. Medical and Hospital News .




.
WAR REPORT
Obama looks abroad, with eye on voters back home
by Staff Writers
Chicago (AFP) May 20, 2012

G8 'unified' on approach to Iran: Obama
Camp David (AFP) Maryland (AFP) May 19, 2012 - President Barack Obama hosting G8 leaders on Saturday said the group was unified on how to approach upcoming nuclear negotiations with Iran.

"We're unified when it comes to our approach with Iran," Obama said as he hosted G8 leaders at Camp David, adding that weaponization of the program was "something of grave concern to all of us."

Iran has said sanctions over its disputed nuclear program should be lifted in talks with world powers next week in Baghdad, but on Saturday maintained that the punitive measures would not compel it to abandon its atomic "rights."

Foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast told state media that the lifting of sanctions would display "the first signs" that the West is changing its "wrong" approach towards Iran and its nuclear work.

Mehmanparast reiterated Tehran's assertion that the sanctions have no legal basis, but admitted "no one in Iran is happy about the sanctions" and that they "may cause problems."

But he insisted that "sanctions do not really have a significant effect."

Iran on May 23 is to meet representatives of the so-called P5+1 group, comprising the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany, in Iraq's capital for the second round of talks which were revived in April in Istanbul after a 15-month impasse.


President Barack Obama spent weekend summits trying to end one war in Afghanistan, prevent another in Iran and save the global economy, knowing that each crisis could impact on his reelection hopes.

Foreign policy rarely decides US elections, but sometimes the imperatives of diplomacy can lead a president onto treacherous political ground at home -- for instance as he manages sensitive ties with China.

But the G8 summit at Camp David and NATO talks in Chicago allowed Obama to bask in a statesman's spotlight, as Republican foe Mitt Romney tried to elbow into the conversation with fuming written statements.

Obama had a chance to influence key world issues that could weigh on voters minds, or impact the US economy before November's election, though his capacity to forge game-changing breakthroughs seemed limited.

After ending the war in Iraq, he will tell voters he is well on the way to ending the war in Afghanistan, but must manage the US exit to ensure the country is not pitched back into its 1990s dark age.

So the NATO summit is important, as Obama locks in plans to put Afghans in charge of fighting next year, get all combat troops home in 2014 and seek commitments from allies to bankroll Afghanistan's future army.

The summit is a pivot point in Obama's effort to frame an end-game narrative for an exhausting war that both honors US sacrifices and avoids the stigma of a perceived retreat.

His policy also includes though the tough political sell of a 10-year commitment to Afghanistan in money and troop training after 2014 designed to ensure Al-Qaeda cannot reclaim its former terror haven.

Obama envisaged 2014 as a time when "the Afghan war as we understand it is over, but our commitment to friendship and partnership with Afghanistan continues."

Mark Jacobson, a former deputy NATO civilian representative in Afghanistan, now with the German Marshall Fund of the United States, said ending the Afghan war responsibly could help Obama with voters, though that was not the president's prime motivation.

"Is there political benefit for President Obama being strong on national security issues? Absolutely," he said, recalling how the US leader took office amid a dark recession and as two wars strained his nation.

"Is there going to be a dividend in the sense of people saying yes this is the person we want to chose to be our leader again? Absolutely.

"But it is because he did the difficult thing and the right thing."

Another issue abroad that weighs on Obama's prospects at home is Iran.

At the G8 summit at Camp David on Friday and Saturday, Obama and fellow leaders cranked up pressure on Tehran, hoping punishing sanctions prompt a change of heart on its nuclear program.

The president hopes diplomacy will obviate the need for a US military strike to degrade Iran's capacity to build a nuclear bomb, or delay a threatened Israeli raid that may be still possible this year.

Either scenario could unleash a wider regional war, send oil prices soaring so squelching the fragile US recovery, spark a Middle East arms race and shred Obama's claims that he made America safer.

Bolstering sanctions, the G8 said it would ensure global markets are supplied when a European oil embargo in Tehran comes into force on July 1.

Even more fundamental to Obama's hopes of winning November's election is the US economy, which is slowly improving but in no state to absorb the shockwaves if Europe slumps deeper into the mire.

Around the dining table of his Laurel cabin, Obama navigated European divisions on how to fight, and contain the continent's debt crisis.

"As all of the leaders here today agree, growth and jobs must be our top priority," Obama said after the talks, lending momentum to signs that harsh German-prescribed austerity could be diluted with some stimulatory measures.

The leaders also backed a "cohesive" euro zone and said Greece should remain within the single currency.

