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Should We Make Peace With Extremists?
Posted by Tom Tarantino on February 27

By Les Gelb
 
We don’t negotiate with evil. We defeat it,” then-Vice President Dick Cheney said at a 2003 White House meeting about dealing with North Korea’s aggressive dictator, Kim Jong Il.

Cheney was only restating standard rhetoric about dealing with perceived devils whose values and interests clash with ours. But standard Presidential practice has been almost exactly the opposite.

“We often cloak in satanic robes those who oppose us, accusing them of threatening our vital interests and values—and often they do endanger us,” says Frank Wisner, a former U.S. ambassador to India and Egypt. “But I have yet to meet opponents who—if they had real power and did in fact endanger us—we did not eventually deal with once events forced our hand.” This was the case, Wisner points out, with Stalin and the Soviets, Mao Zedong, Yasir Arafat, Muammar Qaddafi, North Korea, and even Fidel Castro.

Now President Barack Obama wants to put the devil issue to the test again—by dealing with Iran, currently America’s Public Enemy No. 1. What can he expect from this bold course, and what’s been the track record of dealing with devils over the last half-century?
 
Read the rest of Les Gelbs article here.

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