position:diplomat

  • Erdogan n’a pas aimé la visite de Brett Mc Gurk à Kobané. Ni non plus la jolie photo souvenir qui a émergé sur twitter : http://seenthis.net/messages/456795#message456837
    Certes Brett avait fait des efforts pour ne pas mentionner sur les réseaux sociaux le nom ni un insigne du YPG, lorsqu’il a évoqué son voyage à Kobané à la veille des pourparlers de Genève dont le YPG était exclu. Seulement une rencontre avec les SDF, ce qui est très différent comme chacun sait : http://seenthis.net/messages/456490
    Erdogan calls on US to choose between Turkey or Syrian Kurds
    http://news.yahoo.com/erdogan-calls-us-choose-between-turkey-syrian-kurds-145705967.html?soc_s

    Istanbul (AFP) - Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed anger over a US official’s visit to a Kurdish militia group controlling the Syrian town of Kobane, urging Washington to choose between Turkey and the “terrorists” there.
    A delegation including senior US diplomat Brett McGurk, special envoy to an international coalition fighting IS in Syria and Iraq, last week met members of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), a powerful militia that is in control of Kobane.
    The meetings come after the YPG’s political wing, the Democratic Union Party (PYD), was excluded from new peace talks in Geneva being organised by the UN. Ankara had threatened to boycott the talks if PYD was invited.
    “He visits Kobane at the time of the Geneva talks and is awarded a plaque by a so-called YPG general?” Erdogan told reporters on his plane returning from a trip to Latin America and to Senegal.

    #YPG #SDF #Erdogan

  • Europe Gives Greece 6 Weeks to Stop Migrant Flow | GreekReporter.com
    http://greece.greekreporter.com/2016/01/25/europe-gives-greece-6-weeks-to-stop-migrant-flow

    Europe is about to warn Greece that it has six weeks to stop migrants crossing from Turkey or it will be forced out of the Schengen zone for two years, says a London Times report.
    Germany, Austria, Belgium, Sweden and Denmark will warn on Monday that Greece has six weeks to stop migrants crossing from Turkey or it will be “quarantined” outside the borderless Schengen zone.
    European Commission on Migration Dimitris Avramopoulos has repeatedly stated that European Union law does not allow for a country to be forced out of the Schengen zone.
    “If the Athens government does not finally do more to secure the external borders then one must openly discuss Greece’s temporary exclusion from the Schengen zone,” Johanna Mikl-Leitner, Austria’s interior minister, told Welt am Sonntag last week. “It is a myth that the Greco-Turkish border cannot be controlled.” Northern European countries have expressed similar sentiments on the issue.
    A meeting of European interior ministers will discuss plans for Greece to be sealed off for two years behind a new EU external border in the Balkans.
    According to the report, there is a plan B discussed for the EU’s passport-free Schengen area. The plan says that Europe’s external border would become Slovenia, Croatia and Hungary, staffed by EU border guards with powers to turn back migrants heading to Germany or Sweden.
    Asylum seekers not prepared to stay in Slovenia, Croatia or Hungary to be processed would be pushed back to Greece and Turkey. With the help of armed EU border guards, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia is building a three-meter razor-wire fence along its border with Greece.
    “The easiest plan is to put Greece in sealed quarantine,” an EU diplomat told The Times.
    In order to expedite processing migrants who make it through the Balkans, Germany is discussing setting up registration centers along the frontier with Austria to speed up the repatriation of non-qualifying asylum seekers.

  • In #Ukraine, #Google translates Russia as ‘Mordor’ and top diplomat’s name as ‘sad little horse’ - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/01/05/where-is-russia-actually-mordor-in-the-world-of-google-translate

    Those who tried to use Google Translate to switch Ukrainian into Russian this week may have found an unexpected message in their documents: The “Russian Federation” turned into “Mordor,” and Russia’s top diplomat was translated as a “sad little horse.”

    It was unclear whether the cheeky messages were the result of a hack or someone at Google trying to send a message, and the problem was solved by late afternoon Tuesday, Moscow time. But the problem persisted for at least a day, according to Ukrainian media.

    A “Russian” was also translated as an “occupant.” No word yet on whether Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has lodged an official complaint over his last name being translated as “sad little horse,” or “grustnaya loshadka.”

    #Google_translate hack

  • An Israeli Pivot to Eurasia? | The Diplomat
    http://thediplomat.com/2015/12/an-israeli-pivot-to-eurasia

    There are limits to Israel-Kazakhstan cooperation, however. Iran is the most conspicuous area of divergence between Astana and Jerusalem. The Kazakh government consistently resists demands from both Iran and Israel to take a side in their longstanding disputes. In sharp contrast with Israel, Kazakhstan greeted the nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1 powers with praise. Kazakhstan greatly values its relationship with Iran and perceives Tehran as a natural partner on a range of projects. In the area of Europe-bound natural gas exports, Iran could provide the Central Asian republics with an alternative path to Russian-controlled pipelines and the ever-controversial Trans-Caspian route. Astana already cooperates with Tehran on other infrastructure projects. December 2014, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Iran inaugurated a new railway link, which could carry 20 million tons in trilateral trade by 2020 (compared to 3 million tons in 2014).

