foreign-policy

Obama Needs to Match Bush’s Commitment to Free Trade at APEC, Najib Says

November 12, 2009

By Daniel Ten Kate and Shamim Adam Nov. 13 (Bloomberg) — Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak urged President Barack Obama to show the same commitment to free trade that his predecessor, George W. Bush , expressed at a meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders last year. “APEC in Singapore is a wonderful opportunity for us to make a very strong political statement that we will resist protectionism,” Najib said in the city state ahead of the group’s summit, which Obama will attend. “The thing I liked about President Bush’s foreign policy is that he was very pro- free trade. I hope the same message will be repeated.” Trade will be a focus of Obama’s first trip to Asia as president, which starts today in Japan and also includes stops in China and South Korea. Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said U.S. participation in the four-member Trans-Pacific Partnership would be a “significant advance” toward a wider Asia-Pacific trade area. The U.S. has ceded economic influence in much of Asia to China in a region that contains sea lanes vital to world commerce, as well as coal, oil and other commodities. China’s trade with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations jumped almost 20-fold since 1993 to $179 billion, with its share of total Asean commerce rising to 10.5 percent from 2 percent. The comparable U.S. portion during that period fell to 12 percent from 17 percent, according to Asean statistics. “Obama is not a president who believes instinctively in free trade,” said Razeen Sally, a director of the European Centre for International Political Economy in Brussels, a trade-policy research group. “He’s not a rampant protectionist either; he’s ambivalent, somewhere in between.” Trans-Pacific Partnership The U.S., Australia, Peru and Vietnam are among the Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperation’s 21 member economies that are interested in joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Lee said. Signatories to the 2005 agreement include Singapore, New Zealand, Brunei and Chile. U.S. participation would transform an agreement between countries with a combined gross domestic product that is almost 30 times smaller than the U.S., amid competing visions for Asian economic cooperation and the role America should play. The region’s leaders are impatient for a clear U.S. approach to trade, said C. Fred Bergsten , director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. ‘As Soon as Possible’ “Over time this little seed can bloom and grow,” Lee told APEC business leaders gathered in Singapore. “We hope this will materialize as soon as possible, and when it materializes it will be a significant advance towards the ideal of a free- trade area which encompasses the whole Asia Pacific.” Australia and Peru agreed to start negotiations to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, known as the TPP, last year as the World Trade Organization’s Doha round of global talks foundered. The agreement offers a “high-standard template and we can work to bring in other economies in stages,” Lee said. The U.S. in March postponed initial negotiations to join the TPP. Obama, Japan’s Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and China’s President Hu Jintao are among leaders convening in Singapore to discuss boosting trade and linkages in a region that accounts for more than half of global GDP. New Zealand plans to continue persuading the U.S. to join a regional free-trade agreement, either unilateral or multilaterally, Finance Minister Bill English said in an interview yesterday. “Certainly from our point of view it would work and the region would benefit from it.” To contact the reporters on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net ; Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net

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Clinton Seeks to Prod Israelis, Palestinians to Table During Mideast Trip

October 30, 2009

By Indira A.R. Lakshmanan and Jonathan Ferziger Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has returned to the Middle East in a bid to prod Israelis and Palestinians to the negotiating table five weeks after President Barack Obama failed to kick-start peace talks. Clinton flew from Pakistan late yesterday to Abu Dhabi on the Persian Gulf, where she plans to meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas . Late today, she will head to Israel for consultations with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu , who has resisted U.S. pressure to halt settlement construction in the West Bank as a gesture toward peacemaking with the Palestinians. The Mideast swing comes a week after Clinton reported to Obama that it is premature to resume formal Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. The Palestinians need to do more to stop incitement and prevent terror, and Israel needs to do more to improve the lives of the Palestinians, an administration official said Clinton told Obama. Obama had ordered a review of the peace effort after holding a three-way meeting with Abbas and Netanyahu Sept. 22 in New York. “We are going to continue down this road and do everything we can to clear away whatever concerns that the parties have, to actually get them into negotiations where they then can thrash out all of these difficult issues,” Clinton said in an interview with CNN before she left Pakistan. In Jerusalem, Netanyahu met yesterday with U.S. envoy George Mitchell to prepare for the Clinton meeting and said he hoped the secretary of state would enable Israelis and Palestinians to restart peace talks “as soon as possible.” Extended Diplomacy Still, Clinton may be anticipating extended diplomacy before the U.S. can show results. Abbas has said he won’t return to the negotiating table until Netanyahu backs a settlement freeze. “From the very beginning, the Obama administration set a goal of demonstrating progress in a Palestinian-Israeli peace track,” Gerald Steinberg , a Bar-Ilan University political scientist, said in a telephone interview. “If there can’t be progress, there can at least be lots of effort, which means more visits and more photo opportunities.” Palestinians have been losing faith in Obama’s peacemaking ability and in U.S. policies in the Mideast, according to a survey released Oct. 18 by the Jerusalem Media & Communications Center. Slightly less than 24 percent of those questioned said Obama could boost chances of peace, down from 35.4 percent who in June said they were optimistic about U.S. participation in the Mideast effort, according to the poll. ‘Some Kind of Gesture’ “I don’t think that Abbas will go back to the table without at least satisfying the issue of settlement expansion,” said Mkhaimar Abusada, a political scientist at Al-Azhar University in the Gaza Strip. “There has to be some kind of gesture from Netanyahu, even if it’s just temporary.” Israelis and Palestinians are still fighting over the same issues since peace talks began through the 1993 Oslo accords at a White House ceremony presided over by former President Bill Clinton , Hillary Clinton’s husband. The agenda includes the future of Jerusalem, the fate of Palestinian refugees and the borders of a future Palestinian state. “I watched in the ‘90s as my husband just kept pushing and pushing and pushing and good things happened,” Hillary Clinton said in the CNN interview. “There wasn’t a final agreement but fewer people died, there were more opportunities for economic development, for trade, for exchanges. It had positive effects, even though it didn’t cross the finish line.” Iran Deal Clinton’s stopover in the Persian Gulf emirate of Abu Dhabi comes after Iran demanded changes to a United Nations-brokered deal that would send Iranian enriched uranium to Russia for processing into nuclear fuel for a Tehran research reactor. The Iranian reaction cast doubts over wider talks to allay suspicions Iran is seeking the means to build a nuclear weapon. Netanyahu praised the offer made to Iran, according to an e-mailed statement from his office. The proposal “is a positive first step,” Netanyahu told Mitchell yesterday in Jerusalem. The United Arab Emirates, an oil-producing U.S. ally that hosts American military bases, is a trading partner for Iran, which ships three-quarters of its refined fuel imports through Emirati ports. The U.S. Congress is considering legislation aimed at cutting off gasoline deliveries to Iran, which relies on imports to meet a third of its refined fuel needs. Clinton plans to meet with Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan during her visit. The crown prince, who is also deputy supreme commander of the U.A.E. armed forces, conferred with Obama at the White House in September. ‘No Coincidence’ “Clinton’s trip is no coincidence,” said Christopher Davidson , a Middle Eastern studies professor at Durham University in the U.K. “The U.A.E. has now become a major element in U.S. foreign policy because of Iran.” Dubai, the second-largest of the seven emirates in the U.A.E. after Abu Dhabi, also is a destination for Iranian investment and maintains trade and financial links. “Dubai is Iran’s main window to the global economy, and the U.S. is likely to press the U.A.E. to control Dubai’s relations with Iran,” said Davidson, author of “Dubai: The Vulnerability of Success,” published last year. To contact the reporters on this story: Indira Lakshmanan in Abu Dhabi at ilakshmanan@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan Ferziger in Jerusalem at jferziger@bloomberg.net

