Showing posts with label America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America. Show all posts

Saturday, January 26, 2013

international politics: What Did Obama’s Inaugural Address Say About Foreign Policy?


What Did Obama’s Inaugural Address Say About Foreign Policy?

by James M. Lindsay 

January 22, 2013

U.S. President Barack Obama delivers his inaugural address in Washington on January 21, 2013 (Brian Snyder/Courtesy Reuters).U.S. President Barack Obama delivers his inaugural address in Washington on January 21, 2013 (Brian Snyder/Courtesy Reuters).
Conventional wisdom has it that second-term presidents inevitably concentrate on foreign policy because they can’t get much done on domestic policy. To judge by President Obama’sinaugural address yesterday, he’s not convinced that the pundits have it right.
Unlike George W. Bush, who devoted his second inaugural address eight years ago to arguing that “survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands,” Obama largely talked about creating a more perfect union at home. He warned that growing economic inequality threatens America’s promise. He hailed the country’s social safety net for enabling Americans “to take the risks that make this country great.” And he called for continuing the “journey” toward ensuring that all Americans enjoy equality under the law.
When Obama turned to foreign policy, he surprisingly led with the need to battle climate change. He campaigned in 2008 on ambitious plans to curb the emission of heat-trapping gases. Those efforts mostly fell by the wayside during the first term in the face of Republican opposition, and Obama seldom mentioned climate change during the 2012 campaign. With memories of Superstorm Sandy still fresh and the public worried about jobs, he apparently sees a political opening to jumpstart action. He portrayed efforts to develop sustainable energy as essential for avoiding catastrophic weather and ensuring America’s “economic vitality.”
Obama used the rest of his brief foreign policy remarks to make the case for the benefits of diplomacy—and to signal that his appetite for foreign interventions is low. While acknowledging the value of “strength of arms,” he warned against “perpetual war”—no doubt alluding to his plans to scale back America’s commitment in Afghanistan substantially. He pledged to strengthen “institutions that extend our capacity to manage crisis abroad” and to “show the courage” to resolve differences with others peacefully. And like virtually every president in living memory, he pledged his commitment to strengthening America’s alliances and to supporting democracy around the world.
Obama left it to his audience to speculate how these general observations might translate into specific foreign policy choices. Inaugural addresses are, after all, a time for broad themes rather than detailed programmatic agendas. But the president could find it difficult to follow his own advice. Enthusiasm on Capitol Hill for tackling the causes of climate change (as opposed to dealing with its consequences) remains low. His administration’s reliance on drone strikes in battling al-Qaeda suggests that perpetual war might be a reality, and budding crises in the East China and South China seas could test America’s strength of arms. Diplomacy requires having a willing diplomatic partner, something that might be absent on critical issues such as Iran and Syria. And it is easy to call for better institutions; it is hard to build them.
The hope implicit in Obama’s inaugural address is that world events will not force him to make tough foreign policy choices but rather give him the time to move forward with his domestic agenda. Perhaps they will. But even then, the basic reality of American politics remains unchanged from Obama’s first term: he faces a Republican Party adamantly opposed to much of what he hopes to accomplish at home, and with its control of the House of Representatives, fully capable of stopping legislation in its tracks.
So either way the pundits might have it right after all—Obama could be spending much more time on foreign policy during his second term than his second inaugural address suggests.


source:

Thursday, January 24, 2013

international issue in latin America: Venezuela VP warns of actions to thwart assassination plot


VENEZUELA

Venezuela VP warns of ‘actions’ to thwart assassination plot


 

Venezuelan Vice President Nicolás Maduro warned the opposition that the government would be taking ‘actions’ to stop what he said was an assassination plot against him and National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/23/3197258/venezuela-vp-warns-of-actions.html?cid=nlc-dailybrief-daily_news_brief-link22-20130124#storylink=cp



