Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Gas crisis fuels energy talks

Russian gas crisis sends Central Europe scrambling for future alternatives.
By Benjamin Cunningham - Staff Writer
Gas crisis fuels energy talks

ISIFA Photo

Slovakia considered turning on a Soviet-era nuclear reactor in response to the recent gas crisis.

A European Union-brokered deal to monitor the Ukrainian gas pipeline was meant to turn the gas flow back on, but it was not until Russia and Ukraine resolved a bilateral price dispute that natural gas again started flowing west.

As of press time Jan. 20, Russia had turned on the taps, and the first deliveries had reached Slovak pipelines.

The recent Ukraine-Russia gas row, which cut off supplies to parts of Europe for more than two weeks, again raised questions about the reliability of Europe's present supply lines and the EU's ability to influence key actors, sending the Czech Republic and its neighbors searching for longer-term solutions.


In Slovakia, the quick-fix was a proposal to restart a nuclear reactor at Jaslovské Bohunice, a plan that faced strong EU opposition before eventually being scrapped.

Energy supply breakdown
|---------------------|
Czech Republic
46% coal
21% oil
16% natural gas
15% nuclear
2% other sources
|---------------------|
Slovakia
28% natural gas
24% coal
22% nuclear
20% oil
6% other sources

Source: International
Energy Agency, 2007
|---------------------|

"There is no reason at the moment to re-launch the second V1 nuclear reactor at the Jaslovské Bohunice nuclear power plant," Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said on a Jan. 18 television talk show.

The Slovaks, however, did not eliminate the possibility of restarting the reactor in the event of another future energy crisis, a move that would break the country's EU accession treaty. Slovak Foreign Affairs Minister Jan Kubiš was in Austria Jan. 15 still trying to allay safety concerns related to the Soviet-era facility. The last reactor at the plant was shut down Dec. 31, 2008.

Natural gas is Slovakia's largest source of energy, totaling about 28 percent of use, according to Hiroshi Hashimoto, a natural gas specialist with the Paris-based International Energy Agency. Nearly 100 percent of Slovakia's natural gas supply comes from Russia.

The Czech Republic, by comparison, is both less dependent on natural gas in general and more diversified in terms of sources. In 2007, the latest statistics available, the country counts on natural gas for 16 percent of its total energy supply. Russia supplies 79 percent and Norway contributes most of the rest.

While many are quick to condemn Russia over the recent energy crisis, about 80 percent of Russian gas exported to Europe passes through Ukrainian territory. About two-thirds of Gazprom's revenue comes from gas sold after transiting Ukraine, according to a recent study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

"On the whole [Ukraine] is not a reliable country," says Petr Kratochvíl, a Ukraine and Russia expert at the Prague Institute for International Relations. "The basic problem is that there is not a single voice. The internal political situation is a permanent political deadlock."

As instability in Ukraine increasingly worries Europeans about its reliability as a transit country, various gas-access options are on the table. The proposed North Stream pipeline would bring natural gas from Russia under the Baltic Sea to Germany, then onward to the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. The so-called South Stream pipeline would bring Russian gas through the Balkans to Italy. A proposed Nabucco pipeline would bring Central Asian gas through Turkey and into the EU. None of these options is near implementation, and all face practical and political hurdles.

Czech Energy Envoy Václav Bartuška has publicly advocated the idea of using liquefied natural gas, which is cooled and shipped in tanks, as a means of bypassing future pipeline problems.

Coby van der Linde, director of the Clingendael International Energy Project in The Hague, is skeptical. "The quantities are much smaller. It's just not physically possible," she said.

Coal, a fuel that presently covers nearly half of the Czech Republic's energy use, has been decreasingly popular in recent years, but new technologies could be making it viable again.

"Even though coal is very negative on the environment, if we can store the carbon dioxide somehow, we can use more coal," Van der Linde said.

Green energy options are increasingly popular, at least rhetorically, and Van der Linde points to Denmark as an example of a country formerly dependent on coal and now a world leader in wind energy.

Progress on the Slovak option, nuclear power, has been slowed in recent decades "very much by the Chernobyl event," Van der Linde said.

France, however, became a nuclear innovator in response to the first and second oil crises, Van der Linde said.

Locally, both the Civic Democratic Party (ODS) and the Social Democrats (ČSSD) support expanding sources of nuclear power. The Greens (SZ) have slowed progress as part of their governing coalition agreement, but incoming Green Humans Rights and Minority Minister Michael Kocáb has said he would support a change in party position.

