Monday, February 23, 2009

Obama pens fresh US foreign relations policies

However, some experts believe that the Guantanamo step has been taken in a bit of haste. Reacting on the decision, Michael Scheuer, a previous CIA agent and an old hand on Al-Qaeda told TSI: “It is pretty unclear what will happen to the detainees. I don't make out where they would be taken. We have two choices with us. We can gun them down in the combat zone or treat them as POWs and discharge them when the Hillary Clintonconflict is over; so possibly never.”

Meanwhile, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared that ex-Senator George Mitchell would join Obama bandwagon as a special envoy for Middle-East peace, particularly resolution of Arab-Israeli issues. Mitchell, in the past, had led the peace initiative in Northern Ireland. She also named former US Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, who negotiated the Dayton Accords to end Balkan Wars, as special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan. The choice of Mitchell conveys an obvious pointer that the US will be back as an honest negotiator and will drift away from being Israel's lawyer, which Bush administration was. While, time and again, Obama has confirmed US's support to Israel, he's also indicated that he will refrain from towing the Likud's point of view on the issue. In one of his speeches, he expressed surprise and irony that while statesmen in Israel were open to disscussions, their supporters in the US took a very narrow view of the things. ....Continue

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