US senators call for new climate legislation

Washington, May 13 (DPA) Two US senators Wednesday proposed a climate bill that could break an international logjam over long-stalled US action, strengthen US energy independence and reduce carbon emissions.

Senators John Kerry, a Democrat, and Joe Lieberman, an independent, who ran as a team for the 2004 presidency and vice presidency, are also to call for an expansion of offshore oil and natural-gas production.

US Senate inaction over the past months is often cited as a chief reason for the failure of agreement on a new global treaty to curb greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.

The bill faces an uphill battle amidst an unprecedented crude oil well rupture in the Gulf of Mexico and the resulting debate over expanding deepwater drilling.

The Kerry-Lieberman bill would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent in the current decade compared to 2005 levels, under a carbon emissions trading programme already approved by the House of Representatives.

US President Obama gave full support to the proposal, saying it would ‘strengthen our national security by beginning to break our dependence on foreign oil’.

Obama also noted the challenges ‘underscored by the immense tragedy in the Gulf of Mexico’, but emphasised that the proposal would also help ‘jumpstart’ clean energy technology.

The US Chamber of Commerce was cautious, calling for ‘bipartisan’ support and noting the need to consider such a law’s affect on ‘American jobs and our economy’.

Kerry said the proposed law would ‘finally change our nation’s energy policy from a national weakness into a national strength’.

‘We can finally tell the world that America is ready to take back our role as the world’s clean energy leader,’ Kerry said.

Kerry and Lieberman lost the support of a key Republican, Senator Lindsey Graham, in recent weeks, because the bill would not go far enough to expand drilling.

They also face the loss of support by two key Senate Democrats – Florida’s Bill Nelson and New Jersey’s Frank Lautenberg – because the bill goes too far in expanding offshore drilling. Both states depend heavily on tourist income from pristine beaches.

‘The path to 60 votes in the Senate has been long, but despite Washington conventional wisdom, we are closer than ever to a breakthrough,’ Kerry said in a statement.

A bill similar to the new proposal narrowly passed the House of Representatives in 2009, and would have regulated emissions from almost every sector of the US economy with a cap-and-trade programme.

The Senate bill would set up an emissions trading programme for utilities starting in 2013, and require factories and other industrial sources to join the programme by 2016.

Obama’s advisor on climate issues, Carol Browner, said last week that the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico could even galvanize support for the climate change bill.

‘This accident … is actually heightening people’s interest in energy in this country and in wanting a different energy plan,’ she said.

Obama and Medvedev sign disarmament treaty

In a scene that would have been unimaginable at the height of the Cold War, the leaders of the United States and Russia have signed an agreement to reduce their nuclear arsenals.

Surrounded by the golden opulence of Prague’s hill-top castle, US president Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev shared a laugh as they signed the bound documents, considered the biggest advancement in nuclear disarmament in decades.

It is being described as a historic, not just for the relationship between the former enemies but for the security of the world.

The agreement will cut strategic nuclear arsenals deployed by the former Cold War foes by 30 per cent within seven years but leave each with enough to destroy the other.

“This is a whole range of issues that I think that we can make significant progress on. I am confident that this is an important first step in that direction,” Mr Obama said.

Mr Medvedev was full of similar praise.

“This is a win-win situation. No one stands to lose from this agreement. I believe that this is typical future of our cooperation,” he said.

The former adversaries will reduce their arsenals to 1,550 deployed warheads over the next seven years.

And in another sign of growing cooperation they agreed that Iran may face tougher sanctions over its nuclear ambitions.

“Regrettably Iran is not responding to many constructive proposals that have been made and we cannot turn a blind eye to this,” Mr Medvedev said.

The new agreement has to be ratified by both the Russian parliament and the US Senate, and Mr Obama will need a handful of Republicans onside to get the two-thirds vote required.

William Cohen served as defence secretary in the Clinton administration and is concerned about the agreement.

“Politics has no place here. There is a legitimate question to be raised about the merits,” he said.

“Are we safer with this? Does this make us more vulnerable?”

