Welcome
Back, Carter went to press on the eve
of the 25th anniversary of President Carter’s mediation of the Camp
David Accords between Egypt and Israel. This is
rightfully acclaimed as President Carter’s greatest achievement, yet the
volatility in the Middle East in the early 21st century shows just how
far away that region of the world remains from any semblance of a lasting
peace. The liberation of the Iraqi
people from Saddam Hussein has removed one of the most brutal dictators in
recent memory, but the U.S. occupation of Iraq has also heightened resentment of America amongst a vast majority of Middle Eastern nations.
President
Bush’s war on terror remains his number one priority, and his call for the
destruction of the al-Queda organization and its allies
in the wake of the heinous attacks of September 11 has been widely supported by
the American people. While great
progress has been made on that front, the U.S. road map to peace in the Middle East is in danger of being cast aside in its entirety, as evidenced by the
continued suicide attacks on Israel by Hamas, the Palistinean terror group.
As
noted earlier, Jimmy Carter has far and away the highest standing of any
American in the Middle East, and history has proven that his credibility would
offer the best chance of an agreement between these two bitter adversaries. How Carter would conduct a war on terror is
subject for considerable speculation, but of course he would certainly need to
address that national priority during any attempt for the Democratic nomination
and the presidency.
For
those who approve the war on terrorist organizations, but disapprove of the
exaggerated justifications for invading Iraq; for those who feel that while the
liberation of Iraq from Saddam Hussein was a worthy cause, but unwittingly
further inflamed the tinderbox that is the Middle East; for those who seriously
question whether President Bush can ever obtain the respect and prestige
necessary to preside over a Middle East peace agreement; and for those who have
lost faith in the Bush economic plan, with the elimination of nearly three
million jobs in the U.S. since he assumed office:
No
Democrat could frame a more vivid alternative to the policies of the Bush
Administration than former President Jimmy Carter. Not only is he regarded by acclamation as the
world’s preeminent champion of human rights; but his stature in the eyes of the
world – the highest of any American – is bolstered by an unassailable
integrity, and his works on behalf of the impoverished, the disease-ridden, and
those who simply desire to live in peace and a democratic society have provided
a greater clarity of the goals of his first term in office. His disciplined and active lifestyle has
enabled him to age gracefully, and he has admitted on many occasions how much
better a president he would have been if he knew then all
that he knows now as a result of a long and productive life. Shouldn’t wisdom be considered the most
essential presidential attribute? And if that’s the case, there’s no doubt that
Carter should be the Democratic nominee.
Regarding
domestic policy, any Democratic president who cancelled pork-barrel Democratic
water projects can never be considered a tax-and-spend liberal; to the
contrary, stories of Carter’s tightness with a dollar are legendary among his
friends. As previously mentioned,
Carter’s tell-it-like-it-is-manner evokes memories of Harry Truman, his
favorite predecessor; while Truman’s predecessor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, once
provided a statement that has come to best summarize the world view held by
Jimmy Carter: “Governments can err, presidents do make mistakes, but the
immortal Dante tells us that divine Justice weighs the sins of the cold-blooded
and the sins of the warm hearted in different scales. Better the occasional faults of a government
that lives in a spirit of charity than the constant omissions of a government
frozen in the ice of its own indifference.”
So,
having been stunned by my own survey results, and then being taken aback by Carter’s
lengthy record of achievement, I admit to deviating from my traditional
independent leanings and evolving into an unabashed Carter partisan. I think the remaining question should not be
why Democrats would want Jimmy Carter as their 2004 presidential nominee – but
rather, why not? He’s already made a
world of difference.