
May 2008


Washington Diplomat
PO Box 1345
Wheaton, MD 20915
Tel: 301.933.3552
Fax: 301.949.0065
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Diplomacy Elder Wisdom
No Retirement Rest for Former
World Leaders Like Irelands Robinson
by Mark Hilpert
A recurring cartoon spoof on Saturday Night Live in the late 1990s featured former U.S. commanders in chief as the X Presidents, a superhero-like group that solved international problems like North Korea while simultaneously ridiculing each other.
Little did cartoon creator Robert Smigel realize that such a group would actually be created, albeit far more diverse and more collegial that his all-American, all-white male band of heroes.
The brainchild of billionaire businessman Richard Branson and rock star Peter Gabriel, The Elders group was founded last summer to address some of the worlds most intractable problems such as poverty and civil war through intervention by distinguished former world leaders. The group is composed of activists (Desmond Tutu, Aung San Suu Kyi, Graça Machel), former heads of state (Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, Mary Robinson, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Fernando Henrique Cardoso), former diplomats (Li Zhaoxing, Lakhdar Brahimi), microfinance pioneers (Muhammad Yunus, Ela Bhatt), and former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
The idea behind the Elders was to create a group not tied down by political, economic, and geographic constraints to tackle tough problems, said Mandela at the Elders kick-off event in South Africa last July. They do not have careers to build, elections to win, constituencies to please. They can talk to anyone they please, and are free to follow paths they deem right, even if hugely unpopular.
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter also emphasized the ability of the Elders, with their political lives behind them, to take risks that are sometimes needed to solve seemingly impossible problems. We will be able to risk failure in worthy causes, and we will not need to claim credit for any successes that might be achieved, he said.
Job one was a mission to Sudan last fall to help resolve the Darfur crisis. One participant was former Irish President Mary Robinson. Although she is no doubt pleased to be in such august company, Robinson jokingly referred to the trauma of being invited to be an Elder during a March speech here at Georgetown University. (Indeed, her 63 years have not bowed her tall frame and she could pass for much younger.) Nonetheless, Robinson said that like Eleanor Roosevelt in her later years, shes at an age where shes learned to be bossy.
Robinson is using that bossiness on another Elders initiative, the Every Human Has Rights campaign. Designed to increase awareness of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on its 60th anniversary in 2008, the campaign has established an online petition whereby individuals sign a pledge to protect the rights outlined in the declaration. Like the media-savvy president she was, Robinson brandished a pocketsize copy of the declaration for the cameras during her Georgetown speech.
Diaspora for Breakfast?
Robinson picked up some of that media savvy as one of Irelands most successful politicians and its first female president, serving from 1990 to 1997. Credited with breathing new life into a largely ceremonial and conservative office, she was given a vague mandate from the people who had elected her to do us proud.
Robinsons first act as president was a symbolic gesture of placing a light in a prominent window of the presidential residence to signify Irelands remembrance of the many emigrants who had left their homeland. And although her fellow countrymen ironically werent familiar with the concept of a Diaspora (Robinson said they asked, Do you take two with breakfast?), her gesture was significant to the visiting Irish-American members of the U.S. Congress, who became teary when they saw the light in the window.
But Robinson did more than make gestures. As the descendent of both loyalists to the British crown and rebels against it, she sought to improve relations with Britain by becoming Irelands first president to visit Buckingham Palace and by hosting the Prince of Wales on his visit to Dublin. She also stirred the pot of Northern Ireland politics by meeting with Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, getting terribly criticized for being photographed shaking his hand.
For decades we sought ways to contribute to peace in Northern Ireland, Robinson recalled. In the end, we took risks to bring those who espoused violence into the political process. Many thought it was impossible, but it worked.
Not content with merely shaking things up in the British Isles during her presidency, Robinson angered the Chinese by meeting the Dalai Lama and brought attention to the Rwandan genocide with a visit to that country immediately after its civil war. Pursuing controversy apparently suited her electorate, who gave her a 93 percent approval rating. However, she decided against running for re-election because of the offices seven-year term and its fundamental incompatibility with her activist bent.
Pushing Your Own Buttons
Following her presidency, Robinson went on to head the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights in 1997. As in her presidency, she made the office more activist through such moves as visiting Tibet and publicly criticizing capital punishment in the United States. Since leaving the U.N. post in 2002, Robinson now seems glad to be done with the burdens of office. However, it does mean losing some perks.
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