Posts Tagged ‘ambassador’
Monday, May 18th, 2009
By Celia Canon- Talk Radio News Service
In a sharp break from his previous foreign policy, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made key concessions to U.S President Obama in today’s meeting
Still, Netanyahu did not shift his stance on the two state solution which would allow the Palestinians to have their own legitimate territory and the Israelis could keep most of theirs.
Such was the conclusion of former United State Institute of Peace President and CEO and former U.S Ambassador to Israel Samuel Lewis and former Israeli Ambassador to Jordan and the European Union Oden Eran following the analysis of President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu’s meeting today.
The meeting gained mixed reviews after the analysis of the success of the meeting was observed.
Oren Eran said on Netanyahu that “politically speaking, he passed this particular hurdle but from the press conference at least you an judge that this is not the end of the story.”
Samuel Lewis on his part said “I can’t help saying that we won’t know really know how important this meeting was for some time.”
The meeting was the first between the two nations since President Obama’s election and was significant as it signaled a continuation in the relationship between the U.S and Israel despite the change in the American administration.
Lewis observed that “The number one purpose for Obama and for Netanyahu was the issue of trust, and whether they achieved at the beginning at least a trusting relationship between the two of them that has proved historically to be crucial in this relationship between Presidents and Prime ministers.”
Lewis added that “it hasn’t yet been achieved if it’s going to be achieved.”
In addition, Lewis said, “I understood that emissaries were trying to work out a written agreed statement. Well it didn’t come out as far as I know, which means they didn’t agree, and that I think reinforces my opinion that there were a lot of disagreement in practice.”
However, both Eran and Lewis agreed that Netanyahu made a surprise concession as Eran said, “Obama said that from his point of view, the ability to make peace between the Israelis and the palestinians only strengthen the capability of the international community to wrestle with the Iranian threat.”
Tags: 2 state solution, ambassador, benjamin netanyahu, concessions, Oden Eran, peace, President Barack Obama, reviews, Samuel Lewis, U.S-Israel relationship, united states institute of peace
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Wednesday, May 13th, 2009
By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service
Correspondent Michael Ruhl’s investigative report into the recent pandemic of piracy off of the Horn of Africa. The report focuses on why the piracy is taking place and what can be done to stop it. It includes perspectives from Somali Ambassador-at-large Abdi Awallah Jama, George Mason University Political Science Professor Hazel McFerson, Maersk-Alabama Captain Richard Phillips, and CENTCOM Commander General David Petraeus. (07:30)

Somalia's Piracy Pandemic [07:30m]:
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Tags: $30 million, 1991, 2008, 2009, 911, Abdi Awallah Jama, active defense, Africa, African Horn, ambassador, army, attack, boat, captain, CENTCOM, Central Command, clan, clans, collapse, competition, Congress, cooperation, david petraeus, Defense department, department of defense, desperation, dod, economic, economy, fire hoses, firearms, General David Petraeus, George Mason University, government, Gulf of Aden, guns, Hazel McFerson, Horn, Horn of Africa, Hostage, Indian Ocean, John Clancey, law, lawless, lawlessness, Maersk Alabama, mariner, maritime, maritime piracy, merchant, merchant marine, merchant ship, michael, Michael Ruhl, michael t ruhl, michaeltruhl, military, natural resources, Navy, oppression, passive defense, patrol, Piracy, pirate, Political Science, poverty, power struggle, professor, ransom, Richard Phillips, Ruhl, safety corridor, senate, Somali, Somalia, Task Force 151, University of New Mexico, UNM, US Navy, vessel, violence, violent
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Wednesday, April 15th, 2009
By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service
Piracy is nothing new in Somalia. Every day pirates run free off of Somalia’s nearly 2,000-mile coastline and find haven within this African country which is slightly smaller than Texas. The problem has long been of concern to the U.S. State Department and the United Nations, but it has been gaining special attention once again because of the targeting of American citizens. The hostage situation with American ship captain Richard Phillips caused a nation to hold its breath, and many were in shock when U.S. Congressman Donald Payne (D-NJ) escaped a mortar attack aimed at his airplane in Mogadishu on Monday while the congressman was meeting with government officials.
Maritime piracy has been a lucrative business since the collapse of the Somali government in 1991 and in the thirteen governments to exist since. It can provide quick income for the uneducated and impoverished, and has become a fact of life for companies trading around the Horn of Africa.
The United States has not had full diplomatic ties with Somalia since 1991. Somalia now has a U.S. “Ambassador-at-large” with no formal office in the U.S. from which to work. The Ambassador-at-large, Abdi Awaleh Jama, believes that the violence comes from a “poverty of leadership” in Somalia. Jama said the leaders at the regional and national level don’t serve communal interests but rather favor specific clans or family members.
