EFTA01878748.pdf
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From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
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Subject June 18 update
18 June, 2012
Article 1.
The Financial Times
Egypt's soft coup is following my dispiriting script
Ezzedine C. Fishere
Article 2
The Washington Post
Egypt's military issues decree giving vast powers
to armed forces, but few to president
Ernesto London() and Leila Fadel
Article 3
Los Angeles Times
Hamas factions' reversal of roles rooted in 'Arab
Spring'
Edmund Sanders
Aricle
The Wall Street Journal
Saudi Succession and the Illusion of Stability
Karen Elliott House
Article 5.
NYT
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In a World of Complications, Obama Faces a Re-
election Test
Peter Baker
Ar:Icle 6
The Economist
Russia and the West
Article 7.
Spiegel
Wins Greek Election: Pro-Bailout Government in
Sight
Ankle I
The Financial Times
Egypt's soft coup is following my
dispiriting script
Ezzedine C. Fishere
June 18, 2012 --- For the past 10 weeks I have been writing and
publishing a novel in daily segments. In Bab El-kheroug, or The
Exit, Ali, an old translator at the presidential palace, writes a
long letter to his son explaining his decision to betray the
president. Written in October 2020, Ali's letter tells us the story
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ofEgypt's political upheavals after the revolution of January
2011. It paints a bleak picture of a messy transition followed by
military rule, leading to a second wave of popular protest that
leads to a period of chaos.
As the episodes appeared in the Tahrir newspaper, many readers
anxiously asked whether there was an "exit" from this long and
dark tunnel. There is, at least in the novel, but it took nine years
to find. Most of the readers hoped Egypt would find its way out
sooner than that. But the events of the past two weeks suggest
otherwise. In fact, it seems that the generals in charge, as well as
the Muslim Brotherhood, are sticking to the Bab El-
kheroug script.
Few people in Egypt are surprised by the confrontation between
the military and the Brotherhood. Since January 2011, the
entrenched forces of the old regime have defined Egypt's
popular uprising as a plot by the Brotherhood. Consequently,
they have done everything in their power to contain and isolate
them. The Brotherhood, led by the old and the hardliners, has
managed to alienate its revolutionary and democratic partners
and to scare important segments of society, especially women
and Christians. Neither the Brotherhood nor the generals
showed willingness to share power and both were keen on
marginalising the revolutionary and democratic forces. It is as if
they were clearing the stage for their eventual showdown.
Presidential elections took place against this backdrop. The
result of the first round confirmed this dichotomy, with
Egyptians left to choose between General Ahmed Shafiq, a long-
time protégé of Hosni Mubarak, and Mohamed Morsi, a protégé
of the Brotherhood's strongman Khayrat Elshater. If anything,
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this "choice" is the incarnation of the doctrine that served Mr
Mubarak for three decades, "either me — an authoritarian regime
backed by the military, or the Islamists". Having alienated their
partners and lost substantial popular support, the Brotherhood
now stand alone, facing their entrenched foe. It is an ideal
moment to deliver a coup de grace.
Immediately after the first round of presidential elections, the
courts exonerated all police officers from the charge of killing
protesters in 2011. A few days later, the minister of justice
issued a "decree" giving military police and intelligence the
power to arrest and detain individuals almost at will. A day later,
the constitutional court decided that the electoral law that
organised the legislative elections was unconstitutional
and dissolved the Brotherhood-dominated parliament.
Simultaneously, state-controlled media resumed their campaign
against the Brotherhood. And the generals decided not to
recognise the constitutional committee elected by parliament and
created their own. The next president will be invested with vast
powers, with no constitution or parliament to restrain him. If
Gen Shafiq wins, it is unclear how the Brotherhood would react
to this "soft coup". They made belated noises about the
dissolving of parliament but they seem to hesitate between
escalating their opposition and biting the bullet. Déjà vu?
Certainly, we all feel that we are back in January 2011.
This sense of déjà vu is misleading. Egypt has changed
dramatically. Its younger generations think and act differently
and their expectations are different. Despite failures and
frustrations, the level of political engagement remains high
among all segments of society. Affluent and unprivileged, the
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educated and the illiterate, the liberals and Islamists — they all
continue to demand political and social changes. Those
disillusioned with the revolutionary way embrace reform. It is
the political leaders, on all sides, who are lagging behind. Many
have not yet grasped this hunger for change.
