Archive for July, 2017

On Iran, Canada Should Pick Up Where Obama Left Off – Huffington Post Canada

As the second anniversary of the Iran nuclear deal approaches, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has an opportunity to put his government's new approach to foreign policy into effect by expressing support for the historic agreement reached between world powers and Iran, particularly as uncertainty increases surrounding the Trump administration's support for the deal. On Iran, Canada should pick up where the Obama administration left off and work to ensure that the deal is upheld and engage Tehran on matters of shared interest.

Last month, in a rousing speech before Canada's House of Commons in response to the Trump administration's inward-looking foreign policy, Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland doubled down on the rules-based international order Canada helped shape. In doing so, she said that Canada would lead on the world stage and emphasized the importance of multilateralism in preserving the global order.

To be sure, the best of multilateralism was displayed when the permanent members of the UN Security Council, Germany and the European Union successfully negotiated the nuclear accord with Iran two years ago; peacefully ending a longstanding dispute. Since then, the deal has been performing as it was designed to and has made the world safer by reversing Iran's nuclear program and verifiably preventing Iranian nuclear proliferation. More importantly, the deal prevented a catastrophic war in a region already embroiled in strife; a crisis averted thanks to the political will of both Presidents Obama and Rouhani of Iran.

The political will that previously existed is no longer balanced and the threat of conflict with Iran has needlessly re-emerged. President Trump has shown little inclination to engage Iran and has so far begrudgingly supported the nuclear deal while his administration finalizes its Iran policy review. In his remarks recently to the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson endorsed regime change in Iran and indicated that he had no plans to engage Tehran.

How disengagement and hostility against Iran benefits U.S. interests remains to be seen, particularly since Tillerson's predecessor, John Kerry, worked tirelessly to establish a line of communication with Iran that helped improve relations. If Tillerson's statement is any indication, the Trump administration's Iran policy review is destined to lead Washington toward confrontation with Tehran and could be the beginning of the end of the nuclear deal. This is where Canada should step in to play a larger role.

Canada's voice on the international stage has been largely amplified thanks to the charisma and progressive politics of Prime Minister Trudeau. There is an opportunity for the star power that accompanies the prime minister to be leveraged in support of diplomacy and peace with Iran. Much like President Obama did while in office, the prime minister can be vocal before the media and in his meetings with world leaders about the benefits of the nuclear deal.

Perhaps more importantly, he can persuade President Trump of the merits of the agreement. The prime minister did say that based on his experience, the president "actually does listen." While Canada was not involved in negotiating the nuclear deal, it is bound by it through the UN Security Council resolution which formally endorsed it. To be certain, Canada would not be alone in defending the deal. The European Union has been vociferous about its support for the agreement.

Not only would upholding the nuclear deal be good stewardship of the rules-based international order, it is also in Canada's national interest. Significant business opportunities for Canadian companies exist in Iran in all sectors as a result of the lifting of nuclear-related sanctions.

Since implementation of the deal began, Canada's allies have been pursuing their economic interests in Iran. For example, the European Union's two-way trade with Iran increased 55 percent in 2016 from the previous year. The EU foreign policy chief outright stated that the EU wanted to be Iran's largest trading partner. With France, Iran signed deals with aircraft producer Airbus in a deal worth $23 billion for over a hundred airliners. Iran also signed a deal last week with French oil company Total totaling nearly $5 billion over 20 years. Germany's Volkswagen has also announced that it will be re-entering the Iranian market after a 17 year hiatus. Even U.S.-based Boeing agreed to a $17 billion deal to sell passenger jets to Iran in a transaction that will reportedly support over 100,000 U.S. jobs.

From a geopolitical perspective, as the Trump administration re-orients U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East away from regional balance in favour of Saudi Arabia, Canada has an opportunity to continue the Obama administration's approach by defending the nuclear deal, promoting co-existence between regional players and discouraging the zero-sum game they are pursuing. Increased stability in this region would directly benefit Canadian interests since it is involved in the fight against Daesh in Iraq. Ottawa also provides humanitarian assistance to displaced Syrians in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, and has welcomed over 35,000 refugees from the region in 2016.

