Showing posts with label Diplomacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diplomacy. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2014

Russia sets Ukraine agenda with diplomacy, threats








Ukrainian soldiers stand guard at the gate of a military base in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





Ukrainian soldiers stand guard at the gate of a military base in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





A Ukrainian soldier stands guard at the gate of a military base in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





A Ukrainian armored personnel carrier is stationed behind the gate of a military base in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





Pro Russian soldiers wait outside a Ukrainian military base in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. The seizure of the terminal in the Ukrainian city of Kerch about 20 kilometers (12 miles) by boat to Russia, comes as the U.S. and European governments try to figure out ways to halt and reverse the Russian incursion. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





A pro-Russian soldier stands by a billboard with a map of Crimea and bearing the words “Autonomous Republic of Crimea” in the port of Kerch, Ukraine, Monday, March 3, 2014. Pro-Russian troops controlled a ferry terminal on the easternmost tip of Ukraine’s Crimea region close to Russia on Monday, intensifying fears that Moscow will send even more troops into the strategic Black Sea region in its tense dispute with its Slavic neighbor. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)













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KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia called for the adoption of a national unity deal in Ukraine even as it tightened its stranglehold over Crimea, an audacious combination of diplomacy and escalating military pressure. The U.S. and European Union floundered for solutions — while global markets panicked over the prospect of violent upheaval in the heart of Europe.


Fears grew that the Kremlin might carry out more land grabs in pro-Russian eastern Ukraine, adding urgency to Western efforts to defuse the crisis. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was heading to Kiev in an expression of support for Ukraine’s sovereignty, and the EU threatened a raft of punitive measures as it called an emergency summit on Ukraine for Thursday.


But it was Russia that appeared to be driving the agenda.


Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in Geneva at the beginning of a U.N. Human Rights Council session that Ukraine should return to the Feb. 21 agreement signed by pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych — but not Moscow — aimed at ending Ukraine’s crisis. Yanukovych fled the country after sealing the pact with the opposition and foreign ministers of France, German and Poland to hold early elections and surrender many powers.


“Instead of a promised national unity government,” Lavrov said, “a ‘government of the victors’ has been created.”


Then came dramatic claims from Ukraine that Russian troops had issued an ultimatum for two Ukrainian warships to surrender or be seized — prompting Ukraine’s acting president to accuse Russia of “piracy.”


Four Russian navy ships in Sevastopol’s harbor were blocking Ukraine’s corvette Ternopil and the command ship Slavutych, Ukrainian authorities said. Acting president Oleksandr Turchynov said commanders and crew were “ready to defend their ships … They are defending Ukraine.”


Vladimir Anikin, a Russian defense ministry spokesman in Moscow, dismissed the report of a Russian ultimatum as nonsense but refused to elaborate.


It was not clear what the West could do to make Russia back down. The clearest weapon at the disposal of the EU and U.S. appeared to be economic sanctions that would freeze Russian assets and pull the plug on multi-billion dollar deals with Russia. Late Monday, the EU threatened to freeze visa liberalization and economic cooperation talks and boycott the G8 summit in Russia if Moscow does not climb down on Crimean peninsula by the Thursday summit.


Already the economic fallout for Russia over its Crimea takeover was being intensely felt: Russia’s stock market dropped about 10 percent on Monday and its currency fell to its lowest point ever against the dollar. But the economic consequences of antagonizing Russia were also acute for Western Europe: The EU relies heavily on Russian natural gas flowing through a network of Ukrainian and other pipelines.


By Monday it was clear that Russia had effectively turned Crimea into a protectorate.


Russian soldiers controlled all Crimean border posts Monday, as well as all military facilities in the territory. Troops also controlled a ferry terminal in the Ukrainian city of Kerch, just 20 kilometers (12 miles) across the water from Russia. That intensified fears in Kiev that Moscow will send even more troops into the peninsula via that route.