Separately, the largest state-owned energy company, ČEZ, announced plans Jan. 20 to build two new nuclear reactors in Dukovany by 2035. "Nuclear energy is a political risk, but this is changing because of the environmental discussion," Van Der Linde said.

The Czech Republic has made energy policy a priority of its EU presidency. During the gas row, Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek engaged in shuttle diplomacy between Moscow and Kyiv. While most laud the effort, there are questions as to the concrete results.

"The EU's role was quite weak and the monitors were more symbolic. All the trumps were in the hands of Russia and Ukraine," Kratochvíl said. "They somehow just meet behind closed doors but never know what the agreement is about."

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin says the EU monitors are no longer needed because the price dispute has been settled. Kratochvíl says he is skeptical of whether the Russian-Ukrainian agreement will be honored, as the agreement is not public and various murky special interest groups on both sides persist.

Van der Linde has her own questions, mainly as to whether the EU will ever be able to have a cohesive, comprehensive energy policy. France, for example, is a strong proponent of nuclear energy, while Germany seeks to increase its access to Russian natural gas. "Member states have reaffirmed their sovereignty over energy mix," she said. "Maybe it is good that some countries are specialized."

Rather than a singular EU energy policy, she advocates power plants that can operate with more than one fuel - gas and oil, for example - and a Europe-wide "joint-crisis mechanism" to deal with shortages.

"That is something we can do," she adds. "And now."

Benjamin Cunningham can be reached at
bcunningham@praguepost.com

Vaclav Klaus Congratulated U.S. President Barack Obama, Inviting Him To Prague


Prague - Czech President Vaclav Klaus congratulated new U.S. President Barack Obama on his inauguration and invited him to Prague in a letter, released on the Presidential Office's website.

Klaus stressed in the letter that the United States is for many Czech citizens a symbol of freedom and optimism, democracy and economic success, patriotism and international solidarity.

On this occasion Klaus also recalled the U.S. contribution to the establishment of the first independent Czechoslovak Republic in 1918.

This is why it is natural that both countries started to cooperate intensively after the collapse of the communist regime in 1989, and became allies in NATO ten years ago, Klaus wrote in his letter.

Obama was inaugurated as the 44th U.S. president on Tuesday, replacing George W. Bush after eight years.

Czech diplomats indicated they would like to welcome Obama in Prague in early April ahead of the NATO summit.

The Czech Republic as EU president in the fist half of 2009 would like to organise the first summit of the EU 27 and Obama in Prague.

Klaus in his letter also expressed hopes that he would have a chance to welcome Obama at Prague Castle, the presidential seat, and that Czech-U.S. bilateral relations would keep developing dynamically during Obama's presidency. Author: ČTK

Original Letter

Blahopřejný dopis Baracku Obamovi k inauguraci do funkce prezidenta USA


21. 1. 2009, Praha

Prezident republiky Václav Klaus zaslal ve středu dne 21. ledna 2009 blahopřejný dopis Baracku Obamovi k jeho inauguraci do funkce 44. prezidenta Spojených států amerických.

Vážený pane prezidente,

dovolte mi, abych Vám jménem občanů České republiky a jménem svým poblahopřál k inauguraci do funkce 44. prezidenta Spojených států amerických. Jsem přesvědčen, že pod Vaším vedením se Spojené státy vyrovnají s úkoly, které před Vaší zemí stojí.

Česká republika si váží tradičních a hlubokých svazků, které ji pojí s Vaší zemí. Pro mnoho našich občanů jsou Spojené státy symbolem svobody a optimismu, demokracie a ekonomického úspěchu, vlastenectví a mezinárodní solidarity. Navíc Spojené státy významně přispěly ke vzniku našeho moderního státu po 1. světové válce. Proto je pro nás přirozené, že po pádu železné opony obě naše země začaly intenzivně spolupracovat a před deseti lety se staly spojenci v rámci Severoatlantické aliance.

Vážený pane prezidente, doufám, že Vás budu moci přivítat osobně jménem celé naší země zde na Pražském hradě, a že během Vašeho prezidentství se budou vztahy mezi našimi zeměmi nadále dynamicky rozvíjet. Dovolte mi, abych Vám při výkonu Vaší náročné funkce popřál mnoho úspěchů a také pevné zdraví a štěstí Vám i celé Vaší rodině.

