US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday hailed a landmark deal on transferring police and justice powers from London to Northern Ireland, saying it will help cement the decade-old peace process.

In a statement, Clinton, who visited Belfast in October to try to break the deadlock on the powers transfer, said she planned to host talks in Washington next week with Northern Ireland’s leaders about “the way forward.”

On Tuesday members of the Northern Ireland Assembly voted 88 in favor of the devolution deal and 17 against, the latter all unionists who want the province to remain part of Britain.

The chief US diplomat commended the lawmakers for endorsing the deal, which she called an “important step for the peaceful and prosperous future for all of the people of Northern Ireland for generations to come.”

Devolution will “mark a major milestone” in achieving the aims of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and the 2006 Saint Andrews Agreement and “will help cement the hard-won gains of the past decade,” Clinton said.

“The journey is not over, and real challenges remain,” she warned.

“I encourage all parties to work together in a spirit of cooperation and compromise as they continue the road toward a full and lasting peace,” she added.

She pledged continued US support for a peaceful, prosperous and shared Northern Ireland, saying there will be deeper cultural exchanges and business relationships.

Clinton said the US economic envoy to Northern Ireland, Declan Kelly, is working to promote economic growth, international investment, and “other new opportunities” in the British province.

“And I look forward to meeting with Northern Ireland?s leaders next week in Washington to discuss the way forward together,” Clinton said, apparently referring to Peter Robinson, the first minister and his deputy, Martin McGuinness.

Thanks AFP.

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The Secretary of State will present the International Women of Courage Awards March 10 in Washington, D.C. Tonic talks to one of the inspiring, life-risking honorees. Simply put: Courage personified.

Being courageous is an admirable trait. It’s something that we all aspire to, and encourage in others. But courage, like beauty, is often in the eye of the beholder. To some, deciding to become a parent is the largest act of courage they will ever face. Others may have to muster up strength to battle domestic abuse. Some fight the morning simply to go to a job they hate each and every day. Still others face danger, imprisonment, and even death for causes they believe in, yet continue to be fearless. In all cases, it is determination, bravery, and a strong sense of spirit that pull us through.

This week, in conjunction with National Women’s History Month, ten women will be acknowledged for being fearless, courageous, and relentless when it comes to advocating women’s rights and social justice. Since 2007, the International Women of Courage Award is the Department of State’s only award recognizing women leaders around the world. A ceremony will be held on March 10 when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton presents the awards to the honorees.

The women hail from many different countries, all struggling with rampant humanitarian injustices. “These ten women have overcome personal adversity, threats, arrest, and assault to dedicate themselves to activism for human rights,” said Melanne Verveer, Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues in a press release. “From striving to give more voice to politically underrepresented women in Afghanistan to documenting human rights abuses in Zimbabwe, these heroic individuals have made it their life’s work to increase freedom and equality in the world.”

One of the honorees, Jestina Mukoko, Executive Director of the Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP) and broadcaster for the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, is determined to accurately document the human rights abuses in her country and expose them to the international community. The ZPP reports include violence against women and politically-biased food distribution. During the deep political turmoil of the 2008 election, Mukoko was arrested, tortured, and forced to confess to an alleged terrorist plot. As her case became well-known, villagers concerned themselves with the status of Mukoko’s situation. She has brought much awareness to the injustices flourishing in the country. Her case is a huge marker in the fight against violence and government oppression. She bravely leads the way in defending human rights in one of the world’s most oppressive countries.

Tonic: Why do you feel it is important to document human rights abuses in your country?

Mukoko: At some stage in the future people will be called to account for their actions. The victims and the perpetrators will have an opportunity to deal with it in their conscience.

Tonic: After your arrest, how did you find the strength to continue to stand up for what you believe in?

Mukoko: When that happened it was a harrowing experience and when I found out about the networks and campaigns on my side, I realized there is a story. Going through that made me understand what it means to be abducted, what it means to be imprisoned for what you did not do. I met a lot of people in a similar situation and I began to understand how it helps to talk to someone else, and how talking can help other people.

