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 2013-03-07T12:19:44-05:00 The Atlantic's 2nd Annual Economy Summit

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President Bill Clinton's winning catchphrase "It's the economy, stupid!" still resonates in consequential political debates today -- with both sides of the political aisle and the many factions of economic policy interest groups slugging it out over what a healthy economy needs.

Paulvolcker.jpgThis year's "Economy Summit" organized by The Atlantic features a very diverse cast of perspectives and will focus on debt and strategies for sustainable economic growth. Some will focus on economic debates -- and others will focus on paralyzed leadership.

I'll post the entire program below -- but I should note that Washington Note readers are invited to attend -- or to watch online. If you want to be there in person, be sure to RSVP at the link below The entire conference will stream live here, which means you can watch it from as far as Tazmania or Sanaa if you have a good broadband connection.

One of the interesting issues that my collaborator and former "affinity credit card" entrepreneur Richard Vague are highlighting are the problems of a massive 'private sector debt' problem that continues to lurk in the US economic equation. For those interested, Vague and I outlined some of the problems here and spoke about this in a short YouTube clip as well as on WHYY's Radio Times, a popularly NPR-affiliated program in Philadelphia.

norquist1.jpgThe line-up for this year has a lot of headliners -- in fact, they are all headliners -- but those who will make a lot of the sizzle are former Federal Reserve Governor Paul Volcker, former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, anti-tax pledge activist and President of the Americans for Tax Reform Grover Norquist, Fix the Debt founder Maya MacGuineas, Financial Times Chief US Commentator Edward Luce, and National Journal Chief Correspondent Michael Hirsh.

The list continues with American Prospect Founding Editor Robert Kuttner, Naked Capitalism publisher Yves Smith, former FDIC chief Sheila Bair, former Federal Reserve Board Deputy Chair Alice Rivlin, Senator and former West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin, Senator and former North Dakota Governor John Hoeven, Bloomberg political columnist Margaret Carlson, former Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell, Financial Services Roundtable CEO and former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty, National Journal editorial director Ron Fournier, former George W. Bush National Economic Adviser Lawrence Lindsey and others.

Here follows the schedule:

sheila-bair-20sep12.jpgThe Atlantic's ECONOMY SUMMIT 2013
Debating America's Debt Challenges & Recovery Options
#AtlanticEcon

Wednesday, 13 March 2013
10:00 am - 5:30 pm
Capital Hilton, 16th & K Streets NW, Washington DC
RSVP here

For those outside of Washington or unable to attend, this event will stream live on line and can be watched over the internet HERE or just tune in to The Washington Note home page.

8:45 am
REGISTRATION & COFFEE

Thumbnail image for James-Bennet.jpg9:15 am
WELCOMING REMARKS

ELIZABETH BAKER KEFFER
President, AtlanticLIVE & QuartzLIVE

A Preview of the April 2013 "Money Issue" of The Atlantic

SCOTT HAVENS
President, The Atlantic

JAMES BENNET
Editor in Chief, The Atlantic


9:25 am
DEBATING AMERICA'S ADDICTION TO DEBT & DEBT DEBATES:
WHAT MATTERS AND WHAT MATTERS MORE?

Alexander_Craig_TDBank_TDA12_MI-resize-380x300.jpgCRAIG ALEXANDER
Chief Economist, TD Bank

MAYA MacGUINEAS
Founder, Fix the Debt
President, Coalition for a Responsible Federal Budget

PAUL McCULLEY
Former Managing Director, PIMCO
Chairman, Global Society of Fellows, Global Interdependence Center

YVES SMITH (aka Susan Webber)
Publisher, Naked Capitalism

ROBERT KUTTNER
Co-Founder and Editor, The American Prospect
Author, Debtors' Prison: The Politics of Austerity versus Possibility

moderator
EDWARD LUCE
Economics & Political Columnist, Financial Times
Author, Time to Start Thinking: America in the Age of Descent

Thumbnail image for sperling.jpg10:25 am
A HEALTHY ECONOMY EQUALS FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY & SMART INVESTMENT


THE HON. GENE SPERLING
National Economic Advisor to President Obama

interviewer
JAMES BENNET
Editor in Chief, The Atlantic

10:45 am
GOOD DEBT, BAD DEBT, AND REAL OPTIONS FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH
AMIDST THE POLITICS OF AUSTERITY

Thumbnail image for monica-mehta-writer.jpgMONICA MEHTA
Author, The Entrepreneurial Instinct

STEVE KEEN
Professor of Economics & Finance, University of West Sydney
Publisher of Debunking Economics and Debtwatch

WILLIAM GREIDER
National Affairs Correspondent, The Nation

SHERLE R. SCHWENNINGER
Director, Economic Growth Program, New America Foundation

MICHAEL HUDSON
Research Professor of Economics, University of Missouri
Research Associate, Levy Institute, Bard College
President, Institute for the Study of Long Term Economic Trends

moderator
DEREK THOMPSON
Senior Editor, Business, The Atlantic

Volcker.jpg11:45 am
KEYNOTE PRESENTATION & INTERVIEW

THE HON. PAUL VOLCKER
Former Chairman, Federal Reserve Board

moderator
JAMES BENNET
Editor in Chief, The Atlantic

12:30 pm
KEYNOTE PRE-LUNCHEON INTERVIEW

THE HON. ALICE RIVLIN
Former Deputy Chairman, Federal Reserve Board

moderator
DEREK THOMPSON
Senior Editor, Business, The Atlantic

hirsh.jpg1:30 pm
THE GREAT RECESSION AND PROBLEMS UNRESOLVED

THE HON. SHEILA BAIR
Former Chair, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Senior Advisor, Pew Charitable Trusts

interviewer
MICHAEL HIRSH
Chief Correspondent, National Journal

2:00 pm
HERE'S THE DEAL: HOW WASHINGTON CAN SOLVE THE DEFICIT AND SPUR GROWTH


DAVID LEONHARDT
Washington Bureau Chief, New York Times
Author of the new e-book, Here's the Deal