y

JWYSS@MIAMIHERALD.COM

Venezuela marked the 55th anniversary of its return to democracy Wednesday amid deep political divisions and accusations from both sides that their foes were bent on violence, and even assassination.
At a massive rally, Vice President Nicolás Maduro said there were clear indications that “infiltrated” groups were trying to kill him and National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello.
On the other side of town, huddled in a gymnasium, a coalition of opposition parties accused the government of trying to incite violence on the streets and ratchet up fear to distract the nation from its pressing problems.
Standing in front of a massive banner of the president, Maduro told chanting supporters that the administration had uncovered plans to kill him and Cabello and then blame it on an internal power struggle.
“Don’t be surprised by the actions we take within the next hours or the next days,” he warned the opposition. “And those criminals who infiltrated our country shouldn’t come asking for forgiveness.”
During last year’s presidential campaign, Chávez had maintained foreign mercenaries were plotting against him, including a U.S. citizen —reportedly a former Marine — who was arrested in August. Nothing has come of that case.
Wednesday’s dueling events showed, once again, that the ruling PSUV has the ability to dominate the streets and hem in the opposition even without President Hugo Chávez, who has been in a Cuban hospital for more than a month recovering from cancer surgery.
The rallies marked the 1958 overthrow of dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez who ruled the country for seven years. Earlier this month, the opposition had said it would mark the date by staging a march to protest what they see as the government’s trampling of the constitution. Days later, however, the government also called its supporters to take the streets, and the opposition scaled-back its plans to avoid violence.
On Wednesday, Miranda Gov. Henrique Capriles, who lost against Chávez in the October presidential race, said the government was hoping to stir up trouble.
“The government wanted a confrontation today,” he said at the packed gymnasium where the opposition had gathered. “We are not going to fall into their trap. As long as they keep promoting violence, we’ll keep betting on the peace and tranquility of our nation.”
If Chávez were to step down or die, the constitution calls for new elections within 30 days. Many believe that Capriles, 40, would be the natural candidate to face Maduro or any other Chávez successor.
Political divisions run deep in Venezuela, but this has been a tense month in the oil-rich nation, as the opposition has insisted that the administration is violating the constitution by claiming that Chávez is still in charge even though he has not been seen or heard from since Dec. 10.
On Wednesday, the government said a reporter for state-run VTV television was hospitalized after being beaten at the opposition rally.
On Tuesday, opposition legislator Julio Borges said he had been assaulted on the floor of the National Assembly by PSUV congressman Claudio Farías. Farías maintains that Borges provoked him by insulting Chávez and shoving him.
The tension comes as the administration says Chávez is recovering from his fourth-round of surgery to treat an undisclosed form of cancer. In recent communiqués, the administration has said he’s alert, giving orders and cracking jokes.
Maduro told the Chavista crowds Wednesday that he and the president of the state-run PDVSA oil company Rafael Ramirez were on their way to Cuba to consult with the leader.
“What do you want us to take to Chávez?” Maduro asked the masses.
“Love!” they replied.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/23/3197258/venezuela-vp-warns-of-actions.html?cid=nlc-dailybrief-daily_news_brief-link22-20130124#storylink=cp



source:

security issue in east asia: U.S. envoy warns N. Korea against conducting nuclear test


(3rd LD) U.S. envoy warns N. Korea against conducting nuclear test
SEOUL, Jan. 24 (Yonhap) -- A special envoy from Washington warned Pyongyang Thursday against conducting a nuclear test, minutes before North Korea threatened to carry out an atomic test and more rocket launches directed at the United States in retaliation to toughened U.N. sanctions.

   "Whether North Korea tests or not, it's up to North Korea. We hope they don't do it, we call on them not to do it. It will be a mistake and a missed opportunity if they were to do it," said Glyn Davies, the U.S. special envoy on North Korea policy, when asked about the possibility of a nuclear test by North Korea.

  



"This is not a moment to increase tensions on the Korean Peninsula. This is the opportunity (for North Korea) to seize the moment" to engage with the outside world, Davies said.

   Davies spoke to reporters in Seoul after meeting with his South Korean counterpart, Lim Sung-nam, Seoul's chief envoy to the stalled six-party talks aimed at persuading the North to give up its nuclear weapons ambition.

   Before the meeting, Lim told Davies that a "close consultation between you and me, between Seoul and Washington, will be very important in this period of political transition here and beyond, and that will be our common asset in dealing with North Korea and the North Korean nuclear issue."

   Asked whether South Korea and the U.S. were considering additional bilateral sanctions against North Korea, Davies replied that the allies will focus on "implementing provisions of sanctions by the U.N. Security Council, and then, we will take a look at what further steps might be necessary."

   Minutes after Davies' remarks, the North's powerful National Defense Commission ratcheted up its threat of a nuclear test.

   "We do not hide that the various satellites and long-range rockets we will continue to launch, as well as the high-level nuclear test we will proceed with, are aimed at our arch-enemy the United States," the North's defense commission said in a statement carried by KCNA.

   It didn't say when it would detonate a nuclear device or what a "high-level" nuclear test might be, but Seoul's intelligence officials said Wednesday that North Korea has completed all technical preparations for a nuclear test and one could be carried out in a few days if the communist country makes the decision to do so.

   Seoul's foreign ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young expressed deep regret at the North's threat of conducting a nuclear test.

