Embarrassing moments during presidential campaigns — yes, there have been a few. One thinks of Richard Nixon’s appearance in the first televised debate of the 1960 campaign, with John Kennedy. Nixon played his part, but his sinister-looking expression, contrasted with the fresh face of the future president, undoubtedly cost him the elections.
During Wednesday night’s debate between Republican candidates, Rick Perry likely lost the Republican primaries and fueled the jokes of stand-up comedians for months to come. The late-night talk show hosts are already having a field day.
Moving Backwards
During the televised debate last Wednesday, Rick Perry gave it his all. Full of bombast and misplaced testosterone, Perry embarked on a very authoritative list of government agencies that he would cut if he were (God help us …) president: The Department of Commerce, the Department of Education and ... silence. Perry was unable to name the third agency that he proposes to cut. Not only was this gap at the moment that he made his argument embarrassing, but he added to the ridiculousness by concluding his argument with "Oops."
And suddenly, the only thing we remember from this debate, and all the others before it, is the ridiculousness of this moment.
The Texas governor’s campaign is now in free fall, no matter what his supporters say. On Thursday, Perry embarked on a huge rehabilitation campaign, even going so far as to appear on the Late Show with David Letterman to make fun of his monumental gaffe. It will be difficult, from now on, for Rick Perry to attract new donors, as they will be a little hesitant to be linked to a figure who has become ridiculous and, especially, to fund a campaign that’s hitting the wall. The coming days should provide an answer. With the probable exit of the other Republican candidate, Herman Cain, the path is clearing for Mitt Romney, the anti-tea party candidate with which the GOP is going to betray its base.
During the Cold War, the United States occupied the apex of this triangular dynamic, pitting China and the USSR against each other. Today, it is Beijing that occupies that apex.
The Beijing summit did not produce a major agreement between the great powers on the region, but it firmly established that Middle Eastern crises are now deeply tied to the great-power dialogue.
History has never witnessed a leader quite like Donald Trump — a mix of ignorance, arrogance immorality, brazenness, insensitivity and sheer stupidity.
The challenge for Washington is no longer whether it possesses sufficient capabilities, but whether the political system can align those capabilities behind a coherent long-term priority.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.