Showing posts with label Progress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Progress. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2014

False Science: How Paid Propaganda Masquerades as Scientific Progress

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False Science: How Paid Propaganda Masquerades as Scientific Progress

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Slim progress made as Syria peace talks close in Switzerland




  • Second round of talks in Switzerland has ended with little achieved, U.N. mediator says

  • Lahkdar Brahimi apologizes to the Syrian people suffering after nearly three years of conflict

  • Brahimi says the Syrian government is refusing to discuss a transitional governing body

  • Well over 100,000 people have died in Syria during almost three years of conflict



(CNN) — U.N. mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said Saturday that a second round of talks in Geneva, Switzerland, aimed at ending the crisis in Syria had come to an end with little progress made.


The opposition and the government have agreed to an agenda for a third round of talks but they have not agreed on how to tackle it, he said.


Brahimi apologized to the Syrian people, saying he was “very, very sorry” that despite two rounds of talks ” we haven’t done very much.”


The key sticking point is that the Syrian government wants to talk about tackling terrorism, while the opposition wants to discuss forming a transitional governing body.


Brahimi said he had suggested starting the next round of talks with one day of discussion on each issue — but that the government had thrown a wrench in the works.


“Unfortunately the government has refused, which raises the suspicion of the opposition that in fact the government doesn’t want to discuss the (transitional governing body) at all,” he said.


Brahimi said such intransigence was “not good for the process,” or for Syria.


Negotiators from both sides should go back to their leaders and reflect on a way forward, he said. “Do they want this process to take place or not?” he said.


The snail-paced peace talks, which started last month with Brahimi serving as an intermediary between the two delegations sitting in the same room, have failed to produce an agreement on a first step for resolving a conflict that has dragged on for nearly three years.


It has killed well over 100,000 people and caused millions to flee their homes.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Slim progress made as Syria peace talks close in Switzerland

Monday, January 27, 2014

AmCham and ECCT congratulate financial services industry"s progress



By Kathrine Wei ,The China Post
January 28, 2014, 12:10 am TWN





TAIPEI, Taiwan — The Joint Banking Committee of the American Chamber of Commerce and the European Chamber of Commerce in Taipei yesterday praised the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) for its efforts in taking concrete steps toward improving the banking regulatory environment and making it more competitive by accepting recommendations from industry.

Both chambers of commerce acknowledged that the Taiwanese government is currently working to boost Taiwan’s economy, enhance competitiveness and attract more investment. They stated that the further development of the financial services industry is essential to nurture financial professionals and increase international competitiveness.


The recent progress and efforts made in cross-strait financial cooperation has created an opportunity for Taiwan to become an important offshore RMB market in the Asia-Pacific region, noted the AmCham/ECCT Joint Banking Committee. In recent years, the committee has been continuously providing recommendations aimed at boosting Taiwan as an offshore RMB center as well as promoting Formosa bonds in the international bond market. The committee believes that the regulators’ continued efforts will better position Taiwan as an important financial center in Asia.


The Joint Banking committee also acknowledged that the Taiwan government has referred to the financial market development experiences of Hong Kong and Singapore in setting policy and broadening the business scope of the financial market through timely regulatory review and appropriate deregulation guided by the principles of stabilization and liberalization.


In addition, the committee is highly encouraged by and fully supports the government’s policy to include the financial services industry in the Free Economic Pilot Zones and expand the business scope of offshore banking units (OBUs). These are helpful policies that could spur the repatriation of capital that is currently offshore. This approach is essential to enhance the onshore financial market, which will lead to growth in terms of investment, job opportunities and the economy.


As responsible members of Taiwan’s Financial Industry, AmCham/ECCT Joint Banking committee members announced that it will keep providing recommendations and adopting international expertise in order to benefit Taiwanese corporations and consumers and increase the competitiveness of the financial industry. The committee also fully supports the view expressed by Financial Supervisory Commission Chairman Tseng during the FSC’s business liaison meeting with foreign bank country heads, that members of the financial industry should promote CSR activities in order to build a better living environment for the next generation.