But there are still hurdles ahead.

There is also the issue of America’s plans to build a missile defence shield in Europe. Russia has reiterated its opposition and that could be an obstacle to any further disarmament talks.

Moving forward is what Mr Obama hopes world leaders will do next week when they meet in Washington to discuss ways to secure nuclear weapons from terrorists.

Briefly World

Sun, Mar 28 04:53 AM

Number of US troop deaths doubles in Afghanistan

KABUL: The number of US troops killed in Afghanistan has roughly doubled in the first three months of 2010 compared to the same period last year as Washington has added tens of thousands of soldiers to reverse the Taliban’s momentum. US officials have warned that casualties are likely to rise further as the Pentagon completes its deployment of 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan and sets its sights on Kandahar, where a major offensive is expected in the coming months.

Head of Abu Dhabi wealth fund missing

DUBAI: The United Arab Emirates state news agency says the head of Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund — the world’s largest — is missing after his glider crashed in Morocco. The agency said that Ahmed bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s glider went down in a lake in Morocco on Friday. The pilot of the aircraft was rescued, but authorities continued the search for Al Nahyan. Al Nahyan is the managing director of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and the younger brother of Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the leader of the UAE.

Palin now gives McCain a boost

TUCSON: Sarah Palin urged a cheering crowd on Friday to vote for her former running mate John McCain, lending much-needed support as he faces the toughest re-election battle of his career in the US Senate. “If you want conservative solutions and common sense leadership… to fight for what this state and country needs, I’m asking you to vote for John McCain,” Palin told several thousand people packed into a fairground in Tucson, Arizona. “Let’s send the Maverick back to the Senate,” she added.

Cops find bullet in letter to Berlusconi

Rome: Italian police say they have intercepted an envelope containing a bullet addressed to Premier Silvio Berlusconi on the eve of regional elections in Italy. Berlusconi was in Libya on Saturday to attend an Arab League summit. Police in Milan also said that a letter bomb addressed to the Northern League, a government ally, exploded in a post office and slightly injured a postman. An anarchic group claimed responsibility.

World’s famous landmarks dim lights for Earth Hour

SYDNEY: (Above) Boys light candles to support Earth Hour in Jakarta on Saturday. Millions of people worldwide turned off lights for an hour from 8.30 pm in a gesture to highlight environmental concerns and to call for a binding pact to cut greenhouse gas emissions. This year’s was the fourth annual Earth Hour, organised by the World Wildlife Fund. As each time zone reaches the appointed hour, skylines went dark and landmarks dim, from a Manila shopping mall to the Eiffel Tower in Paris, the Opera House in Sydney and the Empire State Building in New York.

Rocker Bono named worst investor in US

London: Irish rocker Bono has been named the worst investor in America for his decision to back troubled smart telephone maker Palm Inc. The U2 frontman and his private-equity business Elevation Partners invested nearly $500 million into the debt-riddled firm, in December 2008. Bono’s poor business decision has cost him dear with the Palm Inc’s shares plummetting to 35 per cent from January to February, Contactmusic reported.

It’s curtains for Anil Kapoor starrer TV series 24

Los Angeles: Hit television series 24 is seeing its last days on the small screen as the show has got an official cancellation. The show became a hit in India on the web after Bollywood actor Anil Kapoor made an appearance on the show as the leader of a West-Asian country in a guest appearance. The bosses have called it a day and the cast and crew of the Emmy award winning TV series were told that this season will be the show’s last, Variety reported online.

US health bill fixes need new House vote

Historic US health care reform legislation will have to return to the House of Representatives for a new vote after Senate parliamentarian Alan Frumin struck two minor provisions.

The decision came as the US Senate met in a middle-of-the-night session to try to finish the bill, which would put the finishing touches on the sweeping healthcare overhaul signed into law by President Barack Obama on Tuesday.

Senate parliamentarian Alan Frumin upheld two Republican challenges on points of order under budget reconciliation rules, Senate Democratic aides said, requiring another vote by the House.

