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Continue reading …Former PM’s call for clearer strategic approach comes with warning to dictators that they must ‘change or be changed’ Tony Blair has warned the west that it urgently needs a wider plan to respond to the Arab spring, including a warning to autocratic leaders across the Middle East “to change or be changed”. His call for a clearer strategic approach comes in a new foreword to the paperback edition of his bestselling autobiography, A Journey. The former prime minister also praises Europe, and by implication David Cameron, for showing leadership in Libya, saying it would have been inconceivable to leave Muammar Gaddafi in power. He said that if America and Europe had done nothing, “Gaddafi would have retaken the country and suppressed the revolt with extraordinary vehemence. Many would have died.” If he had been left in power while the west was willing to see Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, deposed, “the damage to the west’s reputation, credibility and stature would have been not just massive but potentially irreparable. That’s what I mean by saying inaction is also a decision.” Blair does not call for immediate military intervention across the region, saying instead that “where there is the possibility of evolutionary change, we should encourage and support it. This is the case in the Gulf states.” He hails the way in which “Europe and America came together over Libya and, though it is difficult and though the way things will turn out is uncertain, it showed leadership; and amongst the criticism, there was also – in the region – relief that leadership was shown”. The former premier did a round of interviews on Thursday morning in which he made clear his support for military action in Libya, which he said seemed to be “succeeding”. He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: “My view is that it is preferable to act, because the implications of things going wrong in this region are so strong.” He added: “I think that the construct of what the west and allies – including Arab countries – are doing is right. We have got to judge that according to the circumstances, but I think at the moment it looks like it is succeeding.” The fate of Egypt would be crucial to the outcome of the Arab spring,” he said. He said it would not be easy but “on balance” he was optimistic. He insisted he had been right to make overtures to the Gaddafi regime when prime minister. “I think we were right to welcome what he did then and we’re right to condemn and go after him for what he’s doing now,” he told the BBC. “I think when he gave up his nuclear and his chemical weapons programmes, this was a huge thing for us. He stopped sponsoring terrorism, he started actually co-operating. It was a big change and frankly, had the internal policies been the same, had he gone through the same process of change that his for policy went through it would have been beneficial for him.” On Syria, Blair said the west had to consider the consequences for the region of bringing down a regime such as that of Bashar al-Assad. “It’s not always easy to make absolutely logical distinctions. I mean, why are we treating Syria differently than Libya? The answer is because there isn’t the same consent to deal with the Assad regime in Syria. “There is some hope still, I think diminishing, that he could offer a reform programme of change in Syria and most of all, and this is what’s difficult when you’re sitting in a position of leadership – if you remove that regime what follows? What do you get? Do you get an orderly transition to democracy or do you get chaos, instability, with massive ramifications, in this case, for Israel, Palestine, for the peace process there.” While praising European and US efforts in Libya in his new foreword, Blair also calls for an elected European president who would have a mandate for far-reaching reforms including collaborating on taxes. In an interview in the Times he says such an office would give Europe “strong, collective leadership and direction”. But he accepts that the idea has “no chance of being accepted at the present time”. In his book, Blair acknowledges that the west cannot intervene across the Middle East and claims some leaders are “already embarking on a path of steady change. We should help them keep to it and support it. None of this means we do not criticise strongly the use of violence against unarmed civilians. Or that if that violence continues, we do not reserve the right then to move to outright opposition to the status quo, as has happened in Libya. “But it is more sensible to do so in circumstances where the regime has excluded a path to evolutionary change. Then it is clear: the people have no choice. But if there is a process that can lead to change with stability, we should back that policy.” He adds: “My point is simple: we need to have an active policy, be players and not spectators sitting in the stands, applauding or condemning as we watch.” He says that the lesson for autocratic regimes the world over is to change – or be changed. Largely in line with the policy laid out at the G8 summit of most industrialised nations in Deauville last month, he says: “We should stand ready to help with aid, debt relief and the muscle of the international financial institutions, but we should also be quietly insistent that such help won’t succeed unless proper rules and order are put in place.” Blair, still the special envoy of the quartet in the Middle East, admits the Arab spring is going to make it harder to secure a Palestinian peace deal since Israel is less certain about the nature of the threat it faces. The stability and predictability of Israel’s neighbours, he says, has been replaced by instability and unpredictability. “For similar reasons, but with an opposite conclusion, the Palestinian leadership find it hard to go into negotiation with an Israeli partner they don’t trust, to make difficult compromises which will be tough to sell, in circumstances where they don’t know the regional context into which such compromises will be played.” Blair also warns