Obama to host tripartite meeting with Israeli PM and Palestinian President

Jerusalem, Sep 20 (ANI): In an effort to renew the peace process in the Middle East, President Barack Obama will host a tripartite meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the meeting would take place after Obama meets separately with each of the two leaders.

“These meetings will continue the efforts of President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Special Envoy George Mitchell to lay the groundwork for the relaunch of negotiations, and to create a positive context for those negotiations so that they can succeed,” the Jerusalem Post quoted a White House statement, as saying.

The meetings will take place in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly conference.

The White House announcement of the meeting comes as something of a surprise, since both Israel and the PA until Saturday continued to blame each other for the current stall in peace talks

And recently, Mitchell had failed to make progress in talks with the two leaders.

On Saturday, Mitchell said: “It is another sign of the president’s deep commitment to comprehensive peace that he wants to personally engage at this juncture.” (ANI)

Chidambaram discusses counter-terrorism, 26/11 update with US officials

Washington, Sept 10 (ANI): Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram held meetings here with senior Obama administration officials, including National Security Advisor Lt. Gen. (retired) James Jones, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and the U.S. Attorney General Eric H Holder Jr. on Wednesday.

Enhanced co-operation between India and US on tackling terrorism particularly in South Asia dominated the discussions, sources said.

Pakistan’s inaction in dealing with the perpetrators of 26/11 was also raised.

Chidambaram also met Senator Dianne Feinstein, the Chairwoman of Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

Chidambaram is scheduled to meet the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Thursday.

On Tuesday, officials from FBI, intelligence and security agencies and the New York Police briefed Chidambaram about the measures being taken by them to prevent a Mumbai-type terrorist attack.

From walking at the Penn Station, to a briefing by the New York Police, which had made several changes in its counter-terrorism measures post the 26/11 attacks, Chidambaram and his team of officials got to know what a mega city like New York can do to protect itself from terrorists without inconveniencing its residents.

Chidambaram was also informed about the coast guard facility at Staten Island. It was an important aspect of his trip given that the terrorists who attacked Mumbai on November 26 last year entered Mumbai through the sea route.

Within hours of his landing in New York, Chidambaram visited the Joint Terror Task Force Centre of the FBI where he was given an exclusive briefing by the New York Police Department.

Before leaving New York City for Washington by train, Chidambaram was briefed about security of the Mass Transport System at the Penn station.

The Home Minister is also scheduled to meet the top US intelligence and security officials, including FBI Director Robert Mueller and Director of National Intelligence Dennis C Blair; besides meeting National Security Adviser, Gen (Retd) James Jones at the White House. A tour of the National Counter-terrorism Centre in Virginia is also on his itinerary.

Besides meeting experts and think-tanks” members, Chidambaram is expected to hold talks with key US lawmakers, including Senator Joe Lieberman, Chairman, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee; and Congressman Sylvester Reyes, Chairman, House Select Committee on Intelligence. (ANI)

Chidambaram meets FBI, New York Police officials, gets anti-terrorism tips

New York/Washington, Sep.9 (ANI): India’s Home Minister P. Chidambaram on Tuesday, was briefed by officials from FBI, intelligence and security agencies and the New York Police about the measures being taken by them to prevent a Mumbai-type terrorist attack.

From walking at the Penn Station, to a briefing by the New York Police, which had made several changes in its counter-terrorism measures post the 26/11 attacks, Chidambaram and his team of officials got to know what a mega city like New York can do to protect itself from terrorists without inconveniencing its residents.

Chidambaram was also informed about the coast guard facility at Staten Island. It was an important aspect of his trip given that the terrorists who attacked Mumbai on November 26 last year entered Mumbai through the sea route.

Within hours of his landing in New York, Chidambaram visited the Joint Terror Task Force Centre of the FBI where he was given an exclusive briefing by the New York Police Department.

Before leaving New York City for Washington by train, Chidambaram was briefed about security of the Mass Transport System at the Penn station.

In Washington, Chidambaram will meet with top Obama Administration officials, heads of intelligence and security agencies and influential lawmakers over the next three days.

