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Показаны сообщения с ярлыком Obama. Показать все сообщения
Показаны сообщения с ярлыком Obama. Показать все сообщения

суббота, 20 декабря 2014 г.

Russian biker "Surgeon" was adding in sanction list by Obama

Russian biker "Surgeon" was adding in sanction list by Obama.
Let me remind you that the famous Russian biker with his band accompanied the first humanitarian aid to the South-East of Ukraine

Biker Zaldostanov Alexander, better known under the name of "Surgeon", thanked President Barack Obama for the recognition of his services before Russia,







вторник, 16 декабря 2014 г.

March in Madrid in support of Donbass

March in support of Donbass was to the streets of Madrid on Sunday
Protesters chanted slogans "Poroshenko is killer" and "Obama and Merkel, hands off the DNR."



суббота, 13 декабря 2014 г.

воскресенье, 22 июня 2014 г.

четверг, 12 июня 2014 г.

пятница, 6 сентября 2013 г.

среда, 4 сентября 2013 г.

среда, 17 июля 2013 г.

oozes TO RUSSIA FROM USA

You'll love to hate what oozes TO RUSSIA FROM USA IN THIS ARTICLE:

“There's only one way that Obama can make it truly clear he understands his "reset" has failed and intends to right his foundering policy towards Russia: He must replace Michael McFaul. Snowden's continued presence in Russia and the furious verbal assault on the USA that surrounds him leave absolutely no doubt that I was correct when I said McFaul should never have been given the job in the first place. His policy of appeasement towards Russia has collapsed the same way Chamberlain's policy towards Hitler imploded, with a rabid display of violence and contempt by the dog that was being fed.”

It turns out all this time, THEY have pursued a policy of FLIRTING with us and we are compared with Hitler (who would doubt) and a dog (who represents Hitler, parallel to our side of course), which demonstrates hostility to the one who gives her FOOD ...

continue reading " The U.S. simply cannot continue dropping its guard and treating Russia as if it were a normal country..... By turning a blind eye and offering unilateral concessions, they (Obama and McFaul) have helped Putin consolidate his malignant regime and set the clock back decades on democracy and American values in Russia.

Do All understand??)))
Read full text http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/07/reset_collapses.html

воскресенье, 4 ноября 2012 г.

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

Americans already detained under NDAA?

