Clinton is, of course, a lying, deceptive, vindictive marxist bitch.  Too
bad her loyalties aren't even with America.

 

Bought and paid for by the Chinese years ago.hard to believe anything she
says.her lips are moving.she must be lying.

 

B

 

  

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/print/2011/05/hillary-clinton-chine
se-system-is-doomed-leaders-on-a-fools-errand/238591/


Hillary Clinton: Chinese System Is Doomed, Leaders on a 'Fool's Errand'
By Jeffrey Goldberg
In an exclusive interview, the secretary of state says Beijing's human
rights record is
"deplorable" and it is "trying to stop history" by opposing the advance of
democracy

clinton-ap.jpg

AP
In my latest Atlantic cover story, which is out now, I interview Secretary
of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton about America's response to the Arab Spring. When we
met last
month, in her State Department office, she was, as usual, fluent,
comprehensive, and in
total control of the details. She was also insistent that the
Administration's approach to
the Middle East betrayed no inconsistencies or hypocrisies (there is much on
this subject
below, in a transcript of the interview). We didn't spend a great deal of
time on the
Middle East peace process (though my belief, expressed repeatedly, is that
she is the
best-qualified person in America to bring the Israelis and Arabs to a
negotiated
settlement); instead, we discussed the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood, and
what it might
mean for women, and we also spent some time on the debate between foreign
policy realism
and idealism.

It was during this part of the conversation, when the subject of China, and
its frightened
reaction to the Arab Spring, came up, that she took an almost-Reaganesque
turn, calling
into question not just Beijing's dismal human rights record, but the future
of the Chinese
regime itself. The Obama Administration has been ratcheting-up the rhetoric
on China's
human rights record lately, especially since the arrest of the dissident Ai
Weiwei, but
Secretary Clinton, in our interview, went much further, questioning the
long-term
viability of the one-party system. After she referred to China's human
rights record as
"deplorable" (itself a ratcheting-up of the rhetoric), I noted that the
Chinese government
seemed scared of the Arab rising. To which she responded: "Well, they are.
They're
worried, and they are trying to stop history, which is a fool's errand. They
cannot do it.
But they're going to hold it off as long as possible."

Clinton's assertion that the repressive Chinese system will eventually
collapse brought to
mind nothing so much as Reagan's statement, made to Richard V. Allen in
1977, about
America's goal in the Cold War: "My idea of American policy toward the
Soviet Union is
simple, and some would say simplistic," Reagan said. "It is this: We win and
they lose."
(See this post from Jim Fallows for more, and better, analysis of these
comments.)

I traveled with Clinton on her most recent trip to Egypt and Tunisia, in
March, and she
stated on many occasions during that trip that she was moved by the peaceful
rising of
pro-democracy protesters. Her comments on China to me suggested strongly
that she sees the
Arab Spring as the harbinger of a worldwide move toward democracy.

What follows is a transcript of our conversation. It has been slightly
condensed, and
edited for clarity:

JEFFREY GOLDBERG: I stayed on in Tunisia after you left, and the next day, I
was downtown,
and there was a demonstration forming. And I thought, "Great, young people
yelling about
something." I couldn't figure out what it was immediately. They're in front
of the
Interior Ministry, and I mix in with the crowd and I find out that they're
demonstrating
against an Interior Ministry decision to ban women from wearing the hijab in
their photo
IDs for their national identity cards, and this was a demonstration for the
hijab. And I
asked -- I said, "Is this something that you would compel?" And they said,
"No, but in our
vision of society, people would know the role of men and the role of women."
And I thought
to myself at this moment, "Man, I wish Hillary Clinton was here so I could
ask her what
she thinks of this." THESE revolutions are moving in some ways that are
pleasing to the
American mind and some ways that aren't pleasing.

SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY CLINTON: I have spoken to this on other
occasions, because what
I want to see is the freedom to choose for women and men in responsible ways
that are
protected by the laws of their society so that -- my model, of course, would
be our own
country -- women are able to dress as they choose in accordance with their
own personal
desires. And I would like to see that available to women everywhere so that
there's no
compulsion, there's no government coercion. It is a choice, and --

JG: So the red line is compulsion or anything --

HRC: Absolutely.

JG: -- on the continuum of compulsion.

HRC: Absolutely, anything on the continuum of compulsion. Now, I think there
are security
issues with, like, the burka, but if you're talking about the hijab, which
is the head
scarf, for me, that is not a red line. Now, when people start to say, "Oh,
but there are
certain things women should not be permitted to do and the only way we can
stop them from
doing them is by passing laws against them," like you can't drive in Saudi
Arabia or you
can't vote. They just had a riot in Bangladesh because the government wants
women to
inherit equally. That's a red line, and that infringes on the rights of
women, and
therefore, I am against it and I think any society in the 21st century that
is looking
toward modernization, and certainly if they are claiming to be democratic,
needs to
protect the right to make those choices.