more broadly that the world has not yet adjusted to the emergence of China as a global economic giant, saying “engagement with geopolitics of the 21st-century will be unlike anything the modern world has seen. Our children in the west will be a generation growing up in a situation where virtually every fixed point of reference that my and my parents’ generation knew has changed or is changing”. He claims energy security will become as serious an issue for the nation states as defence. Blair says: “Currently China consumes around 10% of worldwide demand for oil. If its GDP per head carries on rising – and follows the path of similar increases in living standards in South Korea and Taiwan, say – the world output will need to double, and China’s share of demand will rise from 10% to 50%.” He also questions the way in which the EU leaders have led the debate about its future, saying “there has been an obsession about institutional integration in itself rather than a debate about what we want to do as Europe, where the institutions should be at the service of the policy, rather than the policy at the service of institutions”. Tony Blair Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Patrick Wintour Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Between the current interest in America’s founders and a “willingness to believe” the Internet, political misquotes are flying these days, writes David A. Fahrenthold in the Washington Post . A look over the past two years of C-SPAN and the Congressional Record shows that politicians—including congressmen, senators, and the president—…
Continue reading …Palin Derangement Syndrome was in full bloom on MSNBC's “Hardball” Tuesday. At the conclusion of the program, host Chris Matthews went on a hate-filled rant accusing the former Alaska governor of being “out to cause trouble” and wanting “bad news about America” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS: Let me finish tonight with Sarah Palin’s midnight ride with American history. I have a theory about this person: I don't think she is at all interested in American history. If she were, she would know more of it. What she wants is bad news about America. What excites her isn't politics, the debate of one side against the other, Republicans versus Democrats, liberals versus conservatives. What she wants as I said is bad news about America. What excites her is not the chance to participate or lead in government. She quit government, dumped it really. She had other interests. No, Palin is out to cause trouble. She wants people to be mad at politicians, mad at government, mad at the people who report on government. She wants unhappiness with politics and government that dominate the airwaves, dominate the conversation, dominate the country's mood. She wants us to think about government the way the early colonists thought about the British back in England. She wants us to arm ourselves that we can fight the redcoats. She wants us to live in a state of relentless, simmering rebellion, ever angry, ever distrustful, ever detesting the people we’ve elected to run the government, the people who cover the people in government. She wants us to believe toward the government the way angry middle-aged bikers look at government as the enemy. This is why the 2012 election is not about who will lead us but whether we are ready to vote against the belief that we are governing ourselves. What a negative, self-defeating proposition she makes. What a strange reason for remaining in public life. She gets the history wrong because she gets the United States wrong. We are a self-governing country and the people who matter are the ones who help us do it not the ones who attack but do not lead. And what about the media members that attack but do not lead? After all, this is what MSNBC stands for now. On a daily basis, the extended prime time hosts including Matthews, Cenk Uygur, Lawrence O'Donnell, Rachel Maddow, and Ed Schultz Beck do virtually nothing to inform the American public about what's going on in the world. Their message isn't positive or uplifting. It's six straight hours of the most hate-filled invective on television today all aimed at the Republican Party and conservatives. With this in mind, we could easily take Matthews' Tuesday rant, substitute a few words here and there, and demonstrate quite emphatically just what this network has become: Let me finish tonight with MSNBC's midnight ride with American history. I have a theory about this so-called cable news network : I don't think MSNBC commentators are at all interested in American history. If they were, they would know more of it. What they want is bad news about Republicans . What excites them isn't politics, the debate of one side against the other, Republicans versus Democrats, liberals versus conservatives. What they want as I said is bad news about Republicans . MSNBC is out to cause trouble. They want people to be mad at Republicans , mad at the Tea Party , mad at the people who report on the Tea Party . They want unhappiness with conservatism and fiscal discipline that dominate the airwaves, dominate the conversation, dominate the country's mood. They want us to think about Republicans the way the early colonists thought about the British back in England. They want us to disarm ourselves that we can submit to our enemies . They want us to live in a state of relentless, growing dependence , ever angry, ever distrustful, ever detesting the people who pay all the taxes , the people who cover the people who pay all the taxes . They want us to believe toward the government the way a drug addict looks at a dealer as his friend . This is why the 2012 election is not about who will lead us but whether we are ready to vote against the belief that we are governing ourselves. What a negative, self-defeating proposition MSNBC makes. What a strange reason for remaining in business . They get the history wrong because they get the United States wrong. We are a self-governing country and the people who matter are the ones who help us do it not the ones who attack but do not lead. Which rant makes more sense to you?
