Gulf Today

BARBARA BUSH MADE A DIFFERENCE. CAN MELANIA?

- BY MARKOS KOUNALAKIS

Fir st ladies since eleanor roosevelt have developed over the years to do more than serve merely as White house hostess-in-chief. barbara Bush took on an issue, applied her passion, and tried to move the need leon literacy. it’s now time to deploy melania Trump where she can potentiall­y make a difference. It’s time for her to visit her Central European home region to try and bring those countries back to the American fold.

Foreign-born and bred, Melania is the irst modern irst lady who Cannot ACCEDE to the presidency. A Slovenian immigrant to America, she speaks Central Europe’s language. literally. a southern slav, she is familiar not only with the region’s spoken tongues, but also their unspoken cultural tics, social norms and political history.

First ladies have historical­ly been deployed or volunteere­d to use their time to advance America’s status in the world. Jackie Kennedy famously used her grace and language skills to charm France and a good deal of Latin America. Laura Bush, a trained librarian, also promoted literacy around the world like her mother-in-law. Hillary Clinton stood up for universal women’s rights and religious freedoms everywhere she went. Melania Trump should now take advantage of her unique skills, personal narrative, and regional understand­ing to try to keep Central Europe from straying even farther from America’s goals and NATO allies.

Hungary, the czech republic, slovakia, and Poland — known as the Visegrad Four — are all having their authoritar­ian dalliances and are, to a greater or lesser extent, underminin­g strategic American interests and values. some are going much Further, politicall­y flirting with VLADIMIR Putin’s Russia.

Despite Brexit and London’s active divorce from the european union, hungary is considered the greatest threat to the EU’S survival. Britain merely wants to leave the union, Hungary wants to both to keep subsidies coming from Brussels while also under mining the eu’ s legitimacy and authority. Last week’s resounding re election victory for prime minister vi kt or Orban further builds the momentum of a party-state that The Economist claims wishes to dominate the judiciary, corral the media, and raid the state coffers.

The Czech Republic is no better. In fact, it is worse as far as Russia is concerned. The leadership is not only in bed with Russia, its associates share bank accounts with Putin cronies. Prague has become a storybook city full of thuggish “Business” characters .( notably, president Trump’s irst WIFE, IVANA, was REARED In then- czechoslov­akia and reportedly turned down an administra­tion appointmen­t as U.S. ambassador to Prague.)

Poland is the one place that is not likely to give up a relationsh­ip with America for the promise of a better tomorrow promised by Russia. Poland has a longer memory and a more nationalis­t population and Russia remains enemy number one. A Melania visit here could act to reinforce Polish inclinatio­ns towards strengthen­ing transatlan­tic relations — the way Donald Trump’s 2017 visit did — but she would need to remind them that the relationsh­ip is based on universal human rights and shared values that exclude anti-semitism. This is a hard story to sell given President Trump’s role at highlighti­ng xenophobia and his anti - immigrant, anti - refuge estance at home. But a deftly prepared visit can give her an opening to discuss the topic, whether openly or behind closed doors.

Slovakia is reeling from a recent journalist murder that led to the resignatio­n of the country’ s prime minister robert fico. If there is a bright light in the darkness of this act, it is that the martyring of Jan Kuciak has awoken the Slovak populace to the injustice and wholesale vice taking place at the highest level of government. Following the brutality, Slovaks want their country back.

Slovenia, Melania’s home country, CAN BE oficially skipped on such A visit so as to avoid any emotional or political Conflicts. But A visit to THE rest of Central Europe could be a game changer if she played the game well. America still holds a special place for those in Central Europe and enjoys high favorabili­ty numbers amongst their citizens. But it would be naive to suggest that they are unaffected by President Trump’s assaultive words and assertive deeds. Melania would need to dance around all those things, as all irst LADIES Do when they Go ABROAD AND, as the song goes, “accentuate the positive; ELIMINATE THE NEGATIVE.”

Melania trump has chosen cy ber bullying as her cause, but she is already having a hard time selling the notion to an incredulou­s public when the tweeter - fin chief picks on people less powerful than he, a trait Barbara Bush critically noted during the 2016 campaign. Cyberbully­ing may feel like a good issue, but in Central Europe, Melania might make a difference while revisiting her roots and relate her personal rise to the American dream.

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