res : Ibu negara sering bersama bapak negara NKRI ke luarnegeri, tetapi agaknya 
ibunegara NKRI tidak mendapat sorotan media atau juga tidak menjadi topik 
berita media, seperti ratu Rania dari Yordania atau Michele Obama, apa sebab 
Ibu negara yang mempunyai 250 juta anak negara tak mucul memberikan ceramah 
misanya tentang kemajuan wanita NKRI atau mengunjungi rumah sakit anak-anak 
atau bersuara tentang problem yang dihadapi oleh wanita NKRI terpaksa harus 
dikirim menjadi TKW?   

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/on-china-trip-as-in-other-matters-michelle-obama-likely-to-steer-clear-of-controversy/2014/03/09/62591b18-a4c3-11e3-84d4-e59b1709222c_story.html?wpisrc=nl_politics


On China trip, as in other matters, Michelle Obama likely to steer clear of 
controversy
 
Jacquelyn Martin/AP - First lady Michelle Obama listens as a 6th grade class 
talks about a class trip they took to China, Tuesday, March 4, 2014, at 
Washington Yu Ying Public Charter School in Washington. The first lady is 
expected to take a trip to China along with her daughters and mother in March. 

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By Juliet Eilperin and Krissah Thompson, Monday, March 10, 12:58 AM E-mail the 
writers 
When Laura Bush ventured to the Thailand-Burma border six years ago, the first 
lady accused China of not doing enough to pressure the brutal Burmese regime. 
When Hillary Rodham Clinton visited Beijing in 1995, she delivered a blunt 
assessment of China’s human rights record that reverberated as far away as 
South Africa.

But as Michelle Obama prepares to journey to China next week with her mother 
and daughters in tow, one thing is clear: The current first lady does not plan 
to deliver a similar performanc

Obama’s decision to focus on educating young people — a consistent theme in her 
rare solo foreign trips — reflects a broader strategic decision to steer clear 
of political controversies, even after her husband has run his last campaign. 
She is engaged in a sort of soft diplomacy that is more reminiscent of Barbara 
Bush’s style than that of her more immediate predecessors, all of whom courted 
political risks by criticizing authoritarian governments overseas. 
It reflects a strategy she adopted early in her husband’s tenure: to develop 
long-term campaigns around specific issues such as obesity, youth empowerment 
and education, rather than using her position as a bully pulpit. In recent 
weeks, she has promoted new federal rules for nutrition labels and a drop in 
childhood obesity and co-hosted a White House summit on expanding low-income 
students’ access to college.

“This was her decision — not a political one, in the sense that she decided to 
play it safe,” one former senior administration official wrote in an e-mail, 
speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss East Wing affairs. “She never 
wants to show up somewhere and just make a speech.” 

Anita McBride, Laura Bush’s former chief of staff, said the public “may have 
unfairly expected” Obama to act in a more groundbreaking way, given her 
relative youth and career background. But she added: “At the end of the day, 
every first lady is her own CEO. They do what they want to do and choose how 
they want to deploy their influence.”

But Obama’s deliberately soft approach has disappointed some feminists and 
scholars, many of whom have little expectation that she will shift course now. 

“While I personally might like her to engage in issues such as human rights, 
the timing probably isn’t right in terms of world politics,” said Katherine 
Jellison, a professor of women’s studies and history at Ohio University. “With 
the crisis in Ukraine and current controversy about her husband’s handling of 
that situation, it is probably not the right time for the first lady to be 
causing other potential controversies on the world scene.”

Obama’s effort to avoid controversy will be particularly pronounced on the 
China trip because of the country’s complicated relationship with the United 
States. The two nations are global competitors, and the Chinese government’s 
human rights record crops up during almost every high-level meeting between the 
two countries. 

This year, for example, Ilham Tohti — an economics professor and outspoken 
advocate for the Uighur Muslim minority — was arrested and charged with 
separatism, prompting U.S. officials to again urge China to respect the rights 
of political activists. Gary Locke, the outgoing U.S. ambassador at the time, 
raised the case of Tohti and other activists in his final news conference there.

Nineteen years ago, Clinton took direct aim at China’s human rights record 
during the United Nations’ Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, where 
she spoke at length about the injustice of forced abortions and sterilizations 
and the suppression of free speech. 

“It is time to break our silence,” she told a packed audience without naming 
China directly. “It is time for us to say here in Beijing, and the world to 
hear, that it is no longer acceptable to discuss women’s rights as separate 
from human rights.”

