Showing posts with label Kerry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kerry. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Lavrov and Kerry talked about need to respect outcome of Crimea referendum

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Lavrov and Kerry talked about need to respect outcome of Crimea referendum

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Kerry: Include IMF in Ukraine package

US Secretary of State John Kerry testifies before the Senate Appropriation Committee

‘We must have IMF reform, we must have the quota,’ Kerry said. | Getty





Secretary of State John Kerry urged Congress to approve reforms to the International Monetary Fund that the administration says is a critical component of aid to Ukraine but is running into opposition from some Republicans.


“We must have IMF reform, we must have the quota,” Kerry told a Senate appropriations subcommittee Thursday. “It would be a terrible message to Ukraine for everybody to be standing up talking, appropriately, about what’s at stake and not to be able to follow through.”







A partisan divide over changes to the IMF is slowing down efforts on Capitol Hill to provide assistance to Ukraine after the recent Russian incursion.


A bill heading to the Senate floor gives congressional approval to a 2010 IMF decision that reconfigures the amount of money the United States and other countries contribute to the organization. But many Republicans worry the move could expose taxpayers to risk and say it’s unrelated to the crisis in Ukraine. The GOP-controlled House passed a Ukraine measure last week that didn’t include the IMF provision.


“The IMF money has nothing to do with Ukraine,” Speaker John Boehner said Thursday. “I understand the administration wants the IMF money but it has nothing at all to do with Ukraine. So let’s just understand what the facts are here.”


The Ohio Republican urged the Senate to swiftly pass the House legislation before next week’s recess. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has already rejected that option.


Kerry, who also pressed House lawmakers on the IMF issue Wednesday, noted that the U.S. is the only member of the organization that hasn’t approved the reforms. The implications of that, he said, are “just enormous.”


“Our leadership in this is now in doubt,” Kerry told senators. “We’re inadvertently hurting ourselves by sending a message that we’re not prepared to lead.”


Some congressional Republicans are concerned that taxpayer dollars could be at a greater risk under the changes, however. Some Republicans on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee tried to get rid of the provision during a Wednesday markup, but were defeated by Democrats and a few Republicans.


Kerry is headed to London Friday to meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. The secretary of state told senators Thursday morning that he had spoken briefly with Lavrov, who was meeting in Sochi with Russian President Vladimir Putin.


He also warned that while Russia did not currently have the capacity to take over all of Ukraine, “that could change very quickly.”


As voters in Crimea faces a March 16 referendum on ratifying a decision to leave Ukraine and join Russia, Kerry warned of a “very serious series of steps” on Monday both in Europe and in the United States regarding “options available to us” if there is no progress on a resolution by the vote.


“Our hope is to have Russia join in respecting international law,” Kerry said. “There is no justification, no legality to this referendum that is taking place.”


Still, Kerry acknowledged that there was little doubt over what the results of the referendum will be. The Crimean parliament voted earlier this month 78-0 to join Russia.


Jake Sherman contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Kerry: Include IMF in Ukraine package

SHOWDOWN: KERRY GIVES RUSSIA MONDAY DEADLINE

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SHOWDOWN: KERRY GIVES RUSSIA MONDAY DEADLINE

Friday, March 7, 2014

US Foreign Policy: an interpretive dance by Obama and Kerry

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US Foreign Policy: an interpretive dance by Obama and Kerry

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Putin brings down Crimea tensions; Kerry in Kiev








President Vladimir Putin answers journalists’ questions on current situation in Ukraine at the Novo-Ogaryovo presidential residence outside Moscow on Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Putin accused the West of encouraging an “unconstitutional coup” in Ukraine, Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that Moscow reserves the right to use all means to protect Russians there. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





President Vladimir Putin answers journalists’ questions on current situation in Ukraine at the Novo-Ogaryovo presidential residence outside Moscow on Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Putin accused the West of encouraging an “unconstitutional coup” in Ukraine, Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that Moscow reserves the right to use all means to protect Russians there. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





Russian soldiers fire warning shots at the Belbek air base, outside Sevastopol, Ukraine, on Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Russian troops, who had taken control over Belbek airbase, fired warning shots in the air as around 300 Ukrainian officers marched towards them to demand their jobs back. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)





A man wearing camouflage uniform holds a candle during the funeral of Volodymyr Topiy, 59, who was found burned in the house of trade unions in Kiev’s Independence Square during recent clashes with police, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Vladimir Putin ordered tens of thousands of Russian troops participating in military exercises near Ukraine’s border to return to their bases as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was on his way to Kiev. Tensions remained high in the strategic Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea with troops loyal to Moscow fired warning shots to ward off protesting Ukrainian soldiers. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)





Ukrainian navy corvette Ternopil is anchored at Ukrainian navy base in Sevastopol, Ukraine, early Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Russian troops said to be 16,000 strong tightened their stranglehold on Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula Monday, openly defying the U.S. and the European Union and rattling world capitals and stock markets. (AP Photo/Andrew Lubimov)





Ukrainian recruits receive military instructions from a commander at a recruitment center at Kiev’s Independence Square, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Vladimir Putin ordered tens of thousands of Russian troops participating in military exercises near Ukraine’s border to return to their bases as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was on his way to Kiev. Tensions remained high in the strategic Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea with troops loyal to Moscow fired warning shots to ward off protesting Ukrainian soldiers. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)













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(AP) — Vladimir Putin talked tough but cooled tensions in the Ukraine crisis in his first comments since its president fled, saying Russia has no intention “to fight the Ukrainian people” but reserved the right to use force. As the Russian president held court Tuesday in his personal residence, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met with Kiev’s fledgling government and Moscow agreed to sit down with NATO.


Although nerves remained on edge in Crimea, with Russian troops firing warning shots to ward off Ukrainian soldiers, global markets catapulted higher on tentative signals that the Kremlin was not seeking to escalate the conflict. Kerry brought moral support and a $ 1 billion aid package to a Ukraine fighting to fend off bankruptcy.


