Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 4th, 2009
In an interesting juxtaposition to the article we posted yesterday from Venezuela entitled, President Chavez ‘Puts Early End’ to Honeymoon with Obama, and in line with another article we posted from that country headlined, Obama is No ‘Black in Chavez’ Pocket’, this article by Alexander Cambero of Colombia’s El Tiempo lambastes Hugo Chavez as a ‘Tropical Napoleon’ laid low by that leader of empire, President Barack Obama. Those sensitive to a bit...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 4th, 2009
For those interested in a fuller accounting of the May Day remarks of President Hugo Chavez in regard to the Obama Administration than those available on the wire services, this news item from Venezuela’s Tal Cual offers extensive quotes – and coverage of the harsh manner in which his government dealt with pro-democracy counter-demonstrations on the same day.
The Tal Cual report says in part:
“President Hugo Chavez took advantage of International Worker’s Day celebrations...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 4th, 2009
In Europe and elsewhere, the revulsion over U.S. treatment of terrorist detainees shows little sign of abating, and, as this op-ed from Switzerland shows, neither does the self-loathing over the fact that European governments actively participated or turned a blind eye – or as Swiss columnist Francois Gross puts it, “allies of these Crusaders, worthy of their ancestors remained silent. The enablers of the masters of the world caged foreign detainees on their own soil.”
Gross continues...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 3rd, 2009
There has been a lot of criticism from Europe about President Obama’s plan for achieving a nuclear weapons free world, essentially because most columnists there think it wildly naive. This commentary from the Global Geographic Times of the People’s Republic of China, however, sees the idea as a way for America to extend its global dominance by denying the rest of the world any way to deter the United States, which has the most potent conventional military in history.
For China’s...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 1st, 2009
‘WE’VE ALREADY INFECTED HALF THE WORLD WITH OUR SWINE FLU …TO ADD TO OUR PROBLEMS, SOON THEY’LL CLASSIFY US AS ONE OF THE COUNTRIES IN THE AXIS OF EVIL.’
Is it plausible that United States biowarfare research is intentionally or accidentally behind the latest virus to plague the world? According to Carlos Ferreyra of Mexico’s La Cronica de Hoy, one of the many rumors floating around Mexico is that Donald Rumsfeld, who owns a huge chunk of a company called Gilead...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | May 1st, 2009
For those curious about the Byzantine world of Lebanese politics and how the United Stats fits it to it, this article from Lebanon’s L’Orient Le Jour will provide a glimpse.
This article, written by L’Orient Le Jour’s Issa Goraieb, discusses the controversy that erupted after Secretary of State Clinton, during her first trip to Beirut, visited the tomb of former Prime Minister Rafik Harari, who it is widely believed was assassinated in a Syria-sponsored hit in 2005.
In...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 30th, 2009
When a quarter million Western and Afghan troops confront al-Qaeda, the Taliban and whatever jihadi fighters they can muster from around the Muslim world – all in proximity to Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile – what will be the result?
According to Sateh Noureddine, columnist for Lebanon’s As Satif, that moment is fast approaching. He writes in part:
“The battle will pit the armies of the superpower and its allies against the most violent and radical of Islamist groups,...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 30th, 2009
One of the many conspiracy theories prevalent in the Arab world – and elsewhere – is that the United States invented HIV/AIDs, infected people in the rest of the world and blamed it on Africans.
In a new twist on this theory, Abed al-Nasser of Algeria’s Echourouq al-Yawm writes that the U.S. infected Mexico with swine flu to make itself look good by saving its southern neighbor:
“America, the country of Nobel Prizes in every science and that wants to change the maps of...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 29th, 2009
Is the American press, radio and TV acting as the media arm of the Obama Administration? This criticism, made very often on the American right – and for many years in regard to Reagan and Bush on the American left – appears in this article from Jordan’s Al-Arab al-Yawm, as a warning to the world not to fall for it.
For Al-Arab al-Yawm, Amal al-Sharqi writes in part:
It is well known that the American press, in spite of the broad spectrum of freedom it enjoys, remains directed by...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 29th, 2009
It’s the question on everyone’s lips – but one that so far, few have answered: Why have so many died in Mexico of the new H1N1 flu virus, but only one – so far – in the United States?
Looking for an answer, Leo Zuckermann, for Mexico’s Excelsior, writes in part:
“When I get a fever in Mexico, I telephone my doctor. He’s a friend who knows me perfectly. He asks me about my symptoms, makes an initial diagnosis and usually issues me a prescription over...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 28th, 2009
As in the United States, the controversy over the torture issue continues to ripple through the international community.
But according to this editorial from Estadao of Brazil, there is much more at stake than merely the issue of torture, aka, ‘enhanced interrogation techniques.’
The editorial reads in part:
“What’s at stake goes beyond torture … Under the auspices of Bush and the invocation of the imperative of national security, his intimate circle – Vice President...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 28th, 2009
”Iran’s regional cards: Syria, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbullah and Hamas.”
Israel isn’t the only U.S. ally in the Middle East expressing concern about the policies of the Obama Administration. According to this editorial from Lebanon’s L’Orient Le Jour, The pro-West ruling faction in Lebanon is worried as well – given the peace overtures being sent out in the direction of Syria and Iran and the far-right Israeli government of Binyamin Netanyahu.
Emile...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 28th, 2009
Is ‘just following orders’ a defense for those who imposed torture on detainees? While it’s true that the U.N. Convention on Torture outlaws this defense, in the words of Izvestia’s Maxim Sokolov, ‘A convention is a convention, but real life is so much richer.’