2:15 pm
CAN WASHINGTON SEE THE BIG PICTURE?
THE MAKINGS OF A VIBRANT US ECONOMY MAY BE HERE

THE HON. ROBERT RUBIN
Former Secretary of the Treasury
Co-Chairman, Council on Foreign Relations

DAVID WESSEL
Economics Editor & Columnist, Wall Street Journal
Author, Red Ink: Inside the High Stakes Politics of the Federal Budget

Thumbnail image for lindsey.jpg2:45 pm
A NO FILTERS VIEW OF THE AMERICAN ECONOMY'S PROSPECTS AND CHALLENGES

THE HON. LAWRENCE LINDSEY
Former National Economic Advisor to President George W. Bush
Former Governor, Federal Reserve System
President & CEO, The Lindsey Group

interviewer
EDWARD LUCE
Chief US Correspondent, Financial Times
Author, Time to Start Thinking: America in the Age of Descent

3:15 pm
REALLY FIXING THE US ECONOMY: WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE

RENDELL.JPGTHE HON. EDWARD G. RENDELL
Former Governor of Pennsylvania

interviewer
MARGARET CARLSON
Columnist, Bloomberg

3:45 pm
OUT OF THE CLOSET:
DEALING WITH AMERICA'S PRIVATE SECTOR DEBT CHALLENGE

RICHARD VAGUE
Former CEO, First USA Bank

STEVE CLEMONS
Washington Editor at Large, The Atlantic
Founder & Senior Fellow, American Strategy Program, New America Foundation

HOEVEN.JPG4:15 pm
DEBT DRAMAS HAPPEN EVERY DAY IN STATES: HOW GOVERNORS DEAL

JOE MANCHIN.JPGTHE HON. JOE MANCHIN (D-WV)
United States Senator
Former Governor, State of West Virginia

THE HON. JOHN HOEVEN (R-ND)
United States Senator
Former Governor, State of North Dakota

interviewer
STEVE CLEMONS
Washington Editor at Large, The Atlantic

Thumbnail image for norquist reagan-thumb-300x395-2623.jpg4:45 pm
POLICY & PROMISES: PONDERING LEADERSHIP AND A HEALTHIER ECONOMY

GROVER NORQUIST
President, Americans for Tax Reform
Author, Leave Us Alone: Getting the Government's Hands Off our Money, Our Guns, Our Lives

interviewer
STEVE CLEMONS
Washington Editor at Large, The Atlantic
Editor at Large, Quartz

5:15 pm
DEBT & GROWTH IN AN AGE OF POLITICAL BANKRUPTCY

Tim-Pawlenty-360292-1-402.jpgTHE HON. TIM PAWLENTY
President & CEO, Financial Services Roundtable
Former Governor of Minnesota

interviewer
RON FOURNIER
Editorial Director, National Journal

5:45 pm
FESTIVE RECEPTION
with Specialty Drinks:

"Sequester at the Beach" & "Debt Old Fashioned"

The Atlantic's Economy Summit can be watched live streaming here.

With special thanks to Supporting Underwriter, the Center for Audit Quality; Presenting Underwriter, TD Bank; and Knowledge Underwriter, The Governor's Woods Foundation for their generous support of this year's Economy Summit.


 2013-02-27T22:36:15-05:00 Chuck Hagel's Door

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History and consequence will occur behind this door for the next many years.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-02-27T10:55:29-05:00 Hagel Sworn In

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Chuck Hagel, left, is sworn into office as the 24th defense secretary by Michael L. Rhodes, the Defense Department's director of administration and management, as Hagel's wife, Lilibet, holds a Bible at the Pentagon, Feb. 27, 2013. DOD photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley

The Hagel nomination fight is done. It's time to move on to challenges that matter and get beyond personality politics.


Some still seem to want to fight battles over who did what to whom, and I agree with Dana Milbank that a disconcerting strand of McCarthyism appeared in this fight and was fortunately beaten back.

That said, I think after a battle it's important to show respect to those who were on the other side.

They have different priorities. They see the world differently -- and it's important to understand that and salute their own magnanimity after this sort of skirmish.

Bill Kristol put out the following statement yesterday. It's classy, and as good as it will get from the side who really did not want to see Hagel confirmed.

Had the Hagel backers lost, I hope they (and I) would have found a track to be magnanimous and future-oriented.

Statement by William Kristol, Chairman, Emergency Committee for Israel, on
the confirmation of Chuck Hagel as Secretary of Defense:

We fought the good fight, and are proud to have done so. We salute all those -- Democrats and Republicans, Christians and Jews -- who joined with us in the effort to secure a better Secretary of Defense. We are heartened that the overwhelming majority of senators from one of the two major parties voted against confirming Mr. Hagel.

We take some comfort in Mr. Hagel's confirmation conversions on the issues of Israel and Iran, and do believe that, as a result of this battle,

Mr. Hagel will be less free to pursue dangerous policies at the Defense Department and less inclined to advocate them within the administration.

And since hope is an American characteristic and a Jewish virtue, we will also say that we hope Mr. Hagel will rise to the occasion and successfully discharge his weighty duties. In this task we wish him well.

This battle against Chuck Hagel is over.

The fight for a principled, pro-Israel foreign policy goes on.

While I don't agree with the framing or principal points in Kristol's note, I respect the spirit of them. 

When John Bolton resigned, after his recess-appointed term as ambassador in the United Nations ended, I did my best to remind people of his considerable capabilities and his service to the nation, despite what many perceived to be deficits in his views on what American internationalism should be.

This is what the contending sides in many of our policy battles need to demonstrate; it's a good and important lesson for America's youth watching the behavior of national leaders and even pundits.

It's interesting to me that while Bolton never received a Senate vote on his appointment to serve as UN ambassador, he did have a vote when he was confirmed as under secretary of state for arms control and international security affairs. He received 43 no votes against his confirmation, not unlike the 41 nays against Hagel.

Those who supported Bolton then didn't believe that those substantial nays crippled him, and he went on -- in their eyes -- to accomplish substantial things, like the Proliferation Security Initiative (which I liked) and an ongoing assault on international institutions and treaties that they feel crimp American sovereignty (where I have differences).

Hopefully, Secretary of Defense Hagel will continue to impress his advocates with his smart strategic sensibilities and leadership -- but will also draw even grudging respect from those who are his skeptics. 

