Mr. President, Put Up Your Dukes

by: Michael Winship, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Mr. President, Put Up Your Dukes
(Photo: Zee M Kane / fotopedia)

In a scene from the new movie, "The Fighter," we watch welterweight Micky Ward, played by Mark Wahlberg, take a brutal pounding when he's thrown into the ring against a bigger boxer. Micky's been told the fight would be "an easy win," but he's driven into a corner, gloves in front of his face, bloodied and helpless as his opponent throws punch after punch.

With just a few days left in the life of the 111th Congress, Michigan's Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has been urging President Obama to support keeping the Senate in session past Christmas, one last bid to pass legislation before the 112th convenes next month, Republicans dominating the House and increasing their numbers in the Senate.

"The way I think the President needs to fight is to say that he is going to use all of the power he has of a bully pulpit and urge the Senate to stay in, right up to New Year's," Levin said on C-SPAN's "Newsmakers" program Sunday. But, he continued, "I don't see that kind of a willingness to fight that hard, where he will take that kind of a position and that's what's necessary."

Instead, the president's on the ropes like Micky Ward. But he could make a comeback, taking cues from his own past and the examples of two men - each an Obama supporter - whose recent deaths remind us that there are people of actions and words whose very existence advances America and the cause of democracy in the face of seemingly implacable opposition, within and without.

Richard Holbrooke was arrogant, vaultingly ambitious and did not, as the saying goes, suffer fools gladly. But in his decades of public service and diplomacy he displayed, in the words of former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, "the courage of his convictions, and his convictions were on the side of innocent people bludgeoned by the world's worst bullies and tyrants. His was a foreign policy pragmatic in its particulars but intensely moral in purpose and perspective."

I first crossed paths with Holbrooke in 1977, just after President Jimmy Carter had appointed him assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. He was only 35, but already had more than a decade's worth of work experience in world affairs, including his time in 1963 as an officer with the Agency for International Development in Vietnam and a stint on Averell Harriman's staff at the Paris Peace Talks in 1968. Just for starters.

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His greatest success was as chief negotiator of the 1995 Dayton peace accords that ended in the war in Bosnia, although, as John F. Harris and Bill Nichols recalled on the web site Politico.com, "Colleagues joked at the time that Holbrooke succeeded ... because the leaders of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia preferred to end a generations-old blood feud rather than endure another day sequestered with and being badgered by Holbrooke." He was the embodiment of Hollywood mogul Darryl Zanuck's credo," Don't say yes until I finish talking."

At his death, as President Obama's chief envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, he continued to struggle for answers, desperately hoping to find solutions that might bring to a peaceful end America's involvement in those two mutually desperate countries. He refused to relinquish his belief, as he told The New Yorker's George Packer, in "the possibility of the United States, with all its will and strength, and I don't just mean military, persevering against any challenge."

Holbrooke embraced the sentiment so beautifully expressed in John F. Kennedy's 1961 inaugural address: "Let us never negotiate out of fear, but let us never fear to negotiate," words crafted by Kennedy with his friend, counselor and speechwriter Theodore Sorensen. Sorensen died October 31, but a memorial for him was held last week here in Manhattan.

If you were one of those politicians and leaders fortunate to speak Sorensen's prose, his words not only made you sound smart - they actually made you smarter. That's because, echoing through the resonance of his rhetoric, there was learning to be had - history and philosophy, eloquent and perceptive allusions from the Bible, Pericles and Jefferson, Shakespeare, Lincoln and Churchill. A historical or literary reference in one of his speeches, well honed and to the point, could not only inspire you to action, but also send you running for an encyclopedia.

He came by that knowledge via a love of reading passed along to him by his mother, Annis Chaikin, who paid her way through the University of Nebraska working as a maid, and his father Charles, a lawyer who served as that state's attorney general. Writing of his childhood during the Depression in Lincoln, Nebraska, Sorensen said reading allowed him to be "carried afar, on the wings of words."

Sorensen described himself as "a Danish Russian Jewish Unitarian ... surely a member of the smallest minority among the many small minorities that made this country great." Although he was kidding, there was nonetheless within him a compassion and understanding that permanently embroidered his heart on his sleeve, whether it was integrating Lincoln's municipal swimming pool when he was in college or writing a Kennedy address on civil rights in the hours after Gov. George Wallace was made to stand aside from the doorway of the University of Alabama and allow entrance to African-American students. Sorensen was a man who sought justice; a man of peace, humanitarianism and idealism; a man of discretion, commitment and loyalty, not only to his colleagues, but his country.