The points of order involved the revamp of the student loan program included in the package, said Jim Manley, a spokesman for Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid.

Under the reconciliation rules, each provision in the package must have a budgetary impact.

The decision could set up another politically difficult vote in the House, which narrowly passed the overhaul and the companion bill of final changes to cap a year-long political struggle.

“We are confident the House will quickly pass the bill with these minor changes,” said Kate Cyrul, a spokeswoman for Tom Harkin, Democratic chairman of the Senate Health Committee.

The ruling came after Senate Democrats had managed to fend off 30 Republican amendments designed to derail the bill.

The Senate’s approval of even one of the amendments also would have sent the entire package back to the House for another vote, and Democratic senators vowed to prevent that.

Republicans had met with the parliamentarian through the evening on Wednesday in hopes of finding language in the bill that could be challenged under budget reconciliation rules that require every provision have a budgetary impact.

Those rules allow passage by a simple majority of 51 votes, rather than the 60 needed to overcome procedural hurdles.

The ruling means 16 lines will be stricken from the bill, but that is enough to require House action once again.

The overhaul signed by Mr Obama represents the biggest changes to the US health system in four decades.

It expands insurance coverage to 32 million Americans and imposes new regulations such as barring insurance companies from refusing to cover patients with pre-existing medical conditions.

- Reuters

Concerned US asks Pak for immediate resolution of explosive Baloch issue

Islamabad, Sep.2 (ANI): Expressing concerns over the Baloch insurgency, the United States has asked the Pakistan Government to settle all outstanding issues with the Baloch people as soon as possible.

According to sources, three US Senators met President Asif Ali Zardari and asked him to resolve the crisis while expressing concerns over the deteriorating law and order situation in the region.

Senators Carl Levin and Jack Reed of the US Senate’s Armed Services Committee and Edward Kaufman of the Foreign Relations Committee stressed on the need for complete peace and stability in Balochistan during their talks with Zardari, The Dawn reports.

The US Congressional delegation led by Senator Carl Levin, which is on a visit to Pakistan currently, told Zardari that the stability of Balochistan was imperative for success in the ‘war on terror’.

Briefing media person after the meeting, Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar said Zardari urged the senators to try to hasten the reimbursement and supply of critically needed equipment, including helicopter gunships.

Zardari also requested Washington to speed up the process for the early adoption of the Kerry Lugar Bill, and also asked the White House to release all outstanding dues amounting to 1.6 billion dollars in order to help Islamabad counter extremism effectively.

“Payment of outstanding amounts in the support funds is important for the security forces to continue the ongoing military operation against militants,” The Dawn quoted Babar, as saying.

“President Zardari said attaching conditions to aid would be counter-productive and impart a transactional nature to the relationship which must be avoided,” he added.

Zardari also welcomed the Obama Administration’s commitment to help Pakistan address its increasing energy needs. (ANI)

Biofuels to have greatest impact on land use and habitat

London, August 26 (ANI): A new study has determined that biomass production for fuel or electricity generation will have the biggest impact on landscape and habitats.

According to a report in Nature News, the broad analysis of potential US energy and climate-mitigation scenarios compared the land and habitat impacts of various energy mixes – from nuclear power to biofuels – resulting from an array of policy options.

In a supplement to the study paper, the authors re-ran their estimates to take account of the likely impact of the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, also known as the Waxman-Markey bill.

The bill, which is awaiting approval by the US Senate, includes a cap-and-trade system to regulate greenhouse gases.

The researchers estimate that regardless of whether the Waxman-Markey bill were enacted, the amount of land affected by energy development by 2030 will be between 21-70 million hectares – an area which is, even at its lower bound, about the size of the state of Wyoming.

“A cap-and-trade bill may have some incremental effect in increasing energy sprawl, but most of the development that’s going to happen is because of other laws that are already in place,” said study author Robert McDonald, a landscape ecologist with The Nature Conservancy, a non-profit environmental organization based in Arlington, Virginia.

