Archive for March, 2017

Texas dragged into spat between Trump and European Union chief – Chron.com

Ian Wishart, Patrick Donahue, Bloomberg

Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, arrives for the European People's Party Congress on March 30, 2017, in San Giljan, Malta. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, arrives for the European People's Party Congress on March 30, 2017, in San Giljan, Malta. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Texas dragged into spat between Trump and European Union chief

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker hit back at Donald Trump's support for the U.K.'s withdrawal from the European Union, saying that he would champion American states that wanted to secede from the union.

"The newly elected U.S. president was happy that Brexit was taking place and was asking other countries to do the same," Juncker told delegates from his pan-EU Christian Democrat group in Malta. "If he goes on like that, I'm going to promote the independence of Ohio and the exit of Texas."

Whether known to Juncker or not, Texas has long been associated with autonomous leanings, having declared itself the independent Republic of Texas in 1836 after seceding from Mexico, according to the Texas State Library and Archives Commission. It didn't join the U.S. until 1845.

Juncker's tone belies the anger among EU chiefs that President Trump has stoked the Brexit fire and, with it, egged on other countries to follow the U.K.'s lead.

Leaders from the European People's Party, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU President Tusk, were meeting a day after Prime Minister Theresa May officially notified the bloc that Britain is withdrawing, starting two years of negotiations.

"Brexit isn't the end of everything, we must consider it to be a new beginning," Juncker said.

The U.K.'s decision will make the EU "more determined," Tusk said, adding that the bloc would remain "united in the future, also during the difficult negotiations" with the U.K.

While Merkel didn't mention Brexit in her speech directly, she also chose to focus on unity.

"Many people are saying the world and Europe are going a bit off the rails," said Merkel, who as leader of the EU's largest economy will have the biggest say on the final deal the bloc strikes with the U.K. "If we act together in Europe, we can do it much better than if we do things on our own in a world that isn't sleeping."

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Texas dragged into spat between Trump and European Union chief - Chron.com

Brexit Leader Farage: European Union Just Lost Whatever … – Fox Business

The man behind Brexit, Nigel Farage, has called European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker a complete and total idiot after Juncker said he would support the independence of U.S. states in response to President Donald Trumps support for Brexit.

In an interview with FOX Business Networks Stuart Varney, Farage said the remarks had cost Juncker and the European Union "whatever credibility it had in the USA.

[Juncker] is comparing the United States of America, which has a common culture and a common desire to be a nation, with the United States of Europe that he wants to build and impose upon the peoples of Europe, Farage said. Brexit has happened, Trump was a supporter of that project, and now frankly, this idiot, because I cant think of a better word says that hell campaign for Ohio to break away from the USA."

Although Farage is now critical of the EU chiefs support of independence of U.S. states, he was reportedly recruited to help lead an effort to break up California into multiple states.

Farage said that he has to remove any doubt that it is not me trying to break up California. He did say the state splitting up may be a stretch, but he said Brexit proved if you want something enough, it can happen.

I mean think about it, there are 200 countries in the world with populations smaller than California, Farage said. ...What Brexit proves, if you want something enough, it can happen. Looking at the liberal coast and the more conservative interior, I dont think it is completely impossible.

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Brexit Leader Farage: European Union Just Lost Whatever ... - Fox Business

Spain must have say over Gibraltar after Brexit: European Union guidelines – The New Indian Express

European Union HQ in Brussels. | File Photo

BRUSSELS:Spain must have a say over whether any deal after Brexit applies to the British territory of Gibraltar, over which London and Madrid have rowed for 300 years, EU guidelines said Friday.

"After the United Kingdom leaves the union, no agreement between the EU and the United Kingdom may apply to the territory of Gibraltar without the agreement between the Kingdom of Spain and the United Kingdom," the guidelines released by EU president Donald Tusk say.

The tiny British overseas territory on Spain's southern tip has long been the subject of an acrimonious sovereignty row between London and Madrid, which wants Gibraltar back after it was ceded to Britain in 1713.

Spain has proposed that Gibraltar be allowed to remain in the EU in exchange for shared sovereignty with Britain over the Rock.

But residents overwhelmingly voted to remain with Britain in two sovereignty referendums in 1967 and 2002.

The leaders of the remaining 27 EU countries -- including Spain but excluding Britain -- are set to adopt the guidelines at a summit on April 29.

British Prime Minister Theresa May formally triggered the two-year Brexit process on Wednesday.

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Spain must have say over Gibraltar after Brexit: European Union guidelines - The New Indian Express

Britain, Breaking Up With EU, Looks to an Expert: Henry VIII – New York Times


New York Times
Britain, Breaking Up With EU, Looks to an Expert: Henry VIII
New York Times
Big Ben and the British Houses of Parliament on the River Thames in London on Wednesday. Britain has come up with a plan, first used by King Henry VIII in 1539, to legally reconcile laws on the day it leaves the European Union. Credit Justin Tallis ...

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Britain, Breaking Up With EU, Looks to an Expert: Henry VIII - New York Times

As war in Afghanistan drags on, Russia resurrects interest – The Spokesman-Review

FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017, 6:19 A.M.

