Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
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Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
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We begin with the barking dogs of war in the press calling on President Obama to man up and as Jim Acosta of CNN put it, “take out these bastards”, referring to daesh or the Islamic State who are responsible for the massacres in Paris. An award-winning investigative correspondent for CNN, ABC and NBC, Mark Feldstein, a professor and the Chair of Broadcast Journalism at the University of Maryland, joins us to discuss the clamor from journalist, pundits, Republican politicians and some Democrats like Senator Diane Feinstein, to pressure Obama to take the gloves off and go to war in Syria against daesh with or without a plan. |
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Then we get an assessment of Secretary of State Kerry’s optimistic assertion that “we are weeks away, conceivably, from the possibility of a big transition in Syria”. Joshua Landis, the director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma who writes “Syria Comment”, a daily newsletter and blog on Syrian politics, joins us to discuss what daesh hopes to gain from picking a fight with France, Russia, the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Turkey, and what kind of deal might be in the works assuming there is a ceasefire and a peace plan to follow. |
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Then finally we get a second opinion on whether Kerry’s announcement that a shift could come in weeks because the U.S., Iran, Saudi Arabia and a dozen other countries had agreed on a framework to end the crisis in Syria, is realistic. Nader Hashemi, the Director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Denver and author of “The Syria Dilemma”, joins us to discuss whether the Secretary of State’s optimism is justified given the past record of failed attempts at a ceasefire, let alone a peace deal. |
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We begin with an analysis of the declaration of war against daesh, the self-declared Islamic State, by President Hollande today in a rare joint session of the French parliament in Versailles. An expert on the French Socialist Party and French politics, Phillippe Marliere, a professor of French and European Politics at University College, London and the Chair in Political Science at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, joins us. We look into why so many jihadists seem to come from the Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels, and discuss the current state of emergency in France and how a war can be conducted against a stateless group whose soldiers that carried out the massacres of innocent civilians in Paris on Friday, are born and bred French citizens. |
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Then we speak with the founder and former editor in chief of Salon, David Talbot, about his new book “The Devil’s Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA and the Rise of America’s Secret Government”, that reveals the dark underside of one of America’s most powerful and influential figures. We discuss how Dulles saw himself as above the elected law, manipulating and subverting American presidents, colluding with Nazi war criminals and Mafiosi, and based on new evidence that David Talbot has unearthed, playing a much larger role in the assassination of President Kennedy and its subsequent investigation by the Warren Commission. |
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We begin and go to Paris for an update on the investigations into the coordinated massacres that took place on Friday night across the city at restaurants, a concert hall and at a sports stadium. Francois D’Alancon, a Foreign Correspondent with the French daily La Croix who was formerly the newspaper’s Foreign Editor and Middle East Correspondent joins us to discuss the traumatic events that have put the country on a war footing against a threat that cannot be solved by military means alone. As President Hollande is pressured to take a hard line by Sarkozy on his right and Le Pen on his far right, we will examine what can be done to detect potential terrorists before they attack, without undermining Liberte, Egalite and Fraternite. |
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Then we look further into what Hollande means when he announced that war has been declared on France and that in response he will be merciless. The Editor in Chief of Insurgeintelligence and a weekly columnist for Middle East Eye, Nafeez Ahmed, joins us from London to analyze the strategy of the self-declared Islamic State to bait the West they call “crusaders” into scapegoating Muslims and driving wedge between the Muslim diaspora in Europe and the rest of the population, while at the same time U.S. policies have added to the number of failed states in which these jihadists have safe haven and can build their so-called Caliphate. |
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Then finally we examine the rhetoric and recriminations coming from the G-20 meeting in Turkey where discussions are underway to try to end the civil war in Syria which is causing an exodus of refugees to Europe that an E.U. spokesman is blaming Russia for exacerbating by bombing the country in support of the Assad regime. A former senior CIA official Graham Fuller, the author of “Turkey and the Arab Spring: Leadership in the Middle East”, joins us to discuss the problem with direct links to the fate of Syria, Iraq and Turkey itself and that is the Kurdish question now made all the more urgent since Turkey’s President Erdogan cynically reignited a war against the Kurds to win the recent election. |
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We begin with the military offensive underway against the Islamic State in Northern Iraq near the Syrian border involving U.S. Special Forces and 7,500 Kurdish Peshmerga fighters (who incidentally due to falling oil prices have not been paid in months). Max Hoffman, a Policy Analyst on the National Security and International Policy team at the Center for American Progress who focuses on Turkey and the Kurdish regions, joins us to discuss the capture of the important Highway 47 that cuts off the Islamic State in Mosul and shuts down their export of stolen oil from the main oil field they’ve captured.
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Then we will look into the arrest on drug trafficking charges involving 800 kilos of cocaine by the DEA in Haiti of the “son” and nephew of Venezuela’s First Lady, who goes by the title of “First Combatant”. Javier Corrales, a Professor of Political Science at Amherst College and author of “Dragon in the Tropics: Hugo Chavez and the Political Economy of Revolution in Venezuela” joins us to discuss the almost complete media blackout in Venezuela in reporting the arrests and how, once the news eventually filters out through social media, it will affect the upcoming December 6 elections for a new National Assembly. |
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Then finally we speak with an expert on Myanmar/Burma about the sweeping victory by Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy who in the next five months will transition the country away from a 25 year-long brutal and kleptocratic rule by a military junta that seized power after Ms. Suu Kyi won the country’s last democratic election. An anthropologist who studies Buddhist practices, Juliane Schober, the Director of the Center for Asian Research at Arizona State University, joins us to discuss the likelihood of a complete transition to democratic rule and the reasons why the military are giving up power, although they are retaining one quarter of the seats in parliament. |
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We begin with the latest Republican presidential debate that pundits are declaring was a victory for Rand Paul, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, an improvement for Jeb Bush, no change for Carly Fiorina and John Kasich, and something of a loss for the two outsiders leading in the polls Donald Trump and Ben Carson. Since Rubio with Bush, Fiorina and Carson offering extremely hawkish foreign policy prescriptions, we will examine the man behind Ben Carson’s dangerously ignorant and recklessly aggressive foreign policy, retired Army General Robert Dees, who headed Military Ministry which is dedicated to converting members of the U.S. military to Christian evangelicalism and then have them “indoctrinate” the nation then the world to launch a global crusade against Muslims. Investigative journalist James Bamford joins us to discuss his article in Foreign Policy Magazine “Who is the Man Behind Ben Carson’s Foreign Policy?” |
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Then we look into the $607 billion defense bill that President Obama has decided not to veto for a second time despite its provision to keep Guantanamo open. RoxanaTiron, who covers defense and national security for Bloomberg, joins us to discuss whether the president will go around Congress to fulfill his pledge to close Guantanamo and the $11 billion added into the bill that appears to be wasteful and excessive spending by the Pentagon. |
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Then finally, on this Veteran’s Day we speak with Joshua Kors, an investigative reporter with The Nation where he covers military and veteran’s issues. We discuss his recent three-part series for The Nation that reveals how military doctors are deliberately misdiagnosing as many as 31,000 wounded Iraq and Afghanistan vets, labeling them mentally ill with personality disorders in order to deny them medical care and disability pay. |
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