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-02-22T14:52:29-05:00 Nation's Former Top Dog Republican Shares Views on Chuck Hagel

dole reuters.jpgIt's so odd to hear Senators Inhofe, Cornyn, Cruz and a small passel of other GOP Senators state that Chuck Hagel doesn't enjoy Republican support. That's simply not true. Senators Shelby, Johanns, Cochran, and probably others will vote for Hagel next Tuesday. I think end of the day Senator Lisa Murkowski may do so as well.

But the zinger is that decorated World War II veteran, former Senate Majority Leader, former GOP candidate for United States President Bob Dole has endorsed Chuck Hagel:

Chuck Hagel has spent his entire life in service to his country. He volunteered to fight in Vietnam and did so bravely, side-by-side with his brother and earning two Purple Hearts. He served as Deputy Administrator of the Veterans Administration for President Ronald Reagan and was President & Chief Executive Officer of the World USO.

He represented the people of Nebraska in the Senate with honor for twelve years and was a coauthor of the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill. Hagel's wisdom and courage make him uniquely qualified to be Secretary of Defense and lead the men and women of our armed forces. Chuck Hagel will be an exceptional leader at an important time.

John McCain is a national hero and hard core Republican. Bob Dole is a national hero and hard core Republican. Chuck Hagel is a national hero who fought for this country and was seriously wounded in Vietnam -- and is also a hard core Republican. The lines for what being a Republican is are moving back and forth across lines, and the struggle matters.

Senator Joe McCarthy tried to move his political fortunes forward through smears and witch-hunts. That tradition is being revitalized in some corners of the Senate today -- and a big spot light needs to be directed on these nasty campaigns and the people behind them.

Some of the Senators opposing Hagel are doing so because of principled concerns about his views or competency. That is the way this process is supposed to work. However, a handful are in the fight to beat him at any cost -- even through slander and character assassination -- and that is when the system needs to expose the indecency and lack of moral character they are demonstrating.

So, hats off to Senator, former US presidential candidate and war hero Bob Dole for saying what is right and true about Senator and soon be US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-02-06T12:11:33-05:00 Talking Immigration Reform with McCain, Bennet & Klobuchar
John_McCain_official_portrait_2009.jpgThursday afternoon (tomorrow!), as a part of The Atlantic's larger "Manufacturing's Next Chapter" event, I will sit down with Senators John McCain (R-AZ), Michael Bennet (D-CO), and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) for a series of candid discussions on immigration reform and issues related to the future face of American manufacturing and the economy more broadly.

I will talk with Senators McCain and Bennet on their involvement in the Group of Eight and perspectives on each party's endgame for immigration reform. Senator Klobuchar will end the day discussing how she plans on increasing American innovation through immigration reform.

GE, the Center for American Progress, and American Action Forum are supporting this event.

Immigration discussions will start at 4:15 pm EST at the Newseum in Washington, DC. Watch the session live here online.  The entire forum starts at 9:50 am and can also be watched online live.

-- Steve Clemons
 2013-01-30T10:38:40-05:00 112 Pages of Answers from Chuck Hagel
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Reuters


Tomorrow morning at 9:30 am, the US Senate Armed Services Committee will hold a hearing on former Senator Chuck Hagel's nomination by the President to be the next Secretary of Defense.

A sizable roster of policy questions were submitted to Hagel to assess his views on everything form China to Iran to nuclear weapons to thoughts on energy management and security.

Here is the pdf of Hagel's responses.  Warning.  It runs 112 pages long.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-26T23:57:39-05:00 Politico's Matt Wuerker on Hagel Debate

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Brilliant. The Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist at Politico nails it on Hagel debate.

h/t to Daniel Lippman.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-24T13:33:18-05:00 Hillary Clinton Prevails at Benghazi Hearings


Here are some thoughts I shared with PRI's The World yesterday on Hillary Clinton's testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about the Benghazi disaster and death of US Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and other Americans.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-14T10:47:49-05:00 100 Minutes on Chuck Hagel

Sunday morning this week on C-Span Washington Journal, I spent some quality time with former Project for a New American Century Executive Director and now AEI scholar Gary Schmitt discussing Chuck Hagel's nomination to be President Obama's Secretary of Defense. C-Span's Steve Scully anchored the discussion -- which was wide-ranging and in my view, enlightening.

The entire segment is one hour and forty minutes and includes some fascinating historical clips of speeches by and interviews with Chuck Hagel in the C-Span video library files.

Schmitt raised numerous interesting issues -- and we got to the nub of the key strategic debate about how the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars fit into America's strategic narrative. Schmitt's concerns acknowledged, he nonetheless believes Senator Hagel will be confirmed.

The show is well worth watching.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-12T11:04:08-05:00 Blast from the Past: Elliott Abrams on John Lennon

lennon.jpgThere is a brewing storm over Council on Foreign Relations Senior Fellow Elliott Abrams' intemperate remarks about Senator Chuck Hagel -- arguing that the Secretary of Defense nominee must prove he is not an anti-Semite. We'll comment on that at another time.

But I just came by this really interesting passage in which Abrams slams John Lennon one week after Lennon's murder in December 1980 as quoted by Sidney Blumenthal in his book, The Rise of the Counter-Establishment: The Conservative Ascent to Political Power (pp. 161-2):

I'm sorry, but John Lennon was not that important a figure in our times. I do not believe he created the culture of the sixties. Come on! I've actually formed a political opinion of this. Why is his death getting more attention than Elvis Presley's? Because Lennon is perceived as a left-wing figure politically, anti-establishment, a man of social conscience with concern for the poor. And, therefore, he's being made into a great figure. Too much has been made of his life. It does not deserve a full day's television and radio coverage. I'm sick of it.

Abrams didn't think much of John Lennon -- but he clearly does think Chuck Hagel deserves a day or two of coverage.

I hope that Abrams rethinks his position and apologizes to Hagel and welcomes a genuine debate, Council on Foreign Relations-style, about their policy differences.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-12T09:57:22-05:00 The Really New New Republic

tnr new logo.jpg

I have nearly always, mostly, with only a few exceptions really loved The New Republic over the years. Even when I wanted to rip to nano-sized shreds some articles and throw my computer out the window if reading a couple of particularly offensive essays online, I have always been impressed by the edgy wit, complex thought, and relevance of this publication.