Border guard spokesman Sergei Astakhov said the Russians were demanding that Ukrainian soldiers and guards transfer their allegiance to Crimea’s new pro-Russian local government.


“The Russians are behaving very aggressively,” he said. “They came in by breaking down doors, knocking out windows, cutting off every communication.”


He said four Russian military ships, 13 helicopters and 8 transport planes had arrived in Crimea in violation of agreements that permit Russian to keep its Black Sea fleet at the naval base in Sevastopol. The agreement limits the deployment of additional forces at the base.


Ukraine’s prime minister admitted his country had “no military options on the table” to reverse Russia’s military move into its Crimea region. Pro-Russian soldiers surrounded Ukrainian military facilities on the peninsula, completing a military takeover without firing a single shot.


Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk appealed for outside help and said Crimea remained part of his country, as European foreign ministers held an emergency meeting on a joint response to Russia’s military push into Crimea.


“Any attempt of Russia to grab Crimea will have no success at all. Give us some time,” he said at a news conference with British Foreign Secretary Wiliam Hague.


But he added that “for today” there were “no military options on the table,” he said. He said his country was “urgently” asking for economic and political support from other countries.


The fears in the Ukrainian capital and beyond are that that Russia might seek to expand its control by seizing other parts of Ukraine in the pro-Russian east of the country, the country’s industrial powerhouse and agricultural breadbasket.


Hague said “the world cannot just allow this to happen.” But he, like other Western diplomats, ruled out any military action. “The U.K is not discussing military options. Our concentration is on diplomatic and economic pressure.”


Faced with fears of more Russian aggression, Ukraine’s new government has moved to consolidate its authority, naming new regional governors in the pro-Russia east picked among the country’s wealthy businessmen.


By putting influential oligarchs in control of key eastern provinces, Kiev appears to be hoping that Russian-leaning citizens will be more willing to remain within the Ukrainian fold.


In Geneva, Lavrov attempted to deflect international blame back onto the West.


“Those who are trying to interpret the situation as a sort of aggression and threatening us with sanctions and boycotts, these are the same partners who have been consistently and vigorously encouraging the political powers close to them to declare ultimatums and renounce dialogue,” Lavrov said.


“We call upon them to show a responsibility and to set aside geopolitical calculations and put the interests of the Ukrainian people above all.”


Lavrov on Monday justified the use of Russian troops in Ukraine as a necessary protection for his country’s citizens living there. “This is a question of defending our citizens and compatriots, ensuring human rights, especially the right to life,” Lavrov said.


Market reaction to the Russian seizure of Crimea was furious Monday. In European trading, gold and oil rose while the euro and stock markets fell. The greatest impact was felt in Moscow, where the main RTS index was down 12 percent at 1,115 and the dollar spiked to an all-time high of 37 rubles.


Russia’s central bank hiked its main interest rate 1.5 percentage points Monday to 7 percent, trying to stem financial outflows.


Gazprom, the Russian energy giant, was also big loser, its share price down 13 percent as investors worried about how it would get its gas to Europe if hostilities kept up, since much of it goes through Ukrainian pipelines.


Tension between Ukraine and Moscow rose sharply after Ukraine’s pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych was pushed out by a protest movement among people who wanted closer ties with the European Union. Yanukovych fled to Russia after more than 80 demonstrators were killed near Kiev’s central square. He says he is still president.


Putin’s confidence in his Ukraine strategy is underpinned by the knowledge that the nation’s 46 million people have divided loyalties. While much of western Ukraine wants closer ties with the 28-nation European Union, its eastern and southern regions look to Russia for support.


Crimea is where Russia feels most at home in Ukraine: It is home to 2 million mostly Russian-speaking people and landlord for Russia’s critical Black Sea Fleet at Sevastopol.


