Obama's African Hubris

By L.C. Johnson (bio/blog)

I suppose it is too much to ask of Obama supporters to read the following material and appreciate the arrogance and ignorance displayed by Senator Barack Obama, but folks, it appears he is going to do for Africa what George Bush has done for Iraq. Only worse. He is taking sides in a tribal war in Kenya that is on the verge of becoming a Rwanda-like genocide.

Really? Let's start with this uncomfortable fact. The leader of the Kenyan Orange Democratic Movement opposition leader, Raila Odinga, is Barack Obama's cousin. Barack may not put much stock in the relationship, but tribal allegiances are still strong in Kenya and Barack is clearly viewed as a Luo by his fellow tribesmen. Robert Ethan reported recently that:

Barack Obama has had a major impact on the recent disputed Kenyan election. He spoke in support of Orange Democratic Movement opposition leader Raila Odinga when in Kenya in 2006. The two men met last fall when Odinga visited America as each was preparing an "insurgency" campaign in their respective countries. In a recent BBC interview, Raila Odinga, averred that he and Obama were "old friends who spoke often on the telephone". Odinga also said that he and Obama were cousins, a claim that the Obama campaign was unwilling to acknowledge, (given Odinga's current difficulties) but did not deny.

Great. Obama's cousin wants to be president. Is there a familial gene? If you are like most Americans you are blissfully unaware that two of Kenya's tribes--the Luo and Kikuyu--are killing each other over a disputed election that Odinga, Obama's cousin, claims was stolen from him. This dispute has been accompanied by violence:

A mob torched a church where hundreds had sought refuge Tuesday, and witnesses said dozens of people -- including children -- were burned alive or hacked to death with machetes in ethnic violence that followed Kenya's disputed election.

The killing of up to 50 ethnic Kikuyus in the Rift Valley city of Eldoret brought the death toll from four days of rioting to more than 275, raising fears of further unrest in what has been one of Africa's most stable democracies. . . .

President Mwai Kibaki, who was swiftly inaugurated for a second term Sunday after a vote that critics said was rigged, called for a meeting with his political opponents -- a significant softening of tone for a man who rarely speaks to the press and who vowed to crack down on rioters.

But opposition candidate Raila Odinga refused, saying he would meet Kibaki only "if he announces that he was not elected." Odinga accused the government of stoking the chaos, telling The Associated Press in an interview that Kibaki's administration "is guilty, directly, of genocide."

Obama is not responsible for the killings in Kenya. But he has shown shocking naivete in supporting his cousin, who in turn has been quite eager to exploit the familial/tribal tie with Obama. Worse, members of Obama's foreign policy team have helped fan the flames of this mess. How? Are you sitting down? They got Dick Morris involved in the election.

Former Clinton aides currently working for Obama were the "mutual acquaintances" who directed Dick Morris to Kenya to advise the Odinga campaign in November of 2007, shortly after Odinga visited with Obama in America. Morris was an extremely divisive factor in the Kenyan elections, as a foreigner, a white man, and the creator of an antagonistic "have vs. have nots" campaign platform for Odinga's ODM. He also suggested the current campaign of civil disobedience to protest the election result, including a "Million Person March", a la Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam.

When things got out of hand following the election, Obama called Odinga repeatedly, but Mwai Kibaki, the leader of the Government would not return his calls as he perceives Obama to be biased toward his Luo relative Odinga in the conflict. Obama is featured prominently in ODM campaign posters, slogans, and songs in Kenya, and the plaintive phrase "A Luo will become President in America before a Luo will become President in Kenya" is often heard.


 

Obama also is providing the Republicans with the equivalent of an ammunition dump for destroying his candidacy should he become the nominee. The following articles are a preview of shit storm that will be unleashed on Obama.
Jerusalem Post:


But even in this atmosphere Obama stands out - for not only does he theoretically support appeasement, he is actively advancing the interests of Islamists seeking to take control over a state allied with the US.

Kenya currently teeters at the edge of political chaos and civil war in the wake of the disputed Dec. 27 presidential elections. Those elections pitted incumbent President Mwai Kibaki against Raila Odinga who leads the Orange Democratic Movement. While the polls showed the public favoring Odinga, Kibaki was declared the winner. Odinga rejected the results and his supporters have gone on rampages throughout the country that have killed some 700 people so far. Fifty people were murdered when a pro-Odinga mob set ablaze a church in which they were hiding.

