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Posts Tagged ‘POLITICS’:


Obama lands in Chile on Latin America trip

Published by in Uncategorized on March 21st, 2011 | Comments Off

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U.S.: Gaddafi not target of allied military action

Published by in Uncategorized on March 21st, 2011 | Comments Off

Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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Republican Tim Pawlenty expected to take election step

Published by in Uncategorized on March 21st, 2011 | Comments Off

Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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Obama, seeking deeper Latin America ties, grapples with Libya

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

By Alister Bull and Matt Spetalnick

RIO DE JANEIRO |
Sun Mar 20, 2011 11:05pm EDT

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – President Barack Obama will head to Chile on Monday to lay out his vision for deeper ties with Latin America he must balance that with his overnight of the U.S. military action to contain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Obama is expected to hail Chile’s transition from military rule to stable democracy as a model for Libya and other countries in the Arab world, which is being swept by popular rebellions against autocratic rule.

Obama plans a joint press conference with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera that will provide an opportunity for him to further explain why he ordered the U.S. military to join U.N.-sanctioned international action against Gaddafi.

Republican critics of Democrat Obama demand he clarify the mission’s goal. They say he has done a poor job of convincing Americans troubled the United States is undertaking military action in a third Arab country on top of Afghanistan and Iraq.

The strikes are sanctioned under a United Nations resolution to protect Libyan civilians by all necessary means from Gaddafi loyalists trying to suppress a popular uprising against his rule.

Obama, in a brief statement to reporters on Saturday in Brasilia as his five-day Latin American tour got underway, said he had ordered limited U.S. military action to support an international coalition to shield Libyan civilians from harm.

The president is juggling the U.S. involvement in Libya with the deadly nuclear crisis in Japan, while at the same time seeking to promote deeper ties in a fast-growing Latin America he sees as a fertile region for U.S. job-boosting exports.

The region was optimistic Obama would give it the respect it feels it deserves due to its economic health when he took office in 2009. But two years later there is a sense that relations have been neglected while he battles urgent domestic challenges and foreign wars.

Washington’s history with Latin America has included heavy-handed use of U.S. power for much of the 20th century to periods of inattention to the region over the past decade.

CHILE’S GOOD EXAMPLE

While Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s 1973 military coup in Chile, which human rights groups say the United States backed, evokes painful memories for many, a shift to the right last year after two decades of center-left rule underscores the transition to a free-market democracy.

Chile’s solid economic growth, success in easing poverty and peaceful transfer of power make it a poster child for transition in Latin America and Obama will stress this in a speech in Santiago.

Dan Restrepo, Obama’s top Latin American adviser, said the president would hold up the lessons learned by Chile during its transition as an example for other countries, while bringing up the crisis in Japan in the context of Chile’s own experience with natural disasters.

“You’ll see both presidents express solidarity with the Japanese people in light of the events that are unfolding and the tragedy that struck Japan with the earthquake and tsunami,” Restrepo told reporters traveling with Obama.

Chile suffered a severe earthquake last year which, like Japan’s recent catastrophe, triggered a devastating tsunami in which even more people died.

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Sarah Palin Remains Irrelevant in India (ContributorNetwork)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

COMMENTARY | Sarah Palin spoke to the India Today Conclave and wasn’t shy about her stances on foreign policy. Yet she still hasn’t decided to run for president. Palin also made strange statements about how she would have won the presidency in 2008 had she been the top choice and not the second name on the ticket.

India Today reports the former vice presidential candidate said she would have had “more decisiveness, less dithering” on the crisis in Libya.

Unfortunately, foreign military forces can’t just usurp other borders with impunity. That’s why the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously with five abstentions to authorize a no-fly zone over Libya. It came only after the Arab League asked the world body to intervene. French jets are now patrolling the skies over Libya to bring relief to beleaguered rebels after five weeks of fighting.

That dithering Palin spoke of was to take a cautious approach to Moammar Gadhafi. First the U.N. imposed arms embargoes, economic sanctions and then after those didn’t work force was used as a last resort. If Palin had her way, she’d shoot first and ask questions later like her stereotypical gun rhetoric.

She also said she wasn’t sure when she would run for president. Palin probably realized she should make that announcement on American soil not half a world away.

She even waffled on her own political party when she criticized Republicans as being weak.

“Too often, Republicans have the fighting instincts of sheep sometimes,” The Hill reported of Palin.

Do Republicans fight like sheep “often” or “sometimes?” Sounds like Palin has answered one too many opinion polls and thinks her answers are multiple choice. There’s only one answer and it can’t be both “often” and “sometimes.”

Palin was joking when she claimed she could have brought change had she been at the top of the ticket in 2008 according to Politico.

She then quickly stated “I wasn’t saying I should have been [a Presidential candidate],” Politico reported.

The GOP would have made an even bigger mistake to put an unknown governor of Alaska up for President in 2008. That move may even be a grave error in 2012 in a run against Obama vying for his second term.

Palin’s call for change in 2008 meant “going rogue” which isn’t a change at all. The United States went on its own to invade Iraq in 2003. Our foreign policies for years under the Bush administration were far from mainstream when we demanded a missile shield for eastern Europe to defend itself from a supposed Russian threat. Palin wouldn’t have changed any of those strong arm tactics.

Her speech in India was all about what she could have been or what Republicans might be. Instead of stepping up to the plate and being a strong candidate herself, she’s too busy criticizing everyone else. Until she stops dithering about her own political ambitions, Palin is little more than a political whiner who won’t do anything to solve problems.

She can comment all she wants to. As a political celebrity, she can’t pass laws or suggest legislation to Congress. Palin would have to be elected to something for that to happen.William Browning is a research librarian specializing in U.S. politics. Born in St. Louis, Browning is active in local politics and served as a campaign volunteer for President Barack Obama and Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill.

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Sarah Palin Remains Irrelevant in India
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