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Dutch Government Collapses Over Its Stance on Troops for Afghanistan
last-ditch effort to keep Dutch troops in Afghanistan brought down the governing coalition in the Netherlands early Saturday, immediately raising fears that the Western military coalition fighting the war is increasingly at risk.
“If the Dutch go, which is the implication of all this, that could open the floodgates for other Europeans to say, ‘The Dutch are going, we can go, too,’ ” said Julian Lindley-French, professor of defense strategy at the Netherlands Defense Academy in Breda. “The implications are that the U.S. and the British are going to take on more of the load.”
The collapse of the Dutch government comes as the Obama administration continues to struggle to get European allies to commit more troops to Afghanistan to bolster its attempts to win back the country from a resurgent Taliban. President Obama has made the Afghan war a cornerstone of his foreign policy and, after months of debate, committed tens of thousands more American troops to the effort.
Read more >> | The New York Times
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 12:09 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Dutch government collapses over Afghanistan
he Dutch government collapsed in the early hours of Saturday morning over Labour's insistence that the Netherlands pull out of Afghanistan this year.
After two days of intensive talks and a bitter parliamentary debate, it had become increasingly clear the gulf between prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende and deputy prime minister Wouter Bos was too great to bridge.
Labour leader Bos stated earlier this week that he wanted a decision on Nato's request to the Netherlands to stay in Afghanistan at Friday's cabinet meeting. And that decision would have to be a no, he said repeatedly.
Balkenende said he wanted to keep all options open and was sticking to the March 1 deadline.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Dutch government collapses over Afghanistan
See also >> | Dutch cabinet, Balkenende's fourth, collapses - NRC-Hamdelsblad
See also >> | Dutch government falls over Afghanistan mission
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 11:07 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Emergency debate on Afghanistan today
rime minister Jan Peter Balkenende and deputy premier Wouter Bos will debate the future of the Dutch mission in Afghanistan in parliament this afternoon, as speculation grows that the cabinet is about to collapse.
The debate was called by Socialist Party leader Agnes Kant, who said she wanted to get to the bottom of the mixed messages being sent out by ministers.
Labour party leader Wouter Bos said on Wednesday he will categorically not support any extension to the Dutch mission in Afghanistan, despite the formal request by Nato. And he wants minister to say a final no to Nato after Friday's cabinet meeting.
But Balkenende wants Dutch soldiers to stay on past August to train local forces. 'All options are open,' the Christian Democratic party leader said.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Emergency debate on Afghanistan today
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 7:09 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Cabinet in crisis over Afghanistan
he future of the coalition government is in doubt on Thursday morning, after Labour leader and deputy prime minister Wouter Bos said he would definitely not support a continuation of the Dutch mission in Afghanistan, despite a Nato request.
Newspapers are united that the government is in trouble. 'The cabinet is in crisis, the collapse nears' is the headline in the Telegraaf following yesterday's ministerial meeting at which Bos restated his position.
'The last solider must have left Uruzgan at the end of the year. We are keeping our promise to the man in the street,' Bos told reporters after the meeting.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Cabinet in crisis over Afghanistan
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 9:44 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Dutch PM survives motion of no confidence
an Peter Balkenende has enough support in parliament to stay in office, but his problems are far from over.
For the first time in Dutch parliamentary history on Tuesday, a prime minister was confronted with a motion of no confidence that targeted him personally. Opposition members of parliament accused Jan Peter Balkenende of undermining public trust in the government.
The Christian democratic prime minister survived the motion though, as a majority of the lower house still supports him: the motion was rejected 96 to 40.
Tuesday's parliamentary debate over the findings of a special committee that investigated the reasoning behind the Dutch support for the US led invasion of Iraq in 2003 was special for another reason. The meeting closed the book on the issue after seven years, sixteen debates and ten motions that asked for an inquiry into the Dutch involvement and the Davids report that resulted from it.
Read more >> | NRC- Handelsblad International
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, Irak onderzoek, Iraq
- posted by DD @ 11:09 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
The Kingdom and the Afghan Chaos
n his quest to stabilize his country, Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai, dressed in white robes, arrived last week in Mecca on what can only be called a diplomatic pilgrimage. Although Karzai undoubtedly spent time praying at Islam’s holiest site, his mission was intended to prove more than his piety.
So what diplomatic or financial gain was Karzai seeking? Why travel to Saudi Arabia at the very moment that US President Barack Obama’s military surge has become operational? Can Saudi Arabia play a serious role in resolving his country’s increasingly bloody conflict?
