Obama and the case of the missing 'thesis'
October 6, 2008 | Katy, Texas | Vetting explained
Bossie came up dry, but said the effort was well worth it. "A thesis entitled Soviet Nuclear Disarmament, written at the height of The Cold War in 1983, might shed some light upon what Barack Obama thought about our most pressing foreign policy issue for 40-plus years (U.S.-Soviet Relations)," he wrote in an e-mail to NBC News. So what does the missing paper say, and could it be politically damaging to Obama? The Obama campaign won't offer any guidance since it says it doesn't have a copy. Spokesman Ben LaBolt wouldn't even say whether Sen. Obama threw out his copy or lost it. So we turned for answers to the former professor who graded the now-elusive paper. Ace student In 1983, as a senior at Columbia in New York, Barack Obama enrolled in an intense, eight-student honors seminar called American Foreign Policy. His former professor, Michael Baron, recalled in an interview with NBC News that Obama easily aced the year-long class. But Baron says he never had any inkling that the gangly senior would scale such heights. "You wouldn't say, ‘Oh, he's going to be secretary of state or president someday'," Baron said. Obama was whip smart and "clearly one of the top one or two students in the class," he said, but Obama's seven classmates also could hold their own. "No real dolts in the class," Baron remembered. Twenty-five years later, Baron is president of a digital-media company in Florida and has hung up his professorial tweeds for good. He had saved Obama's senior paper for years, and even hunted for it again this month in some boxes. But he said his search was fruitless, and he now thinks he tossed it out eight years ago during a move. Baron described the paper as a "thesis" or "senior thesis" in several interviews, and said that Obama spent a year working on it. Baron recalls that the topic was nuclear negotiations with the Soviet Union. "My recollection is that the paper was an analysis of the evolution of the arms reduction negotiations between the Soviet Union and the United States," Baron said in an e-mail. "At that time, a hot topic in foreign policy circles was finding a way in which each country could safely reduce the large arsenal of nuclear weapons pointed at the other ... For U.S. policy makers in both political parties, the aim was not disarmament, but achieving deep reductions in the Soviet nuclear arsenal and keeping a substantial and permanent American advantage. As I remember it, the paper was about those negotiations, their tactics and chances for success. Barack got an A." Baron said that, even if he could find a copy of the paper, it would likely disappoint Obama's critics. "The course was not a polemical course, it was a course in decision making and how decisions got made," he said. "None of the papers in the class were controversial." So would it provide any political ammunition today? "I don't think it would at all," Baron said. "It wasn't a position paper; it was an analysis of decision-making."
Obama and his former Columbia professor, Michael Baron, at a political event in 2007. Baron acknowledges that he's a big Obama supporter. He wrote a letter of recommendation for his former student when Obama applied to Harvard Law School. And, Federal Election Commission records show, the former professor has donated $1,250 to Obama's presidential campaign. The dog ate my homework? Columbia University can't help solve the mystery, either. The university says that it never had a copy of the paper in its archives, and doesn't today. A spokesman said that no student technically could have written a thesis in 1983, since the university didn't even have a thesis requirement for undergraduates then. "At the time Barack Obama was a student, the political science department had no mechanism by which undergraduate political science majors in Columbia College could receive recognition for writing an independent thesis," said university spokesman Robert Hornsby. "The department's procedures for students to write theses were created in the 1990s." Obama's spokesman seconds that notion: "Senator Obama did not write a thesis, in fact, Columbia's political science department didn't even begin offering the option for College undergraduates to write independent credit theses until the 1990s, well after Obama had graduated." [In February, Obama's campaign did make available a copy of Michelle Obama's senior thesis, written at Princeton University and entitled "Princeton-Educated Blacks and the Black Community." But that was an official thesis, Obama's folks said, and not just a "course paper."] Case closed? So is that it? Is the Case of the Missing "Thesis" over? Not so fast, Sherlock. "If Obama says he doesn't have a copy, I would have to call him a liar," declared David Bossie, the conservative activist. "Obama has it or knows where it is but no one has pressed him seriously for it," Bossie said. In other words, for some, the search continues. - Tags:
- 2008_election,
- undecided
- Posted in Assignment:
- Undecided voters
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