Continue reading …Palin Derangement Syndrome was in full bloom on MSNBC's “Hardball” Tuesday. At the conclusion of the program, host Chris Matthews went on a hate-filled rant accusing the former Alaska governor of being “out to cause trouble” and wanting “bad news about America” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS: Let me finish tonight with Sarah Palin’s midnight ride with American history. I have a theory about this person: I don't think she is at all interested in American history. If she were, she would know more of it. What she wants is bad news about America. What excites her isn't politics, the debate of one side against the other, Republicans versus Democrats, liberals versus conservatives. What she wants as I said is bad news about America. What excites her is not the chance to participate or lead in government. She quit government, dumped it really. She had other interests. No, Palin is out to cause trouble. She wants people to be mad at politicians, mad at government, mad at the people who report on government. She wants unhappiness with politics and government that dominate the airwaves, dominate the conversation, dominate the country's mood. She wants us to think about government the way the early colonists thought about the British back in England. She wants us to arm ourselves that we can fight the redcoats. She wants us to live in a state of relentless, simmering rebellion, ever angry, ever distrustful, ever detesting the people we’ve elected to run the government, the people who cover the people in government. She wants us to believe toward the government the way angry middle-aged bikers look at government as the enemy. This is why the 2012 election is not about who will lead us but whether we are ready to vote against the belief that we are governing ourselves. What a negative, self-defeating proposition she makes. What a strange reason for remaining in public life. She gets the history wrong because she gets the United States wrong. We are a self-governing country and the people who matter are the ones who help us do it not the ones who attack but do not lead. And what about the media members that attack but do not lead? After all, this is what MSNBC stands for now. On a daily basis, the extended prime time hosts including Matthews, Cenk Uygur, Lawrence O'Donnell, Rachel Maddow, and Ed Schultz Beck do virtually nothing to inform the American public about what's going on in the world. Their message isn't positive or uplifting. It's six straight hours of the most hate-filled invective on television today all aimed at the Republican Party and conservatives. With this in mind, we could easily take Matthews' Tuesday rant, substitute a few words here and there, and demonstrate quite emphatically just what this network has become: Let me finish tonight with MSNBC's midnight ride with American history. I have a theory about this so-called cable news network : I don't think MSNBC commentators are at all interested in American history. If they were, they would know more of it. What they want is bad news about Republicans . What excites them isn't politics, the debate of one side against the other, Republicans versus Democrats, liberals versus conservatives. What they want as I said is bad news about Republicans . MSNBC is out to cause trouble. They want people to be mad at Republicans , mad at the Tea Party , mad at the people who report on the Tea Party . They want unhappiness with conservatism and fiscal discipline that dominate the airwaves, dominate the conversation, dominate the country's mood. They want us to think about Republicans the way the early colonists thought about the British back in England. They want us to disarm ourselves that we can submit to our enemies . They want us to live in a state of relentless, growing dependence , ever angry, ever distrustful, ever detesting the people who pay all the taxes , the people who cover the people who pay all the taxes . They want us to believe toward the government the way a drug addict looks at a dealer as his friend . This is why the 2012 election is not about who will lead us but whether we are ready to vote against the belief that we are governing ourselves. What a negative, self-defeating proposition MSNBC makes. What a strange reason for remaining in business . They get the history wrong because they get the United States wrong. We are a self-governing country and the people who matter are the ones who help us do it not the ones who attack but do not lead. Which rant makes more sense to you?
