position:deputy assistant secretary of state

  • Exclusive: Mesa to include nine countries while prioritising Iran threat - The National

    https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/exclusive-mesa-to-include-nine-countries-while-prioritising-iran-threat-

    S Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Arabian Gulf Affairs Tim Lenderking has spent the last three weeks in shuttle regional diplomacy across the Gulf to lay the groundwork for a US-hosted summit in January that would launch the Middle East Strategic Alliance (Mesa), a concept similar to an Arab Nato.

    In an interview with The National on Wednesday, Mr Lenderking divulged details about the structure of Mesa and its long term prospects. He said besides the Gulf Cooperation Council members – Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman – the US and both Egypt and Jordan would be members of such an alliance.

    Mr Lenderking said that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be hosting a GCC + 2 meeting on the margins of United Nations General Assembly on Friday to prepare for the January summit.

    “This stems from the Riyadh summit in 2017 where everyone agreed that the US and the GCC would meet on an annual basis...we added on top of that the keen interest on both sides in building Mesa,” Mr Lenderking explained. The alliance would be based on a security, economic and political agreement that would bind together the GCC countries, along with the US, Egypt and Jordan.

    Notwithstanding the different policy priorities within the GCC itself, Mr Lenderking said the idea of Mesa is “it builds a good strong shield against threats in the Gulf,” naming Iran, cyber concerns, attacks on infrastructure, and coordinating conflict management from Syria to Yemen as part of its agenda.

    “The more we have coordinated efforts, the more effective in enhancing stability,” he said, adding that Iran was the “number one threat” on the Mesa list.

    The senior US official confirmed that the US would be part of the alliance and “we [US] would like to agree on the concept of Mesa by the January summit.”

    He cautioned, however, that these conversations are still in their early stages and “if we find we need to change dates we need to be flexible on that”.

  • U.S. launches long-awaited missile defense shield - CNNPolitics.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/2016/05/11/politics/nato-missile-defense-romania-poland

    The U.S. launched a new ground-based missile defense system in Romania Thursday, sparking fresh tensions with Russia, which quickly blasted the system as a threat to its security.

    The system, to be operated by NATO, is getting up and running nearly a decade after the U.S. first announced plans to do so, only to encounter pushback from Russia. The U.S. has long insisted that the shield is directed against rogue states like Iran and not intended to target Moscow’s missiles, but Russian officials have slammed the move as an “attempt to destroy the strategic balance” in Europe.
    The United States’ Aegis ashore system is declared certified for operations,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday at the ceremony launching the system.

    Missile defense is for defense,” he added. “It does not undermine or weaken Russia’s strategic nuclear deterrent.
    Russia has described the U.S. anti-missile shield in Europe as a “threat” and says it is taking “protective measures” to guard against it, the country’s state news agency TASS reported.
    President Barack Obama scrapped the George W. Bush administration’s planned bilateral deployment of a different system to Poland and the Czech Republic and has instead pursued a NATO-centric approach using alternate technology.

    The system is to be turned over to NATO command and will be housed at a U.S. naval support facility in Deveselu, Romania, the site of a Romanian military base. Construction will begin on an additional anti-missile platform in Poland on Friday.

    The Aegis Ashore Missile Defense System unveiled Thursday is capable of firing SM-3 defensive missiles that can “defeat incoming short and medium range enemy missiles,” according to Lt. Shawn Eklund, a spokesman for the U.S. Navy.

    Eklund told CNN that the facility will be manned by approximately 130 U.S. sailors. The inaugural ceremony for the new system will be attended by top U.S. and NATO military officials.
    The Romania installation is the first land-based defensive missile launcher in Europe and will join other elements of the NATO defensive shield, including a command-and-control center at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, a radar installation in Turkey and four ships capable of identifying enemy missiles and firing their own SM-3s based in Rota, Spain.

    The U.S. and NATO have continually stressed that the system is intended to defend Europe from Iran and its expanding arsenal. Tehran has continued to test-fire ballistic missiles following the internationally negotiated deal to limit its nuclear program.
    But Russia has dismissed the justification.

    From the very outset we kept saying that in the opinion of our experts the deployment of an anti-missile defense poses a threat to Russia,” Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, according to the Tass News Agency. “The question is not whether measures will be taken or not; measures are being taken to maintain Russia’s security at the necessary level.

    Russia believes the missile defense system breaches a 1987 agreement it signed with the U.S.

    In October, at a meeting of the meeting of the Valdai International Discussion Club in Russia, Russian President Vladimir accused the U.S. of “lying” about a “hypothetical Iranian threat, which never existed” and called the system “an attempt to destroy the strategic balance.