 
U.S. Army Military Police escort a detainee to his cell during in-processing to the temporary detention facility at Camp X-Ray in Naval Base Guantanamo Bay.(Reuters / Stringer)
The plaintiffs that are suing US President Barack Obama over his insistence on keeping the National Defense Authorization Act on the books said Thursday that they fear Americans are already being held indefinitely and without trial under the NDAA.
US President Barack Obama refrained from even once commenting on his efforts to keep his power to indefinitely detain Americans without charge when he appeared on Reddit.com recently and urged users to “Ask Me Anything.” His opponents in the matter aren’t shying away from speaking up online, though.
The plaintiffs in the case to ban the White House from imprisoning Americans indefinitely without trial or due justice took to Reddit on Thursday to answer questions involving the National Defense Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 2012, or the NDAA, and blamed corrupt media for letting the Obama administration maintain its ability to book Americans in military prisons without charge.
On December 31, 2011, President Obama authorized the NDAA, and with it he approved a controversial provision that permits the government to indefinitely detain US citizens without trial for mere allegations of ties to suspected terrorists. Journalists and activists filed a lawsuit against the president earlier this year over the provision, Section 1021, which US Federal Judge Katherine Forrest in turn agreed was unconstitutional. Last month Judge Forrest decided that an earlier, temporary injunction on the clause should be made permanent, but the Obama Justice Department pleaded for an emergency stay only hours later. A lone federal appeals judge has since heard that plea and has momentarily blocked Judge Forrest’s injunction. Now pending the results of an appeals panel’s formal investigation, the NDAA’s indefinite detention provision remains on the books.
On Thursday, the plaintiffs in the case — journalist Chris Hedges, activist Tangerine Bolen, Pentagon Papers leaker Dan Ellsberg, their attorneys and others — told users of Reddit to ask them anything.
“The Obama DOJ has vigorously opposed these efforts, and immediately appealed her ruling and requested an emergency stay on the injunction – claiming the US would incur ‘irreparable harm’ if the president lost the power to use Section 1021 – and detain anyone, anywhere until the end of hostilities on a whim. This case will probably make its way to the Supreme Court,” the plaintiffs acknowledged in their introduction.
From there, President Obama’s opponents in federal court combed through hundreds of posts to answer questions regarding the NDAA over the course of several hours. And although the plaintiffs have not exactly been silent with the status of their fight since suing the White House earlier this year, the insight they offered on Reddit provided a fresh update on the case against the NDAA amid some of the government’s most unusual legal maneuvers yet.
Offering his take on the case, Hedges said that he even believes the NDAA’s indefinite detention clause is already being used to imprison Americans, “because they filed an emergency appeal.”
“If the Obama administration simply appealed it, as we expected, it would have raised this red flag,” Hedges added.“But since they were so aggressive it means that once Judge Forrest declared the law invalid, if they were using it, as we expect, they could be held in contempt of court. This was quite disturbing, for it means, I suspect, that US citizens, probably dual nationals, are being held in military detention facilities almost certainly overseas and maybe at home.”
“The signing statement is the most ridiculous part to this for me. He writes this statement saying he's not happy about the power existing, but then his administration fights so hard to keep that specific power in place,” Reddit user devilrobotjesus responded.
“If Obama didn't want it to happen, he would not have signed it, especially after stating that he would veto it,” co-counsel Carl Mayer explained. Mayer has represented the plaintiffs in the case of Hedges v. Obama and said that he plans on continuing his pursuit to take indefinite detention off the books.
“We will do whatever it takes,” Mayers added. “We are prepared for a Supreme Court battle.”
Activist and journalist Tangerine Bolen is also insistent on prevailing over the Obama administration, but says “The biggest obstruction to our winning this case . . . is our broken systems.” Bolen blames a lack of media coverage, insufficient public awareness “and the government behaving very badly, even in court, on the record,” for the difficulties the plaintiffs have had to endure, adding that the Obama administration’s constant missteps have been noticed by no one except “seven plaintiffs, four attorneys, one federal judge and the activists who have been following this case.”
“Amazing,” she added.
Journalist Chris Hedges extrapolated on Bolen’s opinion, singling out “a corporate-owned system of information” for not informing Americans that they can be imprisoned without trial at this very moment.
“MSNBC, which is a propaganda arm of the Democratic establishment, just as Fox is a propaganda arm of the Republican establishment, is not going to raise this as Obama is as guilty as Romney. If we had a healthy press this would have gotten more coverage, although the print media, and in particular my old paper the NY Times, finally did good coverage,” Hedges wrote.
Daniel Ellsberg, the former Defense Department employee who achieved notoriety a generation earlier by leaking what became known as the Pentagon Papers, agreed that the system is severely in fault in this instance.
“Virtually every public institution has failed us gravely. Not only the executive, but the courts, congress, most of the media and most of the churches,” Ellsberg wrote on Reddit. “Radical reform is needed, even to the point of non-violent revolution. “
Elsewhere, the panel touched on why they believe the Obama administration is so adamantly fighting to keep the NDAA legal.
“It is quite possible that the NDAA is . . . a way to get Julian Assange and WikiLeaks,” Bolen claimed. “While the USG has tried to paint us as irrational, delusional and ridiculous, you see the slippery slope here.”
On his part, Hedges said that emails hacked by Anonymous and released by Wikileaks show that the US government has attempted to "tie a legitimate dissident group to terrorism and strip them of their right of dissent,” to which Bolen follows up with an explanation that supports the ramped up attempts from the White House to persecute whistleblowers and leakers under President Obama
“Yes, of course, if [Assange] is an enemy of the state, then yes, [The New York Times] could be considered to have communicated with the enemy. And perhaps the NDAA is a way to finally nail him,” Bolen said.
A three-judge appeals panel is expected to soon weigh in on the stay placed on Judge Forrest’s injunction, in the meantime keeping Section 1021 and the rest of the NDAA applicable to every American.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

суббота, 16 июня 2012 г.