China Post Online – Taiwan , News , Taiwan newspaper



AmCham and ECCT congratulate financial services industry"s progress

Friday, January 10, 2014

Iran nuclear talks end with "very good progress," negotiators say





Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi said the first phase of talks with the UN nuclear watchdog will be finished by early February, English-language Press TV website reported Friday.


Earlier on Friday, Iran and world powers agreed on how to implement a landmark November deal on containing Tehran’s nuclear program, but it must still be approved by each country before it can take effect.


Press TV quoted Salehi as saying: “Iran and the agency will end phase one of the negotiations by early February, and the second phase of Iran-IAEA talks will start soon afterwards.”


In that second phase, Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency need to hammer out a clear framework on how to continue their co-operation.


In November, the two sides agreed on a “roadmap for cooperation” to resolve remaining issues linked to Tehran’s controversial atomic program.


Under it, Tehran agreed to allow IAEA inspectors to visit the heavy water production plant in Arak as well as the Gachin uranium mine in the south.


The Arak heavy-water reactor, which could be operational by the end of next year, is a major source of concern for Western powers.


Its official function is to produce plutonium for medical research, but it could potentially be used for military purposes.


Western nations and Israel have long suspected Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons capability alongside its civilian program, charges denied by Tehran.


The IAEA conducts regular inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities but also wants to investigate allegations that Iran conducted nuclear weapons research before 2003 and possibly since then.


Iran allowed the UN atomic watchdog inspectors to visit the Arak site in December, the first time since 2011.


Meanwhile, two days of talks between high-level Iranian and EU negotiators ended in Geneva on Friday with “very good progress on all the pertinent issues,” said Michael Mann, a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.


The EU represents the P5+1 group of world powers — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States — in the decade-long nuclear negotiations with Iran.


Iran’s deputy chief nuclear negotiator, Abbas Araqchi, said “we found solutions for all the points of disagreement.”


Under a November deal, Iran agreed to curb parts of its nuclear drive for six months in exchange for receiving modest relief from international sanctions and a promise by Western powers not to impose new measures against its hard-hit economy.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/iran/140110/nuclear-talks-p51-geneva-progress-negotiators




GlobalPost – Home



Iran nuclear talks end with "very good progress," negotiators say

Monday, December 23, 2013

Pentagon sees progress on cost of F-35, long way to go




WASHINGTON Mon Dec 23, 2013 7:49pm EST



Workers can be seen on the moving line and forward fuselage assembly areas for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter at Lockheed Martin Corp

Workers can be seen on the moving line and forward fuselage assembly areas for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter at Lockheed Martin Corp’s factory located in Fort Worth, Texas in this October 13, 2011 handout photo provided by Lockheed Martin.


Credit: Reuters/Lockheed Martin/Randy A. Crites/Handout




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Pentagon’s recent focus on pricing has led to “remarkable progress” in cutting the cost of the Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 fighter program, but the plane still costs more than it should to build and operate, Director of Defense Pricing Shay Assad said.


“We’re making progress. We’re doing OK, but we have a long way to go to get to what a Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) should cost,” Assad said in an interview last week.


The Pentagon expects to spend $ 392 billion to develop and build 2,443 F-35 jets for the Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy, 70 percent more than initial projections. But the projected cost has begun coming down, dropping $ 4 billion from 2012 to 2013, and further reductions are expected next year.


Assad said the cost analysis initiative had saved taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars on some contracts.


“Compared to where we were … we’ve made remarkable progress in understanding the costs associated with the JSF. And just as importantly, understanding what it should cost, and what it’s going to take to get to that point,” he said.


The Pentagon in September finalized two agreements with Lockheed valued at $ 7.8 billion for work on 71 more jets. It said the average cost of the planes in a sixth batch was down 2.5 percent from the previous one. Lockheed said it expects a further reduction in the next contract to be signed next year.


Assad was named to the newly created job of director of defense pricing in June 2011, part of a larger drive by chief weapons buyer Frank Kendall, and his predecessor Ashton Carter, to reverse years of cost overruns on weapons like the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the Pentagon’s most expensive program.


Since then, Assad’s office has developed a database on specific weapons programs and companies, allowing contract officers from across the military to compare notes on overhead and material costs, pricing data, and contractor performance.


He said acquisition officials now have nearly instant access to data that would have taken months to research in the past.


