New Administration and Study Abroad
Seton Hall > News & Events Wednesday, February 11, 2009
by: Nandor Forgach
Free Trade
Under Threat: Impact for U.S. Business
A Team of Expatriates: Many of Obama's
Top Advisers Have Learned and Lived Abroad Newsweek, January 26,
2009
By Jeffrey Bartholet and Daniel Stone
The fact that Valerie Jarrett spent her early childhood in Iran made it
easier to bond with Barack Obama. The subject came up the first time
the two met, at a restaurant in the Loop area of downtown Chicago in
1991. Obama had grown up overseas --spending four years in Indonesia as
a boy --and Jarrett was born in the ancient city of Shiraz, where her
American father, a medical doctor, helped found the city's first modern
hospital. Valerie's early languages were Farsi, French and “a little
bit of English.” To this day, her favorite foods include lamb and rice
with Persian spices. “If I walk into a house and I smell saffron, I'm
happy,” she says.
In that first encounter, Jarrett recalls discussing with Obama how
their years overseas helped shape their world views. “I guess the most
basic way is by being around people who have such a broad diversity of
backgrounds,” she says.
For Jarrett's family, who traveled extensively even after they returned
to the United States when Valerie was six, that meant socializing with
people from Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. “You
appreciate and are maybe more open to different perspectives,” she
says.
It's a common point among Obama's top aides, a surprising number of
whom grew up in other countries --the insight they developed by seeing
America from the outside in. The former expats include retired Marine
Gen. James L. Jones, the incoming national-security adviser, who lived
in France for most of his childhood; Timothy Geithner, the nominee for
Treasury secretary, who grew up in Zimbabwe, India and Thailand;
retired Maj. Gen. J. Scott Gration, a child of missionaries in Africa
who is a leading contender to become the new NASA administrator; and
Jarrett, a close personal friend of the Obamas' who will serve as a top
domestic-policy adviser.
Obama has identified his years in Indonesia, and later travels in
Pakistan, as critical to shaping his views on America's role in the
world. “If you don't understand these cultures, then it's very hard for
you to make good foreign-policy decisions,” he told an Iowa campaign
crowd in 2007. “The benefit of my life of having both lived overseas
and traveled overseas … is I have a better sense of how they're
thinking and what their society is really like.”
Most of the world doesn't associate that kind of understanding with
Americans, and with some reason. Even now, only about 22 percent of
Americans have passports, while in many Western European countries the
number is much higher --reaching 71 percent in the United Kingdom. But
as the world shrinks, the numbers of Americans working and studying
outside of the country is rising. In 2006 -07, more than 241,000
Americans studied abroad, up from less than 100,000 who did so a decade
earlier. The State Department estimates that more than 5 million
Americans live overseas. For the generation of Americans coming of age
now, some of the most significant opportunities --for work, investment,
recreation and learning --will be global.
Gration left America in 1952, when he boarded a ship called the African
Lightning and steamed out of New York harbor at the age of about 18
months. His parents were missionaries with the Africa Inland Mission.
They were heading to the Kenyan port of Mombasa, and then inland by car
to the Congo. Three times the family had to flee the Congo --after
independence and a military coup in 1960, after the execution of Prime
Minister Patrice Lumumba in 1961 and lastly during civil war in 1964.
The family lost everything then, and settled in Kenya before returning
to the United States in 1967. “You spend some time [in a country] and
all of a sudden you can't stay in your house because the rebels are
coming,” says Gration. “Life itself is a gift and now you realize that
freedom and life, those things we [Americans] take for granted, those
values you can't put your arms around, are so precious and worth dying
for.”
Gration first met Obama when he was serving as director of Strategy,
Plans and Policy for the European Command. In that capacity, he briefed
then Senator Obama on foreign affairs, and later joined him on a trip
to Africa in 2006. Last year, Gration left the Republican Party to vote
for Obama in the New Jersey primary. He was attracted by Obama's
interest in issues “that are borderless”: the environment, trade,
energy, human rights. “When you grow up as I did, surrounded by
Africans, you see them as individuals --the kids I grew up with, the
kids I played soccer with, [the people with whom] I went and ate around
the fires,” says Gration. “These were my African buddies, and so for
me, when I see the strife in Darfur and when I see what's happening in
eastern Congo, it's not just a problem. It's people.”
Expats also learn, in a personal way, the resentments that foreigners
sometimes feel toward the United States. Growing up in France after
World War II, the future General Jones went to local schools outside of
Paris, then to a NATO school. “In postwar France there was a lot of
anti-American sentiment because of the number of bases we had and the
heavy footprint we showed.”
As a child and a teen, Jones would return to Missouri for two-week
stints every few years, and he yearned for the kind of life where he
could play baseball instead of soccer and fencing. But he also recalls
watching footage of the civil-rights movement --the marches, the
struggle for school integration in Little Rock, the atrocities of the
Ku Klux Klan --on French television. “It was absolutely just a surreal
experience for me,” he says. He was very proud to be American, yet also
shocked and confused by what he was watching.
Relatives in the United States sent Jones care packages --blue jeans
and other American-style clothes. When he rode the French buses, the
locals thought he was a tourist. “What they didn't know was that I
understood everything they were saying,” he says. “It wasn't always
very flattering.” One morning, his father woke up to find U.S. GO HOME
splashed in white paint on his black Chevrolet Bel Air. At other times,
tensions resulted in conflict. ” I got in more fights as a kid as a
result of nationality than any other reason.”
But Jones grew fond of France, and he also had classmates from Germany,
Spain and other NATO countries. That proved useful when he became
Supreme Allied Commander in Europe years later. “You develop a fine ear
for listening to nuance, and to what it is people are saying, but also
how they are saying it,” he says. “You have to be able to look at the
same problem through different prisms to be … successful in the
international environment.”
Now Jones encourages young people to go out and see other countries and
cultures. Anyone who has the opportunity and doesn't seize it “is
really missing out on one of the most important components of how to be
successful in today's shrinking world,” he says. “And if you're going
to hold national office, I think it's an imperative.” Obama would
surely agree.
For more information please contact:
Nandor Forgach
(973) 761-9072
oip@shu.edu