Unlike Clinton, Bush, Obama has no personal ties with any world leader

Washington, Mar.29 (ANI): Fourteen months into the Obama presidency, one striking feature of an American president who took office to a swooning world is the absence of any strong personal ties – or even a go-to working relationship – with any other world leader.

Where Ronald Reagan had Margaret Thatcher, and Bill Clinton and George W. Bush had Tony Blair, Obama has no one leader.

Instead, according to the Christian Science Monitor, the former law professor has what seems to be a preference for big-themed foreign speeches (think Cairo; Prague, Czech Republic; Moscow; Accra, Ghana) and policy gatherings (his UN nuclear summit, the Pittsburgh Group of 20 economic summit, a White House nuclear nonproliferation summit in May) bereft of the warm and fuzzy.

For Obama, no buddies abroad – The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com

For Obama, no buddies abroad
Other U.S. presidents have bonded with foreign leaders, but Obama so far has no such ties. Does that matter?

So, when French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his wife, Carla Bruni, sit down for dinner with the Obamas in the White House family dining room March 30, there is hope for a private, personal, perhaps even chatty evening.

When the Obamas were in Paris last year, Obama turned down a dinner invitation to the Elyseé Palace, ostensibly so he could take Michelle out for a private night on the town.

Obama””s cool, all-business demeanor with his global peers is all the more striking because it is opposite to the style promoted by his predecessor George W. Bush.

President Bush””s policies were widely reviled overseas, but he strove to forge personal links with a few key leaders.

He cultivated Tony Blair””s friendship on Iraq, and he developed a hierarchy of visit venues – White House, Camp David, his Texas ranch – that signalled where a leader stood in his estimation.

He walked hand in hand with the Saudi king, and even tried massaging German Chancellor Angela Merkel””s shoulders – although the latter gesture fell particularly flat.

Bush””s comment about “looking into his soul” upon meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested a desire to know and understand the leader, whereas Obama has yet to find his soul mate on the world stage – and may not be inclined to find one.

Thomas Henriksen, a US foreign-policy scholar at the Hoover Institution in Stanford, California, said: “It appears to be his nature or personality, the so-called no-drama-Obama thing.”

Stephen Hess, an expert on the US presidency at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said: “Obama turns out to be much more cool, in McLuhanesque terms of cool and hot.” (ANI)

Obama’s chief economic adviser sleeps during official meeting yet again

New York, May 28 (ANI): It seems that U.S. President Barack Obama’s chief economic adviser Larry Summers just can’t stay awake, for he once again fell asleep during an official meeting.

Summers has already conked out in public at two high-profile events earlier this year.

He first nodded off at an economic summit in February, and then at a meeting with credit card industry officials in the White House in April.

Obama was so embarrassed with the pictures showing him dozing that he quipped at the White House Correspondents dinner: “Larry Summers needs his sleep.”

And now, Summers gave a re-run of his previous sleeping acts during a private meeting with the President.

“Larry fell asleep last week during a private meeting with the president. Thank God, no reporters were there,” the New York Post quoted an insider as saying.

A representative for the White House declined to comment on the issue. (ANI)

UN General Assembly to hold economic crisis debate June 24-26

New York – The UN General Assembly on Tuesday rescheduled its failed efforts to hold a debate on the global financial and economic crisis at the end of June, three weeks later than the original date.

Last week, the 192-nation assembly cancelled the so-called economic summit originally scheduled for June 1-3 because several government leaders could not attend even though the event had been scheduled and publicized months ahead. Another reason for the postponement was the lack of time to negotiate an outcome document.

“Delegates had expressed concern that they require more time to negotiate the draft outcome document that is to be adopted by world leaders,” assembly president Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann said in a statement.

It said d’Escoto Brockmann consulted with all major regional groups in recent days on the proposed three-week deferral and achieved consensus on the change. He also asked governments to complete the outcome document by June 15.

“We believe that success will depend on a positive and forward- looking outcome document and the active engagement of the political leadership of the member states at the highest possible level,” d’Escoto Brockmann said in an address to the assembly, which convened Tuesday to decide on the new date.

He called on UN members to show political will and good faith when negotiating the outcome document. (dpa)

UN postpones economic summit due to lack of attendance

New York – The UN General Assembly decided on Friday to postpone a much publicized summit on the world financial and economic crisis because several government leaders could not attend.

