Obama’s Apparatchik Still Runs Riot in Guatemala
Donald Trump has taken office, but Barack Obama’s agenda continues at a blistering pace in Guatemala. The US ambassador there is leading the charge.
Donald Trump has taken office, but Barack Obama’s agenda continues at a blistering pace in Guatemala. The US ambassador there is leading the charge.
Taxpayers are on the hook for $750 million annually for five years to Central America, but under current circumstances, US foreign officials will squander the money.
Guatemala may fly under the radar of US media, but how Donald Trump handles this Central American nation will be crucial to restoring the rule of law on immigration.
As soon as Hillary Clinton’s partisans began their campaign to void the presidential election, the United States entered a civil conflict.
Democratic partisans, or so it seems, have found a reason a day for asserting that the election of Donald Trump is a fraud.
You’ve already let me know, in countless different ways, what you think of me. My answer to you has been in process for nearly 60 years.
Now that Fidel Castro has finally done the one thing we all must do, he’s getting the same kinds of notices he got before – like a long-running Broadway show that closes to rave reviews.
Mauricio Macri, Michel Temer Should Wash Their Hands, Merge with Pacific Alliance
Mauricio Macri, Michel Temer Should Wash Their Hands, Merge with Pacific Alliance
If you want to see what foreign policy under a President Hillary Clinton would be like, then look to where she has done her business without being observed or constrained.
No, you didn’t misread the title. The WikiLeaks dump of many thousands of emails has helped Hillary Clinton’s campaign by removing attention from anything else, except those pronouncements by Donald Trump that the media can latch onto and sensationalize.
Alliance with Marxists in Guatemala Haunts Presidential Nominee
Dr. Walid Phares’s account of the meeting between Mr. Trump and President Peña Nieto [NER, September 3] puts a frame around matters that’s all too rare in our current landscape of media analysis.
An English music critic, using all the pleasant contempt to which his station entitled him, once wrote of an Italian tenor in Carmen that the singer’s French pronunciation “has to be heard to be believed.”
In an article published by the Atlantic magazine, journalist Alexia Fernández Campbell alleges that Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto has invited presidential candidate Donald J. Trump to a meeting this week \”because he fears a Trump Presidency.\”
When one country sends an ambassador to another, it is first and last a recognition of sovereignty.
Three former Obama Secretaries of Defense have recently expressed grave concern that a widespread bias in the nation’s culture has penetrated the Oval Office: the United States now has a commander-in-chief who roundly dislikes the military.
How would it be if John F. Kennedy, or his advisors, had decided that the interests of global order were better served by dismissing photographic evidence of Soviet missile emplacements on the island of Cuba — and had made that dismissal the starting-point of a US policy?
On March 29, US Secretary of State John Kerry, in a State Department ceremony, conferred one of its International Women of Courage awards on Guatemala’s attorney general, Thelma Aldana.