Kibaki is close ally of the US in the war against Islamic terror. In stark contrast, Odinga is an ally of Islamic extremists. On August 29 Odinga wrote a letter to Kenya's pro-jihadist National Muslim Leaders Forum. There he pledged that if elected he would establish Sharia courts throughout the country; enact Islamic dress codes for women; ban alcohol and pork; indoctrinate schoolchildren in the tenets of Islam; ban Christian missionary activities, and dismiss the police commissioner, "Who has allowed himself to be used by heathens and Zionists."

Daniel Johnson, NY Sun:

Who is behind these massacres? The opposition leader, Raila Odinga, has had a good press in the West, after he accused the president, Mwai Kibaki, of rigging the election. But the victims of the recent violence have mostly been members of Mr. Kibaki's tribe, the Kikuyu, while those who have gone berserk are supporters of Mr. Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement, which is dominated by the rival Luo tribe.

Whether Mr. Odinga has ordered his men to commit murder and arson is unclear. But his own background does not exactly suggest enthusiasm for democracy and the rule of law. Mr. Odinga's father, Oginga Odinga, led the Communist opposition during the Cold War and Raila Odinga was educated in Communist East Germany.

I can see the headline now, Obama's Commie Uncle. Democrats banking on Obama to bring a new Camelot to Washington need to pause and ask some tough questions. Their refusal to ask Obama about his familial ties in Kenya, about his foreign policy inexperience, and about his meddling in the Kenyan election, will eventually come up.

There may be an innocent explanation for all of this. But sticking one's head in the sand and hoping these uncomfortable issues go away is not a strategy for victory in November.



Display:


Re: Obama's African Hubris (2.00 / 6)

This post shows a profound ignorance on Kenyan tribal relations, and the political trouble there.  I just sent it over to my roommate who has been working in Nairobi for the last year to help resolve tribal tension.

His one word response:
"whatever"


Bring Back MyDD - Just say No to Rec'ing Candidate Diaries.
by CardBoard on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 02:46:58 PM EST

Re: Obama's African Hubris (none / 0)

Ah...what does "whatever" mean?  I confess I  don't find this the most cogent response I've ever heard.


by miriam on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 03:02:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama's African Hubris (2.00 / 1)

I think it was to be taken as this story really doesn't relate to anything that is going on in Kenya right now.  Obama has worked, only, hand-in-hand with the State Department over the past months to speak out for peace in Kenya.  

And, from a political level, we should be supporting the opposition...even though Obama has not openly done so.


Bring Back MyDD - Just say No to Rec'ing Candidate Diaries.
by CardBoard on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 03:15:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama's African Hubris (none / 0)

Its curious, the lack of the Obama's effect, because we have been repeatedly told by Andrew Sullivan and other supporters of the "brown face" theory of American foreign policy, that just the sight of Obama's brown face would make the world sit up and listen. Kenya: Not so much. Especially since the would be Kenyan Head of State, Mwai Kibaki would not even so much as accept Obama's phone call. So much for the "brown face" theory of American foreign policy! Its an ominous sign for those who are looking to Obama for a quick fix to our ailing brand America.


by superetendar on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 03:31:47 PM EST

if Obama is President... (2.00 / 1)

I'm sure the call will be taken.

As a former Peace Corps volunteer from W. Africa, I do believe that an Obama presidency will have tremendous symbolic significance across the continent.  

He would represent the America we want to believe in:
-a country of equal opportunity
-a country founded in principles of human rights
-a country that has cultural connections to every nation across the globe.

-But that's just my opinion based on my own experience.  I don't have any empirical data to give that would back it up.

If you don't have faith in the power of symbolism, (and you are comfortable with Clinton's continuously shifting stance on the war) then screw it - vote for Hillary.  


by Damien in Texas on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 05:07:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: if Obama is President... (none / 0)

I absolutely have faith in the power of symbolism!  

