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Posts Tagged ‘Obama Foreign Policy’

The recent attack by al-Qaida on an American airliner seemingly caught the Obama Adminstration with it’s proverbial pants down in the public relations sense.  Images of Obama enjoying his Hawaiian vacation as his cabinet secretaries and political aides responded (tardily, in my view) to logical Republican comments and concerns regarding national security and the global war against al-Qaida. 

Will the U.S. respond militarily to this al-Qaida attack?  Despite his recent award of the Nobel Peace Prize, President Obama will most likely decide he MUST respond with some sort of overt move on al-Qaida in Yemen.  Covert action will not placate the Republicans who have seized the public debate on this issue, and, after sending General Petreaus to visit with the Yemeni president, the world is also expecting some type of overt U.S. action on Yemen.

For more information on Yemen’s recent history and the wars being fought there, see http://www.historyguy.com/yemen_history_wars_politics.htm

President Obama released a statement addressing the many problems in Sudan, including the ongoing genocide in Darfur, and the unraveling of the peace agreement that ended (or paused?) the bloody Sudan Civil War between the North Sudan and South Sudan.

 

Statement of President Barack Obama on Sudan Strategy

October 19, 2009

 

Today, my Administration is releasing a comprehensive strategy to confront the serious and urgent situation in Sudan.

For years, the people of Sudan have faced enormous and unacceptable hardship. The genocide in Darfur has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and left millions more displaced. Conflict in the region has wrought more suffering, posing dangers beyond Sudan’s borders and blocking the potential of this important part of Africa. Sudan is now poised to fall further into chaos if swift action is not taken.

Our conscience and our interests in peace and security call upon the United States and the international community to act with a sense of urgency and purpose. First, we must seek a definitive end to conflict, gross human rights abuses and genocide in Darfur. Second, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the North and South in Sudan must be implemented to create the possibility of long-term peace. These two goals must both be pursued simultaneously with urgency. Achieving them requires the commitment of the United States, as well as the active participation of international partners. Concurrently, we will work aggressively to ensure that Sudan does not provide a safe-haven for international terrorists.

The United States Special Envoy has worked actively and effectively to engage all of the parties involved, and he will continue to pursue engagement that saves lives and achieves results. Later this week, I will renew the declaration of a National Emergency with respect to Sudan, which will continue tough sanctions on the Sudanese Government. If the Government of Sudan acts to improve the situation on the ground and to advance peace, there will be incentives; if it does not, then there will be increased pressure imposed by the United States and the international community. As the United States and our international partners meet our responsibility to act, the Government of Sudan must meet its responsibilities to take concrete steps in a new direction.

Over the last several years, governments, non-governmental organizations, and individuals, and from around the world have taken action to address the situation in Sudan, and to end the genocide in Darfur. Going forward, all of our efforts must be measured by the lives that are led by the people of Sudan. After so much suffering, they deserve a future that allows them to live with greater dignity, security, and opportunity. It will not be easy, and there are no simple answers to the extraordinary challenges that confront this part of the world. But now is the time for all of us to come together, and to make a strong and sustained effort on behalf of a better future for the people of Sudan.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Statement-of-President-Barack-Obama-on-Sudan-Strategy/

See also: http://www.historyguy.com/obamapresidency/obama_sudan_strategy_2009.htm

And http://www.historyguy.com/obamapresidency/

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