"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"

"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"
"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"

"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"

Διαβάζετε ένα ΑΠΟΛΥΤΩΣ ΑΞΙΟΠΙΣΤΟ και ΧΩΡΙΣ ΚΑΜΙΑ ΑΠΟΛΥΤΩΣ οικονομική στήριξη (αυτοδιοικητική, χορηγική, δημοσία ή άλλη ) ηλικίας 24 ετών Μέσο Μαζικής Ενημέρωσης, με αξιοσημείωτη ΔΙΕΘΝΗ αναγνώριση και ΕΞΑΙΡΕΤΙΚΑ ΥΨΗΛΗ ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ.
Είκοσι τέσσαρα (24) ολόκληρα χρόνια δημοσιογραφίας, ΟΥΤΕ ΜΙΑ ΔΙΑΨΕΥΣΙΣ!!
Contact: politikimx@gmail.com v.ch.maria@gmail.com

Η ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΠΟΥ ΜΑΣ ΤΙΜΑ 14 ΙΑΝΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ 2024

Η ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ ΠΟΥ ΜΑΣ ΤΙΜΑ:

Eως σήμερα 24 Οκτωβρίου 2024 ώρα 10΄22 οι αναγνώσεις της “ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ” είναι -σύμφωνα με την γκούγκλ)- 3.061.688 (τρία εκατομμύρια εξήντα μία χιλιάδες εξακόσιες ογδόντα οκτώ)

Η ανάλυση μηνών είναι:
71316 (Απρίλιος 2024)
76741 (Μάϊος 2024)
66828 (Iούνιος 2024)
80104 (Iούλιος 2024)

79553 (Aύγουστος 2024)
71739 (Σεπτέμβριος 2024)

ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΣΗ ΤΩΝ ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΤΩΝ ΜΑΣ

Σήμερα σταματά η ενημέρωση της αναγνωσιμότητας. Ο λόγος είναι προφανής: δεν έχουμε μεν κανένα έσοδο αλλά η αναγνωσιμότητά μας περικόπτεται διαρκώς, ανάλγητα και συντριπτικά παρά τις κατ΄επανάληψη ΔΙΚΑΙΕΣ διαμαρτυρίες μας στην υπέροχη γκούγκλ. Απο σήμερα η Εφημερίδα δεν φιλοξενεί πλέον διαφημίσεις της. Οταν το κονδύλι της δημιουργίας ΙΣΤΟΣΕΛΙΔΑΣ θα γίνει προσιτό, η Εφημερίδα θα συνεχίσει ως Ιστοσελίδα. Εως τότε,όλα είναι αναμενόμενα και εμείς πανέτοιμοι για ένα καλύτερο μέλλον της "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ". Νερό στο μύλο ΚΑΝΕΝΟΣ, ειδικά όταν συνοδεύεται απο πλήρη αναλγησία.
Άμεση επικοινωνία: v.ch.maria@gmail.com
politikimx@gmail.com

Αναζήτηση αυτού του ιστολογίου

ΠΡΟΣΦΑΤΑ ΑΡΘΡΑ, ΓΝΩΜΕΣ Ημερομηνίες πληρωμής των συντάξεων μηνός Δεκεμβρίου 2024..-ΔΗΜΟΣ ΜΑΡΚΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ ΜΕΣΟΓΑΙΑΣ:ΔΗΜΟΤΙΚΑ ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΙΑ..-EUROPEAN BANK's update ..-ΠΑ.ΣΟ.Κ. Κοινοβουλευτική δράση..-Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Newsletter..-ΑΠΟΧΗ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΚΗΓΟΡΩΝ ΤΗΣ ΑΘΗΝΑΣ ΑΠΟ ΤΙΣ ΔΙΚΕΣ ΕΝΩΠΙΟΝ ΤΗΣ ΟΛΟΜΕΛΕΙΑΣ ΤΟΥ ΣΥΜΒΟΥΛΙΟΥ ΤΗΣ ΕΠΙΚΡΑΤΕΙΑΣ ΕΩΣ ΤΙΣ 31.12.202..-Συγχώνευση Ληξιαρχείων..-Διευκρινίσεις για την εφαρμογή του ν.5143/2024.»..-Πρόσκληση υποψήφιων ε κλάδων ΤΕ και ΔΕ για υποβολή αίτησης-δήλωσης.....-IMF Podcasts..-IMF: Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is Diverging..-"EΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΣ" Ειδήσεις..-ΕΘΝΙΚΗ ΑΡΧΗ ΔΙΑΦΑΝΕΙΑΣ webinar..-"ΕΘΝΟΣ" Ειδήσεις..-"ΤΟ ΒΗΜΑ" Ειδήσεις..-APEC Recognizes Champions of Sustainability with 2024 BCG Award ..-ΑΣΕΠ νέα ..-EUROPEAN CONFEDERATION OF THE FOOTWEAR INDUSTRY(CEC),update..-WorldFootwear:4 από 198 Expo Riva Schuh & Gardabags awaits you..-MAΡΙΑΣ ΑΝΑΡΤΗΣΕΙΣ ΣΤΑ SOCIAL MEDIA,..-ΤΟ ΧΑΜΟΓΕΛΟ ΤΟΥ ΠΑΙΔΙΟΥ:Εξαφανίσεις και Εκμετάλλευση Ανηλίκων από Κυκλώματα..-ΑΑΔΕ: Αυτόματη απόδοση ΑΦΜ σε 700.000 ανήλικους, σταδιακά από τις 11/11..-ΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΣ ΠΙΤΣΙΛΗΣ,ΔΙΟΙΚΗΤΗΣ ΑΑΔΕ:ολόκληρη η ομιλία του στο 17ο Συνέδριο των φορολογικών διοικήσεων του ΟΟΣΑ..-Επίδομα θέρμανσης 2023-24: Τι ισχύει για όσους αγόρασαν καυσόξυλα..-Προέδρου ΣτΕ κ. Πικραμένου επιστολή προς τον Πρόεδρο Ολομέλειας Προέδρων Δικηγορικών Συλλόγων ..- ‍ΔΙΚΗΓΟΡΙΚΟΣ ΣΥΛΛΟΓΟΣ ΑΘΗΝΩΝ: Βιντεοσκοπημένο Σεμινάριο Νομικής Βοήθειας .....-«Καθορισμός της διαδικασίας θέσης των Επιβατικών Ιδιωτικής Χρήσης (ΕΙΧ) οχημάτων και μοτοσυκλετών..."..-ΕΚΛΟΓΕΣ ΕΞΑΑΑ 2024 - ΝΕΟ Δ.Σ...-Ευάγγελος Βενιζέλος, "Πολιτική θεολογία και Συνταγματική ηθική" , εκδόσεις Αρμός 2024..-ENYΠΕΚΚ/ΑΛΕΞΗΣ ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ:ενημέρωση..-ΠΑ.ΣΟ.Κ.:ενημέρωση..- COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,update..-ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΑΝΤΙΚΑΡΚΙΝΙΚΗ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ ΠΑΡΑΡΤΗΜΑ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ & ΦΥΛΗΣ:αιμοδοσία..-NASA's Earth Observatory,update..- WORLD FOOTWEAR weekly newsletter..-After Constantine Journal,update..-WTC Health Program eNews:We'll See You Wednesday!..-ΣτΕ αποφάσεις Ολομέλειας 1639/2024 και 1641/2024:"Στερείται εννόμου συμφέροντος ο ΔΣΑ για την ακύρωση αποφάσεων Υπουργού Δικαιοσύνης.."..-ΔΙΚΗΓΟΡΙΚΟΣ ΣΥΛΛΟΓΟΣ ΑΘΗΝΩΝ:"ΑΠΟΦΑΣΗ ΟΛΟΜΕΛΕΙΑΣ ΣτΕ: ΙΣΤΟΡΙΚΗΣ ΣΗΜΑΝΤΙΚΟΤΗΤΑΣ ΔΙΚΑΙΟΚΡΑΤΙΚΗ ΟΠΙΣΘΟΔΡΟΜΗΣΗ"..-ΕΒΕΑ:Συμπλήρωση ερωτηματολογίου για την ενσωμάτωση της πλατφόρμας S.T.E.P......-EUROPEAN JOURNALISM CENTRE update..-The Clock is Ticking on Sub-Saharan Africa's Urgent Job Creation Challenge..-Ο Πιερικός Οργανισμός Τουριστικής Ανάπτυξης και Προβολής (ΠΟΤΑΠ) στη Διεθνή Έκθεση WTM London 2024..-MAΡΙΑΣ ΑΝΑΡΤΗΣΕΙΣ ΣΤΑ SOCIAL MEDIA,..-ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟ ΣΥΝΤΟΜΟ ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΤΗΣ Μ.Χ.Β. ..- ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗΣ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΕΩΣ ενημέρωση απο τον Κυβερνητικό Εκπρόσωπο Παύλο Μαρινάκη..-ΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΥ ΜΗΤΣΟΤΑΚΗ,ΠΡΩΘΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΥ ΤΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ πρόσφατη δραστηριότητα..-NIH Health Information......-AHEPA update..-Εμπορικό & Βιομηχανικό Επιμελητήριο Αθηνών (ΕΒΕΑ):Ζητήσεις-Προσφορές Οκτώβριος 2024..-IMF update..-"OPEN" tv νέα..-"ΕΘΝΟΣ" Ειδήσεις..-"Περι ζα...ανεμομαζώματα...διαβολοσκορπίσματα":γράφει η Μ.Χ.Β...-"ΤΟ ΒΗΜΑ" Ειδήσεις..-ΕΒΕΑ:Έρευνα του Ελληνικού Παρατηρητηρίου του LSE.....-Αντίδοτο στο δηλητήριο της οχιάς από το ΑΠΘ και το ινστιτούτο Παστέρ..-Ε.Ε.Φα.Μ ενημέρωση..-ΕΒΕΑ επιχειρηματική ενημέρωση..-ΕΝΩΣΗ ΑΓΡΙΝΙΟΥ:αγροτική ενημέρωση..-EUROPEAN COMMISSION Agricultural markets dashboard..-IMF latest news..-SPD update..-EUROPEAN BANK's update..- WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION,s update..-KREMLIN's Weekly information newsletter..-AHEPA Visits Delaware Valley, Kicks off Journey to Greece Fundraising..-NATO update..-Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau,....-GAIN reports..- --

