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World Blog provides a dynamic look at world events and trends from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    5:28pm, EDT

    Despite launch failure, North Korea celebrates military-style

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    Ed Flanagan/NBC News

    At a massive military march in Pyongyang, North Korea on April 15, it was noted a number of times that the female soldiers actually seemed to march straighter and cleaner than the male columns. Their shrill shout to attention always caused you to focus on them, regardless of what you were doing at the time.

    BEIJING – After more than a week in Pyongyang to cover what ended up being North Korea’s failed missile launch, the NBC News team that was covering the story – Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel, producer Ed Flanagan and cameraman David Lom – have left the reclusive country.

    But they still had some photos to share from the various patriotic events they were taken to by their North Korean minders as part of the foreign press corps.


     

    Ed Flanagan/ NBC News

    The rows and rows of soldiers in the bleachers at a mass meeting of soldiers from North Korea's armed services in Pyongyang on April 14 was a spectacle that showed off North Korea's military might and unity behind its new leader, Kim Jong-un.

    From the unveiling of massive 50-foot-tall statues of former leaders Kim Il-Sung and Kim Il-Jong to a large military parade, to regular North Koreans snapping family photos, see some of the team’s photos of North Korean pageantry below.

     

    Ed Flanagan/NBC News

    We saw this little girl being fussed over by her father before a family photo next to a monument on Reunification Street in Pyongyang, North Korea on April 16. The girl later erupted into laughter when cameraman David Lom stuck the videocamera in her face.

     

    David Lom/NBC News

    'Festooned with medals' was how NBC's Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel described the military officers at the massive military rally in Pyongyang o April 14.

    Click here to see another view of the military parade in Pyongyang on April 15 - what it looked like from outer space. It was so big that columns of soldiers could be seen from a satellite photo.

     

    Ed Flanagan/ NBC News

    At 50 feet tall and made of bronze, the two statues of North Korea's former leaders Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-il were colossal. Bathed in the dusk light when they were unveiled in Pyongyang, North Korea on April 13, 2012, they were quite simply a sight to see.

    Ed Flanagan/ NBC News

    When the last military vehicle finished rolling by during the massive military parade in Pyongyang on April 15, adoring civilians pushed through to the edge of the square, cheering for new leader Kim Jong-Un and waving flower wreathes.

    Ed Flanagan/ NBC News

    To our surprise and pleasure, when we arrived at the banks of the Taedong River in Pyongyang for the start of the fireworks display planned to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of President Kim Il-Sung on April 15 we found thousands of civilians waiting for the event to start. It was a rare chance for NBC's David Lom to get shots of North Koreans from outside a bus window.

    See more striking pictures from North Korea in PhotoBlog.


    And a slideshow: North Korea continues celebrations after failed missile  

    8 comments

    It is very disheartening to see the world we live in today in so much turmoil and war. Did you know that Isaiah 2:4 says “And he will certainly render judgment among the nations and set matters straight respecting many peoples. And they will have to beat their swords into plowshares and their  …

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    Explore related topics: military, north-korea, featured, pyongyang, parades, ed-flanagan
  • 22
    Dec
    2011
    12:28pm, EST

    Despite 'Don't Ask' repeal, some gays still don't tell

    By Jim Maceda, NBC News correspondent

    PUL-E-ALAM, Logar Province, Afghanistan – Exactly one year since the ban on gays serving openly in the military was lifted, here’s a different way of gauging how the repeal of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” is playing out: How good is the media access to gay soldiers? 

    The short answer: It’s still a work in progress.

    Ultimately, we got our story for NBC’s Nightly News. We spoke with a dozen or more gay or lesbian soldiers and airmen – both on relatively safe rear guard bases, but also on the front lines.

    That wouldn’t have happened without the approval of military commanders and the cooperation of our “minders” – the Public Affairs Officers who were our liaisons to a gay community which, only months ago, still had to socialize covertly.

    But it was an uphill, two-week battle, full of last minute changes and disappointments. And while in the end the military let us tell the story, we often felt, along the way, that some commanders simply didn’t want us snooping around such a sensitive issue for fear of opening a massive can of worms.

    Reconciling ‘two lives’
    For instance, the sudden cold feet of a young, gay combat engineer – who did not want to be named, based in eastern Afghanistan. Even though he had told his story to the national media before, he had never been publicly identified, and he canceled our interview just as we were to chopper out to meet him.