By Mai Yamani
Read more >> | The Kingdom and the Afghan Chaos - Project Syndicate
Labels: Afghanistan, Foreign Policy, islam, Taliban
- posted by DD @ 11:00 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Labour says final 'no' to Afghanistan
abour leader Wouter Bos has said a final no to any further role for Dutch soldiers in Afghanistan, forcing a potential cabinet crisis.
Nato has asked the Netherlands to stay past the August 2010 deadline in a training role. But, after a meeting with other ministers on Wednesday morning, Bos said Labour would definitely oppose an extension to the Dutch mission at Friday's cabinet meeting.
Bos said his no vote is keeping the Labour party's promise to voters. 'That means there must be a negative response to Nato's request. That decision can be taken on Friday,' he said.
Bos refused to say if the decision meant the cabinet was close to collapse.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Labour says final 'no' to Afghanistan
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 3:15 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Speculation on the demise of the euro
ith the euro under siege, some economists are arguing for radical solutions, like splitting the currency in two.
Can the euro fall after all? Until recently, the scenario seemed unthinkable, but now that the European monetary union is falling apart at the seams, it suddenly seems realistic. Only 11 years after it was introduced to the financial markets, the currency has become the plaything of currency traders.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Europe - Speculation on the demise of the euro
Labels: EU Policy, Euro zone, European Union, Financial Policy
- posted by DD @ 9:25 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
The Greek Crisis and Beyond
s euro-zone leaders face growing uncertainty in financial markets about the public finances of Greece and other member countries, their statements, albeit somewhat vague, underscore a much larger story – one that will force firms and investors to question their assumptions about Europe’s economic, financial, and political environment.
Let’s first dispense with a powerful emerging myth. Greece’s troubles have encouraged some to wonder aloud if the euro zone can survive its growing internal imbalances. But such doubts ignore the political and cultural factors that buttress a deep European commitment to preserve the monetary union.
By Ian Bremmer
Read more >> | The Greek Crisis and Beyond - Project Syndicate
See also >> | Q&A With Ian Bremmer on State Capitalism - Foreign Affairs
See also >> | The Guardian
Recommended >> |
Labels: Euro zone, European Union, Financial Policy
- posted by DD @ 9:54 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Climate Science or Climate Evangelism?
s George W. Bush and Tony Blair learned the hard way, the public does not take kindly to being misled about the nature of potential threats. The after-the-fact revelation that the reasons for invading Iraq were vastly exaggerated – and in some cases completely fabricated – produced an angry backlash that helped toss the Republicans out of power in the United States in 2008 and may do the same to Britain’s Labour Party later this year.
A similar shift in global public opinion is occurring with respect to climate change. The process picked up momentum late last year, after hackers leaked thousands of e-mails from a top British research facility showing that some of the world’s most influential climatologists had been trying to disguise flaws in their work, blocking scrutiny, and plotting together to enforce what amounts to a party line on climate change. More recently, the United Nations’ respected advisory group, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has been deeply embarrassed by the revelation that some alarming predictions contained in an influential report that it released in 2007 have little or no scientific basis.
Although none of these lapses provides any reason to doubt that global warming is real, is man-made, and will create problems for us, these challenges to the IPCC are taking their toll. Indeed, recent surveys show that the public is growing steadily less trusting of the scientific consensus on global warming.
By Bjørn Lomborg
Read more >> | Climate Science or Climate Evangelism? - Project Syndicate
Labels: Climate Change, Climate research, Climategate, Copenhagen
- posted by DD @ 9:35 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Nato troop request sparks political row
conflict has again erupted in the Dutch governing coalition over the Afghanistan mission.
The Dutch governing coalition partners, Christian democrat CDA and Labour, have always disagreed on the best approach for Afghanistan and the role of the Dutch military there. Following an official request by Nato to extend the Dutch deployment in the war-torn country, two ministers are now involved in a public quarrel. Finance minister Wouter Bos and foreign affairs minister Maxime Verhagen have accused each other of disregard for the cabinet’s position on the matter.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Nato troop request sparks political row
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 10:11 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
EU leaders unified in eurozone's defence
reece told that any future financial aid would be conditional on economic reform
European Union leaders emerged from their summit in Brussels today asserting the unity of the eurozone, having told Greece that any future financial aid would be conditional on implementing budget cuts and economic reform.
The government leaders agreed to task their finance ministers with drawing up detailed plans of how financial support might be provided, in the event that Greece asks for it.
