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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mongo2116 who wrote (850050)4/15/2015 12:45:36 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578704
 
There's plenty of faithful sheep in both parties. Gene C exhibit #1
+++++
telegraph.co.uk
Ex-British diplomat accuses Hillary Clinton of role in meltdown of IraqNew book by former adviser to the US in Iraq Emma Sky says Clinton appointed ambassador to Baghdad who had no Middle East experience



Emma Sky A former British diplomat Photo: Linda Nylind/The Guardian


By Colin Freeman, Chief foreign correspondent

8:11PM BST 14 Apr 2015

A former British diplomat has accused Hillary Clinton of contributing to Iraq’s disastrous meltdown during her four years as Barack Obama’s foreign policy chief.

Emma Sky, who served as an adviser to one of the top US commanders in Iraq, claims in a new book that Mrs Clinton operated a “dysfunctional” diplomatic mission to Baghdad that allowed a lapse back into sectarian warfare after elections in 2010.

At that time Mrs Clinton was mid-way through her four-year stint as Mr Obama’s Secretary of State, the equivalent position to Foreign Secretary in Britain.

The criticisms, which come as Mrs Clinton announces her presidential bid, are contained in a book that Ms Sky, an Oxford-educated Middle East expert, is to publish next month about the seven years she spent in Iraq.

Entitled The Unraveling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq, it paints an unflattering picture of the Obama administration as it tried to extricate itself from the country as hastily as possible.

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While the demand for a speedy drawdown from Iraq was driven primarily by Mr Obama himself, Mrs Clinton is accused of appointing an incompetent US ambassador to Baghdad, Chris Hill , who had little experience of the region and held its people in contempt.

That then paved the way for Washington to be outmanoeuvred by Iraq’s prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who was able to grab a second term in office despite fears that he was a sectarian dictator in the making.

The book also claims that the US-vice president, Joe Biden, showed little interest in Iraq’s political complexities, making oafish comparisons between its sectarian civil war and Britain’s historic tensions with Ireland.

Thanks to Mr Obama’s hasty pull-out at the end of 2011, Ms Sky says, hard-won opportunities for a lasting peace in Iraq after the war to remove Saddam Hussein in 2003 were squandered.

“That war - and the manner in which the United States left it behind in 2011 - shifted the balance of power in the region in Iran’s favour,” she writes. “Regional competition... exacerbated existing fault-lines, with support for extreme sectarian actors, including the Islamic State, turning local grievances over poor governance into proxy wars.”


Emma Sky seen here with American troops in Iraq

Ms Sky, who is now an academic at Yale University, first went to work in Iraq in 2003 after a spell as a development expert for the British Council in the Palestinian territories. Although a self-described “tree hugger”, her expertise in Arab affairs saw her appointed as coalition governor of the northern city of Kirkuk, where she then impressed General Ray Odierno, whom she advised during the US troop “surge” that curbed Iraq’s 2006-7 Sunni-Shia civil war.

However, by 2010, Gen Odierno was becoming increasingly concerned that Washington was likely to destabilise Iraq in the “rush to the exit”. He had already “begun to despair”, Ms Sky says, of Mr Hill, who was appointed the year before despite concerns about his lack of Middle East experience.

Lifting the lid on behind the scenes intrigues in Baghdad’s heavily guarded “Green Zone”, Ms Sky writes: “It was clear that Hill, though a career diplomat, lacked regional experience and was miscast in the role in Baghdad. In fact, he had not wanted the job, but Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had persuaded him to take it; she admitted as much to General Odierno, he told me, when he met her in early 2010 in Washington to discuss the dysfunction at the embassy.”

She adds that “in his staff meetings, Hill made clear how much he disliked Iraq and Iraqis”. His main priority, she said, was getting the embassy to look like a “normal” US mission, which included importing rolls of turf “on which the ambassador could play lacrosse”.

Worse was to come when Mr Biden visited Baghdad. He made clear his impatience when Ms Sky tried to explain about Iraq’s myriad political landscape of secularists, Islamists, and moderates who wanted to move beyond sectarianism. Mr Biden “could not fathom this”, she said, telling her: “My grandfather was Irish and hated the British. It’s like in the Balkans. They all grow up hating each other.”

He repeated the simplistic observation at a meeting with the Iraqiya bloc, a religiously mixed, secular movement, only to be embarrassed when one of the Iraqi politicians told him that he had a British passport.

Ms Sky makes her accusations in an article adapted from her book in Politico magazine, titled “How Obama Abandoned Democracy in Iraq”.

She says the lack of foreign policy focus from Washington ultimately allowed the White House to back Mr Maliki for a second term when he tied in 2010’s elections with Ayad Allawi, the secular, pro-Western leader of the Iraqiya bloc. Mr Hill, she says, told a distraught Gen Odierno “that Iraq is not ready for democracy, that Iraq needs a Shia strongman, and Maliki is our man”.

Her revelations come as Haider al-Abadi, Iraq’s prime minister, met Mr Obama on Tuesday to ask for more arms to defeat Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil). Recent gains against the group in Tikrit have been undermined by Isil counter-attacks in the western province of Anbar.



To: Mongo2116 who wrote (850050)4/15/2015 1:03:25 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578704
 
Hillary Clinton is bashing CEOs -- while taking their money

By Rick Newman23 hours ago


.View photo

It’s unremarkable these days to hear somebody bad-mouthing CEOs who pull down 7-, 8- or even 9-figure salaries. Unless the bad-mouther is Hillary Clinton.