    It turned out, like many gay soldiers, he had lived two separate lives. In this soldier's case, his private, gay life and his “normal” life with a wife and child back home. He had never “come out” to his wife or family.

    But he faced an even bigger problem: By admitting to a gay relationship while married, he would also violate U.S. military laws against adultery, which can result in a dishonorable discharge. It made me realize how complicated the coming-out process can be for gay and lesbian service members.

    As a Plan B, I made a quick call to see if we could set up a military embed on a large base in northern Afghanistan. Could we spend a couple of days with U.S. soldiers over Thanksgiving and get their story out to loved ones and our viewers? I asked. 

    “That shouldn’t be a problem, Jim,” was the answer from the very can-do Public Affairs Officer I spoke with. 

    “Good,” I replied. “And while I’m up there I’d also like to ask some soldiers a few questions about how the lifting of the ban on openly gay service members is going in their units.” 

    After a long pause, I heard: “I don’t think I’ll mention that to the boss.”

    “Fine,” I said. “It was just a thought.”

    A few hours later the same PAO left a text message: “Request not granted – sorry, Jim. The boss thinks it’s too unsafe up here right now.”

    Photo Blog: Two women share first kiss at US Navy ship's return

    Slow ripple effect
    There were other setbacks, usually a result of that gap “between two lives” – straight and gay, civilian and military. Many gay soldiers still choose NOT to tell their story rather than be caught in the collision. 

    It’s only been three months since the repeal took effect in the field, and the ripple from that change still has a long way to travel, despite the real freedom from the fear of being discharged from the military that all gay soldiers we spoke with now enjoy.

    One example, the same military policeman who had no problem showing his face on-camera during a gay “coffee hour” at Bagram Air Field, canceled a more personal one-on-one interview the next day near his work station. An articulate soldier with a macho swagger, the MP apologized for the change of heart. But he hadn’t yet come out with some of his colleagues and wasn’t yet ready to do so.

    A year ago the U.S. military was almost evenly divided over the lifting of DADT during war time. But we saw huge strides forward in retraining soldiers to deal with a new reality: Gays always served with honor during war and made their country proud, only now they’re able to do so without having to hide or lie.

    Still, old habits die hard.

    After conversing with gay male and female service members – many of them officers – at one of the “coffee hours,” our PAO was driving us back to our sleeping quarters when an overhead light caught the condensation on our front windshield and one word, written hastily by someone’s finger, appeared for all of us to see.

    “Fags.”

    “Idiots!” belted out our PAO, excoriating his own comrades.

    And I thought to myself, “Now that’s the reality check.” 

    372 comments

    With the rampant homophobia, could you blame them?

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, military, featured, dadt, dont-ask, dont-tell, jim-maceda
  • 21
    Dec
    2011
    3:52am, EST

    Politics trump hunger in North Korea

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters, file

    A North Korean child suffering from malnutrition rests in a bed in a hospital in Haeju, September 30, 2011

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    Months before the death of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il, an array of UN food experts and nonprofit groups urged immediate food aid for the isolated north Asian nation. Three groups that investigated conditions in the country described the urgent need for food, reporting “acute malnutrition” among North Korean children, “widespread consumption of grass” and elderly people on “knife edge.”

    Despite these dire assessments, and warnings that conditions are worsening, the Obama administration has balked on a decision over food aid for the isolated Asian nation. This week, just as promising talks were under way in Beijing between U.S. and North Korean envoys, the news broke that Kim had died. That change put the question of aid on the back burner again.


    “We need to see where (the North Koreans) are and where they go as they move through their transition period,” said State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland addressing questions about food aid on Tuesday. “We will obviously need to reengage at the right moment, but… we haven’t made any internal decisions here.”

    The World Food Programme says millions of children in North Korea are facing starvation and that up to six million people are in need of urgent aid. They've released a shocking and rare footage of emaciated children in hospitals and orphanages, barely clinging to life. John Sparks of Europe's Channel 4 reports.

    Some provisions of a food aid deal that was purportedly being discussed in Beijing surfaced in South Korean press reports. The United States would provide 240,000 tons of high-protein biscuits and vitamins — 20,000 tons a month for a year, the reports said – targeting North Korea’s most vulnerable people — pregnant and lactating women, children, and hospital patients. Nuland would not confirm these reports.