But the younger generations, who make up the majority of the
population, will find a way beyond the dichotomous choice
between Islamists and generals. How fast will this happen?
In Bab El-kheroug this confrontation plunged Egypt into chaos
for nine years. But we all know that novelists are prone to
exaggeration.
The writer is a Cairo-based author
Article 2.
The Washington Post
Egypt's military issues decree giving vast
powers to armed forces, but few to
president
Ernesto Londofio and Leila Fadel
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June 17 -- CAIRO - Egypt's military leaders issued a
constitutional decree Sunday that gave the armed forces
sweeping powers and degraded the presidency to a subservient
role, as the Muslim Brotherhood declared that its candidate had
won the country's presidential runoff election.
The bold assertion of power by the ruling generals followed
months in which they had promised to cede authority to a new
civilian government by the end of June. Instead, activists and
political analysts said, the generals' move marked the start of a
military dictatorship, a sharp reversal from the promise of
Egypt's popular revolt last year. The declaration, published in
the state gazette, had been expected, but its details indicate that
the military has asserted far greater authority than observers had
anticipated. Under the order, the president will have no control
over the military's budget or leadership and will not be
authorized to declare war without the consent of the ruling
generals. The document said the military would soon name a
group of Egyptians to draft a new constitution, which will be
subject to a public referendum within three months. Once a new
charter is in place, a parliamentary election will be held to
replace the Islamist-dominated lower house that was dissolved
Thursday after the country's high court ruled that one-third of
the chamber's members had been elected unlawfully. "With
this document, Egypt has completely left the realm of the Arab
Spring and entered the realm of military dictatorship," said
Hossam Bahgat, a prominent human rights activist. "This is
worse than our worst fears."
The declaration left little doubt that the generals have moved
aggressively to preserve and expand their privileged status after
a transitional period that revealed the significant appeal of
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Islamist politicians. It also indicates the military leadership's
concern about accountability if a system of civilian rule with
checks and balances were to take root. The Obama
administration, with the president spending the day in Chicago
and much of his national security staff in Mexico preparing for
this week's Group of 20 summit there, had no initial reaction to
the new developments. But the decree appeared likely to
compound the administration's frustration over its waning
influence in Egypt. Less than 48 hours before the declaration
was issued, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta telephoned Field
Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, head of Egypt's ruling
military council, to underscore "the need to ensure a full and
peaceful transition to democracy," the Pentagon said.
Thursday's dissolution of parliament also prompted Sen. Patrick
J. Leahy (D-Vt.), chairman of the appropriations subcommittee
in charge of foreign aid, to warn the State Department against
disbursing any of this year's $1.3 billion in military aid to
Egypt.
Brotherhood decries order
The Egyptian military's declaration was issued just 20 minutes
after the polls closed Sunday night at 10. The campaign of
Mohamed Morsi, the Brotherhood's candidate, said a limited
sample of preliminary vote counts from across the country
indicated that the Islamist leader was ahead of rival Ahmed
Shafiq, who was the last prime minister appointed by Hosni
Mubarak and was widely considered the generals' preferred
candidate. Preliminary results published in the state-run Ahram
Online news site showed that, with nearly 3.5 million ballots
counted, Morsi was ahead with almost 55 percent of the vote.
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About 50 million Egyptians were eligible to cast ballots. Final
results are expected Thursday.
But after hailing the preliminary results, Brotherhood officials
decried the military's declaration, calling it a stunning power
grab.
"This is ridiculous, and it confirms that we're facing a new
dictatorship," Mourad Mohammed Aly, a spokesman for the
Morsi campaign, said in a phone interview. The move comes
after the country's top judges, who were appointed by Mubarak,
issued a ruling that dissolved the lower house of parliament,
where the Brotherhood held nearly half the seats after elections
last year.
The constitutional declaration will be binding at least until a
new charter is approved. But because the generals will appoint
the body that will draft that document, they are expected to
ensure that the new constitution leaves them with continued
power and shields them from scrutiny and prosecution. After
Mubarak's ouster from the presidency, the generals portrayed
themselves as champions of the revolution. But revolutionaries
have since accused the military leaders of mishandling the
transition and working to preserve their own interests. Last fall,
in the face of a revolt against military rule that led to a security
crackdown, the generals agreed to speed up the transition to
civilian rule by holding a presidential vote no later than the end
of this month. "This makes it impossible to speak of a transfer
to civilian rule at the end of June," Heba Morayef, a Cairo-based
researcher with Human Rights Watch, said Sunday night. "It
was a soft coup to start with, but now it's pretty blatant."
