>From CBS News website:

Nobel Reaction: Could Obama One Day Lead the U.N.?
Posted by Pamela Falk

At the U.N., several diplomats standing around the corridors noted
that President Obama could be the first U.S. President to someday
become the U.N. Secretary General. Why? Because of such overwhelming
international praise for the president's award of the Nobel Peace
Prize.

But back home, reactions are mixed. To be sure, the prize is a great
achievement; but Mr. Obama's Nobel Prize does not come as a full
laurel wreath.

The problem, apparently for both supporters and critics in the U.S.,
is that the award appears to be more of an award for Mr. Obama's
successful rebuke of the Bush Administration doctrine, not for his
accomplishments. In other words, not that his ideas are not prize
worthy, but that the ideas are not yet implemented.

The Nobel Prize award to Mr. Obama is seen by the international
community as a great shift, in effect, a change in tone to one of
engagement by the White House: "From shaking fists to shaking hands,"
a diplomat said.

Time will tell if Mr. Obama's initiatives bear fruit. The U.N.
Secretary General and the Libyan President of the General Assembly
heaped praise. Yet, the initiatives cited by the Nobel Prize committee
are all in their earliest of stages.

On disarmament, Mr. Obama garnered the passage of a U.N. Security
Council Resolution designed to encourage countries to rid the world of
nuclear weapons, but the president has a long way to go to get the
U.S. Congress to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty; on climate
change, the president committed the U.S. to support new measures, but
no administration yet has signed onto target limits for greenhouse
gases and Mr. Obama has not yet found a plan forward for the
Copenhagen climate summit; and on the Middle East, at the U.N. meeting
between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian
leader Mahmoud Abbas, he got a handshake instead of commitments.

>From the Middle East, the president heard praise from the Palestinian
Authority and from Israeli President Shimon Peres, himself a winner of
the shared prize in 1994, but back home, longer memories prevailed,
and commentators reminded Americans that Yasser Arafat (with whom he
shared the prize) helped torpedo the Middle East peace process.

On the domestic front, many cities, New York included, are more
cautious in their awarding of prizes; New York for example has an
unwritten rule to wait until a leader or sports figure dies before
naming a New York City street after him or her. The belief heard among
supporters is not that Mr. Obama may not prove worthy. The idea is
just that you finish your four years of college before receiving your
diploma. As the day progressed, many Americans felt the award may be
seen an undue burden on the young, untested president.

On the international front, praise flowed. An underling of the Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the Islamic Republic was not upset
and added his agenda – that Mr. Obama use the opportunity to rid the
U.N. of the world powers' veto. Outgoing International Atomic Energy
chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, who is on that slippery slope of negotiating
with the Islamic Republic about their heretofore secret nuclear
facility, said the president provided leadership in disarmament.

International praise was not uniform. Lech Walesa, the former Polish
President who won the prize in 1983, said it is "too early," and the
British press ranged from characterizations from "absurd" to general
wonderment.

Mr. Obama was quick to put a lid on gloating after the initial glee
expressed from his staff ranging from "wow" to "Oslo beats
Copenhagen" (a reference to the Olympic defeat by Chicago) by saying
that he considers the prize a "call to action."

Time will tell. For now, Mr. Obama ends the day with a newfound prize
but, paraphrasing Robert Frost, has his hands full of promises to
keep, and miles to go before he sleeps.

On Oct 9, 3:55 pm, "C.R. Domino" <[email protected]> wrote:
> in his short time in office to warrant a Nobel Peace Prize?
> No disrespect intended to Obama, but come on..........
>
> Perspective.............past winners include:
> Nelson Mandela
> the Dalai Lama
> Desmond Tutu
> Lech Walesa
> Mother Teresa
> Anwar Sadat
> MLK Jr.
> Ralph Bunche
> John Hume
> Albert Schweitzer
> The International Red Cross (in 1944, quite a busy year for them, I'd
> suspect)
> Woodrow Wilson
> Teddy Roosevelt
> Gorbachev
>
> seriously...?????
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