The decision to postpone the June 1-3 “summit of world leaders” on the global recession was also due to the conflict with other important events in the world taking place simultaneously in the early part of June, said Enrique Yeves, the spokesman of assembly president Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann.

Yeves said there was not enough time also to complete negotiations on an outcome document to conclude the three-day summit.

It was proposed that the summit takes place in late June, a decision that the 192-nation assembly planned to take, Yeves said. (dpa)

Kazakhstan and China leaders pledge stronger cooperation

Beijing – Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev met with China’s top legislator Wu Banguo Thursday, pledging to step up bilateral cooperation, state media reported.

Wu, chairman of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress, said relations between the two countries were at an all-time high and that China would work with Kazakhstan to enhance cooperation in fields such as energy, transportation, mineral resources development and infrastructure construction, the Xinhua news agency reported.

Nazarbayev, who kicked off a five-day visit to China Wednesday, also met with Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan.

“With the global financial crisis still spreading, the two countries should work jointly to tackle challenges,” Wang said.

Nazarbayev responded by saying that Kazakhstan is supportive of entrepreneurs carrying out projects beneficial to both countries and business cooperation would also prove a push for improved state-to-state relations.

Nazarbayev also reaffirmed a commitment to fight terrorism in the region, China Radio International reported.

Kazakhstan and China share a border of more than 1,700 kilometres and have previously cooperated on a Kazakhstan-China oil pipeline, which is already in operation, and a natural gas pipeline still under construction.

Nazarbayev is to attend a regional economic summit, the Bo’ao Forum for Asia, in Hainan from Sunday through Tuesday.(dpa)

Merkel calls for German economic meeting

Berlin – German Chancellor Angela Merkel has called on the nation’s business and political leaders to meet next week, a government spokesman said Tuesday, as Europe’s largest economy faces its biggest downturn since the World War II, Amid signs that the global recession had tightened its grip on Germany during the first months of the year, Merkel’s planned economic summit comes as the country starts to gear up for a national election scheduled for September this year.

The talks, to be held in Merkel’s Berlin office are to focus on the economic pressures currently facing the nation as well as the effectiveness of the two recently-launched government stimulus packages.

Merkel has resisted pressure to consider further fiscal measures. A government spokesman said there were no plans to discuss a third stimulus programme at the meeting. (dpa)

Ignorant Masses

The mob of neo-hippies and anarchists that descended on London this week to protest the G-20 economic summit certainly seemed angry. They marched, chanted, burned effigies, broke windows and scrawled graffiti.

Some clashed with police and ended up bloodied, arrested or both. Overall, it was a typical display of the poor behavior that has marred these sorts of global conferences since the WTO meeting in Seattle back in the fall of 1999.

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This time around, however, there really is plenty to be angry about. The world is engulfed in a systemic economic crisis, arguably fueled by the easy money monetary policies of the world’s largest central banks, and indisputably spread by greedy bankers and tame ratings agencies. The credit markets remain in crisis, economies are in recession and trillions of dollars worth of exotic (toxic) securities still lurk in the financial system. Fine, get mad. March, if you must.

But turn up the volume on the television, or squint at the newspaper photographs, and the picture gets fuzzier. A lot fuzzier, in fact.

Why on earth is that bearded chap shouting Free Tibet? What does that have to do with anything? Peace in Palestine? No argument here, but the G-20 is an organization of finance ministers and central bankers. That’s a bit like complaining to the baker that the dry cleaner ruined your best jacket. Global warming? Problematic, to be sure, but go pester Al Gore–these guys have work to do.

Now, to be fair, some of the protestors seemed at least dimly aware that this was a meeting about the global financial crisis, not about the virtues of legalizing marijuana. But even among this crowd, the solutions on offer seemed either slightly simplistic (“Abolish money!”) or downright barbaric (“Kill the Bankers!”).

Listen to their shouts and it becomes increasingly clear that the masses have no clue what they are talking about. Sure, they are angry, but they don’t know what they should be angry about. No wonder so many of them are listed in press accounts as “unemployed” or as (suspiciously old) students. After all, who would hire these folks?

Thankfully, we are here to help. An intrepid reporter for The New York Times did spot one fellow sporting a hand-lettered “Mark To Market” sign. Now, that’s our sort of guy. (He turned out to be a Citigroup financial analyst, but he was still protesting, albeit civilly). Why not follow his example?