  • Daniel Ramamoorthy hates when people ask “Where are you from?” It’s a difficult question to answer when you’ve never spent more than a few years in any one country.
    James Sweeney and Ellen Baker: ‘The feeling of the city and the whole vibe is so New York but it’s cleaner, friendlier, smaller, cheaper.’ Photograph: Cyril ByrneNew to the Parish: ‘We love Dublin. It’s like a mini New York’
    Ovidiu Miron and his wife, Luminita, with their children, Tudor, Vlad and Stefan, at home in Clarehall, Dublin. Photograph: Dara Mac DónaillNew to the Parish: ‘I don’t want my sons to lose their Romanian heritage’
    Gareth and Emma, who were born with a very rare condition called Moebius syndrome, which means they struggle to make facial expressions, blink or move their eyes laterally. Photograph: Alan Betson New to the Parish: ‘We didn’t get together because of our condition but because we fell in love’
    Zeenie Summers: struggled with depression and homelessness in Galway, but found solace in singing and dress-making. Photograph: Sara Freund New to the Parish: ‘I didn’t know I was black until I came to Ireland’
    Chandrika Narayanan-Mohan: ‘Dublin’s small enough that you can actually be someone here.’ Photograph: Alan Betson New to the Parish: ‘I could have been the worst human being ever’
    Nacho Valdes: “When I was in Mexico working as an accountant I thought I was the best in the world. But trust me, I’m happier now.” Photograph: Dave MeehanNew to the Parish: ‘Even the drug addicts here are friendly’
    “I’m not a fan because implied within that question is that you don’t belong,” says Ramamoorthy, who was born in the United Arab Emirates to Indian parents. His father’s job as a diplomat meant the family moved around the world from Yemen to France, Algeria to India, Zimbabwe to Morocco.
    “If it’s where I was born, it’s the UAE. If it’s where my passport is from or where I look like I’m from, then it’s India. If it’s where my accent’s from, then it’s predominantly American. If it’s the kind of music I appreciate the most, then I’d be a black American gospel singer.”
    “Where I’m from is where I’ve spent the longest, and that would be Ireland, because the last five years is the longest I’ve ever spent in any country.”
    Ramamoorthy says he feels more at home in Ireland than in any of the other 10 cities he has lived in. “I’m a complicated mix of the different cultures, people and experiences I’ve had in all those places.”
    When he was 11, Ramamoorthy’s family relocated to India. He was excited to finally live in the country his family represented around the world, but quickly discovered he did not feel Indian. “I felt rejected. It was really tough not being welcomed in my own homeland.”
    Only after moving to Zimbabwe as a teenager did he begin to feel comfortable in his own skin. It was during his time in Africa that he “came to faith” and began to embrace his parents’ Christian religion.
    “Zimbabwe was a fresh start in my life. It’s probably my second home after Ireland. I was learning to appreciate nature and my role as a human in a very complicated and beautiful world.”
    His father, who came from one of the lowest levels of the Hindu caste system, converted to Christianity as an adult. Daniel remembers visiting his father’s home, a small village down a dirt road in rural India where people lived in tin huts with thatched walls.
    “We would sit on the floor cross-legged for hours, until I could no longer feel my legs. I never understood what they said because they didn’t speak the language I know. My entire life, every time I visit his family, I sit and smile and have no idea what they say.” from http://www.bridesmaidie.com

  • European diplomat claims world will condemn Ukraine if it does not investigate murders on Maidan, in Odesa
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine-abroad/european-diplomat-claims-world-will-condemn-ukraine-if-it-does-not-investi

    Ukraine will face international condemnation if Kyiv ignores the remarks of the Council of Europe experts concerning the investigation into the events on Maidan, the tragedy in Odesa in 2014, Director of Human Rights, Special Advisor to the Council of Europe’s Secretary General for Ukraine Christos Giakoumopoulos has stated.

    (brève)

  • Sarkozy’s Russian fling – POLITICO
    http://www.politico.eu/article/sarkozy-russia-fling-putin-nato-united-states

    Once upon a time, Nicolas Sarkozy was such a fervent admirer of the United States that an American diplomat described him in 2009 as “the most pro-American French president since World War II,” according to a Wikileaks embassy cable.

    That version of Sarkozy seems to be lost, replaced by one whose gaze points east. On Thursday, the conservative leader of the “Républicains” party is heading with a small delegation to Moscow, where he will sit down for a face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    A party official traveling with Sarkozy to Moscow described the trip as little more than a courtesy visit to Putin, whom Sarkozy has taken to calling a “friend” since he left office three years ago.

    This is about a leader of the opposition who is going to meet a head of state with whom he worked very closely while he was president,” said Thierry Mariani, a Russophile MEP in Sarkozy’s party, as he was about to board a plane to Moscow. “[Putin] is one of the personal contacts that Sarkozy has kept since he left office.

    Il ne viendrait évidemment à l’idée de personne que le probable candidat futur à l’élection présidentielle viendrait demander un petit soutien à cet autre grand ami de la démocratie.

