B.O.'s foreign policy in a picture.
Let's hope he was polite enough to apply some chapstik.
During a press conference, B.O. was asked about the use of the atomic bomb during the war with Japan. His response was horribly embarrassing.
"If Barack Obama can't stick up for the country he represents when he goes overseas, he should stay home."
The NYT writes: "It wasn't a bow, exactly. But [the President] came close. He inclined his head and shoulders forward, he pressed his hands together. It lasted no longer than a snapshot, but the image on the South Lawn was indelible: an obsequent President, and the Emperor of Japan."
Of course, the NYT would never write anything critical of the Messiah. The above was written about Bill Clinton.
My point here is that B.O. could have said any number of diplomatically vacuous things. He could have said, "Any war is horrible. President Truman made the decision he did with the best information he had. It might not be the decision we would make today, but it ended the war and saved millions of lives." Is it perfect? No. Is it a vigorous defense of the U.S.? Hardly. But it would have been much less embarrassing than the hemming and hawing that gushed from the Great Orator's pie-hole.
"If Barack Obama can't stick up for the country he represents when he goes overseas, he should stay home."
The NYT writes: "It wasn't a bow, exactly. But [the President] came close. He inclined his head and shoulders forward, he pressed his hands together. It lasted no longer than a snapshot, but the image on the South Lawn was indelible: an obsequent President, and the Emperor of Japan."
Of course, the NYT would never write anything critical of the Messiah. The above was written about Bill Clinton.
My point here is that B.O. could have said any number of diplomatically vacuous things. He could have said, "Any war is horrible. President Truman made the decision he did with the best information he had. It might not be the decision we would make today, but it ended the war and saved millions of lives." Is it perfect? No. Is it a vigorous defense of the U.S.? Hardly. But it would have been much less embarrassing than the hemming and hawing that gushed from the Great Orator's pie-hole.