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		<title>Some Nations: Obama, President of the World</title>
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			<title>Comment #1</title>
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			<pubDate>Thu, 06 Nov 2008 19:42:20 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>NBey6</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Bush has really left a bad tastes in the mouths of those overseas, I see?!</p>]]></description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Some Nations: Obama, President of the World</title>
			<link>/blogentry/25433</link>
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			<pubDate>Thu, 06 Nov 2008 19:40:56 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>NBey6</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>In Some Nations, People Look to Obama as President of the World<br /><br />President-elect Barack Obama is being embraced worldwide as a symbol of a new beginning for international relations.<br /><br />Barack Obama&#x27;s election on Tuesday set off international celebrations and ignited a fervor for the United States that has been unseen since the days immediately following the September 11, 2001, terror attacks.<br /><br />To some observers, the international reaction has elevated America&#x27;s president-elect to an unparalleled post: president of the world.<br /><br />In Kenya, where Obama&#x27;s father was born, a national holiday was declared on Thursday. In Indonesia, children danced at the school Obama attended when he was a young boy, embracing him as much for what he represents abroad as for the policies he advocates at home.<br /><br />Click here to see photos of celebrations around the world.<br /><br />People from all over Africa, especially in Kenya, where this is a holiday, are feeling that the most powerful person in the world does not have to be a white guy. That&#x27;s a huge breakthrough for the United States and for humanity, said Walter Russell Mead, the Henry A. Kissinger senior fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy at the Council on Foreign Relations.<br /><br />This is the fall of the Berlin Wall times ten, Rama Yade, France&#x27;s junior minister for human rights, told French radio. On this morning, we all want to be American, so we can take a bite of this dream unfolding before our eyes.<br /><br />America&#x27;s popularity abroad waned dramatically during the Bush administration, and some voters expressed hopes that in electing Obama, they could restore the country&#x27;s image. The wave of good feelings since Tuesday night suggests that even before taking office, Obama has made substantial inroads.<br /><br />This may be the beginning of a new world. It marks the end of old elites and opens the door for new approaches worldwide, an Israeli man in his mid-50s said in Tel Aviv.<br /><br />Foreign observers, who paid rapt attention during the long election season, are taking a personal stake in the outcome of a vote a world away. Expectations are high for the 47-year-old Obama, who will take over on January 20 amid a financial collapse and who will preside over two wars on his first day in office.<br /><br />The standing of everybody in the world is going to be affected by what President Obama does or doesn&#x27;t do, said Mead, noting that all eyes will be looking to the new president for a way out of the global financial crisis.<br /><br />In the Muslim world, the response has been mixed. A journalist with a pan-Arab news channel told FOX News that on election night, workers were going around the newsroom congratulating each other, as if Obama were their president-elect.<br /><br />Iraqis have expressed skepticism that any rapid changes will come as a result of the election, but many see their fates ineluctably tied to Obama&#x27;s foreign policy. By God, the new American President Obama has promised to pull the troops out. This is in the best interest of the Iraqi people, said one Baghdadi.<br /><br />Arab heads of state have been more circumspect, waiting to see whether Obama&#x27;s Mideast policy will depart significantly from that of the Bush administration, and some newspapers in the Arab world have openly announced their distrust of the president-elect.<br /><br />There is no significant difference between Obama and McCain. They disagree only on the means to achieve America&#x27;s chief goal, which is to rule for another hundred years, said an editorial in the Saudi daily Al-Watan, according to the Middle East Media Research Institute, which monitors the Arab press.<br /><br />But some Iranians, speaking to FOX News, said they were excited by the prospect of the coming administration.<br /><br />I want to congratulate you on Barack Obama&#x27;s victory that really turned a new chapter in the world&#x27;s history -- that an African-American man, decent and intelligent, became president of the world, one Iranian said.<br /><br />This was done in America. Your nation has the credit for it.<br /><br />Not all observers expect this world embrace to be long-lasting. I think overseas, as at home, opinion over the longer term will depend on what he actually does, said John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.<br /><br />Obama was issued an early challenge Wednesday, as Russian President Dmitry Medvedev ordered the deployment of short-range missiles near his country&#x27;s border with Poland.<br /><br />Those who have issues with us are certainly not giving him a honeymoon, Bolton said of Russia&#x27;s action, which may have been intended to send a cold word of welcome to Obama and to test his resolve.<br /><br />Russian citizens, too, have been wary in their evaluation of the next president.<br /><br />I don&#x27;t think he can really become the world political leader, said Tatyana Solomonova, a real estate agent in Moscow. The fact that he&#x27;s black can be an obstacle -- there&#x27;s still a lot of racism in the world, in Europe and Russia too. I think he can take a leading role in the Western hemisphere, but not in this part of the world.<br /><br />In Moscow Thursday, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who has a history of controversial remarks, was asked by a reporter about the prospect for U.S.-Russian relations after Berlusconi met with Medvedev.<br /><br />Berlusconi responded by saying that the relative youth of Medvedev, 43, and Obama should make it easier for Moscow and Washington to work together.<br /><br />Then he said, smiling: I told the president that [Obama] has everything needed in order to reach deals with him: he&#x27;s young, handsome and even tanned.<br /><br />Italian news agencies said Berlusconi later defended his remark, calling the statement a great compliment.<br /><br />Why are they taking it as something negative? ... If they have the vice of not having a sense of humor, worse for them, the ANSA news agency quoted him as saying.<br /><br />But Italy&#x27;s only black lawmaker, Jean-Leonard Touadi, called the comment embarrassing.<br /><br />In the United States, a joke like that wouldn&#x27;t just be politically incorrect, but a great offense to this amazing example of integration, which it seems the Italian premier should take as an example, Touadi said.<br /><br />For good or ill, all eyes are now on Obama.<br /><br />Not everybody is going to get what they want, but this is a moment of hope, said Mead, who added that Obama was sure to fall short of some expectations.<br /><br />If you look at Jesus Christ, he walked on water and fed the 5,000 and he ended up getting crucified, so I think it&#x27;s not unlikely that President-elect Obama is gonna disappoint some people also.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/25433">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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