Showing posts with label unity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unity. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Obama calls for trans-Atlantic unity to isolate Russia





BRUSSELS, Belgium — US President Barack Obama made a rallying call Wednesday for countries around the world to defend the international order, which he says has been profoundly challenged by Russia’s annexation of Crimea and ongoing threat to the rest of Ukraine.


“Russia’s violation of international law, its assault on Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, must be met with condemnation, not because we’re trying to keep Russia down, but because the principles that have meant so much to Europe and the world must be lifted up,” he said in a speech that was the main focus of his visit to Europe this week.


“So long as we remain united, the Russian people will recognize that they cannot achieve the security, prosperity and the status that they seek through brute force,” he insisted.


The address to Brussels’ diplomatic and political elite and selected European youngsters came at the end of a packed day of meetings with leading European Union and NATO officials in which the Ukraine crisis dominated.


Obama offered assurances to Poland, the Baltic states and other worried nations along NATO’s eastern frontiers that the United States and other members of the Atlantic alliance would defend them from any threat of spillover from Ukraine.


He repeatedly underscored the significance of Article 5 of NATO’s founding treaty, which states that all 28 allies will come to the aid of any member under attack.


“What we will do always is uphold our solemn obligation, our Article 5 duty, to defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of our allies,” Obama said. “And in that promise we will never waver. NATO nations never stand alone.”


The alliance is planning to strengthen its eastern borders beyond the extra troops and warplanes already deployed in Poland and the Baltic states, Obama revealed. He did not specify how the eastern allies would be reinforced, but NATO officials said details were being worked out ahead of a meeting of alliance foreign ministers next week.


Obama also called on European allies to reverse a trend of falling defense budgets that has weakened NATO in recent years. The events in Ukraine showed that all allies must “step up” and share the burden of Europe’s collective defense, Obama said. “The situation in Ukraine reminds us our freedom isn’t free,” he told a news conference at EU headquarters ahead of his speech.


The invasion of Crimea and the massing of Russian troops on Ukraine’s eastern borders has raised tensions in Europe to levels not seen since the fall of the Iron Curtain. Nevertheless, Obama insisted it is not the start of a new Cold War, not least because Russia lacks the Soviet Union’s global reach.


“After all, unlike the Soviet Union, Russia leads no bloc of nations, no global ideology,” he said.


In a speech that drew cheers and a standing ovation from a crowd that included Belgium’s King Philippe and Queen Matilda, Prime Minister Elio di Rupo and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, Obama reached deep into history to recall the ties that bind Europe to the United States.


Earlier on Wednesday, he accompanied the monarch on a visit to the graves of US soldiers who died in World War I, which broke out 100 years ago this year.


Obama said the experience of that war and other 20th-century conflicts show the United States and its allies can’t ignore the Ukraine crisis even though it may seem remote to many Americans and Western Europeans.


“Casual indifference would ignore the lessons that are written in the cemeteries of this continent,” Obama said. “It would allow the old way of doing things to regain a foothold in this young century. And that message would be heard, not just in Europe, but in Asia and the Americas, in Africa and the Middle East.”


He refuted Russian accusations of Western hypocrisy over Crimea by denying any similarity to Kosovo’s break from Serbia or the US-led war in Iraq. The United States, the president insisted, has no claims on Ukraine beyond letting its people choose their own future.


Obama’s tough words were echoed by NATO’s Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who issued a warning against Russia meddling with members of the alliance.


“NATO is a force for peace, but also unmatched militarily,” Fogh Rasmussen said after meeting Obama. “We do not seek confrontation but we will not waiver if challenged.”


Still, Obama ruled out a military response if Russia launches further attacks on Ukraine, which is not a NATO member. Instead he said the US and Europe would respond with stinging economic sanctions and insisted that the allies were united on that.


“If the Russian leadership stays on its current course, together, we will ensure that this isolation deepens,” a grim-faced Obama told the crowd. “Sanctions will expand and the toll on Russia’s economy, as well as [on] its standing in the world, will only increase.”