  • Poutine, âme d’airain, forêts de pins, guerre et paix | Par M.K. Bhadrakumar – Le 19 octobre 2015 – Source mkbhadarkumar | Traduit par jj, relu par Diane pour le Saker Francophone
    http://lesakerfrancophone.net/poutine-ame-dairain-forets-de-pins-guerre-et-paix

    (...) Ma seconde considération était que la Russie a encaissé le coup du lapin de la nouvelle guerre froide et il est important d’obtenir une sensation de première main sur la façon dont il a réussi à surmonter le coup – et, enfin, à inverser la marée – de la stratégie de confinement tentée par les États-Unis. Bien sûr, il a dû sembler évident pour l’administration de Barack Obama, tout au long de l’affaire, que le projet d’isoler une grande puissance comme la Russie était voué à l’échec. Mais alors, Obama a été béni par le don de l’éloquence et a presque réussi à faire croire à un monde crédule qu’il était sérieux au sujet de l’aventure dans laquelle il se lançait. En fait, dans le processus, quelque chose a changé dans la mentalité russe. L’airain est entré dans son âme, et cela se reflète dans la conduite de la Russie sur la scène mondiale.

    Nous avons entendu tellement de lamentations américaines sur une Chine s’affirmant avec autorité. Mais nous n’avions pas encore vu à l’œuvre ce qu’est l’affirmation de soi tant que vous n’avions pas vu le retour de la Russie sur la scène mondiale. Est-ce une bonne chose ? Je pense que oui. Parce que, l’affirmation de soi de la Russie est une garantie de paix. L’équilibre stratégique mondial est extrêmement important pour maintenir la paix et seule la Russie peut fournir les bases de équilibre. Encore une fois, les règles de conduite internationale fondamentales doivent respecter le droit international et la Charte des Nations Unies. Le système international ne peut plus du tout être dominé par une superpuissance. L’insistance de la Russie sur ces règles de base introduit un mécanisme de correction bien nécessaire dans le système international d’aujourd’hui. (...)

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    Putin makes his move on Syria
    M K Bhadrakumar in Sochi
    October 22, 2015 16:59 IST
    http://www.rediff.com/news/column/putin-makes-his-move-on-syria-/20151022.htm

    The sudden, unexpected meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad in Moscow late Tuesday, October 20, focused on the diplomatic push to kickstart a political process, according to prominent Russian experts here.

    As a top Russian diplomat, Ambassador Alexander Aksenyonok (who was involved in the negotiations over the Dayton Accord) told me in Sochi today, October 22, Moscow is keen on a political settlement in Syria “as early as possible — which is also our exit strategy.”

    From all accounts, the meeting in Moscow on Tuesday took place in an exceptionally warm, friendly atmosphere. Assad had come at short notice at Putin’s invitation. The two leaders held delegation- level talks as well as a restricted meeting.

    The official transcript by the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying to Assad, ’On the question of a settlement in Syria, our position is that positive results in military operations will lay the base for then working out a long-term settlement based on a political process that involves all political forces, ethnic and religious groups.’

    ’Ultimately,’ Putin added, ’it is the Syrian people alone who must have the deciding voice here. Syria is Russia’s friend and we are ready to make our contribution not only to the military operations and the fight against terrorism, but also to the political process. We would do this, of course, in close contact with the other global powers and with the countries in the region that want to see a peaceful settlement to this conflict.’

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    Russia, Iran hold common views on Syria
    M K Bhadrakumar – October 23, 2015
    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar

    Sochi – It turned out to be a real treat that the speaker of the Iranian parliament who is on a visit to Russia, Ali Larijani (a key figure in the foreign and security policymaking in Tehran) flew down to Sochi from Moscow and joined President Vladimir Putin on the podium Friday evening to address the Valdai Club members and have a Q&A with us, lasting nearly three hours. Syria, Ukraine, missile defence and Russian-American relations — it could have been predicted that these would be the areas of interest for the audience, which was almost entirely western.

    The ‘hot topic’ of course was Syria, given President Bashar al-Assad’s sudden visit to Moscow on Tuesday evening. (See my column in Rediff Putin make his move on Syria.) The salience that came through is that there is no daylight possible between the Russian and Iranian positions on Syria. Whereas, speculations were rife lately in the western (and Israeli) media that Russia and Iran are not on the same page regarding the future of Syria, and that it is a matter of time before the contradictions would surface.

    Indeed, Russia and Iran are pursuing different objectives in Syria insofar as although both are waging a war against the Islamic State [IS] and other extremist groups, Tehran also has an agenda toward Syria in terms of that country being a frontline state in the so-called ‘resistance’ against Israel as well as in terms of Tehran’s nexus with the Hezbollah in Lebanon (plus of course the rivalry with Saudi Arabia.) Again, Russia would have geopolitical considerations in Syria, whereas Iran has its commitments as an Islamic republic to fulfill. Putin made the following specific points:

    – The Russian military assesses that the air strikes in Syria have already yielded some results, although they are ‘insufficient’ and it will still be desirable if ‘all countries’ could work together in the fight against the terrorist groups.
    – Russia hopes that Iran will join the FM level talks between the US, Russia, Turkey and Saudi Arabia. There cannot be a solution on Syria without Iran’s participation.
    – The Syrian army is making progress and this will continue.
    – Moscow is not planning any extension of military operations to Iraq. At any rate, the Iraqi government has not approached Russia so far. For the present, Russia is providing arms and intelligence to Iraq within the framework of the coordination centre that has been set up in Baghdad.
    – Putin had asked Assad whether he’d be open to working with moderate rebel groups to fight the extremists; Assad promised to consider.

