John
McCain, in his usual retro style, sends Putin an old-fashioned “Dear Sir, You
Cur” missive, telling his constituents, “I am pro-Russian, more pro-Russian
than the regime that misrules you today. They punish dissent and imprison
opponents. They rig your elections. They control your media.”
Speaking
of which, McCain sends his screed to the wrong Pravda (don’t ask, it’s complicated) but Putin surely gets the message.
Will they exchange seconds to arrange for an old-fashioned shootout on some
neutral ground, say an OK Corral in Turkey?
Obama,
on the other hand, finds a new pen pal by passing notes in the international
schoolyard with Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, who sees in the exchange “subtle
and tiny steps for a very important future.”
A
welcome change in tone from that of his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who
was prone to offhand remarks such as that about Israel: “The regime that
occupies Jerusalem must vanish from the pages of time.”
Still
and all, President Obama, who has accumulated painful experience in trying to
find common ground with adversaries at home and abroad, is chastened enough to
say only that Rouhani “is somebody who is looking to open dialogue with the
West and with the United States, in a way that we haven’t seen in the past. And
so we should test it.”
By
all means, he and McCain should keep expressing themselves on paper rather than
with tons of hardware, but be sure to use enough postage and double-check the
addressee’s residence.
In
doing so, they may want to keep in mind the strategy of statesman-author
Winston Churchill: “History will be kind to me for I intend to write it.”
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