Apart from discussing the 26/11 dossiers that India has submitted to Pakistan,Chidambaram will also discuss issues related to combating financing of terrorism and steps which will need to be taken in this regard as well as with regard to prevention of money laundering.

Ways to strengthen Indo-US anti-terrorism cooperation are among the issues likely to figure prominently in the talks on Wednesday and Thursday.

Chidambaram will meet his counterpart Janet Napolitano; Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Attorney General Eric H Holder.

The Home Minister is also scheduled to meet the top US intelligence and security officials, including FBI Director Robert Mueller and Director of National Intelligence Dennis C Blair; besides meeting National Security Adviser, Gen (Retd) James Jones at the White House. A tour of the National Counter-terrorism Centre in Virginia is also on his itinerary.

Besides meeting experts and think-tanks’ members, Chidambaram is expected to hold talks with key US lawmakers, including Senator Joe Lieberman, Chairman, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee; and Congressman Sylvester Reyes, Chairman, House Select Committee on Intelligence. (ANI)

Pak raises lands drying up issue due to Indian conspiracy with Holbrooke

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): The Pakistan Government is reported to have raised the issue of its agrarian lands drying up due to India’s water conspiracy with visiting US Special Representative to Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke.

Though Holbrooke told officials in Islamabad that American experts will soon be in town to help the country resolve its energy crisis, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will make a further announcement on energy needs during her scheduled visit in October, the latter highlighted the fact that India has reduced the country”s agro-based economy to tatters by building the Wullar Barrage/Tulbul Navigation Project on the Jhelum River.

The News quotes Indus Water Commissioners Ishrat Ali Khan and Jamaat Ali Shah, as saying that Pakistan has handed over credible evidence in June of this year to India, which establishes 14 agenda items; including the contentious Wullar barrage project.

Both officials says that while the talks were essentially a failure, the fact remains that India is taking steps to stop the flow of water through a 22-KM long tunnel into the Wullar Lake.

India, on the other hand, claims that the project, which includes buidling a dam, will help maintain better water levels in a nearby lake and regulate the flow of flood waters.

Islamabad fears the proposed dam on the Jhelum river, a tributary of the Indus, will affect water levels further downstream in the plains of its Punjab province threatening irrigation and power projects.

In the wake of inconclusive talks on water flow of Jhelum, it says that the Indian attempt to use water as a geo-strategic tool, is unfair and in contravention to the Indus Water Ttreaty, 1960.

According to Indus Water Treaty of 1960, India has been allotted exclusive control/right over the waters of the eastern rivers, namely; the Ravi, the Beas and the Sutlej. Pakistan controls the waters of three western rivers; the Indus, the Jhelum and the Chenab.

It is interesting to note that the base-source of water of all the rivers flows from the Indian side of Kashmir.

According to Pakistan, the treaty bars India from storing any water or constructing any storage works on the western rivers that would result in a reduced flow of water to Pakistan and destruction of the country”s Rabi crop.

Pakistan maintains that India, under the treaty, can store water but it cannot divert it to any other side. Thus, any diversion would violate the provisions of the treaty.

Pakistan believes Wullar barrage can be used as: (1) a geo-strategic weapon, (2) potential to disrupt the triple canal project of Pakistan, (3) badly affecting the Neelum-Jehlum hydro-power project, (4) agriculture in Pakistan Kashmir (5) drying the lands of Punjab province.

The Indian side is of the view that Pakistan is not developing its hydel resources anyway and should not get so serious about its objections. (ANI)

US, Pak to revive strategic dialogue to strengthen bilateral ties

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): The United States and Pakistan have agreed to revive strategic dialogue between them to strengthen their bilateral ties.

According to sources, the fourth round of Strategic Dialogue between both nations will be held in Islamabad during Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to Pakistan in October.

The Dawn reported that Clinton is likely to co-chair the talks with Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

The resumption of talks marks a clear change in America’s policy, as after the appointment of Richard Holbrooke as the region’s Special Envoy, most of the dialogue between the two countries took place through him. (ANI)

US to come up with plan to jumpstart Mid-East peace talks: Clinton

Washington, May 29 (ANI): Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that the United States would present detailed plans on the Middle East peace process to the parties involved as part of its efforts to jump-start negotiations. We are going to be putting forward very specific proposals to the Israelis and the Palestinians. That’s what Senator Mitchell has been doing over the last couple of days,” the Jerusalem Post quoted Clinton as saying at a press conference following her lunch meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit.