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Afghanistan’s First Railroad Aims to Undermine Bandit Funding of Taliban

October 27, 2009

By Dave McCombs Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) — Afghanistan is building its first rail link with the help of the Asian Development Bank in a bid to improve trade and aid and undermine highway bandits helping to fund insurgents, including the Taliban. The bank will name the design and operation contractors next week for the $170 million railway from Uzbekistan’s border to Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan’s second-largest city and a hub for aid and imports, said Juan Miranda, ADB director-general for Central and West Asia. Work on the 75-kilometer (47-mile) line will start this year and may finish in 2010, he said. Afghanistan has only 25 kilometers of train track and crime gangs along the highways extort cash and steal cargo from haulers. Human rights campaigners and U.S. government officials say the bandits are helping fuel an insurgency that prompted President Barack Obama to send 21,000 additional soldiers to the country this year and to consider committing more U.S. troops. “It’s a project that will be transformational,” Miranda said by phone from the Philippines capital, Manila. “A railway is a visible sign of progress and it will really help with the trade bottleneck at the border. It’s a sign of hope, rather than desperation.” U.S. General Stanley McChrystal , the commander of U.S. and NATO-led forces in Afghanistan, wrote in an August assessment requesting more troops that insurgent taxes imposed on the “local population through check points” would enable anti- government forces to fund operations, even if profit from the opium trade was eliminated. For more than a century, every attempt to build a rail network has failed as French, German, Indian, Iranian and Soviet rail plans were abandoned or never broke ground, leaving the landlocked nation without an all-weather transport backbone. Cutting off Bandits “A rail line would help by cutting off the source of funds for some of the organized crime groups, because they would not be able to stop the train,” said Ahmad Nader Naderi, a member of the Kabul-based Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission . Afghanistan’s reliance on trucks facilitates “informal payments” such as extortion that inflate shipping costs by 50 percent in the region, according to a 2006 World Bank study. The International Monetary Fund in 2007 estimated shipping costs and delays in Afghanistan are double the regional average. “Projects like this railway would bring hope for a better future,” said Nader Naderi, whose commission investigates human rights abuses. Aid Bottleneck In February, 1,500 metric tons of Russian-donated flour packed onto 25 rail cars arrived at Haryaton, where the Uzbekistan railway line ends, Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported. The cargo took days to shift onto trucks and weeks to deliver, allowing more spoilage, theft and extortion. Almost half of Afghanistan’s imports and even more of its humanitarian aid now come through Haryaton to Mazar-e-Sharif, 290 kilometers north of the capital, Kabul. Local governors have been accused of extorting payments from truck drivers, undermining support for President Hamid Karzai’s central government, Nader Naderi said. Deteriorating road security is also thwarting the U.S. military. In June 2008 alone, 44 trucks and 220,000 gallons (832,790 liters) of fuel were lost because of hijackings and attacks while delivering fuel to Bagram air field near Kabul, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said in a March 2009 report . While the ADB is financing 97 percent of estimated costs through a $165 million grant, Afghanistan will contribute $5 million. The rail construction contract has been awarded to Uzbekistan Temir Yollari , the Uzbek national railway company. ADB Investment The ADB expects to invest about a billion dollars in Afghanistan over the next five years, Miranda said. The paving of a 3,000-kilometer ring road through Kabul, Herat and Kandahar, started six years ago, has yet to be completed as the December 2009 target approaches. Taliban attacks on workers and traffic have delayed construction, Richard Boucher , assistant U.S. secretary of state, said last November. Attempts to create an Afghan railroad began in the 1920s when two German locomotives were used on a 7-kilometer line from Kabul. When King Amanullah Khan, who ordered them, was overthrown, the project was abandoned. The engines now sit rusting among weeds in an outdoor museum, said Andrew Grantham, news editor of Railway Gazette International magazine and author of a Web site on the history of rail projects in Afghanistan. Three locomotives imported from Germany in the 1950s to supply a power station east of Kabul vanished, their fate unknown, said Grantham, who also said he thinks the ADB-financed railway will be built. Similar Fate The current rail project may meet a similar fate, given the lack of security, said Malou Innocent, a foreign policy analyst at the Cato Institute, a Washington research organization. Aid projects pay a percentage to the Taliban for protection, though that may not prevent attacks, she said in an e-mailed comment. “Unless enough U.S., NATO, and Afghan troops are prepared to defend the new railway network indefinitely, we could see all of this infrastructure destroyed almost as quickly as we build it,” said Innocent, co-author of the report: “Escaping the Graveyard of Empires: A Strategy to Exit Afghanistan.” To contact the reporter for this story: Dave McCombs in Tokyo at dmccombs@bloomberg.net .

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Chicago, Tokyo Are Eliminated From Race to Host 2016 Summer Olympic Games

