The only way to deal with a bully

Just to follow up on yesterday’s post about Bill Clinton “annoying” Bush administration officials by making a surprise, last-minute appearance at a U.N. conference on global warming, there’s a fascinating back story that highlights the child-like behavior of the president’s envoys to the gathering.

New York magazine’s Greg Sargent learned that Bush officials “privately threatened” conference organizers after learning about Clinton’s speech, insisting that if Clinton appeared, it would ruin any chance of the United States signing on to a climate-change agreement. Clinton spokesman Jay Carson confirmed the details, saying, “It’s just astounding. It came through loud and clear from the Bush people — they wouldn’t sign the deal if Clinton were allowed to speak.”

As disconcerting as this was, it’s worth recognizing that organizers of the U.N. Climate Change Conference were simply unwilling to let the Bush administration push them around.

The contretemps started late Thursday afternoon, when the Associated Press ran a story saying that Clinton had been added at the last minute to the gathering’s speaking schedule at the request of conference organizers. According to the source, barely minutes after the news leaked, conference organizers called Clinton aides and told them that Bush-administration officials were displeased.

“The organizers said the Bush people were threatening to pull out of the deal,” the source said. After some deliberation between Clinton and his aides, Clinton decided he wouldn’t speak, added the source: “President Clinton immediately said, ‘There’s no way that I’m gonna let petty politics get in the way of the deal. So I’m not gonna come.’ That’s the message [the Clinton people] sent back to the organizers.”

But the organizers of the conference didn’t want to accept a Bush-administration dictum. They asked Clinton that he go ahead with the speech. “The organizers decided to call the administration’s bluff,” the source said. “They said, ‘We’re gonna push [the Bush people] back on this.'”

Good for them. The Bush gang had been acting like children throughout the conference anyway, and hadn’t done much to impress or influence delegations from the rest of the world. These threats over Clinton’s appearance were the last straw — so they were ignored.

Late Thursday night, organizers called Clinton aides to explain that Bush’s envoys had backed down. In fact, it appears Clinton shamed Bush administration officials into accepting concessions they wouldn’t have otherwise.

The United States dropped its opposition early Saturday morning to nonbinding talks on addressing global warming after a few words were adjusted in the text of statements that, 24 hours earlier, prompted a top American official to walk out on negotiations.

At the same time, other industrialized nations that have signed on to the Kyoto Protocol, a treaty binding them to curb emissions of greenhouse gases, agreed to start meeting to set new deadlines once the existing pact’s terms expire in 2012.

Such is the nature of progress in the 17-years-and-counting effort by the world’s nations to act in the face of scientists’ conclusions that emissions from burning essential fuels like coal and oil are raising temperatures and could potentially disrupt climate patterns and inundate coasts.

The United States and China, the world’s current and projected leaders in greenhouse gas emissions, still refused to agree to mandatory steps to curtail the emissions as the talks drew toward a close early Saturday. But there was a growing sense that some longstanding barriers, particularly between developed and developing nations, were starting to erode under the weight of evidence that climate was shifting in potentially dangerous ways.

I suspect the Bush officials will say it was a coincidence, but consider the series of events:

* On Thursday afternoon, the U.S. delegation stormed out of informal negotiations on a climate change agreement.

* On Thursday evening, the delegation learned that Clinton would appear, causing Bush’s envoys to freak out and threaten to pull out altogether.

* Late Thursday evening, U.N. officials forced the U.S. delegation to back down.

* Friday, Clinton spoke and told the world how wrong Bush is on global warming.

* Early Saturday morning, the U.S. delegation agreed to participate in additional nonbinding talks.

Nice job, Bill.

This story is bizarre, and is really shocking if
true. I wonder why it hasn’t been more widely
reported. No I don’t. It’s a serious indictment
against the bullying Bush administration. Why
would the MSM touch it?

But I’m very disappointed that Clinton was
about to back down. He should have done
the opposite, and raised absolute hell.

If it’s true.

  • But I’m very disappointed that Clinton was about to back down.

    Maybe. As Clinton saw it, there was a chance that his cancellation would push the Bush administration back to the negotiating table and his presence would push Bush further away. When dealing with people with the maturity of a third-grader, grown-ups have to be delicate. Clinton wanted to put the policy first — and that’s not a bad thing.

    But fortunately, the conference organizers had a better sense of the political dynamic at hand, Clinton spoke, received a rock-star’s welcome, and Bush caved.

    It’s incremental progress, but it’s progress nevertheless.

  • I admire Clinton for being able to keep his eye on the ball and not worrying about whether he was the guy to carry it across the line.

    The Bushies are amazing in their ability to always live down to my expectations – and then some. Their moronic stupidity is boundless, and they have no “bottom” to bottom out at.

