60th Anniversary of the Geneva Conventions: Remarks by White House Counsel Gregory B. Craig
This audience needs no instruction about the importance of the Geneva Conventions – not only to the civilian populations who suffer from the horrors of war and receive assistance, not only to those in uniform who engage on the field of battle and receive protection, but to all who care about building a more compassionate world community based on cooperation and interdependence and the rule of law. For hundreds of years, there were no standards, no rules, no rights or wrongs about what could be done to those taken captive in the course of battle. For hundreds of years, there was barbarity not only in the treatment of combatants captured on the field of battle but also in the treatment of civilian populations caught up in the midst of war. The signing of the Geneva Conventions brought hope that there would be change. And although we have made progress in some ways, it would be quite wrong to suggest that that was then and all’s right with the world now, that with the arrival of the Geneva Conventions, all the problems of cruelty in wartime were solved. It is a sad fact, for example, that the 1990s was a decade that witnessed the worst civilian-to-combatant ratio of deaths in recorded history. And it is even more disappointing that, in recent years when we resorted to the use of enhanced interrogation techniques the United States fell short.
Read moreBiography of U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Ron Kirk
As United States Trade Representative (USTR), Ambassador Kirk is a member of President Obama’s Cabinet and serves as the President’s principal trade advisor, negotiator and spokesperson on trade issues. Ambassador Kirk was nominated to be United States Trade Representative by President Barack Obama and was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 18, 2009. [...]
Read morePresident Obama to chair high-level meeting of the U.N. Security Council
I am pleased to announce that President Obama will chair a high-level meeting of the U.N. Security Council on nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament when the United Nations convenes for the opening of the General Assembly in September. The special session of the Security Council occurs while the United States holds the presidency of the council, and over the next several weeks the United States will work closely with other Security Council members to prepare for the leaders’ meeting.
Read moreWhite House: D’Agostino To Remain as NNSA Administrator
Today, President Barack Obama announced that Thomas Paul D’Agostino, Under Secretary for Nuclear Security of the Department of Energy and Administrator for Nuclear Security of the National Nuclear Security Administration, will continue serving in his current role.
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