Stop chanting “Abolish Money!” and try out “Hard Money!” for a change. Scream “Transparency!” rather than “Tibet!”; “Clawbacks!” not “Criminals!”

The leaders of the world’s largest economies are likely to still ignore you (at least until you shave and get a decent haircut) but at least you’ll be speaking their language.

And if you are really pissed off at the central bankers, don’t bother smashing the Bank of England’s windows and stealing $20 keyboards. They really don’t care. Instead, make yourself useful and start learning something about monetary policy and credit default swaps. You might even get a job as a result.

Obama’s debut visit abroad lays groundwork for bigger prizes later on

Washington, Apr.8 (ANI): US President Barack Obama’s glowing reception overseas suggests that he and his strategists have laid the groundwork for bigger prizes later on.

“One of the things that will make it easier for the leaders of these nations to work cooperatively with us … is the fact that we have a more positive image among their constituents,” the New York Daily News quoted top White House adviser David Axelrod, as telling reporters Tuesday.

Obama didn’t just attend an economic summit and meet with nearly 20 world leaders. He held six news conferences and two very campaign-like town hall meetings, taking his messages directly to the people.

That message being: It’s okay to love us again.

“You will find a partner and a supporter and a friend in the United States of America,” Obama told students at a town hall talk in Istanbul, where he insisted he was different from his predecessor, even if it might take some time to see just how different, as he shifts America’s path.

Observers felt the agreements Obama won on his trip were relatively modest, including a commitment of 5,000 NATO troops for Afghanistan, a promise to pump billions into the International Monetary Fund, and Russia’s pledge to work on cutting nuclear weapons.

But the goodwill should boost the return down the road, they said.

“It was a campaign – a successful campaign – to sell Obama overseas before the real negotiations have to take place,” said Princeton University’s Julian Zelizer, a politics professor.

The White House was privately thrilled with the results of the tour. “I don’t think anyone imagined going into this trip that it was going to be this successful,” a senior aide said. (ANI)

North Korea presents Obama with leadership test

North Korea’s missile launch presented U.S. President Barack Obama with a leadership test on Sunday during a European tour where he hoped to focus on the economy, Afghanistan and nuclear non-proliferation.

Obama, who took office in January, has tried to emphasize a consultative approach to foreign policy during an eight day-trip that began with an economic summit in London and included an open-air speech in Prague where he called for a world free of nuclear weapons.

Even before Obama delivered the Prague speech, which was to have been one of the focal points of the trip, it was overshadowed by the North Korean rocket launch.

Obama said Pyongyang’s move was intended as a threat to countries “near and far.”

“This action demands a response from the international community,” he told reporters.

Obama’s predecessor, President George W. Bush, faced a similar early test three months into his presidency in 2001 when a Chinese military plane collided with a U.S. electronic surveillance plane off a Hainan island.

A Chinese pilot was killed, and the U.S. plane made an emergency landing on the island. The crew was released 10 days later, and the plane was also later returned.

U.S. officials confirmed the launch just hours before Obama was to tell a crowd of thousands in the Czech Republic that the United States was ready to take steps on non-proliferation.

Aides said his call for the scrapping of all atomic weapons would lend credibility to Obama’s efforts to resolve the nuclear disputes with North Korea and Iran.

The speech in a cobbled square in Prague was meant to be an uplifting event.

A crowd, which the White House said numbered more than 20,000, cheered when Obama and his wife Michelle took the stage. Music by the Irish rock band U2 blared from speakers.

In a scene reminiscent of his presidential campaign, the event was displayed on a giant video screen.

The theme of non-proliferation was likely to resonate with audiences in Europe, where there is strong anti-war feeling.

BREAK WITH BUSH

Earlier in his trip, Obama attended a NATO summit on the border of France and Germany where he tried to persuade reluctant Europeans to contribute more to the Afghanistan war effort.

At the NATO summit and at an earlier meeting in London of the Group of 20 developed and emerging economies, Obama tried to emphasize a break with Bush, who was unpopular in Europe and was criticised for a “go-it-alone” approach to foreign affairs.

Obama’s rise to prominence in the United States was partly based on an image he cultivated as someone able to bridge political and social divides.

At the G20 summit, Obama spoke of the importance of reaching a consensus after the leaders argued over how to approach fiscal stimulus and revamping financial regulation.

At the NATO meeting, there was acrimony when Turkey objected to a push by several European countries to have Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen appointed as the alliance’s next leader.