    The terms that were under discussion, she said, were related to monitoring to ensure the food reached its intended recipients, and “the kinds of food aid that we would consider if the conditions were right and if the right decisions were made.”

    Eating bark, grass
    Meanwhile, there is substantial evidence of a growing food crisis for millions who live in the countryside, beyond the relative comfort of Pyongyang, researchers and humanitarian groups say.

    “What we saw… was extensive chronic malnutrition and cases of acute malnutrition, which is where the person is basically dying,” said David Austin, director of the North Korea program for Mercy Corps., one of five nonprofits dispatched to investigate the situation in February.

    “More than 50 percent of people who are reliant on (state-provided grain) were out seeking out alternative food—things like bark, wild grass, and leaves—and mixing it in with food. We found there was no protein or fat in people’s diets.”

    The mission was undertaken at the request of the federal government’s humanitarian aid agency, USAID after North Korea called for international food aid in January. Their report and a strong recommendation to proceed with the food aid went to USAID in April.  

    When Austin returned to North Korea in September, he says he learned that government grain rations had been cut by more than half to about 150 grams per day.

    “That’s basically (the equivalent of) one potato,” he said.

    In addition to the report by the U.S. group of nonprofits, two other groups—one made up of UN agencies and a group representing five European nonprofits—came to the same conclusions.

    Marcus Noland, senior fellow and Asia expert at Peterson Institute for International Economics, said data support the eye witness reports.

    “The price (of grain) is rising rapidly. That’s bad news,” said Noland. “Normally after the fall harvest, there’s plenty of food, so the price goes down, and then it starts spiking in the late spring -- the so-called ‘lean season.’ This year the prices have basically continued rising right through the harvest… because there isn’t enough food in the country.”

    The price is also rising on corn, and coal, which used by many North Koreans to heat their homes, he said.

    Since last spring, humanitarian groups have been pressing the U.S. government to step in, as it has before, as a major contributor to North Korean aid needs. The last U.S. food handouts ended in March 2009, when North Korea expelled U.S. aid groups that were monitoring the distribution. Shortly afterwards, the North conducted long-range rocket and nuclear tests that prompted tough international sanctions.

    Even though Pyongyong politics are opaque and in flux, not everyone agrees with U.S. “wait and see” posture on food.

    “As far as we understand, the North Koreans have not withdrawn their request for food aid,” said Austin. “But the U.S. government has continued to delay its decision. We think there is a humanitarian need that must be answered. Children are dying.”

    And some observers argue that the transition may present an opportunity to test the waters with Pyongyang’s newly named leader, 27-year-old Kim Jong Un.

    “The fiscal price tag for 240,000 tons is not that big, so it seems to me as a conciliatory gesture at the beginning of this new leadership, you have more to gain than lose,” said Noland of the Peterson Institute. “This guy could turn out to be even crazier or more brutal than his father or grandfather…. But it strikes me that given the circumstances the downside risk of moving forward is very low, compared to the ill will from backtracking.”

    What officials are not making explicit is how the food aid is linked to concessions from Pyongyang, such as promise to halt its uranium enrichment program or to resume six-party nuclear disarmament talks, which ground to a halt three years ago.

    Food for nukes?
    From the point of view of humanitarian groups, aid should completely independent of politics.

    “We don’t want to see the humanitarian principals linked to things such as giving up nuclear weapons,” said Austin of Mercy Corps. “It undermines the moral authority of both.”

    The State Department maintains that U.S. humanitarian assistance should not be politicized, but merely compliment U.S. foreign policy.

    So, coincidentally – or not -- when U.S. humanitarian envoys were discussing food aid with the North Koreans in Beijing over the weekend, the U.S. nuclear nonproliferation envoy was also holding talks in the Chinese capital. According to the AP report, sources close to negotiations said the food aid talks with North Korean officials in Beijing “yielded a breakthrough on uranium enrichment.”

    Food aid that is dependent on nuclear concessions is not fated to go far in Pyongyang during a leadership transition. North Korea watchers say that the anointed leader, who lacks the stature of his father or grandfather, is likely under immense pressure to prove his bravado to the military establishment, not compromise on defense issues.