October 2, 2009

By Adriana Brasileiro and Joshua Goodman Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) — Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who as a boy sold peanuts on the street, beat the world’s two richest nations for the 2016 Olympic Games. Now, he must defeat Rio de Janeiro’s violent crime, which residents call the biggest cloud over their city’s postcard-perfect bid. Lula will also have to push Rio, the sea-side city of Carnival and the 2007 Pan American games, to improve its transit system, renovate its crumbling airport and double its hotel space before it can host its largest international event ever. “The security problem is very serious,” said Carlos Langoni , a former central bank president and finance chief of the organizing committee for the World Cup 2014 , which Brazil will host. “The city’s transportation infrastructure also needs major work but the government is committed and will tackle these issues.” Rio is one of the most violent cities in the world, according to a ranking by Web site RealClearWorld. Home to about 7 million people, it recorded 2,069 murders last year compared with 510 in Chicago, a city of 2.8 million and a finalist contender for the games. The police commit one in five of the murders, according to the United Nations high commissioner for Human Rights . Stray bullets from rival drug gangs battling to control more than 1,000 shantytowns ringing the so-called “Marvelous City” claim dozens of lives each year, police say. The gangs often stop traffic along the main airport road to steal money and cell phones. So-called flash-kidnappings — where victims are taken to ATMs to withdraw cash — are also common, the security secretariat says. Final Round Vote Still, Rio got 66 votes in the final round at the International Olympic Committee meeting in Copenhagen yesterday, while Madrid received 32. Tokyo and Chicago, President Barack Obama’s adopted hometown, lost out earlier. Afterwards, a teary-eyed Lula said he was half-scared by the challenge of hosting the expected 50,000 visitors. As he campaigned for the games over the past months, Lula adopted Obama’s slogan, “Yes We Can,” to address doubts the government can get Rio ready. He pledged to renovate the city’s state-run international airport and unclog traffic-choked streets by extending public transport, including the city’s inefficient subway. Great Victory The Olympics are Rio’s first great victory since the capital moved to Brasilia in 1960, said Andre Urani , a researcher at the Rio-based Institute of Society and Labor Studies. Rio’s bid for the games proposed investments of $11.1 billion. A government infrastructure program has already committed as much as 70 percent of that, according to the Rio Olympics Committee . The organizers need to raise the remaining 30 percent, and expect ticket sales and sponsorships to yield $2.82 billion. The games will inject $51.1 billion into Latin America’s largest economy through 2027 and add 120,000 jobs a year through 2016, according to a study by a Sao Paulo business school for the Ministry of Sports . Lula, who must step down next year after his second term, may be more than a spectator at the 2016 Olympics. With his legacy cemented by landing South America’s first games, and a 77 percent approval rating after almost seven years in office, he’s an automatic contender to run again in 2015. ‘First Class Country’ “Today Brazil was upgraded from a second class country to a first class country,” said Lula, who quit school at 14 and lost part of his finger in an industrial accident. “For the others it was just another Olympics. Brazil was the only country that really wanted to host this.” Getting the games is a triumph for Lula’s foreign policy, which since 2003 has centered on Africa and the developing world, where much of Rio’s lobbying focused. Since April, Lula lobbied in eight countries and the African Union summit in Libya, he said hosting the Olympics wasn’t the exclusive right of rich nations. In a June 15 news conference in Geneva, he said a victory for Rio would empower Africa to match the feat. The victory also stemmed from Lula’s management of the economy , said Rai de Oliveira, a former soccer player who was part of Brazil’s winning team in the 1994 World Cup. Lula rode to office on a wave of anti-capitalist rhetoric that panicked investors and brought the country to the brink of default in 2002. Highest Credit Rating Now Brazil has its highest credit rating ever after Moody’s Investors Service raised its debt to Baa3, the lowest investment-grade, on Sept. 22. Brazilian investment abroad has jumped to $20 billion a year, most of it in the developing world, according to a United Nations report. Sales to developing nations accounted for 50 percent of exports last year, up from 38 percent the year before Lula became president. The nation was among the first to emerge from the global recession. Police estimated that 30,000 cariocas, as residents of Rio are known flooded onto Copacabana beach to celebrate Brazil’s win. “Without Lula this victory wouldn’t have been possible,” said Paulo Figueiredo as he sold caipirinhas, a Brazilian drink made of sugar cane alcohol. “Like Obama said, Lula is the man. He can connect to the people and that’s how he convinced the Olympic committee.” To contact the reporters on this story: Adriana Brasileiro in Rio de Janeiro at abrasileiro@bloomberg.net ; Joshua Goodman in Rio de Janeiro jgoodman19@bloomberg.net

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Rio Wins 2016 Olympics as Lula’s Lobbying Beats Obama

October 2, 2009

By Adriana Brasileiro and Joshua Goodman Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) — Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who as a boy sold peanuts on the street, beat the world’s two richest nations for the 2016 Olympic Games. Now, he must defeat Rio de Janeiro’s violent crime, which residents call the biggest cloud over their city’s postcard-perfect bid. Lula will also have to push Rio, the sea-side city of Carnival and the 2007 Pan American games, to improve its transit system, renovate its crumbling airport and double its hotel space before it can host its largest international event ever. “The security problem is very serious,” said Carlos Langoni , a former central bank president and finance chief of the organizing committee for the World Cup 2014 , which Brazil will host. “The city’s transportation infrastructure also needs major work but the government is committed and will tackle these issues.” Rio is one of the most violent cities in the world, according to a ranking by Web site RealClearWorld. Home to about 7 million people, it recorded 2,069 murders last year compared with 510 in Chicago, a city of 2.8 million and a finalist contender for the games. The police commit one in five of the murders, according to the United Nations high commissioner for Human Rights . Stray bullets from rival drug gangs battling to control more than 1,000 shantytowns ringing the so-called “Marvelous City” claim dozens of lives each year, police say. The gangs often stop traffic along the main airport road to steal money and cell phones. So-called flash-kidnappings — where victims are taken to ATMs to withdraw cash — are also common, the security secretariat says. Final Round Vote Still, Rio got 66 votes in the final round at the International Olympic Committee meeting in Copenhagen yesterday, while Madrid received 32. Tokyo and Chicago, President Barack Obama’s adopted hometown, lost out earlier. Afterwards, a teary-eyed Lula said he was half-scared by the challenge of hosting the expected 50,000 visitors. As he campaigned for the games over the past months, Lula adopted Obama’s slogan, “Yes We Can,” to address doubts the government can get Rio ready. He pledged to renovate the city’s state-run international airport and unclog traffic-choked streets by extending public transport, including the city’s inefficient subway. Great Victory The Olympics are Rio’s first great victory since the capital moved to Brasilia in 1960, said Andre Urani , a researcher at the Rio-based Institute of Society and Labor Studies. Rio’s bid for the games proposed investments of $11.1 billion. A government infrastructure program has already committed as much as 70 percent of that, according to the Rio Olympics Committee . The organizers need to raise the remaining 30 percent, and expect ticket sales and sponsorships to yield $2.82 billion. The games will inject $51.1 billion into Latin America’s largest economy through 2027 and add 120,000 jobs a year through 2016, according to a study by a Sao Paulo business school for the Ministry of Sports . Lula, who must step down next year after his second term, may be more than a spectator at the 2016 Olympics. With his legacy cemented by landing South America’s first games, and a 77 percent approval rating after almost seven years in office, he’s an automatic contender to run again in 2015. ‘First Class Country’ “Today Brazil was upgraded from a second class country to a first class country,” said Lula, who quit school at 14 and lost part of his finger in an industrial accident. “For the others it was just another Olympics. Brazil was the only country that really wanted to host this.” Getting the games is a triumph for Lula’s foreign policy, which since 2003 has centered on Africa and the developing world, where much of Rio’s lobbying focused. Since April, Lula lobbied in eight countries and the African Union summit in Libya, he said hosting the Olympics wasn’t the exclusive right of rich nations. In a June 15 news conference in Geneva, he said a victory for Rio would empower Africa to match the feat. The victory also stemmed from Lula’s management of the economy , said Rai de Oliveira, a former soccer player who was part of Brazil’s winning team in the 1994 World Cup. Lula rode to office on a wave of anti-capitalist rhetoric that panicked investors and brought the country to the brink of default in 2002. Highest Credit Rating Now Brazil has its highest credit rating ever after Moody’s Investors Service raised its debt to Baa3, the lowest investment-grade, on Sept. 22. Brazilian investment abroad has jumped to $20 billion a year, most of it in the developing world, according to a United Nations report. Sales to developing nations accounted for 50 percent of exports last year, up from 38 percent the year before Lula became president. The nation was among the first to emerge from the global recession. Police estimated that 30,000 cariocas, as residents of Rio are known flooded onto Copacabana beach to celebrate Brazil’s win. “Without Lula this victory wouldn’t have been possible,” said Paulo Figueiredo as he sold caipirinhas, a Brazilian drink made of sugar cane alcohol. “Like Obama said, Lula is the man. He can connect to the people and that’s how he convinced the Olympic committee.” To contact the reporters on this story: Adriana Brasileiro in Rio de Janeiro at abrasileiro@bloomberg.net ; Joshua Goodman in Rio de Janeiro jgoodman19@bloomberg.net

