June 26, 2010

Bill O'Reilly: Stratfor.com Intel Briefing - Stratfor.com: Germany and Russia Move Closer

Bill O'Reilly: Stratfor.com Intel Briefing - Stratfor.com: Germany and Russia Move Closer

Stratfor.com: Germany and Russia Move Closer


June 22, 2010
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle will brief French and Polish officials on a joint proposal for Russian-European "cooperation on security," according to a statement from Westerwelle's spokesman on Monday. The proposal emerged out of talks between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev earlier in June and is based on a draft Russia drew up in 2008. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will be present at the meeting. Peschke said, "We want to further elaborate and discuss it within the triangle [i.e., France, Germany and Poland] in the presence of the Russian foreign minister."

On the surface, the proposal developed by Merkel and Medvedev appears primarily structural. It raises security discussions about specific trouble spots to the ministerial level rather than the ambassadorial level, with a committee being formed consisting of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Russia's foreign minister.

June 24, 2010

New Ukrainian Foundation Puts People First - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty © 2010

New Ukrainian Foundation Puts People First - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty © 2010

New Ukrainian Foundation Puts People First

Ukraine's Orange Revolution was a major democratic transition, but  many Ukrainians are disenchanted with democracy.
Ukraine's Orange Revolution was a major democratic transition, but many Ukrainians are disenchanted with democracy.
May 25, 2010
By Taras Kuzio
Ukraine finally emerged as a democracy six years ago following mass protests that became known as the Orange Revolution. The human rights think tank Freedom House has rated Ukraine as "Free" since 2005, making it the only CIS country to sustain this annual ranking over a period of years.

To date, Ukraine has held four elections that were assessed by OSCE observers as "free and fair." It has also been given credit for vibrant media pluralism.

But not everything is in good democratic order in Ukraine.

Public trust in state institutions is at an all time low, corruption levels have risen over the last five years, corruption flourishes within the judicial system and the prosecutor's office, politics has become more brittle and fractured, and Ukrainian citizens are disenchanted with their leaders and with democracy.