___


Bennet reported from Kerch, Ukraine. Danica Kirka in London contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Russia sets Ukraine agenda with diplomacy, threats

Monday, January 13, 2014

Syrian peace talks yield potato diplomacy







U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a “thumbs-up” sign after giving a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry holds up a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, standing right, at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. For some watchers of international diplomacy, the somber road to Syrian peace was overrun Monday by potatoes and furry pink hats. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)













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(AP) — For some watchers of international diplomacy, the somber road to Syrian peace was overrun Monday by potatoes and furry pink hats.


A swapping of delegation gifts between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov served as a distraction from predictions of elusive success in Syria.


The usually stern-faced Lavrov came to the meeting armed with at least two ushankas, a traditional Russian fur hat with earflaps that tie to the top of the hat. Both hats went to women on Kerry’s press staff — including a bubblegum-pink one for State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.


The more bizarre bout of diplomacy came over a pair of Idaho potatoes.


After pictures of Kerry handing Lavrov the tubers during talks Monday morning surfaced on the Web, reporters pressed both leaders for an explanation hours later.


Kerry quickly sought to disavow any deep diplomatic meaning from the spuds, explaining that he was in Idaho over the holidays when he and Lavrov spoke by phone. The Russian, it seemed, associated Idaho with potatoes.


“He told me he’s not going to make vodka. He’s going to eat them,” Kerry said of Lavrov, who was next to him at an otherwise grim news conference on militant threats to humanitarian aid for Syria.


Kerry added: “I really want to clarify: There’s no hidden meaning. There’s no metaphor. There’s no symbolic anything. … He recalled the Idaho potatoes as being something that he knew of, so I thought I would surprise him and bring him some good Idaho potatoes.”


The mention of vodka put Lavrov on a brief rhetorical bender.


“In Poland, they make vodka from potatoes,” Lavrov said. “I know this. But that’s in Poland.”


Kerry tried to steer the discussion back to Iran or Syria, but Lavrov plowed on.


“We used to do this in the Soviet Union,” he said. “Now we try to do it from wheat.”


A few minutes later, Lavrov awkwardly tried to tie the potato diplomacy to the Syrian negotiations.


“The specific potato which John handed to me has the shape which makes it possible to insert potato in the carrot-and-stick expression,” he said to laughter from reporters. “So it could be used differently.”


___


On Twitter: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Syrian peace talks yield potato diplomacy

Friday, December 20, 2013

[287] Drones at Your Doorstep, Puppet States Against Diplomacy & America"s Impending Financial Crash

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[287] Drones at Your Doorstep, Puppet States Against Diplomacy & America"s Impending Financial Crash

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Obama says U.S. remains prepared to act on Syria if diplomacy fails


WASHINGTON | Sat Sep 14, 2013 12:24pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama welcomed a U.S.-Russian accord on Saturday aimed at getting control of Syrian chemical weapons and warned that if diplomacy fails the United States remains prepared to act.


In a statement, Obama reacted to the framework deal that emerged from talks in Geneva between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.


Amid questions about how the deal would be enforced should Syria fail to live up to its obligations, Obama said the United States would work with Russia, Britain, France and the United Nations to ensure there are consequences. Much work remains to be done, he said.


And if diplomacy fails on Syria, “the United States remains prepared to act,” he said.



Reuters: Politics



Obama says U.S. remains prepared to act on Syria if diplomacy fails

Friday, September 13, 2013

VIDEO: Kerry and Lavrov Discuss Proposal on Syria









U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hold a second day of talks in Geneva on Russia’s proposal to secure Syria’s chemical weapons. (Sept. 13)













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VIDEO: Kerry and Lavrov Discuss Proposal on Syria

Obama"s Wing-it Diplomacy Undermines U.S. Credibility


Here’s how the Obama folks have been starting to spin Syria. The president made a credible threat to use military force in Syria. At the same time, he worked behind the scenes to get Russia’s Vladimir Putin to push Bashir al-Assad to give up chemical weapons.


These two seemingly discordant initiatives, brilliantly coordinated, combined to produce a process to eliminate Assad’s chemical weapons without even a shot being fired across the bow.