Those other laws include the US renewable fuel standard, which requires that the volume of renewable fuel blended into gasoline is increased from 34 billion litres in 2008 to 136 billion litres by 2022.

That increase will require an area of between 19 and 31 million hectares – the largest component of McDonald’s projected energy sprawl, despite the fact that biofuels are expected to comprise less than 5 percent of the country’s total energy budget.

The US Energy Information Administration predicts that ethanol derived from corn alone might reach annual production levels of 39 billion litres by 2030.

McDonald and his colleagues calculate that this would require more than 9 million extra hectares of land to be planted with corn (maize), an area about the size of the state of Indiana.

“If we are to prevent serious, damaging climate change, it will require one of the largest land-use changes in the history of the country,” said Jimmie Powell, a policy expert at The Nature Conservancy and a co-author of the study.

“Because the change is so big, it’s important that we do it carefully to minimize the environmental impacts of these new energy resources,” he added. (ANI)

US Senate approves tripled aid bill for Pakistan

Washington, June 25 (ANI): The US Senate has approved the tripled aid bill for Pakistan worth 1.5 billion dollars over the next five years.

The aid, which is a part of the financial assistance pledged by the United States to help Pakistan counter extremism, would primarily be utilized for upgrading the facilities for the security forces, and improve educational and judicial systems.

Senators consider the legislation will lead to an improved relationship between the US and Pakistan in all spectrums.

“This legislation marks an important step toward sustained economic and political cooperation with Pakistan,” said senior Republican Senator on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Richard Lugar.

The bill has already been approved by the House of Representatives earlier this month.

One of the important characteristics of the bill is that it mentions the setting-up of certain Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (ROZ’s) in the border regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The basic purpose of setting-up these ROZ’s is that they will serve as an area from where textiles and other items can be exported duty-free to America.

The US Special Envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke told a House committee that the ROZ’s would help create job opportunities for the people of the region, who have been rendered homeless and are left with nothing due to the continuous military combat and militancy there.

“Creating jobs in the Federally Administered tribal Areas of Pakistan (FATA) served U.S. security interests. Americans have died because people out of work in the FATA, the western tribal areas, joined the Taliban and jobs could reduce that,” The News quoted Holbrooke, as saying. (ANI)

Indo-US nuclear deal plays out in slow motion

NEW DELHI: Although a nuclear deal between US and India is a wrap, the wheels are moving at a grinding slow pace on implementing the deal, with the US dithering on starting negotiations for the reprocessing agreement.

Government sources said civil nuclear issues occupied a large part of the discussions between William Burns and foreign secretary Shiv Shankar Menon on Wednesday. It’s likely they will come up for talks again when Burns meets NSA M K Narayanan on Thursday.

Negotiations for a reprocessing agreement is yet to start, because Washington, Indian officials said, was yet to set a date. India is insistent that a reprocessing deal is absolutely necessary for the nuclear deal to be meaningful. The deal said negotiations would start within six months of the signing of the agreement, but the US is yet to do so. The newly nominated US undersecretary of state for arms control, Ellen Tauscher, told the US Senate at her confirmation hearing that negotiations would start before August 2. In her hearing, she even promised that the entire process of implementing the deal would be completed a year from that date. Given the present pace, there is some scepticism here, and it’s not clear whether US tardiness is just bureaucratic or deliberate.

Indian public and private entities seeking to reap early harvests from the deal have complained that around a score of licenses for nuclear and conventional dual use technologies and equipment are hanging fire with the US administration. The nuclear deal transferred dual-use licensing from presumptions of denial to presumptions of approval — but from all accounts, the Obama administration is yet to approve. Sources here said it would help if a political statement of intent from the top levels of the US government were sent down the system.

Sanctions and bans remain on Indian entities by the US despite the deal, these haven’t yet been lifted.

Just as a sign of how long things can take between the two countries, a technology safeguards agreement (TSA) allowing India to launch spacecraft with US components is yet to be signed, though officials on both sides expected it to be signed on Thursday. This agreement has taken years of painful negotiations and has had to be delinked from a commercial space launch agreement (CSLA) which is still to be negotiated, but could be a boost for India’s civilian space sector.