Obama aides pointed out his role in brokering a meeting between Rasmussen and Turkish President Abdullah Gul. Turkey was persuaded to drop its objections and NATO members unanimously approved Rasmussen as secretary-general.

The next day, U.S. officials confirmed North Korea had launched a rocket. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said he woke Obama at his Prague hotel to give him the news.

Obama will put his skills as a consensus builder to the test again as he seeks to win support in the United Nations Security Council for a response to North Korea. The council was scheduled to meet later Sunday to consider Pyongyang’s action

Obama, Hu stress crisis response in first meeting, AS

BEIJING (AP) President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao, promised to work together to renew global growth and build a strategic partnership but did not discuss Beijing’s unease about its holdings of U.S. debt and other disputes in their first meeting at the London economic summit. Obama accepted an invitation to visit Beijing this year and the two leaders agreed to create a new U.S.-China Strategic Economic Dialogue, said a senior American official who briefed reporters in London.

The official said Obama agreed during the meeting Thursday on the need to change the International Monetary Fund to give China and other developing countries an “an appropriate role” but the two leaders did not discuss details. A bigger voice in managing the world’s finances is a key Chinese demand, and Beijing has suggested its contribution to global bailout efforts will be contingent on receiving it.

“The presidents agreed that the strong links between China and the U.S. economies have been a great mutual benefit, both in terms of trade and investment, and they were eager to build on that,” said the official, who talked on condition of anonymity in line with U.S. government policy. “Each side explained what they were doing and the goals they had in mind, and just expressing the importance that we, together, stimulate our economies and get growth going,” the official said.

The Strategic Economic Dialogue, due to meet later this year, succeeds a twice-a-year forum begun under former President George W. Bush to address a wide range of disputes over trade and other issues. The new forum, held once a year, is to be led by U.S. Secretary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and, on the Chinese side, by Vice Premier Wang Qishan and State Counselor Dai Bingguo.

Hu and Obama avoided U.S.-Chinese disputes, possibly to avoid fueling public pessimism about the global ecomomy. They did not discuss Beijing’s unease about the safety of its vast holdings of U.S. government bonds and its proposal last month for a global currency to replace the dominant dollar, according to the American official.

“There was no mention of either of those two subjects,” the official said. Hu and Obama also avoided expressing their government’s criticisms of each other’s stimulus plans.

Beijing is uneasy that Washington’s heavy spending might fuel inflation and weaken the dollar and has appealed to Obama to steps that might erode the value of China’s estimated $1 trillion in U.S. government debt. Washington needs Beijing to help finance its stimulus by buying more U.S. Treasury securities, and other Western governments want Chinese money to help finance a global bailout fund.

China has said its biggest contribution to a recovery will be to ensure strong growth in its own economy, the world’s third-largest. “There was not a detailed discussion of stimulus,” the official said.

However, he said Obama expressed awareness of the risks of higher inflation from stimulus spending and promised to bring down the U.S. budget deficit after economic growth revives.

Obama, Hu stress crisis response in first meeting, AS

BEIJING (AP) President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao, promised to work together to renew global growth and build a strategic partnership but did not discuss Beijing’s unease about its holdings of U.S. debt and other disputes in their first meeting at the London economic summit. Obama accepted an invitation to visit Beijing this year and the two leaders agreed to create a new U.S.-China Strategic Economic Dialogue, said a senior American official who briefed reporters in London.

The official said Obama agreed during the meeting Thursday on the need to change the International Monetary Fund to give China and other developing countries an “an appropriate role” but the two leaders did not discuss details. A bigger voice in managing the world’s finances is a key Chinese demand, and Beijing has suggested its contribution to global bailout efforts will be contingent on receiving it.

“The presidents agreed that the strong links between China and the U.S. economies have been a great mutual benefit, both in terms of trade and investment, and they were eager to build on that,” said the official, who talked on condition of anonymity in line with U.S. government policy. “Each side explained what they were doing and the goals they had in mind, and just expressing the importance that we, together, stimulate our economies and get growth going,” the official said.

The Strategic Economic Dialogue, due to meet later this year, succeeds a twice-a-year forum begun under former President George W. Bush to address a wide range of disputes over trade and other issues. The new forum, held once a year, is to be led by U.S. Secretary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and, on the Chinese side, by Vice Premier Wang Qishan and State Counselor Dai Bingguo.