MHN ΞΕΧΝΑΤΕ ΝΑ ΔΙΑΒΑΖΕΤΕ ΚΑΙ ΕΔΩ:

SELECT LANGUAGE

"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"

"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2024"
ΑΠΟΓΕΙΩΣΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΣΗ ΣΑΣ!!

ΕΥΔΑΠ

ΕΥΔΑΠ
Μια μικρή, δική σου κίνηση, φέρνει μία μεγάλη αλλαγή για όλους μας. Σε ευχαριστούμε, που κλείνεις τη βρύση! Μάθε ακόμα περισσότερα για το πώς μπορείς να εξοικονομήσεις, κάθε μέρα, νερό, έξυπνα και εύκολα, εδώ.
Δεν μπορώ να καταλάβω πως πολλοί ΔΕΝ γνωρίζουν την αξία της ψήφου.Η ΨΗΦΟΣ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΣΦΑΙΡΑ και σκοτώνει οταν ΔΕΝ σκέφτεσαι...Αυτό..

Έλληνας ιατρός,πολιτικός,συγγραφέας,πανεπιστημιακός, καθηγητής στην Ιατρική Σχολή

Τρίτη 28 Μαΐου 2024

SHOES NEWS:THE EU FOOTWEAR INDUSTRY



The European footwear industry is made up of diverse products and industrial processes. The European Commission works to promote the innovation and competitiveness of firms in the field and to combat counterfeiting, while protecting consumer health and the environment.

The footwear sector is a diverse industry covering a wide variety of materials, including textile, plastics, rubber, and leather, and products from different types of men’s, women’s, and children’s footwear to more specialised products like snowboard boots and protective footwear. In 2019, the footwear sector generated €26.4 billion in turnover, directly employing 24 000 people from 18 800 enterprises (Eurostat, 2023). This range of end products reflects the many industrial processes, enterprises, and market structures within the sector.

SHOES NEWS:Footwear - United States

 https://www.statista.com/outlook/cmo/footwear/united-states

Footwear - United States

  • United States
  • In 2024, the Footwear market in the United States is expected to generate revenue of US$91.51bn, making it the largest revenue-generating market globally.
  • The market's revenue is expected to grow annually at a rate of 3.25% (CAGR 2024-2028).
  • The Textile & Other Footwear segment is the largest segment in the market, with a market volume of US$28.32bn in 2024.
  • When considering the population figures, the per-person revenue generated in the Footwear market is expected to be US$270.30 in 2024.
  • The market's volume is expected to reach 1.97bn pairs by 2028, with a volume growth of 1.6% in 2025.
  • The average volume per person in the Footwear market is expected to be 5.45pairs in 2024.
  • Non-Luxury are expected to account for 92% of sales in the Footwear market by 2024.
  • The United States' footwear market is seeing a rise in demand for sustainable and ethically-produced shoes.

READ MORE:

https://www.statista.com/outlook/cmo/footwear/united-states#revenue

#shoe news: World Athletics introduces new shoe rules

https://www.satra.com/bulletin/article.php?id=2862

World Athletics introduces new shoe rules

Sporting governing body World Athletics has approved new regulations for shoes worn in high-level competitions. From 1st November 2024, athletes will not be permitted to wear footwear with a stack height of over 20 mm. The current regulations allow a 20 mm stack height for sprint and hurdle events up to 400 m, and a 25 mm stack for 800 m events and longer distances.

Most amateur clubs, schools and even masters-level competitions will be exempt from World Athletics’ new ‘applicable competitions scope’. Major marathons and some other elite events will continue with pre-event shoe declarations, and a greater emphasis will be placed on conducting post-race spot checks. From January 2022, athletic shoes must not contain any embedded ‘sensing or intelligent’ technology with the exception of heart rate or cadence monitors.
Publishing Data

This article was originally published on page 2 of the January 2022 issue of SATRA Bulletin.

Η World Athletics εισάγει νέους κανόνες για τα παπούτσια

Ο αθλητικός οργανισμός World Athletics ενέκρινε νέους κανονισμούς για παπούτσια που φοριούνται σε αγώνες υψηλού επιπέδου. Από την 1η Νοεμβρίου 2024, οι αθλητές δεν θα επιτρέπεται να φορούν υποδήματα με ύψος στοίβας άνω των 20 mm. Οι τρέχοντες κανονισμοί επιτρέπουν ένα ύψος στοίβας 20 mm για αγώνες σπριντ και με εμπόδια έως 400 μέτρα και στοίβα 25 mm για αγώνες 800 μέτρων και μεγαλύτερες αποστάσεις.

Οι περισσότεροι ερασιτεχνικοί σύλλογοι, σχολεία και ακόμη και αγώνες επιπέδου master θα εξαιρεθούν από το νέο «ισχύον πεδίο εφαρμογής των αγώνων» της World Athletics. Οι μεγάλοι μαραθώνιοι και κάποιες άλλες ελίτ διοργανώσεις θα συνεχιστούν με δηλώσεις παπουτσιών πριν από τη διοργάνωση και θα δοθεί μεγαλύτερη έμφαση στη διεξαγωγή σημείων ελέγχων μετά τον αγώνα. Από τον Ιανουάριο του 2022, τα αθλητικά παπούτσια δεν πρέπει να περιέχουν καμία ενσωματωμένη τεχνολογία «αίσθησης ή έξυπνης» με εξαίρεση τα μόνιτορ καρδιακών παλμών ή ρυθμού.
Δημοσίευση δεδομένων

Αυτό το άρθρο δημοσιεύθηκε αρχικά στη σελίδα 2 του τεύχους Ιανουαρίου 2022 του SATRA Bulletin .

read more:

SHOES NEWS-COUNCIL OF THE EU:"Green transition: Council gives its final approval to the ecodesign regulation"

Council of the EU

Press release
27 May 2024

Green transition: Council gives its final approval to the ecodesign regulation


The Council has today adopted the ecodesign regulation, which sets requirements for sustainable products. The regulation replaces the existing ecodesign directive and enlarges its scope, beyond energy products, to all kind of goods placed in the EU market. This is the last step in the decision-making procedure.

((With the ecodesign regulation we create the right incentives for the industry to think circular from the very design conception of the products they plan to produce and sell in the EU.

Pierre-Yves Dermagne, Belgian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Economy and Employment))

 

Green requirements for sustainable products


The regulation affects all kinds of products, with only a few exceptions (i.e. cars or defence and security related products). The new regulation introduces new requirements such as product durability, reusability, upgradability and reparability, rules on the presence of substances that inhibit circularity; energy and resource efficiency; recycled content, remanufacturing and recycling; carbon and environmental footprints; and information requirements, including a Digital Product Passport. The Commission will be empowered to set ecodesign requirements by delegated acts and the industry will have 18 months to comply with them.

Ecodesign criteria will be applicable in public procurement to incentivise the public purchase of green products. 

The new regulation introduces a direct-ban on the destruction of unsold textiles and footwear (SMEs will be temporarily excluded) and empowers the Commission to introduce similar bans for other products in the future. The ecodesign regulation will be aligned to the digital services act, when it comes to products sold online.