Read more >> | EU leaders unified in eurozone's defence | Policies | Economics | Management | European Voice
Labels: Euro zone, European Council, European Union
- posted by DD @ 2:43 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Scientists Respond to IPCC Backlash
ifty-five scientists from the Netherlands released the following open letter about the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and errors discovered in its 2007 report on climate change.
In the letter, they explain how the IPCC works, and how the errors drawing so much attention "do not alter the key finding that human beings are very likely changing the climate, with far reaching impacts in the long run."
Read more >> | Solve Climate
See also >> The scientist letter pdf
Labels: Climate Change, Climate research, Climategate, Copenhagen
- posted by DD @ 12:42 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Ministers clash over Nato Afghanistan letter
oreign minister Maxime Verhagen and deputy prime minister Wouter Bos appear to be heading for a showdown over Nato's call for the Netherlands to stay longer in Afghanistan.
Bos, who is leader of the Labour party, and the Christian Democrat Verhagen both outlined their position on different tv talk shows on Thursday night.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Ministers clash over Nato Afghanistan letter
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 12:27 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Training Afghan soldiers can be a violent endeavour
he Dutch government is divided about extending its military presence in Afghanistan. Sending instructors to train Afghan soldiers is an option under consideration. But training and fighting go hand in hand.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Features - Training Afghan soldiers can be a violent endeavour
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 1:56 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Sick children stuck in bureaucacy
New York Times report from Haïti.
Labels: Haïti
- posted by DD @ 11:14 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Iraq and the fig-leaf of just war theory
Discussing the Chilcot Inquiry into the invasion and occupation of Iraq on BBC Radio 5 on 20 January this year, John Rentoul, quoting Nick Cohen, challenged ‘the anti-war mob’, and more specifically Philippe Sands, to tell him how any war could be ‘illegal’. Cohen, like Rentoul, is an apologist for the Iraq War, petulant about critics who insist it was illegal. His petulance, elaborated in the article quoted below, is rooted in his (entirely correct) insistence that the murderous Sadaam Hussein regime was itself acting in ways which were plainly illegal. But my concern isn’t with whether two wrongs make a right. Rather it’s with Cohen’s ‘simple question’:
I am growing old and grey waiting for John Humphrys or Jon Snow to show a spark of journalistic life and ask Nick Clegg, Philippe Sands and all the rest of them the simple question: "What do you mean by an 'illegal war'?"
Read more >> | openDemocracy
Labels: Irak onderzoek, Iraq, Iraq Inquiry Chilcot, Just War, United Kingdom
- posted by DD @ 11:02 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
U.S. Eyes Tougher Sanctions Over Iran Nuclear Program
he Obama administration is working on a series of sanctions that would take aim at the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps of Iran, publicly singling out the organization’s vast array of companies, banks and other entities in an effort to curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
Senior White House officials described what they said would be a “systematic” effort to drive a wedge between the Iranian population and the Revolutionary Guards, which the West says is responsible for running Iran’s nuclear program and has a record of supporting militant Islamist organizations and cracking down on antigovernment protesters.
Read more >> | The New York Times
Labels: Foreign Policy, Iran, Nuclear energy, Nuclear weapons, United States
- posted by DD @ 11:01 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Nato chief: Afghanistan is only the beginning
ato has to play a bigger role in the world by collaborating with countries outside the alliance, Nato chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen told NRC Handelsblad. "Security is unimaginable without partners."
Nato secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen is the first to admit the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation has problems. For years, the alliance has underestimated the complexity of war and now it is also facing financial issues.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Features - Nato chief: Afghanistan is only the beginning
Labels: Afghanistan, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 7:02 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Cabinet admits Iraq war mistakes
he cabinet has admitted MPs could have been better informed about security service 'doubts and conjectures' about Iraq's supposed weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to the 2003 invasion.
And, in their formal response to last month's highly critical Davids commission report, ministers say they should have been more open about the US request for assistance prior to the war.
The Netherlands supported the invasion politically on the grounds that Saddam Hussein was breaking UN resolutions but did not send troops.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Cabinet admits Iraq war mistakes
Labels: Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, Irak crisis, Iraq
- posted by DD @ 6:41 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Ex-Lehman trader says EU should crack down on big banks
nstead of addressing fundamental issues like the role of finance, politicians seem stuck in assuaging public anger, argues Sony Kapoor, a financial adviser to the EU and ex-Lehman Brothers derivates trader, in an interview with EurActiv.