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Iran Agrees to Inspectors’ Visit, New Meeting This Month, EU’s Solana Says

October 1, 2009

By Ladane Nasseri and Gregory Viscusi Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Iran agreed to allow international inspectors to visit its new nuclear fuel plant within the next two weeks and will meet with negotiators for the U.S. and other leading United Nations powers later this month, European Union Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana said. Iran said it will allow inspectors into a recently revealed uranium enrichment plant and the UN powers agreed to look into ways to provide Iran with fuel for a nuclear energy plant. “Today was only a start,” Solana , the point man for the U.S. and five other powers involved in the Geneva talks, said at a news conference. “We will now need to see progress on practical steps.” Today’s meeting, in an 18th century villa outside the Swiss city, brought together Iran’s nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili with representatives of the five permanent UN Security Council members — the U.S, Russia, China, France and Britain – - plus Germany. Since they last met and failed to make headway in July 2008, President Barack Obama promised to engage Iran and Russia has moved closer to the U.S., France, and Britain in threatening tighter sanctions on Iran if it doesn’t stop its uranium enrichment. Iran says the work is aimed at developing peaceful power production; the West suspects the program is cover for a nuclear weapons program. Iran’s “delegation came knowing this was a different setting than the last meeting,” Solana said. “It was the first time the U.S. came fully engaged.” Solana said Iran didn’t directly respond to his offer to freeze UN sanctions imposed on Iran in exchange for the Persian Gulf country freezing uranium enrichment. That offer will be taken up in subsequent meetings, said Jacques Audibert, political secretary of the French Foreign Ministry and France’s representative at the talks. New Plant Revealed The U.S. and its European allies cite Iran’s unveiling last week of a second uranium-enrichment plant as evidence that it’s flouting UN restrictions on its nuclear program. The facility, burrowed into a mountain near Qom, “continues a disturbing pattern of Iranian evasion,” Obama said Sept. 26. Iran said it followed standard procedures by notifying the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency last month about the plant, which is 18 months from completion. Jalili said UN inspectors will be invited to visit the new enrichment site in the next couple of weeks. IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei plans to travel to Iran soon, after an invite from Tehran, Agence France-Presse reported. Sarkozy’s Ultimatum French President Nicolas Sarkozy said last week that Iran has until December to prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear program or face tightened sanctions. “We will judge the Iranians by their implementation,” Audibert said after today’s meeting. “Today we were in discussion mode, not sanctions mode.” Today’s talks at the Villa de Saugy on Lake Geneva began shortly after 10 a.m. local time. Iran’s three-man delegation sat at an oval table facing Solana and the political directors of the six world powers. The talks included several one-on-one meetings, including one between U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs William Burns and Jalili. The U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Iran in 1980, though they have held discussions on Iraq’s postwar security. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described talks with Iran today in Geneva as “productive” and said the U.S. is awaiting actions from the Iranian government in the dispute over its nuclear program. Awaiting Iran’s Response “Now we have to wait and see how quickly and whether Iran responds,” Clinton told reporters today at the State Department in Washington. Today’s meeting was a “positive step for the start of talks” around issues of concern to Iran, Jalili said in a news conference after Solana spoke. “We agreed to follow up on these matters, to reach a framework for further cooperation.” Jalili used this morning’s session to talk about security issues, regional concerns in the Middle East and international nuclear disarmament, diplomats said. The talks were steered back to the nuclear issue, Audibert said. In a potential goodwill gesture, the U.S. yesterday allowed Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to visit his country’s interest section at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, the first such visit in more than eight years. Mottaki, speaking in New York today, said the atmosphere of talks in Geneva today was “constructive” and opens the way for future discussions with the U.S. and its European allies. Iran is ready to “enhance” the discussions to the summit level, Mottaki said. He spoke to reporters at the United Nations in New York. ‘Remarkable Unity’ “There was a remarkable unity of the six,” Audibert said. “There was a very tight common position.” Among the agreements reached today is that experts from the UN’s nuclear agency will meet with Iran by Oct. 18 to see if Iran can ship some of its low-enriched uranium to an outside country to be converted into medium-enriched fuel for an atomic reactor. Audibert said France and Russia are candidates to carry out that work. Iran’s nuclear program began under Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi , who was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic Revolution. While Iran suspended uranium enrichment in 2003 as a goodwill gesture when Mohammad Khatami was president, subsequent talks with European nations to resolve international concerns over its atomic work led nowhere. That was a “bitter” experience for Iran, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Sept. 25. Earlier Sanctions The UN between December 2006 and March 2008 imposed three sets of sanctions on Iran for refusing to suspend enrichment of uranium, which can produce material for a nuclear reactor or a bomb. The measures ban the sale of any equipment that could be used in Iran’s nuclear program, block travel by certain individuals, and cut links to Iranian banks and companies involved in the program. The U.S. has its own set of sanctions which amount to a near trade embargo. In recent weeks, Iran has sought to widen its sources of refined petroleum fuel, suggesting it may be preparing for further sanctions. The world’s fourth-largest oil producer, Iran imports at least one-third of its domestic fuel needs because it doesn’t have enough refineries. U.S. lawmakers are pushing for a ban on gasoline exports to Iran by foreign companies, in addition to restrictions proposed by the Obama administration on Iranian access to oil and gas technology. Iran, as signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has the right to enrich uranium for power generation as long it agrees to outside surveillance. The Security Council has ordered Iran to stop enrichment five times, arguing that its past concealment efforts put the peaceful intentions of its nuclear program in doubt. None of the three nuclear powers in Iran’s neighborhood — Israel, Pakistan, and India – has signed the NPT. To contact the reporters on this story: Gregory Viscusi in Geneva at gviscusi@bloomberg.net ; Ladane Nasseri in Geneva at lnasseri@bloomberg.net .