U.S. Department of State,update




Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Margaret Brennan of CBS’s Face the Nation
05/12/2024

Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Margaret Brennan of CBS’s Face the Nation
05/12/2024 12:24 PM EDT

The Secretary of State

Washington, D.C.

QUESTION: Good morning, Mr. Secretary. I know military experts say Gaza is as complicated and challenging a battlefield as any modern warfare has seen. But back in December President Biden said Israel conducted indiscriminate bombing; in February he said Israel’s offensive was over the top; and then this past week he was asked on CNN about pausing the delivery of 3,500 bombs. Here’s what he said.

PRESIDENT BIDEN: Civilians have been killed in Gaza as a consequence of those bombs and other ways in which they go after population centers. And I made it clear that if they go into Rafah, I’m not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with Rafah, to deal with the cities, to deal with that problem.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, is Israel living up to international humanitarian law standards?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, first, Margaret, good morning. The report that we put out lays out some of the concerns that we’ve had throughout this period when it comes to humanitarian assistance, particularly the early months after October 7th, and when it comes to the use of weapons, concerns about incidents where, given the totality of the damage that’s been done to children, women, men, it was reasonable to assess that in certain instances, Israel acted in ways that are not consistent with international humanitarian law.

It’s also critical to note that Israel itself has accountability processes to get at this. There are hundreds of ongoing inquiries looking at different incidents that have taken place since October 7th. There are criminal investigations that are going forward. Unlike most other countries in the world, Israel has the ability, the means, and the actions to self-correct. But we’ve been on this every single day.

QUESTION: So you have been able, then, to conclude that Israel has violated U.S. laws and weapons-sharing agreements?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No, what we’ve concluded is, in the case of the use of weapons, as you said, this is an extraordinarily complex military environment in which you have an enemy, Hamas, that committed the most atrocious terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7th and then retreats to Gaza, hides behind and underneath civilians, in hospitals, schools, mosques, apartment buildings, and that makes it very difficult to determine – particularly in the midst of war – exactly what happened and to draw any final conclusions from any one incident.

So we have a number of incidents that we continue to look at to try to get the best possible assessment. The Israelis themselves are doing the same thing.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Our assessments will be ongoing. But as I said, given the totality of what we’ve seen in terms of civilian suffering, in terms of children, women, men caught in this crossfire of Hamas’s making who’ve been killed or been injured, it’s reasonable to assess that in a number of instances, Israel has not acted in a manner that’s consistent with international humanitarian law.

QUESTION: So I understand you’re still collecting evidence, but —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: That’s right.

QUESTION: — on the policy, can you clarify? Because even the lead Democrat on House Armed Services says it’s not clear. Is the U.S. slowing down the delivery of any weapons to Israel at this point beyond the 3,500 so-called dumb bombs?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: As you know, Margaret, most of the population from Gaza displaced from the north and from central Gaza has gone to Rafah.

QUESTION: Right.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: There are about 1.4 million people there. And we’ve said to Israel that we cannot, will not support an operation in Rafah – a major military operation – in the absence of a credible plan to protect civilians. We haven’t seen that plan.

QUESTION: And they still haven’t delivered it. So are you —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have not seen that plan.

QUESTION: — slowing the delivery of any weapons beyond these 3,500 bombs?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No.

QUESTION: Are you pausing, for example, precision munitions, as some Republicans have claimed?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Right, the answer to that – the answer to that is no. What the President said and what he’s been clear about in private conversations with the Israelis – which unfortunately leaked to the press, so the President responded forthrightly when he was asked about it – but what we’ve been clear about is that if Israel launches this major military operation into Rafah, then there are certain systems that we’re not going to be supporting and supplying for that operation. But at present, the only thing that we’ve delayed and are holding back are these high-payload bombs because we’re in an ongoing conversation with Israel, given the impact that those weapons can have when they’re used in densely populated areas, including an area like Rafah.

QUESTION: So you still might deliver them?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So we’re in an active conversation with Israel about that. We have real concerns about the way they’re used. But here’s something else that’s critically important, Margaret. We believe two things. One, you have to have a clear, credible plan to protect civilians, which we haven’t seen. Second, we also need to see a plan for what happens after this conflict in Gaza open – is over. And we still haven’t seen that.

Because what are we seeing right now? We’re seeing parts of Gaza that Israel has cleared of Hamas where Hamas is coming back —

QUESTION: Right.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: — including in the north, including in Khan Younis. As we look at Rafah, they may go in and have some initial success, but potentially at an incredibly high cost to civilians, but one that is not durable, one that is not sustainable.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: And they will be left holding the bag on an enduring insurgency because a lot of armed Hamas will be left no matter what they do in Rafah. Or if they leave and get out of Gaza, as we believe they need to do, then you’re going to have a vacuum, and a vacuum that’s likely to be filled by chaos, by anarchy, and ultimately by Hamas again.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So we’ve been working for many, many weeks on developing credible plans for security, for governance, for rebuilding. We haven’t seen that come from Israel. We’ve been working with Arab countries and others on that plan. We need to see that too. We have the same objective as Israel. We want to make sure that Hamas cannot govern Gaza again.

QUESTION: Well —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We want to make sure it’s demilitarized. We want to make sure that Israel gets its leaders. That’s what we’re determined to do.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have a different way – and we think a more effective, durable way – of getting that done. We remain in conversation with Israel about exactly that.

QUESTION: Well, Mr. Secretary, your National Security Memorandum that you signed says Israeli civilian harm mitigation efforts are, quote, “inconsistent, ineffective, and inadequate.” The prime minister himself said Israel assesses the IDF killed 14,000 terrorists and 16,000 civilians. Does the U.S. share the Israeli assessment that more civilians have been killed than actual terrorists?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Yes, we do. And I think the report makes clear that while Israel has processes, procedures, rules, regulations, to try to minimize civilian harm, given the impact that this operation, this war in Gaza, has had on the civilian population, that —

QUESTION: And yet you’re still surging weapons to Israel.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: — those have not been – those have not been applied consistently and effectively. There’s a gap between the stated intent and some of the result we’ve seen. But because it’s so complicated in the midst of a war – and particularly in the midst of a war where you have an enemy that hides in civilian infrastructure, hides behind civilians – to make final determinations on these individual incidents, we’re looking at the totality of what’s happened. We think it’s reasonable to assess, based on what’s happened, that there have been acts that have been inconsistent with Israel’s obligations under international humanitarian law. But we haven’t drawn definitive conclusions. We need to pursue these investigations, just as Israel is doing itself.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, thank you for your time this morning.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Thanks, Margaret.


Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Margaret Brennan of CBS’s Face the Nation
05/12/2024


Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Margaret Brennan of CBS’s Face the Nation
05/12/2024 12:24 PM EDT

The Secretary of State

Washington, D.C.

QUESTION: Good morning, Mr. Secretary. I know military experts say Gaza is as complicated and challenging a battlefield as any modern warfare has seen. But back in December President Biden said Israel conducted indiscriminate bombing; in February he said Israel’s offensive was over the top; and then this past week he was asked on CNN about pausing the delivery of 3,500 bombs. Here’s what he said.

PRESIDENT BIDEN: Civilians have been killed in Gaza as a consequence of those bombs and other ways in which they go after population centers. And I made it clear that if they go into Rafah, I’m not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with Rafah, to deal with the cities, to deal with that problem.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, is Israel living up to international humanitarian law standards?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, first, Margaret, good morning. The report that we put out lays out some of the concerns that we’ve had throughout this period when it comes to humanitarian assistance, particularly the early months after October 7th, and when it comes to the use of weapons, concerns about incidents where, given the totality of the damage that’s been done to children, women, men, it was reasonable to assess that in certain instances, Israel acted in ways that are not consistent with international humanitarian law.

It’s also critical to note that Israel itself has accountability processes to get at this. There are hundreds of ongoing inquiries looking at different incidents that have taken place since October 7th. There are criminal investigations that are going forward. Unlike most other countries in the world, Israel has the ability, the means, and the actions to self-correct. But we’ve been on this every single day.

QUESTION: So you have been able, then, to conclude that Israel has violated U.S. laws and weapons-sharing agreements?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No, what we’ve concluded is, in the case of the use of weapons, as you said, this is an extraordinarily complex military environment in which you have an enemy, Hamas, that committed the most atrocious terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7th and then retreats to Gaza, hides behind and underneath civilians, in hospitals, schools, mosques, apartment buildings, and that makes it very difficult to determine – particularly in the midst of war – exactly what happened and to draw any final conclusions from any one incident.

So we have a number of incidents that we continue to look at to try to get the best possible assessment. The Israelis themselves are doing the same thing.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Our assessments will be ongoing. But as I said, given the totality of what we’ve seen in terms of civilian suffering, in terms of children, women, men caught in this crossfire of Hamas’s making who’ve been killed or been injured, it’s reasonable to assess that in a number of instances, Israel has not acted in a manner that’s consistent with international humanitarian law.