US sources said India should quickly name sites for US reactors and make them public. India had, in a letter of intent by the foreign secretary, told the US that it would buy reactors with a minimum of 10,000 Mwe of new power generating capacity from US companies. This was given to the US on September 10, 2008. Whether the reprocessing negotiations should precede the naming of sites or vice-versa is not yet clear.

For its part, India needs to take steps to formalise the safeguards agreement with the IAEA by submitting a separation plan, as well as sign up to the CSC convention. The convention for supplementary compensation on nuclear damage has been agreed to by India and is necessary, say officials, to enable US firms to participate in the civil nuclear sector in India. International nuclear firms, led by US companies, have been lobbying hard for India to adopt the convention under the IAEA. The global treaty allocates legal responsibility with the installing state and company for compensating nuclear damage caused by a nuclear incident.

US to ensure every penny of Pak aid is utilized for intended purpose : Clinton

Washington, May 21 (ANI): US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said the Obama administration would ensure that US aid to Pakistan is not diverted to any other channel, and is utilized only for the purpose it is meant for.

“The administration will make sure that there’s no diversion of money or any use of it other than what it is meant for,” The Dawn quoted Clinton, as saying.
Addressing the US Senate’s Appropriations Sub-committee on State and Foreign Operations, Clinton said she also supported a legislator’s proposal that conditions should be stringed to the assistance provided to Pakistan and Afghanistan to ensure that the money is used only for the purpose for which it is meant for.

Replying to a Democrat Senator Christopher Dodd’s query regarding speculations that Pakistan might be using the US aid to expand its nuclear capabilities or to buy weapons to be used against India, Clinton assured the Senate that the aid would not be misused.

“None of our aid will affect the efforts by Pakistan regarding their nuclear stockpile,” she said.

“The administration will make sure that there’s no ‘diversion of money or any use of it other than what it is meant for,” Clinton added.

Commenting on the heightened tension between India and Pakistan in the wake of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, Clinton said Washington wants a cordial relationship between both countries.

“The US would like to see a reduction in India-Pakistan tensions and the resumption of the bilateral dialogue to give both a little more confidence in each other,” she said. (ANI)

US porn star says may run for Senate in 2010

Baton Rouge (Florida, US), May 8 (ANI): Porn star Stormy Daniels, a busty blonde from Baton Rouge, has caused a sensation during her “listening tour” of Louisiana this week by announcing a possible run for the US Senate in 2010.

Her target: Republican Senator David Vitter, the family values crusader, whose number turned up in the DC Madam’s notorious little black book.

“Those of you who don’t know who I am,” she told the lunch crowd at a Baton Rouge eatery, “I’d suggest that you don’t Google that until you get home from work.”

Daniels, 30, says it’s a dirty job, but she’ll take the plunge if she finds enough support for pushing Vitter of his Senate pedestal.

“I have never said that I’m the best person for the job. I absolutely am not,” the New York Daily News quoted her as telling WVLA-TV in Baton Rouge.

“I just think I’m a better choice than the senator they already have,” she added.

Daniels, who hasn’t picked a party yet, has some contorted positions. She opposes the stimulus, hopes to rid the internet of child porn, would nix the income tax in favor of raising sales taxes and supports bringing troops home from Iraq.

She has suggested her campaign slogan might be “Stormy Daniels: Screwing People Honestly.”

Vitter is vulnerable. A poll this week found only 30 percent of likely voters would definitely vote to reelect him. (ANI)

Airspace violation prompts brief evacuation of US Congress

Washington – A pilot flying a small plane violated the tight airspace regulations around Washington, prompting orders to briefly evacuate Congress and parts of the White House, media reports said.

The US Senate adjourned into a quick recess but returned to session minutes later after the all-clear signal was given. MSNBC television reported that the pilot complied with demands to alter course.

