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Obama Must Show Leadership on Chinese Activist Chen Guangcheng

May 4, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Back in the 2008 presidential campaign Michelle Obama garnered quite a bit of press when she explained how, for the first time in her life, she was proud of the United States of America.

It didn't do any lasting damage—her husband Barack won the election in a landslide after all—but her observation left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of people.

[Check out our editorial cartoons on President Obama.]

America, as Ronald Reagan often said, is "a shining city on a hill." A beacon of liberty, it casts a warm, beckoning glow to all those who aspire to live in freedom. In that light Mrs. Obama's observation is something less than stellar and demonstrates perhaps that she and her husband do not see things the way the rest of us may.

This is all relevant today because of what is happening in China where Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese activist who has been under house arrest for 19 months for protesting the country's policy of forced abortions, recently escaped and sought asylum in the U.S. embassy in Beijing or at least the assistance of the United States in having his freedom restored.

Chen expected relief. Instead the United States has apparently returned him to the custody of the Chinese authorities, even while top U.S. officials like Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton are in the country for high level talks with the governing Communist regime.

[Vote: Should the U.S. Do More to Help Blind Chinese Activist Chen Guangcheng? ]

Chen and his family are said to want to come to the United States. The Obama administration, at least for the moment, appears cool to the idea. If he is forced to remain in China it is reasonable to assume that human rights are not, as the president and his party have repeatedly stated over the years, as important a part of U.S. foreign policy as they have made them out to be.

In securing Chen's release Obama has the chance to finally earn the Nobel Peace Prize he was surprisingly awarded in the first year of his presidency. If he does nothing—and allows Chen and his family to remain under the thumb of the Chinese Communist establishment—then we all have less of a reason to feel proud about our country. It would be a black mark on the nation's record that will not be easily erased.

Tags:
China,
Obama administration,
Hillary Clinton,
State Department

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"Obama Must Show Leadership on Chinese Activist Chen Guangcheng"

....I'm still waiting for Mr. Obama to show leadership in "anything"!

This president, as well as today's Democrat Party, are only a joke, nothing more!

sammy t. of PA 10:27AM May 07, 2012

ImaginePersonallySeekingnugent'sSupport of CO

I see the illegal drug user long lasting effects on buma when he was in college all the time in his capability as President...

Bill Hedges of MO 11:07AM May 06, 2012

Could somebody please tell me this isn't true. Ted nugent( the schizoid red-neck dA that acts like he is steroids ) said that Romney personally came to him and asked for his support. Is that possible. Is Romney that stupid? I saw nugent blow up on television again yesterday. He looks and acts like an inbred uneducated aHole. I guess this is what the republicans have devolved into. And Romney personally sought his support? And Romney is running for president? If he is that stupid , do you really think we should put him in the Whitehouse? Ted Nugent? I personally don't know anyone who would even walk across the street to suck-up to that idiot. So, what gives? Is Romney clueless? Or does he really admire totally brain-wasted ex-druggies or ex- alcoholics or whatever. The guy is an embarrassment to the human race.

ImaginePersonallySeekingnugent'sSupport of CO 5:43PM May 05, 2012

Peter Roff

Peter Roff

Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. Formerly a senior political writer for United Press International, he’s now affiliated with several public policy organizations including Let Freedom Ring, and Frontiers of Freedom. His writing has appeared in National Review, Fox News’ opinion section, The Daily Caller, Politico and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

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