    Larijani said:

    – He “totally agreed” with Putin’s analysis on Syria.
    – Iran regards that the Russian military intervention in Syria is legitimate.
    – Compared to the operations against the IS for over the past year and more by the US-led coalition, the Russian operations have proved effective. In fact, Russia has achieved already “much more” than the US-led coalition ever could during the past 18 months.
    – The IS transports its Iraqi oil in trucks moving in long convoys. “Don’t the Americans see these convoys?” The US failed to liberate any IS-held territory in Iraq. It is “playing games” with the IS and is virtually “handing over” Iraqi territories to the IS.
    – The intelligence agencies of “some major powers” have secret dealings with the IS, providing them weapons and so on with a view to use them as instruments to advance their interests. (Putin also indirectly, but forcefully, alluded to this collusion between the US and the IS.) The IS gets huge financial support from regional states.
    – “Long-term strategic bonds” are needed among “responsible countries” so that trust develops amongst them to tackle terrorism.(...)

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    Syrian war ends West’s dominance of Middle East
    By M K Bhadrakumar – October 26, 2015
    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2015/10/26/syrian-war-ends-wests-dominance-of-middle-east

    Three weeks and 5 days into the Russian military operations in Syria, Moscow has achieved the objective of compelling the major external players involved to rethink their established stance on the crisis. Unsurprisingly, new fault lines have appeared in Middle East politics. Last week witnessed a surge diplomatic activity to cope with the new fault lines.

    First, of course, much as the United States dislikes the Russian military role in Syria, Washington and Moscow concluded a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday regarding the ground rules guiding the aircraft of the two countries operating in the Syrian skies so that no untoward incidents occur. In political terms, Washington is coming to terms with a Russian presence in Syria for a foreseeable future. (By the way, an analysis by FT concludes that Russia can easily sustain the financial costs of the military operations in Syria.)

    This, in turn, has intensified the US-Russian diplomatic exchanges on Syria. The US Secretary of State John Kerry met his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov in Vienna on Friday at a meeting that also included the foreign ministers of Turkey and Saudi Arabia to discuss the various approaches to bringing together the Syrian parties to peace talks.

    Kerry disclosed that the discussions may continue in a wider format (possibly including Iran, Egypt and Jordan as well) next Friday, which suggests that there was sufficient meat in the discussions in Vienna to be followed up without delay. Put differently, some sort of coordinated US-Russian moves on Syria in the coming days or weeks cannot be ruled out. (...)

    #Valdai #Larijani

    • Dans le dernier texte MK Bhadrakumar écrit :

      Meanwhile, Egypt and Jordan have edged closer to Moscow. Russia and Jordan have agreed, in fact, to set up a coordination centre to cooperate on the ground in the fight against the Islamic State. This is a signal diplomatic achievement for Moscow since Jordan has been the ‘frontline’ state from where the ‘regime change’ agenda was being pushed into Syria by the US and its allies. In effect, Jordan has pulled out of the enterprise to overthrow Assad.

      As for Egypt, it has spoken in favor of the Russian operations in Syria and has stated that the fight against terrorism ought to be the top priority, and, furthermore, that Syria’s unity and stability is of utmost concern. Egypt’s stance has displeased Saudi Arabia, which explains the hurried trip by Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir to Cairo on Sunday. It appears that Al-Jubeir could not persuade Egypt to fall in line with the Saudi approach, which continues to be fixated on the pre-requisite that Assad must be removed from power and that in any peace process that comes first.

      Ta ta ta ta L’Egypte qui se rapproche de la Russie quitte à mécontenter l’Arabie Saoudite qui doit normalement payer les deux Mistrals, commandés par la Russie, à la France....

  • French diplomatic plan to permit elections in eastern Ukraine | News | DW.COM | 02.10.2015
    http://www.dw.com/en/french-diplomatic-plan-to-permit-elections-in-eastern-ukraine/a-18756787

    The dispute over elections in Donbass in eastern Ukraine has threatened to undermine the Minsk agreement signed between Ukraine and pro-Moscow rebels. As the leaders of France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine meet in Paris, veteran French diplomat Pierre Morel has presented a plan which could allow the elections to take place.
    Until now, the government in Kyiv has insisted that local elections due to be held on October 25 should be held according to Ukrainian law in Donbass.
    But the self-proclaimed “People’s Republic of Donetsk and Luhansk” has set a different date, and does not intend to consult Kyiv on the vote.

    Morel is chairman of the working group on political affairs of the Trilateral Contact Group (TCG), consisting of representatives from Ukraine, the Russian Federation and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). It is engaged in finding a peaceful solution to the conflict in Donbass.
    Morel’s plan proposes that elections would be held in compliance with Ukrainian law, as Kyiv wishes, but that the “People’s Republic” would have the possibility of staging them according to their own rules. The diplomat believes this would free the way to implementation of hte Minsk Protocol. It stipulates that Donbass remain part of Ukraine and that Kyiv restores its sovereignty over the region.

    Kyiv is not enthusiastic about Morel’s plan. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said that he considers it to be nothing more than “Morel’s personal opinion.
    Oleksiy Makeyev from the Ukrainian foreign office was less dismissive when he told Deutsche Welle that Ukraine does not reject the “Morel Plan” out of hand, and that it could consider it as one among several proposals. Nevertheless, he went on to emphasize, that for Kyiv, the Minsk Protocol remains the guiding document.
    But other participants in the “Normandy format,” a diplomatic group consisting of senior representatives from Germany, the Russian Federation, Ukraine and France, view things differently.
    The German foreign office stated that Berlin considers the “Morel Plan” to be the basis for a further step towards a solution to the Donbass conflict. That statement reflects the sentiments that German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier expressed after talks with the foreign ministers of the “Normandy format” in Berlin, on September 12.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also proposed supporting Morel’s idea. In a statement to DW and the French foreign office indicated their approval of the plan as well.