People at the White House’s north lawn were told to get inside by the Secret Service. Extra precautions to protect the airspace around Washington were enacted following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.(dpa)

US Congress unlikely to pass emergency aid for Pakistan: US Senator

Washington, May 1 (ANI): Pakistan might be eagerly waiting for 1.4 billion dollars as aid which the United States has pledged, but according to an American lawmaker, the US Congress appears to be in no mood to pass the bill in a huff.

Democratic Senator Richard Durbin said it is highly unlikely that the US Congress would pass an emergency aid package for Pakistan.

“I don’t think it’s likely,” Durbin said.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates had urged the Congress earlier this week to pass the 83.4 billion dollars spending bill for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan ‘as quickly as possible’, including assistance for Pakistan’s counter-terrorism efforts, The Nation reports.

Gates informed a US Senate panel that money to reimburse Pakistan for its operations against extremists along the border with Afghanistan will run out in mid-May.

The Obama administration has made it clear that it wants to speed up to 400 million dollars for Pakistan. Officials have also clarified to the Senators that the administration may seek other avenues for the funding if they fail to act. (ANI)

Robert Blake appointed new Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia

Washington, Apr.26 (ANI): Robert Blake has been appointed as the new Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian affairs dealing with India and Pakistan following President Barack Obama’s decision to remove Richard Boucher from the post.

Blake, who is currently the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, would take charge of his new office after the US Senate confirms him.

He would also be dealing with issues concerning Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, and Maldives.

Blake has held a number of positions at the US State Department earlier. He also served as the Deputy Chief of mission at the US Embassy in New Delhi from 2003 to 2006. (ANI)

Christopher Hill set to be US ambassador to Iraq

WASHINGTON: The US Senate on Monday cleared the last major obstacle to veteran diplomat Christopher Hill’s confirmation as US ambassador to Iraq,
voting to end debate on his embattled nomination.

The 73-17 vote set the stage for a final confirmation ballot as early as Tuesday or Wednesday, when Hill, the US representative to six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear problems, was all but certain to get the green light to go to Baghdad.

Despite overwhelming support from President Barack Obama’s Democratic allies and many Republicans, Hill’s nomination stalled on opposition from Republican Senator Sam Brownback, who forced Monday’s so-called cloture vote.

But lawmakers — even some who expressed reservations about Hill getting the post — said the United States could not go without an ambassador to Baghdad at what was seen as a critical time in Iraq.

“We need an ambassador in Iraq. We need it desperately,” said Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss, who had been guarded about the nomination.

Republican Senator Richard Lugar, an early and influential supporter of the nomination, said the North Korea talks had shown Hill could manage regional politics like those that will shape Iraq’s future.

“We must seek to reassure allies and send adversaries a clear message that the United States remains committed to regional stability and has no intention of leaving a vacuum in Iraq that can be exploited,” said Lugar, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Obama backs treaty to curb flow of guns over border

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – President Barack Obama said on Thursday he will push the U.S. Senate to ratify a long-stalled arms trafficking treaty meant to curb the flow of guns and ammunition to drug cartels in Latin America.

Activists want Washington to push for ratification of the Inter-American Convention against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives and Other Related Materials.

The convention, known by Spanish acronym CIFTA, has been languishing in the U.S. Senate since it was adopted in 1997.

Obama, who visited Mexico to show his support for President Felipe Calderon’s efforts to reduce violence and rein in drug cartels, said he would put his weight behind the treaty’s ratification.

“I am urging the Senate in the United States to ratify an inter-American treaty known as CIFTA to curb small arms trafficking that is a source of so many weapons used in this drug war,” he told a joint news conference with Calderon.

Denis McDonough, Director of Strategic Communications at the White House’s National Security Council, told reporters the treaty was on a list that had been submitted to the Senate of treaties the president viewed as priorities.

“This is one of the priority treaties that we’d like to see the Senate’s advise and consent on,” he said.

That may be difficult.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the United States had to help reduce violence without violating Americans’ right to bear arms, which is enshrined in the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

“We must work with Mexico to curtail the violence and drug trafficking on America’s southern border, and must protect Americans’ Second Amendment rights,” he said in a statement. “I look forward to working with the President to ensure we do both in a responsible way.”