Trading fraud allegations
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Shafiq's campaign issued a statement Sunday accusing the
Brotherhood of "systemic" fraud, including ballot stuffing, voter
bribing, voter intimidation and attacks near polling stations. The
Brotherhood's violations, the statement said, prove that the
Islamist group "does not believe in freedom of choice and
democracy unless this democracy brings them to power."
The statement said the Shafiq campaign filed more than 100
complaints of electoral violations with the presidential election
commission. Aly, Morsi's spokesman, rejected the charges,
insisting instead that Shafiq's camp had manipulated the vote.
Independent observers have not alleged large-scale fraud in the
runoff vote, which was conducted Saturday and Sunday. But
Sunday night's allegations offered a taste of the contentiousness
to come once a winner is declared.
The dissolution of parliament enraged Muslim Brotherhood
leaders. The speaker of parliament, Mohamed Saad Katatny,
issued a statement Sunday night after meeting with the generals
that decried the appointment of a new panel to draft the charter.
Katatny reiterated that -Brotherhood legislators intend to attend
a scheduled session of parliament Tuesday, a move that could
provoke a confrontation between the Islamist lawmakers and
security forces.
Other prominent politicians called on Egyptians to resist the
military's actions. Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, a former
Brotherhood member who was a presidential candidate in the
first round of voting, called the constitutional declaration a "full
military coup" in a message on Twitter.
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Mona El-Ghobashy, a political science professor at Barnard
College, said the document puts the military beyond reproach. It
is a role that the armed forces have taken for granted for decades
because Egyptian leaders have hailed from the ranks of the
military.
"The military stands over and above everyone else, elected by
no one and unaccountable to anyone," she said in an e-mailed
statement.
Ankle 3.
Los Angeles Times
llamas factions' reversal of roles
rooted in 'Arab Spring'
Edmund Sanders
June 17, 2012 -- Gaza City -- Just a couple of years ago, the
prevailing wisdom about Hamas was that its Gaza Strip-based
leaders were forced to be more moderate because they bore the
brunt of economic boycotts and military clashes with Israel.
Exiled llamas bosses living in the relative comfort of Damascus,
however, could afford to take a tougher stance.
But the "Arab Spring" has turned the equation on its head, with
longtime hard-liners who had resided in relative comfort in
Syria adopting a more conciliatory tone as they scramble for safe
haven — and leaders in Gaza emboldened by the rise in
neighboring Egypt of the Muslim Brotherhood, which helped
create the Palestinian militant group in the late 1980s.
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Gaza-based Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh and former
Hamas Foreign Minister Mahmoud Zahar are demanding a
stronger overall voice in the Islamist organization, in what is
becoming its most public fracture since its founding. The Gaza
faction sees little reason to make concessions and is particularly
skeptical about Hamas Politburo chief Khaled Meshaal's sudden
embrace of Palestinian reconciliation with the West Bank-based
rival Fatah party, fearing the move will end the group's five-year
run as the rulers of the Gaza Strip.
The power struggle is likely to shape Hamas' policies in the
coming year, determining whether it continues on a course of
reconciliation with Fatah or reverts to a more antagonistic and
possibly violent path toward Israel.
"The roles have been reversed," said Michael Broening, a
Hamas expert and director of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, a
German-funded think tank in Jerusalem.
The split is coming to a head as Hamas holds secretive elections
for its Shura Council leadership body and appoints a new
Politburo chief. Some close to the group predict that Meshaal,
despite his recent announcement that he would not seek
reelection, will win another four-year term and be given a
mandate to implement a unity government with Fatah, which
Hamas forced out of Gaza in a 2007 battle. Though less popular
in Gaza, Meshaal enjoys continuing support from Hamas
members in the West Bank and diaspora, who outnumber those
in Gaza.
But he is facing a vigorous challenge from Haniyeh, who was
once viewed as a figurehead but is now asserting himself as a
potent rival. Haniyeh has boosted his international profile this
year with trips to Iran, Turkey and Egypt, affirming Hamas'
embrace of armed resistance and dismissing peace talks with
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Israel as pointless. After the United States killed Osama bin
Laden, he praised the Al Qaeda leader as a "holy warrior."