    In Ukraine the “Morel Plan” is seen as an ultimatum. Maria Solkina of the “Democratic Initiatives Foundation,” a Kyiv based research center, told DW that Western partners were forcing Kyiv into a compromise and using the leverage of economic and political dependency on the West to that end.
    Solkina warned that if the Ukrainian leadership were to go along with the “Morel Plan” the “quasi republic” would automatically be recognized. “Ultimately, we would have to support the region economically, but would have no say there politically,” she said.

  • US government hack stole fingerprints of 5.6 million federal employees | Technology | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/sep/23/us-government-hack-stole-fingerprints

    The number of people applying for or receiving security clearances whose fingerprint images were stolen in one of the worst government data breaches is now believed to be 5.6 million, not 1.1 million as first thought, the Office of Personnel Management announced on Wednesday.

    The agency was the victim of what the US believes was a Chinese espionage operation that affected an estimated 21.5 million current and former federal employees or job applicants. The theft could give Chinese intelligence a huge leg up in recruiting informants inside the US government, experts believe. It also could help the Chinese identify US spies abroad, according to American officials.

    The White House has said it’s going to discuss cybersecurity with Chinese president Xi Jinping when he visits Barack Obama later this week.

    • Blog: OPM fingerprint hack 5 times worse than previously thought
      http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2015/09/opm_fingerprint_hack_5_times_worse_than_previously_thought.html

      The hack of personal information from the Office of Personnel Management is easily the most underreported big story of the year, and a catastrophe that will directly affect our national security for years to come.

      At first, the OPM admitted that a few million records had been exposed. Then it become 14 million. Now it’s up to 21 million federal employees, contractors, and, in many cases, their families. Social Security numbers, personal medical information, background checks – all have been exposed to the hackers, thought to work for the Chinese government.

      The agency’s original estimate was 1.1 million fingerprints.

      This is extremely sensitive information that poses an immediate danger to American spies and undercover law enforcement agents.

      As an OPM spokesman told CNNMoney in July: “It’s across federal agencies. It’s everybody.

      Hackers now have a gigantic database of American government employee fingerprints that can be used to positively identify those employees.

      Anyone with these records could check to see if a diplomat at a U.S. embassy is secretly an employee of an American intelligence agency. That person could then be targeted for arrest or assassination.

    • Clapper: ‘We Don’t Know Exactly What Was Taken in the OPM Breach’ | Foreign Policy
      http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/09/24/clapper-we-dont-know-exactly-what-was-taken-in-the-opm-breach

      We don’t actually know what was actually exfiltrated,” Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said during an appearance at Georgetown University. “So what you’re hearing about is absolutely the worst case.

      On Wednesday, OPM revealed that as many as 5.6 million fingerprint records were among the data stolen in a breach disclosed in June. That’s up from their previous estimate of 1.1 million fingerprint records. The 5.6 million people whose fingerprint records were compromised are a subset of the total number of people whose records were stolen from OPM. The total number of people whose records — including documents gathered during the course of background investigations for current, former, and prospective federal employees seeking security clearances — were compromised remains at 21.5 million.
      […]
      Clapper has said previously that the U.S. government has no indication that the stolen information has been used against American agents, and said Thursday that the intelligence community has been searching for “evidence of it turning up some place,” but it so far hasn’t.

  • Saudi abuse scandal rocks India — New Internationalist
    http://newint.org/blog/2015/09/21/saudi-maid-abuse-india

    Last week there was an uproar from the Indian human rights lobby in general and women’s groups in particular when news broke about the abuse of 2 Nepali women used as sex slaves by a Saudi diplomat stationed in New Delhi.

    The women, who had originally been promised employment as maids, had been imprisoned in the diplomat’s luxury flat, tortured, starved, raped, sodomized, abused and beaten. They were also forced to provide sex for the diplomat’s friends when he so commanded them. One finally managed to escape and alerted the police and a human rights NGO. The Saudi diplomat’s wife reportedly had the gall to verbally abuse the police who raided the flat.

    #immunité #impunité #viol #culture_du_viol

    • The 2 Nepali women made headlines briefly. Their story will be forgotten tomorrow. India has hundreds of thousands of trafficked Nepali sex workers. East European women are provided to the wealthy in Goa and Delhi. Wave after wave of women continue to suffer.

  • EU splits in Russian media war – POLITICO
    http://www.politico.eu/article/eu-russia-propaganda-kremlin-media

    New EU task force hobbled by low funding, lack of political support.

    By JAMES PANICHI 9/17/15, 5:30 AM CET Updated 9/17/15, 8:31 AM CET

    Even as the EU mobilizes to fight Russian propaganda, European governments are fighting each other over the best way to go about it.

    A new effort by Brussels to monitor and respond to the perceived bias of Kremlin-controlled media such as Russia 24 or Sputnik has exposed familiar fissures on the Continent.

    As the Russia media task force known as #East_Stratcom begins operating at the end of this month, a new alternative project has emerged and is gaining some traction with countries that are dissatisfied with the existing EU initiative.

    The divisions reflect deep-seated foreign policy differences within the 28-member bloc that came to surface after Vladimir Putin annexed Crimea last year and stirred up a violent conflict in eastern Ukraine.