Of course, every bit of this is false. Only the most credulous Obama fans are fooled.


Back on Aug. 20, 2012, in response to an intelligent question from NBC’s Chuck Todd, the president said that the use of chemical weapons by Syria would be a “red line” that would “change my calculus.”


That’s a threat to go to war. As the Washington Post’s Walter Pincus points out, once a president declares a red line, he should be prepared to back it up. He should order military contingency plans, consult with members of Congress and seek support from foreign governments.


There is no evidence that Obama did any of these things in a serious or sustained way in the 366 days between his red-line statement and the use of chemical weapons in the suburbs of Damascus — not even after British and French intelligence reported the use of chemical weapons last spring.


Then during the week of Aug. 26-30, leaks poured out from the administration that Obama would order air strikes in Syria, but only little ones. Regime change was off the table.


On Friday night before the Labor Day weekend, Obama suddenly decided, during a walk in the White House grounds, to seek congressional approval.


Were any soundings taken of congressional opinion before that decision? It doesn’t seem likely.


Even the slightest pulse-taking would have suggested that getting majority approval would be difficult in a House of Representatives where most Republicans mistrust the president and most Democrats are congenitally dovish.


Especially when public opinion strongly opposed any military intervention.


Attempts to propitiate Democrats by stressing that air strikes would be only a pinprick inevitably repelled Republicans willing to support only measures that would weaken or dislodge the Assad regime.


After Labor Day, as media vote counts started showing a majority of House members voting or leaning no, White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, who accompanied Obama on his Friday night walk, was still predicting that the administration would prevail. That was either insincere or delusional.


The claim that the Russians agreed to push Syria on chemical weapons only because Obama threatened to use force requires a belief they thought he would do so after an adverse congressional vote. Not likely.


Nor is it likely that John Kerry’s statement in his Monday press conference in London that the attack could be avoided if Syria submitted to international inspections was part of a calculated strategy. Kerry’s next words were, “But he isn’t about to do it, and it can’t be done, obviously.”


Kerry was winging it, and so was Obama when he spoke favorably of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s offer to push Syria to give up its poison gas.


So the president’s Wednesday night speech included words supporting military action and other words explaining that it wasn’t necessary.


It can be argued that Obama’s decision to hold off on air strikes and negotiate with the Russians is better for the United States in the short run than the other two alternatives on offer — ineffective air strikes or a landslide repudiation of the commander in chief by Congress.


But in the long run, it’s a terrible setback for America.


Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger muscled the Soviet Union out of Middle East diplomacy back in 1973. In the 40 years since, American presidents have kept the Russians out.


Now they’re back in. A nation with a declining population, a weakened military and an economy propped up only by oil and gas exports has suddenly made itself the key interlocutor in the region.


Obama has allowed this even though it’s obvious that effective disarmament is impossible in a nation riven by civil war and ruled by a regime with every incentive and inclination to lie and conceal.


The negotiations and any fig-leaf inspection process can be dragged out for weeks, months and years, as Saddam Hussein demonstrated.


Obama said he hoped to degrade Syria’s chemical weapons program. Instead he has degraded his own — and America’s — credibility. 




Michael Barone is Senior Political Analyst for the Washington Examiner, co-author of The Almanac of American Politics and a contributor to Fox News.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Obama"s Wing-it Diplomacy Undermines U.S. Credibility

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Frustrated with Syria, W.H. tries gunboat diplomacy

Chuck Hagel is shown. | AP Photo

En route from Hawaii to Malaysia, Hagel declined to discuss any specifics.





ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT OVER THE PACIFIC  — The Pentagon is moving naval forces closer to Syria in preparation for a possible decision by President Barack Obama to order military strikes, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel suggested on Friday.


Hagel declined to describe any specific movements of U.S. forces. He said Obama asked that the Pentagon to prepare military options for Syria and that some of those options “requires positioning our forces.”