“You get a complete snapshot of what kind of contractor am I dealing with. Can I rely on the quality of the proposals they’re giving me,” he said.


As part of the effort, contracting officers must explain their negotiations with the companies in detailed reports, Assad said, citing a recent 500-page report on the F-35.


The Pentagon’s Defense Contract Management Agency also set up 15- to 30-member teams of engineers and other experts at nearly a dozen of the biggest defense contractors, including Lockheed, Boeing Co, Raytheon Co, and Sikorsky Aircraft, a unit of United Technologies Corp.


One of those “integrated cost analysis teams” or ICATs is at the Fort Worth, Texas plant where Lockheed builds the F-35.


Dave Hess, president of engine maker Pratt & Whitney, another United Technologies unit, told Reuters last week that his company and other F-35 contractors were developing a plan with the Pentagon that would encourage companies to invest their own funds to lower production costs. He said details of that plan would be released next month.


Assad said Air Force Lieutenant General Chris Bogdan, who runs the F-35 program for the Pentagon, was exploring how to inject more competition into the longer-term cost of operating and maintaining the new jets, but it was a complex issue that involved everything from training to simulators to logistics.


He said Kendall was keeping close tabs on the longer-term cost of operating the F-35, a bill the Pentagon previously projected at around $ 1.1 trillion over the next 55 years. The Pentagon is expected to lower that estimate next year.


“Mr. Kendall expects us to be unrelenting in trying to find a way to reduce that nut,” Assad said.


(Reporting by Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Richard Chang)






Reuters: Politics



Pentagon sees progress on cost of F-35, long way to go

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Mandela"s 1st township home shows lack of progress








A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in the township of Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moved to the house in Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





Children light candles in front of former president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A condolence book for former president Nelson Mandela situated outside his first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A boy stands in front of a painting showing former South African president Nelson Mandela out of his first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)













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(AP) — A silver and blue plaque with the words “Mandela’s Place” mounted on the brick wall of a small, dilapidated row house is the only recognition of the world-famous statesman who lived there when he was in his early 20s: Nelson Mandela.


There aren’t even any signs in the sprawling Alexandra township to help visitors find their way along trash-strewn streets to get to the house. But the dusty and dangerous slum itself serves as a bleak reminder that nearly 20 years after Mandela became president, many of South Africa’s black communities remain mired in poverty.


A trickle of poor Alexandra residents and their children showed up on Saturday to pay their respects to the anti-apartheid champion at a makeshift shrine with a few dozen candles stuck in the ground, two bundles of wilting flowers nearby and three posters of Mandela.


Some signed a book of condolences set atop a card table by Nomalizo Xhoma, the great-granddaughter of the man who owned the house and took in borders, including Mandela.


“I’m so sad because he was our father and did so many things for us, fighting for us when people beat us during apartheid,” said Pheello Mahlaba, 11. “I’m proud to be from the same neighborhood where he lived.”


The promise of a better life has largely evaded the square-mile Alexandra township. The shabby area is in dramatic contrast to the wealthy, mostly white, Sandton suburb of Johannesburg, whose high-rise towers glisten just across a highway.


Alexandra’s hundreds of thousands of residents occupy an area meant for less than 100,000 and get by with scarce electricity, toilets that serve more than a dozen families, high unemployment, crime and rampant drug use. A project aimed at showcasing the neighborhood’s rich anti-apartheid history was abandoned years after its construction.


This is not the dynamic South Africa celebrated by tourists and world leaders. Residents say Mandela would be disappointed by the lack of progress since the end of apartheid.


“He won’t be satisfied because the place, I can say, it’s now a disaster,” says Emmanuel Mangena, a community development worker at an alcohol and drug counseling center in Alexandra.


Mandela moved to Alexandra in 1941 when he was 23 and the township’s residents were challenging white-minority rule. Mandela participated in bus boycotts here.


He stayed in Alexandra until 1943, describing the house in his autobiography as “no more than a shack, with a dirt floor, no heat, no electricity, no running water. But it was a place of my own and I was happy to have it …


“Alexandra occupies a treasured place in my heart,” Mandela said in the book, “Long Walk to Freedom.” ”It was the first place I ever lived away from home. Even though I was later to live in Orlando, a small section of Soweto, for a far longer period than I did in Alexandra, I always regarded Alexandra Township as a home where I had no specific house, and Orlando as a place where I had a house but no home.”