    At a Wednesday press conference in Romania, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Frank Rose pushed back on Putin’s perspective.
    Russia has repeatedly raised concerns that U.S. and NATO missile defenses are directed against Russia and represent a threat to its strategic nuclear deterrent,” he said. “Nothing could be further from the truth.

    He added that the “U.S. and NATO missile defense systems are directed against ballistic missile threats outside the Euro-Atlantic area. NATO and the United States have explained this to Russia many times over the years.

    Heather Conley, the director of the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, told CNN that Russia has previously suggested that it could retaliate for the missile defense system by stationing S-300 surface-to-air missile systems in Crimea and Kaliningrad, its European enclave located between Poland and Lithuania.
    […]
    But she added, “Despite an incredible amount of consultations with Russia, the Russians never bought the argument that the system was not directed at them.”

  • La visite du conseiller états-unien est reportée à plus tard.

    Thomas Melia est « assistant secrétaire d’État adjoint » ( Deputy Assistant Secretary of State )
    U.S. Delegation’s Azeri Visit Canceled At Baku’s Request
    http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-us-visit-cancellation/25099969.html

    A visit by a U.S. delegation to Azerbaijan has been postponed until after the country’s October 9 presidential election.
     
    A spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Baku said the visit, which was to have been led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Melia, was postponed at the request of the Azerbaijani government. No reason was given.
     
    The delegation had been expected in Baku from the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, on September 9 to observe preparations for the presidential poll.
     
    In Tbilisi, Melia’s delegation met with officials to discuss preparations for Georgia’s October 27 presidential election. The U.S. Embassy in Baku expressed regret and added that the embassy continues to monitor the preelection environment in Azerbaijan and to encourage a free and fair electoral process.

    Peut-être y a-t-il un lien avec ses déclarations répétées sur l’amélioration souhaitable du climat démocratique en Azerbaïdjan ; la dernière (?) datant d’il y a 2 mois.

    U.S. Urges Baku To Take ’Bold Steps’ Ahead Of Election (17/07/13)
    http://www.rferl.org/content/melia-azerbaijan-vote-us-helsinki/25048446.html

    The United States has urged Azerbaijan to take “bold steps to improve the political environment” ahead of the country’s presidential election in October.

    Thomas Melia, the deputy assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights, and labor, said facilitating free and fair elections “doesn’t take place on election day, but throughout these next several months.”

    Melia was speaking at a U.S. Helsinki Commission hearing on Azerbaijan on July 16 alongside Azerbaijani opposition figures and government officials.

    He said things Azerbaijan “could do tomorrow” include releasing detained opposition politician Ilgar Mammadov, registering the EMDS election monitoring organization, and keeping promises to invite election observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe

    Sa notice WP http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_O._Melia

  • Chorus grows against Obama administration’s sanctions-heavy Iran policy - CSMonitor.com
    http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2013/0425/Chorus-grows-against-Obama-administration-s-sanctions-heavy-Iran-policy

    The Obama administration’s effort to end Iran’s nuclear program has focused on punitive measures, with little diplomatic outreach. Critics say this jeopardizes negotiations.

    ...

    “I was in the [State] Department when they kept talking about the so-called two-track policy, and it was clear the whole thing was nonsense, there never were two tracks,” says John Limbert, the former US deputy assistant secretary of state for Iran from 2009 to 2010.

    “The sanctions took all the air out of the room. It was 95 percent sanctions, and that was on a good day.”

    ...

  • Chris Hedges Resigns From Human Rights Organization PEN - Truthdig
    http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/chris_hedges_resigns_from_human_rights_organization_pen_20130401

    The Truthdig columnist was scheduled to speak at events sponsored by PEN American Center next month, but he has resigned his membership in the writers’ organization over its executive director, Suzanne Nossel, a former aide to Hillary Clinton who may have coined the term “soft power.”

    (...)

    In addition to working for the State Department under Hillary Clinton as deputy assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs, Nossel has worked as executive director of Amnesty International USA, and for Human Rights Watch and The Wall Street Journal.

  • The Secret History of America’s Thirty-Year Conflict with Iran
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2012/al-monitor/the-secret-history-of-americas-t.html

    In Bush’s second term, Cheney’s daughter, Elizabeth, a deputy assistant secretary of State, lectured US Foreign Service officers “including those fluent in Farsi” about “the nature of Iranian society and its government” even though she “had no background on Iran,” Crist writes. The lectures were delivered to the “Iran-Syria Working Group, an interagency body co-chaired by Cheney and Elliott Abrams, a neoconservative in the Bush White House.

    (via @angryarab)