Ooops!! I Dropped My Pen Again!

How low will he go? Obama gives Japan’s Emperor Akihito a wow bow
(UPDATES: 12:22 p.m. A brief news video has been added below, showing the greeting in this photograph. Contrary to some claims, the video shows no reciprocal bow by the emperor, who traditionally bows to no one. And we’ve added a file photo from 2007 of Vice President Dick Cheney greeting the Japanese Emperor at the same residence in a different fashion.)
How low will the new American president go for the world’s royalty?

VP Cheney didn't drop his pen
This photo will get Democrat President Obama a lot of approving nods in Japan this weekend, especially among the older generation of Japanese who still pay attention to the royal family living in its downtown castle. Very low bows like this are a sign of great respect and deference to a superior.
To some in the United States, however, an upright handshake might have looked better. (See Cheney-Akihito photo, right).
Remember Michelle Obama casually patting Britain’s Queen Elizabeth on the back during their Buckingham Palace visit? America’s royalty tends to make movies and get bad reviews and lots of money as a sign of respect.
Obama could receive some frowns back home as he did for his not-quite-this-low-or-maybe-about-the-same-bow to the Saudi king not so long ago. (See photo here)
How times change under Democratic presidents.
Back in 1994 when President Bill Clinton appeared to maybe perhaps almost start to bow to Akihito at a White House encounter, U.S. officials rushed to deny it was any such a thing. And the N.Y. Times chronicled the comedic drama here.
Akihito, who turns 76 next month, is the eldest son and fifth child of Emperor Showa, the name given to an emperor and his reign after his death.
Emperor Showa is better known abroad by the life name of Hirohito. He became emperor in 1925 and died in 1989, the longest historically-known rule of the nation’s 125 emperors.
Hirohito presided over his nation’s growth from an undeveloped agrarian economy into the expansionist military power and ally of Nazi Germany of the 1930′s.
And, later, Japan became a global economic giant. Hirohito, along with Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, who authorized the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, were much reviled abroad during World War II.
Historically, debaDemocrat president Barack Obama bows to the Saudi kingte has simmered over how much of a political puppet Hirohito was to the country’s military before and during the war.
Even after Democratic President Harry Truman ordered the two atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the summer of 1945, there were strong forces within Japan that wanted to continue to fight the Americans in the spirit of kamikaze suicide pilots.
But Akihito’s father went on national radio, the first time his subjects had ever heard Hirohito’s voice, and without using the inflammatory word “surrender,” pronounced that the country must “accept the unacceptable.” It did.
Los Angeles Times










Gerald Baker Says:
The pen-dropping incident, to which you allude, must be that of President Truman, when he met with Hirohito on the USS Missouri, for the signing of the Japanese surrender treaty. I mentioned it on my blog, today, but am not sure of my source, for that information.
I remember that, when President Bush met with Prince Bandar, of Saudi Arabia, he used a more subtle approach to indicate his subservience to the latter. in the official picture, which was published in newspapers and, for a while, on a Wikipedia site, Bandar is shown sitting in a higher position than Bush, showing his de facto higher rank.
Posted on November 16th, 2009 at 7:21 pm
Howie Says:
No the dropped pen incident that I am alluding to is just a few months old. If you think back to when President Obama bowed to the King of Saudi Arabia, Press Sec Gates said that President Obama had just dropped his pen.
Posted on November 16th, 2009 at 11:10 pm
Gerald Baker Says:
I found a web site with the picture of Bush and Bandar, that shows Bandar in a much higher position than Bush:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/05/Prince_Bandar_bin_Sultan_with_G.W._Bush.jpg
I think, a likely reason that US presidents toady and kowtow to foreign rulers, is to get the cooperation of their subjects, by means of flattery. It reminds me of a somewhat related comment, by George Bernard Shaw:
“Vulgarity, in a king, flatters his subjects.”
Posted on November 17th, 2009 at 7:23 am