By Peter Hannaford on 10.14.09 @ 6:06AM
An all-talk president deserves nothing less.
If you thought the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to President
Barack Obama was undeserved, you have been looking through the
wrong end of the telescope. Consider this:
When the Committee of Five Obscure Norwegian Socialists awarded
him the prize they did not realize they had done two great
services: (1) made it official that Mr. Obama is a show horse,
not a work horse; and (2) proved definitively that the Nobel
Peace Prize reflects nothing more than the outlook of five
Norwegian Socialists.
It is said that when Alfred Nobel created the foundation that
bears his name and makes the various annual awards, included one
for “peace” it was to atone for inventing dynamite, but dynamite
wasn’t used in weapons. It’s more likely he was influenced by his
peace activist friend, Bertha von Suttner, who won the prize in
1905 (nine years after his death) for leading a peace
organization.
Through most of its history, the Nobel Peace Prize has been
awarded to people for doing something specific or representing
some widely recognized and positive movement. Among the winners
were President Theodore Roosevelt for a peace agreement to end
the Russo-Japanese War; General George Marshall for the Marshall
Plan that rebuilt Europe; Andrei Sakharov the human rights
dissident in the Soviet Union; Bally Williams and Maired
Corrigan, for organizing widespread peace marches in Northern
Ireland of Protestant and Catholic women; Anwar Sadat and
Menachem Begin for the Camp David Accords; Nelson Mandela and
Willem DeKlerk, for the South African transition to democracy.
Nowadays, however, it goes to people not for action, but for
talk. Jimmy Carter, hardly a success at the presidency and now an
international scold, won it in 2002. The five Norwegian
Socialists fell for the global warming hoax and, in 2007, awarded
the Peace Prize to its chief propagandist, Al Gore (they may have
been worried that rising sea levels would swamp fishing villages
on the fjords). Now it goes to President Obama, as the citation
puts it, “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen
international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”
The Committee of Five Norwegian Socialists believes that lions
will lie down with lambs. As there are no lions in Norway they
can be excused for not knowing that when lions are hungry, a lamb
makes a good lunch. Similarly, when President Obama offers to
talk with despots and shake hands with thugs, the Committee
thinks rays of comity and peace will emanate from the exchange.
The deadline for nominations for this year’s prize took place 11
days after Mr. Obama had sworn to uphold and defend the nation
and its Constitution, so they must have had high hopes based on
the rhetorical rhapsodies of his campaign. Even now, eight months
after that deadline, the Norwegians are still banking on “hope”
and “change.” If talk, talk and more talk is an achievement, the
prize is well-deserved, for Mr. Obama is a master of talk -- at
endless pep rally “town meetings,” at prime time news conferences
and on Sunday shows.
By awarding the prize on the basis of hopes and not
accomplishments the Norwegians helped Americans bring focus to an
uncomfortable, widely held feeling that with Mr. Obama it’s all
about him, all the time.
At the recent International Olympic Committee in Copenhagen his
pitch -- and his wife’s -- were filled with personal pronouns.
On the eighth anniversary of September 11, he spoke at the
Pentagon memorial service. He looked glum and his words had a
flat quality, as if he wished he were not there. After all, the
event was not about him. The next day, however, it was once again
all about him. He was back in roaring good form at a rally for
his health care scheme before a union audience in Minneapolis. He
was revved up just as if it was another election campaign
rally.
Mr. Obama may yet accomplish important things, but he hasn’t yet.
Instead we have seen him in full campaign mode “24/7,” as the
saying goes, making false promises about his health insurance
scheme, waffling on his Afghanistan strategy, spending the nation
into trillion dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. No
wonder those Norwegians rested their decision on hope
alone.
topics:
Barack Obama, Global Warming, Alfred Nobel