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Iran Won’t Bend in Nuclear Talks With Western Nations It Blames for Unrest

October 1, 2009

By Ladane Nasseri and Gregory Viscusi Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — The first talks in more than a year between Iranian negotiators and the leading United Nations powers on the country’s nuclear program opened in Geneva after signals that Iran won’t temper its atomic ambitions. Iran’s nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili , began meeting today in an 18th century villa outside the Swiss city with representatives of the five permanent United Nations Security Council members — the U.S, Russia, China, France and Britain — plus Germany. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad yesterday said in Tehran that “the negotiators can adopt any policy they want, but we won’t be harmed.” Mistrust of the West, which is threatening further sanctions if Iran doesn’t curb the nuclear program, has intensified since challengers to Ahmadinejad staged mass protests against his June re-election, saying it was rigged. Dozens of demonstrators were killed when Iran’s clerical regime gave orders to quash the protests, which it said were provoked by the U.S. and U.K. The crackdown has sidelined opponents of Ahmadinejad and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , who favored a less confrontational stance toward the West. Before today’s meeting, Iran’s leaders said they would only discuss global nuclear disarmament and other security issues. The revelation of a second uranium-enrichment site has heightened U.S. and European concern that Iran may be developing weapons. Direct Talks White House officials reiterated yesterday that there would be opportunities for direct discussions between the U.S. and Iran during today’s session in Geneva. An official noted that the former U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker , had held one- on-one talks with Iranian officials on issues stemming from the conflict in Iraq. The Iranian government needs “to get serious” in the talks in Geneva,” U.K. Foreign Secretary David Miliband said. “Our message to Iran is simple: Do not mistake respect for weakness,” Miliband told a conference of the U.K.’s ruling Labour Party today in Brighton, England. “You do have the rights to civilian nuclear power, and we are happy for you to exercise them, but not if the price is plunging the Middle East into a nuclear arms race that is a danger to the whole world.” Today’s talks at the Villa de Saugy on Lake Geneva began shortly after 10 a.m. local time. Jalili and Javier Solana , the European Union’s foreign policy chief and the point man for the world’s powers involved in the talks, posed for photographs outside the villa. They then moved inside to an oval table where Iran’s three-man delegation sat facing Solana and the political directors of the six world powers. ‘Hardliners’ in Power “The hardliners are in power now,” said Geneive Abdo, an Iran expert at the Century Foundation , a New York-based research group. “Khamenei is taking a tough and aggressive posture, consistent with his position since the election crisis, when he blamed the West for the unrest.” The U.S. and its European allies cite Iran’s development of a second uranium-enrichment plant as evidence that the country is flouting UN restrictions on its nuclear program, and say new sanctions may be needed to bring it into line. The underground facility “continues a disturbing pattern of Iranian evasion,” President Barack Obama said on Sept. 26. Iran said it followed standard procedures by notifying the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency last month about the plant, which is 18 months from completion. It says its nuclear program is aimed at generating electricity, and has invited the UN to inspect the new enrichment site, in a mountain near Qom, a city revered by Shiite Muslims. ‘Measurable Results’ A senior U.S. government official, meeting with journalists in Geneva before the talks, said the U.S. and its allies are looking for Iran to implement “practical steps and measurable results” to ensure that its nuclear program isn’t aimed at producing weapons. Solana said earlier this week that today’s talks must focus on Iran’s nuclear program, not wider regional issues. At the last meeting, in July 2008 in Geneva, Jalili lectured about regional threats to Iran and the talks broke up without results. He also said Iran wants to buy enriched uranium from another nation for a nuclear reactor in Tehran. A U.S. official speaking in Geneva yesterday said Ahmadinejad was referring to a research reactor in Tehran and that it was highly unlikely that the U.S. would provide fuel or enriched uranium to Iran. Goodwill Gesture In a potential goodwill gesture, the U.S. yesterday allowed Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to visit his country’s interest section at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, the first such visit in more than eight years. The U.S. and Iran haven’t had direct diplomatic relations in almost three decades. Iran wants to keep the option of becoming a nuclear power and is playing for time by entering into negotiations without conceding any ground, Mark Thomas, a Gulf security expert in Doha, Qatar, for the London-based Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies , said by e-mail. It probably will “hold out the prospect of concessions, whilst continuing a strategy of stalling in order to achieve a ‘break-out’ nuclear weapons capability,” he said. The Iranian opposition, weakened by a campaign of arrests and public trials since the protests, has steered clear of criticizing the government’s nuclear program. Opposition’s Mousavi Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi , who claimed victory in the election and led protests after it, said on Sept. 28 he opposed any sanctions against Iran. During the campaign, Mousavi had defended Iran’s right to nuclear technology while criticizing Ahmadinejad for inflaming tensions with the West through aggressive rhetoric. The nuclear program began under Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi , who was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic Revolution. While Iran suspended uranium enrichment in 2003 as a goodwill gesture when Mohammad Khatami was president, subsequent talks with European nations to resolve international concerns over its atomic work led nowhere. That was a “bitter” experience for Iran, Ahmadinejad said on Sept. 25. The UN between December 2006 and March 2008 imposed three sets of sanctions on Iran for refusing to suspend enrichment of uranium, which can produce material for a nuclear reactor or a bomb. The measures ban the sale of any equipment that could be used in Iran’s nuclear program, block travel by certain individuals, and cut links to Iranian banks and companies involved in the program. The U.S. has its own set of sanctions which amount to a near trade embargo. December Deadline French President Nicolas Sarkozy said last week that Iran has until December to prove the peaceful nature of its nuclear program or face tightened sanctions. In recent weeks Iran has sought to widen its sources of refined petroleum fuel, suggesting it may be preparing for further sanctions. The world’s fourth-largest oil producer, Iran imports at least one-third of its domestic fuel needs because it doesn’t have enough refineries. U.S. lawmakers are pushing for a ban on gasoline exports to Iran by foreign companies, in addition to restrictions proposed by the Obama administration on Iranian access to oil and gas technology. Venezuelan Gasoline Venezuela has said it is ready to supply 20,000 barrels of gasoline a day to Iran starting this month, and Chinese companies are now providing as much as 40,000 barrels a day — or one-third of all imports — via third parties, said Lawrence Eagles, head of commodities research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. It is unlikely Iran will agree to strict international supervision of its facilities, even if the U.S. allows some enrichment to continue, said Ali Pedram , an Iran expert at Durham University in the U.K. “The door to a deal is not closed, but the road is even bumpier than before,” he said. “There is a high wall of distrust.” Iran, as signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has the right to enrich uranium for power generation as long it agrees to outside surveillance. The Security Council has ordered Iran to stop enrichment five times, arguing that its past concealment efforts put the peaceful intentions of its nuclear program in doubt. None of the three nuclear powers in Iran’s neighborhood — Israel, Pakistan, and India – has signed the NPT. To contact the reporters on this story: Gregory Viscusi in Geneva at gviscusi@bloomberg.net ; Ladane Nasseri in Geneva at lnasseri@bloomberg.net .