Sokolov makes the point that it was fine to say ‘just following orders’ was inadmissible for Nazi war criminals, since the Third Reich was no more – and there was little concern about...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 26th, 2009
How is President Obama doing as he nears the 100-days-in-office milestone. According to this editorial from Le Monde, in the area of international justice he has done well and is getting a bad rap from well-meaning but wrong-headed human rights groups.
The Le Monde editorial says in part:
“On April 30, the Obama Administration will have been in place for 100 days. It’s time for a preliminary assessment. In the area of international justice, some are being fussy. Admittedly, they say,...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 25th, 2009
As we have already established – there is little patience in Europe for Bush Administration arguments about expediency when it comes to the issue of “harsh interrogation techniques.”
Adding his views to the debate on the subject is Robert Misik of Germany’s Die Tageszeitung, who writes in part:
“Those who are responsible for gross human rights violations should not so easily escape. It may be that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney don’t regard being stuck in the...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 25th, 2009
Continuing with our coverage of the global reaction to the issue of torture in the United States, this article from Italy’s Corriere della Sera is perhaps the most sympathetic we have seen yet, to the position of those who say ‘harsh interrogation techniques’ were acceptable given the circumstances.
For Corriere della Sera, Guido Olimpio writes in part:
“The CIA memos encapsulate a brutal synthesis of the harshest years of the struggle against terror. A short torture manual...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 24th, 2009
Dick Cheney’s defense of what many call torture has Turkish journalists shocked. This editorial from Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper says in part:
“The reason U.S. policy is so important to us, in particular this new policy, is that our own struggle to rein in such heinous practices in Turkey is directly related to the standards set in Washington. Like most newsrooms in Turkey, ours is intimately familiar with the topic. In the past, torture as an instrument of state power was common...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 23rd, 2009
According to Bettina Gaus of Germany’s Die Tageszeitung, if President Obama obtains a candid and unsparing assessment of the policies of his predecessor by granting immunity to CIA operatives, then it’s an exercise worth doing. But if granting immunity is simply for the purpose of not antagonizing government agencies and the military – then according to Gaus, the confidence that the world has placed in him will have well and truly been squandered.
Gaus writes in part:
“Clearly...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 22nd, 2009
Those who suggest that Hugo Chavez got the best of President Obama at the Summit of the Americas might want to read this article from Venezuela’s El Universal, which advises that the truth is just the opposite – that Obama played Chavez like a harp, forcing him into a situation in which he had to back down.
Castigating the ‘antics’ of President Chavez and expressing his personal discomfort over his gift of an untranslated Spanish-language book on imperialism to the U.S. head...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 22nd, 2009
How significant was Cuban dictator Fidel Castro’s response to President Obama’s overtures last week?
The editorial board of Brazil’s Estadao newspaper puts it this way, in part:
“The reaction from President Raúl Castro was singular. Just a few hours later, from where he was in Cumaná, Venezuela, he sent word “publicly and privately” that “we are open to discussing everything – human rights, freedom of the press and political prisoners.” These...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 21st, 2009
Chavez: ‘Today I don’t smell sulfur.’
Obama: ‘Thank you very much.’
As part of our coverage of the events surrounding the Fifth Summit of the Americas, WORLDMEETS.US offers this unforgiving walk through the reality of Latin America from a Russian perspective.
For Gazeta of Russia, Yevgeniy Trifonov writes in part:
“For Latin Americans, China, Europe and Japan, even all together, can’t substitute for the United States. Cuba is a perfect example of this: free...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 19th, 2009
Venezuela President Hugo Chavez hands President Obama a book titled, Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent, at the Fifth Summit of the Americas in Trinidad & Tobago.
How badly do Latin Americans want President Obama to understand the history of the United States in Latin America? In this ‘Open Letter’ to President Obama, Mexican columnist Gilberto Lopez y Rivas outlines the events that have created a well of angst and resentment toward our nation...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 17th, 2009
‘IT’S A PITY THAT THE PRESIDENT OF GRINGOLAND IS IN
WASHINGTON’S CROSS HAIRS AS HE’S A DEMOCRAT AND HE’S
BARACK OBAMA … AS FOR BUSH, FOR EIGHT YEARS WE HAD ‘WELCOMING MATERIAL’ WAITING FOR HIM … BUT NOW WE HAVE TO THROW IT IN THE TRASH.’
Barack Obama has just completed the first visit by a sitting U.S. president to Mexico City in decades. And while he made a good impression, this editorial from Mexico’s La Jornada suggests that...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 17th, 2009
President Obama has arrived in Trinidad & Tobago for the Fifth Summit of the Americas, and WORLDMEETS.US will be following events every step of the way. As we are wont to do in a situation like this, below are some of the headlines we have posted from around the world in the run-up to the summit. Whether the United States likes it or not – it looks like Cuba will be the central topic of discussion:
El Espectador, Colombia: Cuba in Obama’s Sights
La Jornada, Mexico: It is ‘Important...
Posted by WILLIAM KERN | Apr 14th, 2009
Now that the G20 Summit – and all the other summits – are finally over, along with all the backslapping of participants – not everyone is buying.
One of those skeptical voices belongs to Swiss columnist Patrik Etschmayer, who wonders whether spring fever might have gone to the heads of leaders who seem to believe that throwing more unsecured money at a problem that began due to excessive unsecured money is really the way to address the crisis at hand.
For the Swiss newspaper Nachrichten,...