Article Archive for July 2009

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U.S signs Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

A previous post noted that President Obama had indicated that the United States would sign the the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Today,  the AP reports:
The United States on Thursday signed a U.N. treaty enshrining the rights of the world’s 650 million disabled people, saying it symbolized President Barack Obama’s commitment to upholding human rights through …

U.S. Judge Huvelle orders release of detainee Mohammed Jawad

SCOTUSBlog reports:
A federal judge, ruling for the first time that the U.S. government must release a detainee who once faced terrorism charges, on Thursday told officials to free a young Guantanamo prisoner by Aug. 21 or 22 so that he can return to his home country, Afghanistan.  U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle conceded that the Justice Department still had the …

On the Responsibility to Protect

Over at UN Dispatch, Mark Leon Goldberg writes:

In a short post, Bill Easterly and Laura Freschi air some concerns over the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) that have been leveled by Noam Chomsky and General Assembly President Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann.
Chomsky and D’Escoto both conclude that, in practice, R2P is just Great Power imperialism in disguise. Although a lot of other statements …

Twitter not blocked at White House

A previous post contained a video of White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs telling C-SPAN that Twitter was blocked on White House computers. Apparently Gibbs was wrong. The Christian Science Monitor Blog reports:
On Friday, we passed along a remark that White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs made on C-SPAN – that everyone’s favorite microblogging site was banned on computers at …

Obama: US to sign Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

In case you missed this– on Friday, July 24, President Obama announced that the United States would sign the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. The AP reports:
Marking the 19th anniversary of a landmark law barring discrimination against people with disabilities, President Barack Obama said Friday that the U.S. will sign a United Nations treaty urging …

A “Private Army” for Afghanistan?

Nathan Hodge over at Danger Room is reporting:
The U.S. military is mulling a plan to build a private army to protect bases throughout Afghanistan. On July 10, the Army issued a request for information from companies interested in bidding on an Afghanistan-wide security contract. While a formal solicitation has not been launched, the idea would be to provide security services …

No recess appointment for Dawn Johnsen

Roll Call reports:
President Barack Obama has no plans to use a recess appointment to install Dawn Johnsen as head of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Council, according to a White House official.
Johnsen, an Indiana University law professor, has drawn opposition from conservatives over her positions on abortion and the war on terror.
Johnsen’s nomination was approved by the Senate …

DeMint delays committee vote on nominations of Arturo Valenzuela and Thomas Shannon

The Hill’s Blog Briefing Room reports:
Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) delayed committee votes on two State Department posts today over objections to the administration’s policy towards Honduras, Reuters reports.
DeMint, who believes the recent coup in Honduras was legal, asked to delay votes on the nominations of (1) Arturo Valenzuela to be Assistant Secretary of State for western hemisphere affairs and (2) …


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Welcome! Who am I?



Anthony Clark Arend is Professor of Government and Foreign Service at Georgetown University and the Director of the Master of Science in Foreign Service in the Walsh School of Foreign Service.

Commentary and analysis at the intersection of international law and politics.