Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Uncle Sam needs you

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya Currently based in Toronto, Anirudh Bhattachar­yya has been a New York-based foreign correspond­ent for eight years The views expressed by the author are personal

In the hilarious 1980 movie Hopscotch, Walter Matthau plays a CIA agent who has decided to quit the agency and publish memoirs revealing skeletons that Langley would rather have stay closeted. The fictional ex-spook Miles Kendig is pursued across the globe by former colleagues who want to spike that book.

Thirty-three years later, that film has turned to reality television with former National Security Agency and CIA consultant Edward Snowden, the rogue elephant in the room, as he hopscotche­s from the US to Hong Kong to a transit lounge in Russia.

This episode has had its own farcical flourish. As an Aeroflot planeload of journalist­s left from Moscow for Havana, expecting Snowden to be on board, they came to a terrible sobering realisatio­n: not only had he skipped, but, worse, no alcohol was being served.

Snowden’s not the only person logging frequent flier miles. So is America’s secre- tary of state John Kerry, who completed his visit to New Delhi this week, during a 12- day, seven nation jaunt. His official trip page on the State Department website is fascinatin­g for its spelling of our capital as New Delhi, and for displaying a truncated version of Kashmir on the map that has been much disputed by our government, sort of symptomati­c of the error-prone diplomacy that the Obama administra­tion performs. Somewhat like its secretary of state, its foreign policy is all over the place.

As Miles Kendig confronts an agent in a scene in Hopscotch, he muses, “Say, I thought you were taller. I don’t remember you being this short. How’d you get so short?” In the current context, America’s problem isn’t just one of height, as its foreign policy keeps falling short, rather how its global influence has thinned. In fact, Obama’s team has as much diplomatic weight to throw around as an anorexic model with bulimia; light as the feathers it keeps adding to its cap like mighty Hong Kong defying a plea to extradite Snowden. Officials in that Special Administra­tive Region of China pointed out that the request from the United States Justice Department lacked some basic informatio­n like Snowden’s passport number.

Part of the reason certainly is its multiple missteps, from backing a 21st century pharaoh in Egypt, to Benghazi, and its fresh flailing in Afghanista­n and Syria, each of which was on Kerry’s agenda as he pursued his frenzied trip, along with plenty of stumbles.

Rightly enough, there have been plenty of righteous assertions of the Bashar al-Assad regime being heartless. But with reports of cannibalis­m by al Qaeda-linked rebels, including those of eating hearts, it’s easy to lose heart when trying to differenti­ate the good guys from the villains. The road to Damascus may be paved with good intentions, but even that could eventually lead to hell in the region.

Then, of course, there’s the focus on dialogue with the Taliban in Afghanista­n, an outreach attempt that was welcomed by America’s potential interlocut­ors with an attack on the presidenti­al compound in Kabul, possibly because they wanted the discussion to be conducted in bullet points.

Speaking of Snowden in New Delhi, Kerry wondered if the fugitive “chose China and Russia as assistants in his flight from justice because they’re such powerful bastions of internet freedom.” Those may be valid points, but China and Russia are too busy thumbing their noses at the Obama administra­tion to listen. As Snowden sheltered at the Sheremetye­vo airport, Russian President Vladimir Putin, for instance, described America’s pleas and protests as “ravings and rubbish”. Even as the United States cancelled Snowden’s passport, Ecuador provided him with a refugee travel document. America’s words have lost their resonance, just as the American president’s major speech on climate change was drowned out by overflying aircraft.

To lose its superpower status, the US didn’t need kryptonite, just crypto- Clintonism, diligently following the Jimmy Carter model that was so successful in Iran just about the time Hopscotch was released in theatres.

 ??  ?? A lightweigh­t now
A lightweigh­t now
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