The area surrounding Mandela’s other home in Soweto, Johannesburg’s most famous township, is a bustling tourist attraction. Thousands of foreign tourists flock to see the bed where Mandela once slept and the Soweto museum is surrounded by vendors, artists and dancers.


That activity is conspicuously absent in Alexandra, where many people live in shacks and restaurants often consist of vendors cooking meat on ramshackle portable grills set up on crumbling sidewalks.


“There are few townships, including Soweto, that have such a rich history of the struggle for freedom. If one looks at the key moments in the struggle against white majority rule, Alexandra was in the forefront,” says Noor Nieftagodien, who co-authored a book on the history of Alexandra and teaches at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. “There’s a sense among (Alexandra residents) that they played such an important role. And people there will say they gave birth to Mandela the radical politician. It completely transformed him.”


“The lack of development of the old Alexandra is an indictment of the new South Africa,” Nieftagodien said.


South Africa has come a long way since overcoming apartheid, but it has a long way to go. The country still has a faltering education system and an uneven record on providing basic services, along with allegations of corruption and cronyism. The gulf remains wide between the wealthy white minority and millions of blacks mired in poverty.


Alexandra is typical of townships across South Africa where unemployment is even higher than the national average of 25.2 percent. The rate in Alex, as it is called, is nearly 40 percent, estimates Nieftagodien.


Alexandra has seen some improvements. In 2001, the Alexandra Renewal Project started in which the government invested more than 1 billion rand ($ 100 million). Until then Alex had been the poorest urban location in the country, Nieftagodien said.


Mandela’s former residence was not upgraded, “and now the old man’s dead, what a pity,” said Vusi Oratile, who lives nearby. The Xhoma family still owns the house, and rents it out.


“The house is not looking good,” added Swazi Ntshingila, 43. She said that while residents are very proud that Mandela stayed here, “we are not supposed to be living like this though.”


Community development worker Mangena said Alex’s drug problems are getting worse.


“Poverty is getting rife here in Alex. Crime is happening every day. It’s about drugs,” he said, adding that the drugs lead to burglaries, home break-ins and car theft. “Even laundry drying on the line, you steal it.”


Thabo Rakgonle and his friend Tebogo Simelane are among the 20-somethings out of work. On a recent weekday, they sat listening to music outside a corner store. They say they are proud to be from Alexandra, but they lament its lack of running water, toilets and sports facilities.


“He’s a warrior. He’s a great warrior,” the soft-spoken Rakgonle said of Mandela. “So I think he just actually forgot us here.”


Across the street from Mandela’s house, visible over a crumbling wall, the Alexandra Heritage Centre was built to highlight the township’s anti-apartheid history. But eight years after the building was completed, it remains empty except for the young drug-users who hang out there.


Reforming the house where Mandela lived and opening it as a landmark complete with furniture dating from when Mandela lived there could turn Alexandra into a destination point that helps the community so Mandela’s “spirit will live on,” said community leader Linda Twala. “Right now, it’s an unfinished legacy.”


___


Alan Clendenning in Johannesburg contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Mandela"s 1st township home shows lack of progress

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

No progress on Hill as shutdown enters second day

The sun rises over the White House in Washington on the second day of a federal government shutdown, Oct. 2. | AP Photo

Democrats in the Senate and White House say they want to fund the whole government. | AP Photo





The House will continue Wednesday to try to pass small-bore spending bills to reopen slices of the federal government, as a shutdown with no end in sight enters its second day.


Bills to reopen some national parks, fund veterans affairs and allow the District of Columbia to use local revenue to fund government failed Tuesday under a fast-track procedure that required a two-thirds majority for passage. House Republican leaders will bring those bills up again on Wednesday with time for more floor debate, and a lower, simple-majority threshold for passage. The House GOP will also try to fund the National Institutes of Health, after reports surfaced Wednesday that children with cancer would be turned away from clinical trials.







