Published November 15, 2008 10:33 pm - MUNCIE — When President-elect Barack Obama departed the White House last Monday, he made three phone calls on his way to the airport.
LUGAR: Senator content with mentoring role
By Stephen Dick, Herald Bulletin Assistant Managing Editor
MUNCIE — When President-elect Barack Obama departed the White House last Monday, he made three phone calls on his way to the airport. One was to Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar, the man Obama mentioned in his final debate with Sen. John McCain as a mentor on foreign policy.
On Saturday, however, Lugar reiterated that he wouldn’t be a part of Obama’s administration. He said he would be more effective serving on his Senate committees, such as Foreign Relations and Agriculture.
Lugar visited the Second Harvest Food Bank here Saturday to talk about his agriculture and food issues and to take a tour of the new facility on the city’s north side. He also talked about the problems Obama faced.
As a young senator in 1995, Obama asked Lugar if he could accompany him on a trip to Russia. They spent 11 days in Moscow and the Ukraine.
“It was a good learning experience for both of us,” Lugar said.
On Saturday, a reporter asked if Obama would be a detriment to U.S. foreign policy because of his lack of experience. Lugar responded that the new president would elicit new enthusiasm around the world.
“His experience has been limited,” Lugar admitted. “But he’s an able and intelligent man.”
The senator noted that, prior to the election, “most people didn’t like us” around the world.
“With Obama’s election, there’s been a 25 percent change toward the favorable side.”
Lugar said he was in Germany two weeks after Obama spoke in Berlin last summer. In the presidential campaign, Obama was criticized as being elitist for going to Germany, but the candidate drew a sizable crowd of 250,000 near the Brandenburg Gate, Lugar said.
“There is a large outpouring of good will,” Lugar said.
Despite being called the “bipartisan buddy” in Obama’s inner circle by USA Today, Lugar said his relationships with world leaders would be helpful to Obama.
“He faces an awesome inventory of unfinished business,” Lugar said of the new president. He then went though a litany of hurdles:
— Iraq: Trying to develop a pact between the U.S. and Iraq might require a United Nations resolution.
— Afghanistan: The war is not going well, but Gen. David Petraeus is studying it. Some Taliban are better than other Taliban, and how does the Taliban relate to al Qaida?