Ambasadorul SUA face aprecieri pozitive asupra luptei impotriva coruptiei din 
Romania 

TIMISOARA - Ambasadorul Statelor Unite la Bucuresti, Excelenta Sa Nicholas F. 
Taubman, a apreciat ieri, la Timisoara, ca in Romania "se face tot ce trebuie 
pentru a reduce coruptia". Oficialul american este de parere ca romanii vor 
considera ca nu mai este nevoie de acte de coruptie imediat ce vor cunoaste 
valorile democratiei si libertatii.
  
Discursul demnitarului american - fost businessman de succes - a fost unul 
rezervat, preferand sa discute despre valorile si ospitalitatea Timisoarei, 
oras pe care l-a vizitat dupa vizita efectuata la inceputul saptamanii la 
Cluj-Napoca (unde a inaugurat o investitie americana, EMERSON Corp.,  de 90 de 
Milioane USD). 
  Ambasadorul Taubman a amintit de faptul ca orasul de pe Bega si-a dovedit 
ospitalitatea prin faptul ca ii gazduieste pe refugiatii din Uzbekistan, de mai 
bine de jumatate de an.
  
Vizita sa in orasul de pe Bega a cuprins, la momente oficiale, doar intalnirea 
cu primarul Gheorghe Ciuhandu, insa Taubman a vizitat si "The American 
Corner"(Centru Cultural American), apoi Centrul de Mediere al Conflictelor in 
Domeniul Afacerilor, dar si Centrul unde sunt cazati refugiatii.
Alina Sabou - ROMANIA LIBERA
   
  Diplomatia americana se reorienteaza pe glob, promovand noi prioritati
   
  USA Diplomats Will Be Shifted to Hot Spots

  US State Secretary Rice Also Plans to Elevate USAID Chief
   
  By Glenn Kessler and Bradley Graham - Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 19, 2006
   
  WASHINGTON DC - USA Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday that 
she will shift hundreds of Foreign Service positions from Europe and Washington 
to difficult assignments in the Middle East, Asia and elsewhere as part of a 
broad restructuring of the diplomatic corps that she has dubbed 
"transformational diplomacy."
   
  The State Department's culture of deployment and ideas about career 
advancement must alter now that the Cold War is over and the United States is 
battling transnational threats of terrorism, drug smuggling and disease, Rice 
said in a speech at Georgetown University. "The greatest threats now emerge 
more within states than between them," she said. "The fundamental character of 
regimes now matters more than the international distribution of power."
  As part of the change in priorities, Rice announced that diplomats will not 
be promoted into the senior ranks unless they accept assignments in dangerous 
posts, gain expertise in at least two regions and are fluent in two foreign 
languages, citing Chinese, Urdu and Arabic as a few preferred examples.
  Rice noted that the United States has nearly as many State Department 
personnel in Germany - which has 82 million people - as in India, with 1 
billion people. As a first step, 100 jobs in Europe and Washington will be 
immediately shifted to expanded embassies in countries such as India, China and 
Lebanon. Many of these diplomats had been scheduled to rotate into coveted 
posts in European capitals this summer, and the sudden change in assignment has 
caused some distress, State Department officials said. Officials said that 
ultimately as many as one-third of the 6,400 Foreign Service positions could be 
affected in the coming years.
  Separately, today Rice plans to unveil a restructuring of U.S. foreign 
assistance, including announcing the nomination of Randall L. Tobias as the new 
administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Officials said 
Rice plans to elevate the USAID post, giving Tobias - a former Eli Lilly chief 
executive who now heads the administration's global AIDS relief program - an 
office and a planning staff in the State Department. Rice will designate Tobias 
as having a rank equivalent of deputy secretary of state.
  Although the move stops short of merging USAID with State, it is intended to 
draw the agency closer into the department's fold, the officials said. 
Additionally, the new director will be given broader authority over a range of 
foreign assistance accounts now managed by separate entities. "Effectively, 
this will allow a single person to have visibility into these various 
accounts," a State official said.
  Anticipating such a change, some outside the government have warned that it 
could result in a greater politicization of foreign assistance. "We're 
concerned that the same priority won't be given to long-term development as 
resources are siphoned to support shorter-term diplomatic or military 
objectives," said Jim Bishop, a senior officer of InterAction, the largest 
coalition of non-governmental U.S. aid groups.
  But State Department officials described the restructuring as necessary to 
reverse a growing fragmentation of foreign assistance programs in recent years 
and to ensure more effective and focused spending overseas.
  The two announcements - combined with changes announced Tuesday to streamline 
the movement of people and goods across U.S. borders - are intended to fill in 
the details of Rice's promise to make what she calls transformational diplomacy 
the hallmark of her tenure as secretary of state. "These proposals are part of 
the secretary's continuing strategy to dramatically increase America's 
engagement and dialogue with the world," said Jim Wilkinson, senior adviser to 
Rice. Rice has described the notion of transformational diplomacy as a shift 
from merely reporting on events to influencing them to foster the growth of 
democratic states worldwide.
  Under the plan outlined yesterday, Rice will expand the U.S.A. presence by 
encouraging the spread of new one-person diplomatic outposts, now located in a 
few cities such as Alexandria, Egypt, and Medan, Indonesia. "There are nearly 
200 cities worldwide with over 1 million people in which the United States has 
no formal diplomatic presence," Rice said. "This is where the action is today." 
The move is intended to bring U.S. diplomats - now often barricaded in 
fortified embassies - closer to the mood in the streets.
   
  The State Department will also expand the use of interactive Web sites 
maintained by diplomats to communicate with foreign citizens, promote the 
creation of rapid-reaction forces to deal with regional problems and seek to 
work more closely with military officers to promote the stability of nations 
after conflicts, Rice said.
   
  
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/18/AR2006011801937.html?referrer=email&referrer=email


                
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