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Secret Iranian Plant Gives U.S. Added Leverage in Talks on Nuclear Program

September 30, 2009

By Gregory Viscusi and Janine Zacharia Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) — Iran enters the first talks in more than a year on its nuclear ambitions facing world powers more unified in their demand for limits after the disclosure of a covert uranium enrichment plant. The U.S. says it wants the meeting tomorrow in Geneva to be the start of a dialogue aimed at ensuring Iran doesn’t develop a nuclear weapon. Policy makers are exploring internally what sanctions might be appropriate at the end of the year should talks fail to ensure the nuclear effort is for peaceful ends, as Iran insists. “The Obama administration is going into these talks with much more leverage than it’s had in a while,” said Gary Sick, who advised three U.S. presidents on national security. “The threat of enhanced sanctions, combined with some pragmatic offer to allow Iran to continue with limited enrichment, could lead to a deal.” Iran’s program was discussed last week among the U.S. and its allies at the United Nations and the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh as the Obama administration tried to forge a united front. Three rounds of Security Council resolutions, unilateral U.S. sanctions and European financial restrictions have failed to halt Iranian uranium enrichment. The U.S. has cautioned that Iran may be reaching a point where it could build a nuclear weapon. No ‘Snap Judgment’ “We’re not going to make a snap judgment on Thursday,” State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said yesterday of the Geneva gathering, at which Iran’s nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili , will meet with diplomats from the five permanent United Nations Security Council members — the U.S., Russia, China, France and Britain — plus Germany. Javier Solana , the European Union’s foreign policy chief and a liaison to Iran, said more than one meeting will likely be necessary to reach agreement. “The goal is engagement, to seek assurances that Iran’s nuclear program has peaceful intentions,” Solana said in an interview in Goteborg, Sweden. Last week, the U.S., France and Britain turned up the heat by jointly announcing that they had discovered the hidden enrichment site. That came a few days after Iran sent a letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency declaring its existence. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the plant is 18 months from completion and was disclosed within proper time limits. Whether Iran is within its IAEA obligations is a technical issue, said Sick, who worked for Presidents Gerald Ford , Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan . “They’ve been caught with their nuclear pants down,” Sick said. “They will come to Geneva red-faced, but not apologetic.” Access Sought White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said yesterday Iran must allow international inspectors “unfettered access” to its facilities. Iran says its uranium enrichment is to produce fuel for nuclear power plants. The U.S. and EU countries, as well as Israel, say Iran is developing the capability to make a nuclear weapon should its leaders decide to take that step. The main problem for the allies is that Ahmadinejad said last week Iran won’t discuss its atomic activities. “What business is it of theirs to tell us what we can do?” he told reporters in New York on Sept. 25. It is unclear if the step that Iran has pledged to take — allowing inspectors to visit the new facility — would satisfy the U.S. And one Iranian official, lawmaker Mohammad Karami- Rad, said yesterday his country may withdraw from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty if the Geneva talks fail. China, Russia China and Russia agreed to a statement issued Sept. 23 in New York urging Iran to demonstrate that its program isn’t intended for development of a weapon. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev , who has expressed doubts about the value of sanctions, sent mixed messages on whether Russia would support new penalties. Last week he said sanctions would be appropriate “when all instruments have been used and failed.” After the disclosure of the nuclear-fuel facility, he called on Iran to cooperate in a probe, without mentioning the possibility of new punishments. China, which signed an agreement with Iran for the development of the South Azadegan oilfield Sept. 28, has been cool to new sanctions. The Security Council has banned the sale of any equipment that could be used in Iran’s nuclear program. It has also imposed travel bans on certain individuals and trade restrictions on Iranian banks and companies involved in the program. The U.S. has its own set of sanctions which amount to a near trade embargo. French View French President Nicolas Sarkozy said last week that Iran must change course or face tougher sanctions by December. These may include restrictions on banking and oil and gas technology, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Sept. 27. It remains unclear whether such measures, or pressure to choke off Iranian imports of refined fuel as favored by some U.S. lawmakers, would have any effect. Iran, the world’s fourth-largest oil producer, relies on imports for at least a third of its domestic fuel consumption because of a lack of refinery capacity. It is turning to Venezuela and Asian suppliers to make up for any potential shortfall. To contact the reporter on this story: Gregory Viscusi in Goteborg, Sweden, at gviscusi@bloomberg.net ; Janine Zacharia in Washington at jzacharia@bloomberg.net

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Iran May Quit Nuclear Non-Proliferation Pact If Talks Fail, Lawmaker Says

September 29, 2009

By Ali Sheikholeslami Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Iran may end its participation in the global nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty if talks this week fail to resolve the international dispute over the country’s atomic development, a member of the parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee said. The West has always had a “carrots and sticks” approach to Iran, said lawmaker Mohammad Karami-Rad, who urged the powers to “end their excuses and negotiate on significant issues,” the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported. “If Iran remains under Zionist pressures and U.S. bullying and if the 5+1 talks fail, the parliament will take clear stands, such as quitting the NPT,” he said, referring to Israel and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany A delegation from Iran will meet in Geneva on Oct. 1 with representatives of the world powers to discuss the Iranian uranium-enrichment program, a project that has prompted three sets of United Nations sanctions. Iran told the UN atomic agency on Sept. 21 that it’s building a second enrichment plant. The U.S., the U.K. and France on Sept. 25 demanded immediate access to the site by UN inspectors. Uranium enrichment is at the center of Western concerns about Iran’s nuclear program. The process isolates a uranium isotope needed to generate fuel for a nuclear power reactor; in higher concentrations it can be used to make a bomb. Iran denies it is developing a nuclear weapon and insists the enrichment is needed for civilian uses, such as the production of electricity. Further Sanctions Iran’s construction of the underground plant may prompt additional economic sanctions, including restrictions on banking and on oil and gas technology, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told CNN Sept. 27. Iran denies it violated the rules of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency, saying it complied with a requirement to notify the IAEA of the facility’s existence at least 18 months before uranium enters the plant. Iran tested several missiles this week, including its two- stage, solid-fuel Sejil and the liquid-fuel Shahab-3, which both put Israel within reach. In May, Iran launched a Sejil-2, which it said has a range of 2,000 kilometers (1,240 miles). The Obama administration said yesterday Iran’s missile test was typical of the “provocative” acts by the country. The Iranian parliament urged the leading UN powers to use the “historic opportunity” at the Geneva talks. In a statement, 239 lawmakers today warned that the country may adopt other alternatives if the powers “repeat their mistakes,” IRNA reported. To contact the reporter on this story: Ali Sheikholeslami in London at alis2@bloomberg.net .