    People involved with East Stratcom say the team has been told to stick to a narrow mandate so as not to upset the delicate balance on Russia. The media rapid-response unit is part of the European External Action Service (EEAS), the EU’s version of a foreign ministry.

    According to one East Stratcom member, the office culture is “cautious” and the Russian-language experts are under orders to “fly under the radar” to avoid antagonizing EU governments that are looking to tone down tensions with Russia.

    Those on the unit say the lack of a separate budget for it, insufficient resources and lukewarm support from some EU countries are hindering the counter-propaganda campaign.

    Not all member states wanted this team — we are not even sure that [former Italian foreign minister and current EU foreign affairs chief Federica] Mogherini wanted this team,” a member of the unit said.
    […]
    The EEAS has not released details of the team’s make-up. It is headed by Giles Portman, a British career diplomat who has spent the past eight years working on EU relations with Turkey. Portman reports to Michael Mann, the head of the EEAS’s strategic communications team who was a spokesman for former high representative Catherine Ashton.
    […]
    The sources said the unit includes five Russian-language specialists sent to Brussels from EU states: a Czech, a British national (in addition to Portman), a Dane, an Estonian and a Latvian. They will not become permanent members of staff, but have signed one-year contracts which can be extended for up to four years. Their salaries are paid by their individual governments. Sources say the EEAS has provided four of its own staffers to work with the task force.

    EEAS refused to comment on staffing arrangements.

    A Polish diplomatic source said his government had planned to contribute a Russian-language expert to the team, but withdrew its offer after being told that Portman, rather than the Polish candidate that Warsaw had put forward, would head the unit.
    […]
    … Jerzy Pomianowski, a former Polish diplomat who heads the European Endowment for Democracy (EED), an EU-funded think-tank. [says] “If Europe limits itself to [the East Stratcom] unit and simply produces communication about Europe, then it will not be enough.

    The EED recently completed a feasibility study that called for “a range of coordinated, cooperative and cost efficient initiatives” supported by international donors to respond to the threat of Russian propaganda.

    The group’s report proposed an alternative: The creation of a “news hub” to produce Russian-language news content, with a range of Russian-language programming, alongside a “content factory” which would provide non-news programming such as talk shows and drama.

    Pomianowski is on a barnstorming tour of European capitals to raise funds to get the broad, content-producing initiatives outlined by the EED feasibility study off the ground. Pomianowski met officials from 35 donor countries in Warsaw last week and walked away with a €1 million pledge from Poland, with the Netherlands promising a further €1.5 million to support the EED’s Russian-language media initiative.

  • ’Significant Progress’ Reported At Ukraine Peace Talks In Berlin
    http://www.rferl.org/content/article/27244732.html

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has said “significant progress” had been made toward a resolution of the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

    Speaking after a three-and-a-half-hour meeting with his French, Russian, and Ukrainian counterparts in Berlin on September 12, Steinmeier said the talks had been “less confrontational” than previous ones and that the ministers “made headway in some critical things.”

    Steinmeier said the warring sides were now “very close” to an agreement on withdrawing weapons from the front line between Ukrainian government forces and Russian-backed separatists.
    […]
    Germany’s top diplomat also said there was some progress on the legal groundwork toward holding local elections in eastern Ukraine.

    Ukraine scheduled its vote on October 25, while self-proclaimed leaders of the rebel-controlled Luhansk and Donetsk regions said they would hold their own elections on October 18 and November 1, respectively, drawing protests from Kyiv.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said differences remained on the issue, but “the general impression is that these differences can be overcome.

    Earlier in Kyiv, the secretary-general of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Lamberto Zannier, said the cease-fire had held for more than 10 days, opening space “to make progress on a political level.

  • Saudi-led coalition plans ground attacks in Yemen after taking key city - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/saudi-led-coalition-plans-ground-attacks-in-yemen-after-taking-key-city/2015/07/28/a2131646-315d-11e5-a879-213078d03dd3_story.html

    A former Saudi diplomat who is familiar with the program confirmed that several thousand Yemeni nationals are undergoing boot-camp-like training in at least two military facilities in southern Saudi Arabia. The training began as the air war started, he said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue.

  • Russia says Kiev s refusal to negotiate with rebels alarming - Yahoo7
    https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/28669227/russia-says-kievs-refusal-to-negotiate-with-rebels-alarming

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday said Ukraine’s perceived failure to agree with rebels on implementing a peace deal was “alarming” and urged the West to pressure Kiev.

    The situation is alarming because we’re witnessing a tendency, if you will,” Russia’s top diplomat told reporters.

    Starting with a state coup (Russia’s description of the Maidan protests), the current Kiev authorities have routinely demonstrated their inability to come to an agreement,” Lavrov said after talks with his counterpart from Luxembourg, Jean Asselborn.

    Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko’s proposed constitutional changes have triggered a surge in tensions between Kiev and Moscow-backed rebels that have been battling government forces since April 2014.

    Lavrov said Russia was especially concerned that, in its view, the draft constitution did not honour a “single requirement” of a peace deal brokered by Germany and France in the Belarussian capital Minsk in February.

    Russia is deeply concerned by Kiev’s inability or unwillingness to implement a requirement to agree with Donetsk and Lugansk on the ways of implementing local elections and involving representatives in work on the new constitution,” Lavrov said.

    He added that the Kiev authorities were “torpedoing” the peace agreement and refusing to directly negotiate with rebels, urging the West to pressure Ukrainian authorities to honour the deal.