Lounging in an arm-chair before Russian tricolor flags, Putin delivered a characteristic performance filled with earthy language, macho swagger and sarcastic jibes, accusing the West of promoting an “unconstitutional coup” in Ukraine. At one point he compared the U.S. role in Ukraine to an experiment with “lab rats.”


But the overall message appeared to be one of de-escalation: “It seems to me (Ukraine) is gradually stabilizing,” Putin said. “We have no enemies in Ukraine. Ukraine is a friendly state.” He tempered those comments by warning that Russia was willing to use “all means at our disposal” to protect ethnic Russians in the country.


Significantly, Russia agreed to a NATO request to hold a special meeting to discuss Ukraine on Wednesday in Brussels, opening up a possible diplomatic channel in a conflict that still holds monumental hazards and uncertainties.


While the threat of military confrontation retreated somewhat Tuesday, both sides ramped up economic feuding in their struggle over Ukraine: Russia hit its nearly broke neighbor with a termination of discounts on natural gas, while the U.S. announced a $ 1 billion aid package in energy subsidies to Ukraine.


“We are going to do our best (to help you). We are going to try very hard,” Kerry said upon arriving in Kiev. “We hope Russia will respect the election that you are going to have.”


Ukraine’s finance minister, who has said Ukraine needs $ 35 billion to get through this year and next, was meeting Tuesday with officials from the International Monetary Fund.


World stock markets, which panicked the previous day, clawed back a large chunk of their losses Tuesday on signs that Russia was backpedaling. Gold, the Japanese yen and U.S. treasuries — all seen as safe havens — returned some of their gains. Russia’s RTS index, which slumped 12 percent on Monday rose 6.2 percent Tuesday. In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was up 1.4 percent.


“Confidence in equity markets has been restored as the standoff between Ukraine and Russia is no longer on red alert,” said David Madden, market analyst at IG.


Russia took over the strategic peninsula of Crimea on Saturday, placing its troops around the peninsula’s ferry, military bases and border posts. Two Ukrainian warships remained anchored in the Crimean port of Sevastopol, blocked from leaving by Russian ships.


“Those unknown people without insignia who have seized administrative buildings and airports … what we are seeing is a kind of velvet invasion,” said Russian military analyst Alexander Golts.


The territory’s enduring volatility was put in stark relief Tuesday morning: Russian troops, who had taken control of the Belbek air base, fired warning shots into the air as around 300 Ukrainian soldiers, who previously manned the airfield, demanded their jobs back.


About a dozen soldiers at the base warned the Ukrainians, who were marching unarmed, not to approach. They fired several warning shots into the air and said they would shoot the Ukrainians if they continued to march toward them.


The Ukrainian troops vowed to hold whatever ground they had left on the Belbek base.


“We are worried. But we will not give up our base,” said Capt. Nikolai Syomko, an air force radio electrician holding an AK47 and patrolling the back of the compound. He said the soldiers felt they were being held hostage, caught between Russia and Ukraine. There were no other reports of significant armed confrontations Tuesday in Ukraine.


Amid the tensions, the Russian military on Tuesday successfully test-fired a Topol intercontinental ballistic missile. The missile launched from a launch pad in southern Russia hit a designated target on a range leased by Russia from Kazakhstan.


The new Ukrainian leadership in Kiev, which Putin does not recognize, has accused Moscow of a military invasion in Crimea, which the Russian leader denies.


Ukraine’s prime minister expressed hope Tuesday that a negotiated solution could be found. Arseniy Yatsenyuk told a news conference that both governments were talking again, albeit slowly.


“We hope that Russia will understand its responsibility in destabilizing the security situation in Europe, that Russia will realize that Ukraine is an independent state and that Russian troops will leave the territory of Ukraine,” he said.


In his hour-long meeting with reporters Tuesday, Putin said Russia had no intention of annexing Crimea, while insisting its residents have the right to determine the region’s status in a referendum later this month. Crimean tensions, Putin said, “have been settled.”


He said massive military maneuvers Russia had been doing involving 150,000 troops near Ukraine’s border had been previously planned and were unrelated to the current situation in Ukraine. Russia announced that Putin had ordered the troops back to their bases.


Putin hammered away at his message that the West was to blame for Ukraine’s turmoil, saying its actions were driving Ukraine into anarchy. He warned that any sanctions the United States and EU place on Russia for its actions will backfire.


Russia’s Foreign Ministry derided American threats of punitive measures as a “failure to enforce its will and its vision of the ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ side of history” — a swipe at President Barack Obama’s statement Monday that Russia was “on the wrong side of history.”


The EU was to hold an emergency summit Thursday on whether to impose sanctions.


Moscow has insisted that the Russian military deployment in Crimea has remained within the limits set by a bilateral agreement on a Russian military base there. At the United Nations in New York, Russia’s ambassador to the U.N., Vitaly Churkin, said Russia was entitled to deploy up to 25,000 troops in Crimea under that agreement.


The Russian president also asserted that Ukraine’s 22,000-strong force in Crimea had dissolved and its arsenals had fallen under the control of the local government. He didn’t explain if that meant the Ukrainian soldiers had just left their posts or if they had switched allegiances from Kiev to the local pro-Russian government.


Putin accused the West of using fugitive President Viktor Yanukovych’s decision in November to ditch a pact with the EU in favor of closer ties with Russia to fan the protests that drove him from power and plunged Ukraine into turmoil.


“I have told them a thousand times ‘Why are you splitting the country?’” he said.


While he said he still considers Yanukovych to be Ukraine’s legitimate president, he acknowledged that the fallen leader has no political future — and said Russia gave him shelter only to save his life. Ukraine’s new government wants to put Yanukovych on trial for the deaths of over 80 people during protests last month in Kiev.


Putin had withering words for Yanukovych, with whom he has never been close.


Asked if he harbors any sympathy for the fugitive president, Putin replied that he has “quite opposite feelings.”


