Henry: Is Obama's Nobel a blessing or curse?
CNN Senior White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Yes he can win the Nobel Peace Prize. Even on the same day that
President Obama speaks about his Nobel award at the White House on Friday.
The confluence of events -- some might even call it irony -- was a stark reminder that this award was more about the promise of change than actual change. Peace is not at hand in Iraq or Afghanistan, and while the president has articulated a new approach to the world it will be difficult to translate that vision into some actual victories.
"Even as we strive to seek a world in which conflicts are resolved peacefully and prosperity is widely shared, we have to confront the world as we know it today," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden. "I am the
Let me be clear that I don't buy into any of this silliness from some pundits about how winning such a prestigious honor could backfire on Obama. Becoming only the fourth
But it's important to note that the award does not create one job in the U.S. economy. It does not provide one Republican vote on
With the Norwegian Nobel committee citing the president's "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples," one top Obama adviser told me this is an affirmation of the administration's aggressive efforts to reach out across the world. But this adviser quickly acknowledged the hard work of trying to turn that dialogue into actual progress on difficult problems like forging Israeli-Palestinian peace. Watch Obama's speech on Nobel award »