Should Ottawa increase its advocacy of the Iran deal, particularly if the Trump administration works to undermine it, it should consider restoring ties with Tehran and pursue a policy of engagement based on Iran's continued adherence to the nuclear deal, and cooperation on issues of mutual interest including trade, the environment and the fight against Daesh. It could also engage Tehran directly on issues of great concern such as human rights, including the arbitrary detention of dual nationals, as well as Tehran's regional activities that Canada considers to be destabilizing. In this vein, reports that Canadian officials were in Tehran recently are to be welcomed.

The fate of the historic nuclear deal is at stake as the Trump administration increases its hostility toward Iran. The ongoing nuclear crisis in the Korean peninsula should serve as a reminder to opponents of the deal not to take it for granted. Canada has an opportunity to pick up where the Obama administration left off by defending and upholding the nuclear agreement in support of a peaceful rules-based international order.

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On Iran, Canada Should Pick Up Where Obama Left Off - Huffington Post Canada

Battle for Mosul: Iraq PM Abadi formally declares victory – BBC News


BBC News
Battle for Mosul: Iraq PM Abadi formally declares victory
BBC News
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has formally declared victory over so-called Islamic State (IS) in Mosul. Mr Abadi waved a national flag with troops after announcing the "collapse of the terrorist state of falsehood". Earlier, clashes were ...
US and Iraq Declare Victory Over ISIS in MosulNBCNews.com
Iraq's Moment of Celebration Is One of Deeper Risk, TooNew York Times
Iraqi PM declares victory over Islamic State in MosulReuters
Washington Post -Newsweek
all 1,180 news articles »

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Battle for Mosul: Iraq PM Abadi formally declares victory - BBC News

The Morning Brief: Donald Trump Jr., ISIS in Iraq and Amazon Echo – TIME

Good morning. These are todays top stories:

President Donald Trumps eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., offered two different explanations over the weekend for why he met with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 presidential campaign. In his latest statement, Trump Jr. said he was promised damaging information about Hillary Clinton, the New York Times reported.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has declared a big victory over ISIS in Mosul, according to the Associated Press. The liberation of Iraqs second-largest city was almost nine months in the making.

Nelsan Ellis , who portrayed Lafayette Reynolds on HBO's True Blood , has died at 39, reportedly due to complications of heart failure. HBO said the actor was a longtime member of the HBO family whose groundbreaking portrayal of Lafayette will be remembered fondly.

Also:

Cardinal George Pell , a top Vatican cleric, has returned to Australia to face sexual assault charges.

Five people were gored during the first two days of Spain's running of the bulls.

Elon Musk has revealed the first photos of Tesla's Model 3 .

The Amazon Echo is crazy cheap for tomorrow's Amazon Prime Day .

Pringles is introducing a ramen-flavored chip for a limited time.

The Morning Brief is published Mondays through Fridays. Email Morning Brief writer Melissa Chan at melissa.chan@time.com .

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The Morning Brief: Donald Trump Jr., ISIS in Iraq and Amazon Echo - TIME

One enemy saves another’s life; an Iran-Iraq war story – San Francisco Chronicle

The assignment for Meredith May, who used to be a Chronicle reporter and feature writer, was precise. You have five months, she was told by the publisher, ReganBooks, to meet the protagonists, hear them tell their story (through translators), research its veracity, and write the book, which would be in the first person, with alternating chapters told by each man involved. And thats what led to the publication of I, Who Did Not Die, a book she spoke about and signed at Book Passage in Corte Madera on Thursday.

The story, first reported in Canadian newspapers, is stunning: In 1982, during the Iran-Iraq War, Najah Aboud, a 29-year-old Iraqi who had been drafted, was severely wounded. Iranian Zahed Haftlang, a 13-year-old Iranian child soldier whod enlisted to escape a bullying father, was ordered to make sure every Iraqi enemy in a certain area of the battleground was dead. Searching, he found only one, Najah, barely alive.

Although Zahed had been ordered to kill anyone he encountered, he was unable to do it. Instead, he ministered to Najah for three days, hiding him and saving his life. Ultimately, both men were captured, Zahed spending two years in an Iraqi prison, Aboud spending 17 years in an Iranian prison, way past the end of the war.

Eventually, both men wound up in Canada. And 20 years after their first encounter, by chance, they meet again, at a clinic for people suffering the effects of traumatic stress.