среда, 9 мая 2012 г.

What Does the Taliban Attack on Kabul Portend (II)?

Patr II

During a recent visit to Kabul Afghan friends pointed out that according to the World Bank, the contribution of the Services sector to the Afghan GDP was 50%. An optimistic but hopelessly unreal assessment was offered-this would be only marginally affected by the withdrawal of foreign forces. The truth of the matter is that again according to World Bank estimates 90 to 97% of economic activity in Afghanistan was driven, in the last few years, by the foreign presence. It would not be wrong to assume that once the foreign troops withdraw and foreign aided projects begin to be abandoned for lack of funding the services and construction sector of the economy will contract much more drastically perhaps by as much as 90%.

I had mentioned in the earlier article that the reduction of the ANSF would, by 2017, demobilise about 120,000 ANSF personnel and add these men, with few skills other than handling weapons, to the ranks of the large number of currently unemployed people in Afghanistan. To this one must also add the large number of people currently engaged by foreign and Afghan security companies who will be thrown out of work once foreign financed projects grind to a halt and the need for security at such sites diminishes. What will these people do to secure their daily bread? Out on the streets begging or more likely adding to the ranks of the common criminals or extortionists supported by one war lord or another, to exacerbate the difficulties that the ordinary Afghan citizen faces particularly in urban settings. Many of the unemployed may seek to become economic refugees. I have calculated that as many as 2 million Afghans may, post 2014, seek shelter in Pakistan where the border is open and a smaller number may try to cross into Iran where border controls are stricter

One way to handle this situation would be to ensure the maintenance of a high level of economic assistance to Afghanistan post 2014. The Afghans at the Bonn meeting had circulated a paper suggesting that the international community commit to providing $10 billion a year to Afghanistan up to 2024 by which time the Afghans estimated that enough progress would have been made on the exploitation of Afghanistan’s estimated $1 trillion worth of mineral deposits and on the development of its agricultural potential to allow Afghanistan to stand on its own feet. What most Afghans are asking is whether this is a realistic goal given the donor fatigue that exists in the NATO countries and the obvious reluctance of other potential donors to make such commitments.

They will note the example of Pakistan. The Obama administration pushed strongly for the American Congress to approve what came to be known as the Kerry-Lugar-Berman Bill, which committed the USA to providing 1.5 billion annually in economic assistance for 5 years. Since American law prohibited a commitment for longer than 5 years it included a recommendation that a future congress should extend this for another 5 years. In other words there was formally a decade long commitment of economic assistance. In practice however much of this is bogged down and the Pakistanis have been vociferously complaining about the shortfall in disbursements and about the projects that the Americans have chosen for implementation.

For the moment it is known that on 22nd April a draft ‘Strategic Partnership Agreement” document was finalised and signed by both Ambassador Crocker on behalf of the United States and National Security Adviser Spanta. While the contents of the agreement are not known it is generally believed that this provides for a decade long involvement of the USA with Afghanistan. Commenting on the agreement an American embassy spokesman said, “Our goal is an enduring partnership with Afghanistan that strengthens Afghan sovereignty, stability and prosperity and that contributes to our shared goal of defeating al-Qaeda and its extremist affiliates,”... “We believe this agreement supports that goal.”

It is highly unlikely that this document, which does not deal with the question of a residual American military presence after 2014, will spell out the specifics of the concrete economic assistance that the Americans will provide over the next decade. But even if it does the Afghans must assume that its implementation may face the some problems, as the Pakistanis believe they are experiencing with the Kerry-Lugar-Berman bill.