    The Obama administration has its own politics considerations. Without securing progress on nuclear disarmament, providing aid to North Korea may become bludgeon for Republicans to use against him in an election year.  

    “If you were the Obama administration and looking at this situation with the North Koreans," Noland said, "are you going to expend any political capital on these guys? You’ve got other issues... Do you want to take on dealing with North Korea in Congress? The answer is no.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Click here to follow Kari Huus on Facebook.

     

    Related coverage:

    • Kim Jong Il's body is put on display
    • Will younger Kim's aunt and uncle be North Korea puppet masters?
    • NYT: In Kim's death, an extensive intelligence failure
    • Mourning in North Korea, worries in South after Kim Jong Il's death
    • PhotoBlog: Satellites document North Korea's dark ages
    • PhotoBlog: North Koreans mourn the death of Kim Jong Il, the 'Dear Leader'
    • Slideshow: The life of Kim Jong Il
    • Slideshow: Journey into North Korea

    486 comments

    It is not an American problem.

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    Explore related topics: military, malnutrition, north-korea, food-aid, featured, kim-jong-un
  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    11:17am, EST

    From wannabe housewife to managing $822 billion military budget

    Marian Smith / msnbc.com

    Barbara Westgate, a senior civilian executive in the US Air Force, recalled how a general once patted her on the head and remarked on how "pretty" she was after he was told of her promotion. She now helps to manage more than $822 billion in Air Force funding.

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    LONDON — When Barbara Westgate joined the U.S. Air Force as a secretary in 1973, her career goal was to earn $5,000 a year.

    "I thought I wanted to be a housewife," she recalled.

    Today, Westgate is the civilian equivalent of a three-star general who helps to manage $822 billion (over five years*) in the Air Force's future defense program.


    Westgate was among the pioneering women serving in the military, intelligence and security services from around the world who gathered in London this week to discuss their experiences in leadership positions.

    She told msnbc.com how an older male general offered his congratulations when she was promoted to director of logistics for the Air Force's advanced tactical aircraft program in 1988. "Of course you got the job, Barb, you're just so pretty," he said, before patting Westgate on the head.

    "He was just from that generation," said Westgate, who is now a Washington, D.C.-based officer in the senior executive service of the Air Force. "He thought he was paying me a compliment." Furious as she was, Westgate didn't take it personally.

    Amid the neat uniforms, gold insignia, polished medals, ribbons and brass buttons, the stories were often similar. The Royal Norwegian Navy commander who was the world's first woman to serve on a submarine, the British Royal Navy commander who was the first female flag officer, the Swedish Air Force colonel who was the first woman to command a regiment. When the latter was asked how it felt to be a woman in command, she said, "Well, I’ve always been a woman."

    There was little bitterness. Delegates were quick to point out that their militaries had only really begun to open their doors to women in the past 20 years. It will take time for women to reach senior leadership roles, they reminded each other.

    U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Carol Pottenger said she started her career in 1978 on a tour in Pearl Harbor, a non-operational assignment far from any front line. It was a typical assignment for women then.

    In the 1990s, the Navy began opening up ships and other divisions to women. Now 93 percent of assignments allow them – including the Navy SEALs in support capacity roles. However, that's not 100 percent. Pottenger explained the reality of what that meant for her current role as deputy chief of staff for capability and development at NATO Headquarters Supreme Allied Commander Transformation in Norfolk, Va.: "I could command 40,000 sailors, but in one of the … [divisions] I commanded, women couldn't even serve."

    Marian Smith / msnbc.com

    Colonel Lena Hallin, center, is a Swedish defense attache.

    Speaking to a room full of nodding heads, she added: "If you're going to recruit and retain the best and the brightest, you can't afford to ignore half the population."

    Pottenger commended the mentorship programs and other policies that have opened up the military to women but urged young cadets to actively put themselves forward for more leadership roles and encouraged senior officers to aggressively support the policies from the top.

    'I guess the message got through'
    "Don’t be silly, we didn’t mean women,” Commodore Elizabeth Steele was told when she applied for a post with Canada's navy on a U.N. mission in Cambodia in 1992. She had joined the navy in 1986, when women weren't allowed to be maritime officers because of a policy that deemed them "not qualified."

