The press party at the Democratic National Convention in 1988 was a big deal. Someone told me 2,200 people were there: politicians, lobbyists, pollsters and people with influence. The press was badly outnumbered.
My job required an appearance. I made it and fled. I was congratulating myself on finding a quiet place in a noisy convention center when I noticed I wasn’t alone.
Another lover of quiet had beaten me to the spot. He stuck out a hand and said, “I’m Sam Nunn.”
But everybody knew who he was.
American politicians do so many idiotic things it’s easy to forget that there are people in Washington who know what they’re doing. Nunn was then a U.S. senator from Georgia. He had a reputation for knowing the details and being patient enough to look for reasonable solutions to thorny problems. Even back then, people were urging him to run for president.
The memory of that brief conversation came back because Nunn was in the paper the other day. He’s 87 and was attending an event at the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at Georgia Tech.
The discussion of American foreign policy was typical of Nunn. He talked about details — why 60 percent is an important number when you’re talking about uranium enrichment and why it’s not a bad benchmark in considering when to go to war. But he also gave reasons why he thought the United States had better ways, using diplomacy, to get what it wanted.
His remarks were bipartisan. He said he could understand the sentiment for regime change. He knew how those in power in Tehran had handled protesters. But he cautioned that the world is full of bad leaders, and the United States simply can’t get rid of them all. He quietly, by example, helped us put our sentiments aside and do some thinking.
As he talked, you could get a sense of what a reasonable approach to Iran would have been. It’s quite a contrast to what this county did: try to form a plan after the bombing started.
Patricia Murphy, the newspaper’s senior political columnist, pointed out that every time the country got into trouble people would urge Nunn to run. She asked him why he never did. He replied:
I’ve never looked back and regretted it. I did think about it for a while, but I looked in the mirror several times and I did not see a president staring back.
Sadly, I think he’s right. The country should want someone like Nunn as president. But the country I know always looks for something else.
I hope one day it grows up.
• Source: Patricia Murphy, “Sam Nunn on Iran, Congress and why he never ran for president”; The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, March 18, 2026. It’s here:
https://www.ajc.com/politics/2026/03/president-sam-nunn-it-would-have-had-a-ring-to-it/