The Definition of Courage

“One isn’t necessarily born with courage, but one is born with potential. Without courage, we cannot practice any other virtue with consistency. We can’t be kind, true, merciful, generous, or honest.”- Maya Angelou

Webster’s defines courage as mental or moral strength to venture, persevere, and withstand danger, fear, or difficulty. How come some people seem born to exemplify courageousness in the most powerful sense of the word, while others become more cautious and fearful in the face of adversity?

Tonic: Do you believe some people are naturally more courageous than others or is it a learned trait for everyone?

Mukoko: I believe it is something that happens because we are working with other people. We could not be courageous without other courageous people around us. I am humbled because I work through a network of very courageous people.

Tonic: What motivates you to get out of bed each morning to face another day?

Mukoko: A few years back I was taking care of my growing son, when his father died. I prayed, “Lord, keep me so I can look after this young man.” At 19, he is now beginning to do his own work and there is still a lot happening in my country. I am able to contribute and it will make a difference one day.

Women’s History Month

March is Women’s History Month, and this year happens to be the 30th anniversary. The theme for 2010 is “Writing Women Back into History.” So often our history books revolve around accomplishments by men. The National Women’s History Project began in the 80s when a mere 3 percent of the text in school books made note of women’s accomplishments, and completely neglected the strides made by minority women or those in male-dominated fields such as math and science.

Fortunately, women have come a long way. The role of the female is being recognized as a vital part in growing a nation’s economy and communities. A recent report by Deloitte and Forbes Insights shows how women are slowly, but surely, becoming more prominent in government, and, therefore, influencing more active female roles in the private sector. In the report, Ambassador Amina Chawahir Mohamed of Kenya said, “If you educate a man, you educate an individual. If you educate a women, you educate a community.”

Tonic: Has there been a woman, from the past or present, who has inspired you?

Mukoko: My mother has given me inspiration. My father died when I was 5 and my mother was able to mold me into the woman I am today. I hope the Lord can give her many more days.

Tonic: Your work will have an effect lasting much longer than our lifetime. What would you say to encourage other women to fight tirelessly for what they believe in?

Where I come from that is not easy. It means putting your life at risk. You have to believe there will be a realization in the future that what you are fighting for will be recognized and respected. Do not compromise what you believe in for anything.

The Other Award Recipients

The other award winners include: Shukria Asil (Afghanistan) who works to advance the government’s responsiveness to women; Colonel Shafiqa Quraishi (Afghanistan), Director of Gender, Human, and Child Rights, recruits women to work in the Ministry of the Interior and works to increase benefits to women in the workforce, such as childcare, health care, and security; Androula Henriques (Cyprus) fights the buying and selling of women in the sex trade, has developed an anti-trafficking network, and advocates for institutional change; Sonia Pierre (Dominican Republic) aims to end anti-Haitian discrimination; Shadi Sadr (Iran) advocates women’s legal rights and, as a lawyer herself, has successfully overturned the prosecution of many women sentenced to execution; Ann Njogu (Kenya) is a leader in Kenya’s constitutional reform and collected data used to launch an investigation into government corruption; Dr. Lee Ae-Ran (Republic of Korea) advocates for human rights in North Korea and provides aid to North Korean refugees; Jansila Majeed (Sri Lanka) focuses on minority and women’s rights as well as those of internally displaced persons; Sister Marie Claude Naddaf (Syria) is working to advance social services for women, especially those in the face of domestic violence, homelessness, or trafficking.

Thanks Tonic.

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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday pledged more U.S. help for Central America’s fight against drug cartels, saying the United States was part of the problem as trafficking and violence spread.

“We are going to forge an even closer partnership in the months and years ahead,” Clinton told a news conference in Guatemala, the last stop on a five-day Latin America tour.

“We are well aware that Central America is between the countries of Mexico and Colombia that are waging their own very intense efforts against the criminal cartels.”

Clinton’s stop in Guatemala featured talks with regional leaders on both the drug problem and Honduras, which is struggling to move beyond last year’s coup.

Mexico’s powerful drug cartels have moved deep into Guatemalan territory in the past few years as a Mexican army crackdown has pushed them to seek new smuggling routes between South America and the United States.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reckons three-quarters of South American cocaine going north passes through Central America, smuggled by cartels that earn some $40 billion per year.

Clinton said the United States must take some responsibility

for Latin America’s drug wars because the huge U.S. domestic drug demand helps to drive the market.

