Coalition tensions rise over what could be crushing victory for no campaign in Thursday’s referendum on alternative vote Coalition tensions over what could be a crushing victory for the no campaign in Thursday’s referendum on the alternative vote have exploded into extraordinary scenes in cabinet , with the Liberal Democrat energy secretary, Chris Huhne, confronting David Cameron and George Osborne over campaign leaflets that he believed smeared Nick Clegg. During the ensuing row, Osborne said he was not going to be challenged by a cabinet colleague acting as if he was “Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight”. In tense exchanges, leaked by Conservative sources within an hour of the cabinet meeting, Huhne demanded to know if Cameron would disassociate himself from the leaflets issued by the no campaign that he said had smeared Clegg’s leadership of the Lib Dems. He challenged the prime minister to sack any Conservative official linked to this literature, which said Clegg had broken promises. Cameron replied that he was not responsible for the all-party no campaign literature. Huhne then asked the chancellor whether he had any knowledge of the literature. Osborne apparently replied that this was always going to be a difficult period for the coalition. When Huhne again asked him to explain if he had known of the leaflets, Osborne complained that cabinet was not the right venue for this discussion before making his Paxman remark. Huhne then suggested that people would draw their own conclusions from the pair’s failure to condemn such smears on the deputy prime minister. Huhne did not consult Nick Clegg before his demarche and defended his role in the confrontation. “I think these have been unacceptable leaflets,” he said. “In any other walk of life such behaviour would be seen as nasty, personal and vindictive.” He added: “The home secretary Theresa May used to characterise the Tory party as the nasty party and this episode shows it has a way to go to before it achieves full rehabilitation. The underhand tactics show how desperate the political establishment is to hang on to power.” Huhne’s increasingly bitter public attacks on his coalition colleagues, including such a direct challenge to the prime minister, were dismissed as a yes campaign stunt by Tory sources. The row also angered parts of the all-party yes campaign that saw the inter-party row as a distraction from its final push message, as well as an attempt to highlight the no campaign’s failure to disclose all its funding. One yes campaign spokesman said: “Nothing Huhne has done has been authorised by us, or been helpful to us. The difficulty from day one was that we didn’t want the referendum seen through the prism of the coalition.” A ComRes poll published by the Independent on Tuesday showed the no camp romping home by a massive 66% to 35% among those saying they were certain to vote. Yes campaigners sensed defeat was inevitable. Meanwhile the yes campaign published an appeal signed by Ed Miliband, David Miliband, Lord Ashdown, Gordon Brown, Nick Clegg and two-thirds of the shadow cabinet calling for a yes vote. Ed Miliband also made his most explicit appeal for a yes vote on the basis that it could help nurture an anti-Tory progressive alliance in the country. Labour has always been at its best when it been a force for political reform. Writing for Comment is Free, he said: “If you believe this is a big C conservative country then perhaps you will believe that when forced to choose and elect someone with more than 50% of the vote, it will aid the right. “But if you believe that this is a genuinely progressive country, then we need an electoral system that can reflect the views of the electorate and give expression to the anti-conservative majority.” But the former Labour cabinet minister Lord Boateng lambasted the appeal for a progressive left. “The irony is overwhelming Lib Dem cabinet ministers trying to unite the left while they prop up a Conservative government implementing Conservative policies. If the Lib Dems find the Tories so distasteful you have to ask why they continue in government then.” John Healey, the shadow health secretary, also shared a platform with May to say the only reason the referendum was being held was because the alternative vote “gives the Liberal Democrats an open return to power, gives the Lib Dems a way into government election after election, and gives the Lib Dems a shield against loss of support”. Huhne insisted he was not planning to resign, adding whatever the Liberal Democrats do after the results come in on Friday will be done as a team. Huhne is known to want the coalition to continue, but is understood to believe personal trust between the parties has been lost irrevocably. One source said: “From now we will be consulting the lawyers first when we are offered an agreement by our coalition partners.” Support for a more businesslike approach towards the coalition is also coming from another Lib Dem cabinet minister, Vince Cable. Cameron will deny he is making any explicit concessions, but there are already signs he is backtracking on health, public services reform and the speed with which he brings in elected police commissioners. AV referendum Alternative vote Liberal-Conservative coalition Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Coalition tensions rise over what could be crushing victory for no campaign in Thursday’s referendum on alternative vote