And under the direction of Facebook co-founder and gay rights activist and philanthropist Chris Hughes, I've heard that the magazine is coming back big time -- and will be something to look out for.

I have a link for those of you who want to get the first edition of the relaunched TNR. I can't wait. Congratulations to the entire New Republic team.

-- Steve Clemons

 2013-01-06T13:29:40-05:00 Officials: Chuck Hagel Was a 'Gift From God' for the Israeli USO
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Jason Reed/Reuters


Admiral Ze'ev Almog, or Aluf Almog in Hebrew, speaks in a deep baritone, no-BS, command-authority voice that must have intimidated enemies and political rivals inside and outside Israel's command structure over the past decades. He exudes confidence, authority, and a compelling patriotism for the State of Israel for which he fought in so many wars. The nearly 78-year old former Commander-in-Chief of the Israeli Navy and former head of the Israel Shipyards fought in the Suez Crisis, the Six-Day War, the War of Attrition, the Yom Kippur War, the 1982 Lebanon War, and through the long span of what is called the South Lebanon Conflict.

220px-Rear_Admiral_Ze'ev_Almog.jpgAlmog was commander of the battle-tested Naval Commando Unit, Flotilla 13, performing more than 80 combat operations ranging from penetrating Egypt's Port Said and raids on Adabiya coastal forts to sinking Egyptian torpedo boats. He is credited with dramatic transformation of Israel's sea-based military platforms and operations, and is one of those legendary leaders from whom many Israelis still have the benefit of learning about high stakes moments in the nation's history. Ze'ev Almog has also been a friend of and corresponding with former US Senator Chuck Hagel for decades.

I tracked down the one-time naval commander-in-chief one late night by cell phone. First, I got his grandson, to whom I recounted why I wanted to speak to his grandfather. The young man responded by saying his grandfather would insist on me retelling everything again "exactly." Why was I calling? What was the purpose? What did I intend to do with my interview? Almog is cautious but forceful - and a really busy man. I called four times in one night - finally securing my interview at what was about 1 a.m. for him in Israel.

And then we talked about Chuck Hagel.

The reason I tracked down this acclaimed military leader is that he had also long been involved with the USO, which supports the well-being of US military personnel stationed around the world, and is chartered by the US government but funded entirely in the private sector. Many Americans who weren't soldiers or relatives of soldiers became aware of the USO because of the extraordinary profile that celebrity Bob Hope gave to the organization by performing for US troops during World War II, the Korean War, and more. Almog was selected in 1992 by the USO World Board of Governors to serve as the first USO President in Israel -- and he had been deeply involved with and supportive of USO activities inside Israel in the years before his assumption of the organization's presidency.

I also tracked down Gilla Gerzon, the longtime former director of the USO's operation in Haifa, Israel. Why? An article recently appeared charging Chuck Hagel, who from 1987-1990 was the president & CEO of the USO, with an obsessive anti-Jewish compulsion to close the Haifa operation. The article, "The Saga of Hagel and Haifa," written by senior writer Adam Kredo for the Washington Free Beacon, quotes some who accuse Hagel of having an anti-Semitic fervor that drove him to want to close this facility.

But after digging into this a bit -- both on the American side and Israel side of the debate -- there is ample evidence that this charge against Hagel is at best unsubstantiated by evidence and at face value completely untrue.

When Hagel took over the USO in 1987, the organization was flat on its back and near bankruptcy - and by the fall of 1989, it had more than $1.8 million in the bank, signifying a major reversal of fortunes. Hagel was compelled to shutter a number of under-performing or anachronistic USO platforms that no longer aligned with the habits and travel patterns of US military personnel. And thus when he came into office, he reviewed all of the USO facilities - including the one in Haifa - and decided to keep the Haifa operation open, expanding it in fact, while shuttering ten others in the Middle East region. Hagel's USO performance and challenges are well outlined in this segment of Charlyne Berens's book Chuck Hagel: Moving Forward.

The Free Beacon article states that the USO's then-president Chuck Hagel "led the controversial charge to shutter the port [the Haifo USO operation] during his tenure with the organization." While on one hand, Kredo acknowledges that the USO reported to him that it has no evidence or records to suggest than an effort, or "charge," was made to close Haifa U.S.O. during Hagel's term, he quotes some who recall Hagel on a Haifa-closing crusade, making comments that at least one person felt bordered on anti-Semitism. In particular, the author cites Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs senior staff member Marsha Halteman who states that in a meeting with various concerned individuals and groups, Hagel said "Let the Jews pay for it."

Halteman recounts that she confronted Hagel and told him that she "found his comments to be anti-Semitic." And the piece continues to generically cite others who believe that Hagel was hostile to Jews in general during this period.

This is all remarkable if true, so I sought out those who actually helped run and had direct supervisory authority over and proximity to the Haifa USO operation.

The collective view of Israeli voices directly involved with the USO is that the depiction of Hagel could not be more distant from their experiences and recollections.

Former Israeli Navy Commander in Chief Ze-ev Almog said that Chuck Hagel "was completely positive towards us." He said that in "my experience with the USO, I have never heard a single word that he acted to close the USO in Israel. It happened later."

Indeed, the Haifa USO port was closed in 2002 -- well after Chuck Hagel's tenure, during which Almog and others I interviewed said that Hagel and the USO Board kept Haifa open.

He said that before he was nominated as the first Israeli president of USO, Almog did not know Hagel - and then they became closely acquainted after - meeting twice during trips Hagel made to Israel. Almog continued that they have corresponded over the years, exchanging views, sharing drafts of speeches given, and the like.

Almog said that his experience with Hagel has always been "completely positive" and that he has never seen Hagel "act against Israel." He continued that while he became president of the Israel chapter of the USO after Hagel had left his position, he never heard, observed, or read anything about an effort by Hagel to close the Haifa operation - with which Almog became intimately and directly involved. He said that from his vantage point, these assertions in the recent article by Adam Kredo are groundless.