    But by then sea logistics had opened up to women and Steele submitted her application for the tour. Disgruntled by the response she got, Steele shot back that they should have specified that women need not apply.

    "I guess the message got through because I ended up in Cambodia," she said.

    Steele, who is now the deputy chief of staff and associate deputy minister at Canada's department of defense, advocates the concept of gender intelligence – or recognizing the different strengths men and women have and using them effectively.

    "We have better teams … if we have teams that are diverse," Steele added.

    However, one of the most important results Steele has seen of women entering the military is the influence it has on people in countries like Afghanistan — where women are not considered equal citizens.

    It is important "for a young child to see women in a combat or military role," she said. “There is a connection that a female soldier makes with a person" that is unique and powerful.

    Hosted by the Royal United Services Institute, an independent think tank for defense and security, the Women in Defence and Security Leadership conference wraps up today.

    *The initial post failed to indicate that the $822 billion budget was over a five-year period.

    105 comments

    The article is about women in the military, not DoD spending. Times sure were different back then and bravo to those female pioneers who managed to make it in a man's world.

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    Explore related topics: army, air-force, women, navy, defense, military, rusi, marian-smith
  • 19
    Nov
    2011
    1:34am, EST

    Pakistan envoy to US heads home over memo on reining in Pakistan's military

    The Associated Press reports from Islamabad, Pakistan:

    Pakistan's envoy to the United States says he is flying home to answer allegations he wrote an explosive memo that asked for Washington's help in reining in the Pakistani military.

    Pakistan's civilian government has been facing a crisis following a claim by Mansoor Ijaz, a U.S. citizen of Pakistani origin, that he delivered a memo to then-U.S. military chief Adm. Mike Mullen a week after the U.S. raid killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town.

    The memo allegedly requests U.S. help in installing a "new security team" in Islamabad friendly to Washington.

    Ijaz says that the ambassador, Husain Haqqani, was behind the memo.

    Haqqani, who denies he was behind the memo, tweeted on Saturday he was heading to the "motherland". Officials confirmed his return.

    Comment

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  • 13
    May
    2011
    3:46pm, EDT

    Will Thailand’s military allow free elections?

    DAMIR SAGOLJ / Reuters

    A man wears a T-shirt urging people not to vote for any political parties in Thailand's upcoming elections, but to tick the "no vote" box on their ballots in Bangkok on May 10.

    NBC News’ Warangkana Chomchuen
     
    BANGKOK, Thailand – It’s official. Thailand will go to the polls on July 3.
     
    It’s supposed to be a good news after more than two tumultuous years of political unrest under Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s administration.
     
    It is the first election since street demonstrations in Bangkok last year by the anti-government “Red Shirt” protesters, supporters of deposed former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, led to violent clashes with the security forces that left 91 people dead.
     
    But can the election heal the deeply polarized country and put it back on track? Will it even actually happen? And if it does happen, will the military allow the “wrong side” to win?


    Military meddling 
    Unlike many countries where the military stays put in their barracks, Thailand’s military has a long history of meddling in politics.
     
    There have been 18 coup d'états since the end of the absolute monarchy in 1932. The 2006 coup ousted two-time elected former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, now living in exile to avoid corruption charges that he denied.
     
    In the 2008 elections, the military generals were accused of bending the arms of smaller parties to side with Abhisit’s Democrat Party to form coalition government.
     
    Thaksin’s Puea Thai party, who had 14 more seats, found itself in the opposition. The military’s political maneuvering sent Red Shirt demonstrators, grass-root supporters of Thaksin and anti-coup middle class, out on the streets to voice their frustrations. 
     
    Analysts predict a close race this year and that neither the Democrats, nor Puea Thai, will secure a majority of seats in the parliament. Both parties will still have to woo smaller parties to form a coalition government. This, analysts fear, could open the way for military interference and more violence.
     
    Word on the street is that Puea Thai, which remains hugely popular among Thailand’s rural poor, will win more seats. But Thaksin’s backers suspect the military will again help keep their favorite Democrats in power, and keep them away from it as long as possible.
     
    The accusation isn’t far flung given all the benefits the military has reaped under Abhisit’s administration. Its annual budget since the 2006 coup has swelled to $5 billion, almost double its previous budget, according to a Reuters’ report.
     