Though the Obama administration has pledged intensified Middle East diplomacy since the beginning of its term, Clinton’s comments went the furthest to date in suggesting that the US would make its own proposals for resolving the conflict that multiple American administration plans have failed to resolve.

Arab countries, beginning with Jordan’s King Abdullah during his own White House visit in April, have urged such a US initiative.

Gheit said: “We have been discussing the need for an American major action to expedite the process. We – all of us, the Quartet, the international community, the Arab countries – [need] to show support and understanding and to push them together, allow them to negotiate in direct negotiations.” reater participation has been a central piece of the US administration’s approach thus far, with Clinton stressing that “we’ve also been reaching out to governments of Arab nations, asking what they could be expected to do as we move forward to build confidence and to create a good atmosphere for decisions to be made.”

After meeting with Gheit, Clinton was set to host Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas that evening, as part of a three-day trip to Washington that will culminate with an Oval Office visit Thursday afternoon. (ANI)

Only 1 in 3 Israelis thinks Obama is pro-Israel

Jerusalem, May 18 (ANI): Only 31 percent of Israelis consider US President Barack Obama’s approach pro-Israel, a survey conducted ahead of the meeting between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu revealed.

According to a Smith Research poll, 31 percent Israelis labeled Obama pro-Israel, while 14 percent said he was pro-Palestinian and 40 percent felt he was neutral. The remaining 15 percent didn’t have any views on the issue.

The poll, conducted on 500 Israelis last week, has an error margin of 4.5 percent, The Jerusalem post reports.

Obama’s numbers contrast sharply with those of his predecessor, George W. Bush, whose administration was considered pro-Israel by 88 percent of the respondents.

Obama’s ratings may have gone down after condemnations of Israeli policies by US Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and others.

Obama is expected to unveil his policies on the Arab-Israeli conflict in Cairo on June 4.

Currently, he is in a “policy review period” that he will conclude only after Netanyahu, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak visit the US by the end of the month.

Israelis, according to the poll, view governments of other European countries even less favourable than the US.

Among those nations, only the government of German Chancellor Angela Merkel was seen as being more pro-Israel (37 percent) than pro-Palestinian (21 percent).

The pro-Palestinian tilt was even more pronounced for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government (a 14 percentage point spread). (ANI)

CIA’s Panetta visited Israel to stop it from bombing Iranian nuclear plant

Jerusalem, May 15 (ANI): Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief Leon Panetta was sent on a secret mission to Israel to warn its leaders not to launch a surprise attack on Iran without notifying Washington.

As Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, prepares to visit Washington, it emerged yesterday that Panetta, went to Israel two weeks ago to seek assurances from Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak that their hawkish new Government would not attack Iran without alerting Washington.

Concerns have been rising that Netanyahu could launch a strike on Tehran’s atomic programme, in the same way that Israel hit Saddam Hussein’s Osirak reactor in 1981.

According to The Times, Israel has been preparing for such an eventuality. It has carried out long-distance manoeuvres and is due to hold its largest civil defence drills this summer.

The country’s leaders reportedly told Panetta that they did not “intend to surprise the US on Iran”.

During his visit to Washington, Netanyahu will meet Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama, whom he will try to convince of the need for tougher action against Iran.

Obama favours trying to engage Tehran, but his efforts have been received coolly by President Ahmadinejad.

The Israeli leader is expected to insist that the US stays focused on Iran, rather than tackling stalled talks with the Palestinians. (ANI)

US may ask Pak for concessions on Indo-Afghan trade issue during trilateral talks

Islamabad, May 5 (ANI): The forthcoming trilateral talks between the US President Barack Obama and his Pakistan and Afghanistan counterparts may see the United States mounting pressure on Islamabad to allow India extend its business ties with Afghanistan through the Wagah border.

“The US, which is eying a dominant role for India in the region, wants Pakistan to provide overland trade route for Indian exports to Afghanistan,” the Dawn quoted a diplomatic source, as saying.