___


Sullivan reported from Crimea. Ivan Sekretarev in Sevastopol, Juergen Baetz in Brussels and Raul Gallego in Crimea contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Putin brings down Crimea tensions; Kerry in Kiev

Monday, March 3, 2014

PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill


UKRAINE: PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA AS RUSSIA DIGS IN – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “As Russia dispatched more forces and tightened its grip on the Crimean Peninsula on Sunday, President Obama embarked on a strategy intended to isolate Moscow and prevent it from seizing more Ukrainian territory even as he was pressured at home to respond more forcefully. Working the telephone from the Oval Office, Mr. Obama rallied allies, agreed to send Secretary of State John Kerry to Kiev and approved a series of diplomatic and economic moves intended to ‘make it hurt,’ as one administration official put it. But the president found himself besieged by advice to take more assertive action.


– “‘Create a democratic noose around Putin’s Russia,’ urged Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. ‘Revisit the missile defense shield,’ suggested Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida. ‘Cancel Sochi,’ argued Representative Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican who leads the Intelligence Committee, referring to the Group of 8 summit meeting to be hosted by President Vladimir V. Putin. Kick ‘him out of the G-8’ altogether, said Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip.” http://nyti.ms/1i62atN


– But no one in Washington is calling for armed U.S. intervention, notes POLITICO’s Alex Burns: “For Democrats and Republicans who spent much of the last century competing to be Moscow’s most credible antagonist, and much of the past decade fighting over which party killed terrorists more ruthlessly, there was no rush to the battle domestic stations over the weekend.”  http://politi.co/1luo6iH


– SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY will travel to Kiev on Tuesday “to show support for the new leadership there in the face of the Russian military intervention,” writes the Washington Post’s Anne Gearan. “Kerry on Sunday called the rapid movement of Russian troops across the border into Ukraine’s Crimea region unwarranted and outside international law and said Russia would suffer economic and political consequences. ‘He’s going to lose on the international stage,’ Kerry said on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ referring to Putin. ‘Russia is going to lose, the Russian people are going to lose, and he’s going to lose all of the glow that came out of the Olympics, his $ 60 billion extravaganza.’” http://wapo.st/1hFeVbe


– Russian markets tumbled over jitters about the Ukraine incursion, Reuters reports: http://reut.rs/1hFnC5m


THE FRONT PAGE – Wall Street Journal, 4-col lead: “U.S., Europe Threaten to Punish Putin: Russia’s Crimea Incursion Sparks Demand for Withdrawal, Talk of Sanctions; ‘They are Settling In.’” Washington Post, 2-col lead: “Putin’s intent unclear amid armed face off: UKRAINE MOBILIZES RESERVISTS: Russian troops a ‘declaration of war,’ Kiev says.” NYT, second headline: “Putin Engages in test of Will Over Ukraine: Strategy of Subterfuge and Military Threat.USA Today: “Ukraine standoff deepens: Kiev pleads for help; U.S., allies ready ‘to isolate Russia.’” L.A. Times, 1-col lead: “RUSSIA’S POWER PLAY GAINS STEAM: Officials in Crimea demand Ukrainian Troops Surrender, and the navy chief defects. Kerry is to visit Kiev.”


D.C. GETS ANOTHER SNOW DAY – “Both the House and Senate have canceled votes scheduled for Monday evening due to the impending snowstorm that [was] poised to hit the Washington-area starting Sunday night. The Office of Personnel Management also announced Sunday that the federal government will be shuttered Monday,” POLITICO’s Seung Min Kim writes. “… The office of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said Sunday that those votes will be moved to Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. … In the Senate, a cloture vote on the nomination of Debo Adegbile for assistant attorney general that had been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Monday will now be held Tuesday at noon, according to the office of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).” http://politi.co/1hEhOJq OPM: http://1.usa.gov/1bw9GbZ


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


OBAMA SENDS BUDGET TO HILL TUESDAY – Kristina Peterson reports for the WSJ: “President Barack Obama’s budget for fiscal year 2015 will be delivered this week to a Congress defused of much of the partisan tension over spending that has left the Capitol in a state of nearly constant fiscal crisis. Lawmakers in both chambers already have agreed on their overarching spending figure for the next fiscal year under the bipartisan budget agreement reached last December by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) and his Senate counterpart, Patty Murray (D., Wash.). The result is that the budget push-and-pull between Mr. Obama and Congress skips ahead to the nitty-gritty spending decisions lawmakers make while drafting the traditional 12 spending bills known as the appropriations process. …


– “The White House blueprint is expected to include changes to the tax code to limit what it views as tax evasion among some U.S. companies with overseas operations, a boost for infrastructure funding and an expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit for workers without children, among other provisions. The budget also is expected to point to an overhaul of the immigration system, currently stalled in Congress, an action administration officials say could help reduce the deficit.” http://on.wsj.com/1ojsJJw


– BUDGET CHAIRWOMAN PATTY MURRAY (D-WASH.) said there was no need for Senate Democrats to write a budget resolution this year, prompting howls from Republicans. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett: http://politi.co/1hr68u0


LOIS LERNER won’t testify before Congress after all, even though House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa asserted Sunday that she would. POLITICO’s Reid Epstein: http://politi.co/1g4khta


AFTER BRUISING IMMIGRATION FIGHT, RUBIO EYES COMEBACK – Manu Raju writes for the hometown paper: “Marco Rubio probably wouldn’t have been the biggest draw in Alabama last year, but last week he had big donors dropping big checks. The Florida Republican, who championed the Senate immigration bill last year, swung by a state that has taken a tough stand against illegal immigrants and has repeatedly elected the chief opponent of the Senate plan. But last Thursday evening, deep-pocketed Birmingham donors paid up to $ 32,000 apiece to schmooze with Rubio, raising more than $ 300,000 for the Senate GOP campaign committee. Rubio’s foray into the Deep South shows how quickly he has tried to put the bitter immigration fight behind him as he positions himself for what close allies say is an increasingly likely presidential bid in 2016.” http://politi.co/1fBTJia


TRANSITIONS – BRYAN THOMAS is heading down to Atlanta to join the Jason Carter for Governor campaign. It also happens to be where his fiancée works at the CDC. Thomas had served as communications director for Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.). He’ll be replaced in Larsen’s office by Ingrid Stegemoeller, effective March 10.


