Seriously, I understand what you are saying, however for that day the news of was the fact that our President put himself in a position of subserviance on the national stage lower than that of the Saudi's. You may not consider that a big thing ... but as an active duty man for the last 19 years (scheduled to retire next year), we have gone through some real issues in the Middle East (which before anyone jumps began with Clinton's inability to lead nationally), and so, I know the underlying tone.
Then you could say that Bush did the same thing by showing
his gesture of respect by holding the Prince's hand. That's just what Obama's bow was; a gesture of respect, not "lowering himself and the American people below their level." It's not that I don't think it's a big thing, it's that I think the media is blowing it out of proportion considering that there are
bigger things happening in the world and on our soil.
Regardless of all this the G20 summit/President Obama's trip was a meeting of the highest diplomatic leaders in the world. Respect signs need to be given on both sides during something like this (and they were). The fact that the summit was considered highly productive in terms of public image and diplomatic relations is more important than gestures that were made in the long run.
The Saudi's love us in public, but get them in private and we are infidels who do not deserve to breathe. Trust me on this one, I have witnessed it. They love that we protected them from Sadaam, but outside of that we are good for nothing else than giving them our money.
And showing signs of respect is a way to improve this. I'm not sure what else I can say here regarding the subject. I do wonder why you left out any mention of Bush's shady oil deals with the Saudis though.
And so my friend, on a national stage, Obama did us no favors with this "its not a big deal" gesture. Seriously.
But there was an attempt to, and again, the summit was considered highly productive, so maybe on a world stage, he did.
Let me say this again because I feel it is worth it. I am active duty. Way underpaid and asked to give my life so that people like yourself can have whatever opinion suits you. However, to see our leader put himself in a position of sub-serviance is offending, and degrading.
Next year I will have O's signature on my retirement certificate and I have already made plans to burn it. I dont want it. His name and his "thanks" for my service are empty, completely devoid of meaning, and not worth the paper it will be printed on. And that's the bottom line.
And I thank you for that service. I'm sure you've been through more than I ever will and I'm glad that we have people like you willing to do such service. I have to wonder why you consider a retirement certificate meaningless however, especially if only due to the bow. Again, I don't see this as a gesture of lowering himself below them, I see it as a sign of respect, in an attempt to smooth relations, so that future servicemen
don't have to give their lives fighting for something, somewhere that could have been resolved diplomatically. Maybe you see that as empty, and I really have no standing as I'm not in the service, but I just can't make that connection.
Of course, 9/11 was a "surprise" (even though the intelligence agency was telling Clinton this would happen - again his ability to lead on a global level) ... but nevertheless ... we still have the ability to defend ourselves against pirates on the high seas.
I'm more scared of the ability than the means, so surprise or not, they have the capability. What happens when we get a cell of pirates who board a cruise ship carrying 2,000+ civilians, who have a much more sinister agenda than ransom? We then have the possibility of 2/3rds the death toll of 9/11 (and the largest cruise ships currently entering service have a capacity of about 5,400 (
source)). This to me is a huge threat that needs to be dealt with, and goes beyond "our Navy will take care of it" I think. Having a Navy detail on every major ship sailing is simply unrealistic and definitely wouldn't help the world's economic situation.
And about Bill Clinton having the intelligence about 9/11, indeed he did, but this intelligence was passed on to Bush who chose to ignore it at the time, so the point is null. The fact that the attacks came nearly a year after Bush entered office says nothing about Clinton's ability to lead on a global level, but rather Bush's.
And as info ... Iran was only interested in our money/training as well in the 80s when they were willing to work with us, and now we see what they have done with the cash.
I'd again go back to the fact that Iran indicated that they were interested in diplomatic relations with us which would almost certainly require a condition of them giving up any nuclear weapon capability, especially if they're wanting this in the near future since the US and Russia, the two countries with the most nuclear weapons have reached an agreement to reduce their stockpiles. There will never be a civil relation with a country like Iran when they have the capability for these weapons. So in summary, if the diplomatic relations
that Iran is wanting were ever to happen, I'd be willing to bet that a condition of this would be surrendering any weapons or capabilities to make weapons as well as very close monitoring of their nuclear power facilities.