Speaker John Boehner’s (R-Ohio) decision to bring these bills to the floor is not without risk for Republicans. Democrats would like to use a procedural maneuver — called a motion to recommit — to force a vote on a so-called “clean” continuing resolution. That legislation could re-open government, and fund the health care law. If given the opportunity to bring that bill up, just 16 Republicans would have to join with 200 Democrats to pass the bill through the House. But aides in both parties say such a bill is likely to not be germane to these targeted spending bills.


(PHOTOS: D.C. closes up shop)


The action in the House is mostly stagecraft, since Democrats in the Senate and White House say they want to fund the whole government, not just a few agencies. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) would move to block the House GOP legislation if they are approved by the lower chamber.


Washington is still frozen with partisanship, as the government shutdown continues.


Republicans in the House are hampered by roughly one to two dozen hard-line conservatives, who insist on changes to the health care law as a price of funding the government. Democrats say they aren’t going to negotiate health care policy on a bill that funds the federal government for just a few months.


The next 24 to 48 hours may prove critical in the resolving the impasse. So far, Boehner and his top lieutenants, Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), have been able to keep any large groups of their members from bolting. Roughly a dozen House Republicans have already announced publicly – and individually – that they are ready to give up the fight over Obamacare.


(POLITICO’s full government shutdown coverage)


Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), a leader in the defund Obamacare movement, suggested the government funding fight may not be the place to try to derail President Barack Obama’s signature legislative accomplishment. And Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) has also signaled his uneasiness with the shutdown, telling conservative bloggers on Tuesday that “any opportunity to defund Obamacare through the CR, if there was such an opportunity, is now gone,” according to the Washington Examiner.


If the House GOP unity starts to crumble, then Boehner may be forced to cave in to Democratic demands. So far, he has shown no signs of doing so. Boehner may keep the House in all weekend, GOP leadership aides said, knowing that if members go home and get hammered by constituents angry about the shutdown, they will return to demand a clean funding bill.


Republicans and Democrats are hauling reporters and cameras all over the Capitol to show the effects of a shutdown. The GOP had eight negotiators sit alone at a conference table Tuesday, saying they are ready to work with Democrats to solve this budgetary impasse. Senate Democrats have refused to negotiate, saying they want a clean CR. And on Wednesday, Senate Democrats will bring furloughed federal workers to the Capitol, in an attempt to humanize the shutdown.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



No progress on Hill as shutdown enters second day

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Obama Weekly Address: "Indications Of Progress" On Syria


WHITE HOUSE: In his weekly address, President Obama followed up on his speech to the nation on Tuesday and said there is the possibility for a diplomatic solution in Syria, partially because of the credible threat of U.S. military force.


PRESIDENT OBAMA: This week, when I addressed the nation on Syria, I said that – in part because of the credible threat of U.S. military force – there is the possibility of a diplomatic solution. Russia has indicated a new willingness to join with the international community in pushing Syria to give up its chemical weapons, which the Assad regime used in an attack that killed more than 1,000 people on August 21. I also asked Congress to postpone a vote on the use of military force while we pursue this diplomatic path. And that’s what we’re doing.


At my direction, Secretary of State Kerry is in discussions with his Russian counterpart. But we’re making it clear that this can’t be a stalling tactic. Any agreement needs to verify that the Assad regime and Russia are keeping their commitments: that means working to turn Syria’s chemical weapons over to international control and ultimately destroying them. This would allow us to achieve our goal – deterring the Syrian regime from using chemical weapons, degrading their ability to use them, and making it clear to the world that we won’t tolerate their use.


We’ve seen indications of progress. As recently as a week ago, the Assad regime would not admit that it possessed chemical weapons. Today, it does. Syria has signaled a willingness to join with 189 other nations, representing 98 percent of humanity, in abiding by an international agreement that prohibits the use of chemical weapons. And Russia has staked its own credibility on supporting this outcome.


These are all positive developments. We’ll keep working with the international community to see that Assad gives up his chemical weapons so that they can be destroyed. We will continue rallying support from allies around the world who agree on the need for action to deter the use of chemical weapons in Syria. And if current discussions produce a serious plan, I’m prepared to move forward with it.