Coalition tensions over what could be a crushing victory for the no campaign in Thursday’s referendum on the alternative vote have exploded into extraordinary scenes in cabinet , with the Liberal Democrat energy secretary, Chris Huhne, confronting David Cameron and George Osborne over campaign leaflets that he believed smeared Nick Clegg. During the ensuing row, Osborne said he was not going to be challenged by a cabinet colleague acting as if he was “Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight”. In tense exchanges, leaked by Conservative sources within an hour of the cabinet meeting, Huhne demanded to know if Cameron would disassociate himself from the leaflets issued by the no campaign that he said had smeared Clegg’s leadership of the Lib Dems. He challenged the prime minister to sack any Conservative official linked to this literature, which said Clegg had broken promises. Cameron replied that he was not responsible for the all-party no campaign literature. Huhne then asked the chancellor whether he had any knowledge of the literature. Osborne apparently replied that this was always going to be a difficult period for the coalition. When Huhne again asked him to explain if he had known of the leaflets, Osborne complained that cabinet was not the right venue for this discussion before making his Paxman remark. Huhne then suggested that people would draw their own conclusions from the pair’s failure to condemn such smears on the deputy prime minister. Huhne did not consult Nick Clegg before his demarche and defended his role in the confrontation. “I think these have been unacceptable leaflets,” he said. “In any other walk of life such behaviour would be seen as nasty, personal and vindictive.” He added: “The home secretary Theresa May used to characterise the Tory party as the nasty party and this episode shows it has a way to go to before it achieves full rehabilitation. The underhand tactics show how desperate the political establishment is to hang on to power.” Huhne’s increasingly bitter public attacks on his coalition colleagues, including such a direct challenge to the prime minister, were dismissed as a yes campaign stunt by Tory sources. The row also angered parts of the all-party yes campaign that saw the inter-party row as a distraction from its final push message, as well as an attempt to highlight the no campaign’s failure to disclose all its funding. One yes campaign spokesman said: “Nothing Huhne has done has been authorised by us, or been helpful to us. The difficulty from day one was that we didn’t want the referendum seen through the prism of the coalition.” A ComRes poll published by the Independent on Tuesday showed the no camp romping home by a massive 66% to 35% among those saying they were certain to vote. Yes campaigners sensed defeat was inevitable. Meanwhile the yes campaign published an appeal signed by Ed Miliband, David Miliband, Lord Ashdown, Gordon Brown, Nick Clegg and two-thirds of the shadow cabinet calling for a yes vote. Ed Miliband also made his most explicit appeal for a yes vote on the basis that it could help nurture an anti-Tory progressive alliance in the country. Labour has always been at its best when it been a force for political reform. Writing for Comment is Free, he said: “If you believe this is a big C conservative country then perhaps you will believe that when forced to choose and elect someone with more than 50% of the vote, it will aid the right. “But if you believe that this is a genuinely progressive country, then we need an electoral system that can reflect the views of the electorate and give expression to the anti-conservative majority.” But the former Labour cabinet minister Lord Boateng lambasted the appeal for a progressive left. “The irony is overwhelming Lib Dem cabinet ministers trying to unite the left while they prop up a Conservative government implementing Conservative policies. If the Lib Dems find the Tories so distasteful you have to ask why they continue in government then.” John Healey, the shadow health secretary, also shared a platform with May to say the only reason the referendum was being held was because the alternative vote “gives the Liberal Democrats an open return to power, gives the Lib Dems a way into government election after election, and gives the Lib Dems a shield against loss of support”. Huhne insisted he was not planning to resign, adding whatever the Liberal Democrats do after the results come in on Friday will be done as a team. Huhne is known to want the coalition to continue, but is understood to believe personal trust between the parties has been lost irrevocably. One source said: “From now we will be consulting the lawyers first when we are offered an agreement by our coalition partners.” Support for a more businesslike approach towards the coalition is also coming from another Lib Dem cabinet minister, Vince Cable. Cameron will deny he is making any explicit concessions, but there are already signs he is backtracking on health, public services reform and the speed with which he brings in elected police commissioners. AV referendum Alternative vote Liberal-Conservative coalition Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …I think we’re going to see a lot of this in the coming days: The United States must take one more step to make things right following the killing of Osama bin Laden, Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Monday. Bin Laden’s death “ought to put us in helicopters leaving Afghanistan,” he said. “…There’s no reason to stay. He’s now dead. He’s gone.” Schweitzer spoke with members of the Missoulian’s editorial board Monday, a meeting originally scheduled to discuss the just-ended 2011 legislative session, which until Sunday night was the biggest news in Montana. That news quickly was eclipsed by President Barack Obama’s announcement that the U.S. military had killed bin Laden, who directed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Along with millions of others, Schweitzer watched the coverage of reaction to the momentous event. The raucous celebrations around the country troubled him. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that stemmed from the 9/11 attacks have claimed the lives of about 5,500 members of the U.S. military. But the conflict in Afghanistan quickly ceased to have anything to do with bin Laden, Schweitzer said. “We went to Afghanistan for one reason and one only. We were going to shut down Al Qaeda and find and kill Osama bin Laden. There was no mention of the Taliban.” Yet Al Qaeda is largely gone from Afghanistan and U.S. troops are now focused on the Taliban, he said. “We’re a great country, but we weren’t fighting one man. This is a clash of cultures, a clash of identities and it didn’t end [Sunday] night when Osama bin Laden was killed. There’s still something we need to resolve, but it doesn’t mean we need to stay in Afghanistan or Iraq.” By the way, Barney Frank is saying the same thing: In an interview with ThinkProgress today, Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) told us that the well-executed killing of the world’s most wanted terrorist, Osama bin Laden, “absolutely” bolsters the case for beginning a significant withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Explaining his decision to vote for the Afghanistan war in 2001, Frank said, “We went there to get Osama bin Laden. And we have now gotten Osama bin Laden. … So yes, I think this does strengthen the case [for withdrawal].”
Continue reading …I think we’re going to see a lot of this in the coming days: The United States must take one more step to make things right following the killing of Osama bin Laden, Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Monday. Bin Laden’s death “ought to put us in helicopters leaving Afghanistan,” he said. “…There’s no reason to stay. He’s now dead. He’s gone.” Schweitzer spoke with members of the Missoulian’s editorial board Monday, a meeting originally scheduled to discuss the just-ended 2011 legislative session, which until Sunday night was the biggest news in Montana. That news quickly was eclipsed by President Barack Obama’s announcement that the U.S. military had killed bin Laden, who directed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Along with millions of others, Schweitzer watched the coverage of reaction to the momentous event. The raucous celebrations around the country troubled him. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that stemmed from the 9/11 attacks have claimed the lives of about 5,500 members of the U.S. military. But the conflict in Afghanistan quickly ceased to have anything to do with bin Laden, Schweitzer said. “We went to Afghanistan for one reason and one only. We were going to shut down Al Qaeda and find and kill Osama bin Laden. There was no mention of the Taliban.” Yet Al Qaeda is largely gone from Afghanistan and U.S. troops are now focused on the Taliban, he said. “We’re a great country, but we weren’t fighting one man. This is a clash of cultures, a clash of identities and it didn’t end [Sunday] night when Osama bin Laden was killed. There’s still something we need to resolve, but it doesn’t mean we need to stay in Afghanistan or Iraq.” By the way, Barney Frank is saying the same thing: In an interview with ThinkProgress today, Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) told us that the well-executed killing of the world’s most wanted terrorist, Osama bin Laden, “absolutely” bolsters the case for beginning a significant withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Explaining his decision to vote for the Afghanistan war in 2001, Frank said, “We went there to get Osama bin Laden. And we have now gotten Osama bin Laden. … So yes, I think this does strengthen the case [for withdrawal].”
Continue reading …I think we’re going to see a lot of this in the coming days: The United States must take one more step to make things right following the killing of Osama bin Laden, Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Monday. Bin Laden’s death “ought to put us in helicopters leaving Afghanistan,” he said. “…There’s no reason to stay. He’s now dead. He’s gone.” Schweitzer spoke with members of the Missoulian’s editorial board Monday, a meeting originally scheduled to discuss the just-ended 2011 legislative session, which until Sunday night was the biggest news in Montana. That news quickly was eclipsed by President Barack Obama’s announcement that the U.S. military had killed bin Laden, who directed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Along with millions of others, Schweitzer watched the coverage of reaction to the momentous event. The raucous celebrations around the country troubled him. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that stemmed from the 9/11 attacks have claimed the lives of about 5,500 members of the U.S. military. But the conflict in Afghanistan quickly ceased to have anything to do with bin Laden, Schweitzer said. “We went to Afghanistan for one reason and one only. We were going to shut down Al Qaeda and find and kill Osama bin Laden. There was no mention of the Taliban.” Yet Al Qaeda is largely gone from Afghanistan and U.S. troops are now focused on the Taliban, he said. “We’re a great country, but we weren’t fighting one man. This is a clash of cultures, a clash of identities and it didn’t end [Sunday] night when Osama bin Laden was killed. There’s still something we need to resolve, but it doesn’t mean we need to stay in Afghanistan or Iraq.” By the way, Barney Frank is saying the same thing: In an interview with ThinkProgress today, Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) told us that the well-executed killing of the world’s most wanted terrorist, Osama bin Laden, “absolutely” bolsters the case for beginning a significant withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Explaining his decision to vote for the Afghanistan war in 2001, Frank said, “We went there to get Osama bin Laden. And we have now gotten Osama bin Laden. … So yes, I think this does strengthen the case [for withdrawal].”
Continue reading …Syrian troops claim coastal city from demonstrators challenging rule of President Bashar al-Assad Syrian security forces swept into the coastal city of Banias on Tuesday, a protest leader said, taking control of another urban centre from demonstrators challenging the authoritarian rule of President Bashar al-Assad. “They moved into the main market area. The army has sealed the northern entrance and security forces [sealed] the south,” Anas al-Shughri told Reuters. “They armed Alawite villages in the hills overlooking Banias and we are now facing militias from the east,” he said. Activists said arrests continued across Syria on Tuesday. Speaking from Egypt, Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organisation of Human Rights in Syria, said the latest wave of detentions had involved more than 1,000 people. Assad, a member of the minority Alawite sect whose family has ruled majority Sunni Syria for 41 years, is pursuing a violent crackdown on six weeks of protests which began with demands for greater freedoms and now seek his overthrow. Germany and Britain said they were seekthe US announced sanctions last week – and France said Assad should be among the targets for sanctions. “The Syrian government’s continuing brutal actions leave the European Union no choice but to press firmly ahead with targeted sanctions against the regime,” said Werner Hoyer, Germany’s deputy foreign minister. Last week Assad sent tanks and soldiers into the southern city of Deraa, where the uprising broke out on 18 March. Syrian rights groups say more than 560 civilians have been killed by security forces since the start of the unrest. International condemnation of the crackdown has intensified since the Deraa assault, which revived memories of the 1982 repression of an armed Islamist uprising in the city of Hama by Assad’s father, President Hafez al-Assad. “Syria should not go through another massacre like Hama. We have reminded them of this,” Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has sent envoys to Damascus and spoken to Assad several times during the unrest, told Turkey’s A-TV channel. Israel, which has relied on Assad and his father to keep their front line quiet for nearly 40 years – despite Israel’s occupation of the Golan Heights and Syria’s support for militants opposed to Israel – said Assad was losing his grip. “I believe Assad is approaching the moment in which he will lose his authority. The growing brutality is pushing him into a corner,” said Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister. “The more people are killed, the less chance Assad has to come out of it.” The International Crisis Group NGO said: “The situation in Syria is quickly going beyond the point of no return. By denouncing all forms of protest as sedition, and dealing with them through escalating violence, the regime is closing the door on any possible honourable exit to a deepening national crisis.” In Banias, a Mediterranean coast city that has witnessed some of the most persistent protests, Shughri said armed plainclothes security men had been deployed in the market street and were making arrests. Authorities have described mostly Sunni Banias as a “centre of Salafist terrorism”. Shughri denied residents had weapons and said youths carrying sticks were manning roadblocks, facing off against armed forces who had spread out in the area. Banias city centre has been under the control of demonstrators since, according to residents, Assad loyalists known as “al-shabbiha” opened fire on 10 April after a protest demanding the “overthrow of the regime”. Six civilians were killed, according to residents and human rights campaigners. Authorities said at the time an armed group had ambushed a patrol near Banias, killing nine soldiers. Foreign media are restricted from reporting in Syria, but residents of the southern city of Deraa told Reuters that security forces were still making arrests. “They are still dragging anyone who is less than 40 years of age to the Deraa stadium where they have held hundreds, including several women, in the last week without shelter,” said Abu Muhammad, a resident. Officials say the army stormed Deraa in response to appeals from residents, and blame the violence on armed Islamist