U.S. Navy ships are capable of a variety of military action, including launching Tomahawk cruise missiles, as they did against Libya in 2011 as part of an international action that led to the overthrow of the Libyan government.


(PHOTOS: Chuck Hagel’s career)


“The Defense Department has a responsibility to provide the president with options for contingencies, and that requires positioning our forces, positioning our assets, to be able to carry out different options — whatever options the president might choose,” Hagel said.


He said the U.S. is coordinating with the international community to determine “what exactly did happen” in the reported use by the Syrian government of chemical weapons against civilians earlier this week.


“We’re still assessing that,” he said.


(Also on POLITICO: Barack Obama: Syria situation ‘troublesome’)


Hagel said a determination on the chemical attack should be made swiftly because “there may be another attack coming,” although he added that “we don’t know” whether that will happen.


Hagel said that although he is scheduled to spend the next week traveling in Southeast Asia, he will remain in contact with the White House about developments in Syria and planning for potential U.S. action.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Frustrated with Syria, W.H. tries gunboat diplomacy

Frustrated with Syria, W.H. tries gunboat diplomacy

Chuck Hagel is shown. | AP Photo

En route from Hawaii to Malaysia, Hagel declined to discuss any specifics.





ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT OVER THE PACIFIC  — The Pentagon is moving naval forces closer to Syria in preparation for a possible decision by President Barack Obama to order military strikes, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel suggested on Friday.


Hagel declined to describe any specific movements of U.S. forces. He said Obama asked that the Pentagon to prepare military options for Syria and that some of those options “requires positioning our forces.”



U.S. Navy ships are capable of a variety of military action, including launching Tomahawk cruise missiles, as they did against Libya in 2011 as part of an international action that led to the overthrow of the Libyan government.


(PHOTOS: Chuck Hagel’s career)


“The Defense Department has a responsibility to provide the president with options for contingencies, and that requires positioning our forces, positioning our assets, to be able to carry out different options — whatever options the president might choose,” Hagel said.


He said the U.S. is coordinating with the international community to determine “what exactly did happen” in the reported use by the Syrian government of chemical weapons against civilians earlier this week.


“We’re still assessing that,” he said.


(Also on POLITICO: Barack Obama: Syria situation ‘troublesome’)


Hagel said a determination on the chemical attack should be made swiftly because “there may be another attack coming,” although he added that “we don’t know” whether that will happen.


Hagel said that although he is scheduled to spend the next week traveling in Southeast Asia, he will remain in contact with the White House about developments in Syria and planning for potential U.S. action.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Frustrated with Syria, W.H. tries gunboat diplomacy

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Egypt: Diplomacy has failed to resolve standoff








This image released by the Egyptian Presidency shows interim Vice President Mohamed Elbaradei, center right, meeting with U.S. senators John McCain, center left, and Lindsey Graham, fifth from left, with U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson, fourth from left, in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013. U.S. senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham arrived in Cairo on Monday at President Barack Obama’s request to press senior Egyptians for a quick return to civilian rule. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)





This image released by the Egyptian Presidency shows interim Vice President Mohamed Elbaradei, center right, meeting with U.S. senators John McCain, center left, and Lindsey Graham, fifth from left, with U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson, fourth from left, in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013. U.S. senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham arrived in Cairo on Monday at President Barack Obama’s request to press senior Egyptians for a quick return to civilian rule. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)





A supporter of Egypt’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi holds his posters with Arabic writing which reads ” Yes for legality,” during a protest outside Rabaah al-Adawiya mosque, where protesters have installed a camp and hold daily rallies at Nasr City in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)





Supporters of Egypt’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi hold his posters with Arabic writing which reads ” Yes for legality, No for the coup” during a protest outside Rabaah al-Adawiya mosque, where protesters have installed a camp and hold daily rallies at Nasr City in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)













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(AP) — Egypt’s presidency said Wednesday that more than 10 days of diplomatic efforts to find a way out of the standoff between the country’s military-backed interim leadership and the Muslim Brotherhood have failed.