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Hatoyama Seeks `Yukio-Barack’ Rapport as He Calls for Japan to Woo China

August 31, 2009

By John Brinsley Sept. 1 (Bloomberg) — When Yukio Hatoyama travels to the U.S. this month as Japan’s new prime minister, he’ll have a chance to tell President Barack Obama just what he envisages in calling for a “more equal alliance.” Hatoyama’s Democratic Party of Japan won a landslide election two days ago, ousting a government that had held sway for half a century and signed an agreement in 1960 to host U.S. soldiers on Japanese soil to provide for the country’s security. The DPJ’s platform proposed revising an accord stipulating how the 50,000 American troops stationed in Japan are treated, and developing an “autonomous” foreign policy that is still rooted in the U.S. alliance. Hatoyama has called for closer ties in Asia, especially with China , as that country develops a military capability in line with its economic expansion. “The DPJ wants to have good relations with China and they want to have very good relations with the United States,” Gerald Curtis , a professor of Japanese politics at Columbia University in New York, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “The Hatoyama government will not do things that are going to provoke major controversy with the United States.” Hatoyama, 62, is set to be sworn in as prime minister in time to represent Japan at this month’s Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh and the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Obama, 48 will attend both meetings, giving him a chance to meet Hatoyama. DPJ officials say they would welcome the kind of first-name relationship former premier Junichiro Koizumi enjoyed with President George W. Bush . First Names “The issue for us now is whether Hatoyama can establish a ‘Yukio-Barack’ relationship,” DPJ upper-house legislator Kan Suzuki said in an Aug. 26 interview. “Our biggest policy challenge is diplomacy. As an opposition party, we had a complete lack of information.” As his party’s election landslide unfolded, Hatoyama praised Obama for having “steered U.S. diplomacy toward dialogue.” “We must create a country with the trust of the international community,” Hatoyama said at a press conference early yesterday morning. “There should be many roles that Japan can fulfill between the U.S. and a rising China.” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly described the U.S.- Japan partnership as “key to pursuing peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region.” In an Aug. 30 statement, he said the U.S. “will work closely with the new Japanese government” on issues including curbing North Korea’s nuclear program, combating climate change and “bringing stability to Afghanistan and Pakistan.” U.S. Comment The U.S. isn’t concerned that Japan may seek stronger ties with China and other Asian powers, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said yesterday. “We believe that we’ve always had a strong relationship and that relationship will continue, regardless of what Japanese government is in power,” Gibbs said. While in opposition, Hatoyama’s party resisted Japan’s limited role in providing naval refueling services to support the U.S.-led campaign in Afghanistan. DPJ leaders are also seeking to reduce the estimated $10.3 billion cost of transferring 8,000 Marines from Japan’s southern island of Okinawa to Guam by 2014. Yesterday, Kelly praised Japan’s refueling role while telling reporters that “it’s up to each country to determine how they can best contribute” to stabilizing Afghanistan. He said the U.S. “has no intention” of renegotiating the Guam agreement. Marine Sentenced Japanese citizens, especially in Okinawa, favor changing the U.S.-Japan Status of Forces agreement that gives American servicemen protection from legal prosecution in Japan. A U.S. Marine was sentenced by a U.S. military court to four years in prison in May 2008 for sexual abuse of a 14-year-old Okinawan girl but cleared of rape charges in the latest of a series of such incidents. The DPJ seeks to revise the agreement, a legacy of the U.S. occupation of Japan after World War II, which by the time it ended was twice as long as the war between the two countries. “We want to move away from U.S. dependency to a more equal alliance,” Hatoyama said in a February interview, before he became head of the party. “We’ve followed the U.S. subserviently in the past.” Foreign Policy Foreign policy got little attention during the campaign, with Hatoyama barely mentioning issues such as North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests. Japan participates in stalled six- party talks designed to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear program, a forum the communist regime has been trying to circumvent by seeking direct talks with the U.S. The Obama administration, anticipating an LDP defeat as Prime Minister Taro Aso ’s approval ratings plummeted, requested a meeting between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and senior DPJ officials, including Hatoyama, when she visited Tokyo in February. The new Japanese government may put foreign policy aside temporarily as it works to revive the economy, said Sheila Smith, a senior fellow for Japan Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington. Still, the U.S. military should be paying attention to the DPJ’s desire to reduce U.S. forces in Okinawa and its pledge to end Afghan refueling missions, she said. “They have a tremendous agenda,” Smith said, citing promises on domestic economic stimulus plans. “It’s not quite clear to me where they’ll start.” To contact the reporter on this story: John Brinsley in Tokyo at jbrinsley@bloomberg.net

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Video: Ted Kennedy’s Legacy

August 28, 2009

The third longest serving senator in American history, the late senator involves in many major domestic and foreign policy issues over these crucial decades. (Political Capital)

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Ahmadinejad Nominates Man on Interpol Wanted List as Iran’s Defense Chief

