Obama Likely to Seek a ‘Wartime’ Defense Secretary    In the days since Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel  resigned, two prominent candidates to replace him have said publicly  they will not do so. They are former Undersecretary of Defense Michele  Flournoy and Rhode Island Democratic Senator Jack Reed. As  President Barack Obama seeks a new appointee, the priorities for a  defense secretary have changed since he selected Hagel, then chairman of  the Atlantic Council, in February 2013, according to Barry Pavel,  director of the Council’s Brent Scowcroft Center on International  Security. The president probably will want a “wartime secretary,” Pavel  said in an interview with Ashish Kumar Sen earlier this week.   
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Showing posts from November, 2014
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  An Iran Nuclear Deal: Better Than Nothing if We Get It, But Not a Resolution    As Iran and six other nations announced a seven-month extension of their effort to reach a deal to limit the Iranian nuclear program, the Atlantic Council’s Matthew Kroenig said Iran will pose a nonproliferation threat even if a deal is struck.   Kroenig, a nonresident senior fellow with the Brent Scowcroft Center on  International Security, said the US and its allies must increase their  pressure on Tehran to reach an agreement, but that a deal along the  lines of the current negotiation will not be comprehensive.    
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  Obama to Visit India in January   President Barack Obama will travel to India in January, becoming the  first US president to visit the country twice while in office. Bharath Gopalaswamy, deputy director of the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center, tells Ashish Kumar Sen why this visit is important—and notably how it will be seen by India’s main rivals, China and Pakistan.   
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  Nuclear Deal Could Open US-Iran Cooperation Against ISIS, Ex-Officials Say    As international negotiators approach next week’s self-imposed deadline  for reaching a compromise to let Iran pursue a nuclear program, US and  French former officials told Atlantic Council forums this week that a  deal could offer new advantages in the Middle East.      An  agreement could create an opportunity for a US-Iranian “open  relationship” on confronting militant threats in Iraq and Afghanistan,  Ambassador Thomas Pickering told a November 19 forum at the Council in  Washington. “For the first time, the United States and Iran have gotten  down to the wire, along with our European and Russian and Chinese  colleagues, to something that could in one way or another generate, if  not a sea change, certainly a major shift in the situation in the  region,” said Pickering, a former undersecretary of state for political  affairs.        
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  US Prez gets Modi’s Republic Day invite, says yes  US President Barack Obama has accepted  Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s invitation to be the chief guest at  Republic Day celebrations on January 26 in New Delhi.  This  will be the first time when a US President will be the guest of honour  at an event that both India and the United States hold close to their  hearts — the founding day of the Constitution. Also, Obama will be the  first US President to visit India twice while still in office.  
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  Obama offers shield to 5 m illegal immigrants   In one of the bold decisions of his  presidency that could benefit thousands of Indian techies seeking the  Green Card, US President Barack Obama has unveiled sweeping immigration  reforms that will shield almost five million illegal immigrants from  deportation.   In a  pro-immigrant speech from the White House on Thursday night, Obama urged  Americans to show compassion toward “undocumented Americans” who have  worked hard but “see little option but to remain in the shadows or risk  their families being torn apart.”   
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  Rights group wants law to tackle communal violence       The failure of successive Indian governments to prosecute those  responsible for the deaths of 3,000 Sikhs in the aftermath of Prime  Minister Indira Gandhi’s assassination has left Indians more vulnerable  to communal violence and distrustful of the judicial system, according  to a New York-based human rights group.