Other presidential spouses have confronted repressive regimes as well. Bush 
embraced the cause of Burma, holding an unprecedented news conference at the 
White House urging the country’s isolated military junta to accept help after 
Cyclone Nargis. Three months later, she made the trip to Burma’s border on her 
way to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, visiting refugees and calling on other 
countries to pressure Burma, also known as Myanmar, to change its ways.

“We urge the Chinese to do what other countries have done — to sanction, to put 
a financial squeeze on the Burmese generals,” she said in Thailand.

McBride, now an executive in residence at American University, said the visit 
represented “serious foreign policy” and raised some concerns within the Thai 
government. “We knew that was edgy. We knew that the Thais didn’t like it,” she 
said.

President George W. Bush criticized China during that same trip, saying he had 
“deep concerns” about China’s lack of freedoms.

Shortly after her husband took office in 1977, Rosalynn Carter traveled to 
Central and South America as Jimmy Carter’s personal representative, holding 
private talks on subjects including arms reduction, drug trafficking and human 
rights. “A pretty amazing trip,” said Carl Sferrazza Anthony, historian at the 
National First Ladies Library.

Obama, by contrast, will devote her trip, from March 19 to 26, to visiting two 
high schools and a university and seeing China’s historic and cultural sites, 
such as the terra cotta warriors in Xi’an. Speaking at a ceremony at the State 
Department last week, she said she will emphasize the same themes in China that 
she did during past visits to Mexico and southern Africa. 

“I make it a priority to talk to young people about the power of education to 
help them achieve their aspirations,” she said. “That message of cultural 
exchange is the focus of all of my international travel.” 

Obama’s previous foreign trips amounted to extensions of the consensus-oriented 
efforts she has led at home to promote better education and physical fitness. 
In the same way that she has emphasized individual and communal action rather 
than attacks aimed at snack-food companies, Obama has promoted the aspirations 
of young people overseas. 

During her trip to South Africa and Botswana in 2011, on which she was 
accompanied by her mother, daughters, niece and nephew, the first lady 
described her approach to a small group of reporters as “drawing attention [to] 
and empowering future leaders.”

“It’s a fundamental belief that both Barack and I have, that we have to prepare 
the next generation of leaders,” she said. “Much of what you start, it may not 
be actualized until the next generation. So if they’re not ready, then the 
struggle continues.”

Obama’s approach most closely echoes that of Barbara Bush, who eschewed overtly 
political issues as first lady. In her memoir, Bush calls a dinner invitation 
to Chinese dissident Fang Lizhi a “gaffe.” Chinese security blocked Fang from 
attending the banquet, but Bush writes that she wished the invitation had never 
been proffered.

Bonnie Glaser , a senior adviser for Asia at the Center for Strategic and 
International Studies, said the Chinese will welcome the idea of a 
politics-free visit. “The Chinese will be quite eager to keep any political 
comments or anything that would reflect negatively on their political system 
off the table,” Glaser said. 

In a White House blog post announcing the visit, Obama did raise the prospect 
of discussing some basic freedoms: “I’ll be talking with students about their 
lives in China and telling them about America and the values we hold dear.”

A senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity 
because the trip was still in the planning process, said the first lady will 
raise the issue of freedom of expression in the context of “education and youth 
empowerment” and “the strength of our system contrasted with those of the 
Chinese.”

Depending on how she frames it, Obama’s trip will probably be more in line with 
the one Pat Nixon made with President Richard M. Nixon in 1972, when she 
famously arrived wearing a bright red coat.

“That was her moment, when she made a very indelible impression on the nation,” 
Anthony recalled, adding that it meant rare pictures of Chinese street corners 
were beamed into American homes as cameras followed the Nixons’ every step. 
“She went around to schools, to stores, hospitals, restaurants, kitchens, and 
was seen interacting with everyday Chinese citizens.”

Pat Nixon, however, also understood the importance of more confrontational 
diplomacy. In a solo trip to Liberia, Ghana and other African countries, she 
addressed legislatures and met with leaders to talk about human rights in South 
Africa, which was under apartheid rule.

Stephanie Coontz, a faculty member at Evergeen State College in Washington 
state and director of research and public education for the Council on 
Contemporary Families, said the role of the first ladies has evolved 
dramatically in the modern age, reflecting changes in the expected roles of 
women. But that also presents the presidential spouse with a “tough choice,” 
she said.

“Do you actually assert your own political agenda even when it differs slightly 
from your partner’s, which obviously raises other problems, or do you avoid it 
by being nonpolitical?” Coontz said in an e-mail.

“I’d love to see a model where the spouse (which may someday be a man) was 
supportive of the partner’s preeminent role in world politics but found a way 
to maintain his or her own separate identity,” she added. “But it’s a really 
hard tightrope to walk.” 

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