The statement follows a flurry of diplomatic visits by envoys from the United States, the EU and Arab Gulf states to defuse the crisis between the government and supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi, who hails from the Islamist group.


The comments from the office of interim President Adly Mansour, who was installed by the military after the July 3 coup that overthrew Morsi, said the mediation efforts have ended and blamed the Brotherhood for the failure to reach a resolution.


“These efforts did not achieve the success that was hoped for, despite full support provided by the Egyptian government,” the statement said. “The state of Egypt appreciates the efforts of friendly nations and understands the reasons why they did not achieve their desired objectives, and holds the Muslim Brotherhood full responsibility for the failure of these efforts.”


The presidency did not say what the interim leadership’s next step would be, but in the past week authorities have outlined plans to break up two major sit-ins in Cairo by Morsi’s supporters. Diplomatic efforts were largely centered on finding a peaceful way out of the crisis to avert the use of force against the sit-ins.


Already more than 250 people have been killed in violence since the military ousted Morsi more than a month ago. His supporters have staged daily protests since.


The presidency’s statement was released a day after a visit to Cairo by two U.S. Senators who urged the military-backed interim government to release Islamist figures as a gesture to Brotherhood or risk making “a huge mistake.”


Mansour, the interim president, rejected the senators’ message, calling it “unacceptable interference in internal politics.”


The Brotherhood is demanding Morsi’s reinstatement as Egypt’s first freely elected president while the new government vows to push ahead with fresh elections early next year.


Before dawn Wednesday, a security official said clashes between supporters of the country’s ousted president and residents of Egypt’s Mediterranean city of Alexandria have left one person dead and dozens wounded. Residents of the Manshiya neighborhood were angered by marchers who were chanting against the country’s armed forces. It was not immediately clear what sparked the violence.


The official, who spoke anonymously in line with regulations, said 46 people were wounded, including some by gunshot and birdshot, in the violence.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Egypt: Diplomacy has failed to resolve standoff

Monday, August 5, 2013

VIDEO: Raw: Iran Swears in New President









Iran swore in its new president, Hasan Rouhani, on Sunday. Rouhani spoke to parliament, calling on the west to abandon what he called the ‘language of sanctions.’ (Aug. 5)













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VIDEO: Raw: Iran Swears in New President

Friday, August 2, 2013

VIDEO: Threat Closing Some US Embassies on Sunday







The US is closing embassies and consulates in Muslim and Middle Eastern countries on Sunday in response to an unspecified threat. State Department officials say they are closing the facilities out of an ‘abundance of caution.’ (Aug. 2)













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VIDEO: Threat Closing Some US Embassies on Sunday

Friday, July 19, 2013

NJ man specialist in BBQ, North Korean diplomacy







In this Thursday, July 18, 2013 photo, Bobby Egan poses for photos outside his BBQ restaurant, Cubby’s, in Hackensack, N.J. Egan had a well-documented, decades-long friendship with North Korean diplomats posted to the United Nations in New York. His book about his experiences dealing with the North Koreans, called “Eating with the Enemy,” was optioned by HBO, and actor James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in the film before his untimely death last month. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)





In this Thursday, July 18, 2013 photo, Bobby Egan poses for photos outside his BBQ restaurant, Cubby’s, in Hackensack, N.J. Egan had a well-documented, decades-long friendship with North Korean diplomats posted to the United Nations in New York. His book about his experiences dealing with the North Koreans, called “Eating with the Enemy,” was optioned by HBO, and actor James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in the film before his untimely death last month. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)





This 2002 photo provided by Cubby’s BBQ owner Bobby Egan shows Egan, center, with a group of North Koreans displaying their catches during a fishing trip with off Long Island, N.Y Egan had a well-documented, decades-long friendship with North Korean diplomats posted to the United Nations in New York. His book about his experiences dealing with the North Koreans, called “Eating with the Enemy,” was optioned by HBO, and actor James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in the film before his untimely death last month. (AP Photo/Courtesy Bobby Egan)