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, where we’ve been watching the snow steadily falling on Capitol Hill the past couple hours. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @ClareFlann and @wyattlarkin.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – It’s a snow day for the House and Senate, which have both cancelled their sessions today. They’re expected to be back on Tuesday.


AROUND THE HILL – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell are expected to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at 3:45 p.m. in S-216. Netanyahu meets with Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi at 4:45 p.m. in H-207. Those meetings could be cancelled due to snow. At 11 a.m. Tuesday, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


BLACK CAUCUS: BASTION OF SENIORITY – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan crunches the numbers:  “If the 84-year-old [John] Conyers wins reelection in November to a 26th term — as expected — he will become the dean of the House, the most senior member by length of service, replacing his onetime boss and Democratic icon, retiring Rep. John Dingell of Michigan. Conyers and other African-American lawmakers, in fact, belong to one of the few remaining bastions of incumbency — the Congressional Black Caucus.


– “Under current projections, the 114th Congress will include roughly 70 members who have been in the House for 20 years or more. One-fifth of those veteran lawmakers — 14 — will be black Democrats, including the two longest-serving members of the House, Conyers and Rep. Charles Rangel of New York. Rangel was first elected in 1970. Thanks to that seniority, CBC members could end up as top Democrat on at least seven major committees next year, including Education and the Workforce; Financial Services; Homeland Security; Judiciary; Oversight and Government Reform; Science, Space and Technology; and Veterans’ Affairs.” http://politi.co/1i5IciH


“Shifting Senate Landscape Draws New Faces,: GOP Used Polls to Woo Rep. Gardner to Challenge Sen. Udall in Colorado,” By the Wall Street Journal’s Janet Hook and Patrick O’Connor: “Rep. Cory Gardner of Colorado is in an enviable position, with a safe House seat and bright prospects for joining his party’s leadership. So when GOP officials last year asked him to give it all up to run for the Senate, he declined. Last week, amid more appeals from party leaders and weak poll numbers for Democrats, Mr. Gardner reversed course—a significant boost to GOP hopes not only for unseating Democratic Sen. Mark Udall but also for claiming a Senate majority. The story of Mr. Gardner’s change of mind shows how the political environment has deteriorated for congressional Democrats ahead of the midterm elections, which historically are difficult for the president’s party. It also is a reminder that campaigns are made or broken not just by money or message, but by who decides to run.” http://on.wsj.com/1bZqN8O


– And former Mississippi Rep. Travis Childers jumped into the race Friday against incumbent GOP Sen. Thad Cochran, sensing an opening for Democrats given what’s becoming a nasty Republican primary. http://politi.co/1eLgXXz


THE MESSY RACE FOR STEVE STOCKMAN’S SEAT – Katie Glueck reports for POLITICO: “A dozen Republicans are vying to replace the firebrand conservative congressman, who isn’t seeking reelection amid a quixotic bid for the Senate. And in the Lone Star State’s 36th Congressional District, which stretches from the Houston suburbs out to East Texas, activists are struggling to wade through all the options, while the large, right-leaning cast of candidates is competing to curry favor with the region’s highly conservative voters. At a recent debate, for instance, some of the biggest points of contention centered on whether to use drones on the border and whether to impeach President Barack Obama.” http://politi.co/1fBVn36


CRITICS HIT CONGRESS OVER NSA OVERSIGHT – Darren Samuelsohn reports for POLITICO; “Splashing America’s surveillance secrets on the front pages of newspapers for nearly nine months has created an array of scapegoats, from Edward Snowden to the NSA and President Barack Obama. Now the blame is also spreading to Congress. Cries of lax Capitol Hill oversight are piling up as Snowden-inspired stories continue to explode in the media, casting doubt on whether the legislative watchdogs can be trusted to oversee national security agencies that they’ve long defended. Intelligence Committee leaders from the House and Senate insist they’ve done their due diligence but acknowledge that lawmakers can glean only as much information as the president and his team will share. And even then, anything of such a highly classified nature can’t be legally disclosed anyway.” http://politi.co/1cnoEnV


IMMIGRATION HITS HOME FOR GOODLATTE – WaPo’s Pamela Constable in Roanoke, Va.: “As chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, a panel at the center of the national immigration debate, Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) has taken a tough stance on illegal immigration that reflects the views of many House Republicans: better border security and law enforcement before other reforms, and “zero tolerance” for illegal immigrants in the future. But as the representative of the sprawling 6th Congressional District in southwest Virginia, the former immigration lawyer faces the sort of changing demographics that have transformed this conservative, rural region into a multinational mosaic — and that have put immigration reform at the top of the national agenda. Roanoke, Goodlatte’s home in the Blue Ridge Valley, has seen its Hispanic population soar by 280 percent since 2000, to 6 percent of 100,000 residents — the biggest leap of any jurisdiction in the state except the Washington suburbs. In Harrisonburg, a college town 100 miles north, Hispanics have reached 16 percent of 49,000 residents.” http://wapo.st/1hEmb7x


THE OSCARS: ‘12 YEARS A SLAVE’ TAKES BEST PICTURE – The AP’s Jake Coyle: “Perhaps atoning for past sins, Hollywood named the brutal, unshrinking historical drama ‘‘12 Years a Slave’’ best picture at the 86th annual Academy Awards. Steve McQueen’s slavery odyssey, based on Solomon Northup’s 1853 memoir, has been hailed as a landmark corrective to the movie industry’s virtual blindness to slavery, instead creating whiter tales like 1940 best-picture winner ‘’Gone With the Wind.’ ‘12 Years a Slave’ is the first best-picture winner directed by a black filmmaker. …


