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New U.S. Envoy to Sudan Named

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We are shipowners and we like to offer our vessel to the responsible agency
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WHo is this idiot? Tom Miller, president and CEO of the United Nations
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Haiti,Haiti, world waves, there are a survivalsituation, water, fire(energy),
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We have to keep Haiti in the news
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I think only good buildings will help them to prevent the disaster
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Como podemos Ayudarsi El personal de las Naciones Unidas o la Fundación no
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John Boonstra - March 18, 2009 - 8:31 am
Via Enough Said, the United States has finally appointed a Special Envoy to Sudan, something that Obama had hinted would be a priority of his early presidency. The Envoy, whose name had remained curiously un-leaked as late as yesterday afternoon, will be Scott Gration, a former Air Force General and high-ranking member of Obama's national security team during the campaign. This accomplishes two goals for Obama: naming a Special Envoy, and finding a job for Scott Gration.
It is interesting that Obama tapped a military official to do this job, rather than a career diplomat, as was Gration's predecessor, Rich Williamson. This is not to say that Gration won't necessarily bring a diplomatic verve to the gig, only that he also must be looking at Darfur through a military/national security lens, as well. And as a testament of how important Sudan is to American foreign policy, not only in a moral sense, but in a fundamentally interest-based one, this is an appreciable development.
Here's Gration's speech before the Democratic National Convention last August, and here's an interesting snippet from a New Yorker article on American foreign policy, written last October by Nicholas Lemann:
Somehow, I don't think he has to worry about Sudan's conflicts freezing any time soon.
(image of Gration, November 2007, from flickr user Barack Obama under a Creative Commons license)