On Tuesday, I mocked
Time’s Joe Klein for suggesting that Barack
Obama didn’t necessarily want to meet with with Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and I noted a video in which Obama mentions Ahmadinejad
within the context of negotiations. J. Klein also insisted that
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who Obama may have really meant,
wasn’t as much of a “flagrant anti-Semite.” But as I pointed out,
Khamenei called Israel a “cancerous tumor” that “should
be removed from the region…”
Now, in a column, he says that the Obama position is
“fuzzy” so that McCain should stop linking him to Ahmadinejad to
scare up Jewish votes. And in a blog post, J. Klein
writes, “Obama’s position on talking to Ahmadinejad, which is
muddy, to say the least, but has never included the following
statement, ‘I will meet unconditionally with Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.’”
This a ridiculous standard. Go back and watch the video from
the YouTube debate in which Obama answered affirmatively that
he would meet with the leaders of a number of rogue states, without
preconditions, within a first year of his administration. Closely
watch the amateur video when the question is being posed, and you
will see that when Iran is mentioned, a photo of Ahmadinejad pops
on the screen. All summer, Obama had the opportunity to correct
news reports on him vowing to meet with Ahmadinejad, but he didn’t.
During the controversy over Ahmadinejad’s visit last fall, he was
again given a chance to backtrack, but reiterated his willingness
to meet with Ahmadinejad. J. Klein’s sister company, CNN, reported, “Obama stands ground on meeting with
Ahmadinejad.” He once again didn’t correct the record.
I might add that not only did Obama not run away from the idea
of meeting with Ahmadinejad, he embraced it. He used the
controversy as an example of how he represented a break from the
“conventional Washington thinking” on foreign policy. This whole
stunt by J. Klein is outrageous.