"If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich." Those, too, are words from the 1961 inaugural address Sorensen and Kennedy wrote together, as true today while we're debating tax cuts and the estate tax.

Just words. But President Obama, as I know Ted Sorensen told you, just words are how a president operates, how a president engages a country. Put up your rhetorical dukes - we know it's what you're good at when you want to be and the spirit moves you. At the end of "The Fighter," Micky Ward triumphs and becomes light welterweight champion of the world. This fight is only over, sir, if you throw in the towel. Many fear you already have done so. Now's the time to start proving them wrong.

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Michael Winship is senior writer at Public Affairs Television.
 


Comments

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Obamanible FOIL for the

Obamanible FOIL for the Burning Bushs.



O'Corporate's fists have

O'Corporate's fists have been used to pummel the will of the American people, particularly the majority who hold the least wealth: More war, more protection for the top 1%, an attempt to destory social security, protecting/rewarding big finance for destroying the economy, nearly a million more foreclosures, allowing millions more to sink into poverty, protecting health Inc profits, reducing liberties, maintaining the right to assasinate. traveling the world selling weapons, continuing the drug war, lying about nearly every campaign promise - etc, etc, etc. Impeach!



This is the Goldman Sachs

This is the Goldman Sachs administration, stooges coming and going into postions of power from the Wall Street-Washington revolving door. I'd say we live in a tyranny, the author above is writing about a fictitious country from a planet in a solar system, far far away.



D Johnstone: "It is usually

D Johnstone:

"It is usually considered good form to avoid sharp criticism of someone who has just died. But Richard Holbrooke himself set a striking example of the breach of such etiquette. On learning of the death in prison of Slobodan Milosevic, Holbrooke did not hesitate to describe him as a "monster" comparable to Hitler and Stalin.

This was rank ingratitude, considering that Holbrooke owed his greatest career success – the 1995 Dayton Accords that ended the civil war in Bosnia-Herzegovina – almost entirely to Milosevic. This was made quite clear in his memoir To End a War "



Mr. Winship begins with a

Mr. Winship begins with a very brief pep talk for Obama, but wanders all over the planet, now and then brushing up against his point.



Obama is a wimp, a spineless

Obama is a wimp, a spineless politician who has just cut his own political throat. What Democrat will vote for him in 2012 except those who vote Democratic no matter what? And many of those will stay home.



I am one of those people who

I am one of those people who will vote Democratic no matter what, but in 2012 it will be very hard to vote for Barack Obama if he doesn't redeem himself with some miracle of political will and acumen.

Maybe Howard Dean was too angry when he ran before. Now his anger would be quite appropriate. Maybe he can challenge Obama for the Democratic nomination. If Bernie Sanders is up to the challenge, maybe he can try.



Yes, before all property

Yes, before all property rights are effectively rendered null and void in this country Mr. President! We need you to criminally indict the rampant fraud of the robber banksters and their MERS mortgage system NOW:

See the website, reader supported news .org, an article called "Anatomy of Mortgage Fraud." (I'd paste the link, but my post gets denied that way.)



Is there something we are

Is there something we are missing? Is this the same man we elected in 2008 or has a stand-in taken his place? The "compromises" Obama has worked out with the HELL NO crowd have been made using America's future as payment. We are in for two years of REpugnican HELL and then the prospect of a Repugnican president and Congress. What a terrible first half this presidency has been!



Obama never said he was

Obama never said he was going to fight. He said he was going to "change" the way washington does business, by reaching out across the isle and working together. Anyone who expected him to stand up and fight had a little too much hope in their cool aid. Obama is an uncle tom, always was, always will be. Stop praying for him to do something and throw his ass out. His own chief of staff called you f'ing retards!

Stop voting for democrats just because they are not republicans. That is the vote they count on. The democrats are the Washington Generals. They are never going to win, because that isn't their role. WISE UP PEOPLE



President BO is a great

President BO is a great actor/orator. He fooled a lot of people getting elected, pretending to help the middle and lower classes, end wars, provide real health care reform (not just health insurance revisions that still benefit the insurance companies), etc. This was the "Democratic" candidate the conservatives (Wall Street, the MIC, media) wanted, in case McCain did not win. His Harvard hubris, his close ties to the rich elites, and his lack of principles bode ill for any positive change the next 2 years. Some charismatic Progressive needs to come forward now to challenge BO for the upcoming 2012 election.