Sources said the Obama Administration may also ask Pakistan to shift its focus from the eastern Indian border and redeploy much of its 250, 000 troops to the western border along Afghanistan to check the Taliban and Al-Qaeda spillover.

Off late, Washington has made it clear to Islamabad that its ‘obsession’ with India as a mortal threat is misguided.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has already clarified that the trilateral summit would see discussions on specific topics which America believes are of more important than some other issues.

“We’ll have some very intense sessions on the specifics of what we’re trying to accomplish. It’s a very difficult environment because of the confusion among the civilian and military leadership’ about how to prioritise what is the greatest threat to Pakistan,” Clinton had said.

However, it is believed that Pakistan is also prepared to take on the issue with the United States and would stand firm on its stance.

“It is very significant for Pakistan. Traditionally it was our bargaining chip for the Indians to move on Kashmir. Now they want us to do something without any movement, and are browbeating us,” a Pakistan official said.

India and Afghanistan have been urging Pakistan to provide a free passage to the traders through the Wagah border since 2003-0, but Islamabad has been continuously rejecting the demands. (ANI)

Four in five US Jews unwavering in their support for Obama: Gallup Poll

New York, May 3 (ANI): Despite fierce op-ed page debates over the Obama administration’s actions so far on Israel, Iran and the Middle East, American Jews are unwavering in their support of the new president, according to a new Gallup poll.

Tracking polls conducted through Obama’s first 100 days in office show that 79 percent of Jews approve of Obama’s performance so far, about the same percentage that voted for him last November, reports The Jerusalem Post.

Only Muslims gave Obama higher approval ratings, with 85 percent responding that they approve of the president. Respondents who identified themselves as non-religious also indicated overwhelming support, with 73 percent indicating approval.

Liberal Jews showed overwhelming support for the Democratic president, with 96 percent approving of his job performance. Among those who described themselves as moderate, 77 percent approved of Obama.

Jewish conservatives split evenly, with 45 percent approving of Obama and 45 percent disapproving.

The poll’s authors noted that Obama has taken a strong stand on the Middle East by appointing George Mitchell as a special peace envoy and dispatching Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the region. The new administration has also signaled shifts in their approach to Iran’s nuclear program.

“It is not clear whether US Jews endorse Obama’s approach, but the fact that four in five approve of the job he is doing – consistent with their vote for him in the election – suggests they at least tolerate it,” they wrote. (ANI)

Concerned US wooing Sharif to deal with militancy

Washington, May 2 (ANI): The Obama Administration is reaching out more directly than before to Pakistan Muslim League (N) chief Nawaz Sharif, main rival of President Asif Ali Zardari, as the US loses confidence in the Pakistani Government in wake of the relentless advance of the Taliban.

Some Obama Administration officials’ think that Sharif’s close ties with Islamists in Pakistan could be useful in helping Zardari’s Government to confront the stiffening challenge by Taliban insurgents.

The move reflects the heightened concern in the Obama Administration about the survivability of the Zardari Government, The New York Times reports.

General David H. Petraeus, the head of the United States Central Command, has said in private meetings in Washington that Pakistan’s Government is increasingly vulnerable, according to administration officials.

Washington has a bad history of trying to engineer domestic Pakistani politics, and no one in the administration is trying to broker an actual power-sharing agreement between Zardari and Sharif, administration officials say.

But they say that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and special envoy Richard C. Holbrooke have urged Zardari and Sharif to look for ways to work together, seeking to capitalize on Sharif’s appeal among the country’s Islamist groups, the paper reports.

Some Pakistani officials said that members of Zardari’s government were already reaching out to Sharif and that officials in Washington were exaggerating their influence over Pakistani politics.

Obama administration officials have been up front in expressing dissatisfaction with the response shown by Zardari’s government to increasing attacks by Taliban fighters.

A US Defence Department official said Obama is “gravely concerned” about the stability of the Pakistani Government; and described Zardari as “very, very weak.”

The official said the administration wanted to broker an agreement not so much to buoy Zardari personally, but to accomplish what the administration believes Pakistan must do.

“The idea here is to tie Sharif’s popularity to things we think need to be done, like dealing with the militancy,” The NYT quoted the official, as saying. (ANI)

US says military option in Iran would be ineffective

Washington, May 1 (ANI): The use of the military option against Iran to halt that country’s nuclear program would only yield temporary and ineffective results, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.

