Lowcountry Cops
Thursday, September 09, 2010
MySpace   |     |   Tell a Friend
US Search.com, Inc.
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Calendar   Register Register  Login Login


What is the biggest challenge for new President?

 Post Reply Post Reply
Poll Question: What is the biggest challenge for new President?
Vote Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
2 [12.50%]
12 [75.00%]
1 [6.25%]
1 [6.25%]
0 [0.00%]

Author
  Topic Search Topic Search  Topic Options Topic Options
WebGeek View Drop Down
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar
Website Administrator
Posting Rank: 105

Joined: November 30 2004
Location: North Charleston
Online Status: Offline



Posts: 626
Topics: 316
  Quote WebGeek Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link to This Post Topic: What is the biggest challenge for new President?
    Posted: November 07 2008 at 11:19pm
What do you think is the greatest challenge facing newly elected President Obama?
 
 
During the campaign, Vice President-elect Joseph Biden predicted that Barack Obama would be tested by an international crisis not long after moving into the Oval Office. And this week—in spite of the spotlight on Obama's historic election as the 44th U.S. commander-in-chief—there were fresh reminders that the accumulating problems overseas will not wait for him to grow comfortable in his new job.
%20

Just hours after the Illinois Democratic senator completed a victory at the polls that was widely cheered around the world, another president thousands of miles away spoke up. He issued not the traditional, pro forma congratulations to an incoming American leader, but rather a blunt warning. Without citing Obama by name, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev vowed to place mobile missiles around the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad if the United States proceeds with deploying a controversial missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

Such a system—conceived and promoted by the Bush administration—would, in principle, be deployed during an Obama presidency. Obama has given broad support to missile defense if it were shown to be effective, but he has argued that the Bush administration has been rushing it toward deployment.

In any case, the Russian warning was a strikingly ungracious reminder that Obama will be inheriting a deeply troubled foreign policy legacy not of his making.

Meanwhile, Iran provided another reminder of unresolved tensions abroad. Military officials there announced that they would respond with force to any violation of Iran's airspace. Obama has expressed a willingness to have U.S. diplomats meet directly Iranian officials to discuss that country's nuclear programs, but hard-liners in Tehran are apparently nervous that a more fluid U.S. diplomatic approach to the issue could put them in a tough spot.

Still, the overwhelmingly warm international reaction to Obama's triumph signals that he will be able to tap into a reservoir of good will overseas that should assist his efforts to repair alliances. It should also help strengthen his hand in seeking extra help in dealing with a range of challenges—from the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan to possible nuclear weapons break-outs to Middle East peace efforts, among others.

Obama's personal story and path-breaking rise to the presidency, coupled with his rejection of Bush's go-it-alone tendencies and the promise of change, are all primed to dampen the anti-Americanism that has plagued U.S. standing in the world during the Bush years. With an Obama presidency, says Kishore Mahbubani, a leading Asian foreign policy commentator and a former Singapore diplomat, "I personally believe...at least half of the anti-Americanism will vanish."

That could be a major soft-power asset, if Obama and his incoming diplomats can solidify and harness it to repair the damage to U.S. standing in the world.

Obama appealed to that soft-power sentiment on election night in remarks probably heard by more people overseas than in America. "Tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals—democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope," he declared. "That's the true genius of America, that America can change."

But he paired that message with a warning of his own: "To those who would tear the world down, we will defeat you."

His running mate, Biden, told supporters that foreign challengers would find that Obama has "a spine of steel." The new president may well have an opportunity to demonstrate that quality in the months to come.

  • Click here for more on U.S. diplomacy
  • Click here for more on the Obama transition
  • Click here for more by Thomas Omestad
Palmetto Cops is looking for photos, videos and scans of patches for use on the web site. PM me if you have an item we may use. ~ Thanks!


Back to Top
R.E. Sharpe View Drop Down
Corporal
Corporal
Avatar
Verified LEO
Posting Rank: 11

Joined: January 09 2005
Location: North Charleston
Online Status: Offline



Posts: 294
Topics: 39
  Quote R.E. Sharpe Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link to This Post Posted: December 26 2008 at 8:28pm
This is the most interesting video I've yet to see concerning Obama.. Kinda makes you go hmm..
 
"those who accept what is handed them without question, deserve whatever they get"
Back to Top
R.E. Sharpe View Drop Down
Corporal
Corporal
Avatar
Verified LEO
Posting Rank: 11

Joined: January 09 2005
Location: North Charleston
Online Status: Offline



Posts: 294
Topics: 39
  Quote R.E. Sharpe Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link to This Post Posted: January 08 2009 at 7:41am
check out this mugshot array - something's amiss here, just can't quite put my finger on it...
 
 
 
"those who accept what is handed them without question, deserve whatever they get"
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply



Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0.219 seconds.



 12,198,685 Visitors since June 1, 2004 © Copyright 2010 Palmetto Cops, Inc. Part of the US Public Safety Network.