The treaty has to garner 67 votes in the 100-member Senate, where lawmakers have been loathe to take on the National Rifle Association (NRA), a powerful gun lobby, despite a spate of domestic shootings that have resulted in multiple deaths.

The NRA opposes the treaty.

Wayne LaPierre, NRA executive vice president, said his organization takes “a back seat to no one” in opposing illegal arms trafficking.

“The answer is to enforce the current law. Everything these drug cartels are doing involving firearms is illegal on both sides of the border already,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Jonathan Winer, a former deputy assistant secretary of state who was the main negotiator of the treaty during the Clinton administration, said the treaty would not impose any new restrictions on legal gun sales or ownership in the United States.

“It is designed to help U.S. law enforcement track abuses of firearms of criminals back to the last lawful sale so they can determine what went wrong. It is completely consistent with all U.S. laws and does not ever impose a foreign law on a U.S. person who has abided by U.S. law,” Winer told Reuters.

(Editing by Todd Eastham; additional reporting by Richard Cowan)

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.

Obama open to discussion about CO2 rules

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama hopes to get a climate change bill on his desk this year and is open to discussing how stringent the rules of a carbon emissions trading system should be for industry, a top adviser said on Tuesday.

Nancy Sutley, chairwoman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, said the Obama administration was still studying the main climate bill in the U.S. Congress and would look at other proposals that may crop up in the coming months.

“The president asked for a bill to be sent to him this year and that’s, I think, still the hope,” she told Reuters in an interview.

U.S. Representatives Edward Markey and Henry Waxman, both Democrats, introduced a bill in March that would cut U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas linked to climate change, by 20 percent through 2020.

The Waxman-Markey bill would achieve that with a “cap-and-trade” system, which would limit the amount of CO2 that power plants or industrial users could emit. Those who cut their emissions below their allotment could sell their unused credits.

Sutley said the White House was “still evaluating the bill and looking forward to working through the legislative process.”

She said the administration was open to negotiating what percentage of permits in the cap and trade system should be sold or auctioned to industry.

“I think it’s an area for discussion,” she said when asked about Obama’s flexibility on his demand, articulated during the presidential campaign, for 100 percent auctioning.

She said the administration had not reached a “bottom line” on that issue.

Obama has indicated to business leaders that he could be flexible on the 100 percent pledge, though the White House has said he would continue to press lawmakers for that goal.

The White House has put energy reform at the top of its to-do list along with healthcare and education.

But the U.S. Senate rejected an effort to put climate change legislation on a fast track using the federal budget, making it harder for Congress to put a cap on greenhouse gas emissions this year.

The administration plans to have a cap and trade system in place by 2012, but Sutley said it was too early to say when that system could link up with an already-established one in the European Union.

EU officials are eager to have a U.S. system in place so the European scheme could expand and establish an international carbon market.

Sutley said Obama’s commitment to cutting U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, which contrasted with his predecessor, former President George W. Bush, had created a different dynamic in international talks to forge a global climate pact.

“Going into it, the difference is the U.S. wants to do something,” she said. “That’s a big new thing for the international discussions.”

(Editing by Eric Beech)

US delegation to Cuba meets Fidel Castro

Washington, April 8 (DPA) Former Cuban president Fidel Castro met Tuesday with three visiting members of the US Congress in what they called a sign that Cuba wants to open a new dialogue with Washington.

After a two-hour meeting with Castro, Congresswoman Barbara Lee told reporters in Washington that she was convinced the Cubans want to talk with Washington about normalising relations.

Lee said she would tell US President Barack Obama that the Cuban leadership, including President Raul Castro, brother of Fidel, appeared to communicate ‘their willingness and their desire to sit down and have a dialogue and discussions leading hopefully to a normal diplomatic relations.’