Gates said a military attack on Iran would merely send the country’s nuclear program further underground. Instead, the United States and its allies must convince Teheran that its nuclear ambitions would spark an arms race that would leave the Islamic republic less secure.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the US should work with its allies on tougher international sanctions.

Gates also said America should pursue partnerships with Russia on missile defense programs in the region to further isolate Iran and to give it economic and diplomatic reasons to abandon its nuclear interests voluntarily.

According to Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, any US-Iranian dialogue should depend on the Iranian regime’s willingness to stop its drive toward a nuclear weapon.

“Israel is not opposed to the American dialogue with Iran, but believes that the US should put a time limit on dialogue while the international community prepares a severe sanctions package that can be in place immediately in case the dialogue fails,” Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in a statement late last week.

He recommended that the sanctions package include the financial and insurance sectors, imports and energy infrastructure, and warned: “Israel has already said that it is not taking any options off the table, and recommends that others do the same.”

Iran will be one of the issues that President Shimon Peres and Obama will discuss when they meet in Washington on Monday. (ANI)

Taliban will be back, Buner retreat only a tactical move: Pak military analyst

Islamabad, Apr.25 (ANI): While the Pakistan Government may now expect international pressure on it to ease a bit following reports of the Taliban retreating from the Buner region of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), experts believe that the move is only tactical, and it is almost certain that they would come back.

“It’s a tactical move, these kinds of movements make tactical retreats.But they are not prepared to surrender their weapons or submit to state authority. They’ll be back.” The Telegraph quoted Lahore based military analyst, Hasan Askari Rizvi, as saying.

The Taliban spokesperson Muslims Khan had said following orders from their leaders the Taliban is moving out of Buner, however, it is still unclear whether the extremists have genuinely left the region, or they would just melt into the local population, by stopping their armed patrols.

Concerns were raised across the world about the Taliban inching closer to Islamabad after they moved into Buner, just 60 miles away from the federal capital.

The United States, in particular, has expressed fears of Pakistan falling into the hands of the insurgents.

Expressing fears about Pakistan being taken over by the insurgents, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen said: “We’re certainly moving closer to the tipping point where Pakistan could be overtaken by extremists.”

In the recent past America has continuously blamed Pakistan for its lack of capability and willingness to tackle the surge of the Talibani extremists.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s had also said that the Pakistan Government was basically abdicating to the Taliban and other extremists. (ANI)

Clinton’s friends find new way to help her pay left over campaign debt

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): Us Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s friends have found a new way to help her pay most of the bills left over from her presidential campaign.

US election laws barred President Barack Obama from writing a big cheque to help settle Clinton’s gaping campaign debt, but he and other Clinton allies found another way to help the Secretary of State pay presidential campaign debt, Politico reports.

Obama’s inaugural committee and a slew of other groups ranging from Bill Clinton’s charitable foundation to Media Matters to the Democratic gubernatorial campaigns of Gavin Newsom in California and Terry McAuliffe in Virginia combined to pay nearly 2.1 million dollars.

Clinton’s presidential campaign received an additional 2.6 million dollars from her still-functioning Senate campaign, which a source close to the campaigns said was to buy the presidential email list outright.

The more than 3.6 million dollars she received for the list, revealed in Federal Election Commission filings, is about four times the 938,000 dollars donors gave.

To be sure, email lists are valuable fundraising tools, and it’s become standard practice for campaigns to rent or buy them from one another.

But the money came at an especially opportune time for Clinton, whose ability to raise money to repay her debts is limited by ethics rules and traditions that effectively bar diplomats from partisan political activity, including raising cash.

The income from the list’s rental and sale – the latter cryptically listed in her FEC filings as “sale of assets” – allowed Clinton’s presidential campaign in the first three months f the year to pay 3.7 million dollars in leftover bills. (ANI)

Taliban’s ‘safe havens’ in Pak’s heart a “doomsday scenario for India, Afghanistan and West

Washington, Apr.24 (ANI): The so called ‘peace deal’ between the government of Pakistan and the Taliban in the Swat Valley has brought Washington and Islamabad at loggerheads, with the United States considering that the accord would only provide an opportunity to the insurgents to build terror safe havens in Pakistan’s heart.

