Literature
The world's most powerful women: Three US secretaries of state and their accounts (Column: Bookends)
 
 
 If the US president is the world's most powerful leader, his secretary 
of state (or foreign minister) is a close second though maybe not as 
well-known. Of the 68 secretaries since 1790, few are recognised names -
 even in America - though six, right from the very first (Thomas 
Jefferson), went on to become presidents themselves. Only three have 
been women, but they happened to be in office at critical and 
challenging times, held their own in high-level diplomacy and have 
penned absorbing accounts of their experiences.
It may have taken
 the US more than 200 years to have a woman as its chief diplomat (being
 beaten by Romania, Israel, Sri Lanka, and Turkey among others) but then
 three held the post in the decade-and-a-half since 1996 (while one more
 was in contention in 2012 but withdrew). Daughters of a Central 
European emigre or an African American churchman and wife of a former 
president - the trio represented a cross-section of America's diversity,
 but had impressive credentials.
Though dealing with matters 
already out in public, their versions add considerable insight on 
responses to a wide array of key challenges faced by not only their 
country but the world at large in the 20th century's last decade and the
 21st's opening ones - of ethnic cleansing and genocide (and the global 
community's reaction), Islamist terrorism, the rise of China, and others
 - while giving an invaluable but sobering account of how some conflicts
 (Middle East) defy even the best efforts of superpowers to resolve.
The
 first of this trio, Madeleine K. Albright (1937-) was earlier appointed
 by president Bill Clinton as envoy to the UN in 1993 - a time when its 
credibility declined as it withdrew posthaste from a chaotic Somalia, 
failed to stop massacres in an unravelling Yugoslavia and seemed unable 
to gauge the scale of killings in Rwanda or respond effectively. In 
"Madam Secretary: A Memoir" (2003), she does not shy away from 
discussing these matters and taking responsibility but also bringing out
 the limitations - and the disunity - of great powers and others on the 
UN Security Council in responding to these events.
As secretary 
of state (1997-2001), Albright describes her determination not to let 
Kosovo become another Bosnia and the vigorous diplomacy needed to this 
end. And then there are riveting accounts of the frustration in nudging 
thr Israelis and the Palestinians towards talks with meaningful 
outcomes, of attending the UN conference on women in Beijing, of 
experiencing the surrealistic atmosphere of North Korea, and the US' 
first experience of Al Qaeda through the 1998 bombing of embassies in 
Kenya and Tanzania.
Condoleezza Rice (1954-), who held the post 
2005-09 in George H.W. Bush's second term, was his national security 
advisor (also being the first woman in this post) 2001-05 when 9/11 and 
the second Iraq war took place. In "No Higher Honor: A Memoir of My 
Years in Washington" (2011), she begins with those turbulent days in 
September 2001 and of fashioning the response against Al Qaeda and 
Taliban and then as the Bush administration changed tack and moved 
towards war with Saddam Hussain's Iraq. While acknowledging the 
intelligence about the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq proved wrong,
 she remains steadfast that the US intervention for regime change was 
justified.
Rice also deals with the issues where progress faces 
frequent reversals or roadblocks - the Middle East, the Korean peninsula
 and so on, as well as other high-level diplomacy which saw her log 1.06
 million air miles in visits to 83 countries (though this was beaten by 
her successor, with 112 countries though only 956,733 air miles).
A
 former first lady, a two-term senator and contestant for her party's 
nomination for president in 2008 (and coming close to winning), Hillary 
Rodham Clinton (1947-) had no lack of experience for the post, where the
 initial priorities were repairing fractured alliances and ending two 
wars. And soon there was the Arab Spring while unresolved conflicts 
continued to fester.
In "Hard Choices" (2014), Clinton (2009-13) 
focusses on responses to these and other challenges as well as her fresh
 initiatives - championing "smart power" diplomacy, use of social media 
and reaching out to common people and civil society in countries she 
visited. Of key interest is the account of the May 2011 raid to settle 
scores with Osama Bin Laden, of negotiating military intervention in 
Libya, of dealing with Pakistan, and of facilitating an end to Myanmar's
 diplomatic isolation (and meeting Aung San Suu Kyi).
Indian 
readers might not be pleased at the country's lack of detailed mention 
except in Rice's account, but the authors hold they were forced to leave
 out several issues to keep their books to manageable levels - though 
they still range between 600 and 800 pages! But for anyone interested in
 understanding the responsibilities and limitations of US power, they 
are essential reading.
(08.03.2015 - Vikas Datta is an Associate 
Editor at IANS. The views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at
 vikas.d@ians.in )
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	