The leading Democratic candidate for president has kicked off her campaign with a mild but unexpected jab at the leaders of corporate America. In an email to supporters right after declaring her candidacy, Clinton lamented the strains on ordinary families “when the average CEO makes about 300 times what the average worker makes.” Analysts interpret the populist remark as a leftward turn meant to appease liberals outraged over soaring income inequality and the outsized lifestyles of the one percent.

That’s pretty typical for a Democrat running for president—except that Clinton’s campaign is likely to be funded by many CEOs who fit the very profile she’s decrying. Clinton is citing data generated by the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, which finds that the ratio of average CEO pay to average worker pay exploded from 20-to-1 in 1965 to 296-to-1 in 2013. During that time, CEO pay grew by nearly 1,800%, while average-worker pay grew by just 32%. Today, average pay for a CEO is $15.2 million, while the typical worker earns about $52,000.

If that wealth gap bothers Clinton, it sure hasn’t stopped her from accepting checks from some of America’s richest business leaders. During her 8 years as a senator, for instance, Clinton accepted donations from J.P. Morgan Chase ( JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon ( latest annual compensation: $20 million), Goldman Sachs ( GS) CEO Lloyd Blankfein ( $23 million), Morgan Stanley ( MS) CEO James Gorman ( $18 million), and James Simons, founder of the hedge fund Renaissance Technologies, who has a net worth of about $14 billion. One of her most dedicated long-time supporters is DreamWorks ( DWA) CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg ($13.5 million in annual pay). Another big backer is Warren Buffett, who earns a modest $100,000 salary as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway ( BRK-B) -- but whose net worth grew by about $13 billion in 2014, due to his equity stake in Berkshire.

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Clinton is unapologetic about her affluent funders. "Hillary has criticized a system that keeps the deck stacked for those at the top, and has offered some policy ideas for ways to ensure that every American family has a chance to succeed," campaign spokesman Josh Schwerin told Yahoo Finance. "She’s pleased to have support from a wide variety of people, including CEOs who support her vision for America."

Since Clinton just declared her candidacy for the 2016 presidential race, no public records are yet available listing donors contributing directly to her campaign. But a political action group supporting Clinton — Ready for Hillary — has been accepting donations since 2013. And the list of big donors includes a number of CEOs and their family members writing large checks despite the candidate’s apparent misgivings about corporate wealth.

Here’s a sampling of businesspeople in the top tier of donors — giving $25,000 to Ready for Hillary — according to the Center for Responsive Politics:

Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce.com ( CRM). Latest annual pay package: $ 31.3 million. Benioff’s wife Lynne also donated $25,000 to Ready for Hillary.

Eli Broad, retired entrepreneur who made billions in insurance and home building. Estimated net worth: $7.1 billion.

Bruce Cozzad, CEO of Jazz Pharmaceuticals ( JAZZ). Latest annual compensation: $8.3 million. Cozzad’s wife Sharon also gave $25,000 to Ready for Hillary.

William Freeman, chairman and co-founder of real-estate investment firm Freeman Webb, whose pay is undisclosed because his firm is privately owned.

Clifford Hudson, CEO of burger chain Sonic ( SONC). Latest annual pay package: $2.5 million.

Laurene Powell Jobs, wife of deceased Apple ( AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs. The mercurial Jobs earned just $1 per year as Apple CEO, but he died in 2011 with a net worth of about $7 billion, mostly from stock in Apple and Walt Disney, which bought Jobs’s company Pixar in 2006.

Thomas H. Lee , founder of the private-equity firms Thomas H. Lee Partners and Lee Equity Partners. Estimated net worth: $2 billion.

William Rudin, CEO of privately owned New York real-estate firm Rudin Management Co. Estimated net worth: $4.4 billion (applies to extended family).

George Soros, chairman of hedge fund Soros Fund Management. Net worth: $23 billion.

John Tyson, chairman and former CEO, Tyson Foods ( TSN). Total pay in 2007, his last year as CEO: $9.3 million.

Alice Walton, daughter of Walmart ( WMT) founder Sam Walton. Estimated net worth: $37 billion.

Many other million- and billionaires will undoubtedly help fund Clinton’s 2016 campaign, some of them taking advantage of rules that allow them to give unlimited amounts to activist “super PACs” without having to disclose their identities. There’s nothing inherently wrong, of course, with wealthy people funding political campaigns, and various Republican candidates, including Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and Rand Paul will enjoy lavish funding from their own moneyed kingmakers.

Clinton will stand alone, however, if she accepts millions of dollars in corporate money while publicly assailing the same people funding her campaign. That will only fuel the cause of liberals hoping to enlist Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts—who castigates corporate influence in politics while accepting far less corporate money—to challenge Clinton for the Democratic nomination. To keep Warren and her wing content, Clinton may have to say no to a bit of corporate money, in addition to complaining about it.



To: Mongo2116 who wrote (850050)4/15/2015 1:38:27 PM
From: locogringo1 Recommendation

Recommended By
John

  Respond to of 1578704
 
By the way how come RUSH LIMBAUGHS ratings blow moose c--k??? hehe!!

Yes, I understand that he has asked to increase work to 3.001 hours a day instead of 3, and has applied for food stamps and a rent subsidy.

Pretty soon he will be interviewing Sharpton to pad his ratings, or maybe a naked Mika and Joe?

How fast he has fallen to be only a multi millionaire, DESTROYED AGAIN by the ultra right wing whackjobs liars.

He has been destroyed and demolished and pummeled like the republicans, right?



To: Mongo2116 who wrote (850050)4/15/2015 2:52:56 PM
From: Mahmoud Mohammed2 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
TideGlider

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578704
 
Gene,

Re: "... blow moose c--k??? hehe!!"

Get well soon ... You'll be back on your knees in no time. <ggg>