US diplomats see the peace accord of the Swat Valley, which is located just 60 miles away from Islamabad, as a threat to the region, and to the western world too.

“There’s a doomsday scenario where the real concern is that they establish a foothold in this part of northern Pakistan to launch attacks on Afghanistan, India and the West,” The Telegraph quoted a diplomat, as saying.

With the Pak Taliban announcing earlier this week that Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and other top Taliban leaders from Afghanistan would be welcomed in the valley as ‘brothers’, as would militants fighting British and American forces in Afghanistan, concerns for America have increased manifold.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, fearing Taliban taking over Pakistan in near future, had also said that Islamabad has no choice left but to challenge the expanding writ of the insurgents.

Clinton also has accused the Government of Pakistan of “abdicating” to the Taliban and other extremist groups by ceding large tracts of territory.She said that the country’s instability is a “mortal threat” to world peace. (ANI)

Fighting climate change is like losing weight: Hillary Clinton

London, Apr 23 (ANI): The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has compared the challenge of tackling climate change to her own fight to lose weight.

Speaking to State Department staff on Earth Day, Hillary said more must be done to reduce the department’s environmental footprint, reports The Telegraph.

“Often times when you face such an overwhelming challenge as global climate change, it can be somewhat daunting – it’s kind of like trying to lose weight, which I know something about,” she said to laughter.
She added: “You think, oh I only have to lose X numbers of pounds but it seems like such a far away goal.

“It’s kind of like world peace and so therefore why even try? Well, because we are called to try. That’s who we are as human beings and that’s especially how we think of ourselves as Americans.”

Also, Mrs Clinton defended the right to abortion and the Obama administration’s judgment to finance family planning overseas.

“When I think about the suffering that I have seen of women around the world, I’ve been in hospitals in Brazil where half the women were enthusiastically and joyfully greeting new babies and the other half were fighting for their lives against botched abortions,” she told Congress.

She added: “I’ve been in African countries where 12 and 13-year-old girls are bearing children. I have been in Asian countries where the denial of family planning consigns women to lives of oppression and hardship.

“It is my strongly held view that you are entitled to advocate and everyone who agrees with you should be free to do so anywhere in the world, and so are we.” (ANI)

Obama strongly backs Mexico’s effort to fight drugs

MEXICO CITY: In his second big trip abroad since becoming US president, Barack Obama pledged strong support on Thursday for the Mexican
Barack Obama
President Barack Obama shakes hands with Mexican President Felipe Calderon at the end of a joint news conference in Mexico City. (AP Photo)
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government’s fight against powerful drug cartels, who are waging turf wars along the border.

Obama, who made his first major foray onto the international stage in Europe earlier this month, offered Mexican President Felipe Calderon a partnership in his efforts to combat drug gangs.

“At a time when the Mexican government has so courageously taken on the drug cartels that have plagued both sides of the borders. It is absolutely critical that the United States joins as a full partner in dealing with this issue,” Obama said at a welcoming ceremony.

White House officials have played up the symbolism of Obama’s visit to Mexico, which is struggling to contain unprecedented drug gang violence that is spilling over into the United States.

“I think that President Calderon has done an outstanding and heroic job in dealing with what is a big problem right now along the borders with the drug cartels.” Obama said on CNN’s Spanish-language channel.

Obama is also expected to discuss energy and the economy with Calderon in Mexico City before heading to Trinidad and Tobago for the Summit of the Americas on Friday.

Obama hopes to improve relations with Mexico and the rest of Latin America after a deterioration in relations his advisors blame on former President George W Bush.

More drug violence

On Wednesday, about a dozen people died in a shootout between troops and suspected drug traffickers in southern Mexico, typical of the clashes that killed 6,300 people across the country last year.

But Calderon said that he was “absolutely not” losing the war on drugs.

Obama will push the US Senate to ratify a treaty designed to reduce the flow of arms and ammunition to drug cartels in Latin America, a senior US official said.

The Obama administration is tightening security at the US-Mexico border to prevent trafficking of guns from the United States to Mexican cartels and hopes to send Black Hawk helicopters to bolster Calderon’s effort.

