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President Barack Obama delivers the keynote address at the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies 22nd Annual Awards Gala Dinner in Washington, Wednesday, May 4, 2016. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) Image Credit: AP

US President Barack Obama has embraced his role as comedian-in-chief. Whether in the well of Congress or at the lectern of the White House correspondents’ dinner, he can flash scathing wit followed by a slow-burn stare into the middle distance.

And because most humour is rooted in the truth of pain, and because self-deprecating humour is often the most truthful of all, it is not surprising that Obama can appreciate the power of Peanuts.

In a new archival edition of The Complete Peanuts (1999-2000; Volume 25) from Fantagraphics that hits shelves next week, Obama provides the foreword. And in a mere five paragraphs, it’s clear that the president’s sense of humour — even beneath that sometime professional air of aloof detachment — beats with the deeply human identification with Charlie Brown and the gang.

Yes, even the powerful leader of the free world can relate to the world’s worst baseball player.

“I grew up with Peanuts,” Obama writes. “But I never outgrew it.”

Creator Charles Schulz, the president continues, “treated childhood with all the poignant and tender complexity it deserves. He gave voice to all its joys and anxieties.”

Obama touches on the emotions that Schulz plumbed so brilliantly for a half-decade in his iconic strip: “Hope. Doubt. The exquisite pain of unrequited love. The self-exploration of what it means to be different.”

It’s reassuring to see these emotions acknowledged, however briefly, by any world leader. No matter how high one’s ambition, we must share our humanity or be lost.

Obama, like millions of fans worldwide, recognises why Peanuts is comics’ most truthfully human of security blankets.