QUESTION: So I understand you’re still collecting evidence, but —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: That’s right.

QUESTION: — on the policy, can you clarify? Because even the lead Democrat on House Armed Services says it’s not clear. Is the U.S. slowing down the delivery of any weapons to Israel at this point beyond the 3,500 so-called dumb bombs?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: As you know, Margaret, most of the population from Gaza displaced from the north and from central Gaza has gone to Rafah.

QUESTION: Right.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: There are about 1.4 million people there. And we’ve said to Israel that we cannot, will not support an operation in Rafah – a major military operation – in the absence of a credible plan to protect civilians. We haven’t seen that plan.

QUESTION: And they still haven’t delivered it. So are you —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have not seen that plan.

QUESTION: — slowing the delivery of any weapons beyond these 3,500 bombs?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No.

QUESTION: Are you pausing, for example, precision munitions, as some Republicans have claimed?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Right, the answer to that – the answer to that is no. What the President said and what he’s been clear about in private conversations with the Israelis – which unfortunately leaked to the press, so the President responded forthrightly when he was asked about it – but what we’ve been clear about is that if Israel launches this major military operation into Rafah, then there are certain systems that we’re not going to be supporting and supplying for that operation. But at present, the only thing that we’ve delayed and are holding back are these high-payload bombs because we’re in an ongoing conversation with Israel, given the impact that those weapons can have when they’re used in densely populated areas, including an area like Rafah.

QUESTION: So you still might deliver them?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So we’re in an active conversation with Israel about that. We have real concerns about the way they’re used. But here’s something else that’s critically important, Margaret. We believe two things. One, you have to have a clear, credible plan to protect civilians, which we haven’t seen. Second, we also need to see a plan for what happens after this conflict in Gaza open – is over. And we still haven’t seen that.

Because what are we seeing right now? We’re seeing parts of Gaza that Israel has cleared of Hamas where Hamas is coming back —

QUESTION: Right.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: — including in the north, including in Khan Younis. As we look at Rafah, they may go in and have some initial success, but potentially at an incredibly high cost to civilians, but one that is not durable, one that is not sustainable.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: And they will be left holding the bag on an enduring insurgency because a lot of armed Hamas will be left no matter what they do in Rafah. Or if they leave and get out of Gaza, as we believe they need to do, then you’re going to have a vacuum, and a vacuum that’s likely to be filled by chaos, by anarchy, and ultimately by Hamas again.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So we’ve been working for many, many weeks on developing credible plans for security, for governance, for rebuilding. We haven’t seen that come from Israel. We’ve been working with Arab countries and others on that plan. We need to see that too. We have the same objective as Israel. We want to make sure that Hamas cannot govern Gaza again.

QUESTION: Well —

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We want to make sure it’s demilitarized. We want to make sure that Israel gets its leaders. That’s what we’re determined to do.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have a different way – and we think a more effective, durable way – of getting that done. We remain in conversation with Israel about exactly that.

QUESTION: Well, Mr. Secretary, your National Security Memorandum that you signed says Israeli civilian harm mitigation efforts are, quote, “inconsistent, ineffective, and inadequate.” The prime minister himself said Israel assesses the IDF killed 14,000 terrorists and 16,000 civilians. Does the U.S. share the Israeli assessment that more civilians have been killed than actual terrorists?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Yes, we do. And I think the report makes clear that while Israel has processes, procedures, rules, regulations, to try to minimize civilian harm, given the impact that this operation, this war in Gaza, has had on the civilian population, that —

QUESTION: And yet you’re still surging weapons to Israel.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: — those have not been – those have not been applied consistently and effectively. There’s a gap between the stated intent and some of the result we’ve seen. But because it’s so complicated in the midst of a war – and particularly in the midst of a war where you have an enemy that hides in civilian infrastructure, hides behind civilians – to make final determinations on these individual incidents, we’re looking at the totality of what’s happened. We think it’s reasonable to assess, based on what’s happened, that there have been acts that have been inconsistent with Israel’s obligations under international humanitarian law. But we haven’t drawn definitive conclusions. We need to pursue these investigations, just as Israel is doing itself.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, thank you for your time this morning.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Thanks, Margaret.

Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Kristen Welker of NBC’s Meet the Press
05/12/2024


Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Kristen Welker of NBC’s Meet the Press
05/12/2024 12:32 PM EDT

The Secretary of State

Washington, D.C.

QUESTION: And joining me now is Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Secretary Blinken, welcome back to Meet the Press.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Morning, Kristen.

QUESTION: Thank you so much for being here. I want to start with that State Department report that did not draw a definitive conclusion about Israel, whether it’s violated international law. Amnesty International says of the report, this is the, quote, “international version of ‘thoughts and prayers.’” Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen says it ducks the ultimate questions that the report was designed to determine.

Mr. Secretary, is the U.S. trying to avoid holding Israel accountable for its actions?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No. We don’t have double standards. We treat Israel, one of our closest allies and partners, just as we would treat any other country, including in assessing something like international humanitarian law and its compliance with that law. I would invite people to read the report. They can see for themselves everything that we’ve laid out in the report.

The report also makes clear that this is an incredibly complex military environment. You have an enemy that intentionally embeds itself with civilians, hiding under and within schools, mosques, apartment buildings, firing at the Israeli forces from those places. It’s very, very difficult in the heat of war to make a definitive assessment about any individual incident, but what the report concludes is that based on the totality of the harm that’s been done to children, to women, to men who are caught in this crossfire of Hamas’s making, it’s reasonable to conclude that there are instances where Israel has acted in ways that are not consistent with international humanitarian law.

At the same time, Kristen, we continue to look at, investigate each of these incidents, but critically, so does Israel. There are hundreds, as we understand it, of open inquiries into particular incidents that have taken place since October 7th. There are criminal investigations that are going forward. Israel, unlike many other countries, has both the means and the will to try to police itself. So we need to let those play out, but our own process that has been underway for many months to look at individual incidents, that will continue as well. And when we can reach definitive conclusions, we will, but it’s very difficult to do that in the midst of a war.

QUESTION: And I hear you saying how complex the situation is on the ground, but here we are in the seventh month of this war, Mr. Secretary. How is it possible that the State Department, with all of its resources, was not able to reach a definitive conclusion on this critical question of whether Israel has violated international law?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Again, precisely because we continue to be in the midst of that war, and making these assessments in real time when we don’t have people on the ground, when we also have to make sure that we’re getting information from all concerned, that takes time, and we want to make sure that we can reach definitive conclusions.

But as the report makes clear, given the totality of the damage that’s been done to civilians, to children, to women, to men – given that, given the fact that Israel clearly has procedures, rules, regulations, laws that go into the targeting decisions they make, the way they conduct themselves – but the results that we’ve seen in terms of the horrible loss of life of innocent civilians, it’s reasonable to assess, as we say in the report, that there are instances where they’ve acted inconsistent with their obligations under international humanitarian law. Those investigations continue, both by us and by Israel.

QUESTION: Let’s zoom out a little bit and talk about U.S. policy. The U.S. has urged Israel not to invade Rafah, yet troops are already on the ground, and this weekend we learned that over 300,000 people are being evacuated. President Biden threatened to withhold certain weapons if Netanyahu goes into Rafah in a full-scale invasion, while at the same time sending in other weapons. Big picture, why should Israel believe that the U.S. is willing to back up its threats?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, first let’s step back for one minute. No one has done more to defend Israel when it mattered than President Biden. He was there in the days after October 7th, the first President to go to Israel in the midst of a conflict. When Iran mounted an unprecedented attack on Israel some weeks ago – 300 projectiles, including ballistic missiles, launched at Israel – the United States for the first time ever participated it its active defense and President Biden brought together a coalition of countries the helped defend Israel. So no one has done more than Joe Biden.

At the same time, what we’ve seen over the last few months is a deep concern on our part about the possibility of a major military operation in Rafah, given the damage it would do to civilians – there are more than 1.4 million Gazans in Rafah, most of whom have moved from other parts of Gaza. Absent a credible plan to get them out of harm’s way and to support them, the President’s been clear for some time that we couldn’t and would not support a major military operation in Rafah.

Now, at the same time, we share Israel’s objective in making sure that Hamas cannot govern Gaza anymore, that it be demilitarized, that Israel get its leaders – we continue to support them. But there’s a better way of achieving that than going headlong into Rafah. That’s what we’re talking about with Israel now. We have a better way of doing it. We’re engaged in conversations with them about that. But the President, in answering a question, was very clear about where we are on Rafah itself and what we would do or not do in the event that they go with a major military operation.