More from GlobalPost: 7 parts of Russia that other countries could call theirs


However, there are divisions among NATO allies about how far to go in punishing Russia. Some, including the Netherlands, Bulgaria and Italy, are urging caution because of fear of provoking Russia and concerns about the impact sanctions will have on their economies.


Even the EU’s big hitters — Germany, France and Britain — have major economic concerns even though their leaders have taken a more hawkish line as Russian President Vladimir Putin has cranked up military pressure on Ukraine.


Obama and EU leaders said their energy ministers would be meeting next week to discuss weakening Moscow’s economic influence over Europe. Among the topics will be relaxing restrictions on American gas exports to reduce reliance on Russian fuel sales.


Obama said that regardless of Russia’s short-term military gains, the ideas supported by Ukraine’s pro-Western demonstrators would eventually prevail.


“If we hold firm to our principles and are willing to back our beliefs with courage and resolve,” he concluded, “then hope will ultimately overcome fear and freedom will continue to triumph over tyranny.”


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/140326/obama-eu-nato-brussels-russia-speech




GlobalPost – Home



Obama calls for trans-Atlantic unity to isolate Russia

Friday, November 15, 2013

Ex-Cyprus president, unity advocate Clerides dies at 94




NICOSIA Fri Nov 15, 2013 1:42pm EST



Greek Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos (R) talks to the former Greek Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides (L) before a meeting of the delegations in Buergenstock, Switzerland, March 29, 2004. REUTERS/POOL/Attila Kisbenedek

Greek Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos (R) talks to the former Greek Cypriot President Glafcos Clerides (L) before a meeting of the delegations in Buergenstock, Switzerland, March 29, 2004.


Credit: Reuters/POOL/Attila Kisbenedek




NICOSIA (Reuters) – Former president Glafcos Clerides, a conservative who ushered Cyprus into the European Union but failed in efforts to heal the island’s decades-old ethnic partition, died on Friday, his doctor said. He was 94.


Clerides led Cyprus for two consecutive terms from 1993 to 2003, but was inextricably linked with the island’s fraught modern history since its independence from Britain in 1960.


Cyprus’s Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities were split by a Turkish invasion in 1974 prompted by a brief, Greek-inspired coup, following years of sporadic ethnic strife on the eastern Mediterranean island.


Years before his first election victory, Clerides was a prominent Greek Cypriot leader who helped craft treaties that gave Cyprus independence, and was a negotiator with longtime Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash, who died last year.


Clerides bowed out of politics in 2003 when he failed in an attempt to get elected for a third, truncated term to spearhead peace negotiations with Turkish Cypriots.


He turned 94 in April but his health had deteriorated in recent years and he died at a Nicosia clinic from complications associated with old age, doctor Iosif Kassios told reporters.


Widely respected, even by Turkish Cypriots, Clerides was one of the last surviving European leaders to have seen active service in World War Two as a gunner for Britain’s Royal Air Force. He escaped German prisoner-of-war camps three times.


A colorful character who studied law in London, Clerides was once written off in a premature obituary after being shot down over Hamburg during World War Two. He spent a year in chains and endured two forced starvation marches across Germany before escaping for a third time.


“There are those who can endure the adversities and those who break down … If you see the result of those who break down, you decide you are going to survive,” he once told Reuters, reminiscing on his war experiences.


After the war, he returned to London to pursue law, where he met his wife, Indian-born Lila, who worked at the BBC World Service. She once told this correspondent that she agreed to a date after taking pity on Clerides, a scruffy young man just released from a prisoner of war camp.


The couple renewed their marriage vows in 1995 and Lila died in 2007. They are survived by a daughter, Kate.


Clerides unsuccessfully lobbied the Greek Cypriot side to accept a U.N. reunification plan for Cyprus put to public referendum in April 2004. The plan was accepted by the Turkish Cypriot community.


The rejection by the Greek Cypriots meant that only the internationally recognized republic in the south of the island joined the EU, although all of it was technically admitted.