I was then interested in whether this obvious hero in Israel's military establishment had any reservations at all about Hagel's larger views about Israel:

Clemons:  In your interactions with Chuck Hagel did you ever experience any negativity about Israel, or its people or institutions?

Almog:  Not at all.   I must be fair.  I heard about, and even read some articles about, his negative attitude towards Israel and I never met such an occurrence.

Look. One time one of my best friends from San Diego - a very good friend of mine - attracted my attention that Hagel was against signing a press request to release Jews from Russia. My friend is not Jewish. He said to me, "Look. See - your friend - see how he behaves!" He was the only Senator among the 100 that opposed the signature for that publication.

I sent it to Chuck, and he sent me back his letter to President Clinton, and what President Clinton answered to him. Those two letters were sent to me showing that he thought it was rather better to do it that way than doing it through the press - and he fully supported this claim to release the Jews, but to go through the President and not to the press. Although I understand he was the only Senator to take that position.

What Almog shared by way of an interesting anecdote is that Hagel in this case avoided jumping on a media bandwagon and used his role as a United States senator to make a difference in a policy matter, forgoing personal vanity or media puffery.  It's unclear how many of the other 99 US senators sent private, compelling letters to Bill Clinton on this matter, but it's easy to presume that far more signed their names passively to a media vehicle on the issue -- rather than more proactively engaging in a serious exchange with the president of the United States on the matter. 

gilla gerzon.jpgGilla Gerzon, fondly referred to by many US soldiers and Marines as the "mother of the 6th Fleet", was director of the USO Mission in the port of Haifa for nearly 20 years and served in that capacity when Hagel was the organization's CEO.  Gerzon is the first Israeli citizen to receive the U.S. Navy Commendation Medal.  I tracked her down to ask her to share her recollections of Hagel and the debate surrounding whether the Haifa USO mission would remain open or close.

Clemons:  I am calling to ask your recollections of Chuck Hagel's tenure as president and CEO of the USO and the discussions in the late 1980s about closing the Haifa facility you directed.  Could you share your thoughts?

Gerzon:  First of all, I must say that I admire him. I have great respect for him.

Clemons:  When were you at the Haifa USO mission? [Subsequent reseach shows she was the founding director of the USO Haifa mission and served from its opening in December 1984 through its closing in September 2002].

Gerzon:  I was the USO Director in Haifa -- So many years, almost 20 years. I was director during the time when Chuck Hagel was President of the USO.

Clemons:  Do you remember Chuck Hagel trying to close the Haifa operation?

Gerzon:  No. Look, I do not remember that he did anything like that. The issue is....OK, listen. He came to visit Israel with his wife. He came to see the operation, and that was the first time I met him, and he was very moved I think by what we were doing because he saw that for us this was a very, very important mission.

The issue is you need to understand the importance of young people who are going overseas. They are -- I have, always been very patriotic to the USO mission and very patriotic toward the military, to the servicemen and women.  Here [in Israel] service is mandatory, but in America they volunteer to do it. They don't have an easy life.

Imagine you are 18 or 19, and you are overseas, you don't know the culture, the people, the language, and you are coming off the ship. We felt very special towards the US Marines and Navy. In the Gulf War, we had the patriots from the Army. So, just imagine you are 19 years old, you are away from home, you have a birthday and someone gives you a birthday party. Maybe "Happy Birthday David"....and just 18 years old or 19. A small thing makes a big difference.

For me, it was an absolute gift of God and for our volunteers when Chuck Hagel came to Israel. I think he felt that, the importance of those overseas here who were helping American men and women. 

From this first moment I felt like he was a great supporter. He had the wisdom of his heart. You know every leader can be a leader, but you have to have wisdom in your heart to feel what is important. I think he was very wonderful for us by making the best decision to leave the doors open, and then he was a great supporter of us. He truly admired the USO Mission here and our work.
The actual USO Director in Haifa during the late 1980s review of her facility says that Chuck Hagel's visit "was an absolute gift of God" and goes on to praise him effusively for his support.  This seems to be vital material missing from the Washington Free Beacon article charging Hagel with having been on a crusade to close the facility.

On the US side, I spoke with Edward "Ned" Powell, former president & CEO of USO world headquarters who led the organization when the Haifa mission was closed.  He said that he had no idea whether Chuck Hagel had sought to close the mission earlier or not. He said he had never been given any word that he had worked to do that. 

But Powell said that what is often not understood -- no matter the circumstanced about Haifa at that time -- is that the USO is a completely private organization, supported by private dollars though it was congressionally chartered as an organization.  Powell said that the world changes, that the location of American servicemen and women in the world has shifted from certain theaters of conflict to new ones.  He said that it made no sense in 2002, after the debacle of 9/11 and the US invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, to preference USO facilities in Haifa when there was a massive troop deployment on the other side of the Middle East and in South Asia.

Powell said "I closed Paris.  Believe me, I would have loved to keep visiting the USO Mission in Paris, but it would have been wrong.  There are no US service members there.  I closed England and others as well, but I'm not anti-British."

Powell said that his and Hagel's job as CEO of the USO is to make sure that USO platforms are giving the most value for the private dollars that support them -- that the operations are "necessary and performing at a high standard."  He said that when Hagel came in as USO president, the organization was in "severe financial duress."  Powell said Hagel had to make tough calls.  In fact, while deciding to keep the Haifo USO facility open, Hagel closed 10 other operations in the region.

While Hagel took the USO from the edge of bankruptcy to restoring its financial legs, Powell expanded the USO's operating budget from less than $40 million a year to nearly $250 million in 2008.

Current USO President and CEO Sloan Gibson wrote this to me about Chuck Hagel's tenure at the organization:

Senator Hagel has been a steadfast supporter of our troops and their families for more than three decades, well beyond his own military service. He personally brought that strong commitment to the USO as CEO and President of the USO from 1987 to 1990.