“The dominant paradigm now is the clan paradigm… not the nation paradigm,” Jama said. He continued, “When there is no law and order, you take the law into your own hands.” Jama said the natural resources in Somalia have been seized by certain clans and used to hold down opposition within the rest of the country.
Jama, who does not fault the sitting Somali president for the country’s condition, said that pirates flourish off the expansive coast because the rule of law has not existed in Somali society in the past decade. When such anarchy is combined with the overflowing poverty, a situation will develop where people will seize “any opportunity they have to make money,” said Jama.
Officials within the Somali government have defended the so-called pirates as being a “coast guard” who protect the country’s resources. Jama dismisses that claim.
“These are criminals who want to make quick money, and who want to just use force, in the name of saving Somalia,” he said. “They are only there to enrich themselves, and to use that gimmick that they are defending Somali resources, which is wrong.”
Joel Carny, an expert from Refugees International, said that Somalia “really hasn’t had a central government that has functioned in so long.” He believes this has led to “warlordism” and opportunity for clan-based regional politics to develop. He called Somalia “an environment in which everyone has to fend for themselves.”
According to Carny, approximately two million Somalis have been displaced due to the violence in the past decade and three million are in need of emergency assistance.
Somalia’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Elmi Ahmed Duale, acknowledged in a phone conversation that the violence was taking place and said the government cannot hide it. He hopes for a resolution.
The international community has taken this issue very seriously. The United Nations has had peacekeepers in Somalia at various times since 1991, and most recently the African Union has dedicated resources through AMISOM, their official Mission to Somalia. In February 2009, the United Nations Security Council authorized AMISOM to stay in Somalia for another six months, which places peacekeepers on the ground through August. The United Nations says the goal of this mission is to help establish order and secure human rights.
Recent Somali elections were marked by violence to the point that they had to take place in neighboring Djibouti. Somali President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was elected in January, and shortly thereafter, Ahmed appointed a new prime minister.
Carny is doubtful of the new government’s ability to establish order but thinks that the international community should give the new president a chance. Carney said, “Lets see if [the government] can establish a viable authority… that can at least establish security inside the capitol and then spread from there.” Carney said, however, that “anyone who’s pessimistic about Somalia is probably going to be right.”
Jama wants the United States to help Somalia build a “proper coast guard,” which would replace vigilantism that currently runs the shorelines.
Both Jama and Carny acknowledged that most of the social problems in Africa are rooted in the colonial past, but Carny believes that Africa must move on. “We’re not going to redraw the boundaries in Africa,” said Carny. He suggested that Somalia could be governed regionally through “some kind of Federalism,” as a credible solution for ethnically diverse nations prone to social conflict, civil war and genocide.
“For better or for worse, these countries have to live and work their way out of consequences. When you get good leadership at the national level… things can turn around fairly quickly,” Carny said.
Listen to the audio report here.
Tags: 1991, 2009, Abdi Awaleh Jama, Africa, African Horn, African Union Mission to Somalia, ambassador, Ambassador-at-large, AMISOM, august, boundaries, civil war, clan, coast guard, colonialism, colony, committee, conflict, Congress, crisis, democrat, Department of State, Djibouti, Donald Payne, Dr. Elmi Ahmed Duale, Eli Ahmed Duale, federalism, Genocide, Horn, House Foreign Affairs Committee, Human Rights, imperialism, international law, Joel Carny, law, maritime, michael, Michael Ruhl, michael t ruhl, michaeltruhl, Mogadishu, natural resources, New Jersey, Peacekeppers, Piracy, pirate, poverty of leadership, president, prime minister, Refugees International, Richard Phillips, Ruhl, Security Council, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, social conflict, Somalia, State Department, texas, UN Peacekeepers, United Nations, United Nations Security Council
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Wednesday, April 15th, 2009
By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service
Correspondent Michael Ruhl reports on the security and humanitarian crisis presently plaguing Somalia. Ruhl interviews Somalia’s Ambassador-At-Large to the U.S., Abdi Awaleh Jama, and also speaks with Joel Carny from Refugees International.
Read the full article here
Version 1: (00:30)
Version 2: (02:00)
Version 3: (03:25)
Tags: 1991, 2009, Abdi Awaleh Jama, Africa, African Horn, African Union Mission to Somalia, ambassador, Ambassador-at-large, AMISOM, august, boundaries, civil war, clan, coast guard, colonialism, colony, committee, conflict, Congress, crisis, democrat, Department of State, Djibouti, Donald Payne, Dr. Elmi Ahmed Duale, Eli Ahmed Duale, federalism, Genocide, Horn, House Foreign Affairs Committee, Human Rights, imperialism, international law, Joel Carny, law, maritime, michael, Michael Ruhl, michael t ruhl, michaeltruhl, Mogadishu, natural resources, New Jersey, Peacekeppers, Piracy, pirate, poverty of leadership, president, prime minister, Refugees International, Richard Phillips, Ruhl, Security Council, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, social conflict, Somalia, State Department, texas, UN Peacekeepers, United Nations, United Nations Security Council
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Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
By Kayleigh Harvey – Talk Radio News Service
At a public hearing on U.S. Military Aid to the Middle East today, retired Ambassador Edward Peck said, “The American public knows nothing about the Middle East and because they know nothing they are not very interested, and because they’re not very interested they don’t know much, because nobody is going to tell them.”