May was speaking at the bookstore, which has a busy schedule of events, just after Al Frankens presentation of his Al Franken, Giant of the Senate. That audience was huge and friendly, a choir to be preached to, a crowd easily amused. (More about his presentation tomorrow.) But no one got the chills until May told her books story.

May will be at a Writers With Drinks event at the Make-Out Room in San Francisco at 7 p.m. on Sept. 9.

Mark Kelly, who retired as an astronaut in 2011, the year his wife, Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, was shot in the head, is going to be at Shreve & Co. on Tuesday, July 11, on behalf of Breitling watches, which calls him a company Ambassador. Kelly was a space shuttle pilot who became a mission commander. The (sort of) tie in between his distinguished public and scientific life with this commercial gig is that the watch company has a new Navitimer Breitling DC-3 watch thats being shlepped around the world on a Breitling DC-3 plane.

In the comments section of the Mission Local story alleging that many items in the permanent collection of the Mexican Museum are not authentic artifacts, a person identifying himself as George Washington weighed in. This isnt just in Mexico museums but all over the world. Dinosaurs are fake. Its one of the biggest hoaxes. Every single dinosaur skeleton you see at a museum isnt real. They are all cast. Dinosaurs were invented to support the evolution myth. Nice coincidence that dinosaurs werent discovered until right after the evolution theory came to be. And remember, George Washington cannot tell a lie.

Julie Brown Saari attended a Salute to America July 4 concert of the Cleveland Symphony, and overheard a small boy who was there with his mom, who told him there would be fireworks after the concert. Then will they play some real music? he asked her. Saari thought this amusing; perhaps he was disappointed there was no rock n roll. But having looked at the program which included the Strategic Air Command March, Army Air Corps March and March-Past of the U.S. Armed Forces I think the kid may have a future as a music critic.

Those San Rafael Pacifics, mentioned herein last week for their Alternative Facts Night, seem to like combining baseball with social action: On Aug. 26, in support of Tri-Valley Socks (Stepping Out for Cancer Kures), they will make baseball history, says an announcement, by being the first professional mens team to wear bras over their jerseys to support the fight against breast cancer. Challenge to players in womens leagues: What are you going to do about the fight against prostate cancer?

Leah Garchik is open for business in San Francisco, (415) 777-8426. Email: lgarchik@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @leahgarchik

PUBLIC EAVESDROPPING

Can we get the

vegan chocolate bunny?

Little girl to mother, overheard at Target

in San Rafael by Gary Meyer

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One enemy saves another's life; an Iran-Iraq war story - San Francisco Chronicle

5 things for Monday, July 10: The US and Russia, Iraq fighting, London market fire – CNN International

1. US and Russia Donald Trump Jr. said he met with a Russian lawyer connected to the Kremlin last year because he'd been told the person had "information helpful to" his father's campaign. In a statement to CNN, Trump Jr. said the meeting was set up by an acquaintance from the Miss Universe pageant and that he also invited Jared Kusher and then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort to the meeting. Trump Jr. said the woman they met with said she had information that people connected to Russia were funding the DNC and supporting Hillary Clinton, before changing the subject to adoptions of Russian children. Trump Jr. said nothing came of the meeting and his father never knew about it.

The June 2016 meeting -- which happened two weeks after Donald Trump nabbed the GOP nomination -- is significant because it's the first known meeting of senior Trump officials with a Russian national during the campaign.

Overall about 45 fires are burning across parts of the West, which is suffering through a dry, hot summer. Six states are under red flag warnings, and things won't get better this week, since weather forecasters think lightning from thunderstorms will spark more blazes.

Fourteen different firesare burning from one end of the Golden State to the other, spurring thousands to evacuate. One of the fires, in Santa Barbara County in the south, threatened about 60 kids at a summer camp. They had to wait in a dining hall while firefighters fought the flames around them. The kids were unharmed. There are fires in Northern California too, must notably one in Butte County that's burned 5,600 acresand forced 4,000 people to flee.

Overall about 45 fires are burning across parts of the West, which is suffering through a dry, hot summer. Six states are under red flag warnings, and things won't get better this week, since weather forecasters think lightning from thunderstorms will spark more blazes.

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5 things for Monday, July 10: The US and Russia, Iraq fighting, London market fire - CNN International