other articles that referred to de facto Secretary of State. The article actually just reports what has been a fact since before Obama took office. Kerry did informally represent Obama at Poznan and in several countries in the Near East and South Asia, including India and Pakistan in the wake of the Mumbai bombings. This week's diplomacy was simply too big and too key not to get mentioned and it is interesting that many articles have mentioned the earlier work with Syria.
I think that many comments on that thread were too defensive about the reality that Kerry's role really has been far beyond the normal role of the chair of the SFRC. I can't think of any diplomacy of similar magnitude done by the very capable Senator Lugar or McCain (the chair of Armed Services then) for Bush. Not to mention, all the examples I site here (
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=132&topic_id=8710134&mesg_id=8710612 ) all were done with minimal media coverage, so the asinine comments that he is "making sure it is known" are uncalled for - it simply was too front and center on the major foreign policy issue. (imagine what Schumer or Gillibrand would have done with this or the unqualified praise that either Clinton would have gotten.
I do understand that anything that tries to create a Clinton/Kerry rivalry in real or simply among supporters in the blogosphere is beyond counterproductive. Kerry's strong smack down to that was fantastic and Beachmom posting it here was also fantastic. It would have been smart of Clinton to add her own praise to Obama's to proactively make this harder. In addition focus on Senator Kerry would be better than focusing on the fact that either Holbrooke or Clinton likely should have been there since the fraud question arose a few weeks ago. They are in DC in the WH meeting - though they could have been there remotely as Clinton was from Russia. This left just Eikenberry, who was the one who pulled Kerry in.
Another thing to consider is that no one argued that Bill Clinton was taking over his wife's role when he went to NK. There was simply universal praise for him. Now, I am not equating the two, as a Bloomberg artice wrongly did, this is far more significant and important to our national interests and required a lot more diplomacy. Many people in government or outside it have done the type of visit that gets these high profile releases of Americans. Many people on Prosense's thread gave many examples of past diplomacy by Kerry, even under Republican Presidents.
But, the fact is this is a moment when Kerry's long, hard work building relationships led to him being of enormous service partially by being in the right place at the right time. I agree that it is important to point out that Clinton approved of this and was constantly in touch and Kerry did respect the hierarchy rather than free lancing (or possibly worse, dealing directly with the President.) Knowing how I reacted to one article that said Kerry should be considered for replacing Holbrooke or even HRC, I think I know how the Clinton people likely feel when there is any hint that articles are saying that at a de facto level Kerry is doing HRC's job (and with excellent results .. in his spare time as a US Senator) These are obviously not parallel, but the similarity is the idea that it under estimates Kerry's or Hillary's value and importance.
I don't think that we need to be so defensive when Kerry finally gets some credit for the genuinely important accomplishments he has made.
here is the GD-P thread -
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=132x8710134