Which is why I believe that having a woman US president would speak volumes to the world, and to the women in many cultures worldwide, who to this day are still abused, discounted, not allowed a voice, and still traded as slaves and property.

Over half the world's population is female, and has never seen a woman as leader of the free world.  That will be revolutionary, my friend.    Obama does not own symbolism.


by WMCB on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 05:57:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: if Obama is President... (none / 0)

Actually, I have more faith in practical, pragmatic diplomacy knowing you don't win people over all the time.

If Obama was so compelling why is the President of Kenya refusing to take his telephone call?  Its also kind of insulting to assume the African countries share concern over America's racial problems and therefore view Obama as some sort of moral talisman, especially when actual racial problems still and will continue to exist.

I don't know any serious country on the face of this earth that would chose a leader based on symbolism. Kings or Queens, yes. Heads of State not so much. Its screwy and a sign of great decline and weakness, that's how an Obama presidency will be percieved, as America reduced to symbolism.


by superetendar on Fri Feb 01, 2008 at 08:05:43 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Ah, another peak... (1.66 / 3)

...into the mind of Larry "Hussein" Johnson.

Can't wait for the next episode.


What's the Point?
by Vermonter on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 03:35:44 PM EST

Re: Ah, another peak... (none / 0)

LOL!


by pastor john on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 06:49:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama's African Hubris (none / 0)

No, the better approach towards African nations in crisis is a hands-off one, like what the Clintons did during the Rwandan genocide.


by Adam B on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 05:48:05 PM EST

Obama stands with the International (none / 0)

community in questioning the election:


The disputed presidential poll which has sparked violence and claimed at least 200 lives in Kenya fell well below international standards, EU election observers have claimed.

The observation team said it had concerns about the results which saw the re-election of President Mwai Kibaki on Sunday only after a controversial three-day counting process.

He is working closely with the State Department:


On January 1, two days before the Iowa caucuses, Obama left a message for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. According to Robert Gibbs, Obama's Communications Director, Rice called back "as we were driving from Sioux City to Council Bluffs on January 1. They talked about the situation and Rice asked Obama to tape a Voice of America message calling for calm." Obama taped the message on January 2, after a rally in Davenport, Iowa. He said, in part:

"Despite irregularities in the vote tabulation, now is not the time to throw that strong democracy away. Now is a time for President Kibaki, opposition leader Odinga, and all of Kenya's leaders to call for calm, to come together, and to start a political process to address peacefully the controversies that divide them. Now is the time for this terrible violence to end.
Kenya's long democratic journey has at times been difficult. But at critical moments, Kenyans have chosen unity and progress over division and disaster. The way forward is not through violence - it is through democracy, and the rule of law. To all of Kenya's people, I ask you to renew Kenya's democratic tradition, and to seek your dreams in peace."

Pretty incendiary language from Obama, right?


Go back to Hussein Texas
by gobacktotexas on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 05:57:52 PM EST

Re: questioning the election is redundant (none / 0)

It's clear Obama is taking an active role to the extent that he is subjecting himself to cheap attacks by people such as the diarist.  So he is definitely doing something.  I am curious as to what else you think he should/could do.  


Go back to Hussein Texas
by gobacktotexas on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 08:05:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama's African Hubris (none / 0)

Of course...readers here are more versed in foreign policy than Larry Johnson. Some of you might want to read his bio before you hit "post".


by americanincanada on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 06:35:39 PM EST

Read it years ago. (2.00 / 1)

was bored then.  even more bored now.


by Teaser on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 06:49:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]

This is some stupid shit (none / 0)

add it to the pile


by Teaser on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 06:47:34 PM EST

African Hubris (2.00 / 1)

What the hell is African Hubris? Is it better if he has Americn hubris. Why not hubris about Kenya or foreign policy. Larry, you have lost all credibility. I'm embarrassed that I once supported your posiition toward Bush and Iraq.


by commoncents on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 07:22:10 PM EST

Re: African Hubris (none / 0)


Is there a familial gene?

It seems he is saying that some people who come from the continent of Africa might have a genetic predisposition to certain undesirable traits, right?

Never thought I would see people go that route on a "progressive" blog.  


Go back to Hussein Texas
by gobacktotexas on Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 07:50:51 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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