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Condoleeza Rice: Obamas Wahl macht Amerika glaubwürdig

 

Die scheidende Aussenministerin sieht in der Wahl des ersten schwarzen Amerikaners zum Präsidenten einen Schub für das Demokratisierungsprojekt, das sie mit Bush angefangen hat. 

Genau wie den Afghanen sei übrigens auch den Schwarzen die Fähigkeit zur Demokratie abgesprochen worden. Guter Punkt. Das ganze Gespräch zum Abgang hier.

Auszug: 

WHAT THE ELECTION THAT HE WON MEANS.
Electing a black president says around the world that you can overcome old wounds. I’ve said in our case, We have a birth defect, but it can be overcome.

WHAT THE ELECTION THAT HE WON MEANS.
I’ve heard people commenting on how in this election, in far places, people talk about what is a caucus and how does that differ from a primary. I think that links up with the fact that the United States under this president has been more active and more insistent that democracy is not just something for a few. People are watching, and I think they’re trying to learn from democratic experience.

WHAT ALL THOSE ELECTIONS IN IRAQ AND UKRAINE AND LEBANON MEANT.
It’s not that you deliver on it tomorrow. Maybe 2005 was a bit deceptive in that way because you had the Iraqi elections, the Cedar Revolution, the Orange Revolution, the Rose Revolution and the Palestinian election.  So maybe people came to expect too much too soon.

WHAT ELECTIONS COULD MEAN FOR PEOPLE WHO DON’T TEND TO HAVE THEM.
I’ve seen too many peoples dismissed as not ready for self-government. First it was Asians, and then Latin Americans and Africans were there for a while. I know for a while black Americans were, too.

I’ve seen it said, well, you know: They’re illiterate; how could they vote? And then you see in Afghanistan people line up for long, long lines. Because somehow they know that making a choice matters.