– “The starved stars of the Texas AIDS drama ‘’Dallas Buyers Club’ were feted: Matthew McConaughey for best actor and Jared Leto for best supporting actor. … Cate Blanchett took best actress for her fallen socialite in Woody Allen’s ‘Blue Jasmine,’ her second Oscar.” http://bo.st/NMxVKA


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Drew Thies was first to correctly answer that Pedro Pierluisi, resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is the member of Congress who serves a four-year term. Many of you also answered that the vice president, as president of the Senate, also serves a four-year term, which technically is also correct.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Pietrzyk offers an Oscars-themed question: What Oscar-winning actor was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for. But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill

PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill


UKRAINE: PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA AS RUSSIA DIGS IN – Peter Baker writes on A1 of the New York Times: “As Russia dispatched more forces and tightened its grip on the Crimean Peninsula on Sunday, President Obama embarked on a strategy intended to isolate Moscow and prevent it from seizing more Ukrainian territory even as he was pressured at home to respond more forcefully. Working the telephone from the Oval Office, Mr. Obama rallied allies, agreed to send Secretary of State John Kerry to Kiev and approved a series of diplomatic and economic moves intended to ‘make it hurt,’ as one administration official put it. But the president found himself besieged by advice to take more assertive action.


– “‘Create a democratic noose around Putin’s Russia,’ urged Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. ‘Revisit the missile defense shield,’ suggested Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida. ‘Cancel Sochi,’ argued Representative Mike Rogers, the Michigan Republican who leads the Intelligence Committee, referring to the Group of 8 summit meeting to be hosted by President Vladimir V. Putin. Kick ‘him out of the G-8’ altogether, said Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic whip.” http://nyti.ms/1i62atN


– But no one in Washington is calling for armed U.S. intervention, notes POLITICO’s Alex Burns: “For Democrats and Republicans who spent much of the last century competing to be Moscow’s most credible antagonist, and much of the past decade fighting over which party killed terrorists more ruthlessly, there was no rush to the battle domestic stations over the weekend.”  http://politi.co/1luo6iH


– SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY will travel to Kiev on Tuesday “to show support for the new leadership there in the face of the Russian military intervention,” writes the Washington Post’s Anne Gearan. “Kerry on Sunday called the rapid movement of Russian troops across the border into Ukraine’s Crimea region unwarranted and outside international law and said Russia would suffer economic and political consequences. ‘He’s going to lose on the international stage,’ Kerry said on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ referring to Putin. ‘Russia is going to lose, the Russian people are going to lose, and he’s going to lose all of the glow that came out of the Olympics, his $ 60 billion extravaganza.’” http://wapo.st/1hFeVbe


– Russian markets tumbled over jitters about the Ukraine incursion, Reuters reports: http://reut.rs/1hFnC5m


THE FRONT PAGE – Wall Street Journal, 4-col lead: “U.S., Europe Threaten to Punish Putin: Russia’s Crimea Incursion Sparks Demand for Withdrawal, Talk of Sanctions; ‘They are Settling In.’” Washington Post, 2-col lead: “Putin’s intent unclear amid armed face off: UKRAINE MOBILIZES RESERVISTS: Russian troops a ‘declaration of war,’ Kiev says.” NYT, second headline: “Putin Engages in test of Will Over Ukraine: Strategy of Subterfuge and Military Threat.USA Today: “Ukraine standoff deepens: Kiev pleads for help; U.S., allies ready ‘to isolate Russia.’” L.A. Times, 1-col lead: “RUSSIA’S POWER PLAY GAINS STEAM: Officials in Crimea demand Ukrainian Troops Surrender, and the navy chief defects. Kerry is to visit Kiev.”


D.C. GETS ANOTHER SNOW DAY – “Both the House and Senate have canceled votes scheduled for Monday evening due to the impending snowstorm that [was] poised to hit the Washington-area starting Sunday night. The Office of Personnel Management also announced Sunday that the federal government will be shuttered Monday,” POLITICO’s Seung Min Kim writes. “… The office of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said Sunday that those votes will be moved to Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. … In the Senate, a cloture vote on the nomination of Debo Adegbile for assistant attorney general that had been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Monday will now be held Tuesday at noon, according to the office of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).” http://politi.co/1hEhOJq OPM: http://1.usa.gov/1bw9GbZ


***CONGRESS ADOPTS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE MEDICARE SOLUTION! Only if they pass legislation to finally fix Medicare’s broken funding formula. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. Let’s act now! FixMedicareNow.org


OBAMA SENDS BUDGET TO HILL TUESDAY – Kristina Peterson reports for the WSJ: “President Barack Obama’s budget for fiscal year 2015 will be delivered this week to a Congress defused of much of the partisan tension over spending that has left the Capitol in a state of nearly constant fiscal crisis. Lawmakers in both chambers already have agreed on their overarching spending figure for the next fiscal year under the bipartisan budget agreement reached last December by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) and his Senate counterpart, Patty Murray (D., Wash.). The result is that the budget push-and-pull between Mr. Obama and Congress skips ahead to the nitty-gritty spending decisions lawmakers make while drafting the traditional 12 spending bills known as the appropriations process. …


– “The White House blueprint is expected to include changes to the tax code to limit what it views as tax evasion among some U.S. companies with overseas operations, a boost for infrastructure funding and an expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit for workers without children, among other provisions. The budget also is expected to point to an overhaul of the immigration system, currently stalled in Congress, an action administration officials say could help reduce the deficit.” http://on.wsj.com/1ojsJJw


– BUDGET CHAIRWOMAN PATTY MURRAY (D-WASH.) said there was no need for Senate Democrats to write a budget resolution this year, prompting howls from Republicans. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett: http://politi.co/1hr68u0


LOIS LERNER won’t testify before Congress after all, even though House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa asserted Sunday that she would. POLITICO’s Reid Epstein: http://politi.co/1g4khta