“We know that we’re part of the problem,” she said. “That’s an admission that we have been willing to make this past year and it’s one of the reasons why we feel so strongly about trying to help countries like Guatemala fight this terrible criminal scourge.”

Traffickers traditionally moved cocaine through Central America by plane or boat but are increasingly developing land-based operations in countries such as Guatemala and Costa Rica, leading to rising rates of local drug violence and addiction.

Central American leaders have complained that their region is increasingly at risk in the drug wars and is not given enough assistance under the 2007 U.S. Merida initiative, which has authorized some $1.12 billion in help since 2008, mostly for Mexico.

“We are convinced that the fight against narco-trafficking and organized crime should be regional,” Guatamalan President Alvaro Colom said at the news conference. “We have seen an invasion by the Mexican cartels, we have seen a total invasion of narco-trafficking.

“The cartels move from one place to the next but its our society that is suffering.”

Clinton did not provide specifics of the new U.S. help on Friday but has used her visit to reassure Central American governments that they would see more U.S. assistance on things such as maritime security, police and judicial capacity, and anti-corruption efforts.

Guatemala has made several high-profile arrests in recent weeks, including those of the national police chief and anti-drug czar, both charged in connection with the theft of cocaine and guns from a drug gang warehouse last year.

Thanks Reuters.

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Hillary Clinton has been conducting telephone diplomacy with Northern Ireland politicians ahead of Tuesday’s vote on the devolution of justice.

The United States Secretary of State spent 15 minutes talking with Ulster Unionist leader Sir Reg Empey, looking for an update on his party’s position.

The UUP have said they will oppose the transfer of justice powers.

Ulster Unionist sources said Mrs Clinton did not try to strong-arm them into changing their position.

Ulster Unionists are to make a final decision on how they will vote on Monday night.

The UUP has been refusing to endorse the Hillsborough Agreement, insisting that matters such as education, parading and “the dysfunctional nature of the current Executive” must be addressed.

Mrs Clinton also spent 15 minutes talking to the Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness.

Thanks BBC.

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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Costa Rica for a meeting of foreign ministers focused on economic development in the Americas.

Clinton will take part in Thursday’s Pathways to Prosperity conference with officials from more than a dozen Latin American nations, including Peru, Honduras and Guatemala.

She is scheduled to meet with female entrepreneurs just before the gathering, which is being held in the Costa Rican capital, San Jose.

Later in the day, Secretary Clinton is expected to hold talks with outgoing Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, and with President-elect Laura Chinchilla. She arrived in Costa Rica early Thursday as part of a six-nation tour of Latin America, which has already taken her to Uruguay, Argentina, earthquake-ravaged Chile and Brazil.
 
Clinton will wrap up her travels in Guatemala before returning to the United States at the end of the week.

On Wednesday, the top U.S. diplomat met with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.  She defended the Obama administration’s foreign policy approach, saying it is working in many places as the president reaches out to different countries.

Secretary Clinton noted the United States would like to have a positive relationship with Venezuela, but said under the current circumstances, it is difficult.    

She spoke of what she called “rhetoric” and “threats” coming from Venezuela, where she said President Hugo Chavez has been trying to stifle the press and is taking over companies and their assets.  President Chavez has been a long-time critic of the United States.

Thanks VOA News.

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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, visiting Brazil to enlist support for tougher United Nations Security Council penalties on Iran over its suspected nuclear weapons program, said the U.S. believes Iran will only negotiate after sanctions are imposed.

“Once the international community speaks in unison around a resolution, then the Iranians will talk and begin to negotiate,” Clinton said during a press conference today in Brasilia after talks with Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim. “We want to get to negotiations; we just think that the best path is through the Security Council.”

Clinton said that while Brazil and the U.S. differ over whether sanctions are the best approach, both countries “do not want to see Iran become a nuclear weapons country.”

Brazil, which holds a temporary voting seat on the UN Security Council, backs Iran’s claim that its nuclear program is for energy and medical purposes, and has resisted a U.S. and European push to impose new penalties to squeeze Iranian commercial and financial transactions as a means to force Iran to the negotiating table.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has cultivated trade and diplomatic ties with Iran, and is scheduled to visit Tehran in May.