QUESTION: I hear you saying you haven’t seen a credible plan yet for how Israel would go into Rafah and mitigate any civilian casualties. Is it fair to see – say that President Biden and Prime Minister Netanyahu are not seeing eye to eye right now?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: There are two things. One is that, as the President said and as we’ve said in many conversations over the last couple of months, there has to be a credible plan for the civilians. We have to make sure —

QUESTION: Have you seen a credible plan?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have not.

Second, there’s something else that’s important. We also haven’t seen a plan for what happens the day after this war in Gaza ends, because right now the trajectory that Israel is on is even if it goes in and takes heavy action in Rafah, there will still be thousands of armed Hamas left. We’ve seen, in areas that Israel has cleared in the north, even in Khan Younis, Hamas coming back. So the trajectory right now is that going into Rafah, even to deal with these remaining battalions – especially in the absence of a plan for civilians – risks doing terrible harm to civilians and not solving the problem, a problem that both of us want to solve, which is making sure Hamas cannot again govern Gaza.

Israel’s on the trajectory potentially to inherit an insurgency with many armed Hamas left or, if it leaves, a vacuum filled by chaos, filled by anarchy, and probably refilled by Hamas. We’ve been talking to them about a much better way of getting an enduring result, enduring security, both in Gaza itself and, much more broadly, in the region. Those conversations continue. And that’s what partners, that’s what allies, do. We are clear-eyed and we speak the truth to each other as we see it. We have American interests first and foremost in mind; we also have Israel’s interests in mind.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: And there may be a difference in view in the best way to achieve them, but that’s also the nature of the relationship.

QUESTION: I want to drill down with you on President Biden’s threat to withhold weapons. What exactly is his red line, Mr. Secretary? What would trigger him to say, “I am now withholding weapons?”

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Look, we don’t talk about red lines when it comes to Israel. We talk, again —

QUESTION: President Biden did talk about a red line, though, Mr. Secretary, respectfully.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So let me be – yeah, let me be clear. Let me be clear about two things.

QUESTION: What would trigger him to make that decision?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Sure. So first, we have been holding back – and we’re in active conversations with Israel about – the provision of heavy or high-payload weapons, large bombs, because of the concern that we have about the effect these weapons can have when they’re used in a dense urban environment like Rafah. We’re discussing that with Israel right now.

Second, what the President said is that if Israel goes in with a major military operation in Rafah, in that case there are certain systems that we will not provide to Israel that would aid in – aid that effort, because it’s something that we do not want to be part of given the damage that it would do to civilians, and again, not to achieve a durable, lasting, effective result for Israel and for its security. That’s what the President said. We’ve said that in conversations with our Israeli partners. It’s unfortunate that that leaked out, but the President responded forthrightly to a question when he was asked about it.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, I want to ask you about the very latest on the deal to get the hostages released, for a ceasefire. We know that the CIA director has since returned home. Did those talks fall apart because Prime Minister Netanyahu was threatening and is making moves to go into Rafah?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Look, it’s important, first of all, to remind ourselves that Hamas could have ended this on day one. Well, this never, of course, should have happened. There was actually a ceasefire before October 7th, on October 6th, that Hamas destroyed in the most barbaric way possible, humanly imaginable. But every day after that, Hamas could have decided to give up the hostages, stop hiding behind civilians, put down its weapons, and all of this would have been over.

It still has that possibility. The quickest way for this to end is for Hamas to give up the hostages. We will get a ceasefire that we can build on – and build to something more lasting and more durable. The different teams continue to talk. It remains our view that the fastest way to get to a ceasefire, the fastest way to get hostages home, is through an agreement, and we’re determined every single day to pursue that and to try to get it to happen. I think you can question whether Hamas actually wants to get this. It would also be the best way to make sure that we can really surge humanitarian assistance and better protect civilians in Gaza. Hamas purports to be interested in that; its actions certainly demonstrate the opposite.

QUESTION: All right. Secretary Blinken, thank you so much for your time this morning. We really appreciate it.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Kristen, thank you.


Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Kristen Welker of NBC’s Meet the Press
05/12/2024


Secretary Antony J. Blinken With Kristen Welker of NBC’s Meet the Press
05/12/2024 12:32 PM EDT

The Secretary of State

Washington, D.C.

QUESTION: And joining me now is Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Secretary Blinken, welcome back to Meet the Press.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Morning, Kristen.

QUESTION: Thank you so much for being here. I want to start with that State Department report that did not draw a definitive conclusion about Israel, whether it’s violated international law. Amnesty International says of the report, this is the, quote, “international version of ‘thoughts and prayers.’” Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen says it ducks the ultimate questions that the report was designed to determine.

Mr. Secretary, is the U.S. trying to avoid holding Israel accountable for its actions?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: No. We don’t have double standards. We treat Israel, one of our closest allies and partners, just as we would treat any other country, including in assessing something like international humanitarian law and its compliance with that law. I would invite people to read the report. They can see for themselves everything that we’ve laid out in the report.

The report also makes clear that this is an incredibly complex military environment. You have an enemy that intentionally embeds itself with civilians, hiding under and within schools, mosques, apartment buildings, firing at the Israeli forces from those places. It’s very, very difficult in the heat of war to make a definitive assessment about any individual incident, but what the report concludes is that based on the totality of the harm that’s been done to children, to women, to men who are caught in this crossfire of Hamas’s making, it’s reasonable to conclude that there are instances where Israel has acted in ways that are not consistent with international humanitarian law.

At the same time, Kristen, we continue to look at, investigate each of these incidents, but critically, so does Israel. There are hundreds, as we understand it, of open inquiries into particular incidents that have taken place since October 7th. There are criminal investigations that are going forward. Israel, unlike many other countries, has both the means and the will to try to police itself. So we need to let those play out, but our own process that has been underway for many months to look at individual incidents, that will continue as well. And when we can reach definitive conclusions, we will, but it’s very difficult to do that in the midst of a war.

QUESTION: And I hear you saying how complex the situation is on the ground, but here we are in the seventh month of this war, Mr. Secretary. How is it possible that the State Department, with all of its resources, was not able to reach a definitive conclusion on this critical question of whether Israel has violated international law?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Again, precisely because we continue to be in the midst of that war, and making these assessments in real time when we don’t have people on the ground, when we also have to make sure that we’re getting information from all concerned, that takes time, and we want to make sure that we can reach definitive conclusions.

But as the report makes clear, given the totality of the damage that’s been done to civilians, to children, to women, to men – given that, given the fact that Israel clearly has procedures, rules, regulations, laws that go into the targeting decisions they make, the way they conduct themselves – but the results that we’ve seen in terms of the horrible loss of life of innocent civilians, it’s reasonable to assess, as we say in the report, that there are instances where they’ve acted inconsistent with their obligations under international humanitarian law. Those investigations continue, both by us and by Israel.

QUESTION: Let’s zoom out a little bit and talk about U.S. policy. The U.S. has urged Israel not to invade Rafah, yet troops are already on the ground, and this weekend we learned that over 300,000 people are being evacuated. President Biden threatened to withhold certain weapons if Netanyahu goes into Rafah in a full-scale invasion, while at the same time sending in other weapons. Big picture, why should Israel believe that the U.S. is willing to back up its threats?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, first let’s step back for one minute. No one has done more to defend Israel when it mattered than President Biden. He was there in the days after October 7th, the first President to go to Israel in the midst of a conflict. When Iran mounted an unprecedented attack on Israel some weeks ago – 300 projectiles, including ballistic missiles, launched at Israel – the United States for the first time ever participated it its active defense and President Biden brought together a coalition of countries the helped defend Israel. So no one has done more than Joe Biden.

At the same time, what we’ve seen over the last few months is a deep concern on our part about the possibility of a major military operation in Rafah, given the damage it would do to civilians – there are more than 1.4 million Gazans in Rafah, most of whom have moved from other parts of Gaza. Absent a credible plan to get them out of harm’s way and to support them, the President’s been clear for some time that we couldn’t and would not support a major military operation in Rafah.

Now, at the same time, we share Israel’s objective in making sure that Hamas cannot govern Gaza anymore, that it be demilitarized, that Israel get its leaders – we continue to support them. But there’s a better way of achieving that than going headlong into Rafah. That’s what we’re talking about with Israel now. We have a better way of doing it. We’re engaged in conversations with them about that. But the President, in answering a question, was very clear about where we are on Rafah itself and what we would do or not do in the event that they go with a major military operation.

QUESTION: I hear you saying you haven’t seen a credible plan yet for how Israel would go into Rafah and mitigate any civilian casualties. Is it fair to see – say that President Biden and Prime Minister Netanyahu are not seeing eye to eye right now?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: There are two things. One is that, as the President said and as we’ve said in many conversations over the last couple of months, there has to be a credible plan for the civilians. We have to make sure —

QUESTION: Have you seen a credible plan?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: We have not.