AFTER BRUISING IMMIGRATION FIGHT, RUBIO EYES COMEBACK – Manu Raju writes for the hometown paper: “Marco Rubio probably wouldn’t have been the biggest draw in Alabama last year, but last week he had big donors dropping big checks. The Florida Republican, who championed the Senate immigration bill last year, swung by a state that has taken a tough stand against illegal immigrants and has repeatedly elected the chief opponent of the Senate plan. But last Thursday evening, deep-pocketed Birmingham donors paid up to $ 32,000 apiece to schmooze with Rubio, raising more than $ 300,000 for the Senate GOP campaign committee. Rubio’s foray into the Deep South shows how quickly he has tried to put the bitter immigration fight behind him as he positions himself for what close allies say is an increasingly likely presidential bid in 2016.” http://politi.co/1fBTJia


TRANSITIONS – BRYAN THOMAS is heading down to Atlanta to join the Jason Carter for Governor campaign. It also happens to be where his fiancée works at the CDC. Thomas had served as communications director for Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.). He’ll be replaced in Larsen’s office by Ingrid Stegemoeller, effective March 10.


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, where we’ve been watching the snow steadily falling on Capitol Hill the past couple hours. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @ClareFlann and @wyattlarkin.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – It’s a snow day for the House and Senate, which have both cancelled their sessions today. They’re expected to be back on Tuesday.


AROUND THE HILL – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell are expected to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at 3:45 p.m. in S-216. Netanyahu meets with Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi at 4:45 p.m. in H-207. Those meetings could be cancelled due to snow. At 11 a.m. Tuesday, House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp keynotes a tax reform forum in Rayburn 2325. At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Camp headlines a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


BLACK CAUCUS: BASTION OF SENIORITY – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan crunches the numbers:  “If the 84-year-old [John] Conyers wins reelection in November to a 26th term — as expected — he will become the dean of the House, the most senior member by length of service, replacing his onetime boss and Democratic icon, retiring Rep. John Dingell of Michigan. Conyers and other African-American lawmakers, in fact, belong to one of the few remaining bastions of incumbency — the Congressional Black Caucus.


– “Under current projections, the 114th Congress will include roughly 70 members who have been in the House for 20 years or more. One-fifth of those veteran lawmakers — 14 — will be black Democrats, including the two longest-serving members of the House, Conyers and Rep. Charles Rangel of New York. Rangel was first elected in 1970. Thanks to that seniority, CBC members could end up as top Democrat on at least seven major committees next year, including Education and the Workforce; Financial Services; Homeland Security; Judiciary; Oversight and Government Reform; Science, Space and Technology; and Veterans’ Affairs.” http://politi.co/1i5IciH


“Shifting Senate Landscape Draws New Faces,: GOP Used Polls to Woo Rep. Gardner to Challenge Sen. Udall in Colorado,” By the Wall Street Journal’s Janet Hook and Patrick O’Connor: “Rep. Cory Gardner of Colorado is in an enviable position, with a safe House seat and bright prospects for joining his party’s leadership. So when GOP officials last year asked him to give it all up to run for the Senate, he declined. Last week, amid more appeals from party leaders and weak poll numbers for Democrats, Mr. Gardner reversed course—a significant boost to GOP hopes not only for unseating Democratic Sen. Mark Udall but also for claiming a Senate majority. The story of Mr. Gardner’s change of mind shows how the political environment has deteriorated for congressional Democrats ahead of the midterm elections, which historically are difficult for the president’s party. It also is a reminder that campaigns are made or broken not just by money or message, but by who decides to run.” http://on.wsj.com/1bZqN8O


– And former Mississippi Rep. Travis Childers jumped into the race Friday against incumbent GOP Sen. Thad Cochran, sensing an opening for Democrats given what’s becoming a nasty Republican primary. http://politi.co/1eLgXXz


THE MESSY RACE FOR STEVE STOCKMAN’S SEAT – Katie Glueck reports for POLITICO: “A dozen Republicans are vying to replace the firebrand conservative congressman, who isn’t seeking reelection amid a quixotic bid for the Senate. And in the Lone Star State’s 36th Congressional District, which stretches from the Houston suburbs out to East Texas, activists are struggling to wade through all the options, while the large, right-leaning cast of candidates is competing to curry favor with the region’s highly conservative voters. At a recent debate, for instance, some of the biggest points of contention centered on whether to use drones on the border and whether to impeach President Barack Obama.” http://politi.co/1fBVn36


CRITICS HIT CONGRESS OVER NSA OVERSIGHT – Darren Samuelsohn reports for POLITICO; “Splashing America’s surveillance secrets on the front pages of newspapers for nearly nine months has created an array of scapegoats, from Edward Snowden to the NSA and President Barack Obama. Now the blame is also spreading to Congress. Cries of lax Capitol Hill oversight are piling up as Snowden-inspired stories continue to explode in the media, casting doubt on whether the legislative watchdogs can be trusted to oversee national security agencies that they’ve long defended. Intelligence Committee leaders from the House and Senate insist they’ve done their due diligence but acknowledge that lawmakers can glean only as much information as the president and his team will share. And even then, anything of such a highly classified nature can’t be legally disclosed anyway.” http://politi.co/1cnoEnV


IMMIGRATION HITS HOME FOR GOODLATTE – WaPo’s Pamela Constable in Roanoke, Va.: “As chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, a panel at the center of the national immigration debate, Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) has taken a tough stance on illegal immigration that reflects the views of many House Republicans: better border security and law enforcement before other reforms, and “zero tolerance” for illegal immigrants in the future. But as the representative of the sprawling 6th Congressional District in southwest Virginia, the former immigration lawyer faces the sort of changing demographics that have transformed this conservative, rural region into a multinational mosaic — and that have put immigration reform at the top of the national agenda. Roanoke, Goodlatte’s home in the Blue Ridge Valley, has seen its Hispanic population soar by 280 percent since 2000, to 6 percent of 100,000 residents — the biggest leap of any jurisdiction in the state except the Washington suburbs. In Harrisonburg, a college town 100 miles north, Hispanics have reached 16 percent of 49,000 residents.” http://wapo.st/1hEmb7x