Meshaal, by contrast, has called for a focus on nonviolent
resistance and supports giving rival Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas more time to negotiate a peace deal
with Israel. He has also endorsed the creation of a Palestinian
state based on 1967 borders, which some see as an indirect
acceptance of Israel's existence even though Hamas officially
refuses to recognize Israel.
In an interview at his Gaza home, Zahar, once viewed by the
West as a moderate, acknowledged the debate within Hamas, but
said the divisions were being exaggerated and exploited by its
enemies.
"It's not about different ideas, it's about the methods," he said.
"In the end the majority will decide and everyone accepts."
Raising an open palm to make his point, Zahar said, "See, all of
these fingers are on the same hand. Some are long, some are
stout. But when we grasp something, it is together."
Still it was Zahar who was seen as having broken ranks over the
last year with his public and personal attacks on Meshaal for
pursuing the reconciliation deal and failing to consult the Gaza
leadership. Such disputes are rare in Hamas, which is known for
its discipline and keeping arguments behind closed doors.
Zahar said he supports the Shura Council decision to back
Meshaal regarding reconciliation, but personally considers the
program "foolish."
Meshaal's apparent transformation from Iranian-supported
radical to peace-seeker coincided with the collapse of his
longtime residency in Syria, which has descended into violence
and ethnic strife. Not wanting to take sides and unwilling to
express support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, Meshaal has
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been shopping for a new permanent base in Jordan, Egypt or
Qatar, so far with little luck.
"Before Meshaal was considered the radical with support from
Iran and Syria, but things have shifted in the past year and now
he's the moderate as he looks for a new place," said Al Azhar
University political analyst Mkhaimar Abusad in Gaza City.
"That's the political price he must pay. He can't continue with
the same old rhetoric if he wants to be in Cairo, Doha or
Amman."
Unhappy with Meshaal's refusal to back Assad, Iran has
reportedly reduced its funding to Hamas, dealing a blow to
Meshaal's image as the group's international liaison and
controller of the purse strings. At the same time, Iran is
supporting Islamic Jihad, a Hamas rival in Gaza.
Unlike Hamas, Islamic Jihad continues to fire rockets into
southern Israel and clash with Israeli soldiers along the Gaza
border. It has accused Hamas of abandoning the resistance, in
part by having called for a cease-fire with Israel.
"Over the past two years, the competition with Hamas has
increased," said Islamic Jihad senior leader Khaled Batsh. "But
it's positive competition. Hamas should care more about the
resistance and less about fruitless political talks."
Gaza-based Hamas leaders see Fatah reconciliation as a threat to
their authority. A proposed unity government would install
Abbas as prime minister, leaving it unclear what role Haniyeh
would play.
"Haniyeh has tasted international politics and political power,
and he's not willing to just give that up," said Broening, the
think tank analyst.
There's one thing both sides agree on: Egypt will be crucial to
the future of Hamas because of the fall of Hosni Mubarak, a
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Hamas foe, and the political rise of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Meshaal's pursuit of reconciliation is largely seen as an effort to
please Muslim Brotherhood leaders in Cairo, who have signaled
that they want to see an end to the Palestinian division.
"Both see Egypt as the key," Abusad said.
\nide 4
The Wall Street Journal
Saudi Succession and the Illusion of
Stability
Karen Elliott House
June 17, 2012 -- The death and burial this weekend of Saudi
Crown Prince Nayef, the second Saudi crown prince to die in
less than a year, demonstrates the inherent instability of the
absolute monarchy still being ruled by the geriatric sons of the
founder of modern Saudi Arabia.
King Abdullah, who has outlived both of his presumed
successors, is himself 89 and in failing health. So the looming
question is will the ruling Al Saud family pass the crown to yet
another geriatric brother of the king? Or will he seize this
occasion to jump to a new generation of royals who might be
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presumed to have more vitality and vision to revitalize the
moribund kingdom on which the world depends for so much of
its oil? A formula to select a new crown prince exists in which
some three dozen sons and grandsons of the founder would vote
secretly to choose the new crown prince. This commission has a
majority of grandsons who could vote for one of their
generation.
Given the royal family's reverence for age, however, almost
surely the next crown prince with be Prince Salman bin Abdul
Aziz, 76, a full brother of the two late crown princes. While
change sweeps much of the rest of the Middle East, the Saudi
monarchy continues to cling to the status quo.
