I did not vote for Hillary Clinton in the 2008 primary
elections. I didn’t want her to be president. I wasn’t even a huge fan of hers.
I don’t know why. I guess I was just excited about the potential for a Barack
Obama presidency (and had been since his Democractic convention speech in 2004).
The election got nasty. Hillary said some things that people cringed at. Bill
said some things that people cringed at. Barack said some things people cringed
at. It was thought that President Obama taking Joe Biden as his VP was a slight
to Hillary – and maybe it was – but it turned out to be one of the best
administrational slights ever made.
Hillary Clinton has been no less than a phenomenal Secretary
of State. Hillary not only repaired the fracture within the Democratic party
with her steadfast commitment to the Obama administration foreign policy, but
also gained the respect of most Republican lawmakers and citizens with her tireless
travel and diplomatic efforts in reaching out to leaders throughout all corners
of the globe. Clinton has visited more countries and traveled more extensively
than any other secretary of state in history. She is indefatigable. She’s
visited several countries during her tenure that have been ignored by American
presidents and secretaries of state for years. She saw before her as Secretary
of State a task that was nothing short of changing how the rest of the world
perceived the United States. And while that is a continuing process (and
hopefully her legacy will continue under Sec. of State John Kerry), Clinton has
made giant strides in improving the relations of the United States with the rest
of the world.
Clinton faced congressional hearings today to answer
questions about the murder of diplomatic personnel in Benghazi, Libya on
September 11, 2012. Clinton was nothing short of spectacular. Certainly this
was an awful situation. Awful for the families who suffered losses of their
loved ones. Awful for other diplomatic personnel who lost a colleague and are
also put at unease over their own security. Awful for the administration that
place those personnel in harm’s way. And awful for an American public that sees
the hatred against the United States being manifested in such a horrific way.
And rightly, the public and members of congress want answers to questions about
how this was allowed to happen. Republican congressmen attempted – and succeeded
– in making Susan Rice, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, the
sacrificial lamb, by accusing her of fabricating a protest that had turned into
an attack on the consulate in Benghazi. Susan Rice was incorrect, that much has
been shown to be true, but she was simply relaying CIA talking points that she
had been given, to the Sunday morning talk shows. Rice should not have had to
fall on the sword, but as a consummate professional, she did so to protect the
integrity of the office on Secretary of State.
Hillary has done the same thing. While Clinton wasn’t the
one to attend the Sunday morning shows, she would have given the same
information that Ambassador Rice gave. And that is what Hillary has indicated in
these congressional hearings. She said it before and she’s repeated it today
that she was the one responsible for diplomatic personnel, and while there
might have been failures in providing adequate security to American consulates
and diplomatic personnel around the globe, there was so much happening during
that time that there was little that she or the State Department could do. It was
a bad situation and the Secretary of State cannot wave a magic wand and make a
bad situation disappear. But she’s proven throughout the questioning of the
Benghazi attacks, and especially during these hearings, that she is a person of
integrity and will sacrifice herself to the dogs of politics to save the face
of the office of the Secretary of State, the President, and the country as a whole.
We will miss you Madame Secretary. See you in 2016.
4 comments:
Absolutely agree! Very true. It was good to see her transformation from candidate to Secretary of State. She has certainly proven herself as a leader.
She could certainly get my vote in 2016.
Let's get that campaign going!
The Lincoln/Seward and Obama/Clinton parallels are uncanny. It maybe because I'm a history nerd, but her role as Secretary of State is one for the history books.
As for president though...I can't see Clinton as the next president. I think she is better in foreign policy.
I think it's interesting that she's been so respected as Sec. of State, but at the same time no one really makes a big deal about any major accomplishments she has had.
I read a great article about how because of the heightened importance of the Sec. of Defense in the Obama (and Bush II) administrations, the Sec. of State doesn't have as much of a public role, but they're working on important, but less sexy issues.
Clinton is a politician. She was good with foreign policy, but I think at heart she's a politician.
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