Continue reading …The first woman editor of the New York Times tells why she got the job, how she’ll handle the crucial transition to digital – and why her tattoo is so important to her The executive editor of the New York Times is about as close as it gets in America to royalty, discounting the president and Lady Gaga. Even in this fragmented era of Twitter , Google News and the blogosphere , the newspaper’s chief still has the power to direct the national conversation, to move markets, unseat politicians, sanction wars and create Hollywood movie stars. Yet from the moment I’m ushered into Jill Abramson’s office, it is clear that the characterisation of the typical New York Times editor as a supremely powerful and rather overbearing regal type cannot easily be applied to her. It’s partly that her room has the jumbled air of an antiques shop, cluttered as it is with several bouquets of flowers sent from admirers and friends to congratulate her on her appointment. The walls are cluttered too with several black and white photos, including one of her mother, Dovie, aged 12 standing beside the towering figure of Babe Ruth at the Yankee stadium. More quizzically, there are a couple of cushions on a sofa bearing images of fluffy “Westies” – West Highland terriers like her first dog Buddy. And on a table there’s a copy of her soon-to-be-published book, The Puppy Diaries: Raising a Dog Named Scout, about her current pet, a golden retriever. “I’m a huge dog nut, giant, giant,” she says. It’s not the comment itself that is surprising – though to hear the next editor of the New York Times wax lyrical about her passion for dogs is not exactly what I had expected – so much as the way she says it. Abramson has one of the thickest New York accents you’ll ever hear, a nasal drawl in which the vowels are stretched to breaking point like an elastic band. So “out” becomes “iouuut”, and “now” “niouuuw”, a bit – with all due respect to her beloved dogs – like the mewing of a cat. Abramson , now 57, was born on the Upper West Side to parents who were themselves lifelong Manhattanites. In her childhood home, the New York Times substituted for religion, she says. “What the New York Times said was the absolute truth.” She wears her New Yorker-ness brazenly, proudly, on her sleeve. Or rather, under it – on her right shoulder where eight years ago she placed a tattoo to mark her return to New York city after a long stretch in Washington. It’s a rendition of a New York subway token, an image she chose for its double resonance. “Having grown up here I love the subway, take it everywhere,” she says. “But the reason I picked it for my tattoo was also that on the outside rim of the token it says ‘Good for one fare only’ and that’s my philosophy for life. So it’s a perfect combination of a great philosophy and the city that I love and was born in.” The quality that has been most noted about Abramson’s elevation to the top job in American journalism has not been her identity as a New Yorker but her gender. For the first time in the Times’s 160-year history, the institution is about to be led by a woman. Abramson herself is ambivalent about the significance of that bald fact. In 2006, when Katie Couric was made the first solo anchor of a network news show, she wrote an article in the Times review section headlined “When will we stop saying ‘First woman to . . .’?” She chuckled about that at a dinner last week with Arthur Sulzberger – the Times’s publisher, who gave her the editor’s job. “The thesis of the piece was, when are we going to stop commenting on that. I was saying to Arthur, this is ironic and makes me into a big hypocrite.” But she swiftly adds that in her opinion the “first woman” syndrome does have real meaning. What meaning, I ask. “Number one,” she replies, “I know I didn’t get this job because I’m a woman; I got it because I’m the best qualified person. But nonetheless what it means to me is that the executive editor of the New York Times is such an important position in our society, the Times itself is indispensable to society, and a woman gets to run the newsroom, which is meaningful.” Will it define the paper’s direction under her in any sense? “Possibly,” she replies. “But I think everybody here knows what kind of stories excite me most: hard-edged, deeply reported investigative stories, rich on-the-ground international stories, so I don’t think anyone is fearful that I’m going to bring soft news on to the front page.” Few would disagree with Abramson’s contention that she was best qualified for the post. Harvard-educated, she joined the paper from the Wall Street Journal in 1997 and went on to become Washington bureau chief of the Times. In that role, she survived a tense relationship with the then editor-in- chief, Howell Raines , who was pushed from the job after only two years in a move that Abramson is said to have encouraged and that was widely seen at the time as vindication for her criticism of him. Then there were the many bruising encounters with the Bush administration. “I’m a battle-scarred veteran in that regard. There were several national security stories that they asked us not to publish that we ended up publishing.” Her track record includes stints at investigative reporting, a skill that proved useful during the recent run of WikiLeaks disclosures, in which she played no small part. Of all the investigative work she’s done, though, she is proudest of the inquiry she led into the independent counsel Ken Starr at the time of the impeachment of Bill Clinton . “We had a sceptical take on the motivations of [Starr], and I’m really proud that we did that