  • Les Séoudiens et le réseau Haqqani : Cables detail Saudi diplomat’s meeting with Haqqani’s son
    http://www.dawn.com/news/1190941/cables-detail-saudi-diplomats-meeting-with-haqqanis-son

    Jalaluddin has been on the UN Sanctions list since January 31, 2001. The provisions of the UNSC resolutions 1267 (1999), and 1333 (2000) apply to him, which, among other things, bar the international travel of listed individuals and prevent any assistance to them.

    The Saudi cables show that Jalaluddin carried a Saudi passport since the days of the Afghan jihad.

    His son Nasiruddin had handed over that passport to Ambassador Ghadeer during their meeting. Though the cable did not state why the passport was given to the ambassador, it is possible that it was sent for renewal.

    There are, however, no cables among those released so far detailing when Jalaluddin travelled to Saudi Arabia or if he ever undertook the journey.

    Pakistan has often been criticised for its links with the Haqqani network. The latest US State Department report titled ‘Country Reports on Terrorism 2014’ also notes that Haqqani network leadership “continued to find safe haven in Pakistan”, but there has been little talk of their other patrons, including Saudi Arabia.

  • Israeli diplomat in Berlin: Maintaining German guilt about Holocaust helps Israel
    In off-the-record comment to journalists, embassy spokeswoman Adi Farjon said Israel had no interest in full normalization of relations with Germany.
    By Nir Gontarz | Jun. 25, 2015 | Haaretz Daily Newspaper | I
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.662962

    A spokeswoman for the Israeli embassy in Berlin recently told Israeli journalists it was in the country’s interest to maintain German guilt about the Holocaust, and that it isn’t seeking full normalization of relations between the governments.

    Embassy spokeswoman Adi Farjon made the comments in a closed briefing session with journalists at the embassy.

    “We were all in shock,” said a female journalist present at the briefing. “The spokeswoman clearly said it was an Israeli interest to maintain German guilt feelings. She even said that without them, we’d be just another country as far as they’re concerned.”

    Others present at the event confirmed the journalist’s account.

    Some added that the Israeli ambassador himself, Yakov Hadas-Handelsman, was present for some of the briefing, as were other embassy workers who don’t speak Hebrew. Another journalist commented, “It was so awkward. We couldn’t believe our ears. We’re sitting there eating peanuts, and behind the spokeswoman there are two German women sitting there who don’t understand a word of Hebrew – and the embassy staff is telling us they’re working to preserve the German guilt feelings and that Israel has no interest in normalization of relations between the two countries.”

    “I don’t remember saying that,” Farjon told Haaretz in response. “I can’t vouch for any particular quote, she added. “It was an off-the-record conversation, a briefing talk. The way I speak with Israeli journalists is a little different. These things aren’t intended to get out. I can’t reveal the principles I work by. For example, I don’t say who I go to in order to get good stories out here, or who I pay for things like that.”

    A spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem said Farjon’s comments had been taken out of context. “These are tendentious quotes ... from an off-the-record briefing for Israeli reporters who were visiting Berlin. At this briefing, there was an open and critical discussion in which the invited Israeli journalists took an active part, and it’s regrettable that someone decided to violate the rules of journalistic ethics and take selected statements out of their broader context and distort them in a way that alters their meaning.”

    This year is a special one for the German and Israeli governments, with Berlin and Jerusalem marking 50 years since the start of diplomatic relations between the two countries. German support for Israel also appears to be at an all-time high – particularly in light of Israel’s ongoing battles with the European Union over labeling of products from West Bank settlements and its troubled diplomatic standing in the world.

    This week, as part of the 50th-anniversary celebrations, Bundestag President Norbert Lammert visited Israel. In his speech to the Knesset on Wednesday, Lammert said that the “intensive friendship between our two countries is a historic miracle.” In his speech, Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein praised the special and extraordinary” relations of the two countries, calling Germany “a true friend of Israel.”

  • Netherlands, Malaysia push for UN tribunal for MH17 culprits - Yahoo News
    http://news.yahoo.com/netherlands-malaysia-push-un-tribunal-mh17-culprits-172412069.html

    The Netherlands, Malaysia and three other countries want a UN tribunal to be set up to try those responsible for the downing of the Malaysia Airlines flight over Ukraine last year, a senior diplomat said Wednesday.

    Malaysia is expected to present a draft resolution to the Security Council next month on setting up the tribunal, said the diplomat, who asked not to be named.

    They are looking for agreement to establish a UN tribunal that would be the way to hold accountable,” he said.
    […]
    The five countries of the Joint Investigation Team — Australia, Belgium, Malaysia, the Netherlands and Ukraine — met last week in New York to discuss the proposed international court.

    The diplomat said the countries were mindful of the need to “avoid a Russian veto” and that careful negotiations would be required on the wording of the resolution setting up the court.

    Malaysia is hoping that the council will adopt the measure on July 22 to mark the one-year anniversary of the first resolution passed just days after the tragedy.

    There is also concern that the resolution should be adopted before the criminal investigation is completed in the coming months, the diplomat said.

  • Swiss diplomat Tagliavini to give up Ukraine OSCE role - StarTribune.com
    http://www.startribune.com/swiss-diplomat-tagliavini-to-give-up-ukraine-osce-role/306367271

    The Swiss government says diplomat Heidi Tagliavini plans to step down as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s representative in talks between Moscow, Kiev and pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine.

