| India has a long history of being led by political
dynasties, and like the United States still battles sexism and
racism. So for many Indians, the latest U.S. presidential campaign
is something of a wonder.
An African-American stands a good chance of winning his party's
nomination. A woman is his primary rival. And, most impressive
of all, she appears to be increasingly handicapped - rather than
helped - by the fact that her husband was once president.
Sen. Hillary Clinton "has played the dynastic card a lot,
and it's worked against her," marveled Seema Mustafa, a longtime
political editor with India's Asian Age newspaper. "That
would never happen in India, where it always works for you."
This year's U.S. election campaign, with its groundbreaking crop
of candidates and its focus on international concerns like Iraq,
is reshaping the world's view of the United States, political
analysts say. In some places, officials see the candidacies of
Clinton, fellow Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain
as a chance to heal rifts with the U.S. over such issues as the
war on terror and global warming.
Many people abroad are surprised to find the United States is
perhaps not as racist as they had imagined. Others, impressed
at the lively campaign, are regaining faith in American democracy.
Concerns in recent years that the U.S. has used torture against
terrorism suspects, has continued to back authoritarian rulers
in nations like Pakistan and has backed away from international
institutions like the United Nations has blemished the United
States' reputation abroad, experts say. The election campaign,
some believe, has made a different impression.
"It's an exciting race, an example of participative democracy
and unprecedented mobilization," El Pais, one of Spain's
leading daily newspapers, wrote in an editorial in the wake of
the Super Tuesday primaries.
Across much of the world, Obama has been a source of particular
fascination, not least because of his meteoric rise from relative
unknown to Democratic front-runner.
In Kenya, where Obama's father was born and where his grandmother
still scatters corn for her chickens in a remote village, the
junior Illinois senator is seen as a home-team candidate. Radio
talk shows have dissected the primaries in the kind of grueling
detail one expects from beltway wonks - except all the callers
are speaking Swahili.
Although many in Africa credit the Bush administration for massively
funding efforts to fight HIV-AIDS there, McCain and his former
Republican primary rivals have gotten little more than cursory
coverage in Africa's press. Clinton has been more popular, her
name tapping a deep well of fondness that many Africans still
hold for her husband, who among other things apologized for U.S.
inaction during the Rwandan genocide.
But Obama "gives us hope that if America can leave its racist
past behind and elect a black president, then maybe African governments
can do the same - peacefully resolve our own ethnic and tribal
problems," said Fred Aja Agwu, a political analyst with the
Nigerian Institute of International Affairs in Lagos.
In Mexico, former Foreign Minister Jorge Castaneda wrote that
an Obama election would have symbolic importance for the world,
even more than a historic Clinton victory.
"It isn't that the very possible arrival of a woman to the
presidency lacks importance," Castaneda wrote in a much-discussed
newspaper column. "But just as nothing is fair in life, ethnic
origin trumps gender."
Israelis, on the other hand, for the most part find Obama worrying
and have questioned his commitment to "pro-Israeli"
policy compared with his rivals Clinton and McCain.
Still, liberal Israelis call his candidacy a breath of fresh
air that would be well-emulated in Israel, where the political
landscape is littered with old faces.
"There are those in Israel who are envious of the hope Americans
have not yet lost," wrote Yossi Sarid, a former left-wing
parliament member and columnist for the daily Haaretz. "Where
is our Obama?"
In much of the world, enthusiasm for the U.S. race focuses not
so much on one candidate as the fact that Americans seem ready
to show the door to President Bush.
Most opinion polls in Europe show Obama as the favored U.S. candidate;
in Britain, Clinton is leading. The region has traditionally favored
Democratic contenders but has warmed to McCain as well. Robin
Shepherd, an analyst at London's Chatham House think tank, called
him "the kind of Republican who can cross the trans-Atlantic
divide."
Perhaps the biggest surprise for Europeans is how well Obama
has done so far in the race, his successes at odds with European
notions of the U.S. as a deeply racist society.
Many Pakistanis agree with Europeans that the best choice to
run the world's remaining superpower is somebody other than Bush,
whose administration is accused of meddling in Pakistani affairs
by encouraging an aggressive policy in the war on terror.
In a nation that just voted for change of its own - the party
of President Pervez Musharraf, a U.S. ally, was roundly defeated
in parliamentary elections last month - more than a few people
like Clinton because of fondness for her husband's administration,
others focusing on her gender.
"Being a woman, she may have a soft heart for what's happening
in the world," said Aqeel Yaseen, 27, a journalist for an
Urdu-language daily newspaper.
Some Pakistanis are wary of Obama because of his expressed willingness
to consider attacking al-Qaida in their country if the Pakistani
government cannot or does not do so.
Russians largely see Obama as their best bet, particularly after
a quip by Clinton in January suggesting that President Vladimir
Putin, a former KGB agent, "by definition ... doesn't have
a soul."
But for many abroad, the race itself, regardless of its winner,
is a revelation.
"I think it's pretty revolutionary," said Anuradha
Chenoy, a professor of international relations at Jawahar Lal
Nehru University in New Delhi. "There's a gradual strengthening
of democracy in the U.S. if so many people can accept both a black
and a woman candidate. It's amazing."
Source: MCT
|