The commentariat have been churning over President Obama's quick and not overly warm handshake with an 82-year-old Latin strongman who, more than 20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc, would merit no attention if his name weren't Raul Castro. It's not a Middle East issue as such, but our region has a history of awkward handshakes, as I've noted before. There was the painful Giraud-de Gaulle handshake at Casablanca in 1943, where you can imagine FDR and Churchill holding figurative guns to their heads:
Then there was Arafat and Rabin, where only Bill Clinton looks relaxed:
Or when Obama met Qadhafi in 2009 in Italy, two years before he bombed him out of office and helped his people put an end to him:
But for those who see Obama and Raul as proof positive of Obama's radicalism, please chew on this one for a while:
For the young ones among you, that is Fidel Castro and Richard Nixon.
Enough said.
Let's not forget the memorable hand shake between Donald Rumsfeld and Saddam Hussein in March 1984, shown here by The National Security Archive:
ReplyDeletehttp://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB82/