President Elect Obama and Britain
Attached is a link to a TimesonLine article about President-Elect Obama, and how his grandfather was arrested by the British in Kenya during the Mau Mau:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle5282113.ece
The author speculates that this might effect President-Elect Obama's attitude towards the special relationship between the U.S. and Great Britain. As an American of English decent, I have always been proud of the relationship between the U.S. and Great Britain (leaving out the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812 - when you set fire to the White House:D).
I think that the author is hyping the issue somewhat, but I wanted the prespectives of other members, esspecailly those from Britain. Britain along with Australia has been the best allies America has had and I think I that it should stay that way.
Thanks
The new President and the UK
I am sure the background to President Obama, including the allegation his grandfather was tortured in Kenya will feature in a briefing paper for the UK government. Whether the President will be influenced by this history is a moot point.
Did this family history affect his decision-making on Gitmo Bay? I am not aware of his general attitude to human rights.
The much vaunted "special relationship" is highly prized here, notably by the Whitehall-Westminster establishment (akin to "within the Beltway") and of course the intelligence / military links.
IMHO UK public opinion is less convinced, even hostile to this relationship. Relatively minor issues, for example entry requirements to the USA led to much adverse comment in the conservative-leaning Daily Telegraph. In 2001 two million marched in London against any war with Iraq and this week an opinion poll stated 73% opposed the UK role in Afghanistan.
I shall watch to see President Obama affirms the "special relationship" and if his presidency affects how UK public opinion views the USA.
Incidentally one Whitehall observer, albeit in 2001, described the UK as "America's Ghurkha" and that within "The Beltway" few saw the relationship as that special.
The CIA in the UK and more
In a headline 'CIA warns Barack Obama that British terrorists are the biggest threat to the US', IMHO a worrying sign that our special relationship is either the victim of much "spin" or much is changing on the ground. This is the article: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...to-the-US.html
Much of the story relies on ex-CIA officer Bruce Riedel and the timng after the spat over disclosing US documents in a UK court case makes me suspect "spin" is at work. Who is now an adviser to President Obama, in particular reviewing policy in Afghanistan / Pakistan.
Update: This website has a pithy commentary on the stories and points out such activity, even by an ally, the CIA, would be illegal: http://www.spyblog.org.uk/
davidbfpo
Why US-UK relations can be frosty
A rare mention of the terrorist suspects held in the UK, who are wanted by the USA; one has been in custody fighting extradition for ten years: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...n-Britain.html
Note these cases pre-date the very favourable, one-way extradition agreement UK to the USA.
davidbfpo
The Special Relationship is over
Within a five minute interview on The (UK) Daily Telegraph on wider issues, Morris Reid, an adviser to Bill Clinton and now - maybe - to President Obama, finally makes a comment 'The special relationship is over and dead'. Never heard of him, but Google suggests he has access inside D.C.
Try: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...n-adviser.html
davidbfpo
Not his call. Nor is it Obama's call. That relationship
has endured over a good many years in spite of bad things each Nation has done to the other and in spite of shifting political winds from either DC or Whitehall. Not the first time I've heard the 'prediction' that it was dead and I'll bet it will not be the last. It's deeper than politicians.
Come to think of it, almost anything is deeper than politicians...
David, since the name Morris Reid ...
was a blank to me, I thought it best to look him up. His bio is here; he pundits on a number of different issues (e.g., here); and is basically a media-business consultant with BGR Group - and a former media flak and current lobbyist.
Connection (if any) with Obama administration, I did not see in a very cursory search.
Brits fighting in Afghanistan on the other side?
Not startling news, but The (UK) Independent returns with a long article on the briefings that British accents have been heard in Afghanistan: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/wo...n-1631347.html
Not that it is just a UK issue, after a Somali from the USA went back to fight:
http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/...n-somalia.html
Could be a seperate thread, but fits in here too.
davidbfpo