JG: Should we fear the Muslim Brotherhood?

HRC: Well, I think we don't know enough yet to understand exactly what
they're morphing
into. For me, the jury is out. There are some Islamist elements that are
coming to the
surface in Egypt that I think on just the face of it are --

JG: Coming out of jails, in fact.

HRC: Coming out of jails, coming out of the shadows, and they are inimical
to a democracy,
to the kind of freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of
conscience that was
the aspiration in Tahrir Square.

JG: Is there a situation in which a woman can find herself in a country
where it's not
necessarily the law that you have to wear the hijab, but that a culture is
created by the
government that would cause you to raise a flag?

I've never understood the division between so-called realists and so-called
idealists

HRC: Of course, but that's true in any society. You can go into
neighborhoods in the
United States where people dress a certain way because they don't want to be
out of touch,
where boys wear pants down to their knees, which nobody has compelled them
to do but they
pick up the cultural norms, or where girls are improperly dressed by my
eyes, but that's
what they see in the media.

So certainly, there are cultural norms and there are family expectations and
there are
even religious admonitions. But so long as there is not the coercion of the
state, then
I'm not going to be pointing fingers at people who make certain choices that
I would not
make, but within a democracy should be protected. But when it comes to
political
decision-making, then I think you have to be very careful that the people
who are in those
positions are understanding of their obligation to protect decisions that
they do not
necessarily agree with.

It's almost impossible to imagine in today's world, but there might be a
family in our
country that doesn't want their children to learn to drive because they
think it's against
their religion. Well, that's very different than the family that says we
don't want our
children to get medical assistance. And our courts step in and say, "That's
too far even
for parental authority." And similarly, in societies, you do not want
so-called political
decision makers, political parties, or political leaders to be making
decisions that are
going to infringe on the range of opportunities that should be available to
both women and
men.

JG: Should the U.S. now be using the bully pulpit to go to countries and
say, "You know
what, we have a system, liberal democracy, that works really well, and since
you're in
this very fluid moment, you should look into this." In other words, engage
in the battle
of ideas --

HRC: Absolutely.

JG: -- with Islamist parties.

HRC: Well, with everybody. The Islamist parties are the ones that,
obviously, we look at
with most worry. But there are remnants of old regimes that are also trying
to prevent
progress and keep people economically denied opportunity and politically
denied their
rights.

So in this kind of transition, there are ideological foes of democracy,
there are economic
and commercial foes of democracy, there are political foes of democracy. So
I think we
need to be competing in the arena of ideas and information.

JG: Is that a little bit neoconish?

HRC: No. I don't think so. I think that's what we believe in. We believe
that more speech
is better than less speech. We deplored the guy in Florida who burned the
Koran, which is
so hard for other people to understand, around the world, because they say,
"Well, if you
thought it was terrible, you should have stopped it." And we say, "No, we
overwhelmed it
with speech deploring it and speech calling for tolerance and respect."

So I testified before Congress a few weeks ago. I said we are losing the war
of ideas
because we are not in the arena the way we were in the Cold War. I don't
think that
belongs to a political party or a political philosophy in our country. I
want to see us
out there pitching our ideas. Now, we need to do it in a way that's more
likely to be
understood and received than just asserting it in a conclusory way, but no,
we need to be
much more engaged. And frankly, just at the moment when there's this ferment
for democracy
breaking out -- 20 years-plus after the Berlin Wall fell, and we invested so
much money
and effort over so many decades to get behind the Iron Curtain, to talk
about what
democracy was, to keep the flag of freedom unfurled in people's hearts, to
get our
messages in through every means of shortwave radio and smuggling Bibles, and
we did all
kinds of things just to give people a sense that they weren't alone and that
maybe their
ideas about the human spirit were not subversive -- well, we have cut back
on all of that.
We don't have those messages going out.

China is starting an English-speaking television network around the world,
Russia is, Al
Jazeera. And the BBC is cutting back on its many language services around
the world. We're
not competing. I just feel like we're missing an opportunity. And I'm well
aware of our
budget constraints and all of the difficulties we face, but now is the time
-- not in an
arrogant way, but in a matter-of-fact experiential way.

We have figured out (in America) how people from every part of the world,
every kind of
person you can imagine, can live together, can work together. It wasn't
easy. It took a
long time, but I think we know a little bit about how to do it, and we want
to offer
whatever assistance we can.

