Madeleine Albright, groundbreaking secretary of state and feminist icon, dies at 84

Secretary Hillary Clinton remembers Secretary Albright...excerpts below


Late one night in 1995, in a cramped airplane cabin high over the Pacific, Madeleine Albright put down a draft of a speech I was set to deliver in Beijing at the upcoming United Nations conference on women, fixed me with the firm stare that had made fearsome dictators shudder, and asked what I was really trying to accomplish with this address.

“I want to push the envelope as far as I can,” I replied. “Then do it,” she said. She proceeded to tell me how I could sharpen the speech’s argument that women’s rights are human rights and human rights are women’s rights.

That was Madeleine, always cutting right to the heart of the matter with clarity and courage. She pushed the envelope her entire life.

Madeleine’s death is also a great loss for our country and for the cause of democracy at a time when it is under serious and sustained threat around the world and here at home. Now more than ever we could use Madeleine’s vital voice, her cleareyed view of a dangerous world and her unstinting faith in both the unique power of the American idea and the universal appeal of freedom and democracy. We can honor her memory by heeding her wisdom.

She saw the chronically underestimated Putin for what he is: a vicious autocrat intent on reclaiming Russia’s lost empire and a committed foe of democracy everywhere. In a prescient column in The Times published Feb. 23, she warned that an invasion of Ukraine would be “a historic error” that would leave Russia “diplomatically isolated, economically crippled and strategically vulnerable in the face of a stronger, more united Western alliance.” As happened so often, the man with the guns was wrong and Madeleine was right

In 2000, she was the first secretary of state to travel to North Korea, where she spent 12 hours negotiating with the dictator Kim Jong-il. But, as she often said, her crucial historical frame of reference was Munich, not Vietnam, so she had a deep appreciation for the risks of inaction. Today, with a rising tide of authoritarianism threatening democracy not just in Ukraine but all over the world, that is a lesson worth remembering.

As secretary of state, Madeleine helped my husband welcome Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic into NATO after the end of the Cold War. Years later, I asked her to head up an international commission for the Obama administration to redefine NATO’s mission for the 21st century. Having experienced Europe’s historic traumas firsthand, she understood that the security provided by NATO was the key to keeping the continent free, peaceful and undivided. She saw it as a political alliance, not just a military pact, cementing democracy in countries that had only recently freed themselves from authoritarianism.

Madeleine rejected the criticism, renewed recently, that NATO’s expansion needlessly provoked Russia and is to blame for its invasion of Ukraine. As the Princeton historian Stephen Kotkin has noted, that argument ignores Russia’s centuries-long efforts to dominate its neighbors. Madeleine would be quick to add that it also erases the aspirations and autonomy of the former Soviet bloc countries that threw off their chains, built fragile democracies and rightly worried about Russian revanchism. She would encourage us to listen to the insights of leaders like our friend Mr. Havel, who said the message of NATO expansion is that “Europe is no longer, and must never again be, divided over the heads of its people and against their will into any spheres of interest or influence.”

Make no mistake, if NATO had not expanded, Mr. Putin would be menacing not just Ukraine but the Baltic States and likely all of Eastern Europe. As the historian and journalist Anne Applebaum recently argued, “The expansion of NATO was the most successful, if not the only truly successful, piece of American foreign policy of the last 30 years.”

Madeleine also strongly disagreed with Donald Trump’s approach of treating America’s alliances as a protection racket where our partners must pay tribute or fend for themselves. She knew that U.S. alliances — especially with other democracies — are a military, diplomatic and economic asset that neither Russia nor China can match, despite their best efforts, and are crucial for our own national security.

After the insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, and Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn a free and fair election, Madeleine imagined Abraham Lincoln weeping. “My family came to America after fleeing a coup, so I know that freedom is fragile,” she wrote. “But I never thought I would see such an assault on democracy be cheered on from the Oval Office.” With the Republican Party recently declaring the insurrection and events that led to it to be “legitimate political discourse,” and some of the party’s most powerful media allies pushing Kremlin talking points on Fox News and elsewhere, it’s clear that the threat to our democracy that so alarmed Madeleine remains an urgent crisis.