    The royalist establishment, who maintain their power through the military, and Bangkok elites are more comfortable with British-born, Oxford-educated Abhisit. They do not want their status quo challenged by Thaksin’s supporters and the Red Shirts, whom they said have anti-monarchy, republican agenda.  

    With their interests at stake, military leaders are flexing their muscle.
     
    It’s been speculated that the clashes along the Thailand-Cambodia border over a disputed Hindu temple may have been escalated on purpose to delay the elections.
     
    Critics said that a pervasive sense of crisis has been created to reinforce the military’s image as a benevolent protector and a unifying force of the Thais. 
     
    ‘Protecting' the monarchy
    At home, the army’s commander-in-chief also ordered legal action against the opposition Puea Thai members and Red Shirt leaders for showing disloyalty to the king – a grave accusation in Thailand where the king is highly revered and the monarchy is a sensitive subject. 
     
    Thailand’s lèse majesté law prohibits any word or acts that "defames, insults or threatens the king, the queen, the heir to the throne or the regent," and carries a severe penalty of up to 15 years imprisonment. Bails are often denied and the legal process is vague and secretive. 
     
    Controversial radio stations, as well as tens of thousands of websites deemed insulting to the royals, have been shut down. “Cyber scout” volunteers were recruited to patrol cyberspace in a hysterical search of culprits.
     
    This week an army officer filed another complaint against Somsak Jeamteerasakul, a prominent Thai academic, who proposed a roadmap to reform the monarchy.
     
    The military’s aggressive stance in safeguarding the monarchy also comes at a delicate time as the 83-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej has been hospitalized since 2009.
     
    Analysts said the military generals, like politicians, take advantage of the public anxiety over the king’s health. The lèse majesté law is used as a political weapon to intimidate political adversaries and suppress freedom of speech.
     
    Cementing the strong tie between the military and palace also helps to justify the military’s special role in politics, even permission to stage a coup.
     
    Some people like to argue that this is a Thai-style democracy – a euphemism for a system that listens more attentively to the voice of the generals and elites than the majority of the people.
     
    This system legitimizes disrespect for the rule of law and outside interference as long as it works to the selected group’s favor.
     
    But Thailand’s deep divisions and ongoing political upheavals that portend more violence suggests that this custom-made democracy doesn’t really work.
     
    Abhisit said the July 3 elections would prove that Thailand can be governed by law, not by the protests and the military. Everyone is hoping he’s right.

    1 comment

    What is the matter with our "government !!!!!!! We are hurrying to start oil production on a "hurry up " plan - what about alternate energy sources, President Obama ??? We send $20 billion to Pakistan who aren't cooperating with us on bin Laden while Social Security has not had a cost of living in …

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  • 11
    Feb
    2011
    2:30pm, EST

    'It was a bloodless coup'

     

    NBC's Richard Engel and Lester Holt discuss whether President Hosni Mubarak's departure was a military coup or an orderly transition of power.

    The Egyptian military essentially gave President Hosni Mubarak an ultimatum last night, NBC News' Richard Engel reports from Cairo.

    Several senior officials were "furious" with Mubarak's refusal to step down and threatened to take off their uniforms and join the protesters, Engel reported.


    "When the military comes in and tells the president, 'We will not stand beside you — you must stand down,' it's hard to call it anything but a coup," Engel said.

    Click the video for Engel's full report with NBC's Lester Holt.

    8 comments

    found this cool video & song of the events in egypt -- www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aq__3XcXFAo

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  • 10
    Feb
    2011
    6:08pm, EST

    U.S. less sure of Egypt's military

    U.S. intelligence officials are beginning to doubt the Egyptian military's reassurances that it won't take action against demonstrators after President Hosni Mubarak's surprise announcement, NBC News' Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had made seven calls to their counterparts in the past two weeks and were told that under almost any circumstances "the military would not fire on the people," officials told Miklaszewski.

    But "as of now, we don't have any idea what the military might do," one of the officials said this evening.

    U.S. officials said they were especially concerned about Mubarak's apparent declaration that he would "federalize the streets" — about what that might mean and whether the military would obey orders to crack down.

    12 comments

    The evil dictator Hosni Mubarak on advise of the evil Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is spewing he will not leave office because that would be against the Egyptian constitution! IT IS against the Egyptian constitution for the senior parliamentary member to not be given the nod to take over. IT IS  …

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