Reunification of Cyprus, whose 1974 ceasefire lines are monitored by U.N. peacekeepers, continues to elude an army of international negotiators.


“The choice is between… ‘yes’ and jumping off a precipice. We don’t know how deep that precipice is,” Clerides told a pro-reunification rally in April 2004 in one of his last public appearances.


(Editing by Mark Heinrich)





Reuters: Lifestyle



Ex-Cyprus president, unity advocate Clerides dies at 94

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Wasserman Schultz: Dems Will Stand "In Unity" On Obamacare





“Tomorrow when that legislation comes on the floor, I’m confident the Democrats are going to stand, as we have, in unity to continue to support fully implementing the Affordable Care Act,” Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) said Thursday on CNN.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Wasserman Schultz: Dems Will Stand "In Unity" On Obamacare

Sunday, August 11, 2013

McConnell demands unity on fiscal issues

Mitch McConnell is pictured. | AP Photo

He sees a winning political message heading into the fall before the 2014 midterms. | AP Photo





On guns, immigration and controversial nominees, Senate Republicans’ story this year is one of division.


But on fiscal issues, GOP leadership is demanding a different ending — one of harmony rather than discord.







Ahead of fall fiscal talks that already have Washington nervous about a government shutdown, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is clamping down on Republicans with a firm message to stick with him on spending.


(WATCH: Candy Crowley talks post-vacation agenda for Congress, Obama)


With the nearly unanimous GOP rejection last week of Senate Democrats’ transportation funding bill, McConnell senses an opportunity to dig in on an issue that highlights the most elemental difference between the two parties: the size of government.


The GOP leader sees a winning political message heading into the fall before the 2014 midterms. Showing himself as the leader of a conference bent on spending cuts as he runs for reelection in conservative Kentucky won’t hurt either.


To McConnell, Republicans are simply following the law established by the Budget Control Act — which created the sequester’s automatic spending cuts — to trim billions in spending each year while Democrats are the party of “tax and spend,” turning their backs on the last big bipartisan budget deal. A vote for the transportation bill would have violated Congress’s promise to stick to the agreed-upon spending levels, Republicans say.


(Also on POLITICO: Senate THUD battle pitted Mitch McConnell against Susan Collins)


“The story line would have been that Congress on a bipartisan basis walked away from the Budget Control Act,” McConnell said.


But GOP unanimity while staring down a government shutdown won’t be easy.


A small group of Senate Republicans are participating in open-ended budget talks with the White House. A number of Republicans in both chambers, including House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), want to replace the sequester before further cuts hit in January. And voting records show that Senate Republicans are more fractured than Democrats.


After GOP splits on guns, immigration, the farm bill, an Internet sales tax bill and some of President Barack Obama’s most controversial nominees, Democrats doubt Republicans can coalesce around anything anymore. Top McConnell aides argue those are issues for which the “breakdowns are not traditional” — or strictly along party lines. In comparison, fiscal issues offer a chance to draw a “very clear line” between the two parties, an aide said.


(Also on POLITICO: Congress leaves with big problems unsolved)


The fall spending showdown is of utmost importance to Republican leaders because it involves must-pass legislation, pegged to the hard deadline of Sept. 30. Immigration, farm and the sales tax bills are all stalled in the House with no clear path forward — but they lack the urgency of government funding or raising the debt ceiling, two issues Republicans may try to pair together in order to increase their leverage for more spending cuts.


“The spending one is not in doubt: There will be a law,” said a top McConnell aide.


The strategy of presenting a united front on spending smells of desperation given months of division, Democratic Senate aides say. They believe six to 10 Republicans can be wooed to support levels higher than the $ 967 billion in discretionary spending that GOP leadership prefers, especially if a spending bill is tailored to some of their interests and replaces some or all of the sequester. Arizona Sen. John McCain is worried about the sequester hurting fire preparedness. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham frets about national security. Democrats see the unease as an opportunity.


“There are a number of senators who have broken away here who are trying to do the right thing,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said last week.




POLITICO – Congress



McConnell demands unity on fiscal issues