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Alvaro Vargas Llosa
1/16/08 Deseret News A11
WASHINGTON -- Foreign leaders and journalists often joke that the
whole world should get to vote in U.S. elections since the outcome
affects the entire planet. His recent setback in New Hampshire
notwithstanding, an intense scrutiny of Barack Obama is taking place
from Buenos Aires to Paris. But what observers and politicians are
saying about him is what they are really saying about their own
societies.
In Europe, one senses a quiet shame. The left, which loves to
criticize the Unites States for its imperial foreign policy and its
discrimination against blacks and Hispanics, is not really saluting
Obama . There have been few gushing articles in Italy's La
Repubblica or France's Le Monde. And by sending the message that it
might be ready to elect a black candidate, a part of mainstream
America is showing the industrialized world a more open-minded
attitude than the U.S. usually gets credit for.
This is particularly embarrassing in socialist Europe. Contrast the
attitude of those white Americans who are ready for a President
Obama with the conditions that have led France's North African
immigrants to riot on the outskirts of Paris. And have the
Scandinavian countries ever generated anything comparable to Obama
among the minorities who are tended to so generously as long as they
don't make too much noise?
The European right appears more enthusiastic about the liberal Obama
than the left. French political scientist Dominique Moisi seems to
think the Democrat will give pro-American Europeans some arguments
to "sell" the United States among anti-Americans. "Why is Obama so
different," he asks in a recent syndicated essay, "from the other
presidential candidates? After all, in foreign policy matters, the
next president's room to maneuver will be very small. He (or she)
will have to stay in Iraq, engage in the Israel-Palestine conflict
on the side of Israel, confront a tougher Russia, deal with an ever
more ambitious China and face the challenge of global warming.
"If Obama can make a difference, it is not because of his policy
choices, but because of what he is. The very moment he appears on
the world's television screens, victorious and smiling, America's
image and soft power would experience something like a Copernican
revolution."
French philosopher Guy Sorman states in a recent op-ed article
syndicated in Europe that "the heart of the United States is still
conservative" and will "remain within the constraints set by Reagan
in the 1980s: moral values, markets, military activism and small
government." He points out that Obama will pull the troops out of
Iraq but reinforce the U.S. presence in Afghanistan. Other
right-wing commentators point to the fact that, unlike Hillary
Clinton, Obama's health-care plan would not impose mandatory
insurance -- a sign that his type of social engineering is "light."
In Latin America, conservatives are also looking positively at Obama
for different reasons. They use him as an example of the reasonable
way to bring about social change -- peacefully and through the
established institutions -- even if they disagree with his liberal
penchant.
For instance, in Argentina's La Nacion, Mario Diament notes that
Obama's background means the candidate "does not carry the history
of racial discrimination" that other black leaders carry, and
applauds the fact that "he is not one of the irate leaders of the
civil rights era." The implicit message directed at Latin America's
left is that the United States is a self-correcting society that,
unlike radical Bolivians or Venezuelans, does not believe in
replacing the legacy of discrimination against minorities with
populist revolutions.
The Latin American left, sensing that the story of racial mobility
implicit in Obama's personal story is too good an ad for American
society, has chosen to moderate its embrace of the black American
senator. One pundit noted in Venezuela that the only meaningful
gesture toward Latin America coming out of an Obama foreign policy
agenda would be "the lifting of the travel restrictions against
Cuba" and "perhaps one day talking to Hugo Chavez."
Few observers overseas, left or right, seem to expect Obama to
signify a traumatic shift for the United States. Regarding domestic
policy, no Europeans or Latin Americans expect anything like 1932
(the New Deal) or 1964 (the Great Society); concerning foreign
policy, nobody expects anything like 1968 (Nixon and Kissinger's
realpolitik). That makes Obama's gradual rise to prominence mostly a
psychological and symbolic phenomenon rather than a harbinger of
major change.
Consequently, the way he is viewed overseas has much more to do with
the way each faction relates to the other across the ideological
divide at home than what Obama would actually do or not do.
Alvaro Vargas Llosa, author of "Liberty for Latin America," is the
director of the Center on Global Prosperity at the Independent
Institute. His e-mail address is AVLlosa@independent.org.
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