The Wall Street Journal on the Obama Administration “Shunning Tibet” September 18, 2009
Posted by Danny Fisher in China, Dalai Lama, Tibet.Tags: China, Dalai Lama, The Wall Street Journal, Tibet
trackback
The Wall Street Journal offers a powerful editorial this week about U.S. President Barack Obama’s decision not to meet with His Holiness the Dalai Lama during his upcoming visit to Washington. The newspaper’s editors write:
[It's] a big departure from a significant and important tradition: President George Bush met the Dalai Lama every time the monk visited Washington; as did President Bill Clinton. The Tibetans hadn’t formally scheduled a meeting with President Obama for next month, but the Dalai Lama had expressed his hope to meet the President on the trip.
Mr. Obama may be trying to smooth the waters after raising tariffs on Chinese tire imports Friday. Or he may think that a Tibet snub will buy him concessions from China when he visits Beijing in November. Or he may be simply caving to Chinese pressure not to have the meeting. China has bullied Australia, Germany, Canada and France in recent years for welcoming the man they label a “splittist.”
By delaying his meeting with the Dalai Lama, Mr. Obama is only rewarding that choleric behavior and giving Beijing more leeway to protest whenever he does work up the nerve to meet the Dalai Lama. It also sends a message to other democracies that it’s acceptable to cave to Chinese pressure.
Also missing from this picture is any understanding of why the Dalai Lama’s cause is so important to both Chinese and U.S. interests. The Dalai Lama advocates the same human freedoms on which the U.S. was founded: Democracy and the right to exercise basic civil liberties, including freedom of worship. China won’t be a stable and prosperous country until it respects these freedoms. And a peaceful China is in everyone’s interests.
Read the rest here.
[Photo by the Associated Press.]




While I don’t condone what China is doing, let’s not forget America in its early phase also oppressed cultures, namely the Native American Culture, Hawaiian Culture, not to mention enslaving Africans.
So, while Americans show rightness indentation let not forget that we have not acted as noble as we want other countries to act.