Lula today reiterated his resistance to sanctions, telling reporters, “it’s not prudent to put Iran against a wall.” He said he would have “frank” talks with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over Iran’s enrichment of uranium, and repeated that Iran has a right to a peaceful nuclear program.

Thanks Business Week.

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Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner said she asked U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to assist in facilitating talks with the U.K. over the Falkland Islands.

Fernandez made the comments today in Buenos Aires during a meeting with Clinton. Argentina, which claims sovereignty over the islands that U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher went to war to defend in 1982, summoned U.K. embassy officials on Feb. 2 to protest the imminent start of drilling by Falkland Oil & Gas Ltd.

Thanks Business Week.

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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton landed Monday in Montevideo, Uruguay, the first stop in a six-nation Latin American tour that will take her to quake-ravaged Chile on Tuesday.

Clinton attended the inauguration of President Jose Mujica, a former member of a radical guerrilla group who spent 14 years in prison. He was released in 1985 when democracy was restored to Uruguay after a 17-year dictatorship.

Mujica was minister of livestock and agriculture from 2005 to 2008 and a senator until his election to the presidency in November.

Clinton is expected to travel next to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and meet with Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo.

The U.S. secretary of state is expected to arrive in Santiago, Chile, on Tuesday, two days after her department “strongly” urged U.S. citizens to avoid tourism and nonessential travel to the South American nation and three days after an 8.8-magnitude earthquake killed more than 700 people.

On Sunday, the Chilean government requested medical and communication assistance from the United States. The State Department “is working closely with the U.S. military, the Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance to identify appropriate medical resources and ensure their delivery as soon as possible,” the department said Sunday in a written statement.

The U.S. military and USAID are trying to help Chilean communications in the form of satellite phones, it said.

The Latin American tour was scheduled prior to the quake, and Clinton is expected to bid farewell to Chile’s president, Michelle Bachelet, who is leaving with high approval ratings for having steered the country through the global economic downturn and promoted progressive social reforms. Clinton will also meet with conservative billionaire businessman Sebastian Pinera, who is to assume the office on March 11.

Also on Clinton’s itinerary are Brazil, Costa Rica and Guatemala.

Brazil, which will hold presidential elections in October, has one of the world’s largest economies and will host the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics.

There, Clinton is expected to talk with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva about his planned trip to Iran, which the United States and other nations believe has undertaken a program to build nuclear weapons, an assertion Iran denies.

In Costa Rica, which this month elected its first woman to the nation’s top job, Clinton will meet separately with President Oscar Arias and President-elect Laura Chinchilla, who takes office in May.

She also will attend Pathways for Prosperity, a meeting of hemispheric officials. The initiative includes such things as microcredit and ways in which women can be empowered, a State Department spokesman told reporters last Friday.

“It all fits in within the theme of trying to look for ways to enhance competitiveness, with a significant component, too, of encouraging private-public partnerships in the search for greater competitiveness and to address issues of social inclusion,” said Arturo Valenzuela, U.S. assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs. “Issues like corporate social responsibility, for example, are also on the table.”

Clinton’s final stop is Guatemala, a Central American nation beset by poverty and high crime. She will meet with Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom and leaders of other Central American countries and the Dominican Republic before returning to Washington.

Thanks CNN.

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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will push for new sanctions on Iran’s nuclear program in Brazil as part of a five-country trip to Latin America.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton undertakes a “we haven’t forgotten you” swing through Latin America this week that aims to bolster the Obama administration’s profile in the region, with an agenda ranging from democracy and security to Iran.

Iran? One of Secretary Clinton’s stops is Brazil, which currently holds a rotating seat on the United Nations Security Council, where the US is pressing for adoption of a new round of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program.

Brazil aspires to world-power status and to a permanent seat on an expanded Security Council, but it also says it opposes international measures against Iran. So Clinton will emphasize the internationalist perspective that a nuclear Iran would destabilize a volatile region, and remind the Brazilians that (in the US view) if they want to be a world power, they need to think and act like one.

Stable democracies highlighted

More broadly, Clinton will use her five-country trip to highlight how the Western Hemisphere is almost uniformly a region of stable democracies facing common challenges, aides say. On her week-long trip, Clinton is scheduled to visit Chile, Uruguay, and Costa Rica, all of which recently elected new presidents.