   "The government deeply regrets that North Korea made such a statement and we again strongly urge North Korea not to make any further provocations, including a nuclear test," Cho told reporters in a regular press briefing.
North Korea angrily responded to the U.N. resolution that widened sanctions in response to the North's December rocket launch, saying it will strengthen its "nuclear deterrence."

   Intelligence officials said North Korea had dug a tunnel for a test at its Punggye-ri nuclear test site, but the tunnel has now been plugged with dirt and concrete, suggesting that all measuring and other equipment has already been installed inside.

   North Korea had detonated nuclear devices at the Punggye-ri test site in 2006 and 2009, following long-range rocket launches.

   Professor Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said the Thursday statement by the North's top military body might be interpreted as a notification that it could soon conduct a third nuclear test.

   "I believe that the statement by the North's National Defense Commission was a forewarning that it could conduct a nuclear test within one month," Yang said.

   Some analysts have speculated that North Korea could use a uranium device for the first time after two previous tests with plutonium devices. North Korea surprised the world in late 2010 by showing its modern uranium enrichment facility to a U.S. scientist, a facility that could be easily modified to produce highly enriched uranium (HEU).

   North Korea claims the uranium enrichment program is for peaceful energy development but outside experts believe that it would give the country a new source of fission material to make atomic bombs, in addition to its widely known plutonium-based nuclear weapons program.

   Asked about the North's allusion to a "high-level nuclear test," an intelligence source in Seoul said, "I think it is highly likely that North Korea would conduct a third nuclear test with HEU."

   Despite the North's rare threat of a nuclear test and more missile launches, the U.S. envoy Davies reminded North Korea that the Washington is "still open to authentic and credible negotiations to implement the September 19, 2005 joint statement."

   "We are willing to extend our hand if Pyongyang chooses the path to peace and progress by letting go of its nuclear weapons and its multi-stage missiles," Davies said.

   "If North Korea comes into compliance with Security Council resolutions and takes irreversible steps leading to denuclearization, the United States and, we believe, other partners in the six-party process will do the hard work with the DPRK (North Korea) of finding a peaceful way forward," Davies said.

   "It is very much up to Pyongyang to decide," the U.S. envoy said.

   kdh@yna.co.kr
(END)

source:
english.yonhapnews.co.kr

Security Issue in East Asia : 2nd LD) S. Korea, U.S. ponder 'additional sanctions' against N. Korea


(2nd LD) S. Korea, U.S. ponder 'additional sanctions' against N. Korea
SEOUL, Jan. 23 (Yonhap) -- South Korea and the United States are considering slapping their own "additional sanctions" on North Korea in addition to a new U.N. resolution that increased sanctions against the North for its December rocket launch, a senior Seoul diplomat said Wednesday.

   The idea of Seoul and Washington imposing their own sanctions against Pyongyang will be one of the topics for the Thursday talks in Seoul between Glyn Davies, Washington's special representative for North Korea Policy, and South Korea's chief nuclear envoy Lim Sung-nam.

   Davies is due to arrive in Seoul on Wednesday after the U.N. Security Council ordered new sanctions against North Korea's December rocket launch and vowed to take an unspecified "significant action" if the North carries out another rocket launch or a nuclear test.

   "We have been in discussions with the U.S. side about additional bilateral sanctions against the North following the U.N. resolution," the diplomat said on the condition of anonymity.

   Possible options would include making it more difficult for North Korean ships to travel in waters near the Korean Peninsula and strengthening inspections of North Korean ships suspected of engaging in weapons trafficking in accordance with U.N. sanctions, the diplomat said.

   South Korea has also been "in negotiations with other relevant countries about additional bilateral sanctions against North Korea," the diplomat said.

   In a swift response to the U.N. resolution, North Korea's foreign ministry threatened to strengthen its "nuclear deterrence," in an indication that it could conduct another nuclear test.

   The diplomat said South Korea has been monitoring activities at a possible nuclear site in North Korea to determine if the North's third nuclear test is imminent, but said that "so far there has been no imminent sign of a nuclear test," adding that they are taking precautions and will be prepared to deal with all possible situations.

   North Korea has been under U.N. sanctions since 2006 when it conducted its first nuclear test. The sanctions were tightened in 2009 after its second nuclear test.




Later Wednesday, Seoul's foreign ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young said South Korea will "review bilateral measures against North Korea with relevant countries while focusing on implementing the U.N. resolution."

   Cho labeled the North's indication of a nuclear test as "very regrettable," while South Korea is closely monitoring activities at the North's nuclear test sites.

   The spokesman also ruled out a meeting between Davies and South Korean President-elect Park Geun-hye.

   kdh@yna.co.kr
(END)

source:
english.yonhapnews.co.kr