because every one else was feeding off of tips from the independent counsel.” Her commitment to investigative reporting could prove crucial in the next few years as other papers across the US increasingly abandon serious and probing reporting. Abramson is well versed in the bloodbath that has befallen the American newspaper industry. Last year she wrote an essay for the Daedalus journal, in which she chronicled the catastrophe that has unfolded as foreign bureaux have closed, newsrooms been slashed and entire newspapers shut down. The Times, with its still hefty news- room of 1,200 journalists, has managed largely to buck the trend, but it has not been immune from the existential crisis of steadily falling advertising and circulation revenues as readers migrate to the web. As managing editor of the paper over the past eight years, working alongside the current executive editor, Bill Keller, she has had to wield the knife and cut 100 newsroom jobs, but says: “It’s not been the same kind of deep muscle cuts that other news- rooms have made.” Abramson has spent the past six months immersing herself in the digital side of the Times operation. That’s important preparation, because the paper’s digital future may well determine the success or failure of her term in the editor’s seat. How well, how radically, will she handle the ongoing transition to a digital world? The Times’s record in that regard is patchy. On the one hand, on 6 September Abramson will inherit a paper that is second to none in terms of its global internet reach. Its readership, measured as monthly unique users, now stands at 46 million worldwide, which is testament to its winning combination of superb traditional reporting and an impressive modern array of multi- media offerings and blogs. But the Times has also been criticised for being sluggish when it comes to developing its internet community of readers by embracing the openness and interactivity of the web. “I would say that’s fair,” Abramson concurs. “We are now on that case heavily in terms of using social media for reporting and to make the Times a platform for people to gather. In some ways, on breaking news our greatest competitor can be Twitter.” I’m glad she raises the Twitter issue, because if she didn’t, I would have had to. It goes to the heart of the Times’s challenge: the perception that at its core the paper remains slightly resistant to the digital revolution. That impression hasn’t been helped by the recent series of columns written by Keller himself, in which he rather proudly declared that he had tweeted “#TwitterMakes-YouStupid. Discuss” while in another he ridiculed the Huffington Post for serving up a diet of “celebrity gossip, adorable kitten videos, posts from unpaid bloggers and news reports from other publications”. His comments have a grain of truth in them, certainly, but they played to the Times’s weak spot – the impression that it can radiate a patrician aloofness, of haughty disregard of the lessons it could learn from competitors. Abramson is in an awkward place when it comes to all this. She can hardly criticise Keller’s take on Twitter, as she hasn’t even got a Twitter account to call her own. She rather sheepishly admits that she has just set one up, but when I ask her when she did so she says: “Today, or yesterday.” Isn’t it a bit weird, I suggest, that the next editor of America’s most important paper, the person vested with the crucial task of steering it through a period of unparalleled digital change, hasn’t even yet sent her first tweet? “It may be weird,” she says. “But I haven’t felt the need until now. I’m an interior kind of person.” She seeks to dig herself out of this hole by promising to step up the pace of digital innovation. She’s got herself an iPad, she says, and says she loves the Huffington Post’s iPad app. “It’s really jazzy.” She also name-checks Arianna Huffington , the website’s charismatic founder. “I’ve known her since the early 90s in Washington and she has invented a site that is interesting a lot of the time. I went and spent a day at the HuffPo and had a lovely lunch with Arianna.” She also promises to tackle the perception of the Times as an institution that hands down the absolute truth, just as she saw it when she was growing up, rather than engaging in a conversation with its readers. Her goal, she says, is not to be an unapproachable voice of supreme authority. “Nobody wants a unitary voice of authority any more. Readers are sceptical about our authority, I’m very aware of that. It’s a question of engaging more than we might have years ago. Our readers are an unbelievable resource to us and yes we have to be more energetic and creative about leveraging the beauty of our online audience.” But she makes clear she has no intention of losing sight of what has made the New York Times great. “I think the authority that we enjoy comes from the depth of our reporting and that is immutable. That will never change.” Jill Abramson New York Times US press and publishing Digital media United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Here’s a typical Villager discussion on deficits and social safety nets: We’ve done enough polls now to know that Americans do not want Medicare/Medicaid/Social Security benefits cut. They are a bedrock in the lives of this country. I expect Republican hit men to continually try and destroy all New Deal and the Great Society safety net programs designed to serve and protect its population. That’s what a great society does. If VP Biden’s group, Cat Food Commissarios, and Harold Ford Jr. type jackasses need any more proof of this, the PCCC, DFA, Credo, MoveOn