Senator Hagel arrived at the USO during a fiscally tough time for the organization, and we have him to thank for leading the way back to financial health so that the USO could continue to provide its signature programs and services for America's troops and their families around the world. He kept the USO moving forward - just like the US military we serve.
The bottom line: Chuck Hagel kept the facility open and expanded it when he was restructuring and shifting priorities inside the USO to keep it alive.  If Hagel had had a deep anti-Israel bias, others would have seen it and reported it -- and the near bankruptcy of the organization as a whole would have given him more than enough cover to close the place if he felt that was needed, or what he personally desired.

A few years ago, I visited Hamburg, Germany as the guest of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation and its International Political Dialogue Director Claus Gramckow.  As we drove by a building in the now very wealthy city, he lamented the closing years before of what he called "America House," a US-government supported facility that hosted events, a library, and resource center for Germans interested in knowing more about America. 

Gramckow said that we have to acknowledge that the world changes, that today that kind of center needs to shift to Kabul and Baghdad.  But still, some will lament and feel like a lesser priority when institutions like this close.  The same logic applies to America's USO operations -- loved or not -- in the parts of the world they are located.

-- Steve Clemons is Washington Editor at Large at The Atlantic, where this post first appeared. Clemons is also editor at large of Quartz, a new global financial publication, and can be followed on Twitter at @SCClemons

 2012-12-28T17:01:56-05:00 Reading Tea Leaves of Political Appointments Not Yet Made
Hagel and Obama.jpg
Reuters


Something rare just happened.  Rather than me having to dog various of the media handlers or key policy hands at the National Security Council or White House on whether Chuck Hagel is on or off the SecDef list, I just got a phone call from a senior Executive Branch person in the know who said something along the lines that the media are hyperventilating this thing into the wrong direction and that the process of considering nominees is proceeding in a way completely different than the media are telling it.  This person said Hagel is very much on the list.

I asked if Hagel had the edge in the process -- and got nothing more than the above. I was told that there were concerns about "stature" and "command capabilities" of the other publicly mentioned possibilities.

220px-Michele_Flournoy_official_portrait.jpgBut let's be blunt about something. I can't offer my source's name though can attest to the individual's proximity to some of the nominee discussions. Am I being spun?  Perhaps. The fact is that I did not solicit this particular call and this person has never tilted me wrong before. If Ashton Carter, Jack Reed, Colin Powell, or Michele Flournoy end up standing next to the president introduced as his next SecDef nominee, is the information I just received wrong?  Not necessarily. This is a process where shadows and nuance are the rule.

What has happened in this mess of leaked potential nominees to jobs is that the political advisers around the president are able to take the temperature of various institutions' love or hate of their candidates. I mention institutions rather that citizens because this is entirely an inside-the-Beltway sport. How much will Bill Kristol, the Republican Jewish Coalition and others put into the kitty to fight Hagel? How much is the president willing to invest -- even before a potential nomination reaches the kicking the tires phase?

It's fascinating to watch -- even if the anguish of pundits and media do reach the flamboyance of a Quentin Tarantino movie. The not-yet-nominated candidate for a position, in cases like Susan Rice and Chuck Hagel, are also barred by instruction and convention from defending themselves or saying much in public. This reminds me of a hilarious, anonymously written item run by The Washington Note titled, "To All Those Waiting for the Obama Team Phone Call."  The writer eventually did get quite a cool political appointment in the Obama administration -- and survived the torturous process.

220px-Ashton_Carter_DOD_photo.jpgBut what is weird about this process is that it starts with a couple of leaks and good journalism -- in the Hagel case with The Cable's Josh Rogin breaking the news that Chuck Hagel was being vetted for some job. And then on December 13th, Bloomberg's Hans Nichols broke the news that Hagel was President Obama's lead candidate for SecDef.

Then the neoconservative machinery cranked up -- with blasts from Bill Kristol with some key assists from Senators Lindsey Graham and Charles Schumer. Hagel's terrible commentary 14 years ago about the then-nomination process of out and proud James Hormel as America's first gay ambassador popped up to generate a wave of concern in the progressive community, most particularly from MSNBC's Rachel Maddow. Hagel apologized for those remarks. Hormel graciously and emphatically embraced Hagel's apology -- and I wrote what I know and shared what I had written years ago about Hagel's pro-LGBT rights stand. 

The Hagel nomination's seeming complexity -- hyped up by leading advocates of policies that "help Israel so much that it hurts," a term once shared with me by Ambassador and then Israeli Foreign Ministry Deputy Spokesman Gideon Meir about some the activities of diaspora support groups like AIPAC -- then began to lead political pundits to declare the Hagel nomination "toast", as Politico's Mike Allen did. U.S.-Israel negotiator Aaron David Miller arguing Hagel should not be toast. Others like MSNBC's Chris Matthews have said that the Hagel bubble has popped. 

Then Tom Friedman put wind in the sails of the Hagel nomination by saying that he deserved to run the Department of Defense and the President should choose him. Friedman writes for the world -- but also has a strong readership among the same people who vote for Chuck Schumer -- and the Schumer-Tom Friedman divide is key here. Ultimately, Friedman beats Schumer as his constituency is larger, and Friedman has more impact on the perception of Obama's successes and victories.  Senator Schumer will ultimately agree to disagree with a Presidential pick of Hagel and deal well with the White House on other fronts. And even then, as Chuck Hagel voted for John Bolton at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, it's not so hard to imagine Schumer ultimately voting in favor of Hagel.

National Journal's Michael Hirsh read the tea leaves in a comment he got from the White House and reported that the Obama team was going wobbly on Hagel because of the line, "we are considering other candidates."  To my friend and colleague Hirsh this sounded like a comment he had received during the Susan Rice imbroglio in which an official had planted with him something along the lines that "the President was vexed between Susan Rice and John Kerry for the Secretary of State position."  To Hirsh, this seemed like a signal to Rice that the President wanted her to stand down.

The bottom line is that for those, even myself, who have argued that Hagel's nomination was still kicking, or withering, assumptions are being made about what would seem logical, what would a president faced with a neocon onslaught, lack of unanimity in the Senate, and the potential for yet another fight with the GOP (well, mostly the GOP) do when the Obama team may have thought this would be a smoother ride.

So, many are now thinking that of the two other leading candidates, Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter and Michele Flournoy, who served as Under Secretary of Defense for Policy and is the former president of the Center for a New American Security, Flournoy will get the nod. 