But events in Europe appear to be moving at a faster pace than world leaders and the economies of Greece, Spain and Italy look fragile.

So, Obama's fate could rest on events he cannot control, an agonizing prospect for someone known as the most powerful man in the world.

Romney, believing November will herald a close election, sought to inject himself into the conversation at the weekend, but did not fare well as foreign leaders appeared keen to share the limelight with Obama.

"At the same time that President Obama has been weakening our military, he has sent the message -- intentionally or not -- that the worth of NATO has diminished in America's eyes," Romney said in a Chicago Tribune op-ed.

The Republican also slammed Obama during the G8, praising global leaders for seeking to boost oil supplies to "strengthen our hand in confronting Iran" but criticizing Obama for taking "precisely the opposite approach."

Related Links




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries


Iran MPs urge P5+1 to respect 'rights' in nuclear talks
Tehran (AFP) May 20, 2012 - A majority of Iranian lawmakers on Sunday urged world powers to respect Iran's "rights" in crucial talks next week in Baghdad over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme.

Of the 290-member parliament, 203 MPs called on the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany, the so-called P5+1 group, to also seek "co-operation" with Iran, the official IRNA news agency reported.

"The P5+1 should respect the rights of the Iranian nation," the MPs said in a statement.

"And they should ignore the Zionists' pressures and move to change their policy of confrontation to co-operation under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty."

The lawmakers also advised Iran's negotiating team to "vigorously defend Iran's rights" during the May 23 meeting with representatives of the P5+1 in Iraq's capital, and warned that Iran would "respond to any political pressure."

The statement comes as Iranian officials in recent days have stepped up their assertions that they will resist any pressure during the talks.

Tehran has also asked for the lifting of Western sanctions to create a "productive" atmosphere for negotiation.

The Baghdad meeting marks the second round of talks between Iran and world powers over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme, which were revived in April in Istanbul after a 15-month impasse.

US President Barack Obama said on Saturday at the G8 summit that he was committed to pursuing a dual-approach policy of sanctions and pressure along with diplomacy to curb Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

Obama also warned that Iran's inability so far to convince the world its nuclear work was peaceful was "of grave concern."

The leaders of eight leading industrialised countries called on Iran to engage in "detailed discussions" in Baghdad that can "lead towards a comprehensive negotiated solution which restores international confidence that Irans nuclear programme is exclusively peaceful."



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



NUKEWARS
Crunch week for hopes of progress in Iran crisis
Vienna (AFP) May 19, 2012
Renewed efforts to take the heat out of the dangerously escalating Iran nuclear crisis face a stern test this week with two crunch meetings, first in Tehran on Monday and then in Baghdad two days later. In Tehran, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) head Yukiya Amano, in his first visit as director general, will press Iran for closer cooperation in order to relieve its long-held suspic ... read more


NUKEWARS
Dazed and angry residents count losses of Italy quake

Culture losses magnify Italy earthquake trauma lead

Italy quake zone hit by aftershocks as 5,000 seek shelter

Four climbers die on Everest: officials

NUKEWARS
Chinese navigation system to cover Asia-Pacific this year

Northrop Grumman Successfully Demonstrates New Target Location Module

Habits and hidden journeys of ocean giants

Floating robots use GPS-enabled smartphones to track water flow

NUKEWARS
Urban landscape's power to hurt or heal

Anthropologists discover earliest form of wall art

Evolution's gift may also be at the root of a form of autism

Anthropologist finds explanation for hominin brain evolution in famous fossil

NUKEWARS
Heliconius butterfly genome explains wing pattern diversity

Living longer - variability in infection-fighting genes can be a boon for male survival

Philippines seeks to blunt knife fish invasion

Mixed bacterial communities evolve to share resources, not compete

NUKEWARS
Biologists produce potential malarial vaccine from algae

Health experts narrow the hunt for Ebola

US AIDS relief program saved 740,000 lives: study

HIV/AIDS patients at higher risk of cardiac death: study

NUKEWARS
Suspect substance found before Dalai Lama visit

Chen starts life in US as China stays quiet

Asia gaming shines despite China slowdown: analysts

China embassy in US cold-shoulders Tiananmen leader

NUKEWARS
Armed N.Koreans kidnap Chinese sailors: reports

EU navies launch first land strike on Somali pirate assets

Ship guards trigger clashes with pirates

War planes strike suspected Somali pirate base: coastguard

NUKEWARS
Outside View: Austerity vs. stimulus

China's Wen makes growth economic priority: report

Japan ready to help in euro crisis at G8 talks

Spanish contagion spreads panic in markets


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement