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China-Japan-Koreas
U.S. State Dept. Lacking Nork 'Control Tower'
2009-03-25
The US Treasury Department isn't the only government agency with a lot of openings left unfilled.
The U.S. administration has not yet lined up its North Korea specialists within the State Department, leading in the view of some critics to delays in dealing with North Korea's impending rocket launch and the detention of two American reporters in the North.

Robert Einhorn, a senior adviser in the Center for Strategic and International Studies, had been expected to take charge of strategies for North Korea's weapons of mass destruction as the next U.S. undersecretary for arms reduction and non-proliferation. But he has suddenly declined to accept the offer.
Apparently he can spell 'Titanic' ...
Ellen Tauscher, a seventh-term Democrat member of the House of Representatives, has been nominated in his place.
Laficornia Bay Area Dhimmicrat: you can guess her policies ...
Kurt Campbell, a former deputy assistant secretary, has not yet been nominated as assistant secretary of state for East Asia and Pacific Affairs. Stephen Bosworth, who worked part-time as special representative for North Korea policy, has returned to his job as dean of Tufts University's Fletcher School after visiting nations participating in six-party nuclear talks.

There is speculation that the reason the two reporters are still being held in the North is that there is no "control tower" for North Korean issues at the State Department. No senior American officials have officially demanded their release in the week since they were captured. The U.S. is ostensibly trying to solve the problem through quiet diplomacy, but in reality there is no senior U.S. government official who wants to take the initiative.
The Hildebeast is off doing other things, Bill Richardson is nowhere to be found, Chris Hill is -- thankfully -- off the case, and there are no adults at the Nork desk at Foggy Bottom. And the Norks are about to test-launch an ICBM. Wonderful.
Posted by:Steve White

#11  As a current ex-pat, it's good to know the U.S. government and the State Department has my back.
Posted by: Mizzou Mafia   2009-03-25 19:53  

#10  red cabbage. definitely.
Posted by: GirlThursday   2009-03-25 11:31  

#9  Seafarious, Al Gore is here in East Tennessee giving a talk on his favorite subject, Global Warming and looking for Idjits to buy his carbon credits. The temperature went from 74 yesterday to 50 today but at least it's not snowing. Yet.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2009-03-25 11:29  

#8  I would guess that to be RED cabbages GT?
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-03-25 11:24  

#7  I work for the state department, how dare you question our methods! (not really)
But I do have a solution: We should just fling cabbages at North Korea using large catapults emplaced at the DMZ, that way the journalists and Norks can eat the cabbage and we can start a war. Thats a strategy the US state department can use! Dont bother to thank me, it was nothing! Heres the address where you can send my consulting fee....po box dont give a fig, c/o the us state departments suck it division, 10034.
Posted by: GirlThursday   2009-03-25 11:19  

#6  I'd be careful about the "our citizens" part. They were just a couple of typical traitorous media, who got busted by a regime they probably sympathize with. Oh, and they're in the predicament because they were stupid and thought that their shit didn't stink and that they were immune because they were "journalists". Doesn't matter if the norks ran across the border or not, they still set them off either way.
Posted by: gromky   2009-03-25 10:09  

#5  I can't help thinking that doing nothing is better than liberals trying to "help".
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-03-25 10:01  

#4  ...but I can't help thinking that the fewer Obamanauts there are in any agency, the better off we are.
Posted by: AlanC   2009-03-25 09:33  

#3  And meanwhile our citizens are being "interrogated" by the NorKs in Pyongyang. (I'll find the link later.)

Where's Algore?
Posted by: Seafarious   2009-03-25 08:26  

#2  U.S. is ostensibly trying to solve the problem through quiet diplomacy
This is just a taste of what things will be like for 4 years as "quiet diplomacy" is waged and strongly worded notes are brandished.
Posted by: Spot   2009-03-25 08:06  

#1  I think their policy is roughly: 'we'll just stop being mean to them and they'll like us.'

Pretty amazing that we have yet to officially demand their release. I thought the State Dept had a macro for that sort of thing. Should be automatic.
Posted by: JAB   2009-03-25 01:54  

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