groups. They say most of those killed have been police and soldiers. The Red Cross called on Syria to grant immediate safe access to people wounded and those being detained by the authorities. Wissam Tarif, of the human rights organisation Insan, said the Damascus suburbs of Zabadani and Madaya had been without communication for five days. “Military and security men have been raiding houses since early on Monday,” he said. The interior ministry offered an amnesty to protesters who surrender to security forces, saying people who carried guns, attacked security forces or “spread lies” would be spared punishment if they hand themselves over by 15 May. It also urged them to supply information about “saboteurs, terrorists and weapons caches”. Syria Bashar Al-Assad Israel Germany European Union guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Debate within Obama administration over whether to speed up pullout of US troops, set to start this summer The killing of Osama bin Laden has opened up divisions inside Barack Obama’s administration over whether the withdrawal of US troops in Afghanistan, which is scheduled to begin this summer, should be bigger and faster than planned. Politicians, soldiers and analysts from the US to Afghanistan have debated whether the removal of the al-Qaida leader will shorten the war and open the way for reconciliation with the Taliban. The Pentagon, braced for a Taliban onslaught in the spring, wants only a token cut of about 2,000 of the 100,000 US troops in Afghanistan. But members of Congress called for significant cuts given that Bin Laden had been the reason for going into Afghanistan, a view shared by some in the White House who are thinking about Obama’s re-election chances next year. Obama is due to announce in July the scale of the troop drawdown. Bin Laden’s death is also having a continuing impact on US-Pakistan relations and members of Congress called publicly for the billions of dollars in US aid to Pakistan to be suspended. The CIA director, Leon Panetta, contributed to the deteriorating relationship between the two countries when he told Time magazine that Pakistan could not be trusted with news of the mission. “It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis could jeopardise the mission. They might alert the targets,” Panetta said. The White House spokesman, Jay Carney, when asked about the US relationship with Pakistan, opted for a diplomatic approach. “It is a complicated but important relationship,” he said. Carney said there was a debate within the White House over whether to release pictures of Bin Laden’s body. He said there were sensitivities attached to such an action, such as inflaming opinion in the Islamic world. He described the pictures of Bin Laden’s face, with a bullet hole, as “gruesome”. Seeking to clarify some of the conflicting statements made by the Obama administration over the last 48 hours about the mission, Carney said Bin Laden had not been armed when shot and Bin Laden’s wife had not been killed, only injured. US and British sources said the killing introduced a major new element to the debate about easing western involvement in Afghanistan. Barney Frank, a Democratic congressman who was until this year chairman of the House finance committee, told the ThinkProgress website: “We went there to get Osama bin Laden. And we have now gotten Osama bin Laden. So yes, I think this does strengthen the case.” He added: “We just killed Osama bin Laden, and I think that takes a lot of the pressure away – a lot of the punch away from the argument that ‘Ooh, it will look like we walked away’.” Richard Lugar, the most senior Republican on the Senate foreign affairs committee, speaking at a hearing on Afghanistan, referred to the $100bn (£61bn) the US planned to spend in Afghanistan next year. “It is exceedingly difficult to conclude that our vast expenditures in Afghanistan represent a rational allocation of our military and financial assets,” he said. Larry Sabato, a professor of politics at the University of Virginia, predicted: “One of the unintended consequences of Bin Laden’s death will be American soldiers coming back faster.Listen to the man in the street. I can’t count the number of times I have heard people say ‘We can get out off Afghanistan faster’. “People think the peace dividend is getting out of Afghanistan. By the summer, it will be unavoidable. We will have to get out faster.” The Pentagon, resisting major troop withdrawals, is arguing that big gains made by the US and its allies in Afghanistan over the winter would be put at risk if there was a significant cut in troops. A Taliban commander, among those who escaped from Kandahar prison last week, agreed with the Pentagon assessment, predicting Bin Laden’s death would not shorten the war. He told the Guardian: “The Afghans are fighting the foreigners, so killing Bin Laden won’t affect anything. The fighting will not stop. We will be just as strong.” A western source in Kabul suggested the short-term impact of the killing could be to fuel the fighting: “They have killed the person of Bin Laden but not the reason why he exists and what he is for. They have destroyed his body, not his cause. “In fact, they have created another martyr without addressing the fundamental reason why Osama and the movement behind him exists. America is still occupying two Muslim countries and bombarding another.” Michael Semple, who has held extensive talks with the Taliban