  • Threatened to pull out of what?

    A nonbinding suggestion to continue non-productive talks, accomplishing nothing at some later date?

    Puhleeease!

    (previously posted in the wrong place, sorry)

  • I’m with bcinaz–nonbinding talks?!?

    That’s like having the President or Big Oil executives testifying for Congress while not under oath. Pointless.

    The Bush administration was positioned to look like jerks, but nothing substantive was accomplished.

  • I don’t know whether the story is funny or sad. On one hand it shows the Administrations childish incompetence, but on the other hand it is yet another attempt to silence dissent.

  • Hey, folks. this tantrum from the Bush administration was clearly orchestrated. Imagine you have these two options:

    (1) You resist Kyoto because you are bought and paid for by oil, auto, and other interests

    (2) You resist Kyoto because you are a bunch of crybabies who really, really, really can’t get over how much you hate Bill Clinton.

    Given the choice of the two, they had to choose (2).

  • “Compounding the embarassment, the U.S. delegation actually had to first walk in to the negotiations before they could “walk out,” because they hadn’t been regularly attending the meetings.”
    -Think Progress

    ShrubCo reminds me of Mike Tyson’s recent years. The warpaint is on but when the going gets tough the voice goes into oversqueak and if he gets hit hard, he hunkers down and doesn’t want to play anymore. Their successes have come from controlling both houses of congress. They are paper tigers with no validity. That a battle-scarred and burden carrying Bill Clinton can send them into such a tizzy just by threatening to speak is a great clue to their underlying uncertainty and lack of conviction in the correctness of their path of noncompliant obstruction.

    It is time for the opposition party to organize and oppose. Bill C. showed how easy it is to dig a few shovelsful of sand out from underneath their castlewalls. There’s not even a basement wall. It’s just sitting there. Floating on loose sand. An emperor with no clothes. A castle with no foundation. An empire built on a war with no reason.

  • I can’t help but compare the way Clinton was received in Montreal with the complete bomb of a speech Bush just gave at the Council for Foreign Relations. LOL LOL LOL

    Clinton’s initial decision was correct (and I’m not a great fan of the Big Dog). There’s a implicit agreement between former Presidents not to embarrass the sitting President. It’s sorry the Bushistas abuse that gentlemen agreement for their own petty bullying ends, but Clinton was correct nonetheless.

  • My theory is that this must have been one of those ‘the chief insists!’ moments. That is, the Bush organizers who were working ‘frantically behind the scenes’ were frantically doing so because they had the word directly from Bush: ‘if Clinton speaks, then absolutely no go!’. And we all know how top-down, authoritarian their organization is. It just fits with his personality, and it fits with the nature of how things are done in the Bush administration. Can you just imagine how horrible it would be to have to work for those people.

  • How can it be that the United States, which claims to lead the world in democratization, (and thus must lead the world in the variety and scope of dialogs that compose democracy), actually denies the very existence of global warming?

    America’s breath must smell like shit to most of the world.

  • Spot on, burro. I can’t think of a more literal example of ‘taking my ball and going home’ coming from an adult in any field. It was such a childish temper tantrum, that I wonder how these people manage to dress themselves in the morning. At any rate, it seems the emotional development of the Bush clowns is as stunted as their intellectual abilities.

    You gotta wonder if the stories of Shrubya’s coolness to his dad has anything to do with his dad’s friendship with the Big Dog.

  • Talk about childish….

    Montreal, Canada – The National Center for Public Policy Research is handing out “emissions credits” printed on toilet paper at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Montreal today, to symbolize the failure of the Kyoto Protocol and the futility of emissions trading schemes.

  • Sadly, Democrats always cave in to Republican threats, as Clinton was about to do. To yield was typical Democratic behavior.

    Thank God, someone else (The UN) called the childish bluff of the Republicans and stood firm.

  • Defiant, Clinton wasn’t caving to Rethug threats, he was doing what he had to do to protect the planet. He was taking the high road and not letting a school yard tiff decide the fate of the world. If Bush will only sign if Bill isn’t in the room, so be it. That’s the point. Bill isn’t the master politician, he’s someone who does the right thing – and that’s what drives Rethugs crazy. ; )

  • Okay, protesting and making threats of pulling out because Sudan sits on the HRC I can understand, but as everyone here already knows, this just makes the Bush people look like complete asses (yet again.) Even if you have a difference of ideologies, he was our last president, and it’s not like he’s the dictator of some third world country. There is no good reason whatsoever to refuse to participate because Bill Clinton is going to be there. Unless you’re Sudan or the unelected dictator of some third-world country who doesn’t mind making yourself look like an ass.

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