WASHINGTON As Americas effort to end 16 years of war in Afghanistan yields little progress, Russia is resurrecting its own interest in the graveyard of empires. The jockeying includes engaging the Taliban and leading a new diplomatic effort to tackle Afghanistans future, with or without U.S. support.

Uncertain of Moscows intentions, the Trump administration will stay away when Russia hosts regional powers China, India, Iran and Pakistan, and several Central Asian countries, for another set of Afghan talks next month. Afghanistans government is attending, but the U.S. declined an invitation, saying it wasnt consulted ahead of time. No one has invited the Taliban.

For Russia, dogged by memories of the Soviet Unions disastrous 1980s occupation of Afghanistan, its a surprising turn at the head of the countrys proverbial peace table. And it coincides with the Kremlins campaign to wield greater international authority at the U.S. expense elsewhere, including intervening in Syrias war and pushing for a settlement on President Bashar Assads and its own terms. Moscow even has sought to broker new Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, challenging Washingtons grip on the Mideast peace process.

For the United States, the new Russian foray into Afghanistan may represent another worrying consequence of a perceived American retrenchment. The perception has intensified overseas as President Donald Trump formulates new policy. Since taking office, he has scarcely mentioned Afghanistan, the U.S. militarys largest deployment in a war zone.

Russia sees a gap and is trying to fill it, said Jonah Blank, a South Asia expert at the RAND Corp. Its looking around for opportunities, for any place where it can expand its own influence and freedom to pursue its own interests, and undermine U.S. alliances and partnerships.

Although Washington is sitting out the upcoming Moscow conference, officials said the State Department still wants to work with Russia and others to encourage Afghan peace talks. But it is trying to get Russia and others to increase pressure on the Taliban, said officials who werent authorized to speak publicly on the diplomacy and requested anonymity.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will discuss the matter in Russias capital next month.

But several senior U.S. military officials have voiced suspicions.

Theres a lot that we dont know about what Russia is doing, Army Gen. Joseph Votel, who leads U.S. forces in the Middle East, told a congressional panel this week.

Its fair to assume they may be providing some kind of support to them in terms of weapons or other things, he said, adding that Russia is attempting to be an influential party in this part of the world.

I dont consider their outreach and linkage to the Taliban to be helpful, Votel said.

President Vladimir Putins government is an unlikely peace broker in Afghanistan, but the Afghans are grappling with great uncertainty.

Theyre waiting to see if Washington sends more troops as Gen. John Nicholson, top U.S. military commander in Afghanistan, advocates or adjusts strategy amid increased Taliban attacks and Afghan military setbacks. In the past year, insurgents have sought to overrun several provincial capitals. Last week, they captured a southern district in Helmand province, which American and British troops fought bitterly to give to the government. The U.S. maintains 8,400 troops in Afghanistan, training local forces and conducting counterterrorism operations.

Moscow denies providing material support to the Taliban, which ruled Afghanistan until the U.S.-led invasion in 2001. Russia says contacts are limited to safeguarding security and getting the hardline religious fundamentalists to reconcile with the government which Washington has failed for years to advance. Russia also has promoted easing global sanctions on Taliban leaders who prove cooperative.

At its heart, Russia assesses Afghanistans civil war fundamentally differently than the West. It often frames its suspicions of U.S. activity in terms evocative of the Great Game of the 1800s, when the British and Russian empires vied over Afghanistan and its neighbors, determined to shape the strategic land bridge linking Asia and the Mideast. And it has started seeing the Taliban as a largely local force, not an international jihadist threat, and a potential partner in combating Islamic State attempts to gain a foothold in Afghanistan.

Where is Afghanistan and where is America? Zamir Kabulov, the Kremlins special envoy to Afghanistan, said in a January interview with Turkish media, likening U.S. bases in the country to Russia deploying troops to Mexico. The comparison may be somewhat strained. Russias frontier is several hundred miles from Afghanistan; the U.S. shares a roughly 2,000-mile border with Mexico, its southern neighbor.

While the Russians are primarily concerned about Afghanistan destabilizing their periphery, they may be trying to boost their diplomatic profile and strengthen bonds in Asia. Russias eastward push has accelerated as ties with the U.S. and Europe have soured over the 2014 annexation of Ukraines Crimea region and allegations of meddling in the American presidential election.

Russia has improved once cool relations with Pakistan, where Taliban leaders have sought sanctuary. And it has increasingly tightened political and economic coordination with China.

People are frustrated that Afghanistan is not stabilizing. The whole region is suffering, Pakistans U.S. ambassador, Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, said. But he said U.S. leadership was preferable.

Moscow hasnt won the Afghan governments trust.

Differentiating between good terrorists and bad terrorists (is) a major mistake, Homayun Qayoumi, a top aide to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, told a Washington audience this month.

Russia may be making some diplomatic progress. After visiting Moscow this month, Hanif Atmar, Afghanistans national security adviser, said he received assurances Russia was promoting reconciliation and not providing military support. He welcomed the approach.

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As war in Afghanistan drags on, Russia resurrects interest - The Spokesman-Review