By Sheri McWhirter
CNHI News Service
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- President Barack Obama has a "heavy agenda" both inside the United States and abroad, said a veteran reporter who for decades covered and commented on top national stories.
Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post political correspondent David Broder will be in Michigan Thursday to discuss U.S. foreign policy under Obama's administration.
"I'll make the point that in the first three, four, five months of his presidency, public opinion and public agenda was focused on the economy and that bumped issues back on the foreign policy side," Broder said.
But there are significant issues between the United States and the rest of the world that can't long be ignored, he said. There's the question of defensive missles in Eastern Europe that are opposed by Russia, plus tariffs on Chinese imports balked at by that nation.
And not the least of concerns: wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the most prominent foreign policy cliffhanger, Broder said.
"The No. 1 topic will be what in the hell are we going to do about Iran?" he said.
Broder, 80, writes a regular column about American political life, carried globally by more than 300 newspapers.
Broder has been described as the most influential political journalist in the country.
Among those excited to hear Broder speak is John Zachman, who teaches political science at Northwestern Michigan College. Broder's history of political reporting can benefit today's students, Zachman said.
"He's a very thoughtful political commentator," he said. "He really knows his stuff and backs up his positions with data. He's a model for how to approach political analysis and political problem-solving for students."
Sheri McWhirter writes for The Record-Eagle in Traverse City, Mich.
CNHI News Service Originals
September 16, 2009
Broder says Obama must soon turn to foreign policy issues
- CNHI News Service Originals
-
-
It's not pleasant for the pheasants either
MADELIA, Minn. -- Life is never easy for a pheasant in Minnesota, but that is especially true during winters such as this one.
-
Cultural District anchors Calgary’s arts scene
CALGARY, Alberta -- Calgary’s oil men have been seen as risk takers when drilling for oil and natural gas.
The same trait seems to have rubbed off on the city’s creative community. -
Authorities seek owner, crew of abandoned fishing boat
The 87-foot scalloper "Nha Trang" has been abandoned at a fishing company's wharf here, with no sign of the captain or crew for weeks.
-
Civil War Sesquicentennial: Details beyond the battles
RICHMOND, Va. -- My way or the highway is not the attitude Virginia intends to bring to the Civil War’s 150th anniversary parties starting in 2010.
Your way gets the honors. That means many new perspectives gleaned from letters, diaries, historians and the land itself form the foundation for four upcoming years of Civil War sesquicentennial special events. -
New police search technology finds missing persons
Finding a lost person with Alzheimer's disease, autism or another disorder that causes forgetfulness could soon get a lot easier.
-
Restoring Model A Ford painstaking task
WOODWARD, Okla. -- “Bud” Rush no longer spends his retirement days fishing at a lake.
Emphysema has taken care of that. -
Broder says Obama must soon turn to foreign policy issues
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- President Barack Obama has a "heavy agenda" both inside the United States and abroad, said a veteran reporter who for decades covered and commented on top national stories.
-
Archie's 70 years of sweetheart choice indecision ends
HAVERHILL, Mass. — For fans of the "Archie" comics serial, it has always been the great debate.
Betty Cooper or Veronica Lodge? -
Woman left homeless after SWAT raid
ANDERSON, Ind. — A woman was left without a livable home Wednesday after the Anderson Police Department SWAT team used tear gas and other methods to try to coax out a fugitive who wasn’t there.
-
Turnpike bust: $1 million in heroin seized
- More CNHI News Service Originals Headlines
-