Second, there’s something else that’s important. We also haven’t seen a plan for what happens the day after this war in Gaza ends, because right now the trajectory that Israel is on is even if it goes in and takes heavy action in Rafah, there will still be thousands of armed Hamas left. We’ve seen, in areas that Israel has cleared in the north, even in Khan Younis, Hamas coming back. So the trajectory right now is that going into Rafah, even to deal with these remaining battalions – especially in the absence of a plan for civilians – risks doing terrible harm to civilians and not solving the problem, a problem that both of us want to solve, which is making sure Hamas cannot again govern Gaza.

Israel’s on the trajectory potentially to inherit an insurgency with many armed Hamas left or, if it leaves, a vacuum filled by chaos, filled by anarchy, and probably refilled by Hamas. We’ve been talking to them about a much better way of getting an enduring result, enduring security, both in Gaza itself and, much more broadly, in the region. Those conversations continue. And that’s what partners, that’s what allies, do. We are clear-eyed and we speak the truth to each other as we see it. We have American interests first and foremost in mind; we also have Israel’s interests in mind.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: And there may be a difference in view in the best way to achieve them, but that’s also the nature of the relationship.

QUESTION: I want to drill down with you on President Biden’s threat to withhold weapons. What exactly is his red line, Mr. Secretary? What would trigger him to say, “I am now withholding weapons?”

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Look, we don’t talk about red lines when it comes to Israel. We talk, again —

QUESTION: President Biden did talk about a red line, though, Mr. Secretary, respectfully.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: So let me be – yeah, let me be clear. Let me be clear about two things.

QUESTION: What would trigger him to make that decision?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Sure. So first, we have been holding back – and we’re in active conversations with Israel about – the provision of heavy or high-payload weapons, large bombs, because of the concern that we have about the effect these weapons can have when they’re used in a dense urban environment like Rafah. We’re discussing that with Israel right now.

Second, what the President said is that if Israel goes in with a major military operation in Rafah, in that case there are certain systems that we will not provide to Israel that would aid in – aid that effort, because it’s something that we do not want to be part of given the damage that it would do to civilians, and again, not to achieve a durable, lasting, effective result for Israel and for its security. That’s what the President said. We’ve said that in conversations with our Israeli partners. It’s unfortunate that that leaked out, but the President responded forthrightly to a question when he was asked about it.

QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, I want to ask you about the very latest on the deal to get the hostages released, for a ceasefire. We know that the CIA director has since returned home. Did those talks fall apart because Prime Minister Netanyahu was threatening and is making moves to go into Rafah?

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Look, it’s important, first of all, to remind ourselves that Hamas could have ended this on day one. Well, this never, of course, should have happened. There was actually a ceasefire before October 7th, on October 6th, that Hamas destroyed in the most barbaric way possible, humanly imaginable. But every day after that, Hamas could have decided to give up the hostages, stop hiding behind civilians, put down its weapons, and all of this would have been over.

It still has that possibility. The quickest way for this to end is for Hamas to give up the hostages. We will get a ceasefire that we can build on – and build to something more lasting and more durable. The different teams continue to talk. It remains our view that the fastest way to get to a ceasefire, the fastest way to get hostages home, is through an agreement, and we’re determined every single day to pursue that and to try to get it to happen. I think you can question whether Hamas actually wants to get this. It would also be the best way to make sure that we can really surge humanitarian assistance and better protect civilians in Gaza. Hamas purports to be interested in that; its actions certainly demonstrate the opposite.

QUESTION: All right. Secretary Blinken, thank you so much for your time this morning. We really appreciate it.

SECRETARY BLINKEN: Kristen, thank you.


Secretary Blinken’s Call with Israeli Minister Gallant 
05/12/2024

Secretary Blinken’s Call with Israeli Minister Gallant 
05/12/2024 08:09 PM EDT

Office of the Spokesperson

The following is attributable to Spokesperson Matthew Miller:

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant today. The Secretary affirmed the ironclad U.S. commitment to Israel’s security and the shared objective of the defeat of Hamas. They discussed the situation in Gaza and ongoing efforts to secure the release of hostages. The Secretary reaffirmed the U.S. opposition to a major military ground operation in Rafah, where over one million people have taken shelter. The Secretary underscored the urgent need to protect civilians and aid workers in Gaza and urged the Minister to ensure assistance can move into Gaza and help address distribution challenges inside of Gaza as Israel pursues Hamas targets.


Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
05/13/2024
Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
05/13/2024 08:53 AM EDT


HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
hide
Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia

Media Note

May 13, 2024

Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Liz Allen will travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia May 12-20 to deepen partnerships with Western Balkan countries and advance our shared goals of regional cooperation and European integration. Under Secretary Allen will emphasize the fundamental democratic values we share with the people of the Western Balkans and the importance of working together to protect free and open societies from malign influence.

In Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Under Secretary Allen will meet with students participating in the embassy’s Leadership, English, and American Democracy (LEAD) program to discuss their experiences learning English and developing community service projects that promote shared values and people-to-people ties. While in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Under Secretary Allen will also visit the Srebrenica Memorial Center, where she will honor the victims of genocide and meet with family members. Her trip will highlight how the United States is working with Bosnia and Herzegovina to secure a democratic, inclusive, and prosperous future for all citizens.

Under Secretary Allen will then travel to Belgrade, Serbia, where she will discuss opportunities to expand the U.S.-Serbia relationship and our shared goal of accelerating Serbia’s path to EU membership with Foreign Minister Marko Djuric and senior government officials. To highlight the critical importance of media freedom in democratic societies, Under Secretary Allen will participate in a panel discussion and present the Independent Journalists’ Association of Serbia’s annual awards for investigative journalism. She and Speaker of the National Assembly Ana Brnabic will visit the site of the future American Resource Center (American Space) at Ložionica, which will expand access to U.S. arts, culture, education, and entrepreneurship resources for Serbian youth. She will also speak at the annual conference of the English Language Teachers’ Association, the largest national network of English language teachers in Serbia, and present the Access Impact Award honoring the 2024 winner. Before departing Serbia, Under Secretary Allen will travel to Sjenica to address participants of the first Balkan Youth Leadership Program (BOLD) Summit, a regional network of young people working on civic engagement and economic development projects to make a difference in their communities.

In Pristina, Kosovo, Under Secretary Allen will meet with Kosovan President Vjosa Osmani and Prime Minister Albin Kurti to discuss U.S. support for Kosovo’s path to Euro-Atlantic integration and our partnership with Kosovo to counter foreign disinformation and malign influence. While in Kosovo, Under Secretary Allen will visit U.S. service members deployed as part of the NATO Kosovo Force Peacekeeping Mission (KFOR) at Camp Nothing Hill, underscoring the United States’ commitment to the region’s stability and security. Under Secretary Allen will also hold discussions with diverse Kosovan students engaged in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics classes at Rochester Institute of Technology – Kosovo. She will travel to Dresnik to uncover Roman-era mosaics archeologists are restoring thanks to support from the State Department’s Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation.

Finally, Under Secretary Allen will travel to Skopje, North Macedonia, where she will meet with experts on foreign malign influence. In respect for cultural diversity and North Macedonia’s rich heritage, Under Secretary Allen will visit an ancient Roman forum in Stobi, where U.S. government support through the Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation helps preserve one of North Macedonia’s most treasured archeological sites. While there, she will discuss with local partners the project’s potential to further expand economic development, tourism, and people-to-people ties.

Tags
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Kosovo North Macedonia Office of Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Office of the Spokesperson Official International Travel Serbia Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs


Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
05/13/2024
Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
05/13/2024 08:53 AM EDT


HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
hide

Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Elizabeth M. Allen’s Travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia
Media Note

May 13, 2024

Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Liz Allen will travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, and North Macedonia May 12-20 to deepen partnerships with Western Balkan countries and advance our shared goals of regional cooperation and European integration. Under Secretary Allen will emphasize the fundamental democratic values we share with the people of the Western Balkans and the importance of working together to protect free and open societies from malign influence.

In Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Under Secretary Allen will meet with students participating in the embassy’s Leadership, English, and American Democracy (LEAD) program to discuss their experiences learning English and developing community service projects that promote shared values and people-to-people ties. While in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Under Secretary Allen will also visit the Srebrenica Memorial Center, where she will honor the victims of genocide and meet with family members. Her trip will highlight how the United States is working with Bosnia and Herzegovina to secure a democratic, inclusive, and prosperous future for all citizens.