commissioned a new battle ground state poll focusing on our safety nets and by an overwhelming margin Americans will punish the Democratic Party if they do cut benefits to procure some grand bargain. Voters Ready To Penalize Democrats Who Mess With Medicare Voters in key Senate swing states don’t want cuts to Medicare and Medicaid benefits — and they’re prepared to exact revenge on politicians who vote in favor of them. That’s according to new Public Policy Polling (D) numbers from Ohio, Missouri, Montana and Minnesota, where Democratic Senators face what could be tough reelection fights. The polling, published first by TPM, was sponsored by a coalition of progressive groups. Numbers from the polls published Monday found voters in the states overwhelmingly opposed to cutting Social Security in the name of balancing the federal budget. Results from the polls are being rolled out all week here . Tuesday’s polling shows voters ready to penalize politicians who vote to cut benefits from the nation’s other massive entitlement programs. The polls were sponsored by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, Democracy For America, MoveOn.org and CREDO Action. The groups hope to see entitlements protected as budget politics continue to consume Washington. The sponsors say the swing state results show Democrats who don’t toe the progressive line will be on the wrong side of voters. Each poll surveyed more between around 500 to 700 people and has a margin of error around 4%. Every Senator mentioned is a Democrat up for reelection in 2012. The results: If Senator [NAME] voted to cut Medicare and Medicaid benefits, would that make you more or less likely to vote for him, or would it make no difference to you? Ohio (Sen. Sherrod Brown): 15% more likely, 65% less likely, 20% no difference Missouri (Sen. Claire McCaskill): 10% more likely, 64% less likely, 25% no difference Montana (Sen. Jon Tester): 16% more likely, 60% less likely, 24% no difference Minnesota (Sen. Amy Klobuchar): 17% more likely, 57% less likely, 26% no difference The progressive groups behind the polls say the political consequences for Democrats who cut entitlement benefits couldn’t be clearer. Here’s more of the breakdowns in the poll . The evidence is clear. Get the hint? No matter who far the beltway media elites and Conservatives push their own agenda, Americans are not buying it and Democrats should heed these poll results because not only is it good policy to protect our social safety nets, not is it the moral thing to do, it’s also an election wrecking ball that will cost the Democratic Party dearly in 2012.
Continue reading …America’s first colonists were a religious lot. Three-and-a-half centuries later, not much has changed: more than 9 in 10 Americans still say they believe in God, according to a new Gallup poll. (LIST: Top Ten Interesting Facts About the World’s Oldest Bible) American enthusiasm for the divine has hardly waned since the 1940s, when a
Continue reading …Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announces he is on ‘opposite side’ to those who accuse him of revolutionary deviancy Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has admitted for the first time that a rift has developed between him and some of the most senior figures of the Islamic regime. In a press conference in Tehran on Tuesday, the first since news emerged of his power struggle with the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the president said: “It is very clear now that we are 180 degrees away from them – we are actually on opposite sides.” He pointed the finger at ruling conservatives, who have accused the government of “revolutionary deviancy”, while playing down suggestions that he has been at odds with Ali Khamenei. In recent months, conservatives close to the supreme leader have launched an extensive campaign against the president and his allies, who they believe is undermining the supremacy of the leader. Senior figures in the powerful revolutionary guards and some of the most prominent clerics in the country who have supported Ahmadinejad in the past are now distancing themselves from him. Those who remain in his camp have faced accusations of “sorcery”, “deviancy” and even espionage, and some presidential aides have been arrested. “They arrested those people. Good for them,” Ahmadinejad said. “Now they should let us continue our job. The government is seeking for nothing rather than serving the people and fulfilling the revolutionary aims.” He refused to answer further questions about the power struggle and said: “Our position at the moment is to stay silent. An inspiring unity silence.” Ali Khamenei’s supporters believe Ahmadinejad has not publicly given his full backing to the supreme leader after they clashed over cabinet appointments in April. Asked about Iran’s nuclear programme, the president denied recent allegations made by the chief executive of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, that the country may be working on developing weapons. “With America’s orders, the IAEA has written some things in a report that are against the law and against the agency’s regulations. These have no legal value and aside from harming the agency’s reputation it will have no other effect,” Ahmadinejad told reporters. He also said no offer from world leaders could stop Iran enriching uranium and accused the US and its allies of meddling in Syria and Bahrain. Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Nuclear weapons International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
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