The New York Times reported April 16 that Hillary Clinton, front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016 (if she wants it), “seemed flustered” when asked recently what her proudest moment was as secretary of state. The Times’s Mark Lander and Amy Chozick said Clinton’s problem was that “much of what she labored over so conscientiously is either unfinished business or has gone awry in [Obama’s] second term.” Really, though, her problem is a guy named John Kerry.
Nobody thinks Hillary Clinton did a bad job as secretary of state, but it’s a struggle to identify any noteworthy accomplishments. That Clinton herself could only come up with a relay race metaphor (“you run the best race you can run, you hand off the baton”) — itself borrowed from an interview President Obama gave the New Yorker in January (“you are essentially a relay swimmer in a river full of rapids”) — does not inspire one to read Hard Choices, the lugubriously-titled memoir she will publish in June. Clinton’s fumble probably helped prompt all the condescending nonsense directed at her, from friend and foe alike, after it was revealed she was about to become a grandmother. Her allies wanted to change the subject; her enemies wanted to move in for the kill.
Lander and Chozick suggested Clinton’s proudest moment at State should have been the sanctions that prompted Iran to stop expanding its nuclear program and brought it to the bargaining table. But an interim agreement wasn’t reached until November — nine months after Clinton left office. Is Clinton being circumspect out of deference to Kerry, her successor? More likely, she’s playing it safe in case the negotiations fall apart, as may well occur. In a speech last month Clinton said “the odds of reaching [a] comprehensive agreement are not good,” and declared herself “personally skeptical that the Iranians would follow through and deliver.”
“Playing it safe” does not describe Clinton’s successor, John Kerry. Less than six months into his tenure, Kerry started peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The talks blew up earlier this month, but Kerry is scrambling to revive them. Kerry also brokered a deal with Russia to compel Syria to rid itself of chemical weapons. Although clearly inadequate to the situation (Kerry is now also advocating military action against the Assad regime, according to the Wall Street Journal), more than half of Syria’s known store of chemical weapons has been removed.
All these efforts earned Kerry a furious tongue-lashing earlier this month from Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain. “I think you’re about to hit the trifecta,” McCain told his former Senate colleague, citing obstacles on Iran, Israel and the Palestinian Authority, and Syria. “Sure, we may fail,” Kerry replied. “And you want to dump it on me? I may fail. I don’t care. It’s worth doing.” At both ends of this conversation were people who won their party’s nomination for president, got beat in the general, and now have little to lose. Hillary Clinton is not a member of this club, and “I don’t care” are not words one can easily imagine her saying about any failure, large or small.