JG: The flip side of that question is: Has this moment taught us that
foreign-policy
realism, the realist school, is dead? I mean, you're sounding very
idealistic --

HRC: No, no. I think I'm very hardheaded. I've never understood the division
between
so-called realists and so-called idealists. I don't know how you get up in
the world every
day, doing what I do, if you don't have some sense of idealism, because you
have to
believe that as hard as it is, you're going to prevent the dictator from
oppressing his
people, you're going to help to stop the war, you're going to figure out a
way to get
clean water to thirsty people and cure kids of disease. And at the same
time, I don't know
how you go through the day and expect to be successful without being very
hardheaded and
realistic. So for me, it's not an either/or.

When I came in here, I said, look, I think there are these three trends that
we have to
pay attention to that are separate and apart from dealing with nations,
dealing with
regions, dealing with ideologies. [First,] power is diffuse. It is no longer
the province
of just governments. There's too much going on in the world today. People
know too much.
So we have to start dealing with people on a more direct basis.

JG: The realist camp did hold for 50 years -- Scowcroft/Kissinger types --
that dictators,
benevolent or otherwise, are the one address we should pay attention to: you
should deal
with the leader, and let them sort out the problems beneath them.

HRC: Right.

JG: I know you're arguing against the idea that there are discrete streams
of
foreign-policy thought, but --

HRC: I'm not arguing --

JG: -- but you are talking --

HRC: Look, I'm not arguing against it. I'm just saying that it's not
either/or. So that
today, that, to me, would be impossible, so the realist position today is
you have to deal
with. Realism evolves. I mean, we aren't living in Bismarckian Germany right
now. And can
you imagine any secretary of state like Henry Kissinger being able to go
anywhere secretly
today? I don't think so.

JG: You mean allegedly being sick in Pakistan for a week and dashing off to
China? You
would kind of like that, though.

HRC: Well, of course I would. But it's not possible. The second issue is the
dispersal of
power through information that was unimagined a decade ago, let alone 50
years ago. So
even if you thought you could just deal with one guy in one country and you
could check it
off your list of concerns, that's impossible now. The way technology has
exploded means
that we are all living in a totally different environment. It has changed
everything. And
to pretend otherwise, that there's some kind of great doctrine out there
that can be taken
from the heavens and imposed upon the global national body, is just not
realistic anymore.

JG: I'm not a fan of coherence. We have this bias toward coherence.
Everything has to be
tied up neatly --

HRC: Everybody wants that.

JG: Everybody wants coherence. Is there, however, some sort of coherent
story line that
you can identify that's happened since the poor vegetable seller
self-immolated.

HRC: I mean, I'm now being blamed in some Arab capitals for having caused
this with my
speech in Doha. I mean, because what I saw happening was so clear to me that
what was
going on was just this movement below the surface, that despite the leaders'
either
refusal or blindness to see what was going on, it was moving. And we have
just lost our
breath over the last many years trying to get people that we worked with
ahead of the
curve. So I gave that speech in Doha, and it was fascinating, and I noticed
it at the
time. A lot of the government leaders were like, "No, didn't want to hear
it." The
business leaders, the NGOs, were on the edge of their seats. They were
nodding at each
other. They were poking each other in the arm. I could see it. I could
literally see it
where I was sitting as I was delivering it, and then during the
question-and-answer
period.

So the leaders might have chosen to be oblivious, but people in the society,
not just the
young people, but people of all walks of life, they knew that there was this
beginning of
change.

JG: One of the obvious contradictions here is that while on the one hand you
are pushing
for democratic reform in Egypt and Tunisia, places like that, you have also
gone into the
monarchy business. We have a lot of allies -- Jordan and Saudi Arabia, most
notably -- who
are going to feel some pressure on the democratic front, and our direct
interest is in
supporting and keeping these guys on their thrones. Does this contradiction
bother you?

This administration has probably done more for Israeli security than any
administration

HRC: I wouldn't accept the premise. I think that we believe in the same
values and
principles, full stop. We believe that countries should empower their
people. We believe
that people should have certain universal rights. We believe there are
certain economic
systems that work better for the vast majority of people than other
subsystems. So I think
we're very consistent. I think that's been a cornerstone of American foreign
policy for at
least the last century.

At the same time, we live in the real world. And there are lots of countries
that we deal
with because we have interests in common. We have certain security issues
that we are both
looking at. Obviously, in the Middle East, Iran is an overwhelming challenge
to all of us.
We do business with a lot of countries whose economic systems or political
systems are not
ones we would design or choose to live under. And we have encouraged
consistently, both
publicly and privately, reform and recognition and protection of human
rights. But we
don't walk away from dealing with China because we think they have a
deplorable human
rights record. We don't walk away from dealing with Saudi Arabia --

JG: And (the Chinese) are acting very scared right now, in fact.