In the near term, the change from one elderly brother to another
will not affect U.S. Saudi relations. For better or worse, the U.S.
is wedded to the Al Saud family, not to a particular prince. But
we should not confuse stagnation with stability. The fact that the
royals continue to rule when autocratic regimes have been swept
aside in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and perhaps soon in Syria, doesn't
mean this U.S. ally is stable.
The kingdom faces multiple problems: Unemployment is 40%
among 20- to 24-year-olds, 40% of Saudis live on less than
$1,000 a month, the kingdom's one-dimensional economy earns
nearly 80% of its revenues from oil, and 90% of all workers in
its private sector are foreigners. Moreover, the senior Al Saud
rulers have an average age exceeding 80 while 60% of the
country's population is below 20 years of age.
Beyond all this, the tension level in Saudi society is rising
precipitously as the royals vacillate between seeking to satisfy
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modernizers' demands for more change and seeking to placate
conservatives for whom the only acceptable change is a return to
the religious purity of the Prophet Muhammad, which many feel
the royal family has abandoned. Saudi Islam increasingly is
divided within itself, as is the royal family.
Prince Salman, the kingdom's defense minister since last
November (after nearly half a century as governor of Riyadh), is
more energetic and less rigid than the late Prince Nayef, but
unlikely to initiate significant reforms. Nayefs death will please
those Saudis who want at least a continuation of King
Abdullah's modest reforms, including trying to curb religious
control over education and providing Saudi women scholarships
to study abroad, albeit accompanied by a male relative. These
Saudis feared Nayef as king would roll back even such small
gains to curry favor with the fundamentalist religious
establishment.
But Prince Salman is no democrat. In an interview with me in
his Riyadh office two years ago, he took pains to explain why
democracy couldn't work in Saudi Arabia. "If Saudi Arabia
adopts democracy every tribe will be a party," he said, adding
that the country would be chaotic. Instead, he said, the Kingdom
has shura, or consultation. "Government asks a collection of
people to consult and when there is no consensus, the leader
decides," he said candidly summing up Al Saud autocracy.
The problem is that a growing number of Saudis are no longer
content to obey authority. Saudi Arabia boasts 10 million
Internet users, up from only 500,000 a decade ago, and it is
second only to much-larger Egypt in Facebook users. Young
Saudis know what is happening in the rest of the world and are
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frustrated at what they see as the lack of freedom and
opportunity in their own country. This frustration is producing
growing signs of sedition despite government deterrence by
punishing those who step out of line.
Recently, a young Saudi woman confronted by the country's
religious police in a Riyadh mall for wearing nail polish told
them her nails were not their business. She filmed her
confrontation with authorities and posted it on YouTube. Last
month, Manal al-Sharif, jailed a year ago for driving her car and
posting a video of that forbidden act on YouTube, doubled
down on her defiance by going to Oslo to speak at a freedom
forum even though her employer warned she would be fired. A
young Saudi male dared to film and post on YouTube the
grueling poverty in Riyadh, concluding by interviewing a local
imam who said young girls in the neighborhood are being sold
into prostitution. The film went viral with some 800,000 Saudis
viewing it before its youthful maker was arrested.
Clearly, a growing number of frustrated Saudis no longer either
respect or fear their leaders. Saudis are not demanding
democracy; only transparent, efficient, honest government. They
want a leader who can make the sclerotic system function better.
Yet, much like the Soviet Union in its final years when power
passed from one old man to another—Brezhnev to Andropov to
Chernenko—in quick succession, the Saudi royal family
continues to pass the crown from one aged son of the founder to
the next.
Recall, the Soviet Union was widely assumed to be stable. In the
end, it proved brittle. Saudi succession looks very much like a
movie we've seen before.
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Ms. House, aformer publisher of The Wall Street Journal, is a
Pulitzer Prize winnerfor Mideast coverage. She is author of
"On Saudi Arabia," to be published in September by Knopf
N Y'l'
In a World of Complications, Obama
Faces a Re-election Test
Peter Baker
June 17, 2012 — For Barack Obama, a president who set out
to restore good relations with the world in his first term, the
world does not seem to be cooperating all that much with his bid
to win a second.
That reality has been on vivid display in recent days. Europe has
seemed unable to contain its rolling economic crisis to just
Greece. The Syrian conflict has intensified as the United Nations
suspended its observers' mission amid the violence. Egypt's
popular revolution is at risk of being reversed by the military.
And the Russians are cracking down at home and rattling sabers
abroad.