Obama’s outreach to Mexico has already included a visit by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who soothed Mexicans by acknowledging the violence there stemmed partly from Americans’ “insatiable demand” for drugs.

Obama wrote in an op-ed article sent to a handful of Latin American newspapers that his efforts to help wipe out organized crime would start at home — reducing US demand for illegal drugs and stemming the flow of arms and cash over the Mexican border.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Wednesday named a “border czar,” Alan Bersin, a former Justice Department official who had served in a similar role under former President Bill Clinton. She said his mission was to see that pledges on border security fed through to results.

US ‘sceptical’ over talk of Iran N-progress

Washington
has met an announcement by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that major advances have been achieved in Iran’s nuclear programme with “scepticism”.

“I think we certainly could view it with scepticism,” said State Department spokesman Robert Wood, commenting on reports that there are some 7,000 centrifuges installed in Iran to enrich uranium.

“Iran has in the past, you know, announced that it is — it was running a certain number of centrifuges that didn’t really pan out with regard to the IAEA’s (International Atomic Energy Agency’s) own estimate.

“So it’s not clear,” he said on Thursday.

For her part, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said: “Well, first of all, we don’t know what to believe about the Iranian programme. We’ve heard many difference assessments and claims over a number of years.”

She added that the United States is involved with talks by world powers with Iran in part to “enforce the international obligations that Iran should be meeting to ensure that the IAEA is the source of credible information.”

Clinton pointed to “a great gap between what the IAEA observed about seven weeks — six, seven weeks ago and what the Iranians are now claiming.”

Ahmadinejad on Thursday declared the major advances at the opening of a nuclear fuel plant. At the event he announced that two high-capacity centrifuges were being tested.

Life’s a picnic for Obama and Hillary Clinton

Washington, Apr.11 (ANI): It was reportedly Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s idea to hold her afternoon meeting with President Barack Obama outside.

Fierce campaign rivals just a year ago, Obama and Clinton were the picture of political bliss earlier this week when they ditched the Oval Office for a little quality time in the White House garden, reports the New York Daily News.

On a glorious spring day in the nation’s capital, the pair decamped for a picnic table next to a new swing set the Obamas recently purchased for daughters Sasha and Malia.

Witnesses – who were mostly there to watch First Lady Michelle Obama plant a new vegetable garden in another corner of the White House’s sizable grounds – reported lots of smiling and easy banter between the two. (ANI)

US seeks global help for anti-piracy task force

WASHINGTON: In the wake of an American-flagged cargo-ship being attacked by pirates off the coast of Somalia, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
on Friday said the United States has sought the help from more countries for the anti-piracy task force in the region.

“Piracy may be a centuries-old crime, but we are working to bring an appropriate 21st-century response,” she told reporters at the State Department press meet.

Terming piracy as a serious matter, Clinton said these people are nothing more than criminals.

“We are looking for ways to increase the effectiveness of what we are doing, including the recruitment of additional partners, to be part of the surveillance work that is done,” Clinton said in response to a question.

With the naval vessels of several countries in the region, Clinton said: “We have had some success in coordinating amongst the contributors to this naval task force. The Department of Defence is taking the lead in helping to put together an international task force.”

“There are a number of nations now ranging from, of course, the United States to Europe to Asia, including Japan and China and Korea, which have naval vessels in the waters off the Horn of Africa,” she said.

“It’s important that we come up with an international resolution of this. And we will be consulting closely and widely to determine what else other countries are willing to do and what further steps the international community believes should be taken,” Clinton said.

At the same time, she acknowledged that the instability in Somalia is a contributing factor to those who take to the seas in order to board ships, hijack them, intimidate and threaten their crews and then seek ransom.

Earlier in the day, the State Department Spokesman Robert Wood said the US is in touch with a number of nations with regard to this issue.

“It’s a growing concern to not just the United States but others who deal with shipping in that area,” he said, adding the US military and the militaries of other countries are trying to see what we can do to prevent these types of piracy acts from happening.

In response to a specific question, Wood said India can certainly play an important role in this regard. “I think India certainly could play a role. That’s a decision for India,” he said.