HRC: Well, they are. They're worried, and they are trying to stop history,
which is a
fool's errand. They cannot do it. But they're going to hold it off as long
as possible.

JG: But what do you do to get these kings -- for instance, King Abdullah II
of Jordan?
He's under more pressure than he's ever been. He's a great ally to America,
he's certainly
not a murdering thug like Qaddafi. But he's a king, and he's got problems in
managing the
government. How do you specifically help a person like that stay ahead of
the curve?

HRC: We offer as much support and advice as we possibly can.

JG: It didn't work with Mubarak.

HRC: No, it did not work with Mubarak, and it wasn't for want of trying.
President after
president, secretary after secretary -- everybody tried. In countries such
as Jordan, we
are trying to be of practical help. So for example, the king has not only
some political
challenges and economic challenges that he is working toward addressing, but
Jordan is one
of the most water-deprived countries in the world. So a few months ago, I
announced a
Millennium Challenge grant of something like $250 million to help them deal
with their
water problems, because I believe that it's not only that we go and sit and
say, "You
should do this, and you should do that," which is easy to say, but that
we're a real,
friend, partner, and ally. And we say, "Look, here's some positive, tangible
progress we
can help you make." And that's true across the board where we deal with
people who are in
the throes of transition and we think have their hearts in the right place,
but face some
difficult issues.

JG: One thing I didn't understand was this Bashar al-Assad moment, when you
called him a
reformer, or said he was being seen by others as a reformer. There is always
going to be
plasticity or strategic hypocrisy in the way you have to deal with the
world. But
shouldn't we be blowing some of these winds of change in the direction of
Damascus and
Tehran as well?

HRC: We don't have to blow. The winds are blowing. There's no stopping them.
And what we
have tried to do with him is to give him an alternative vision of himself
and Syria's
future. So when a number of the members of Congress who have gone over to
Syria come back
and say both publicly and privately, "We think he really wants to reform,
but he's trying
to put together the political pieces to be able to do that," I think it's
worth reminding
him of that. And since I'm not going to be on a phone conversation with him,
and I'm not
going to fly to Damascus, I think that's one way of communicating with him.
He's got to
make the decisions, and thus far, it doesn't look like it's heading in the
right
direction. But there was certainly a lot of hope that he would begin to
introduce the
kinds of reforms that would help Syria get ahead of the curve.

JG: Would you be sad if his regime disappeared?

HRC: It depends upon what replaces it.

JG: Talk about Tehran a little bit, because they are this looming shadow
over the entire
Middle East. Every aspect of every problem that you're dealing with has an
Iran component.
They're scared, and they're also seeing some opportunities, obviously. It's
not a bad
thing for them to see the rise of Islamic parties. But how do you box them
in, move them
toward actual reform, encourage the people to rise up as they did in 2009?

HRC: Well, I regret deeply the way that the regime in Iran is treating their
own people,
the level of hypocrisy that they have demonstrated in responding to the
uprisings across
the region. They have demonstrated quite a talent for totalitarianism, and
they have
imposed a relentless mind-control mechanism that has begun to go even into
what is in
their textbooks, what you can learn, what you can talk about. That is so
contrary to the
kind of mentality of the modern Iranian from everything we know, but it is a
scary place
now to live in.

JG: What can we do?

HRC: Well, I think we're doing it. At first, in 2009, there were a lot of
very
knowledgeable Iranians inside and outside of the country who said, "Don't
overstate it,
don't oversell it, this has to be homegrown, don't turn it into something
that America is
doing, we need to be able to stand on our own feet." Sort of the same way
Tahrir Square
was: "This is our revolution; everybody else get out of our way." And the
force with which
the regime just slammed that down and has continued to morph into a kind of
military
dictatorship, with the Revolutionary Guard basically in charge, has made it
even more
imperative that we do everything we can to support those who are standing up
for human
rights and real democracy in Iran.

JG: I guess the way to ask it is: Can we capitalize on the Arab Spring?

HRC: I think so, and I think we are. I think we are very clearly saying that
the Iranians
are trying to take credit for something they had not only nothing to do
with, but they are
exactly in opposition to and should be given no credence whatsoever.

JG: Stipulated that you get it coming and going on these questions, do you
-- and I just
want to come to two final things on the Middle East peace process -- but
stipulated that
somebody in Egypt is going to think of you as the best friend of Mubarak and
somebody in
the Gulf is going to think of you as sort of a wild-eyed Wolfowitz or
something --

HRC: You can say I'm wild-eyed but don't compare me to that. (Laughter.)

