty years, has been largely reversed under the current 
administration.

No longer is the promotion of freedom, liberty, and democracy around the world 
one of our fundamental principles. Instead, the Obama administration appears to 
be approaching most situations opportunistically and with a decidedly 
short-term perspective-- trying to accommodate our adversaries through soothing 
rhetoric, rather than forcefully advocating our interests, values, and core 
principles.

In his Inaugural Address, President Obama had started the process of abandoning 
these core values, saying that he would be willing to cooperate with any 
nation, even regimes "who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the 
silencing of dissent," if they were willing to merely "unclench their fist"-- 
that's apparently all they had to do.

This is dangerous, wrong, and will ultimately serve to undermine American 
interests around the world. Unfortunately, Obama has continued in this wrong 
direction. At no point during President Obama's Cairo speech in June did he 
explicitly say that the United States stands for democracy, freedom, or 
liberty. Rather, his speech was an implicit repudiation of what has come before.

His message could not have been more direct: "I know there has been controversy 
about the promotion of democracy in recent years...So let me be clear: No 
system of government can or should be imposed by one nation by any other."And 
he has followed through-- in his budget proposal now before Congress he has 
proposed reducing the amount of aide for democracy promotion in Jordan and 
Egypt, concentrating 86% of funding for democracy promotion to war-torn 
Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran.

One week later, President Obama refused to so much as comment on the obviously 
fraudulent Iranian presidential election. As hundreds of thousands of Iranian 
citizens were in the streets demonstrating for the values that we hold most 
dear, he publicly issued a statement that "Now, it's not productive, given the 
history of the U.S.-Iranian relations, to be seen as meddling-- the U.S. 
President meddling in Iranian elections."

President Obama made it clear that it was neither in our interest nor 
appropriate to advocate or demand free and fair elections, because doing so 
would presumably jeopardize future discussions about Iran's nuclear program. 
What Mr. Obama failed to recognize, however, was that if the United States were 
to stand behind Opposition candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Iran could 
conceivably be forced to evolve as a nation and become more open, a society 
that is more willing to engage in constructive diplomatic relations with the 
United States, and more likely to dismantle its nuclear program.

And it's not just Iran. President Obama took a similar approach during the 
recent Strategic and Economic Dialogue with China, held in Washington, D.C. He 
made no mention of the protests raging in Xinjiang, where Chinese government 
policies towards the Uighurs and other ethnic minorities have sparked deadly 
ethnic riots, rather, he said that "support for human rights and human 
dignity"are "not things that we seek to impose."

Promoting freedom and liberty can and has saved lives. It has produced 
democratic change in countries as diverse as the Philippines in 1986 and 
Central and Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Ronald Reagan was 
able to negotiate successful arms agreements while working to dismantle the 
Soviet Union and its control over the nations of Central and Eastern Europe-- 
demonstrating that the two tasks are not inconsistent.

Failure to press for democratization can cost tens of thousands of lives and 
promote autocratic rule unnecessarily. I have seen this myself in Serbia, where 
in 1992, both the incoming Clinton administration and outgoing Bush 
administration allowed Slobodan Milosevic to stay in power, despite widespread 
electoral fraud. The result was eight more years of autocratic rule, during 
which tens of thousands of lives were lost, in events such as the now notorious 
Srebrenica Massacre, which alone took the lives of 8,000 Bosniaks.

The Clinton administration learned from what happened in 1992 and in 2000, 
President Clinton made a courageous decision to support a grassroots electoral 
effort, which finally removed Milosevic from office, and helped integrate the 
former Yugoslavia into the European community.

Today, with reports of fraud in the Afghanistan elections, and crucial 
elections coming up in Iraq, and Ukraine, it is especially critical for the 
Obama administration to reemphasize, in all of its communications and outreach, 
our core American values of promoting freedom and democracy around the world. 
This is not just a rhetorical question. Promoting freedom, liberty, and 
democracy will advance American interests and strengthen ties between America 
and the rest of the world-- friend and foe alike. 

Douglas E. Schoen, is a Democratic strategist and FOX News contributor. He is 
the author of  "Hugo Chavez and the War Against America: The Threat Closer to 
Home" (Free Press, 2009), has worked on political campaigns in Venezuela over 
the past thirty years. He also worked with the pro-democracy movement in Serbia 
between 1992 and 2000.








  


 

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