Under Secretary Allen will then travel to Belgrade, Serbia, where she will discuss opportunities to expand the U.S.-Serbia relationship and our shared goal of accelerating Serbia’s path to EU membership with Foreign Minister Marko Djuric and senior government officials. To highlight the critical importance of media freedom in democratic societies, Under Secretary Allen will participate in a panel discussion and present the Independent Journalists’ Association of Serbia’s annual awards for investigative journalism. She and Speaker of the National Assembly Ana Brnabic will visit the site of the future American Resource Center (American Space) at Ložionica, which will expand access to U.S. arts, culture, education, and entrepreneurship resources for Serbian youth. She will also speak at the annual conference of the English Language Teachers’ Association, the largest national network of English language teachers in Serbia, and present the Access Impact Award honoring the 2024 winner. Before departing Serbia, Under Secretary Allen will travel to Sjenica to address participants of the first Balkan Youth Leadership Program (BOLD) Summit, a regional network of young people working on civic engagement and economic development projects to make a difference in their communities.


In Pristina, Kosovo, Under Secretary Allen will meet with Kosovan President Vjosa Osmani and Prime Minister Albin Kurti to discuss U.S. support for Kosovo’s path to Euro-Atlantic integration and our partnership with Kosovo to counter foreign disinformation and malign influence. While in Kosovo, Under Secretary Allen will visit U.S. service members deployed as part of the NATO Kosovo Force Peacekeeping Mission (KFOR) at Camp Nothing Hill, underscoring the United States’ commitment to the region’s stability and security. Under Secretary Allen will also hold discussions with diverse Kosovan students engaged in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics classes at Rochester Institute of Technology – Kosovo. She will travel to Dresnik to uncover Roman-era mosaics archeologists are restoring thanks to support from the State Department’s Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation.


Finally, Under Secretary Allen will travel to Skopje, North Macedonia, where she will meet with experts on foreign malign influence. In respect for cultural diversity and North Macedonia’s rich heritage, Under Secretary Allen will visit an ancient Roman forum in Stobi, where U.S. government support through the Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation helps preserve one of North Macedonia’s most treasured archeological sites. While there, she will discuss with local partners the project’s potential to further expand economic development, tourism, and people-to-people ties.

Tags
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Kosovo North Macedonia Office of Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Office of the Spokesperson Official International Travel Serbia Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs


Ambassador Murray’s Travel to Peru for the Second APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting
05/13/2024
Ambassador Murray’s Travel to Peru for the Second APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting
05/13/2024 09:10 AM EDT


HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Ambassador Murray’s Travel to Peru for the Second APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting
hide
Ambassador Murray’s Travel to Peru for the Second APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting

Media Note

May 13, 2024

U.S. Senior Official for Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Ambassador Matt Murray will travel to Arequipa, Peru from May 13 to 18 for the Second Senior Officials’ Meeting and Related Meetings (SOM2) of the APEC Peru 2024 host year.


While in Arequipa, Ambassador Murray will engage in a series of working group meetings, workshops, and stakeholder engagements. He will collaborate with senior government officials, business leaders, and other stakeholders from across the Asia-Pacific region to discuss U.S. priorities for APEC and explore alignment with Peru’s objectives as host of APEC 2024.


The meetings will include two APEC ministerial meetings and a joint meeting between them: Acting Division Chief for Women’s Economic Security Sandrine Rukundo will serve as the U.S. Head of Delegation for the High-Level Policy Dialogue on Women and the Economy on May 16 and United States Trade Representative Ambassador Katherine Tai will serve as the U.S. Head of Delegation to the Ministers Responsible for Trade Meeting from May 17 to 18. On May 16, Ambassador Tai will also participate in a “Women in Leadership” fireside chat alongside Julia Torreblanca, APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC) 2024 Chair, at the University of Santa Maria.


A joint meeting of the High-Level Policy Dialogue on Women and the Economy and Ministers Responsible for Trade Meeting – headed by Ambassador Tai and Ambassador Murray – will convene on May 17, spotlighting the intersection of women and trade as a means to drive greater sustainable and inclusive economic growth. Ambassadors Tai and Murray will also visit the Academy for Women Entrepreneurs (AWE) Fair, held at the Bi-National Cultural Center from May 16 to 18.


The meetings in Arequipa will also include a Public-Private Dialogue on Women and the Economy – Creating Change: Women’s Economic Empowerment on May 15, in which Special Advisor on International Disabilities Rights (SAIDR) Sara Minkara will discuss financial inclusion to promote women’s economic empowerment.

For further information, please contact the U.S. APEC Team at DOSAPEC@state.gov.

Tags
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs Office of Global Women’s Issues Office of the Spokesperson Official International Travel Peru


Under Secretary Fernandez’s Travel to New York for the Cobalt Congress
05/13/2024
Under Secretary Fernandez’s Travel to New York for the Cobalt Congress
05/13/2024 09:41 AM EDT


HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Under Secretary Fernandez’s Travel to New York for the Cobalt Congress
hide

Under Secretary Fernandez’s Travel to New York for the Cobalt Congress
<p class="article-meta do



Toπικό Μέσο Μαζικής ενημέρωσης ("θυγατρικό" της "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"),ΜΙΑ ΚΡΑΥΓΗ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ 170.000 Ελλήνων Πολιτών. Είκοσι ολόκληρα χρόνια ζωής (2000-2021) και αγώνων στην καταγραφή και υπεράσπιση της Αλήθειας για τον πολύπαθο τόπο των Αχαρνών.

ΑΧΑΡΝΕΣ: Ενημέρωση...ΓΙΑ ΤΟΝ ΛΕΗΛΑΤΗΜΕΝΟ ΔΗΜΟ

ΠΡΩΘΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΣ ΤΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ,ΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΣ ΜΗΤΣΟΤΑΚΗΣ

ΠΡΩΘΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΣ ΤΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ,ΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΣ ΜΗΤΣΟΤΑΚΗΣ
Βιογραφικό του Κυριάκου Μητσοτάκη Ο Κυριάκος Μητσοτάκης γεννήθηκε το 1968 στην Αθήνα. Αφού αποφοίτησε αριστούχος από το Κολλέγιο Αθηνών συνέχισε τις σπουδές του στην Αμερική. Σπούδασε κοινωνικές επιστήμες στο Harvard από όπου αποφοίτησε με την ανώτατη τιμητική διάκριση «summa cum laude» ενώ τιμήθηκε με τα έπαθλα «Hoopes» και «Tocqueville» για την εκπόνηση της διατριβής του με θέμα την αμερικανική εξωτερική πολιτική απέναντι στην Ελλάδα. Συνέχισε τις σπουδές του στο Stanford, στον τομέα των διεθνών οικονομικών σχέσεων και τις ολοκλήρωσε στο Harvard Business School στον τομέα της διοίκησης επιχειρήσεων. Πριν ασχοληθεί με την πολιτική, εργάστηκε επί μία δεκαετία στον ιδιωτικό τομέα στην Ελλάδα και το εξωτερικό. Διετέλεσε οικονομικός αναλυτής στην Chase Investment Bank και σύμβουλος στην κορυφαία εταιρία συμβούλων McKinsey and Company στο Λονδίνο. Μετά την επιστροφή του στην Ελλάδα, εργάστηκε ως ανώτατο στέλεχος επενδύσεων στην Alpha Ventures της Alpha Bank και στη συνέχεια μετακινήθηκε στον Όμιλο της Εθνικής Τράπεζας της Ελλάδας. Διατέλεσε για τρία χρόνια Διευθύνων Σύμβουλος της Εθνικής Επιχειρηματικών Συμμετοχών, την οποία και ανέδειξε σε κορυφαία εταιρεία στην Ελληνική και Βαλκανική αγορά του private equity και του venture capital. Η Εθνική Επιχειρηματικών Συμμετοχών χρηματοδότησε πολλές γρήγορα αναπτυσσόμενες επιχειρήσεις με ίδια κεφάλαια, δημιουργώντας εκατοντάδες θέσεις απασχόλησης. Για την επαγγελματική του δραστηριότητα έχει λάβει τιμητικές διακρίσεις, με σημαντικότερη την βράβευσή του το 2003 από το World Economic Forum ως “Global Leader for Tomorrow”. Στις εκλογές του 2004 και του 2007 εξελέγη πρώτος σε σταυρούς προτίμησης βουλευτής με τη Νέα Δημοκρατία στη μεγαλύτερη εκλογική περιφέρεια της χώρας, τη Β΄ Αθηνών, ενώ στις εκλογές του 2009 εξελέγη για τρίτη φορά. Στις εκλογές του Μαΐου 2012 εξελέγη για μία ακόμη φορά πρώτος στη Β’ Αθηνών, ενώ ήταν επικεφαλής του ψηφοδελτίου στις εκλογές του Ιουνίου 2012. Στη Βουλή των Ελλήνων έχει συμμετάσχει στην Επιτροπή Αναθεώρησης του Συντάγματος και στις Επιτροπές Οικονομικών, Παραγωγής και Εμπορίου, Ευρωπαϊκών Υποθέσεων και Εξωτερικών και Άμυνας ενώ διετέλεσε για δύο χρόνια Πρόεδρος της Επιτροπής Περιβάλλοντος. Έως τις εκλογές του 2012 ήταν Τομεάρχης Περιβαλλοντικής Πολιτικής της Νέας Δημοκρατίας. Έχει επισκεφθεί πολλές περιβαλλοντικά ευαίσθητες περιοχές της χώρας, έχει συμμετάσχει σε δεκάδες συνέδρια για το περιβάλλον στην Ελλάδα και το εξωτερικό μεταξύ αυτών στις διεθνείς διασκέψεις του ΟΗΕ για την κλιματική αλλαγή στο Μπαλί, το Πόζναν, το Κανκούν και την Κοπεγχάγη. Διετέλεσε Υπουργός Διοικητικής Μεταρρύθμισης και Ηλεκτρονικής Διακυβέρνησης από τις 25 Ιουνίου 2013 μέχρι τις 27 Ιανουαρίου 2015. Στις εθνικές εκλογές της 25ης Ιανουαρίου 2015 εξελέγη για πέμπτη φορά βουλευτής της ΝΔ στη Β’ Αθηνών τετραπλασιάζοντας τους σταυρούς που έλαβε σε σχέση με τις εθνικές εκλογές του Μαΐου 2012. Στις 10 Ιανουαρίου 2016 εξελέγη πρόεδρος της Νέας Δημοκρατίας και αρχηγός της Αξιωματικής Αντιπολίτευσης. Στις 7 Ιουλίου 2019 εξελέγη Πρωθυπουργός της Ελλάδας. Μιλάει Αγγλικά, Γαλλικά και Γερμανικά και έχει εκδώσει το βιβλίο «Οι Συμπληγάδες της Εξωτερικής Πολιτικής». Έχει τρία παιδιά, τη Σοφία, τον Κωνσταντίνο και τη Δάφνη.