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Tags: aid, ambassador, American, CNI, east, edward, Israel, middle, military, peck, public, retired
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Monday, April 6th, 2009
by Christina Lovato, University of New Mexico-Talk Radio News Service
The planned rocket launch in defiance of international law by North Korea should not hinder U.S. hopes of achieving the peaceful denuclearization of the North, an opinion backed by senior-level U.S. diplomats.
“Korea and the U.S. are fully at one voice now in tackling the North Korea missile launch and also in pushing forward the six-party process,” said Han Duk-soo, Korean Ambassador to the United States.
“The six-party talks should be promoted. That is at present the only alternative to the peaceful denuclearization of North Korea,” said Han Duk-soo. “Peace and security and prosperity in this region is very crucial not only for this region but also for the global community.”
Lee Ki-Taek, Vice Chairman of the National Unification Advisory Council said that the launch was a threat. But “It does not matter whether it was a satellite or missile for it was clearly not hope,”he said.
Charles L. Pritchard, President of the Korea Economic Institute in Washington, D.C. said that the Obama administration has shown a “conservative” response to what’s been going on with North Korea.
“The United States, it has been said here already, intends to maintain the six-party talks as the basis of engagement of North Korea. That may not turn out to be quite as accurate as they hoped,” Pritchard said.
Pritchard said that the U.S. has made an emphasis on bilateral ties, and has been directly engaged in the consultation process with North Korea and Japan.
Pritchard suggested that the continuation of the tri-lateral coordination is necessary, but that the idea of withholding visas for North Koreans as a form of punishment should be tossed out the window.
Tags: ambassador, Charles L. Pritchard, DC, diplomats, Han Duk-soo, japan, Korea Economic Institute, launch, Lee Kit-Taek, missile, National Unification Advisory Council, North Korea, six-party, Us, washington
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Wednesday, March 25th, 2009
By Michael Ruhl, University of New Mexico – Talk Radio News Service
The U.S. may be one step closer to sending a new ambassador to Iraq. The Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee convened on Wedneday to vet Ambassador Designate Christopher Hill. Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-Mass.) recognized the importance of getting a new ambassador to the region with expedience, but certain Senators have expressed concerns about Hill’s past.
Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), who should be noted is not on the Committee, several weeks ago promised a fight in the Senate confirmation process because of actions that transpired while Hill was heading the six-party talks concerning North Korean nuclear disarmament. Brownback felt that Hill had misled Congress on his intentions to confront the issues of Human Rights with North Korea during the negotiations, since those issues ended up not being addressed.
Hill responded to Brownback’s concerns during the hearing today, and said that although he had agreed before Congress to address human rights, the process was stalled before the issue could be discussed. Human rights would have been on the table during the restoration of diplomatic ties with North Korea, Hill said, but that phase would have come only after the verification of North Korea’s nuclear assets, and that verification never took place. Hill had planned on supporting initiatives from then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to put together a human rights program to tie progress in human rights reform to better diplomatic ties. Hill said today that America’s relationship with North Korea would not be normalized until North Korea completely did away with its nuclear stockpiles, and Hill could not fulfill his promise to Congress until the stockpiles had been eliminated.
It’s uncertain when the Senate confirmation vote will take place. There has been talk concerning delaying the vote until after the upcoming Congressional recess.
Tags: ambassador, Christopher Hill, Condoleezza Rice, Confirmation, Human Rights, Iraq, john kerry, michael, Michael Ruhl, michael t ruhl, michaeltruhl, North Korea, nuclear, republican, Ruhl, sam brownback, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Commi, vote
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Thursday, March 5th, 2009
By Kayleigh Harvey – Talk Radio News Service
Congressman Gene Taylor (D-Missi) asks Ambassador Stephen Mull, Acting under Secretary for International Security and Arms Control for the U.S. State Department whether a ship, targeted by pirates, baring the American flag, would be treated as committing an attack against America. Mull’s response was inconclusive, and Congressman Taylor and Chairman Skelton have asked the Ambassador to submit a written statement outlining in detail, to the committee how this crime is dealt with under international and domestic law.
Tags: ambassador, attack, Congressman, gene, Piracy, pirate, seas, stephen mull, taylor
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Monday, January 19th, 2009
Bureau Chief Ellen Ratner interviews John Bruton the Head of Delegation and ambassador for the European Union about Obamas presidency and European and America relations. (7:12)
Tags: ambassador, Bruton, EU, John, obama, States, United
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