From my archive of press clippings:
Jamaica Observer
Ja wouldn't stare down Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Dear Editor,
With his back to the wall, the prime minister has devised a tactic which at least has a fighting chance of working. He has come out of his corner of the ring swinging, in the diplomatic fight with the Obama administration. His bona fide in the Dudus matter may be a little weak, as many suspect, and his position, in real terms, may well be motivated by self-interest and self-preservation, but at least he is a fighter, and not a weeper, as a certain woman was reputed to have become when faced with the Trafigura scandal.
Read the whole letter here.
Snippet(s):
"Word in Washington is that Obama can indeed be bullied - and has been bullied - according to his opponents, because of not wanting it to appear that as a liberal he is a hard taskmaster, preferring to be known as "non-confrontational". Now, where did I hear this term before? After all, he has just let Honduras bully the USA.
Now, this assumption may be a risky one, since others - Obama's supporters - say that he is as tough as nails, but acts in such a deliberate manner that he is not easily drawn by hot rhetoric."
&
"(O)ne of the things which has most riled the State Department is Minister Baugh's and the administration's foreign policy moves. We have joined the Latin American and Caribbean breakaway OAS group. Its first item of business is the stated desire to break what they see as US hegemony in the region, and then to support Argentina in its grouse with Britain over the Falklands."
_____
Patrick Blake
mysterymonpatrick@hotmail.com
Showing posts with label Dr Kenneth Baugh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Kenneth Baugh. Show all posts
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Saturday, February 14, 2009
JG - Mendicancy revisited
From my archive of press clippings:
Jamaica Gleaner
Mendicancy revisited
published: Sunday July 13, 2008
Robert Buddan, Contributor
When Dr Kenneth Baugh, the deputy prime minister, made his administration's maiden speech at the United Nations on October 3, 2007, a month after coming to office, there was no difference evident between his administration's position and that of the previous administration's position on international trade negotiations. Dr Baugh said that the new government would continue to pursue the widely accepted principle of special and differential treatment for developing countries under the DOHA Round of WTO negotiations, and that the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) being negotiated with the European Union was inequitable and violated the principle of global partnership.
Read the whole article here.
Jamaica Gleaner
Mendicancy revisited
published: Sunday July 13, 2008
Robert Buddan, Contributor
When Dr Kenneth Baugh, the deputy prime minister, made his administration's maiden speech at the United Nations on October 3, 2007, a month after coming to office, there was no difference evident between his administration's position and that of the previous administration's position on international trade negotiations. Dr Baugh said that the new government would continue to pursue the widely accepted principle of special and differential treatment for developing countries under the DOHA Round of WTO negotiations, and that the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) being negotiated with the European Union was inequitable and violated the principle of global partnership.
Read the whole article here.
Labels:
Doha Round,
Dr Kenneth Baugh,
EPA,
European Union,
Jamaica,
Jamaica Gleaner,
Robert Buddan,
United Nations,
WTO
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