(Because of the massive earthquake Saturday, it was unclear Sunday if Clinton would be able to visit Chile Tuesday as planned. In a statement Clinton said, “The United States stands ready to provide necessary assistance to Chile in the days and weeks ahead and is coordinating closely with senior Chilean officials on the content and timing of such support.”)

While Uruguay elected a leader from the left, Chileans opted to shift their presidency from the left to the right. For its part, Costa Rica elected its first woman president.

Clinton will “underscore US support for representative democracy in the region, regardless of whether elected leaders come from the left … or from the right,” says Peter DeShazo, director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Mr. DeShazo notes that the Obama administration started off professing a deep commitment to the region, backing up words with high-profile visits.

President Obama visited Mexico and attended a hemispheric summit in Trinidad early in his presidency.

But – as often happens – other international and domestic issues crowded out Latin America, so Clinton is out to reconfirm the commitment, DeShazo says.

Clinton’s trip comes a week after Latin American and Caribbean countries decided to create a new regional bloc to include Cuba (barred as a dictatorship from the Organization of American States) but closed to the US and Canada.

Officials in Washington insist the US welcomes the new organization focused on southern interests.

Repairing the damage over Honduras

Still, the secretary of State’s trip also appears to be designed in part to repair the damage the US relationship with the region sustained over Washington’s handling of last year’s coup in Honduras and its aftermath. Two of Clinton’s stops will be in Central America, where she will press for Honduras’s reinsertion into the hemispheric community and for the region to overcome differences over Honduras’s new post-coup government, State Department officials say.

“We see the outcome in Honduras is a very successful case of standing for a very fundamental principle … that you cannot tolerate a coup d’etat in a country,” said Arturo Valenzuela, assistant secretary of State for Western Hemisphere affairs, in a briefing for reporters on Clinton’s trip Friday.

“But at the same time, a solution had to be found to Honduras,” he added, noting that the “international community” has recognized the recent election of President Porfirio Lobo, whom voters chose in January to replace the ousted Manuel Zelaya. “We need to work to try to see how we can engage it back in.”

(Monitor report: “Could Honduras crisis prompt a power grab in Nicaragua?”)

Mr. Valenzuela also addressed Washington’s interest in discussing Iran with Brazil, saying, “What we want to try to tell the Brazilians is yes, if you have engagement with Iran, we’d really want to encourage you and urge you to in fact use that engagement in a way that you can push the Iranians … to meet their fundamental international obligations.”

Putting the point a bit more bluntly, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs Phillip Crowley told reporters a day earlier, “Brazil is an emerging power with a growing influence in the region and around the world, and we believe that with that influence comes responsibility. And we will be talking to Brazil about the way forward on Iran.”

Thanks Christian Science Moniter.

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Hillary Clinton’s Next Stop: Latin America!

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Costa Rica and Guatemala from February 28 – March 5, 2010.

In Uruguay, Secretary Clinton will be attending President Mujica’s inauguration on March 1. She will travel to Santiago where she will meet with President Bachelet and President-elect Piñera. On March 3, Secretary Clinton will be meeting with President Lula and Foreign Minister Amorim in Brasilia. In Costa Rica on March 4, Secretary Clinton will be a keynote speaker at the Pathways to Prosperity in the Americas Ministerial Meeting and will meet separately with President Oscar Arias and President-elect Laura Chinchilla. In Guatemala, we are working to schedule a meeting with leaders of Central American countries and the Dominican Republic to discuss issues of mutual interest. The Secretary will also meet with President Álvaro Colom during her visit to Guatemala.

Thanks State.Gov
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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton yesterday urged Russia to take part in a NATO plan for European missile defense, Bloomberg reported (see GSN, Feb. 22).

“While Russia faces challenges to its security, NATO is not among them,” Clinton said in Washington. “We want a cooperative NATO-Russia relationship that produces concrete results and draws NATO and Russia closer.”

“Just as Russia is an important partner in efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation, so should it be in missile defense,” she said.

Clinton’s remarks preceded a meeting today by NATO envoys on updating the “strategic concept” undergirding the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which was established 51 years ago and involves Canada, European nations and the United States.