But we are not just going to take Russia and Assad’s word for it. We need to see concrete actions to demonstrate that Assad is serious about giving up his chemical weapons. And since this plan emerged only with a credible threat of U.S. military action, we will maintain our military posture in the region to keep the pressure on the Assad regime. And if diplomacy fails, the United States and the international community must remain prepared to act.


The use of chemical weapons anywhere in the world is an affront to human dignity and a threat to the security of people everywhere. As I have said for weeks, the international community must respond to this outrage. A dictator must not be allowed to gas children in their beds with impunity. And we cannot risk poison gas becoming the new weapon of choice for tyrants and terrorists the world over.


We have a duty to preserve a world free from the fear of chemical weapons for our children. But if there is any chance of achieving that goal without resorting to force, then I believe we have a responsibility to pursue that path. Thank you.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Obama Weekly Address: "Indications Of Progress" On Syria

Obama Weekly Address: "Indications Of Progress" On Syria


WHITE HOUSE: In his weekly address, President Obama followed up on his speech to the nation on Tuesday and said there is the possibility for a diplomatic solution in Syria, partially because of the credible threat of U.S. military force.


PRESIDENT OBAMA: This week, when I addressed the nation on Syria, I said that – in part because of the credible threat of U.S. military force – there is the possibility of a diplomatic solution. Russia has indicated a new willingness to join with the international community in pushing Syria to give up its chemical weapons, which the Assad regime used in an attack that killed more than 1,000 people on August 21. I also asked Congress to postpone a vote on the use of military force while we pursue this diplomatic path. And that’s what we’re doing.


At my direction, Secretary of State Kerry is in discussions with his Russian counterpart. But we’re making it clear that this can’t be a stalling tactic. Any agreement needs to verify that the Assad regime and Russia are keeping their commitments: that means working to turn Syria’s chemical weapons over to international control and ultimately destroying them. This would allow us to achieve our goal – deterring the Syrian regime from using chemical weapons, degrading their ability to use them, and making it clear to the world that we won’t tolerate their use.


We’ve seen indications of progress. As recently as a week ago, the Assad regime would not admit that it possessed chemical weapons. Today, it does. Syria has signaled a willingness to join with 189 other nations, representing 98 percent of humanity, in abiding by an international agreement that prohibits the use of chemical weapons. And Russia has staked its own credibility on supporting this outcome.


These are all positive developments. We’ll keep working with the international community to see that Assad gives up his chemical weapons so that they can be destroyed. We will continue rallying support from allies around the world who agree on the need for action to deter the use of chemical weapons in Syria. And if current discussions produce a serious plan, I’m prepared to move forward with it.


But we are not just going to take Russia and Assad’s word for it. We need to see concrete actions to demonstrate that Assad is serious about giving up his chemical weapons. And since this plan emerged only with a credible threat of U.S. military action, we will maintain our military posture in the region to keep the pressure on the Assad regime. And if diplomacy fails, the United States and the international community must remain prepared to act.


The use of chemical weapons anywhere in the world is an affront to human dignity and a threat to the security of people everywhere. As I have said for weeks, the international community must respond to this outrage. A dictator must not be allowed to gas children in their beds with impunity. And we cannot risk poison gas becoming the new weapon of choice for tyrants and terrorists the world over.


We have a duty to preserve a world free from the fear of chemical weapons for our children. But if there is any chance of achieving that goal without resorting to force, then I believe we have a responsibility to pursue that path. Thank you.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Obama Weekly Address: "Indications Of Progress" On Syria

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Schultz: Obama Made Progress With Syria Speech


MSNBC’s Ed Schultz and a panel of MSNBC analysts discuss whether President Obama’s address to the nation advanced his argument for military action against Syria and whether progress is being made on the overall challenge of dealing with Syria’s chemical weapons.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Schultz: Obama Made Progress With Syria Speech

Friday, July 19, 2013

Kerry, Palestinians discuss peace talks in Amman, progress unlikely

AMMAN (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met a Palestinian negotiator in Jordan to discuss resuming peace talks with Israel, officials said, with chances of an immediate breakthrough appearing slim before he leaves later on Friday.



Reuters: Top News



Kerry, Palestinians discuss peace talks in Amman, progress unlikely