I imagine that you, like me, did not know Ambassador J.
Christopher Stevens. He was our ambassador to Lybia who was killed in a mob or
planned Al Quida attack last week.
Most of us wouldn’t know any of our diplomatic corps unless
we had some personal involvement with them or their respective embassies.
All of us may choose to research Ambassador Stevens’
biography and CV. Just listening to news reports is impressive. His dedication
to service was the personification of what an American diplomat is supposed to
be. What an American is supposed to be when he or she travels to other
countries.
Unfortunately it is not often the case. I have seen atrocious
behavior by ignorant Americans travelling abroad and I have been embarrassed by
their actions.
In an FYI, the diplomatic ambassadorial service is not
always a perk for financial contributions to the current presidential regime. For
most, it is a noble calling and a culmination of years of altruistic service to
the ideals of America.
I’d like you to take the time to read about Ambassador
Stevens.
What follows is an excellent column from Robin Wright, a
joint fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Woodrow Wilson Center.
Here it is:
The last time I saw Chris Stevens was in May, at
his swearing-in ceremony for his first post as ambassador, in Libya. We'd been
friends since he was a junior diplomat on the Iran desk, when we used to gab
for hours about Tehran's cryptic politics. We later met up in Mideast hot
spots, from Syria and Saudi Arabia to the Palestinian territories. He always
had funny tales about diplomatic mischief.
During an earlier tour in Tripoli, when Moammar
Gadhafi was still in power, Chris once grabbed the camera off a Libyan
intelligence goon on his tail, turned and, with a big smile, took the guy's
picture. Then he gave the camera back. The lanky Californian could be both
charming and disarming, even as he made his point.
Chris was posted in Jerusalem during the second
intifada, when Palestinians were blowing themselves up on Israeli buses and
Israeli troops were raiding West Bank villages. In a bit of unorthodox public
diplomacy, Chris and a junior officer went outdoors during a rare snowstorm and
started lobbing snowballs at each other. Young Palestinians and Israeli border
guards on opposite sides of the divide joined in. It broke the tension, at
least temporarily.
His antics were misleading, however. Chris fast
became one of America's savviest envoys.
In April 2011, two months after the Libyan uprising
erupted, he was dispatched on a cargo ferry from Malta to Benghazi to set up a
U.S. liaison office to the rebels, working out of a hotel room. Colleagues
dubbed him the expeditionary diplomat.
"He very quickly developed these amazing
circles of contacts," recalled Jeffrey Feltman, a former colleague and now
an undersecretary at the United Nations.
More than anyone else, Stevens soon convinced
Washington that the Transitional National Council (NTC) had the political bona
fides to pick up the pieces after Gadhafi's 42-year rule.
His assessment has so far proved accurate. When
Libyans went to the polls in July, the majority rejected hard-line Islamists as
well as separatists. And many NTC officials won the popular vote.
Most colleagues thought Chris was daft for taking
the ambassadorship, in what would be his third Libyan tour. But he was excited.
"You've got to come out," he told me. "It's going to be
fascinating. Wild, but fascinating."
A week before his murder in Benghazi, we exchanged
emails about my plans to visit Libya in a few weeks. A State Department travel
warning last month cited increasing assassinations, car bombs and gunmen
abducting foreigners. Clashes among militias "can erupt at any time or any
place in the country," it cautioned.
Yet Chris saw the potential over the peril. He was
not among those declaring that the Arab Spring had only made the region worse.
Quite the reverse. He understood that the Middle East is moving into the second
phase of its traumatic transition as Arabs vie to define a new order.
So as the United States deployed gunships and
drones this past week to track his killers, I started thinking about what Chris
would have wanted the United States to do - about his death, the latest turmoil
and in the years ahead. I suspect his message would have been: Waver not.
But he was less an advocate of U.S. influence than
of U.S. enabling. Two days after his murder, Chris was supposed to inaugurate
the first "American Space" in Libya. That's why he went to Benghazi.
The center would offer a library, computers with free Internet access, language
classes and films.
In prepared remarks he never got to give, Chris was
going to say, "An American Space is not part of the American Embassy. It
is owned, operated and staffed by our Libyan partners, while the United States
provides materials, equipment and speakers. An American Space is a living
example of the kind of partnership between our two countries which we hope to
inspire."
In this fragile phase, as Libyans and other Arabs
reclaim control of their lives from autocrats and colonial rule, Chris was
pressing Washington to let the newly empowered take the lead.
He was famous for his "pleasant
silences," Feltman said. "He would sit there as if he had all the
time in the world. Yet it was comfortable enough in ways that the interlocutor
started talking more."
After a brief visit to Benghazi in August 2011,
Feltman went to say farewell to Ali Tarhouni, the NTC's minister of oil and
finance. Chris suggested that they all "hang out" a bit. During one
of Chris' silences, Tarhouni began to outline the rebels' military plan for the
takeover of Tripoli. Residents in several neighborhoods were going to rise up
simultaneously, then militias from other areas would move into the capital. The
NTC wanted Tripolitanians to feel ownership, not as if armed gangs from rival
provinces were moving in. It all played out the next day, and Gadhafi fled the
capital.
Two days after Chris died, President Barack Obama
vowed: "We are going to bring those who killed our fellow Americans to
justice. . . . No act of terror will go unpunished."
But Chris would almost certainly have urged his
bosses to hold off on extraterritorial intervention.
The trial of Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, the former
ruler's son and political heir, will be a pivotal test for Tripoli. A former
lawyer, Chris was aware of the need for real justice under the government
elected this year, rather than a repeat of Ghadhafi's murder after rebels
caught him trying to escape through a sewer pipe last year.
But Chris understood the sensitivity about any U.S.
attempt to help write a new Libyan constitution. He instead favored American
assistance on the basics of the rule of law, such as training police on
collecting credible evidence, judges on courtroom procedures, and prosecutors
and defense lawyers on honoring the restrictions as well as the responsibilities
of the law. He wanted Libya to become a model for a region prone to capricious
justice.
Chris was already deep into the kind of
nation-building projects that the United States often blew during a decade in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Even as he helped develop plans to track missing parts of
Libya's deadly arsenal - including chemical and anti-aircraft weapons - he also
pressed for the integration of some militias into a new Libyan military.
"He recognized that they were not all rag-tag
ruffians running around with guns," said Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State Ray Maxwell. "A lot see themselves as patriotic."
One of the most striking things about Chris was
that he was not afraid of the future, as many may be after the latest attacks
on U.S. targets. "I never understood why he never flinched," his
sister Anne Stevens emailed me the day he died. "I guess because he always
had good relationships with people, he always came out okay."
Chris would have been heartened by another
demonstration in Benghazi the day after he died. A sign held high by a young
Libyan in blue jeans declared, in big red letters, "Chris Stevens was a
friend to all Libyans."
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