‘It is time to look at a new direction in our foreign policy,’ said Lee, who led the seven-member delegation primarily of members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

‘The 50-year embargo just hasn’t worked, and American citizens should have the right to travel to Cuba. It’s in our economic interest to do business with Cuba.’

Obama during his election campaign advocated a ‘new strategy’ for Cuba and could offer more changes at the summit of the Americas April 17-19 in Trinidad and Tobago.

Last week, the US Senate introduced a bill that would lift travel restrictions for US citizens to Cuba. The Congress temporarily eased travel restrictions for family members last month when it cut off money to enforce travel restrictions on families that had been further tightened under former president George W Bush.

The Congress members were the first Americans to meet with Castro since he fell ill and handed power to Raul, who met with the delegation Monday.

The delegation said that Fidel appeared to be in good health. Congresswoman Laura Richardson described him as in good spirits and said he had asked how Cubans can help Obama.

Fidel Castro wrote in a commentary published Monday that Cuba was not afraid of dialogue with the United States.

India a partner in Obama’s N-efforts?

IF US President Barack Obama is serious about reducing nuclear weapons, putting in place a global nuclear test ban and ending the production of fissile material to produce more nuclear weapons, then India will necessarily be in the frontline of such efforts. Speaking in Prague, Obama said, ” and #8230;I state clearly and with conviction America’s commitment to seek peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons and #8230;” “To put an end to Cold War thinking, we will reduce the role of nuclear weapons in our national security strategy and #8230; we will negotiate a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with the Russians this year.

” The US President also said his administration would “immediately and aggressively” pursue the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), which was rejected by the US Senate in 1999. India, which has still to sign and ratify the CTBT, having acquired de facto nuclear weapon status in 1998, would have little choice but to sign the Treaty if the Senate ratifies it.

“I don’t see why today’s India should object to signing the Treaty if the US and China ratify it,” Arundhati Ghose, former Indian ambassador and arms control expert, told HT. Ghose, however, was skeptical about Obama’s efforts to reduce global nuclear weapons. “I think he’s forgotten that the (presidential) campaign is over.

He is President of the US, which is in dire straits,” she argued. Another key area of interest is a new treaty to end the production of fissile material.

“If we are serious about stopping the spread of these weapons, then we should put an end to the dedicated production of weapons-grade materials that create them,” Obama said. “The basic bargain is sound: Countries with nuclear weapons will move towards disarmament, countries without nuclear weapons will not acquire them, and all countries can access peaceful nuclear energy.

,” he underlined. Radha Kumar, trustee at the Delhi Policy Group, said the world would have to deal with the issue of unequal levels of fissile material in the possession of nuclear weapon states.

On CTBT, Kumar said: “The logic is there for India to sign CTBT. But it remains to be seen what government takes power in Delhi.”.

Zardari says Pakistan will never give in to terrorists

Islamabad, Apr 8 (ANI): President Asif Ali Zardari today expressed Pakistan’s firm commitment to fighting extremism, and vowed to never give in to the militants and extremists.

Talking to a US Congressional delegation led by Senator John Kyl at the Aiwan-e-Sadr, Zardari said the fight against extremism cannot be won only through military means alone.

Zardari said military was only one aspect of the solution and the government has resorted to a strategy of dialogue with reconcilable elements that are willing to give up violence.

He said the international community has also realized the significance of this approach and added that same realization was also reflected in President Barack Obama’s review strategy, The News reported.

The delegation comprised members of the US Senate and House of Representative from both Republican and Democratic parties.

Matters relating to new US initiative announced by President Obama to fight militancy and terrorism in the region with focus on Afghanistan and Pakistan came under discussion.

Zardari said Pakistan appreciates the focus of international community on helping Pakistan fight militancy and extremism.

He said Pakistan needs economic assistance to help alleviate poverty besides special police force would be equipped with modern weapons and equipment. This would help fight militants and extremism more efficiently.

Referring to the upcoming meeting of Friends of Democratic Pakistan (FoDP), Zardari said he will soon be going to Tokyo to attend the meeting and he expects generous political and strategic support of the international community to Pakistan. (ANI)