The fundamental truth that Madeleine understood and that informed her views on all these challenges is that America’s strength flows not just from our military or economic might but from our core values. Back in 1995, Madeleine told me a story that still inspires me. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II, she visited parts of the Czech Republic that had been liberated by American troops in 1945. Many people waved American flags as she passed, and to her surprise, some had just 48 stars. They had to be decades old. It turned out that American G.I.s had handed out the flags a half-century earlier. Czech families said they had kept them hidden all through the years of Soviet domination, passing them down from generation to generation as the embodiment of their hope for a better, freer future.

Madeleine knew exactly what that meant. Even at the end of her life, she treasured her first glimpse of the Statue of Liberty, sailing into New York Harbor in 1948 as an 11-year-old refugee on a ship called the S.S. America. She would have been thrilled by President Biden’s announcement on Thursday that the United States will welcome up to 100,000 refugees fleeing Ukraine, and she would encourage us to do more to respond to this unfolding humanitarian nightmare. She would warn, as she did in her book, about the “self-centered moral numbness that allows Fascism to thrive,” and urge us to keep pushing the envelope for freedom, human rights and democracy. We should listen.
 
RIP




Madeleine Jana Korbel Albright, the first female secretary of state, who arrived in the U.S. as a young girl from war-torn Czechoslovakia before becoming a political and feminist icon, died Wednesday at 84.

Albright's death from cancer was confirmed by her family in a statement posted to Twitter on Wednesday.
Albright, who served as secretary of state from 1997 to 2001 under President Bill Clinton, pushed for NATO expansion eastward into the former Soviet bloc and helped lead the NATO bombing campaign in 1999 to halt ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. She previously served as Clinton's U.S. ambassador to the United Nations from 1993 to 1997.
Born in Prague in 1937, Albright – then Madeleine Korbel – fled to England with her family in 1939, less than two weeks after Nazi Germany invaded Czechoslovakia. While her family was of Jewish ancestry, she was raised Roman Catholic and only learned at the time of her 1997 secretary of state confirmation that three of her grandparents died in the Holocaust.
Albright's family lived in the cellar of an apartment in Notting Hill before returning to Prague after World War II. They moved to the U.S. in 1948 after the communist takeover of Czechoslovakia. Her family eventually settled in Denver, where her father worked as a dean of the school of international relations at the University of Denver.
"I lived in many, many places," Albright told USA TODAY in 2020 when she was recognized as one of USA TODAY's Women of the Century. "I was asked to describe myself in six words at dinner, which were 'worried, optimist, problem solver, grateful American.
You forgot “psychopathic murderer”.

 
Albright mentored women in both parties, including notables like Condoleeza Rice and Wendy Sherman, who is currently negotiating with the Russians to end the Ukraine war
 
Albright mentored women in both parties, including notables like Condoleeza Rice and Wendy Sherman, who is currently negotiating with the Russians to end the Ukraine war
Did she mentor women on how to commit mass murder?

Assorted neocons, imperialists, and NATO expansionists like Albright have gifted us with this stupid war - a fratricidal European conflict that will only benefit Xi Jin Ping.
 
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Albright calls President Trump "the 1st anti-democratic president in modern US history", in her book 'Fascism: A Warning'
 
The old hag could allow the deaths of 500,000 children and y'all'd would still be singing her praises...ohh wait....that is EXACTLY what she did. Fine. you put her on a pedestal..the left has lost their damn minds anyway. who cares. But we're not gonna do it.
She was secretary of state. It's the President of the US who decided not to protect Iraqui children, not Madeline Albright. She tended to be a bit partisan, and I think her attitude toward Republican Presidents Bush and Trump was pap. She still served the American people well in her capacity to call terrorist countries unsafe for Americans to travel in. The problem of Iraq fell to Clinton's successor.
 
a hipster in Brooklyn who heard Albright speak told a Russian newspaper that Albright was a "war mongering ghoul"...good times!
 
