The Role of Trade and the Commerce Department in U.S. Diplomacy

February 22, 2009 by editor · Leave a Comment
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US Dept of CommerceDiscussions on trade, especially in this current financial climate, begin at the intersection of two of the biggest concerns facing the American people: the economy and foreign policy. In this podcast, Dan Keenaghan, Deputy National Director for the U.S. Commercial Service of the International Trade Administration, explains how trade can be used as a tool for American diplomacy and highlights specific examples where trade has opened lines of communication through business, often leading to a greater understanding of foreign cultures and even friendships.

Download Podcast – Trade and U.S. Diplomacy 02.21.08

President Obama’s Special Envoys and Amb. Holbrooke goes to South Asia

February 15, 2009 by editor · Leave a Comment
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President Obama’s decision to deploy a diplomatic envoy strategy in several global hotspots was a swift and strong move, but is this tactic effective? In this podcast, Ambassador S. Azmat Hassan (ret.) reviews the recent trip of Amb. Richard Holbrooke, the President’s newly named Special Envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan and examines the diplomatic tool of Special Envoys.

Download Podcast – Envoy Diplomacy and Amb. Richard Holbrooke 02.14.09

Morgan Tsvangirai named Prime Minister of Zimbabwe

February 12, 2009 by editor · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Africa, Morgan Tsvangirai, Prime Minister, Zimbabwe 

Following nearly a year of political turmoil, Morgan Tsvangirai was sworn in today as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe’s coalition government. Facing rampant hyperinflation, a widespread cholera outbreak and almost 90% unemployment Mr. Tsvangirai steps into a particularly difficult state of affairs. The former Secretary-General of the Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) and founder of the opposition party the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), Mr. Tsvangirai is no stranger to difficult times. Two years ago he found himself tortured and imprisoned by loyalists of President Robert Mugabe. Now he is expected to put past ills aside, and help move a country crippled at the hands of a despotic regime into a prosperous future. The real question is, will this political experiment succeed, or will today’s events simply mark another chapter in the traumatic history of failed African states? Curiously, Mr. Tsvangirai must now work to rebuild his struggling country with the same man who drove it into the ground. Truly, the prospects for Zimbabwe’s future are inextricably linked to the tenuous relationship between President and Prime Minister.

By: Freedom-Kai Phillips

Sri Lankan Resistance Over

February 8, 2009 by editor · Leave a Comment
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Reports from Sri Lanka indicate that time and territory are about to run out for a decades old opposition group, the Tamil Tigers. The Sri Lankan army has taken control of Kilinochchi, a city on the northern tip of the island that was the political and military headquarters of the Tigers. Aid groups cannot keep up with the steadily increasing humanitarian crisis, the last hospital in the region has been forced to evacuate. The last remaining rebel fighters are hemmed in around Mullaittivu, a town on the northeast coast. Designated a terrorist group by the U.S. in 1997, the Tigers are reported to have purchased arms from Myanmar, Ukraine, Cambodia and other sources, with profits from drugs and human trafficking, money laundering, piracy and credit card fraud. The violence has been ruthless on both sides, Tamils and government troops alike, but the government’s first moves in the next few months will be critical in deciding whether the bloodshed is truly over. A rapid and substantial overhaul of Sri Lanka’s human rights laws and the majority’s treatment of ethnic minority groups must occur to ensure that opposition groups don’t turn to violence instead of a strong system of social justice.

Pakistani court frees A.Q. Khan

February 6, 2009 by editor · 3 Comments
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As U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke prepares to depart for Pakistan, Afghanistan and India next week; a court in Pakistan freed Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan today, the father of Pakistan’s nuclear program. Dr. Khan, who was placed under house arrest in 2004 has been called the “world’s leading black market dealer in nuclear technology”. Watch AP Video.

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