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"Chemical Ali" sentenced to death – again

An Iraqi court Tuesday sentenced Ali Hassan al-Majid to death for atrocities committed against Shiites who staged an uprising in 1991 following the U.S.-led liberation of Kuwait. Majid, known as “Chemical Ali” for his gassing of the Kurdish population in the Anfal campaign, responded to a Shiite uprising in the south of Iraq that brought […]

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Europeans Doubtful About Obama's Team

This post was written by Transatlantic Media Network Intern Cecily Boggs  The European media have given a cautious, and frequently critical, welcome to President-elect Barack Obama's nomination of his foreign policy and security team, and particularly his choice his defeated rival Hillary Clinton for Secretary of State. Many commentators asked whether such a well-known and […]

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Support for the New Team?

Support for the New Team?

I really don't like cynicism all that much, it's easy to be cynical but it really contributes very little. Take, for example, this opinion piece by Lionel Beehner, a former writer for the Council on Foreign Relations, who offers a cynical take on President-Elect Obama's new foreign policy team: Pardon the metaphor, but Obama is […]

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Poznan

UN Climate Negotiations Kick Off in Poznan is the headline from Climate-L.Org, the "knowledge management project" run by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD).  (I flagged these meetings last month under IGO Update at the blog.)  Nearly 11,000 folks "from government, business and industry, environmental groups and research institutions" are gathering in Poland for […]

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European Media Against Detroit Bail-Out

As the "Big Three' American automakers continue their quest for a government bail-out, European commentators have tended to take to the view that they should submit to the "survival-of-the-fittest" logic of market forces , not least, perhaps, because many European companies fear that a U.S. bail-out would give the American manufacturers an unfair competitive advantage. […]

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Sahrawi students killed

I just witnessed a Sahrawi student protest in Agadir today. Two Sahrawi students were killed last night when a Supratours bus (bus B-A 6687),  deliberately ran them over at the bus station in Agadir, according to 24 year old Ahmed Salem Dohi who was at the scene and was visibly upset when I met him. Four Sahrawi […]

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American Movies Don't Boost U.S. Image

A report by Tom Arango in the New York Times, "World Falls for American Media, Even as It Sours on America,' says that while the image of the United States around the world remains negative, according to the latest Pew Global Attitudes Project (released in June), the viewing of American movies and television has dramatically […]

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Reflections on the Global Financial Crisis

In the wake of the global financial crisis, 2008 is a year for serious reflection on the meaning of globalization and the importance of economic policy coordination. The overall attitude amongst the leading industrial powers at this November's G20 summit is to maintain domestic stability under a framework for reform of the global financial system. […]

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Religious Conflict or Retribution?

Religious views, if extremist, can lead to conflict. On the other hand, conflicts can make religions appear extreme , actually tarnishing the faiths themselves. This past week, the horrific images of death and devastation in Mumbai have significantly changed the world's perception of the war on terror. Instead of recognizing the events as truly international […]

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Gearing Up For Holiday Giving

Gearing Up For Holiday Giving

Now that you have managed to make it through the Thanksgiving holiday, fat and happy your mind has begun to drifted away from thoughts of turkey and stuffing, and not to mention pumpkin pie, to thoughts of holiday giving. This year most of our wallets are not as fat as they once were and charitable […]

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World AIDS Day

World AIDS Day

Today marks World AIDS Day, the day was marked by a number of events, educational programs and, pledges, as Governments around the world used the occasion of World AIDS Day Monday to pledge greater efforts to end discrimination against victims of HIV/AIDS and to fund treatment programs. The number of people living with HIV/AIDS has […]

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Paying for Change

Paying for Change

  The New York Times offers this profile of the new foreign policy team: As President-elect Barack Obama introduces his national security team on Monday, it includes two veteran cold warriors and a political rival whose records are all more hawkish than that of the new president who will face them in the White House […]

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CNN to Challenge the Associated Press

At a time when most newspapers are rapidly increasing their online and video content, the international television giant CNN is making a lunge in the reverse direction. At a meeting of editors at its Atlanta headquarters this week, CNN plans to unveil details of a new service, CNN Wire, which it will market to newspapers […]

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The Age of the Fidayeen: Terror's New Tactic

As the physical and psychological trauma of the Mumbai attacks continues to settle in, the Indian media is beginning to refer to the incident as their "9/11'.  Mumbai, and the region at large, are no stranger to terrorist activity. In fact, coordinated bombings in 1993 and 2006 both had higher death counts than the events […]

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What Kind of Public Diplomacy?

Today, as Barack Obama formally announces his national security team, there is plenty of buzz over what his choices mean in the field of public diplomacy.  Hillary Clinton, under whose State Department aegis public diplomacy falls, was not particularly vocal or articulate on this topic as a candidate.  Robert Gates, whose Defense Department has no […]

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