Not
happy with having screwed up most of the Middle East, the
Administration wants to see our Allies burn too. This morning Obama
recognized Abbas of the Palestinian Authority for his great work
ignoring the fact he has a popularity rating below Obama's and is on the
12th year of his four year presidential term,
Official Ordered Out Of Bahrain After Meeting
(NEW YORK TIMES 08 JUL 14) ... Michael R. Gordon and Kareem Fahim
WASHINGTON – Bahrain on Monday
ordered the senior United States official on human rights to cut short
his visit and leave the country after he met with the nation’s main
Shiite opposition group.
Bahrain’s
Foreign Ministry said that Tom
Malinowski, the assistant secretary of state for human rights, had
violated “conventional diplomatic norms” and had interfered in the
country’s internal affairs by meeting with “one side and not others.”
The
statement did not specify what meeting Mr. Malinowski had attended. But
a member of al-Wefaq, the country’s largest opposition party, said he
had attended a reception at its headquarters on Sunday night.
The action appeared to catch the State Department by surprise, and American officials sought on Monday to persuade Bahrain to reverse it.
Jen Psaki, the State Department spokeswoman, said in a statementMonday night that
the United States was “deeply concerned” by Bahrain’s decision. Ms.
Psaki also complained that Bahrain had insisted that a Foreign Ministry
official attend all of Mr. Malinowski’s meetings with “individuals and
groups representing a broad spectrum of Bahraini society, including
those held at the U.S. Embassy.”
That demand, she said, was a “violation of international diplomatic protocol.”
Bahrain
has posed a vexing situation for the Obama administration,
which has tried to maintain a strong alliance with the Sunni monarchy
despite concerns about human rights. The Navy’s Fifth Fleet, which
operates in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea, is headquartered
there, and Western officials have had concerns about Iranian meddling.
But
the State Department’s 2013 report on human rights also cited a litany
of abuses in Bahrain, including “citizens’ inability to change their
government peacefully; arrest and detention of protesters on vague
charges, in some cases leading to their torture in detention; and lack
of due process in trials of political and human rights activists,
medical personnel, teachers, and students, with some trials resulting in
harsh sentences.”
Bahrain’s
sharp response to Mr. Malinowski’s meeting was a measure of the deep
polarization in the country, which has been shaken by unrest since the
2011 uprising by a Shiite-led opposition movement demanding greater
political rights from the Sunni monarchy. With negotiations over a
political settlement stalled for years, street confrontations between
protesters and the state security’s services have become increasingly
violent.
Even so, Mr. Malinowski, who began what was supposed to be four-day trip to the country on Sunday,
had told friends that he was “optimistic about the visit and the
prospects for reconciliation,” one acquaintance recounted. American
officials said that the Bahraini authorities had been
informed of Mr. Malinowski’s schedule and that American diplomats had
previously met with al-Wefaq members without incident. Ms. Psaki said on Monday
that the purpose of Mr. Malinowski’s visit had been to strengthen ties
with King Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa and support “reform and
reconciliation efforts at an important time.”
Hadi Hasan al-Mosawi, a member of al-Wefaq, said he was shocked by the government’s announcement on Monday. The reception Mr. Malinowski attended on Sunday was a weekly social event that al-Wefaq holds during the holy month of Ramadan.
Mr. Malinowski arrived with several others, and stayed for at least a half-hour, speaking for a time with Sheikh Ali
Salman, the group’s general secretary.
“This was not a closed meeting,” Mr. Mosawi said.
Mr.
Mosawi said there were no great expectations from Mr. Malinowski’s
trip, which appeared intended, at best, to restart serious dialogue
between the government and the opposition.
“With this unfortunate event, I fear things are ruined,” he said.
Mr.
Malinowski was briefly detained in Bahrain in 2012 and
pepper-sprayed by the police when he observed a protest there as the
director of the Washington office of Human Rights Watch, an episode he
recounted in an article in Foreign Policy.com.
In an appearance that year before a congressional human rights
commission, Mr. Malinowski warned that Bahrain risked upheaval if it
resisted demands for reform.
Michael R. Gordon reported from Washington, and Kareem Fahim from Cairo. David D. Kirkpatrick contributed reporting.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/08/world/middleeast/us-official-ordered-out-of-bahrain-after-meeting.html?_r=0
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