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Obama supporters at a huge rally in Grant Park react as networks call the election and Obama is the president elect. |
What Obama’s election means abroad
Barack Obama’s victory was met with euphoria in
many nations by those who see him as restoring their
faith in American ideals.
By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer
Johannesburg, South Africa - As
Wednesday dawned rainy and gray on the Champs-
Élysées, a Parisian waiter spontaneously gave a fist
pump and shouted, “Obamamania! Yeah!”
The world, which has tracked this American election
like no other, sees Barack Hussein Obama as their
president, their choice. And they see him through
their own geographical and cultural prisms. To many,
he represents the restoration of faith in American
democratic ideals, of equality. The global euphoria
over the election of the first black US president is
also partly an expression of a populace that wants
to believe that the same principles can apply to
their lives, too.
Of course, as the son of a Kenyan goatherd, he’ll be
Africa’s man at the White House, say Kenyans. But
his appeal seems to transcend his heritage or his
skin color. In Pakistan, for example, where politics
has been the province of a wealthy elite, Mr. Obama
is a powerful symbol for the dispossessed masses.
Yes, he went to Harvard University. But also went to
a Muslim elementary school in Indonesia. “They will
say, ‘He is one of us,’” says Rasul Baksh Rais, a
political scientist at the Lahore University of
Management Sciences.
In Saudi Arabia, many young Saudis have been
affectionately using his middle name, dubbing him
“Abu Hussein,” or “Father of Hussein.” Here, he
symbolizes a restoration of faith in the democratic
freedoms that Saudis don’t yet have. “Saudis … did
not really believe in the American version of
democracy. How could they when all the presidents of
the so-called ‘melting pot’ were Anglo,” writes Eman
Al-Nafjan in her post on the Saudiwoman’s Weblog.
“But now they are rubbing their eyes in disbelief.”
Similarly, Liu Na, a high school teacher in Beijing,
China, said Wednesday that “his victory proves that
there is real democracy in the United States.” She
added, “He is not from a family of profound
influence…. Obama has a very international
background, which represents America’s special
situation; so many citizens are immigrants. He
relied on his own hard work and abilities to go so
far.”
The Anti-Bush reaction
The global enthusiasm for Obama also has a lot to do
with the way the world views America in the
post-9/11 world. It’s a reaction. Even America’s
allies had grown tired of the Bush administration’s
dogged go-it-alone unilateralism in its war on
terror, and later its appeals for help in the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq. The current financial
crisis, seeded in decades of laissez-faire
regulation of American banks and hedge funds, also
persuaded many that America needed new leadership.
But while global citizens knew they couldn’t cast
votes, it was clear that they felt they had as much
at stake in the US presidential elections – and
indeed, in the very idea of America as a democracy –
as Americans do.
“His [Obama’s] message is so powerful for Africans:
Yes we can,” says David Monyae, an independent
political analyst in Johannesburg. “If an
African-American can do it and become president,
then people in Africa think, maybe black nations can
also do it, and achieve prosperity, and people who
are struggling for democracy in Zimbabwe can do it,
and those in power can do what is in their power to
change their countries for the better.”
In Europe, the meaning of Obama is tied up with the
meaning of America in a very real sense. Obama has
tapped what has long been a “universalist” strain in
French thinking, political scientists say – in part,
that all individuals are equal and owed that
equality.
“Obama will bring a new trust in America around the
world. We can now think of ourselves dreaming again
with the Americans, dreaming about better relations,
about a real future,” says Harold Herman, a lawyer
in a Paris firm. “For eight years, we’ve not been
able to think of ourselves in a real relationship
with America, and it is not what we wanted. But now,
new things are possible. The US, Europe, and Africa
all have new possibilities for the future.”
Dominique Moisi, a leading Paris intellectual,
echoes the euphoric mood: “This is a Copernican
revolution in the image of the US.”
In Montreal’s Haitian community, Obama’s visage has
become ubiquitious, as iconic as Che Guevara.
Sixty-four-year-old Haitian immigrant Jean-Michel
Baptiste says he’s sold hundreds of Obama T-shirts
from in his small ethnic grocery store in recent
weeks.
“I never ever thought I would live to see a historic
moment like this,” said Mr. Baptiste Tuesday night.
“A page in history has been written. A black has
been elected as the president of the most powerful
country in the world,” he said.
Even though Canada has a Haitian-born woman,
Michaelle Jean, as its governor-general (a titular
representative of the Queen of England), Baptiste
says it’s not comparable. “Look, she was appointed
to her position. Obama earned his position by merit.
He was chosen by the American people to be their
commander-in-chief.”
