Straight talk from lecture
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JOSEPH N. BELL
The Newport Beach Library Foundation wound up this season’s
Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series with a winner against some
tough competition. A responsive audience that could have been
watching the Lakers’ first playoff game against Minnesota showed up
last Friday night to hear former United Nations ambassador Nancy
Soderberg. This in spite of the fact that she is an admitted Democrat
who worked for Bill Clinton and was probably going to say good things
about the United Nations.
The turnout for Soderberg speaks well for a community seeking a
variety of viewpoints on critical national issues and a Library
Foundation that provides speakers who make that possible. It takes a
lot of dedicated work on the part of foundation members and financial
support from local residents and businesses to attract the quality of
speakers to which we’ve become accustomed, but they’ve been bringing
it off for seven years.
A dramatic example that the foundation is on its game showed up
last Sunday on CBS-TV’s “60 Minutes.” The lead interview was with
recently retired Gen. Anthony Zinni, whose dedicated and decorated 40
years of service to the U.S. Marine Corps, both military and
diplomatic, qualified him superbly to deliver some straight talk
about the accountability of the Bush administration architects of the
Iraq war for the mess we are in there today. Distinguished Speakers’
subscribers heard Zinni deliver a similar message at our public
library a month ago -- and had a chance to question him afterward.
Soderberg’s qualifications for speaking on the U.N. -- she has
held high-level foreign policy and national security posts in the
Clinton White House, the United Nations and the U.S. Congress and is
currently director of a multinational organization called the
International Crisis Group -- are as solid as Zinni’s, but she comes
at her subject a little more obliquely. She threw us some local bones
before plunging into her topic, and she was heavy early on with
dubious poll numbers -- 61% of Americans feel these are the most
dangerous times in our history, seven of eight Muslim countries feel
threatened by the U.S., that sort of thing. But the meat was
decidedly there.
Given the current somber news tidings, she was remarkably upbeat,
combining her tough criticisms of the course we have taken over the
past year with an assurance that we are finally stumbling onto the
right track.
“Winston Churchill liked to tell us that Americans have a history
of getting it right, but only after exhausting all other
alternatives,” Soderberg said. “And we are beginning to get it right
in Iraq, even though the map to peace is still on the side of the
road in Washington where they are mostly just reacting to events.
“The Bush people came to office with the myth that they could
shape the world,” she continued. “In that vision, the U.N. was
sidelined and ridiculed instead of seen as a useful tool and part of
the solution. I’ve never seen such acrimony in the U.N. as there was
during the debate before the attack on Iraq. The Bush people pushing
the attack had never before been involved in nation-building, and
they fundamentally misunderstood what had to be done.”
But she sees this depressing scenario starting to turn around as
the U.N. “has begun to come back in style” with the Bush
administration. She warns there won’t be a dramatic change, that it
may take three to five years to “get it right,” but at least we are
headed in the right direction. And to stay on course, we need an exit
strategy, a new legitimate government in Iraq, and a gradual
withdrawal of our forces.
“It’s going to be a long and tough fight,” she said. “A lot of bad
stuff is going to continue. So it’s essential that we find more
modest goals to define success, which won’t really start until there
are successful elections next year. Meanwhile, we have no more urgent
agenda than pursuing a fundamental change in the attitude of the Arab
world toward the United States.”
When I talked with Soderberg briefly afterward, she made two
points I found of special interest. First, Secretary of State Colin
Powell is coming back in favor at the expense of the Pentagon
neo-cons as Bush changes direction. And, second, there is a heavy
load of resentment toward the U.S. at the United Nations, but that
won’t stop other countries from pursuing “the right thing,” even if
it gets Bush off the hook.
As we left the auditorium, each member of the audience was given a
card on which to suggest speakers they would like to hear in upcoming
programs. I called Lizanne Witte, who has been deeply involved in the
process of selecting and negotiating with prospective speakers, to
find out how that process works and what may be in store for next
year.
She told me this year isn’t over yet. The foundation lucked into
an opportunity within their budget range to land New York Times
columnist and PBS commentator David Brooks for a one-night stand on
June 18 and jumped at it.
The new season, she said, is still uncertain while foundation
workers study upcoming books and project compelling interests as they
try to psych out the Zinnis who will turn into stellar attractions.
“Next year,” she said, “we probably couldn’t afford the general.
We got him just in time.”
I skipped the dinner that followed Soderberg’s Friday night talk
in an effort to catch the end of the Laker game. I was too late, of
course, but still in plenty of time to watch the Angels. Between
innings I tried to think up affordable candidates for the library
series. Witte told me they were looking for speakers who were “both
funny and bright.”
I couldn’t get beyond Shaquille O’Neal and Mike Scioscia. I’m not
sure they qualify, but they’d probably come too high, anyway. If you
have any better thoughts, drop them off at the library. Meanwhile,
Brooks assuredly does qualify.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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