Kapoor, whose think-tank Re-Define has been consulted by the European Parliament and the European Commission on financial regulation, says world leaders have so far shown a lack of vision in reshaping the post-crisis financial system, arguing that it will be up to the EU's competition authorities to clean up.
Outside Brussels, national leaders are missing the bigger picture, says Kapoor, though some have come up with "politically palatable" proposals.
Read more >> | EurActive
Labels: European Union, Financial Policy
- posted by DD @ 1:21 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Europe loses seat at top table
n Washington they're not sure who's in charge. In Brussels they're squabbling. Ian Traynor reports on the EU's crisis of confidence
Read more >> | The Guardian
See also >> | Tough snub - ECFR
Labels: European Union, Foreign Policy, United States
- posted by DD @ 10:28 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Iran starts processing nuclear fuel towards weapons-grade strength
ran today started to enrich its existing nuclear fuel stockpile towards weapons grade strength.
The move caused international alarm and gave new impetus to Western calls for new sanctions on Tehran despite opposition from China, which insists that negotiations could still succeed.
"Today we started to make 20 per cent enriched nuclear fuel... in the presence of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) inspectors at Natanz," an unnamed official told Iran's Arabic-language state television, al Alam.
Read more >> | Iran starts processing nuclear fuel towards weapons-grade strength - Times Online
- posted by DD @ 10:20 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
341,956 of blank EU travel documents in criminal hands
classified Dutch government report has revealed that criminals stole 341,956 passports, identity cards, visa stickers and drivers' licences from European government facilities since 2000.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - 341,956 of blank EU travel documents in criminal hands
Labels: Criminality, EU Policy, Immigration
- posted by DD @ 10:11 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
The Euro’s Final Countdown?
he introduction of the euro in 1999, it was claimed, would narrow the economic differences between the member countries of the monetary union. Unemployment rates would converge, as would other important macroeconomic variables, such as unit labor costs, productivity, and fiscal deficits and government debt. Ultimately, the differences in wealth, measured in terms of income per capita, would diminish as well.
After the common currency’s first decade, however, increased divergence, rather than rapid convergence, has become the norm within the euro area, and tensions can be expected to increase further.
Read more >> | The Euro’s Final Countdown? - Project Syndicate
Posted using ShareThis
Labels: EU Policy, Euro zone, Financial Policy
- posted by DD @ 9:58 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Nato suggests Afghan training role
hristian Democrat and Labour MPs both support a suggestion by a Nato chief that Dutch soldiers remain in Afghanistan to train local troops, most newspapers report on Monday.
Labour has always been adamant that the Netherlands must start pulling out its forces in August, despite mounting pressure from the US and other allies for the Dutch to stay.
Read more >> | DutchNews.nl - Nato suggests Afghan training role
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 10:22 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Hirsi Ali dates professor Ferguson
ormer Dutch MP, presently exiled in the US, Hirsi Ali is said to have an affair with the internationally celebrated historian and TV presenter Niall Ferguson. He has broken up with his wife after 16 years.
The 45-year-old Harvard professor has left former newspaper editor Susan Douglas, with whom he has three children, for the Somalian-born feminist Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
Ms Hirsi Ali, 40, is a lawyer and former Dutch MP who wrote the script for a controversial film that criticised Islam and resulted in the assassination of its director. She is currently living under police protection in America.
Read more >> | Mail Online
Labels: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
- posted by DD @ 10:00 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Martens: 'Sarkozy blocked Juncker as EU president'
ilfried Martens, the chair of the largest European party, sheds light on the secretive appointment of ‘European president’ Herman Van Rompuy.
Wilfried Martens (73) is a powerful man in Brussels. As the chair of the European People’s Party, Europe’s largest political party and the former prime minister of Belgium, he played an important behind-the-scenes role in the appointment of his compatriot Herman Van Rompuy to the newly created office of permanent president of the European Council.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Europe - Martens: 'Sarkozy blocked Juncker as EU president'
Labels: European President, European Union
- posted by DD @ 5:08 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
New mistake found in UN climate report
he UN climate change panel IPCC not only wrongly predicted Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035, it also put more than half of the Netherlands below sea level.
