Henry Kissinger may have declined to serve in any theoretical Herman Cain administration. But if a blissfully simple foreign policy map issued on Cain's website is any guide, the pizza magnate-turned-presidential candidate would be able to get by without him.
The world according to Herman Cain, cribbed from Facebook's map of global friendships and greeted with guffaws across the blogosphere, makes the George W. Bush universe of "good guys" and "bad guys", look positively, well, Kissingerian.
On Cain's map, the United States' most important friends and foes appear with a one, two or three-word label.
Canada, Japan and Israel are "Friend and Ally". Brazil and India are "Friend" and "Strategic Partner" respectively. Britain gets the top rating of "Our Special Relationship" - though Cain's alleged sexual peccadilloes may have Britain's Foreign Office cringing.
Then there are the bad guys - Iran, North Korea and Venezuela, described as "Adversary Regimes".
As for the fiendish complexities of relationships with Pakistan and Egypt, no worries. Put those two down as "Danger and Opportunity".
China is described as "Competitor", while Russia is labelled "Rival".
In fairness, it should be noted that even before he was left speechless by an elementary question about Libya last month, Cain never portrayed himself as a foreign policy savant.
"I'm not supposed to know anything about foreign policy," he has said. "Because you run for president, people say you need to have the answer. No, you don't! That's not good decision-making."
But the US and the world will surely be spared the experience.
After an improbable spell atop Republican polls, Cain seems close to leaving the race through allegations of serial sexual harassment, and a 13-year affair that ended in September. The candidate denies all, but yesterday dropped another hint he may throw in the towel.
"I will talk this through with my wife and family this weekend and re-evaluate," he told CNN.
Foreign policy maps are the least of his worries.
Independent