The Peter Principle: "In a
hierarchy every employee tends to rise to his or her level of
incompetence."
At this point last year, Hillary
Clinton was still seen by about half the people who voted in
Democratic primaries (and about two-thirds of the reporters who
wrote about them) as the best possible person to become the next
President of the United States.
In fact, in a poll taken exactly a
year ago by Franklin & Marshall College in the run-up to the
Pennsylvania primary the results showed: Hillary Clinton leads
Barack Obama by 16 points among likely Democratic primary voters,
51% to 35%. Mrs. Clinton leads among voters in virtually every
demographic group, with the exceptions being non-whites and voters
in Philadelphia.
Hillary, remember, had gone
oh-for-February and under the rules of the Democratic Party it was
not likely she would be able to overtake Barack by the end of the
primary season, but she refused to get out.
It is now clear to me - although I
have absolutely no reason to know this to be true - that Hillary
agreed not to blow up the Democratic convention in Denver if she
became Secretary of State.
Which she is.
And she is dreadful at it.
Need proof? How about the one paper
which Conservatives read when they can't tune in Rush Limbaugh. I
speak, of course, of the Washington Post which, in its lead
editorial on Monday wrote:
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton continues to devalue and undermine the U.S. diplomatic
tradition of human rights advocacy.
The Post reminded us that when
Clinton was in China she dismissed its dismal human rights record
by saying "'those issues can't interfere' with economic, security
or environmental matters."
Then, after her State Department
wrote that Egypt's "respect for human rights remained poor during
2008," she gave Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak the diplomatic
equivalent of a wet kiss by saying, "I really consider President
and Mrs. Mubarak to be friends of my family," which, according to
the WashPost "will be treasured by al-Qaeda recruiters and
anti-American propagandists throughout the Middle East."
Wait! There's more!
In Turkey, when she was asked about
her Department's giving Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan the
diplomatic equivalent of a Special Agent Jethro Gibbs smack on the
back of the head for "strongly criticizing the press and media
business figures, particularly following the publishing of reports
on alleged [government] corruption" she said:
"Well, my reaction was that … no
politician ever likes the press criticizing them."
Oh. We're not done yet. This is the
best part.
When British Prime Minister Gordon
Brown visited American President Barack Obama last week there were
several things which were seen, by diplomats, as slights - but
real people wouldn't have noticed.
There was no opening press
conference in front of the massed flags of the two countries. And
WH press secretary Robert Gibbs talked about the "special
partnership" between the US and the UK which is not the same, in
diplomat-speak, as the previous construct which was "special
relationship."
But that wasn't the big one. The big
one was the exchange of gifts. According to the New York Daily
News:
"After Brown presented Obama with a
pen holder crafted from the timbers of the 19th century British
warship HMS President (whose sister ship, HMS Resolute, provided
the wood for the Oval Office's desk), Obama offered up ... 25 DVDs
of American movie classics."
How is this tied into Hillary? Well,
as it happens the officials responsible for deciding who gets what
from the President are the folks in the Gift Division of the
Office of Protocol which is in the State Department which is run
by … Hillary Clinton.
The Brits are understandably miffed
by the notion that the people at the highest levels of the US
government gave some staffer the State Department VISA card with
instructions to go the Borders at 18th and L and find something
for about 100 US Dollars, not British Pounds.
Brown had thought about this visit
and presented a one-of-a-kind gift. Clinton's people … didn't.
Remember that during the campaign
Hillary claimed she knew a lot about this stuff because she had
travelled around the world a good bit either by herself as First
Lady, or as chaperone-in-chief to keep an eye on old Bill while he
was on a road trip (if you know what I mean and I think you do).
It turns out that Hillary Clinton
has reached her level of incompetence as Secretary of State.
The problem for the rest of us is
that President Obama can't seem to decide whether to be Herbert
Hoover or Franklin Roosevelt when he talks about the economy.
So, as dismal as she has been in her
first months as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton might have
been correct: She still might have made a better President than
Barack Obama.
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