Moscow has been vocal in its opposition to inclusion of former Soviet republics such as Georgia in the alliance, and has also turned a wary eye toward Western missile defense programs.

In recent weeks, Moscow has criticized plans by the Obama administration to locate missile shield systems in Romania and other Eastern European states as a defense against Iranian short- and medium-range missiles.

This was not the first time Clinton called on Moscow to take part in missile defense talks for Europe. She made similar comments in Paris last month.

Yesterday, the top U.S. diplomat said she could envision Russia at some point joining NATO. “I can imagine it but I’m not sure the Russians can imagine it,” Clinton said.

Terrorism and the spread of nuclear weapons are the “key challenges” facing the alliance, the secretary said.

“The danger of a nuclear attack from a nonstate actor has increased,” Clinton said. She said efforts by Iran and North Korea to produce better missiles were “reviving the specter of an interstate nuclear attack.” (Indira Lakshmanan, Bloomberg/Business Week, Feb. 23).

Clinton added that while Washington has “real differences” with Moscow on several issues, the Obama administration is resolved to collaborate with the Kremlin on shared areas of interest, Reuters reported.

“We want a cooperative NATO-Russia relationship that produces concrete results,” Clinton said.

Thanks NTI.

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Hillary Clinton Stop the Sarah Palin Express?

The phenomenon that is Sarah Palin seems to be gathering momentum like a runaway train. Mortified Democrats hope she’s a runaway train wreck. But Palin’s fanatical supporters are convinced she is simply getting to the White House that much faster.

She has made enough mind-boggling public gaffes to sink twenty careers – and grown stronger. Democrats look hopefully to the latest polls, which suggest that, while she may be winning the popularity contest, voters are losing confidence in her as presidential material. Even so, she remains a genuinely threat to the Obama administration and Democratic candidates across the country. It was Palin, after all, who single-handedly derailed Obama’s health-care reform bill after her “death panel” accusation. It was also Palin who single-handedly politicized the global warming debate, by pointing to emails she claimed proved the whole thing was a liberal conspiracy in which Democrats somehow played a role. Her relentless mocking of Obama initiatives has emboldened Republican and conservative opposition, which noticed that “Obama bashing” is an effective political tool for winning support without offering any actual alternative solutions.

As a result, for Democrats, defusing this ticking political time bomb is Priority Number One. However, the question remains as to the best person to do this. Joe Biden has a tendency to put his foot in his mouth and could easily do more harm than good. Obama himself cannot afford to attack her directly – that would give her too much credibility. He is also a Harvard Law School graduate and, worse, like Biden, he is man. Palin would take every opportunity to construe whatever criticism he makes of her as evidence of his intellectual elitism and misogynistic streak.

The job falls, therefore, to a woman, and the only woman in the current political arena more powerful than the speeding locomotive that is Sarah Palin…is Hillary Clinton. A criticism of Palin that might sound mean-spirited from Obama would be a clean smack-down from Hillary. As a speaker, when tightly scripted, Palin is a charmer, but her tight skirt and high heels are no match for Clinton’s pantsuit and comfortable walking shoes.

The Hurt Locker
And when it comes to a fight, Hillary can pack a wallop. She is a hardened political soldier who has crawled through the blood and gore of the Washington battlefield to emerge as the most powerful woman in the United States – if not the world. That is why, during her campaign for the Democratic nomination, her “take no prisoner” mentality made her a formidable rival for Obama. Although she lost, she forced him to acknowledge her 18-million-voter support base. He would not be President today if she had not endorsed him. And she is Secretary of State because of that.

And Obama would be doing Hillary a favor. She isn’t exactly thrilled that her job takes her away from the front line of national affairs, often to the point where Americans forget she is still around. She would therefore relish an opportunity to get back in the game and grab some headlines again. She has nothing to lose and everything to gain. If she fails, she simply fades back into her job and moves on with her life. If she successfully neutralizes Palin, it will practically guarantee her nomination as the Democratic Presidential candidate for 2016. Don’t rule it out. She is not one to go gently into that good night.

Palin’s glass jaw is that she can criticize others, but she does not take criticism well. In the political arena, Hillary can take a world of hurting and come back at you with a ferocity that leaves you breathless.

Thanks Huffington Post.

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