as a European representative in Kabul and still maintains contacts, said the removal of Bin Laden might open the way for reconciliation with the Taliban. “There is an interesting conversation going on now. One side says this shows that the Americans will be preparing to leave and we can ride it out. There is another pro-talks and pragmatic point of view that this could be helpful for a settlement, as it gets Osama off the agenda and makes the al-Qaida issue much easier to deal with,” Semple said. In western eyes, the killing of Bin Laden makes it easier to cut the tie because it ends the personal bond between him and the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar. But that only becomes relevant if serious peace talks start. David Cameron joined the US in questioning Pakistan on how Bin Laden had a “support network” there. The prime minister told MPs: “The fact that Bin Laden was living in a large house in a populated area suggests that he must have had a support network in Pakistan. We don’t currently know the extent of that network, so it is right that we ask searching questions about it. And we will.” Adding to Pakistan’s embarrassment, it has emerged that its intelligence service had raided the compound where Bin Laden was found in 2003 while it was under construction. The intelligence agents had been looking for an al-Qaida suspect, raising further questions why they failed to put the compound under surveillance in later years. Cameron, who last year accused Pakistan of looking “both ways” on terrorism, declined to explain which elements in Pakistan may have assisted Bin Laden. The prime minister warned that the killing could lead to a “lone wolf” attack. He said: “Clearly there is a risk that al-Qaida and its affiliates in places like Yemen and the Maghreb will want to demonstrate they are able to operate effectively. And, of course, there is always the risk of a radicalised individual acting alone, a so-called lone-wolf attack. So we must be more vigilant than ever– and we must maintain that vigilance for some time to come.” Osama bin Laden United States Obama administration Afghanistan Pakistan US military US politics Barack Obama Ewen MacAskill Julian Borger Nicholas Watt Jon Boone guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Madrid court claims government-linked groups paid $3.3m ransom to free Alakrana and its 36 crew members A Spanish court has sentenced two Somalis to 439 years in jail each for the 2009 hijacking of a Spanish fishing boat in the Indian Ocean, while claiming government-linked bodies paid a ransom to secure the release of the vessel and its crew. But Spain’s foreign minister, Trinidad Jiménez, quickly contradicted the court and denied the government had paid to secure the release of the Alakrana. The tuna fishing boat with a 36-member crew was seized off Somalia and held for 47 days. An alleged $3.3m ransom was paid. Spain says it does not pay ransom, but in the Alakrana case, the government said on the day of the release it did what it had to do. It did not elaborate. Spanish commandos captured two men as they sailed away from the boat during the hijacking drama and they were brought to Madrid for trial. The National Court identified them as Cabdiweli Cabdullahi and Raageggesey Hassan Aji. Jiménez told reporters that “the government did not pay ransom in the Alakrana case” and insisted this is what officials had said all along. However, the 50-page court verdict says the trial “had shown beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was not the ship’s owner but public organisations linked to the government which paid for the release of the crew and the ship”. Piracy at sea Somalia Spain Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Looking back at Sunday night’s White House Correspondents Dinner, it’s clear now that some of the jokes were more than little pungent — considering that the president at that point had authorized the mission to kill Osama bin Laden. For example, there was this bit from Seth Meyer’s ribbing of various entities, including the president and C-SPAN: MEYERS: Every time I tune into C-SPAN it looks like they just had a fire drill. C-SPAN is one unpaid electric bill away from being a radio station. People think Bin Laden is hiding in the Hindu Kush. But did you know that every day from 4 to 5 he hosts a show on C-SPAN? You can see that Obama enjoyed that joke quite a bit. You have to wonder what he was thinking just then. That’s even more the case in his pwnage of Donald Trump : Click here to view this media Josh Marshall pointed this one out : OBAMA: But all kidding aside, obviously, we all know about your credentials and breadth of experience. (Laughter.) For example — no, seriously, just recently, in an episode of Celebrity Apprentice — (laughter) — at the steakhouse, the men’s cooking team cooking did not impress the judges from Omaha Steaks. And there was a lot of blame to go around. But you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. And so ultimately, you didn’t blame Lil’ Jon or Meat Loaf. (Laughter.) You fired Gary Busey. (Laughter.) And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at night. (Laughter and applause.) Well handled, sir. (Laughter.) Well handled. That was already a cutting and sardonic appraisal. Given the weight that Obama was carrying that night, it now appears in retrospect to be flatly devastating.
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