Hu and Obama avoided U.S.-Chinese disputes, possibly to avoid fueling public pessimism about the global ecomomy. They did not discuss Beijing’s unease about the safety of its vast holdings of U.S. government bonds and its proposal last month for a global currency to replace the dominant dollar, according to the American official.

“There was no mention of either of those two subjects,” the official said. Hu and Obama also avoided expressing their government’s criticisms of each other’s stimulus plans.

Beijing is uneasy that Washington’s heavy spending might fuel inflation and weaken the dollar and has appealed to Obama to steps that might erode the value of China’s estimated $1 trillion in U.S. government debt. Washington needs Beijing to help finance its stimulus by buying more U.S. Treasury securities, and other Western governments want Chinese money to help finance a global bailout fund.

China has said its biggest contribution to a recovery will be to ensure strong growth in its own economy, the world’s third-largest. “There was not a detailed discussion of stimulus,” the official said.

However, he said Obama expressed awareness of the risks of higher inflation from stimulus spending and promised to bring down the U.S. budget deficit after economic growth revives.

India wants transparency on A.Q. Khan issue for a better tomorrow for the world

London, April 1 (ANI): Ahead of the G-20 economic summit, India on Wednesday said that there was a need for more transparency on the Pakistan’s nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan issue.

Addressing the media, Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon here said that there was a need for the international community to work together to prevent any future possibility of recurrence of nuclear technology proliferation.

“On the A.Q. Khan network, we feel that there is a need for much more transparency. Not only about what happened in the past but to enable us to be certain that nothing like that will happen again. And to be sure that nuclear materials technology equipment are all not just secure today, but will always be secure,” said Shivshankar Menon.

Menon stressed that the transparency over Khan’s issue was needed also to ensure the nuclear technology remained in safe hands, not just today but also in future, and the world community should reflect a united approach on such a matter.

“This is very important because the danger really, of networks, like the A.Q. Khan network that they blur the line between what is official, what is not official, what is private and that is really worrying part for us. So it’s very important. So whether it is people being out, free to continue with these activities, or whether it’s putting in place systems to prevent a recurrence of this sort of proliferation, we feel it’s very important that the international community must work together,” Menon said.

“I’d be surprised if Pakistan wasn’t mentioned at the sidelines of the summit, because it is an issue, an issue not only for us, but an issue really for the world and the US has just unveiled its new comprehensive strategy to deal with Afghanistan and Pakistan. So I think its natural that this will be a topic,” Menon added.

Deliberating about the Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh’s meet with his British counterpart earlier in the day ahead of the G-20 economic summit, Menon said that both the leaders met at 1.30 p.m. on Wednesday and spent about little more than an hour together.

” Most of the conversation was really about the global economic crisis, financial crisis and what the G-20 meeting could do about it. Both of them expressed satisfaction with the way that preparations have been going, and that work has been done before the actual summit, the leader’s meeting,” said Menon informed.

On the Government of India’s steps to shield the country from getting over influenced from the global financial crisis, Menon said: “Stimulus packages that we have implemented already and the steps we are taking to increase investment in infrastructure, designed to do is really to compensate for the deterioration in the external environment so I would characterize the Indian economy as an economy that is capable of taking care of itself and is continuing to maintain a positive growth and therefore is part of the solution to the problem rather that part of the problem itself.

“We don’t intend to approach the IMF, we don’t feel the need to, but we do feel that it does need to be augmented, its resources need to be augmented to help the other developing countries who have been very hard hit by the crisis.” By Smita Prakash (ANI)

US and Russia to reopen negotiations after a decade

London, April 1 (ANI): The United States and Russia will reopen negotiations to reduce their nuclear warheads, a BBC report mentioned President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev as saying on Wednesday here, ahead of the G-20 economic summit which begins on Thursday.

The discussions will be the first such talks for more than a decade.

The announcement came on the fringes of the G20 summit of world leaders which is convening in London.

The U.S. and Russia have also agreed to discuss “mutual international co-operation”, the two presidents said.

Obama said earlier there were very real differences between Washington and Moscow, but that there was also a broad set of common interests.

After their meeting, Medvedev said that he viewed prospects for future bilateral relations “with optimism”.

Meanwhile, Medvedev invited his American counterpart to visit Moscow in July – an invitation Obama has accepted. (ANI)

United States and China pledge co-operation for a better future

London, April 1 (ANI): The United States and China on Wednesday agreed that there was need to step up economic co-operation to address the ongoing global financial crisis.