The Dutch environment minister, Jaqueline Cramer, on Wednesday demanded a thorough investigation into the 2007 report by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change after a Dutch magazine uncovered it incorrectly states 55 percent of the country lies below sea level. The the Dutch national bureau for environmental analysis has taken responsibility for the incorrect figure cited by the IPCC. Only 26 percent of the Netherlands is really below sea level.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - New mistake found in UN climate report
Labels: Climate Change, Climategate, IPCC
- posted by DD @ 11:54 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Marry Him!
y advice is this: Settle! That’s right. Don’t worry about passion or intense connection. Don’t nix a guy based on his annoying habit of yelling “Bravo!” in movie theaters. Overlook his halitosis or abysmal sense of aesthetics. Because if you want to have the infrastructure in place to have a family, settling is the way to go. Based on my observations, in fact, settling will probably make you happier in the long run, since many of those who marry with great expectations become more disillusioned with each passing year.
Labels: Relations
- posted by DD @ 6:05 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Muddling Out of Freefall
bama wanted to bridge the divides among Americans that George W. Bush had opened. But now those divides are wider. His attempts to please everyone, so evident in the last few weeks, are likely to mollify no one.
By Joseph E. Stiglitz
Read more >> | Muddling Out of Freefall - Project Syndicate
Labels: Barack Obama, Economy, United States
- posted by DD @ 5:51 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Cabinet reaches compromise on Afghanistan
inisters have reached a compromise on extending the Dutch mission in Afghanistan past the August deadline, magazine Elsevier reports on its website, quoting cabinet sources.
The magazine says the proposal, which involves staying in Afghanistan with a much smaller force, will be discussed by the full cabinet on Friday.
DutchNews.nl - Cabinet reaches compromise on Afghanistan
Labels: Afghanistan, Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 4:21 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Investors Fear Europe’s Woes May Extend Global Slump
ust as America’s recession begins to ebb, trouble is brewing in Europe that may prolong a downturn on the Continent and ricochet through the global economy as it struggles toward a recovery.
Read more >> | The New York Times
Labels: Euro zone, European Union, Financial Policy
- posted by DD @ 11:35 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Crumbling Europe?
he worry du jour is the Iberian peninsula — Spain and Portugal. Greece is at least temporarily set aside. Watch for Ireland and Italy to join the list at some point.
The euro block may be solid at the core — France, Germany, the Netherlands — but it is vulnerable at the fringes. These countries are facing huge budget deficits and the difficulty of competing economically without devaluing their currency. If they had not joined the euro, the devaluations would have taken place some time ago. Now they cannot.
Read more >> | The New York Times
Labels: Euro zone, European Union
- posted by DD @ 11:31 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Stop perverting Anne Frank’s diary
anning the diary from schools because she wrote about sex is bizarre. But so are the attempts to turn it into a guide to life.
By Nathalie Rothschild
Read more >> | Spiked - Nathalie Rothschild
Labels: Anne Frank, Sexuality
- posted by DD @ 6:38 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
US blames Lisbon Treaty for EU summit fiasco
he US State Department has said that President Barack Obama's decision not to come to an EU summit in Madrid in May is partly due to confusion arising from the Lisbon Treaty.
State department spokesman Philip J. Crowley told press in Washington on Tuesday (2 February) that the treaty has made it unclear who the US leader should meet and when.
"Up until recently, they [summits] would occur on six-month intervals, as I recall, with one meeting in Europe and one meeting here. And that was part of – the foundation of that was the rotating presidency within the EU. Now you have a new structure regarding not only the rotating EU presidency, you've got an EU Council president, you've got a European Commission president," he said.
Read more >> | EUobserver / US blames Lisbon Treaty for EU summit fiasco
Labels: European Union, Foreign Policy, United States
- posted by DD @ 10:20 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Amazon vs. Apple: What Should E-Book Prices Be?
mazon has backed down from its weekend dispute with Macmillan, agreeing to charge the publisher's higher prices for Kindle editions rather than its preferred $9.99. But the long-term questions about e-book pricing remain.
Read more >> | The Atlantic
- posted by DD @ 9:53 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
No US-EU summit in May
S dashes Spanish plans for Madrid summit this spring.
The US government has confirmed that President Barack Obama will not meet EU leaders in Madrid this spring as planned by Spain, the current holder of the EU's rotating presidency.
Philip Gordon, the assistant secretary of state in charge of relations with Europe, told reporters in Washington yesterday (1 February) that Obama “never had on his schedule a trip for a spring US-EU summit” and that a summit in Spain “was not on his agenda in the first place”.
Read more >> | No US-EU summit in May | Policies | Foreign affairs | Americas | European Voice
Labels: European Union, Foreign Policy, United States
- posted by DD @ 12:24 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Saab’s new owner has history of unpaid debt
ictor Muller, the man behind Spyker's acquisition of Swedish car maker Saab deal, has never been shy to put other people’s money to use, sometimes losing it in the process.
