21
November 2011

The Value of Values: Soft Power Under Obama

Stand Up America

One irony of the Obama presidency is how much it relies on hard power. The president came into office proposing a dramatic shift from George W. Bush’s perceived unilateralism, and most of his predecessor’s hard-edged counterterrorism tactics and massive deployments in wars abroad. Yet after three years, Obama has escalated forces in Afghanistan, embraced the widespread use of unmanned drones to kill terrorists at the risk of civilian casualties, kept Guantánamo open, and killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in a thoroughly unilateral fashion.

What he hasn’t accomplished to any great degree is what most observers assumed would be the hallmark of his approach to foreign affairs—a full assertion of the soft power that makes hard power more effective. His 2008 campaign centered on a critique of President Bush’s overreliance on hard power. Obama suggested he would rehabilitate the damaged image of America created by these excesses and show that the United States was not a cowboy nation. Upon taking office, he made fresh-start statements, such as his June 2009 remarks in Cairo, and embraced political means like dialogue, respectful multilateralism, and the use of new media, suggesting that he felt the soft power to change minds, build legitimacy, and advance interests was the key element missing from the recent US approach to the world—and that he would quickly remedy that defect.

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18
November 2011

Putin making Russians ‘restive’ – but don’t expect revolt

Democracy Digest

Sergei Magnitsky died two years ago today, but the political impact of his death continues to resonate.

Several Republican senators want a vote on the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law and Accountability Act before they will endorse Michael McFaul, the Obama administration’s nominee to be the new US envoy to Moscow. The measure will deny visas to and freeze the assets of several dozen Russian officials implicated in the lawyer’s mistreatment and death.

Although the Magnitsky case is not an especially egregious or atypical case in a country of endemic abuses, Russian democracy and rights activists believe the case has a broader political significance.

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18
November 2011

Legal merry-go-round over prison death

Russia Today

Russia’s investigative committee has brought charges against a doctor whose alleged negligence caused a high-profile death in prison.

Fifty-three-year-old Vera Trifonova, head of a real estate agency, was arrested on fraud charges in December 2010. Despite having serious health problems, she was put into a pre-trial detention center. In April 2010 she died in custody.

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18
November 2011

The State We’re In – A Second Chance

Radio Netherlands

Audio MP3

A woman discovers the magical powers of laughter after the tragic death of her brother. A Russian playwright puts corrupt officials on trial in her play. A Nigerian pastor and imam on their journey from religious hatred to brotherhood and a woman in the US who was estranged from her mother for decades – and then reunites with her. hairy girl займы на карту https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php займы онлайн на карту срочно

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18
November 2011

US State Dept. Demands Answers in Russian Lawyer’s Death

The World

Listen to radio Broadcast here: http://www.theworld.org/?powerpress_pinw=94788-podcast

The name Sergei Magnitsky is not well known in this country. He was a Russian lawyer. And two years ago this week, he was found dead in his prison cell in Moscow.

The event has had serious international repercussions. For one thing, it’s spiked tensions between the US and Russia.

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17
November 2011

Interview with Natalia Magnitskaya

BBC

Extraordinary personal stories from around the world: Today, the mother of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow prison, calls for a full investigation into his death. She describes seeing his battered body in the mortuary – and accuses the authorities of being involved. Also the emotional moment when a deaf American woman regained her hearing – captured on film, it’s become an internet sensation.

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17
November 2011

Activists vow to ensure full inquiry into Magnitsky death

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17
November 2011

Play marks death of lawyer who exposed Russian tax fraud

TrustLaw

A play about the final moments of an anti-corruption lawyer who challenged Moscow in the biggest tax fraud in Russian history will be performed for the first time outside the country, marking the second anniversary of his death, the Moscow Times reported.

Sold out and playing for just one night at Amnesty International’s London headquarters on Wednesday, One Hour Eighteen exposes the killing of Sergie Magnitsky, after he testified against a group of corrupt Russian Ministry of Interior officers who he had investigated over the theft of millions of dollars.

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17
November 2011

Sergei Magnitsky Death Highlights Russia Impunity

Index on Censorship

After speaking out against corruption, the young lawyer was left to die in jail. Two years on, says Jamison Firestone, no one has been brought to justice

In 2008 a young Russian lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, working for Russia’s largest foreign investor, Hermitage Fund, began investigating links between senior Russian officials and organised crime figures.

As Magnitsky dug deeper, he found instance after instance of fraudulent tax refunds, totalling about half a billion dollars. He filed a series of complaints and repeatedly gave testimony against the officials and criminals involved.

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