Ahead of the G-20 economic summit to be held here on Thursday, the US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao met here and both Heads of State expressed a commitment for the need to resist protectionism and ensure stable US-China trade relations.

The two leaders agreed to establish a Strategic and Economic Dialogue group to tackle the global financial crisis and strengthen the worlds’s financial systems.

Following the meet, Obama accepted an invitation to visit China this year.

“The Presidents agreed on the need for sweeping changes in the governance structure of international financial institutions,” a White House statement was quoted by the BBC, as saying.

The two Heads of State also agreed to cooperate on nuclear issues concerning North Korea and Iran, adding that they would resume discussions about human rights “as soon as possible”.

Meanwhile, Chinese President Hu Jintao stressed a commitment to expand domestic demand to fuel economic growth. (ANI)

Obama still a rock star in Europe

Washington, Mar.31 (ANI): As President Barack Obama heads to London for the G-20 economic summit, most Europeans are excited at the prospect of his arrival personally.

Obama was the most popular and most influential world leader in a February Harris Interactive survey of 6,299 adults in Western Europe and the United States, topping the Dalai Lama in popularity and Russia’s Vladimir Putin in influence.

More than 80 percent of those polled in Italy, France, Spain and Germany said they held either a “very good” or “somewhat good” opinion of the new American president. At the same time, 71 percent of those polled in the United States reported similar sentiments.

“Europeans find him to be very a stimulating and uplifting character in the area they look to for America to provide: Leadership which Europeans can intellectually and morally agree,” said one expert.

A January BBC World Service poll of 17 countries found that 67 percent of those surveyed believed Obama’s election would lead to improved international relations.

Only 5 percent said his election would worsen relations.

Obama was very popular throughout the world during the presidential campaign. A year ago, in a Pew Global Attitudes poll in 23 foreign countries, all but two of the countries surveyed expressed more confidence in the prospect of a Democratic Obama presidency that of his Republican rival, Arizona Sen. John McCain.

The only country where McCain enjoyed a major lead over Obama during the summer was Israel, where McCain held a 26 percent lead in a poll conducted by the Peace Index Project in July. (ANI)

Michelle Obama ready to take the world stage

Washington, Mar.30 (ANI): US First Lady Michelle Obama is getting set to take the world stage by accompanying husband and President Barack Obama on their first trip abroad after assumption of office.

Both are headed for London and Paris, where President Obama is to attend this week’s G-20 Summit and a meeting of NATO leaders.

According to Politico, the first couple’s trip to Europe Tuesday takes Michelle Obama to a land that likes her husband but seems positively fascinated by her.

The British press in particular has followed Michelle Obama’s every move breathlessly, from her dresses to the “kitchen garden” behind the White House.

One London paper tracked down her high-school prom date. Another asked plaintively, “Why Doesn’t the UK Have a Michelle Obama?”

Michelle Obama’s official schedule says she will accompany the president to many of his events – they both will have tea with Queen Elizabeth II, for instance – but she’ll have some solo outings as well. She’ll visit an all-girls school in London where the population is mostly minority and the second language is English – an echo of her work in Washington, DC.

Sarah Brown, Britain’s first lady, will give Michelle Obama a tour of a health facility in London Wednesday and will take her and other spouses on a tour in London Thursday during the G-20 economic summit.

In France, Obama will join NATO spouses in visiting a hospital and a cathedral. And at all of these events, she’ll stand next to some of the world’s most high-profile political spouses- including Bruni-Sarkozy, the Italian-born ex-supermodel who is an admirer of the self-described girl from the Chicago’s South Side.

Aides say Michelle Obama is aware of the moment and she has been reading up on her fellow members of the first ladies’ club ahead of the trip.

Michelle Obama’s aides also insist that she is there in a support role to her husband. Yet if history is any guide, first ladies can overshadow their spouses, and the comparisons to Jacqueline Kennedy’s 1961 trip to Paris seem sure to abound, much like some are fond of comparing Michelle O. to Jackie O. (ANI)

Iran’s Ahmadinejad opens regional economic summit in Tehran

Iran's Ahmadinejad opens regional economic summit in Tehran Tehran – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday opened a regional economic summit in Tehran and called on the member states of the Economic Cooperation Organisation (ECO) to increase political and economic cooperation.