    Tagliavini, who previously worked on crises in places including Chechnya and Georgia, has played a low-key but well-regarded role for the past year in efforts to cool the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

    The Swiss Foreign Ministry said Saturday that Tagliavini wants to give up her mandate soon. It gave no reason or exact timing for her departure.

    The announcement comes four days after the latest talks ended with no visible results. The OSCE’s deputy chief monitor in Ukraine has called for an urgent resumption of negotiations amid the worst fighting since a cease-fire began to take hold in March.

  • #wikileaks: WHO ARE THE HOUTHIS, PART TWO: HOW ARE THEY FIGHTING?, 2009 December
    https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/09SANAA2186_a.html#efmAB-ACz

    WEAPONS SUPPLY
    –-------------

    12. (S/NF) Contrary to ROYG [Republic of Yemen Government] claims that Iran is arming the Houthis, most local political analysts report that the Houthis obtain their weapons from the Yemeni black market and even from the ROYG military itself. According to a British diplomat, there are numerous credible reports that ROYG military commanders were selling weapons to the Houthis in the run-up to the Sixth War. An ICG report on the Sa’ada conflict from May 2009 quoted NSB director Ali Mohammed al-Ansi saying, “Iranians are not arming the Houthis. The weapons they use are Yemeni. Most actually come from fighters who fought against the socialists during the 1994 war and then sold them.” Mohammed Azzan, presidential advisor for Sa’ada affairs, told PolOff on August 16 that the Houthis easily obtain weapons inside Yemen, either from battlefield captures or by buying them from corrupt military commanders and soldiers. Azzan said that the military “covers up its failure” by saying the weapons come from Iran. According to Jamal Abdullah al-Shami of the Democracy School, there is little external oversight of the military’s large and increasing budget, so it is easy for members of the military to illegally sell weapons.

    13. (S/NF) ROYG officials assert that the Houthis’ possession and use of Katyusha rockets is evidence of support from Iran and Hizballah, arguing that these rockets are not available in Yemeni arms markets nor ROYG stockpiles. (Comment: Given Yemen’s robust arms markets, especially in Sa’ada, it is possible that Katyushas are available on the black market even if they are not in ROYG stockpiles. According to sensitive reporting, there is at least one instance of Somali extremists purchasing Katyusha rockets in Yemen in 2007. End Comment.) However, according to sensitive reporting, it may have been the ROYG military who aided the Houthis in obtaining a shipment of 200 Katyusha rockets in late November 2009.

    #cablegate (via Angry Arab)

  • The Inaccuracies of South Asian Maps | The Diplomat

    http://thediplomat.com/2015/02/the-inaccuracies-of-south-asian-maps

    An otherwise excellent Washington Post article last week featured a map of where the Pashtun ethnic group lived Afghanistan and Pakistan that triggered a pet-peeve of mine: the fact that many non-political maps of South Asia are inaccurate. By inaccurate, I do not mean to say that they are deliberately wrong. Indeed, the Washington Post ethnic map of the Pashtuns in Afghanistan is generally correct in its basic contours. However, it is not so in its details, and the zone of Pashtun inhabitation seems splashed around throughout Afghanistan, without a level of accuracy that I would think be necessary for such a map.

    This is a problem, and not merely an academic or esoteric one. Because the demographics of a province or region in places like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and India are important to demarcating provincial boundaries, governance, administration, and education, they matter. Additionally, historical maps of the region face similar problems – a lack of exactitude – that can be problematic, especially as territorial claims and arguments about traditional civilizational boundaries or spheres of influence matter in South Asia. While it is true that pre-modern mapping in South Asia did not display the level of accuracy that modern maps do and that South Asian norms of territoriality were different, there is still no reason that modern mapmakers should not try to be accurate in mapping ethnic groups and historical boundaries. A similar level of accuracy can be seen in historical and demographic maps of Europe, including those of the Roman Empire.

    #cartographie #asie #propagande #manipulation

  • Russian Schoolchildren Invited to Spend Holidays in North Korean Camps | News | The Moscow Times
    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/russian-schoolchildren-invited-to-spend-holidays-in-north-korean-camps/518343.html

    A high-ranking North Korean diplomat in far eastern Russia has proposed that local schoolchildren spend their holidays in North Korean youth camps in a bid to further strengthen relations between the countries, according to a statement released Tuesday.

    Im Cheon Il, North Korea’s general consul in the Russian city of Nakhodka, made the proposal at a meeting with the Russian republic of Yakutia’s head of foreign affairs, Vladimir Vasilyev, the republic’s government said on its website.

    The officials also discussed promoting tourism in general and trade, particularly in agriculture, the statement said.

  • Chinese diplomat tells West to consider Russia’s security concerns over Ukraine | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/27/us-china-ukraine-idUSKBN0LV0H120150227

    Western powers should take into consideration Russia’s legitimate security concerns over Ukraine, a top Chinese diplomat has said in an unusually frank and open display of support for Moscow’s position in the crisis.

    Qu Xing, China’s ambassador to Belgium, was quoted by state news agency Xinhua late on Thursday as blaming competition between Russia and the West for the Ukraine crisis, urging Western powers to “abandon the zero-sum mentality” with Russia.

    He said the “nature and root cause” of the crisis was the “game” between Russia and Western powers, including the United States and the European Union.