JG: But it's interesting because you hear, not only here but in the White
House also,
people are saying, "Oh, you guys are so slow on Yemen or so slow on this" --

HRC: I mean, my doctrine is the Goldilocks Doctrine -- not too hot, not too
cold, just
right.

JG: I get that. But let me come back to this: How do you deal with
hypocrisy, meaning that
you're going to deal with one country one way, and another in another way?

HRC: I don't. I honestly believe that each place is different. There are
trends, but I
think following the fall of the Berlin Wall, how Germany responded and
Poland responded,
you couldn't say that there was one template that fit all.

JG: That was an easier one, though.

HRC: I don't know that it was. I mean, we all are prisoners of our own
experience. And you
can look at transitions to democracy in Latin America and in Europe -- look
at Spain and
Portugal. There's no two that are exactly alike. There may be common trends,
and you hope
you get to the same point at the end of the journey, but Yemen is a very
different country
than Libya, in every way you can imagine.

JG: Come to the Middle East peace process for one second. The Israelis and a
lot of their
supporters in America will say, "See, the Arab revolt proves that the people
were not
upset about Palestinians; they're upset about a lack of accountability in
our governments,
etc., economic opportunity --"

HRC: They're upset about both.

JG: How related to the Arab Spring is the Middle East peace process? And how
could it
affect it in adverse or positive ways?

HRC: Well, I think a lot of it is sequencing, Jeff. Right now, people in
Egypt, for
example, are very focused on their own future. That doesn't mean that the
Arab-Israeli
conflict doesn't come up, because it came up when I was there, but it didn't
come up as
the only subject people wanted to talk to me about, which was sometimes the
case in the
past. It came up as, "Okay, for now we're going to honor the Camp David
accords, but you
know we're going to have to take a look at this when we get a new government
and we get
more stable, we figure out what our relationship really is. We're not going
to be an
automatic supporter of the peace process. But right now, we've got to get
our economy
going, we've got to get our political transition done."

So it's not like it's off the table. It's just stuck in a corner until other
matters get
tended to. But if you talk to King Abdullah of Jordan, it is still very much
on the mind
of Jordanians, because they live with it every single day.

JG: So lack of progress could have an adverse effect on --

HRC: This is nothing that I haven't said many times and told my Israeli
friends, because I
love Israel and I feel so strongly about the future. Right now, you have a
secular
leadership in the West Bank that has made economic progress and has made
security
progress. You have an uncertain environment that Israel is now having to
cope with, and I
do not in any way discount how difficult that is. That has happened in Egypt
[for one],
and you've seen Israeli commentators saying they're not so sure that change
in Syria is in
Israel's interest.

JG: I was wondering if that had some influence on the way this government
here has been
talking about [Syria] --

HRC: Well, it certainly didn't escape my notice. You have a situation in
Lebanon that is
uncertain. So Israel has real problems that it has to deal with in new ways
now, with all
of the changes going on. I still believe it is very much in Israel's
interests and
Israel's security to really turn their attention to the peace process and to
hammer out an
agreement under appropriate safeguards for Israel's security with the
Palestinian
Authority.

JG: One final question on that subject: About four years ago, we were
talking in your
Senate office about Israel, and how to get them to make the concessions
necessary for
peace. One of the things you said that struck me was that, in your
understanding of the
Israeli mind-set, the Israelis will move on these issues when they feel the
warm embrace
of the United States --

HRC: Right.

JG: -- when they know that somebody is behind them. And when they feel
alienated from the
United States, as they did for the first couple years of this
administration, they're less
apt to move. Does that still hold true, or has Prime Minister Netanyahu just
shown no
desire to move, with a warm embrace or without a warm embrace?

HRC: I think he has some very serious concerns that have to be addressed.

JG: National-security concerns or coalition concerns?

HRC: National security is the first and foremost of his concerns. But
obviously, he's in
politics. I've been in politics. You also have to worry about your political
position. But
this administration, the Obama administration, has probably done more for
Israeli security
in as short a period of time as any administration in the past. The kind of
assistance and
support that we have given to Israel in order to assuage some of the
legitimate security
concerns that Israel has, the work that we are doing to try to contain Iran,
the sanctions
that we, much to everyone's amazement, were able to negotiate, the pressure
that we've
brought to bear on Iran -- we have really been closely coordinating on key
issues that are
fundamental to Israel's security. So I think that that has to be the way
we're judged,
because we certainly have delivered on that.

This article available online at:

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/05/hillary-clinton-chi
nese-system-is
-doomed-leaders-on-a-fools-errand/238591/



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