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 first response to Obama’s State of the Union from the Republicans which is an invitation from Speaker Boehner to Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu to address the Congress, aimed clearly as a slap in the face to Obama’s foreign policy efforts in coordination with the U.K., France, China, Russia and Germany, to curb Iran’s nuclear program and end its isolation. M.J. Rosenberg, who served as the Director of Policy Analysis for the Israel Policy Forum and was an editor of Near East Report, the American Israel Public Affairs (AIPAC’s) biweekly publication on Middle East Policy, joins us to discuss whether this poke in the eye to Obama will backfire in Israel and hurt Netanyahu’s reelection chances. |
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Then we look into the diplomatic opening underway in Havana in talks between the top U.S. diplomat for Latin America, Roberta Jacobson and her Cuban counterpart Josefina Vidal, the head of the Cuban Foreign Ministry’s North American affairs division. William Leogrande, a Professor of Government at American University and co-author of “Back Channel to Cuba: The Hidden History of Negotiations between Washington and Havana” joins us to discuss the likely outcome of the first talks in 38 years involving a top U.S. official and the Cuban government. |
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Then finally we speak with Thomas Edsall, a professor of journalism at Columbia University and the author of “The New Politics of Inequality” and “The Age of Austerity”. He joins us to discuss his op-ed in The New York Times “Can Capitalists Save Capitalism” and the emerging “inclusive capitalism” movement that seeks to make our capitalist system more equitable, more sustainable and more inclusive. We will discuss elements of “inclusive capitalism” in the president’s State of the Union address and the White House’s economic agenda of tax increases on the 1% aimed at bringing about “higher median incomes, lower poverty rates, and broader, more inclusive growth”. |
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We begin with what is being called a coup in Yemen where rebel Houthi fighters have swept into the presidential palace in the capitol Sanaa, raising concerns in Washington that America may have lost its ally in the war against al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, President Hadi. Dr Sheila Carapico, a Professor of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Richmond and the author of “Civil Society in Yemen: The Political Economy of Activism in Modern Arabia”, joins us to discuss the U.S.’s singular focus on al Qaeda and its reliance on Saudi Arabia to stabilize Yemen which had its own version of the Arab spring and where the population is increasingly anxious about American drone strikes. |
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Then we speak with Lebanon-based journalist Thanassis Cambanis who writes “The Internationalist” column for The Boston Globe and is the author of “A Privilege to Die: Inside Hezbollah’s Legions and Their Endless War Against Israel” and his latest book, “Once Upon a Revolution: An Egyptian Story”. We will first discuss the likelihood that Hezbollah will retaliate against Israel for the killing of an Iranian General on the Golan Heights and then the revolution in Egypt and why it failed and why it will eventually come back, probably in a more violent and bloody incarnation. |
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| Then finally we speak with two presidential speechwriters about President Obama’s upcoming State of the Union speech and the roles and rituals involved in producing these speeches that involve the input of many and the final editing of one. Paul Glastris, the Editor in Chief of The Washington Monthly and a former special assistant and senior speechwriter to President Bill Clinton and David Halperin, a senior fellow at Republic Report and a former White House speechwriter and special assistant for national security affairs to President Clinton, join us to discus the upcoming SOTU and its likely themes and focus. |
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| Today, to celebrate this Martin Luther King holiday, we are going to play a just-discovered speech that Martin Luther King gave in London, England in 1964 that was recently discovered in the Pacifica Radio archives. This speech has not been played in its entirety since the era in which it was recorded. It was a speech that Dr. King gave when he traveled to London to express solidarity with the international movement calling for sanctions against the South Africa Apartheid State. | ![]() |
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We begin with President Obama’s proposals to increase taxes on the wealthy to benefit the middle class which he will outline in Tuesday’s State of the Union address. Joining us is Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist David Cay Johnston, whose reporting has uncovered so many loopholes and inequities in the U.S. tax code that he has been called the “de facto tax enforcement officer of the United States”. We discuss the details of the president’s proposals and the expected opposition from Republicans who are cutting the IRS’s budget and changing the way the impact of tax cuts on government revenues is measured to disguise the increase in the deficit. |
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Then we look into the anti-corruption crusade launched by China’s President Xi Jinping that looks to many analysts as a Stalinist purge of political rivals rather than a genuine effort to clean up endemic corruption. Andrew Nathan, a Professor of Political Science at Columbia University and the author of “China’s Transition: The Tiananmen Papers”, joins us to discuss what Xi’s endgame might be given the selective nature of the purges underway in China as Xi and his fellow “princelings”, descendents of senior Communist Party founders, continue to enjoy unimaginable power and wealth while crushing any possible threats to their power. |
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Then finally we discuss the recent terrorist attacks in Paris as representing a third generation of asymmetrical war, with the first stage in Afghanistan and Iraq itself, the second stage the London and Madrid bombings, and Paris and Belgium reflecting the third stage. Saskia Sassen, the Co-Chair of The Committee on Global Thought at Columbia University and author of the new book “When Territory Exits Existing Frameworks”, joins us to discuss how cities have become the front lines of conflict and violence stemming from the increased mobility between Europe and theaters of war in the Middle East. |
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We begin with the president’s recent call to improve cyber security which he is expected to expand upon in next week’s State of the Union address. Peter Singer, a Strategist and Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation whose latest book is “Cybersecurity and Cyberwar: What Everyone Needs to Know”, joins us to discuss the gap between military capabilities and civilian defenses made clear by the Sony hack as well as the recurring breaches of large corporations like Target that expose millions of consumers to cyber theft, and the recent rash of cyber attacks on CENTCOM’s twitter account and threats by Anonymous to hack jihadi websites.
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Then we examine the hypocrisy of going to war against the so-called Islamic State because of their brutal beheadings of journalists and now being allied with Saudi Arabia against ISIL, while the ruling feudal Saudi Royal Family carried out 82 beheadings in 2014 alone. Sarah Whitson, the Executive Director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa Division, joins us to discuss Saudi Arabia’s policies of intolerance and extremism with the recent public flogging of Raif Badawi, the liberal blogger who was sentenced to 1,000 lashes and 10 years in jail for “going beyond the realm of obedience”, meaning deviating from absolute fealty to the King. We also discuss Sarah’s article at CNN “Saudi Blogger’s Flogging Should Outrage the World”. |
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Then finally we speak with Paul Glastris, the Editor in Chief of the Washington Monthly and a former special assistant and chief speechwriter to President Bill Clinton, about his article at The Washington Monthly “Why a Second Progressive Era is Emerging and How Not to Blow It”. At a time when Republicans control both the Senate and House and are moving aggressively to weaken the government and government programs that serve the American people, we will look into how a counterrevolution to this government now in power of the oligarchy, for the oligarchy and by their servants, might emerge and who might lead it. |
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