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As President Obama left on Sunday for an international summit
meeting in Mexico, the daunting array of overseas issues
underscored the challenges for an incumbent who is trying to
manage global affairs while arguing a case for re-election.
Although American voters are not particularly focused on
foreign policy in a time of economic trouble, the rest of the
world has a way of occupying a president's time and intruding
on his best-laid campaign plans.
If anything, the dire headlines from around the world only
reinforce an uncomfortable reality for this president and any of
his successors: even the world's last superpower has only so
much control over events beyond its borders, and its own course
can be dramatically affected in some cases. Whether from
ripples of the European fiscal crisis or flare-ups of violence in
Baghdad, it is easy to be whipsawed by events.
The trick for any president, of course, is in not seeming to be
whipsawed, even as his challenger presents him as weak and
ineffectual in shaping international events. If a president cannot
stand tall in the world, the argument goes, he is not up to the
task of governing in a complicated age.
"Both candidates have to pretend that the U.S. presidency is far
more influential over events than it really is," said Stephen D.
Biddle, a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations. The
obvious example is the European economic situation, which has
profound implications for the American economy but is largely
out of American hands.
"But to admit this is to look weak or to seem to evade
responsibility," Mr. Biddle said. "So both candidates tacitly
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agree to pretend that their policies are capable of righting the
American economy while their opponent's would sink it, when
the reality is that both are in thrall to foreigners' choices to a
degree that neither would acknowledge."
Mr. Obama's trip to Mexico for a gathering of the Group of 20
leaders is his third international summit meeting in a month,
reflecting the pull of priorities for any incumbent. While he
confers in Los Cabos, his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney,
will tour swing states. "I've still got my day job," as Mr. Obama
put it at a California fund-raiser last month.
The president will talk with European leaders about pulling out
of the financial spiral after Sunday's election in Greece, which
gave the pro-bailout party a slim victory and the right to form a
coalition government. He will also meet with President Vladimir
V. Putin of Russia just days after the Obama administration
accused Moscow of supplying arms to Syria in its bloody
crackdown on the uprising there.
Just as Mr. Obama and Mr. Putin meet for the first time as
presidents, their underlings will sit down in Moscow for the
latest round of talks with Iran that are intended to curb
Tehran's nuclear program. The optimism over these talks this
spring seems to have faded into fears of a further impasse that
would play into Iran's hands.
Little of this has played out on the campaign trail. In the latest
New York Times-CBS News poll, only 4 percent of
Americans picked foreign policy as their top election concern.
Over all, polls show Mr. Obama with a double-digit advantage
over Mr. Romney on foreign policy.
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Yet Mr. Romney has occasionally turned to foreign policy to
bolster his broader attempt to portray Mr. Obama as a failed
president. On Saturday, he told a conservative coalition that
when it came to Israel, he would "just look at the things the
president has done and do the opposite." On the CBS News
program "Face the Nation" on Sunday, Mr. Romney said that on
Iran "I would be willing to take military action, if necessary, to
prevent them from becoming a nuclear threat to the world."
Some Romney advisers said Mr. Obama was too willing to
avoid accountability by presenting himself as a powerless
bystander.
"These crises reflect an absence of leadership from the Obama
administration," said Kristen Silverberg, a former State
Department official under President George W. Bush who is
advising Mr. Romney. "He sat out the Iran protests, has faltered
on Syria and let the Russians know he'll be even more `flexible'
after our election. Global security and the strength of the global
economy depend on strong U.S. leadership and a president who
believes in America's role in the world."
Jamie M. Fly, executive director of the Foreign Policy Initiative,
a conservative group, said there was a growing sense "that what
is required is American leadership rather than the president's
leading-from-behind foreign policy that has failed to address an
imploding Syria, a nuclearizing Iran, an economic crisis in
Europe and a revanchist Russia." While foreign policy can pose
its challenges, it has advantages for a president. Flying around
the world on Air Force One to meet with the likes of Mr. Putin
conveys a statesmanlike stature. It allows him to brush off
criticism as just politics, as his campaign did with Mr. Romney's
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comments about Israel over the weekend. "Mitt Romney is yet
again trying to score cheap political points by distorting
President Obama's record of support for Israel," Ben LaBolt, an
Obama campaign spokesman, said in a statement. "Our
relationship with Israel is too important for Governor Romney to
play politics with it." Mr. Obama assumes foreign policy will
be an advantage for him, particularly because of his record of
pulling troops out of Iraq, helping topple the government of Col.
Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, taking robust action against
terrorists and authorizing the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
He is the "first real national security Democrat" since President
John F. Kennedy, said James M. Goldgeier, dean of American
University's School of International Service. "He looks and acts
like a commander in chief. So yes, the euro crisis, Syria, Iran,
etc., can cause him problems. But Romney has his work cut out
for him on foreign policy." Nancy E. Soderberg, a national
security aide and United Nations diplomat under President Bill
Clinton, says it is "par for the course" that an incumbent has to
address international challenges while the challenger has a free
ride.
But for all the attention on Syria, Egypt and other areas of
conflict, the most important crisis for Mr. Obama remains the
European economy because of its impact at home. "Europe's
weakness is likely to blow back on Obama's efforts this fall —
just at the wrong time," she said. "He'll have to run harder
because of it."
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Article 6.
The Economist
Russia and the West
Jun 16th 2012 -- ON THE margin of the G20 summit later this
month Russia's new (but also old) president, Vladimir Putin,
will meet America's Barack Obama for the first time since his
election in March. The atmosphere is likely to be chilly. That is
as it should be, for since his decision last autumn to return to the
Kremlin, Mr Putin has been stridently negative and anti-
Western, most recently over Syria (see article). Such behaviour
demands a stiff response from the West.
When Mr Obama came to power, his administration talked of a
"reset" in relations with Russia. This new, friendlier approach
had some useful consequences. It enabled America to negotiate
and ratify a strategic arms-reduction treaty. It helped to bring
about a slightly more constructive Russian attitude to Iran's
nuclear ambitions. And it secured Russia's imminent entry into
the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Just as with China a
decade ago, WTO membership should press Russia to compete
more openly and fairly in world markets and to abide more
closely by international trade rules.
But the reset was based in part on two misplaced hopes: that
Dmitry Medvedev, who had been lent the presidency for one
term by Mr Putin in 2008, would genuinely take charge of the
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country, and that some in his government had sound liberalising,
pro-Western instincts. Those hopes were dashed by Mr Putin's
swatting aside of Mr Medvedev last September to allow his own
return to the Kremlin, the rigging of elections, his crackdown on
Moscow's protesters and his new Nyet posture.
This should not lead to a total rupture with Russia. Constructive
engagement should continue on the economic front. With the oil
price falling, stronger economic ties to the West could help to
create a business constituency inside Russia that sees the need
for greater liberalisation to keep the economy growing. The
West should certainly look at introducing reasonable visa rules
for Russian businesspeople (Britain's are absurdly tough). Other
cold-war relics, such as America's Jackson-Vanik trade
restrictions, should also go. And why not dangle in front of the
bauble-loving Mr Putin the prospect of Russian membership of
the OECD rich-country club? Or a free-trade agreement with the
European Union?
But if it is right to engage economically, it is also right to
condemn Mr Putin's illiberal autocracy. Mr Obama should
bluntly criticise Russia's poor human-rights and democratic
credentials. Western ambassadors should not hesitate to talk to
opposition protesters in Moscow just because the Kremlin
objects.
In foreign policy, too, the West should stand firm. Russia cannot
be allowed to veto America's missile-defence plans in Europe.
Nor should Mr Putin's continued blocking of UN Security
Council resolutions authorising intervention in Syria be treated
as an insurmountable bar to action, any more than it was in
Kosovo in 1999. G20 leaders should do their utmost to
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embarrass Mr Putin over his backing for Mr Assad. This week
Hillary Clinton, America's secretary of state, was admirably
tough, condemning Russia's sales of arms to Syria.
Tough on corruption, tough on the causes of corruption
Mr Putin respects toughness, not weakness. This matters when it
comes to his government's more egregious behaviour, such as
the jailing of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, once boss of the Yukos oil
company, the killing of Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer working for
William Browder, a foreign investor, or the murder in London of
Alexander Litvinenko, a former security official. In cases like
these it is right to try to identify the individuals involved so as to
deny them visas and freeze their assets, as a congressional
legislative amendment related to the Magnitsky case proposes.
Equally it is right to work against money laundering through
Western financial centres. Russia should not be singled out, but
it should be treated like other autocratic and corrupt countries.
Mr Putin cultivates the image of a popular and admired
strongman, but the wave of protests since he announced his
return to the Kremlin has exposed his weakness and loss of
support. His power base is beginning to erode. Economic
engagement with the West, combined with firm criticism of his
democratic and human-rights abuses at home and abroad, are the
best response.