The Afghans know that those with money are rapidly taking the money out of Afghanistan. The Deputy Governor of the Central Bank has said that $ 8 billion were taken out of the country last year and there are good reasons to believe that despite the new regulations introduced to discourage the exodus of funds more than $4 billion will leave the country this year. Some Afghan friends have said that this fear is unfounded. They believe that the announcement of the US-Afghan Strategic Partnership will restore faith in the future of Afghanistan and such funds will be invested in Afghanistan. One can hope this turns out to be true but the prospects are bleak.

As the foregoing shows, the economic picture-post 2014 appears grim and that is the reality but one must also recognise that there are some bright spots, which, if properly developed, may mitigate the hardship.

These are the major foreign investment agreements signedso far. First the Aynak copper mines where the Chinese have committed to a $2.4 billion investment for strip mining that will provide considerable investment in the mine itself but will also involve the construction of such infrastructure projects as a thermal power plant and a railway to allow the shipment of the mined ore to some smelting unit. A similarly large investment has been committed for the exploration and exploitation of Afghanistan’s fossil fuel deposits. The Indians on their part have put together a consortium, which has committed to an investment of more than $10 billion for the exploitation and transport of iron ore from the Hajigak deposit-reportedly one of the largest and richest in the region. Lastly there is the finalisation recently of the agreement between Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India on transit fee for the pipeline, which is to bring 3.2 billion cubic feet of gas daily from Turkmenistan to markets in Pakistan and India. This project alone would give Afghanistan a transit fee that at the agreed rate of 49.5 cents per thousand cubic feet an annual income of mote than half a billion dollars and would generate other economic activity that could add another half a billion to Afghanistan’s GDP.

Much remains to be done before these projects can bear fruit. The Aynak project remains stymied until the archaeological remains around the site have been completed. The routes to be followed by the transport infrastructure to be created to take the ore to market have yet to be decided. One would like to suggest that as regional cooperation increases the Chinese and Afghans should think in terms of transporting this copper ore to Pakistan’s Baluchistan where a similarly large deposit of copper is awaiting exploitation. The combined product of the two mines would permit the setting up of a smelting plant within the region and an economical transport of the finished product through Pakistan’s port at Gwadar. Currently legal problems are holding up the Pakistan project but were there a chance of a joint smelting plant being set up the incentive for resolving the legal disputes in Pakistan would become irresistible.

Similar work of an imaginative and innovative nature will need to be done for the other projects that are being considered. The most important issue however is going to be the post 2014 security situation and that in turn is going to depend on how rapidly the process of reconciliation proceeds and how this process helps to bridge the differences both ideological and political between the “armed opposition” and the Karzai administration on the one hand and between Afghanistan’s various ethnic groups on the other. Will there be agreement on retaining an American military presence after 2014? If so will this become an insurmountable obstacle as negotiations with the Taliban proceed? Will Afghanistan’s neighbours cooperate?

Only slightly less important will be the efforts that are needed to provide better governance and the impact on these efforts by President Karzai’s repeated assertion that he was considering stepping down before 2014 when the next Presidential elections are due to permit the holding of the elections before foreign troop withdrawal is completed. Will a new team to cope with the challenges of overseeing the withdrawal and undertaking the needed reform of government structures? These two sets of questions, perhaps the subject of the greatest concern to Afghans, will be the subject of my next article. full text

воскресенье, 29 апреля 2012 г.

Are the Limits of American Power Closer Than We Think?

APR 23 2012, 12:22 PM It's getting tougher for the U.S. to impose its will, but we can still lead the world -- the trick is convincing the world to follow.


President Barack Obama speaks in Washington. Reuters


Here are a few of the big, global problems that the U.S. has recently tried and failed to resolve:

North Korea's recent test-launch of a long-range missile, which U.S. diplomacy and threats couldn't deter.

A new war between the Sudans, breaking a short-lived peace that the U.S. spent years building.

Syria's continuing massacre of civilians, for which neither American diplomats nor American generals can find an acceptable solution.

Egypt's tightening military rule, which has gotten so bad that the U.S. spent weeks just to extricate some detained American NGO workers.

Israel's settlement growth in Palestinian territory, which the U.S. opposes as a barrier to Middle East peace.