August 21, 2009

By Ali Sheikholeslami Aug. 21 (Bloomberg) — An Iranian official wanted by Interpol in connection with the bombing of an Argentine Jewish center has been nominated for promotion to defense minister in President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ’s cabinet. Ahmad Vahidi, currently deputy defense minister, is accused by Argentina of a role in the 1994 bombing of the center in Buenos Aires, the worst attack on a Jewish target outside Israel since World War II. The blast left 85 people dead and injured more than 150. Argentina is seeking his extradition. Among the other suspects is Mohsen Rezai , a former Revolutionary Guards Corps chief who challenged Ahmadinejad in the June 12 election. “This is yet another of Ahmadinejad’s actions that prove he is a person you cannot deal with,” Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Andy David said today in a telephone interview, referring to Vahidi’s Aug. 19 nomination. “The leadership of Iran is simply not willing to take the path of peace.” Vahidi has been subject to an Interpol “red notice” since November 2007. Such a notice is distributed to police agencies worldwide to request their assistance in detaining him, according to the Web site of Interpol , based in Lyon, France. Phone calls to the Iranian Embassy in London weren’t immediately answered, nor were calls to the Foreign Ministry in Iran, where Friday is observed as the Muslim prayer day. Vahidi has been a senior member of the Revolutionary Guards and has served as deputy to two defense ministers, the state-run Fars news agency reported. He is also a member of the Expediency Council, which has the final say in any disputes on legislation. A parliamentary vote on Vahidi and the other cabinet nominees is scheduled for Aug. 30. Signals ‘Defiance’ “Vahidi’s nomination represents not only the president’s choosing of a relatively narrow echelon of Iran’s security apparatus to top positions, but also signals his defiance and lack of care for the consequence of such key appointments on foreign policy,” Gala Riani , Middle East analyst for London- based business intelligence and forecasting company IHS Global Insight , said today in an e-mail. “The appointment may be a strong signal by the embattled president against international and domestic pressure, on the other hand it may simply represent a continuation of Ahmadinejad’s well-trod path of defiance. or a combination of both,” she said. The announcement that Ahmadinejad won a second term in the election triggered major street protests, after defeated candidates Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karrubi claimed the ballot was rigged. Ahmadinejad has denied the allegation. Crackdown on Protests The Iranian government deployed police officers and members of the volunteer Basij militia armed with batons and tear gas to quell the mass protests. The demonstrations were followed by thousands of arrests and trials of some 140 leading opposition figures and supporters. The crackdown on protesters prompted international condemnation. The government said 30 people died in the unrest, while the opposition put the number at 69. Ahmadinejad has been criticized by the opposition for stoking tension with the West over his rigid stance on Iran’s nuclear program and routinely questioning Israel’s right to exist and the extent of the Nazi Holocaust. Iran is under United Nations sanctions for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment. To contact the reporter on this story: Ali Sheikholeslami in London at alis2@bloomberg.net .

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Manisha Thakor and Sharon Kedar: Forget Mad Men, It’s Time for Mad Women

August 14, 2009

American society is systematically encouraging women to give up financial control. Now that we have your attention, let us share the evidence… Exhibit A: The Princess Problem – you are what you get USA Today Contributor Laura Vanderkam recently wrote a must-read Op-Ed entitled “The Princess Problem. ” The crux of Laura’s argument is that there is a big disconnect between the reality of many women’s financial lives (being the breadwinner) and what they are brought up to expect (getting the glass slipper). Here are our favorite excerpts: • Some moms worry that princesses make girls obsessed with beauty. But I think the problem is that the popular princesses lack what psychologists call an ‘internal locus of control.’ This is the belief that you are responsible for making your way in the world. • In one study of negotiations, 85% of men had an internal locus of control. They determined their worth and said it was their responsibility to ensure their companies paid up. Only 17% of women felt that way. More than 80% of women felt that their worth was determined by what their companies chose to pay them, just as Cinderella is chosen by her prince. Exhibit B: 50% of Americans think women should be FORCED to take their husbands’ last names: Per Feminsting.com, a study presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association indicated that roughly 70% of Americans think a woman should take her husband’s last name upon marriage and a whopping 50% think women should be legally mandated to do so. If your blood is boiling… wait, there’s more. Feministing.com goes on to report that when pressed for a reason why women should change their last names respondents said, ” Women should lose their own identity when they marry and become a part of the man and his family .” Against this kind of backdrop is it any wonder that Secretary of State Clinton was more than a little miffed at being asked for her husband’s view on foreign policy matters? Exhibit C: Paula Abdul says “bye-bye” to being paid significantly less (over 50% less!!) than American Idol co-hosts Ryan Seacrest and Simon Cowell… and not many eyebrows are raised Leaving aside the larger issue of how much anyone should be paid for hosting a reality TV show, we were blown away to learn how much less Paula Abdul was reportedly making relative to her male co-stars . Apparently, Paula was pulling in roughly $3.5 million a year as compared to Ryan’s $10 million, and Simon’s $30 million plus. These are unconfirmed numbers, but even if they are off by half, the pay disparity is still staggering. So what’s the point of these three seemingly disparate examples? The future of our society. As Judith Warner said recently in the NYT , “Women’s issues are being framed by this administration in terms of realpolitik: U.S. security depends on women’s empowerment. Global economic growth depends on women’s participation.” Judith’s wonderful piece is a call-to-action to stop the trivialization of all things Hillary Clinton. We’d argue that the rallying cry should be extended to all women. Whether by design or by default – our society continues to encourage women to give up financial control and condone pay inequality. As Season Three of the hit series Mad Men takes to the airwaves, perhaps it’s time for some Mad Women to take to the streets. Manisha Thakor and Sharon Kedar are the co-authors of two books: ON MY OWN TWO FEET: a modern girl’s guide to personal finance and the upcoming GET FINANCIALLY NAKED: how to talk money with your honey.

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Obama’s Approval Rating Drops in Quinnipiac Poll on Health Care, Economy

August 6, 2009

By Kristin Jensen Aug. 6 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama ’s approval rating is falling on concern unemployment is rising and the budget deficit will grow, a Quinnipiac University poll shows. Exactly half of the registered voters surveyed from July 27 to Aug. 3 by Quinnipiac said they approve of the job Obama is doing, compared with 42 percent who disapprove. That’s down from 57 percent approval and 33 percent disapproval in a poll taken in late June, according to results released today. Americans are upset about rising unemployment and worried that health-care plans making their way through Congress will add to the U.S. budget deficit , said Peter Brown , assistant director of the Hamden, Connecticut-based polling institute. The combination has helped drive down the president’s ratings. A “willingness to give him the benefit of the doubt is, among some voters, evaporating,” Brown told reporters in Washington yesterday. The poll found that voters disapprove of the way Obama is handling the economy by 49 percent to 45 percent. On his effort to overhaul of the health-care system, 52 percent disapprove of his handling of the issue while 39 percent approve. Only foreign policy offered a bright spot: 52 percent of poll respondents approved of his job on this front, compared with 38 percent who disapproved. Quinnipiac took the poll in the middle of a controversy over Obama’s remarks about the arrest of Harvard University scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr . Gates, who is black, was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge after a confrontation at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with a white police officer. Obama, asked about the incident during a July 22 news conference, said police “acted stupidly” in making the arrest. In the poll, voters by 49 percent to 33 percent said Obama acted “stupidly” when he waded into the matter. Even so, 55 percent said they approved of the way Obama is handling race relations. The poll surveyed 2,409 registered voters nationwide and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points. To contact the reporter on this story: Kristin Jensen in Washington at kjensen@bloomberg.net

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Clinton Enlists Chinese Support on Nuclear Disputes With Iran, North Korea

July 29, 2009

By Indira A.R.

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Obama Promotes `Better Impression’ of U.S. Without Major Overseas Crisis

July 21, 2009

By Janine Zacharia July 22 (Bloomberg) — Joe Biden predicted last October it wouldn’t be six months “before the world tests Barack Obama .” Instead, the world largely has embraced the new president.

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