I listened to MSNBC commentator Krystal Ball chat with show anchor Karen Finney say that it would be awesome to have Flournoy because she was a mom and had kids -- and this would be a great signal to the country to have a woman in that key position. One part of me agrees that the appointment of Flournoy would break another glass ceiling for women, but there will be questions about both of these candidate's capabilities and perspectives as well that have not been scrutinized.

What are their views on Iran? Should we have bombed yesterday? On the Bob Gates view that anyone who would commit U.S. forces to large ground wars and occupations should have his or her head examined? On the privatization of the U.S. military so that despite spending gobs more money, the number of military personnel in uniform has declined while the contractor surge has grown unabated? How does one restructure the military in an age of budget austerity? Don Rumsfeld thought through some of this in his pre-9/11 tenure. What are their views?

Senator Jack Reed and former secretary of State Colin Powell have both been mentioned as well -- but both seem equally, personally committed to keeping their names off the list of likely choices.

What I heard from my executive branch source made a lot of sense to me today. That many in the punditocracy and D.C.'s strategic class are hyperventilating about these candidates and what we think Obama will do and won't do with scant evidence or commentary from the president or his team. The fact is that the White House has been highly cryptic at best about who is on the list and how they are proceeding.

If the White House does not go with Hagel, the Obama team has a problem as they will be appearing to reject a two-time Purple Heart recipient who was nearly a candidate for president of the United States, who served as a sergeant in Vietnam, and who believes that the Pentagon must be reshaped and remodeled to deliver security to the American public on leaner budgets. Hagel is a defense cuts guy -- and the person in this job will be spending 90 percent of his time not dealing with Israelis or other governments but wrestling with generals about how to rebalance America's national security priorities from low-return wars in the Middle East and South Asia to higher-return concerns in Asia. And they'd be conceding to a lot of folks whom the president just wiped the floor with in the last election.

Michael Hirsh has also raised the obvious but neglected point that Hagel is one who got the wars right -- in that they were bad wars -- and broke ranks with his party and pal John McCain in favor of the broader American national interest. Hirsh says he should not be punished for that -- but should be rewarded.

So, if the source I spoke to is right and the media discussion has distorted what is fantasy and fact and is now quite distant from what the real process is with President Obama and Chuck Hagel, all the better. 

We are still reading tea leaves in this appointment process -- which should be more transparent, managed in the halls of Congress in a legally scripted process, and less of a nightmare for the potential nominee.

-- Steve Clemons is Washington Editor at Large at The Atlantic, where this post first appeared. Clemons can be followed on Twitter at @SCClemons

 2012-12-27T10:07:03-05:00 Khalilzad: Hagel a Courageous Patriot Who Deserves SecDef Consideration

khailzad cpac-thumb-615x424-109328.jpg

Reuters/Jonathan Ernst

Former George W. Bush administration US Ambassador to Iraq, Afghanistan and the United Nations -- as well as former National Security Council Senior Director for Southwest Asia, Near East, and North African Affairs -- Zalmay Khalilzad shared with me some thoughts on the possible nomination of Senator Chuck Hagel to serve as President Obama's Secretary of Defense.

Khalilzad enjoys a distinguished record in national security circles, having also served as a long time senior analyst at the RAND Corporation.  He is widely considered to be a leading neoconservative thinker and policy practitioner and was an active supporter of the Bill Kristol/Robert Kagan-led Project for a New American Century, which provided the primary foundation for foreign policy-oriented neoconservatives during the Clinton era.

What follows are Ambassador Khalilzad's responses to questions I posed regarding Hagel.

Clemons:  Can you share your thoughts on the strengths and/or weaknesses that Senator Chuck Hagel might bring to the position of Secretary of Defense?

Khalilzad:  He is a patriot who has fought for his country. He is courageous and is not afraid to express his views--when when those views are not popular. I have not always agreed with Chuck Hagel's views. But I have always admired him for having the courage of his convictions.

Clemons:  Senator Hagel has been challenged as being an enemy of Israel - and for making homophobic remarks 14 years ago about the then nomination of US Ambassador to Luxembourg James Hormel. Others argue that Hagel has been supportive of Israel's interests but in a way that doesn't make a false choice between Israel and Arab states and doesn't compromise core US national security interests. Do you think his views on US-Israel relations are disturbing, unconstructive and disqualifying? Do you believe that Hagel is an enemy of Israel? Or do you find his views, if you are familiar with them, constructive and realistic takes on US-Middle East policy?

Khalilzad:  I have not heard him say anything that would indicate that he is an enemy of Israel.

Clemons:  Hagel has also apologized to Hormel for his past remarks and has indicated support for 'open service' in the military and protection and support of LGBT families. Do you believe that given the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell and the rise of LGBT issues in American society and culture that Hagel's remarks 14 years ago are disqualifying? Given that he is likely to be asked about this issue in a Senate confirmation hearing and will be able to make clear his views, does he need to do more now to alleviate concerns about his views toward the LGBT community?

Khalilzad:  He has apologized for his statement of some 14 years ago and has clarified his current position on this sensitive and important issue. That was a different era; the country as a whole has undergone enormous change on this matter, and so has he, it seems.

Clemons:  Any other thoughts, views, concerns, or insights you would like to share?

Khalilzad:  He deserves serious consideration to be the next Secretary of Defense.

-- Steve Clemons is Washington Editor at Large at The Atlantic, where this post first appeared. Clemons can be followed on Twitter at @SCClemons
 2012-12-26T13:45:18-05:00 Media Alert: Talking All Things Chuck Hagel at 5:10 pm EST on MSNBC Hardball

hardball-with-chris-matthews-9.jpgFor those glued to news on Boxing Day, I'll be joining TIME International Editor Jim Frederick to discuss the "borking" of various White House potential nominees on MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews.

For those interested, here are two Washington Roundup pieces of those for and against Hagel's potential nomination as Obama's Secretary of Defense: first & second.  Here too is an interesting response to questions I posed to military writer and analyst Tom Ricks.

