dyirbal’s blog

Just another Edublogs.org weblog

Boss orange

February 21st, 2008 · 3 Comments
Uncategorized




Foreign policy team follies

Today we turn to the foreign policy teams of the Presidential candidates and asses who they bring to the table as ‘experience’ in our troubled times. From Foreign Policy In Focus, article of 04 FEB 2008, Behind Obama and Clinton:

Contrasting Teams

Senator Clinton’s foreign policy advisors tend to be veterans of President Bill Clinton’s administration, most notably former secretary of state Madeleine Albright and former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger. Her most influential advisor – and her likely choice for Secretary of State – is Richard Holbrooke. Holbrooke served in a number of key roles in her husband’s administration, including U.S. ambassador to the UN and member of the cabinet, special emissary to the Balkans, assistant secretary of state for European and Canadian affairs, and U.S. ambassador to Germany. He also served as President Jimmy Carter’s assistant secretary of state for East Asia in propping up Marcos in the Philippines, supporting Suharto’s repression in East Timor, and backing the generals behind the Kwangju massacre in South Korea. Senator Barack Obama’s foreign policy advisers, who on average tend to be younger than those of the former first lady, include mainstream strategic analysts who have worked with previous Democratic administrations, such as former national security advisors Zbigniew Brzezinski and Anthony Lake, former assistant secretary of state Susan Rice, and former navy secretary Richard Danzig. They have also included some of the more enlightened and creative members of the Democratic Party establishment, such as Joseph Cirincione and Lawrence Korb of the Center for American Progress, and former counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke. His team also includes the noted human rights scholar and international law advocate Samantha Power – author of a recent New Yorker article on U.S. manipulation of the UN in post-invasion Iraq – and other liberal academics. Some of his advisors, however, have particularly poor records on human rights and international law, such as retired General Merrill McPeak, a backer of Indonesia’s occupation of East Timor, and Dennis Ross, a supporter of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank. Yes the article is pointing to major flaws in these two candidates!Now to those on the Left who point to nefarious dealings on the Carlyle Group, The Nation on 01 NOV 2004 in an article James Baker’s Double Life, by Naomi Klein will point out that it has not been acting alone in some realms talking about the pre-War Iraqi debt and Kuwaiti claims on Iraq:This is where the Carlyle/Albright consortium comes in. The premise of its proposal is that Iraq’s unpaid debts to Kuwait are not just a financial problem but a political and public relations problem as well. Global public opinion is no longer what it was when Kuwait was promised full reparations. Now the world is focused on reconstructing Iraq and forgiving its debts. If Kuwait is going to get its reparations awards, the cover letter argues, it will need to recast them not as a burden on Iraq but “as a key element in working toward regional stability and reconciliation.” Several parties involved in the consortium emphasized that the proposal concerned only reparations debts. Albright Group spokesperson Jamie Smith said, “We were asked to join a proposal to secure justice for victims of Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait and ensure that compensation to Kuwaiti victims–which was endorsed by the US government and the United Nations–be used to promote reconciliation, environmental improvements and investment in Kuwait, Iraq and the region.” In fact, the proposal does not restrict itself to reparations debt. The consortium also asks the government of Kuwait to give the consortium control over $30 billion in defaulted sovereign debts to be used as political leverage to secure reparations claims. Furthermore, most experts Michael Jackson mp3 on debt restructuring agree that Iraq’s debts must be looked at as a whole: There is little point forgiving Iraq’s sovereign debts if the country is still going to be saddled with an unmanageable reparations burden. This understanding
Usefull links: Kimbo vs tank winner, Lost 4 episode 3, Kristin chenowith, Drexel lacrosse, Cameroon info

Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

3 responses so far ↓

  • 1    Msn.com // Feb 23, 2008 at 8:34 pm

    [...] the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/02/prweb710014.htmUsefull links: Swimming nsw, Boss orange, Koco, Cameroon info, Obama t [...]

  • 2    Guess who s coming to dinner // Feb 24, 2008 at 5:32 pm

    [...] the 2008 Film Independent Spirit Awards are after the jump.Usefull links: Pa road conditions, Boss orange, Gene shallot, Forest whitaker, P [...]

  • 3    dyirbal's blog // Apr 2, 2008 at 4:35 pm

    [...] posts: Lynn redgrave, Boss orange, San antonio class, Winners of dancing with the stars, Gilman [...]

Leave a Comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image