In which we scour the transcript of the State Department's
daily presser so you don't have to. Here are the highlights of Tuesday's
briefing by spokesman P.J. Crowley:
Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton met with Kurdistan Regional Government President Massoud
Barzani, who also met
with President Obama. Then Clinton left for London to meet with world leaders
on Yemen and then join the international conference on Afghanistan. She'll move
on to Paris after that.
At the Afghanistan conference, in
addition to reviewing "milestones and metrics" for progress of the Afghan
government, the world leaders will be discussing how to engage elements of the
Taliban that could be persuaded to give up the fight. "So we will be looking at
how to set up a special fund, to be able to support those who are committed to
giving up violence," said Crowley, "And I think that there will be discussions
about a reconciliation strategy."
Crowley stood by Clinton's
statements yesterday saying she "deeply
resents" the criticism of the relief effort in Haiti. "You have criticisms coming from Italy, occasionally from
France. We've had General Honore in our own country, who has, you know, tried
to draw an equivalence between our experience in New Orleans and experience in
Haiti, and the fact is, you cannot compare the two."
Crowley singled out Al Jazeera's
English channel, which compared the U.S. relief effort in Haiti to the Green
zone in Baghdad.
National Security Advisor Jim Jones, Joint Chiefs Chairman Mike Mullen, and Undersecretary of
State for Arms Control Ellen Tauscher
just got back from Moscow where they were meeting about the follow on to the
START nuclear agreement. Formal negotiations will resume in Geneva on Monday
led by Assistant Secretary Rose
Gottemoeller. Source tell The Cable
that "progress was made" in Moscow and an agreement could be completed soon. "I
think we're reasonably optimistic that the finish line is within sight,"
Crowley said.
Assistant
Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs Arturo
Valenzuela, his principal deputy Craig
Kelly, and Assistant Secretary for Economic and Business Affairs Jose Fernandez are in Honduras to
attend the inauguration of new president Pepe
Lobo.
Crowley had cautious praise for the reported
pending release of democracy icon Aung
San Suu Kyi by the Burmese Junta. "I think the idea that her release will
conveniently come after the election is unfortunate, but we will continue to
press the Burmese government, you know, for her release," he said.
The State Department dispatched four
helicopters to aid Peruvian authorities in the evacuation of 400 Americans from
the area around Machu Picchu in Peru, which is being plagued by
rains and mudslides.
Clinton talked to British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown Tuesday about
the power
sharing negotiations in Northern Ireland. Will she get personally involved
in the issue? "It's always possible," Crowley said.
Still no consular access to the
American hikers imprisoned in Iran, despite that Belgians just released from
the same prison said they were "deeply
concerned" about the fate of the hikers.
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