Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09DOHA390
2009-06-15 04:28:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Doha
Cable title:  

BROOKINGS EVENT AMPLIFIES PRESIDENT'S SPEECH

Tags:  PREL PHUM KPAO QA 
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P 150428Z JUN 09
FM AMEMBASSY DOHA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 9144
INFO GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS DOHA 000390 


FOR NEA/ARP AND NEA/PPD

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM KPAO QA
SUBJECT: BROOKINGS EVENT AMPLIFIES PRESIDENT'S SPEECH

----------
KEY POINTS
----------

-- (U) On June 4, the Brookings Doha Center hosted its most
well-attended event ever for audience members to discuss the
President's speech with Ambassador.

-- (U) Most attendees who spoke welcomed the speech, and many
wondered if the President would have the support of the Congress and
the Government of Israel for his initiatives.

-- (U) Several people voiced their concern that the President had
not provided enough details on how he would implement his plan.

-- (U) Ambassador took the opportunity to reinforce the speech's key
themes, and to encourage audience members to think about the speech
as a "declaration of intent" from which would flow plans and
programs to implement the President's vision.

-- (U) Local press coverage of the event was positive.

END KEY POINTS

UNCLAS DOHA 000390


FOR NEA/ARP AND NEA/PPD

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM KPAO QA
SUBJECT: BROOKINGS EVENT AMPLIFIES PRESIDENT'S SPEECH

--------------
KEY POINTS
--------------

-- (U) On June 4, the Brookings Doha Center hosted its most
well-attended event ever for audience members to discuss the
President's speech with Ambassador.

-- (U) Most attendees who spoke welcomed the speech, and many
wondered if the President would have the support of the Congress and
the Government of Israel for his initiatives.

-- (U) Several people voiced their concern that the President had
not provided enough details on how he would implement his plan.

-- (U) Ambassador took the opportunity to reinforce the speech's key
themes, and to encourage audience members to think about the speech
as a "declaration of intent" from which would flow plans and
programs to implement the President's vision.

-- (U) Local press coverage of the event was positive.

END KEY POINTS


1. (U) Brookings Doha Center's Director Hady Amr moderated a town
hall-style event with Ambassador at the center's headquarters on
June 4 that turned out to be Brookings' most well-attended event in
its two-year history in Doha. The audience featured a mix of over
100 expatriate Arabs, South Asians, Americans and others.


2. (U) Most attendees who spoke voiced support for the speech. For
example, Kareem Farhad, a Lebanese university student, said the
speech "made my day, as well as the day of many other Arab youth."
It would "empower moderates and spark a debate among the
conservatives," he said.


3. (U) An Arab-American who said he was in "self-imposed exile" ever
since anti-Arab sentiment rose in the United States after 9/11,
said, "The speech today gave me hope; I think I might go back to the
United States now because I think Obama was being sincere."


4. (U) Rasheed Ali, a Pakistani man living in Doha, felt the speech
would "go down in history as being as important as JFK's Ich bin ein
Berliner speech." He said he greatly appreciated the President's
recognition that countries in the region had been treated as proxies
by the great powers for too long.


5. (U) While others welcomed the speech, they also questioned the
President's ability to implement his vision. An American working at
Georgetown University wondered, "How can Obama deal with the
'hardline' Israeli Government." A Pakistani man asked if the "hard
issues outlined in the speech could really be tackled." An American
woman wondered if the President could convince the U.S. Congress to
support his approach to the Israeli Government.


6. (U) Dr. Zakariya Matar, an expatriate Lebanese, listed all the
topics that he thought the President had missed, including piracy,
the Swat Valley, Syria, Darfur, corruption, and human rights in
Egypt.


7. (U) A Syrian expatriate engineer praised the President's charisma
and noted that he presented a stark difference from President Bush's
style, but asked why he had not addressed an important country like
Syria in his speech, and why he was asking the Arabs to pay for the
Europeans' holocaust against the Jews.


8. (U) Answering questions and offering commentary to groups of
interventions at a time, Ambassador took the opportunity at the
event to emphasize the President's key themes. He also urged
audience members to view the speech as a "declaration of intent"
meant to present the President's strategic direction, from which
would then flow planning and programs to implement that vision.


9. (U) Coverage of the event in Arabic-language dailies "Al Arab"
and "Al Watan" was positive, featuring photos and noting, for
example, that "Speaking in Arabic, LeBaron stressed what President
Obama said, 'America was not and will not be at war with Islam.'"

LEBARON