OMAΔΑ FACEBOOK "ΔΗΜΟΤΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ"

OMAΔΑ FACEBOOK "ΔΗΜΟΤΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ"
ΔΗΜΟΤΕΣ ΤΩΝ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ

"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ

"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ
"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ

"ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ για τον μικρό μας Αγγελο,ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"

"ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ για τον μικρό μας Αγγελο,ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"
Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ" θα ζητά ΕΣΑΕΙ.."ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΟΝ ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"!!

ΕΘΝΙΚΟ ΚΕΝΤΡΟ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ"

ΕΘΝΙΚΟ ΚΕΝΤΡΟ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ"
Ερευνα,Συνεντεύξεις και επισήμανση της σπουδαιότητος του τότε ΕΘΝΙΚΟΥ ΚΕΝΤΡΟΥ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ" απο το Περιοδικό "ΑΧΑΡΝΕΩΝ Εργα" το έτος 2004!!
Ο Ιστοχώρος μας ΔΕΝ ΛΟΓΟΚΡΙΝΕΙ τα κείμενα των Αρθρογράφων του. Αυτά δημοσιεύονται εκφράζοντας τους ιδίους.
Απαγορεύεται η αναδημοσίευση, αναπαραγωγή, ολική, μερική ή περιληπτική ή κατά παράφραση ή διασκευή ή απόδοση του περιεχομένου του παρόντος διαδικτυακού τόπου σε ό,τι αφορά τα άρθρα της ΜΑΡΙΑΣ ΧΑΤΖΗΔΑΚΗ ΒΑΒΟΥΡΑΝΑΚΗ και του ΓΙΑΝΝΗ Γ. ΒΑΒΟΥΡΑΝΑΚΗ με οποιονδήποτε τρόπο, ηλεκτρονικό, μηχανικό, φωτοτυπικό ή άλλο, χωρίς την προηγούμενη γραπτή άδεια των Αρθρογράφων. Νόμος 2121/1993 - Νόμος 3057/2002, ο οποίος ενσωμάτωσε την οδηγία 2001/29 του Ευρωπαϊκού Κοινοβουλίου και κανόνες Διεθνούς Δικαίου που ισχύουν στην Ελλάδα.

Tι ήταν η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ»..για όσους δεν γνωρίζουν.

Η «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» γεννήθηκε το 2000,ως συνέχεια του Περιοδικού «ΑΧΑΡΝΕΩΝ Έργα». Δημιουργήθηκε από Επαγγελματίες Εκδότες με δεκαετίες στον τομέα της Διαφήμισης, των Εκδόσεων και των Δημοσίων Σχέσεων και αρχικά ήταν μια Υπερτοπική Εφημερίδα με κύριο αντικείμενο το Αυτοδιοικητικό Ρεπορτάζ.

Επί χρόνια, κυκλοφορούσε την έντυπη έκδοσή της σε ένα ικανότατο τιράζ (5000 καλαίσθητων φύλλων εβδομαδιαίως) και εντυπωσίαζε με την ποιότητα της εμφάνισης και το ουσιώδες, μαχητικό και έντιμο περιεχόμενο της.
Η δύναμη της Πένας της Εφημερίδας, η Ειλικρίνεια, οι Ερευνές της που έφερναν πάντα ουσιαστικό αποτέλεσμα ενημέρωσης, την έφεραν πολύ γρήγορα πρώτη στην προτίμηση των αναγνωστών και γρήγορα εξελίχθηκε σε Εφημερίδα Γνώμης και όχι μόνον για την Περιφέρεια στην οποία κυκλοφορούσε.

=Επι είκοσι τέσσαρα (24) χρόνια, στηρίζει τον Απόδημο Ελληνισμό, χωρίς καμία-ούτε την παραμικρή- διακοπή

. =Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, προβάλλει με αίσθηση καθήκοντος κάθε ξεχωριστό, έντιμο και υπεύθυνο Πολιτικό της Πολιτικής Σκηνής. Στις σελίδες της, θα βρείτε ακόμα και σήμερα μόνο άξιες και χρήσιμες Πολιτικές Προσωπικότητες αλλά και ενημέρωση από κάθε Κόμμα της Ελληνικής Βουλής. Η «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» ουδέποτε διαχώρησε τους αναγνώστες της ανάλογα με τα πολιτικά τους πιστεύω. Επραττε το καθήκον της, ενημερώνοντας όλους τους Ελληνες, ως όφειλε.

=Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, δίνει βήμα στους αδέσμευτους, τους επιτυχημένους, τους γνώστες και θιασώτες της Αλήθειας. Στηρίζει τον Θεσμό της Ελληνικής Οικογένειας, την Παιδεία, την Ελληνική Ιστορία, προβάλλει με όλες της τις δυνάμεις τους Αδελφούς μας απανταχού της Γης, ενημερώνει για τα επιτεύγματα της Επιστήμης, της Επιχειρηματικότητας και πολλά άλλα που πολύ καλά γνωρίζουν οι Αναγνώστες της.

=Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, ο απλός δημότης–πολίτης, φιλοξενείται στις σελίδες της με μόνη προϋπόθεση την ειλικρινή και αντικειμενική γραφή και την ελεύθερη Γνώμη, η οποία ΟΥΔΕΠΟΤΕ λογοκρίθηκε.

Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ», είναι ένα βήμα Ισονομίας και Ισοπολιτείας, έννοιες απόλυτα επιθυμητές, ιδιαιτέρως στις ημέρες μας. Είναι ο δικτυακός τόπος της έκφρασης του πολίτη και της εποικοδομητικής κριτικής, μακριά από κάθε στήριξη αφού δεν ετύγχανε οικονομικής υποστήριξης από Δήμους, Κυβερνήσεις ή όποιους άλλους Δημόσιους ή Ιδιωτικούς Φορείς, δεν είχε ΠΟΤΕ χορηγούς, ή οποιασδήποτε μορφής υποστηρικτές. Απολαμβάνει όμως Διεθνούς σεβασμού αφού φιλοξενεί ενημέρωση από αρκετά ξένα Κράτη πράγμα που της περιποιεί βεβαίως, μέγιστη τιμή.

Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» διαγράφει απο την γέννησή της μια αξιοζήλευτη πορεία και απέκτησε εξ αιτίας αυτού,ΜΕΓΙΣΤΗ αναγνωσιμότητα. Η Εφημερίδα «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» κέρδισε την αποδοχή και τον σεβασμό που της ανήκει, με «εξετάσεις» εικοσι τεσσάρων ολόκληρων ετών, με συνεχείς αιματηρούς αγώνες κατά της τοπικής διαπλοκής, με αγώνα επιβίωσης σε πολύ δύσκολους καιρούς, με Εντιμότητα, αίσθηση Καθήκοντος και Ευθύνης.

ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΤΕΣΣΑΡΑ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2024

ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΤΕΣΣΑΡΑ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2024
ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΤΕΣΣΑΡΑ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2024