"we have all become familiar with the counter-terrorism mantra: see something, say something. I propose an added exhortation: do something. Each of us needs to decide in accordance with our talents what that something is, but it begins by pushing back harder against the debilitating cancer of cynicism" - Madeleine Albright, December 2018, reflecting on the tensions of The Trump Administration

"on the day the Nazis 1st changed my life, i could barely walk. it was March 15, 1939. Battalions of German stormtroopers invaded my native Czechoslovakia, escorted Hitler to Prague Castle, and pushed the world into WWII. After 10 days in hiding, my parents and I escaped to London. after 6 years, the Nazis surrendered, and we returned home with high hopes to build a new life in a free land. for a brief time, all was well. then in 1948, our country fell under the control of communists. once more my family was driven into exile. That Armistice Day, we arrived in the US where we were welcomed as refugees. I did everything I could to fit in, but i could not escape knowing that, even decisions made far away could spell the difference between life and death." - Madeleine Albright, reflecting on her youth years

"In those miraculous days, our TV brought news each morning of what had long seemed impossible. I can still picture the decisive moments of my native country's Velvet Revolution, so called because it was secured without the cracking of heads or gunfire. In Prague's historic Wenceslas Square, a crowd of 300,000 joyously rattled keys to emulate bells tolling at the end of Communist rule. On a balcony overlooking the throng was Vaclav Havel, the valiant playwright who 6 months earlier had been a prisoner of conscience and 5 weeks later would be sworn in as president of a free Czechoslovakia" - Madeleine Albright, reflecting on the fall of the Soviet Union
 
"we have all become familiar with the counter-terrorism mantra: see something, say something. I propose an added exhortation: do something. Each of us needs to decide in accordance with our talents what that something is, but it begins by pushing back harder against the debilitating cancer of cynicism" - Madeleine Albright, December 2018, reflecting on the tensions of The Trump Administration

"on the day the Nazis 1st changed my life, i could barely walk. it was March 15, 1939. Battalions of German stormtroopers invaded my native Czechoslovakia, escorted Hitler to Prague Castle, and pushed the world into WWII. After 10 days in hiding, my parents and I escaped to London. after 6 years, the Nazis surrendered, and we returned home with high hopes to build a new life in a free land. for a brief time, all was well. then in 1948, our country fell under the control of communists. once more my family was driven into exile. That Armistice Day, we arrived in the US where we were welcomed as refugees. I did everything I could to fit in, but i could not escape knowing that, even decisions made far away could spell the difference between life and death." - Madeleine Albright, reflecting on her youth years

"In those miraculous days, our TV brought news each morning of what had long seemed impossible. I can still picture the decisive moments of my native country's Velvet Revolution, so called because it was secured without the cracking of heads or gunfire. In Prague's historic Wenceslas Square, a crowd of 300,000 joyously rattled keys to emulate bells tolling at the end of Communist rule. On a balcony overlooking the throng was Vaclav Havel, the valiant playwright who 6 months earlier had been a prisoner of conscience and 5 weeks later would be sworn in as president of a free Czechoslovakia" - Madeleine Albright, reflecting on the fall of the Soviet Union
Let’s remember the Soviet Union fell because of the determination of Havel and Walesa and John Paul II and Thatcher and Reagan and millions of other freedom-fighters. Many in the Democratic Party establishment, which Albright served, were rather fond of the Soviet Union.
 
"i have been involved in 5 winning presidential campaigns & 8 losing ones. Winning is better, but we can learn as much or more from finishing second" - Albright...Hillary has been involved in 0 winning presidential campaigns, & 2 losing ones!
 
Amen my brotha her Amerikkkan crackkka kkkapitalism foreign policy be keepin' Africa down she a racist **** her.
The only question is whose troll sock account this is. Jitler back again?
 


this vile hellbitch. What arrogance...that this moron albright would make it to heaven in the first place. And i say that because SHE said it FIRST,...women who don't support other women (in politics that supports the killing of the unborn) there's a special place in hell for them. I suspect.....after having read Foxx's book of martyrs that Madeline has been shown her room in hell.

Hilliary is looking uglier and uglier. If American leftists vote for the more attractive candidate, she's in a world of trouble.

and i wonder if their praise of this woman on earth only hurts her position with judgement.
 

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