The Yemeni president's refusal to abdicate power, despite a U.S.-brokered pledge that he would step down.

Afghanistan's unceasing war with itself, to which ten years of American-led war have not brought peace.

Iran's nuclear development, which looks to be continuing despite U.S. sanctions and recent U.S.-led disarmament talks.

The U.S. isn't powerless. It's significantly alleviated most of these conflicts, and it's taken the international lead on all of them. But the pattern is unmissable. It is a big, complicated world in which the U.S. can only do so much. We're the most powerful country in the world by far, but that doesn't always make us the bosses. This might seem obvious, but American domestic discourse -- not to mention foreign discourses -- often seem to assume a strength of American hegemony that just doesn't exist.

President Obama's major foreign policy addresses, like those of the presidents before him, take American dominance in world affairs as both necessary and absolute. There's nothing wrong with declaring that Iran will not be allowed to build a nuclear weapon or that democracy will come to the Middle East. And there's nothing wrong with the American leader discussing those issues from an American perspective. After all, the U.S. is the strongest and richest country in the world, which also makes it the best positioned to help. But there's a difference between helping and solving, just as there's a difference between offering leadership and having others follow. We seem to assume the latter (as do many non-Americans, for example in Egypt, where it's common to assume "foreign hands" guide Egyptian politics when in fact the U.S. seems to have less influence there every day), imagining American power extends far beyond its actual limits.

Part of this is domestic politics. Mitt Romney was probably making a smart political move to jump on Obama's hot mic comments to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev about how the U.S. couldn't make another nuclear arms reduction deal until after the election. Reducing American might is politically unpopular (even though we don't actually need those thousands of nuclear warheads) as is the idea of offering concessions to another, not-so-friendly country. It would be bad politics for Obama to enter tough and maybe even painful negotiations with a competing nation, probably because this conflicts with the Reagan-era idea that America's inherent strength and goodness means that we dictate terms to the world. But even Reagan compromised and horse-traded with Moscow, though he also had the good sense not to do it during an election.

This is the big conflict between how U.S. leaders negotiate American politics and American foreign policy: the former requires confidence, the latter humility. But the two are not inseparable. Maybe because our political system promotes leaders who believe most strongly in American power, or maybe because it pressures those leaders to exercise more power than they might actually have, it can often seem that the U.S. is constantly falling short of our ambitions. We can't stop Israeli settlement growth, Iranian nuclear development, Sudanese civil war, AIDS in Africa, or terrorism in Pakistan, even though Americans presidents keep insisting that we will.

There was a time when we seemed to have more influence on how other countries behaved. In this 1980 map of Cold War alliances, the "blue" countries would reliably, if not always, follow U.S. leadership. Part of that was because we had easier requests then; it's one thing to tell Pakistani generals to train anti-Soviet fighters, quite another to ask them to give up power to democratic institutions. But the threat of Soviet domination gave us a common mission that made cooperation more attractive and American leadership more desirable. There's no more great red menace to unify the majority of the world under American leadership. Other countries don't need us in the way that they used to.

The good news is that American and global interests still tend to line up pretty frequently. That's not a coincidence. The U.S. does more than any other country at maintaining global peace, cooperation, and free trade. The rest of the world might not depend on American protection from the Soviet Union, but it depends on the U.S.-enforced political and economic order. That's the new American leadership. When China slashed its Iranian oil imports by half -- a big blow to Tehran and a boost to the U.S.-led effort to isolate Iran -- it wasn't because Obama called up Chinese President Hu Jintao and told him to do it. The U.S., through a lot of difficult and sometimes painful diplomatic and economic maneuvering, found a way to line up American and Chinese interests.

This sort of power makes the U.S. good at promoting democracy, cooperation, and free trade -- Burma's opening, for example, or China's remarkably peaceful rise -- but less effective at stopping civil wars or convincing dictators to do things that might threaten their own rules (or lives). If Iranian leaders believe they need a nuclear program to save themselves from a U.S. invasion, they're going to keep it. And the logic of ethnic conflict or religious terrorism can't really be refuted by, say, American trade incentives.