THE OSCARS: ‘12 YEARS A SLAVE’ TAKES BEST PICTURE – The AP’s Jake Coyle: “Perhaps atoning for past sins, Hollywood named the brutal, unshrinking historical drama ‘‘12 Years a Slave’’ best picture at the 86th annual Academy Awards. Steve McQueen’s slavery odyssey, based on Solomon Northup’s 1853 memoir, has been hailed as a landmark corrective to the movie industry’s virtual blindness to slavery, instead creating whiter tales like 1940 best-picture winner ‘’Gone With the Wind.’ ‘12 Years a Slave’ is the first best-picture winner directed by a black filmmaker. …


– “The starved stars of the Texas AIDS drama ‘’Dallas Buyers Club’ were feted: Matthew McConaughey for best actor and Jared Leto for best supporting actor. … Cate Blanchett took best actress for her fallen socialite in Woody Allen’s ‘Blue Jasmine,’ her second Oscar.” http://bo.st/NMxVKA


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Drew Thies was first to correctly answer that Pedro Pierluisi, resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is the member of Congress who serves a four-year term. Many of you also answered that the vice president, as president of the Senate, also serves a four-year term, which technically is also correct.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Ben Pietrzyk offers an Oscars-themed question: What Oscar-winning actor was Ronald Reagan’s best man when he married Nancy Davis in 1952? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for. But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



PRESSURE MOUNTS ON OBAMA OVER UKRAINE, RUSSIA DIGS IN – Kerry to Kiev – Snow cancels House, Senate votes – Obama budget coming Tues. – Netanyahu on the Hill

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Gag-A-Maggot: Kerry Kennedy Plays “My Daddy Was Assassinated” Card To Jury In Her DUI Trial…

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Gag-A-Maggot: Kerry Kennedy Plays “My Daddy Was Assassinated” Card To Jury In Her DUI Trial…

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Israel: MUST READ Open Letter to John Kerry

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Israel: MUST READ Open Letter to John Kerry

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Kerry hints at sanctions as Ukraine toll climbs


KIEV, Ukraine — Secretary of State John Kerry said Wednesday that U.S. sanctions against Ukraine are possible as thousands of riot police and protesters again massed in the country’s capital after the bloodiest day of violence in the tug of war between Russia and the West.


The White House first threatened to impose sanctions against Ukraine more than two months ago in the early days of the crisis that has torn the country apart.


Chaos reigned again Wednesday as black smoke rose above Kiev and police stun grenades thundered as officers sought to push demonstrators away from Independence Square, the epicenter of the turmoil.


Thousands of activists armed with fire bombs and rocks stood firm, setting up a repeat of the deadly violence that engulfed the square a day earlier.


At least 26 people were killed in Kiev on Tuesday — including 10 police officers — and hundreds were hospitalized in what was Ukraine’s deadliest day since since winning independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.


The country’s interim prime minister went as far as to describe the clashes as an attempted coup.


“This was not a demonstration of democracy … It is the manipulation of people’s minds and an attempt to seize power by force,” interim Prime Minister Serhiy Arbuzov told a government meeting watched by The Associated Press on Wednesday morning.


The country’s leading security agency said Wednesday that demonstrators had seized over 1,500 firearms, prompting a nationwide “anti-terrorist” operation to restore order.


In a statement, Ukraine’s Security Service said that such alleged actions by “radical and extremist groups” endanger the lives of millions of Ukrainians caught in the crossfire.


But European Union leaders called an emergency meeting to consider sanctions after what they called an “excessive use of force.” The European Investment Bank added that it would be freezing its activities in the country.


Parts of the city have been in a state of near paralysis since November after President Viktor Yanukovich ditched a deal with the European Union and struck a loan scheme with Russia to float its ailing economy.


Protests began peacefully last year but have been increasingly characterized by smaller, more extreme elements – many aligned with the far-right – who have clashed with riot police.


While the demonstrations started as a rejection of the Russia-leaning government policies, protesters said they now seek to “oust a corrupt and brutal regime,” according to a post by the opposition-run “Euromaidan” Facebook group on Wednesday morning.


Tuesday’s violence shattered weeks of relative calm in the capital and was sparked by Russia’s announcement it was ready to resume its loan package to the Ukraine. Some in the opposition saw this as an indication that the two countries had struck a deal and that the government was intent on standing firm against the protesters.


The unrest has also spread to other parts of the country. In the central city of Khmelnitsky, YouTube video appeared to capture a scene of protesters laying siege to a police station before shots scattered the crowd. In the aftermath, a woman is shown lying on the sidewalk, blood pouring from a head wound.


In the western city of Lviv protesters seized government buildings, police stations and the tax agency headquarters, The Associated Press reported.


Polish border guards also said protesters were blocking access to one of its crossings with Ukraine. Amateur video footage also showed people storming a regional administrative building in Uzhgorod, a city near the Slovakian border.


The European Union said it was preparing targeted sanctions against those responsible for the violence.


“We have … made it clear that the EU will respond to any deterioration on the ground,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said in a statement. “We therefore expect that targeted measures against those responsible for violence and use of excessive force can be agreed by our member states as a matter of urgency.”


Image: UKRAINE-UNREST-EU-RUSSIASERGEI SUPINSKY

Anti-government protesters protect themselves behind shields as they clash with the police on Independence Square in Kiev early on Wednesday.



Demonstrators torched vehicles and buildings, and threw stones and Molotov cocktails. Authorities responded with rubber bullets and smoke grenades, often while singing the Ukrainian national anthem, The Associated Press reported.


Having given the protesters an ultimatum to clear the streets, security forces descended on the city’s Independence Square – the iconic center of the protest movement known as the “Euromadian” – parts of which were still ablaze Wednesday morning.


Around half of the 20,000 demonstrators who flooded the streets on Tuesday heeded the call of former world champion boxer turned opposition leader Vitali Klitschko to stand their ground.


Klitschko returned to the square afterward and urged the protesters to defend the camp.


