Puja Deverakonda on July 16, 2008 at 9:33pm.
Yes, if campaign officials select the new favored location for Obama's July 24th speech, the Berlin Siegessäule (Victory Column). Putting Obama’s speech at the Siegessäule would be a smart public diplomacy for three key reasons: 1) "Change" - After the Brandenburg Gate proved to be contentious, other ideas tossed around by the campaign were Tempelhof Airport, site of the Berlin Airlift, Checkpoint Charlie, the only East/West Berlin checkpoint through with non-Germans were allowed to pass, and Schoeneberg Town Hall, the site of John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech as well as a rally immediately after the fall of the Berlin wall. All these places evoke Berlin's Cold War History. By picking a monument that is both symbolic of Berlin and commemorative of another history (Prussian military victories), Obama's speech would now symbolize an intentional break with Berlin's Cold War past, and, consistent with the theme of his campaign, ushering in a new era for German-American/EU-American relations.