When U.S. interests line up with global interests, we suddenly become very effective at leading the world: isolating Iran, convincing Sudan to allow its southern third to secede, or curbing Chinese trade abuses, for example, would probably all have been impossible on our own. But they also wouldn't have happened without the U.S. taking the lead. That means that U.S. leadership is becoming more about finding opportunities for cooperation and compromise than it is about, say, the strength of our military or force of our ideas, although those help too. Sometimes the U.S. president has to tell his Russian counterpart that he'll offer some concessions in exchange for, say, dismantling Soviet-era nuclear weapons or reducing arms sales to Syria. That's not a particularly jingoistic vision of American leadership, and it's not likely to play well in a political campaign. But that's the world we live in.

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вторник, 28 февраля 2012 г.

War Criminal Bill Clinton Among Nobel Peace Prize Nominees

Kurt Nimmo
PrisonPlanet.com
February 27, 2012
Former president Bill Clinton is among nominees for the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, Reuters reports. Jan Egeland, the European director of Human Rights Watch, mentioned Clinton after the five-member Norwegian Nobel Committee said it was considering two hundred and thirty one names.



Nobel Prize winner Obama learned how to sell mass murder as humanitarianism from Clinton.
In 2009, the current war criminal in chief, Barry Obama, was chosen as peacemaker. The Committee said Obama received the award “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between people.” Obama was continuing and amplifying upon Bush’s wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan at the time, making him a perfect candidate for the hypocritical “award” doled out by the ossified Norwegian Nobel Institute and its secretariat.
In 1999, Bill Clinton was one of the world’s leading war criminals. He had surpassed the crimes of his predecessor and “brought to the commission of war crimes a new eclectic reach and postmodern style,” Edward S. Herman wrote at the time. “A skilled public relations person, he has refined the rhetoric of humanistic and ethical concern and can apologize with seeming great sincerity,” a parlor trick Obama has attempted to emulate.
Clinton bombed the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Afghanistan and the Sudan, killing untold numbers. In the latter case, he bombed a pharmaceutical plant.
His putrid crown was the sanctions regime imposed on Iraq. “UNICEF reports that in 1999 more than 1 million Iraqi children under 5 were suffering from chronic malnutrition, and some 4,000-5,000 children are dying per month beyond normal death rates from the combination of malnutrition and disease,” writes Herman. “Death from disease was greatly increased by the shortage of potable water and medicines, that has led to a 20-fold increase in malaria (among other ailments). This vicious sanctions system, causing a creeping extermination of a people, has already caused more than a million excess deaths,” a toll that has exceeded the toll of “all so-called weapons of mass destruction [nuclear and chemical] throughout all history,” according to John and Karl Mueller.



Clinton and NATO specialized in targeting civilians like these Albanian refugees.

In Yugoslavia, Clinton targeted civilian infrastructure and civilian facilities – houses, hospitals, schools, trains, factories, power stations, and broadcasting facilities. Noted journalist John Pilger added “housing estates, hotels, libraries, youth centers, theaters, museums, churches and 14th century monasteries on the World Heritage list” to Clinton’s target roster. According to Yugoslav authorities, 60 percent of NATO targets were civilian, including 33 hospitals and 344 schools, as well as 144 major industrial plants and a large petro-chemical plant whose bombing caused a pollution catastrophe.
Not long after Clinton ran out of targets, the BBC reported that the use of depleted uranium in Serbia would cause 10,000 extra deaths from cancer. Scientists at Kozani in northern Greece reported that radiation levels were 25% above normal whenever the wind blew from the direction of Kosovo while Bulgarian researchers reported finding levels eight times higher than usual within Bulgaria itself, and up to 30 times higher in Yugoslavia.

Considering the fact that the Nobel Prize is now a cheap artifact awarded to war criminals and psychopaths, Clinton should be a shoo-in. Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning, and more than 200 other nominees should be dropped from consideration.
Bill Clinton, war criminal extraordinaire, is the ideal choice.

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