In this Thursday, July 18, 2013 photo, Bobby Egan poses for photos in his BBQ restaurant, Cubby’s, in Hackensack, N.J. Egan had a well-documented, decades-long friendship with North Korean diplomats posted to the United Nations in New York. His book about his experiences dealing with the North Koreans, called “Eating with the Enemy,” was optioned by HBO, and actor James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in the film before his untimely death last month. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)





In this Thursday, July 18, 2013 photo, Bobby Egan poses for photos in his BBQ restaurant, Cubby’s, in Hackensack, N.J. Egan had a well-documented, decades-long friendship with North Korean diplomats posted to the United Nations in New York. His book about his experiences dealing with the North Koreans, called “Eating with the Enemy,” was optioned by HBO, and actor James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in the film before his untimely death last month. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)













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(AP) — The way Robert Egan sees it New Jerseyans and North Koreans have a lot in common. They’re family-centered, fiercely loyal, and often misunderstood by outsiders.


It’s those similarities that this high school dropout turned BBQ pit-master says allowed him to be a successful liaison between the United States and North Korea for years, a role that has eluded even seasoned diplomats.


Egan formed an unlikely friendship in the early 1990s with the North Koreans posted to their country’s United Nations mission in New York, following an introduction by Vietnamese officials he’d met through his activism on the search for missing American soldiers.


“There is a lot of North Jersey in the North Koreans: they’re sensitive, they’re caring people,” Egan said, adding they were also family-oriented and loyal. “But there’s another side to them, I don’t know if that’s bipolar or what, but there’s two personalities.”


James Gandolfini was set to portray Egan in a movie for HBO before the actor’s untimely death last month. A spokeswoman for HBO said the project would continue and the company maintains the option on a book Egan wrote with journalist Kurt Pitzer, called “Eating with the Enemy: How I Waged Peace with North Korea from My BBQ shack in Hackensack.”


The gregarious 55-year-old, known as Bobby, freely admits to a past that included drug use and youthful petty crimes. Egan said he had always been open with both the North Koreans and his own government about his activities, and freely shared information with both camps.


A lengthy 2007 Vanity Fair profile of Egan said the author had been shown proof of Egan’s role as an on-again, off-again informant for the FBI, which had also kept tabs on Egan. The portion of Egan’s FBI file that related to North Korea — which the magazine obtained under a Freedom of Information request — was several hundred pages long and marked “classified.”


A 2002 New York Times article about North Korea’s newly discovered secret nuclear program said The Times had been contacted by the North Koreans through Egan, because they had wanted to get a message to the U.S. government about their willingness to negotiate with the Bush administration over the program.


Egan said his relations with the North Koreans have cooled since the 2010 publication of his book, and because he feels North Korea’s current leader, Kim Jong Un, is a more volatile, dangerous man than his predecessor and less open to backdoor communication between the two nations — which have no formal diplomatic relations.


During his active years with the North Koreans, Egan often fed visiting delegates at Cubby’s, his modest BBQ restaurant located along a light industrial stretch of road in Hackensack, about eight miles outside of Manhattan. The exact mileage between Cubby’s and the UN was itself a matter of diplomatic importance: the restaurant fell within the 25-mile radius that North Koreans are permitted to travel on their heavily restricted visas. His restaurant walls and several albums are full of photos of Egan escorting the North Korean diplomats on fishing and hunting trips, or to Giants games. They also include pictures of his several trips to North Korea.


Egan, who is proud of his blue-collar Italian and Irish ancestry, said the North Koreans came to trust his straight-talking New Jersey ways.


“Certainly the roughness around me, the ‘street Bobby,’ is something they respond favorably to,” he said. “Right up to the top, they got all Bobby Egans running their country. These guys are street thugs. These guys have made it the hard way.”


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NJ man specialist in BBQ, North Korean diplomacy