International security
En
route back to Washington at the tail end of his most recent overseas trip, John
Kerry, America’s peripatetic secretary of state, stopped off in France “to share
a hug with
all of Paris.” Whether Paris reciprocated the secretary’s embrace went
unrecorded.
Despite the requisite reference to General Pershing
(“Lafayette, we are here!”) and flying James Taylor in from the 1960s to assure
Parisians that “You’ve Got a Friend,” in the annals of American diplomacy
Kerry’s hug will likely rank with President Eisenhower’s award of the Legion of
Merit to Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza for “exceptionally meritorious
conduct” and Jimmy Carter’s acknowledgment of the “admiration and love” said to
define the relationship between the Iranian people and their Shah. In short, it
was a moment best forgotten.
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