“We will not go anywhere from here,” Klitschko told the crowd. “This is an island of freedom and we will defend it,” he said.


“I am not going to sit and wait while they kill me,” said one protester, 32-year-old Anton Rybkovich. “I’m going to attack. The more force the government uses, the more harsh our response will be.”


In a statement Wednesday, President Yanukovich maintained his call for a peaceful resolution to the stand-off instead of violence.


“I am totally against a heavy-handed approach and the more so against bloodshed,” Yanukovich said. “I once again call the leaders of the opposition, who claim that they aim for a peace settlement, to separate themselves from the radical forces which provoke bloodshed and clashes with law enforcement services.”


Vice President Joe Biden called Yanukovich on Tuesday, urging him to pull back government forces and exercise maximum restraint, the White House said. In Paris, Secretary of State John Kerry issued a statement condemning the violence and urging the Ukrainian government and protesters to take steps to de-escalate the situation through dialogue.


Maria Stromova of NBC News contributed to this report from Moscow. Alexander Smith reported from London.


First published February 19 2014, 2:45 AM






Kerry hints at sanctions as Ukraine toll climbs

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Kerry: Climate Change Is "the World’s Largest Weapon of Mass Destruction"


john kerry


Secretary of State John Kerry said today in Indonesia that climate change is “the world’s largest weapon of mass destruction.”


The Weekly Standard



Kerry: Climate Change Is "the World’s Largest Weapon of Mass Destruction"

John Kerry mocks those who deny climate change







Secretary of State John Kerry takes a selfie with a group of students before delivering a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta. Kerry called for a “global solution” for climate change in the first of several speeches he will deliver this year on the topic. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)





Secretary of State John Kerry takes a selfie with a group of students before delivering a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta. Kerry called for a “global solution” for climate change in the first of several speeches he will deliver this year on the topic. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)





Secretary of State John Kerry gestures during a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta. Kerry called for a “global solution” for climate change in the first of several speeches he will deliver this year on the topic. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)





Secretary of State John Kerry pauses as he delivers a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta, Indonesia. Climate change may be the world’s “most fearsome” weapon of mass destruction and urgent global action is needed to combat it, Kerry said on Sunday, comparing those who deny its existence or question its causes to people who insist the Earth is flat. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)





Secretary of State John Kerry sits with a group of students as he is introduced to deliver a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta. Climate change may be the world’s “most fearsome” weapon of mass destruction and urgent global action is needed to combat it, Kerry said on Sunday, comparing those who deny its existence or question its causes to people who insist the Earth is flat. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)





Students listen as Secretary of State John Kerry delivers a speech on climate change on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014, in Jakarta, Indonesia. Climate change may be the world’s “most fearsome” weapon of mass destruction and urgent global action is needed to combat it, Kerry said on Sunday, comparing those who deny its existence or question its causes to people who insist the Earth is flat. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, Pool)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday called climate change perhaps the world’s “most fearsome” destructive weapon and mocked those who deny its existence or question its causes, comparing them to people who insist the Earth is flat.


In a speech to Indonesian students, civic leaders and government officials, Kerry tore into climate change skeptics. He accused them of using shoddy science and scientists to delay steps needed to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases at the risk of imperiling the planet.


A day earlier, the U.S. and China announced an agreement to cooperate more closely on combating climate change. American officials hope that will help encourage others, including developing countries like Indonesia and India, to follow suit.


China and the United States are the biggest sources of emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases that cause the atmosphere to trap solar heat and alter the climate. Scientists say such changes are leading to drought, wildfires, rising sea levels, melting polar ice, plant and animal extinctions and other extreme conditions.


Also in the Jakarta speech, Kerry said everyone and every country must take responsibility for the problem and act immediately.


“We simply don’t have time to let a few loud interest groups hijack the climate conversation,” he said, referring to what he called “big companies” that “don’t want to change and spend a lot of money” to act to reduce the risks.


Kerry later singled out major oil and coal concerns as the primary offenders.


“We should not allow a tiny minority of shoddy scientists and science and extreme ideologues to compete with scientific facts,” Kerry told the audience at a U.S. Embassy-run American Center in a shopping mall.


“Nor should we allow any room for those who think that the costs associated with doing the right thing outweigh the benefits.”


“The science is unequivocal, and those who refuse to believe it are simply burying their heads in the sand,” Kerry said. “We don’t have time for a meeting anywhere of the Flat Earth Society,”


Kerry said the cost of inaction will far outweigh the significant expense of reducing greenhouse gas emissions that trap solar heat in the atmosphere and contribute to the Earth’s rising temperatures.


He outlined a litany of recent weather disasters, particularly flooding and typhoons in Asia, and their impact on commerce, agriculture, fishing and daily living conditions for billions of people.


“This city, this country, this region, is really on the front lines of climate change,” Kerry said. “It’s not an exaggeration to say that your entire way of life here is at risk.”


He added: “In a sense, climate change can now be considered the world’s largest weapon of mass destruction, perhaps even, the world’s most fearsome weapon of mass destruction.”


The solution, Kerry said, is a new global energy policy that shifts reliance from fossil fuels to cleaner technologies. He noted the President Barack Obama is championing such a shift and encouraged others to appeal to their leaders to join.


The U.S.-China statement issued just after Kerry left Beijing on Saturday said the two countries agreed on steps to carry out commitments to curb greenhouse gases, including reducing vehicle emissions, improving energy efficiency of buildings and other measures.


Beijing and Washington launched a climate change discussion last year, promising progress in five areas: reducing vehicle emissions; advanced electric power grids; capturing and storing carbon emissions; gathering greenhouse gas data; and building efficiency.


Kerry was in Indonesia on the last leg of a three-nation tour of Asia that started in South Korea. After leaving Indonesia on Monday, he planned to visit Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.


Before the climate change speech, Kerry toured Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque, one of the largest in the world, to pay his respects to Indonesia’s Muslim majority population.


Associated Press




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John Kerry mocks those who deny climate change