Postcard from NATO summit: What are all these people doing in Chicago?
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| Chicago
锘縏he young woman at the H&M counter held back the bag of merchandise. 鈥淐an I ask you a question?鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat is NATO?鈥
I had stopped in at the H&M on State Street after earlier discovering that my hotel had a swimming pool. I figured the Swedish budget emporium would have a swimsuit that wouldn鈥檛 break the bank (mission accomplished: basic trunks, $12.95). The sales clerk had her eye on my press credential, and the lanyard emblazoned with 鈥淣ATO 2012 CHICAGO鈥 that held it around my neck.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the military alliance that unites the US and European countries. They agree to defend each other from outside threats, and once in awhile the leaders meet,鈥 was my paltry and unsatisfactory answer to her question.
She wanted to know more. 鈥淵ou said military?鈥 she continued, still clutching my bag. 鈥淪o why are they in Chicago?鈥 聽
It's a fair question. This is only the third time since NATO was formed in 1949 that the US has hosted a summit, and it is the first time ever for one to be held in an American city other than Washington.
Outside on State Street, the Chicago police were three or four to a corner, just in case a rogue anti-NATO protest flared up. Large swaths of the young clerk鈥檚 city were cordoned off, urban ghost towns set aside for President Obama and his guests. I could see what it was that had filled her with questions, why perhaps she had seized on the word 鈥渕ilitary.鈥
Besides that, the local press and TV seemed to be focused on the dangers and inconveniences the summit poses for the city 鈥 the anticipated, possibly violent demonstrations, the closed major thoroughfares 鈥 and less on the whats and whys of the big gathering.
So why Chicago? I told her I could imagine that the mayor, the president鈥檚 good friend, might have suggested it, and that Mr. Obama probably wanted to show off his hometown to this big group of foreigners. In fact he鈥檇 said as much as he greeted the NATO leaders.
To my surprise, there was one more question. Still smiling, still curious, she wanted to know what was so important that all these leaders would come to Chicago to discuss it. 鈥淲ill they actually decide something?鈥 she wondered.
Another good question. 鈥淲ell, they鈥檙e going to talk a lot about Afghanistan, because the other NATO countries have soldiers fighting the war there, like we do,鈥 I said. 聽
I was conscious of the line of customers ready to cash out. I sensed I was holding things up, but I also felt as if my answer was not yet good enough. 鈥淎ll the NATO countries have decided to have their soldiers out of Afghanistan within a couple of years, including us,鈥 I said. 鈥淏ut Obama doesn鈥檛 want us to be left over there on our own, so he鈥檚 going to try to convince the others to stick around with us. So we鈥檒l see.鈥
At that she handed over my bag. 鈥淥K, thanks for explaining that,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what all this was about,鈥 she said, indicating 鈥渙ut there鈥 with her eyes.
Then her next customer was at the counter, and I stepped outside.