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Britain
Malloch-Brown ready to be Syria's tool
2007-11-16
Lord Malloch-Brown, the controversial Foreign Office minister, was in a fresh row last night after telling senior members of the Syrian regime of his willingness to speak for them on the world stage. The remarks were reportedly made last week at a reception hosted by Sami Khiyami, the Syrian ambassador. One witness said the minister told the Syrians: "Think of me as your man in the Cabinet." Lord Malloch-Brown denies making the comment.

The reception was held to mark the visit of Abdullah Dardari, Syria's deputy prime minister. He and Lord Malloch-Brown are said to be close friends from when they worked at the United Nations in New York. The Arabic newspaper al-Quds al-Arabi, whose correspondent attended the reception, said Lord Malloch-Brown gave an "emotional" speech, recalling how he had considered himself to be "representing Syria inside the UN". The minister also spoke warmly about Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president.

The speech may fuel doubts about Gordon Brown's wisdom in appointing Lord Malloch-Brown. The White House accuses Syria of supporting Iraqi insurgents and Lebanon's Hizbollah movement. Lord Malloch-Brown was appointed by the Prime Minister as part of his "government of all the talents" and has permission to attend Cabinet meetings.

One guest at the reception told The Daily Telegraph: "People were startled by how effusive he was, especially when he said, 'Think of me as your man in the Cabinet'." A Syrian embassy official said: "It was a courtesy, a kind thing to say. He was saying he would do his best to narrow the gaps between the two countries."

Bernard Jenkin, a Conservative member of the Commons defence committee, said: "This is another clumsy outburst, which reinforces the impression that the Foreign Office exists to represent foreigners instead of British national interests."
Posted by:ryuge

#9  has anyone noticed how far left the Atlantic Monthly has gone

I've definitely noticed too. I try to subscribe to magazines that have ,at least some, content from both sides, and have subscribed to the Atlantic for a while now. They've had great things from Christopher Hitchens and I especially used to look forward to Mark Steyn obits. They had a riveting article about Abu Sayef in the Philippines a while back.

But I definitely see the slide into boilerplate, academic ivory-tower echo chamber crapola and breathless anti-Bush alarmism. And, yes, Fallows is often an excellent example of this.

The Atlantic has been publishing historical articles in recent months to celebrate their 150th anniversary. The contrast between some of these and these how-will-America-recover-after-the-disaster-that-is-GWB pieces does not show a promising trend. And, it seems that Steyn won't be doing obits anymore either.

A$$holes. Jerks.
Posted by: ryuge   2007-11-16 18:36  

#8  has anyone noticed how far left the Atlantic Monthly has gone.

Years ago. That one can be credited to James Fallows among others.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2007-11-16 18:17  

#7  Malloch-Brown ready to be Syria's tool

Too late, by far. Malloch-Brown already is a tool, however limp.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-11-16 17:46  

#6  Well, mjh, I used to be an avid Economist reader back in the days of Norman McRae and even Rupert Pennant-Rea. But I never read it now because of its leftward tilt and its swing from pro-American to anti (I'm a Brit myself). But the ghastly Malloch Brown was a mere peon at The Economist, not the Editor in Chief. I think he was the Political Editor, and then only for a couple of years. So, while he may have contributed to the decline and even hastened it, he couldn't have done that much damage all on his own. As long as we're handicapping formerly good magazines, has anyone noticed how far left the Atlantic Monthly has gone. Subscription cancellation is just one pro-Hillary article away.
Posted by: Peter Carroll   2007-11-16 17:23  

#5  Well, if Gordon Brown wants to maintain his status as "poodle in good standing", then I suggest he dump Malloch-Brown faster than ... (I'll let you guys fill in the blank)
Posted by: danking70   2007-11-16 12:33  

#4  I believe there is a Soros connection.
Posted by: Thrairt Oppressor of the Lichtensteiners6029   2007-11-16 10:40  

#3  An interesting Side Note regarding Mr. Malloch-Brown, prior to his employ at the UN, he was the editor in chief of the Economist. Any 'burgers who read that (formerly) fine periodical throughout the '90's may have observed its devolution from a respected centuries-old scholarly journal of world affairs and economics into a more expensive weekly version of the Guardian. I attribute it mainly to his influence. Just another leftist bringing down the respected institutions of Western Civilization, and now coddling terrorists in the interests of transnational progressivism. (spit)
Posted by: mjh   2007-11-16 09:59  

#2  It's good to send people like Brown back home so the hometown folks can get a bellyfull of their brilliance. Should be US policy to not renew their visas after one term.
Posted by: ed   2007-11-16 09:11  

#1  "I'm a naughty boy. I'm your whore. Use me"
Posted by: Frank G   2007-11-16 08:41  

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