Dutch sports car manufacturer Spyker last week bought Saab from its American owner General Motors, saving the Swedish auto maker from certain demise. The deal is considered so important, even the Dutch prime minister felt inclined to comment on it during his weekly press conference on Friday. „A tour de force by Victor Muller”, is how Jan Peter Balkenende called the takeover. “You need guts to pull a move like this,” said the prime minister, a long-time friend of Muller’s and fellow car aficionado.
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Saab’s new owner has history of unpaid debt
- posted by DD @ 6:51 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Deception helps illegal immigrants sneak into EU
llegal immigrants and Dutch customs officials are caught in a game of cat and mouse. The frontline: Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.
Some of them might suddenly change queues, taking their chances with an official that looks more lenient. Others may come down the escalator as a group, only to split up as soon as they enter the customs officials' line of sight. Sometimes a sloppily done necktie or a pair of white sneakers under a black suit will give them away. Sometimes the question “what is your passport number?” will. If they proceed to rattle it off, they have fallen for it, Erwin Rasterhoff, a customs official at Schiphol airport explained. “Nobody knows their passport number by heart.”
Read more >> | nrc.nl - International - Deception helps illegal immigrants sneak into EU
Labels: Immigration, Netherlands
- posted by DD @ 9:35 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Debating Defense
dozen international think tanks are organizing a worldwide on-line debate, to be held from February 4-9, in association with NATO, the European Commission, and several governments. The debate will be open not just to defense experts, but also to non-governmental organizations, development specialists, and anyone with views on where global security thinking should be headed.
The five-day Internet debate will include 10 topics, ranging from human rights to piracy, from crisis preparedness to climate change, and from development to conflict prevention. Discussion will be sparked by on-line appearances by top military, political, and civil-society leaders, who will debate with participants. Anyone interested in taking part can log on from anywhere in the world to pose questions or comment on what is being said, but they need first to sign up at www.securityjam.org.
Read more >> | Project Syndicate - Debating Defense
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Labels: EU Policy, European Union, Foreign Policy, NATO
- posted by DD @ 11:35 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
EU sticks to 20% climate target
U decides against unilateral increase in its emissions-reduction target.
The European Union today made a formal declaration to the United Nations that it will stick to its target to cut greenhouse-gas emissions by 20% by 2020.
All big-polluting countries are required to file an emissions-reduction pledge to the United Nations climate secretariat in Bonn by Sunday (31 January) at the latest, a deadline agreed at last month's summit in Copenhagen.
Read more >> | EU sticks to 20% climate target | Policies | Climate change | Politics | European Voice
Labels: Climate Change, Copenhagen
- posted by DD @ 11:12 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Trouble in the Euro Zone
he real action at Davos, I am continually assured, lies in the casual behind-the-scenes meetings. But for those of us not wealthy or famous enough to fly to Switzerland, what Davos means is the large public meetings where wealthy and powerful people get together to make lengthy but uncontroversial statements about the problems facing our little globe. It’s the spoken equivalent of “We Are the World.”
Read more >> | Trouble in the Euro Zone - The Atlantic
Labels: Davos, Euro zone, European Union
- posted by DD @ 8:04 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
Dutch minister: 'Don’t confuse integration with assimilation'
ntegration should not be confused with assimilation, the Netherlands’ European affairs minister said. “You can ask people to change their attitude according to social requirements, but you cannot ask them to change who they are,” Frans Timmermans said Wednesday, speaking with press at a roundtable meeting in Ankara.
Read more >>| Dutch minister: 'Don’t confuse integration with assimilation' - Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review
Labels: Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, integratie, Integration, Turkey
- posted by DD @ 7:42 p.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
The future of Dutch foreign policy
he investigation into the reasoning behind the Dutch support for the US-UK invasion of Iraq may well mark a post-Cold War turning point for Dutch foreign policy. The days of the taken-for-granted US-European relationship are over.
One significant finding of the investigation into the reasoning behind the Dutch support for the US-UK invasion of Iraq, published earlier this month, was the decisive role of the ‘Atlantic reflex’. The committee chaired by former supreme court judge Willibrord Davids concluded the ministry of foreign affairs had treated the question primarily as an issue of alliance with its strongest international partner, rather than an issue to be decided on merits of international law.
Read on >> | nrc.nl - International - Opinion - The future of Dutch foreign policy
Labels: Dutch politics, Foreign Policy, Irak crisis, Irak onderzoek, United States
- posted by DD @ 10:39 a.m. Perma Link/Print (0) comments
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