Iran, Pakistan and Turkey founded the ECO in 1985. Later Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan joined the group.

Ahmadinejad said the central Asian bloc should work harder to become an influential international organisation.

The summit was overshadowed by reports that Turkish President Abdullah Gul had delivered a message from US President Barack Obama to Ahmadinejad.

The reports have not been confirmed but Gul said Tuesday prior to travelling to Tehran that the change of presidency to Obama was very important, and added that “all countries must rethink their policies.”

Another major issue is possible Iran-US cooperation in Afghanistan after US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said last week that Iran would be invited to a conference scheduled for this month in a European capital.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari reportedly plan to meet on the sidelines of the ECO summit to discuss security in both countries.

Tehran said it would be ready to help the West in Afghanistan but had not yet received any official invitation to the conference in Europe. (dpa)

US hopes G20 summit can iron out differences with EU on economy

US hopes G20 summit can iron out differences with EU on economy Washington – The White House on Tuesday said it hoped an upcoming economic summit would help the United States and European Union to resolve a growing rift over how to manage a deepening global recession.

Ahead of a Group of 20 (G20) summit of the world’s leading economies in April, White House and EU officials have apparently been at odds over whether more government stimulus will be needed to pull their economies out of recession.

“That’s why we have summits,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said when asked about disagreements across the Atlantic.

Gibbs noted the “aggressive action” already taken by President Barack Obama and said he expected both short-term stimulus efforts and financial regulation to be the key topics for April’s G20 meeting in London.

“If many nations work collectively, in concert, the impact to the global economy will only be sharper and stronger,” he said.

Gibbs’ comments came after EU ministers on Monday rejected pressure from the United States to inject more government funds into their flagging economies.

“Recent American appeals insisting that Europeans make an additional budgetary effort to combat the effects of the crisis were not to our liking,” said Luxembourg Prime Minister Claude Juncker, who chaired a meeting of the euro zone’s finance ministers. “Europe and the euro group have done what they needed to do.”

Obama last month signed an unprecedented 787-billion-dollar spending package to revive the US economy, which is going through its worst recession in decades.

European governments have been more cautious of running up huge budget deficits despite the economic crisis, and want the G20 meeting to focus on overhauling financial regulation to avoid a future collapse.

Obama’s top economic advisor Larry Summers urged world leaders to inject more demand into the global economy in a Financial Times interview published Monday.

The World Bank on Sunday predicted the global economy will contract in 2009 for the first time since World War II. (dpa)

Obama to meet Queen ahead of G-20

London, Mar. 6 (ANI): Ahead of G-20 economic summit, Queen Elizabeth is expected to hold a private “getting-to-know-you” meeting with Obama.

The Sun quoted a source, as saying, “There is a wish to do these things as discreetly as possible in the first instance.”

Her Majesty will meet the new US President in advance of an economic summit in London.

President Obama will fly with wife Michelle on Air Force One to Stansted, Essex. The private talks will be held the next day at Buckingham Palace.

Obama will then join G-20 leaders for a Downing Street dinner on the eve of the summit on April 2.

The private meeting is highly unusual because Obama will not be on a State visit.

But advisers believe it is important the Queen, who opened an interchange in Hull yesterday, meets him before any official trip.

On Thursday, Obama reportedly gave Gordon Brown 25 top US movies as a gift after talks in the US.

Brown’s wife Sarah gave Obama’s two daughters Topshop outfits. And the First Lady gave Brown’s two boys toy helicopters. (ANI)

British PM’s wife gifts Obama girls clothes from Top Shop

London, Mar 4 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s wife, Sarah, has gifted clothes from the high street chain Top Shop to U.S. President Barack Obama’s daughters.

On her visit to the White House, Sarah talked to US First Lady Michelle Obama for more than an hour.

She personally handed over the gifts to the President’s daughters Malia, 10 and Sasha, 7, reports The Telegraph.

The girls even received children’s books by British authors from the Prime Minister’s wife.

Michelle Obama, in return, gave Sarah a model of the Presidential helicopter Marine One for the latter’s two sons Fraser and John.

Both of them discussed maternity issues, and talked about the First Lady’s plans to come to London next month for the G20 meeting.

Barack and Michelle Obama are scheduled to visit Britain for the first time after entering the White House for the economic summit on April 2.

Earlier, the British Premier and the US President held talks in the Oval Office. (ANI)