Those included in the roundups beyond Tom Ricks are Leslie Gelb, David Frum, Ambassador James Hormel, Hattie Babbitt, Robert Dreyfuss, Bing West, Adam Garfinkle, Ari Melber, Senator Charles Schumer, David Rothkopf, Dan Glickman, Stephen Walt, Paul Pillar, Thomas Fingar, David Boaz, and Jeffrey Laurenti.

Here as well is a piece I have also written on Hagel's views about gays and lesbians serving in the military -- as well as another highlighting two Democratic and two Republican national security advisers defending Hagel from the smear campaign run against him.

The time is scheduled for about 5:10 pm EST.

-- Steve Clemons


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 Fri, 24 May 2013 08:05:18 EST Yes Mr President, This Is Who We Are
Michael Ratner and Paul Jay analyze President Obama's defense of his drone and Guantanamo policies - a policy based on continuing US dominance in the Middle East; Obama's speech was interrupted by Code Pink's Medea Benjamin

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last updated: Sun, 26 May 2013 08:04:48 GMT

 Fri, 24 May 2013 11:00:00 GMT China's reform hands fail to clap
The young Chinese leadership is displaying a near-schizophrenic split that can be summed up by President Xi Jinping's gung-ho style and no-holds-barred defense of Mao Zedong and the seriousness with which Premier Li Keqiang, China's first "PhD prime minister", is pushing economic reforms. Irreconcilable contradictions persist between nurturing the marketplace and the Chinese Communist Party's power imperative.

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 Wed, 02 Jan 2013 21:23:56 +0000 Race for Iran Is Going to Tehran
With the impending publication of our Going to Tehran:  Why the United States Must Come to Terms with the Islamic Republic of Iran, we have decided to move our blog to a new platform, www.GoingtoTehran.com.  Race for Iran will remain active as a repository for our previous posts and comments, going all the way back [...]

With the impending publication of our Going to Tehran:  Why the United States Must Come to Terms with the Islamic Republic of Iran, we have decided to move our blog to a new platform, www.GoingtoTehran.comRace for Iran will remain active as a repository for our previous posts and comments, going all the way back to October 2009, but henceforth our new posts will be published on Going to Tehran.  As you will see, it looks and operates very much like Race for Iran, so hopefully the transition will be non-stressful.  We thank all who have read, engaged, and supported us on Race for Iran, and look forward to seeing you and new readers who might join us on Going to Tehran.

–Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett 

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 Fri, 24 May 2013 14:50:47 +0300 The State of Whom?
CAN A law be both ridiculous and dangerous?

It certainly can. Witness the ongoing initiative of our government to enact a law that would define the State of Israel as “The Nation-State of the Jewish People”.

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 2013-05-26T08:01:00Z Fußball ist Freundschaft - Franz Beckenbauer unterzeichnet offenen Brief des ersten internationalen Kinderforums
London (ots) - - Querverweis: Bildmaterial ist abrufbar unter http://www.presseportal.de/galerie.htx?type=obs - Mit der Unterschrift von Schirmherr Franz Beckenbauer unter einen offenen Brief an di...

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 Fri, 24 May 2013 11:50:10 -0400 Crowe calls for investigation into immigration case in America
Sinn Féin spokesperson on foreign affairs, trade, and diaspora, Seán Crowe TD, has called on the Tánaiste and Minister for foreign affairs, Eamon Gilmore, to investigate the reports that a Donegal woman was turned over to U.S. immigration authorities by the Irish International Immigration Centre (IIIC) in Boston.

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 Sat, 25 May 2013 19:47:26 +0000 The Halfway ‘Obama Doctrine’
Exclusive: President Obama’s counterterrorism speech failed to quiet his critics on the Left who want an immediate end to the “war on terror” and those on the Right who demand more Bush-Cheney policies. Obama charted a middle course of gradually reducing violence and asking for patience, reports Robert Parry. By Robert Parry How to view President Barack Obama’s speech on counterterrorism can be likened to how you might think about a serious drug problem: you could deny that anything’s wrong and...

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 Sun, 26 May 2013 09:25:00 +0400 Kerry presses Egypt on economic reform, says aid depends on it
Secretary of State John Kerry urged Egypt to act swiftly on economic reforms to secure a $4.8 billion International Monetary Fund loan, saying the measures were needed to get further aid from the U.S. Congress, an American official said. Kerry met Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi for about an hour on the sidelines of an African Union summit on Saturday, discussing Syrias civil war, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, human rights in Egypt and the countrys faltering economy, the official said. Egypts Islamist-led government has been resistant to introducing the austerity measures needed to win the IMF funding, including raising taxes and cutting fuel subsidies, fearing such painful reforms could provoke social unrest. However, an IMF deal could help shore up investor and donor concerns after two years of political instability since the overthrow of former president Hosni Mubarak in early 2011. The instability has depressed tourism, a crucial industry for Egypt. The U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Kerry had made the argument that the reforms were necessary to persuade American lawmakers to proceed with further economic support for the country, which borders U.S. ally Israel. "He urged action on making reforms happen now to move towards requirements to get the IMF package," the official said. During his first visit to Cairo as secretary of state, on March 3, Kerry told Mursi the United States would provide the first $190 million of $450 million in pledged budget support because of Mursis commitment to see the IMF process through. The remainder, however, would depend on the economic reforms, a point Kerry made again in the Ethiopian capital. "He said ... we need to be able to show Congress that you have taken the necessary reforms," said the official. "I have been a strong advocate of support for Egypt. I continue to support aid for Egypt, but ... we need to see reforms in place that will encourage my former colleagues back at home to act." Kerry served in the U.S. Senate for nearly 30 years before becoming the countrys top diplomat on February 1. Egypt has in recent years received about $1.3 billion in military aid from Washington, support that dates back to its signing of a peace treaty with Israel more than 30 years ago. That assistance, however, is not seen as contingent on Egyptian economic reform.

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 Sun, 26 May 2013 10:24:00 +0400 Liliger Cub Learns to Run and Jump After Surgery
There is a unique new attraction at the Novosibirsk Zoo: a liliger – a hybrid between a lion and a liger – named Kiara. Kiara, who is nine months old, recently underwent surgery for a broken paw. She now lives in an open enclosure.

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