Ankle 7.
Spiegel
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Wins Greek Election: Pro-Bailout
Government in Sight
06/17/2012 -- The conservative New Democracy has won the
Greek election, whose outcome was seen as crucial to the euro
zone's future. The party should be able to form a pro-bailout
coalition government with the Socialists, but Greece could still
face months of uncertainty.
The world had been watching Sunday's elections in Greece with
bated breath, worried that the outcome could precipitate a Greek
exit from the euro zone. Now it looks as if the two mainstream
parties that support the bailout deal with the European Union
and International Monetary Fund (IMF) may be able to form a
government -- but Athens isn't out of the woods yet.
According to official results from the Greek Interior Ministry,
conservative New Democracy came first with 29.7 percent of the
vote, giving it 129 seats, followed by the left-wing Syriza party
with 26.9 percent (71 seats). The center-left Socialists (PASOK)
came third with 12.3 percent (33 seats).
The far-right Golden Dawn party received 6.9 percent of the
vote, giving it 18 seats in parliament.
The party that finishes first gets a 50-seat bonus, meaning that
New Democracy and the Socialists have 162 seats in the 300-
seat Greek parliament between them. They could form a
coalition government which would back the EU-IMF bailout.
New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras called for broad
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support for a "national salvation government," saying "there is
no time to waste." The new government "must bring economic
growth and reassure Greeks the worst is over," he said.
'Path Will Be Neither Short Nor Easy'
EU leaders reacted to the result with relief. German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's office said she had congratulated Samaras by
telephone on Sunday night and said that Merkel assumes Greece
"will keep to its European commitments."
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaible called the result
"a decision by Greek voters to forge ahead with the
implementation of far-reaching economic and fiscal reforms.
This path will be neither short nor easy but is necessary and will
give the Greek people the prospect of a better future."
Speaking to German television on Monday morning, German
Deputy Finance Minister Steffen Kampeter said Germany
expected the new Greek government to honor its existing
commitments but said Athens should not be pushed too hard. "It
is clear to us that Greece should not be over-strained," Kampeter
said.
"We want Greece to stay in the euro, we want Greece to
continue wanting to belong to Europe," said German Foreign
Minister Guido Westerwelle, speaking before the final results
were announced. He stressed that Greece had to decide on its
future, saying: "You cannot stop anyone who wants to go." He
insisted that there could not be "substantial changes" to the
agreement with the EU and IMF, but that he could "well
imagine talking again about timelines." Last week, there were
media reports that the EU might relax the terms of the agreement
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should pro-bailout parties be able to form a government.
The Euro Group of euro-zone finance ministers said in a
statement that "continued fiscal and structural reforms are
Greece's best guarantee to overcome the current economic and
social challenges and for a more prosperous future of Greece in
the euro area," adding that it "reiterates its commitment to assist
Greece."
"The Greek people have spoken," said European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President
Herman Van Rompuy in a statement. "We fully respect its
democratic choice. We are hopeful that the election results will
allow a government to be formed quickly." They said they
would "continue to stand by Greece as a member of the EU
family and of the euro area."
Government May Be Weak
Syriza had threatened to pull out of the deal with Greece's
creditors if elected, a step that could lead to Greece being forced
to exit the euro zone, with unforeseeable -- but presumably
disastrous -- consequences for the rest of the currency union. If
Athens were to fail to stick to the terms of the bailout deal with
the EU and IMF, it could face default within months, making a
return to the drachma practically inevitable. Worried Greeks had
been withdrawing hundreds of millions of euros from their bank
accounts in the days before the election, amid fears of their
savings being wiped out.
Observers believe, however, that even if New Democracy and
the Socialists manage to form a government, it may still be weak
and could seek to renegotiate the terms of the bailout. Alexis
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Tsipras, leader of Syriza, said his party would continue to fight
the bailout. "Very soon, the left will be in power," he told
supporters in Athens on Sunday night. "We begin the fight again
tomorrow."
Sunday's vote, which had been cast as a referendum on Greece's
membership of the euro, was the second Greek election in six
weeks. None of the parties were able to form a viable
government after the inconclusive May 6 vote, where angry
voters punished the two mainstream parties, leading to a second
election being called. New negotiations to form a coalition
government are expected to start on Monday.
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