Louis Balthazar, a political scientist at the
University of Quebec in Montreal, offers some
insight into Obama’s popularity in Canada. “Firstly,
he’s not [George W.] Bush. He represents something
different. He’s not arrogant or domineering. His
approach is respectful and cooperative.”
Professor Balthazar says that the jubilation in the
Haitian community is understandable. Obama’s
election sends a strong message throughout the world
about minorities. “It’s a lesson to other countries,
to us in particular. It’s an inspiration for us,” he
says. Of late, there has been a growing backlash to
cultural minorities in the province of Quebec.
“People are happy because he is of our color,” says
Tariq Bashir Mohamed Kheir, a Sudanese engineer,
sitting down to an early morning cup of tea in
Khartoum, Sudan. “It will break the view of
Americans…. They see blacks as inferior to whites….”
Laurent Joffrin, editor of the French daily
newspaper Libération, wrote in his Wednesday column,
“Obama’s story shows that identity is not a fact of
nature that locks men up inside their births, but
[is shaped] by a conscious adherence to democratic
principles…. Does that seem hypothetical or
abstract? Maybe. But for an hour, a day, let’s
believe in it. For the first time in a long time,
the New World deserves its name.”
End of multilateralism
In Beijing, Chinese leaders hope that Obama “will
fundamentally shift from [President George] Bush’s
unilateralism to multilateralism and give serious
concern to cooperation with Europe, China, and
Japan,” says Yan Xuetong, a professor of
international relations at Tsinghua University in
Beijing. Over the past eight years, he added,
America has come to be seen abroad as “selfish,
violent, and applying double standards. Obama can
redeem America’s international image.”
For Russia, the election comes after several years
of deteriorating relations rooted in differences
over the invasion of Iraq, NATO’s expansion, and,
more recently, in the August war between Russian and
Georgia. But Elina Kirichenko, head of North
American studies at the official Institute of World
Economy and International Relations in Moscow, says
that Obama’s election is “a very important signal to
the world. Americans are saying they want changes.
The fact that Obama is young, and is not a child of
the cold war, is very hopeful. During the campaign
he seemed much more flexible than McCain and spoke
more about common interests of the world’s peoples.”
In New Delhi, Teerna Khurana, a strategic
consultant, lists all the ways that Obama could be a
bad choice for India. He might reconsider Bush’s
recently concluded deal to sell nuclear technology
to India. Obama has also stated his desire to keep
more jobs in the US, potentially undercutting
India’s greatest economic success story –
outsourcing. And his desire to find a solution to
regional insecurity in Pakistan and Afghanistan
could resurrect the issue of Kashmir.
Yet Ms. Khurana is overjoyed at Obama’s election.
“It’s good for America, it’s good for the world,”
she says, before adding, “the only question is if
it’s good for India.”
In Tokyo, “many people feel relieved” by Obama’s
victory, says Minoru Morita, a political analyst.
“It proves the soundness of America. Many Japanese
believe Obama will work with other world leaders to
put the world on the right track.”
Skepticism in Iraq and Latin America
While change may be welcome in some quarters, Obama
is met with skepticism in parts of the Arab world.
Rahim Sabri, owner of a popular breakfast restaurant
in Baghdad, waves off Obama’s promise to end the war
in Iraq. “Obama is also the face of the occupier,”
he says. “US troops … are at a crossroads: Either
withdraw or stay forever.”
But some Iraqis see Obama as a symbol of change that
will affect them. “Obama is different. This time I
am optimistic,” says Jassim Attiya, a high school
physics teacher. “We are fed up with colonial white
faces; people want to end the US presence in Iraq.”
Many Mexicans worry that Obama has said he’d
reconsider negotiating parts of the North American
Free Trade Agreement. Still, “Obama winning means
there is a real alternation in power,” says Dan
Lund, an American pollster based in Mexico City.
“They are fascinated by this.”
In Venezuela, residents there say they see parallels
between the first black president in the US and
their own president, Hugo Chávez, who represented a
change from the old power elite.
In Bolivia, now governed by its first indigenous
president, people see a similar parallel, says
Eduardo Gamarra, a political scientist at Florida
International University: “Bolivians and especially
those who favor Evo Morales are looking at Obama
with some expectations there.”
• Contributing to this story: Zhang Yajun from
Beijing; Caryle Murphy from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia;
Scott Peterson from Baghdad; Robert Marquand from
Paris; Fred Weir from Moscow; Nachammai Raman from
Montreal; Sara Miller Llana from Mexico City; Heba
Aly from Khartoum, Sudan; Rob Crilly from Nairobi,
Kenya; Mark Sappenfield from New Delhi; Peter Ford
from Obama, Japan, and Takehiko Kambayashi in Tokyo.
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