S úctou

Václav Klaus


Friday, January 09, 2009

Polish President: "EU Presidency Is A Great Opportunity For Czechs"

Prague - The six-month Czech presidency of the European Union that started on January 1 is a great opportunity for the Czech Republic, Polish President Lech Kaczynski said after a meeting with his Czech counterpart Vaclav Klaus today.

Kaczynski at the same time said he believes that the Czech presidency would be successful. Each EU-presiding country becomes a power and it depends on it how to it will use this opportunity, Kaczynski said.

"We envy the Czech Republic this presidency very much," Kaczynski noted.

Poland will preside over the EU in 2011 only. Kaczynski said the situation would be different then since the Lisbon treaty would probably take effect, changing the functioning of the EU.

The Lisbon treaty is to reform the EU institutions. Besides Ireland, which rejected the treaty in a referendum last June, the Czech Republic is the only EU member state that has not yet ratified it.

Klaus and Kaczynski today primarily focused on the Russian-Ukrainian conflict that led to restricted gas supplies from Russia, but both presidents also discussed the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Kaczynski said the EU represented by the Czech Republic should play an active role in the solution to the conflict. Both presidents mentioned that they touched upon several ideas in this respect during their talks, but they did not elaborate.

"I suppose that diplomacy demands certain discretion in such complex matters," Kaczynski said.

The Israeli military operation against the Gaza Strip started on December 27, 2008 in reaction to the activities of the Hamas radical movement. The conflict has so far claimed several hundred civilians victims in Gaza, according to Palestinian sources.

Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg headed the EU mission that visited the region last weekend. Klaus said today the Czech Republic would try to use all contacts that might help reach ceasefire in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict soon and set up a long-term rational settlement in this part of the world.

Author: ČTK

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Sarah Palin speaks with CNN's Drew Griffin


(CNN)
-- Republican vice presidential nominee Gov. Sarah Palin
spoke Tuesday to CNN's Drew Griffin. It was her first interview with
the network. Here is the transcript.

CNN: You seemed to be very much on your game. You get huge
crowds. Even bigger crowds than [Republican presidential candidate
Sen.] John McCain. Why is that?

Sarah Palin: I think it's
what I'm representing and what the message is and that is true reform
of government that is so needed, and having a representative of someone
who has a track record of showing that, yeah, you can, you can do this,
you can reform, you can put government back on the side of the people,
you can fight corruption. You can actually take steps towards helping
our nation become energy-independent and all those things that we're
talking about. I think that more and more Americans are realizing that,
well, good, we have a candidate who has actually done some of those
things and it's not just, talkin' the talk, she's gonna tell us how
she's done this.

CNN: Let's talk about some of that,
because, I mean, two months ago, it was all about who you were, where
you were from and Wasilla, Alaska. I think, now it's just the economy.
And you are the only person in this race with executive experience,
who's taken over governments as mayor and governor. What will you do,
day one, to tell the American people, things are changing for the
better?

Palin: You know, that's a good point about that
experience and we don't like to toot our own horn so we don't, I don't
talk about my experience that much in terms of years in office or in
positions that have been executive experience but, I have, I do have
more experience than [Democratic presidential candidate Sen.] Barack
Obama does. You know, he had served for his 300 days before he became a
presidential candidate and that wasn't in executive office, of course,
but, as an executive, working with John McCain, we will take on the
special interests and we will clean up Wall Street and some of the
abuse of the power in Washington, D.C., also to first and foremost get
government back on the side of the people, and, we do this economically
speaking here, by cutting taxes, not increasing them, allowing our
small businesses and our families to keep more of what they earn, and
produce so that they can reinvest according to their priorities. Not
politicians' priorities and special interests' priorities. Our small
businesses, keeping more of what they earn, that allows them to create
more jobs, they're gonna be hiring more people, that gets our economy
going. That's what has happened in the opportunities that I've had in
executive positions as mayor, manager, and as governor. It works.
Reining in government growth, recognizing government certainly plays
appropriate roles in building infrastructure, providing tools for our
families, for our businesses, but then government kinda getting outta
the way as you have great oversight making sure that there isn't the
corruption and the abuse, but government, I think get outta the way and
let the private sector do what it does best.

CNN: Yeah, but, I mean we're in a crisis right now.

Palin: We are.

CNN: And the plans that you mention take time, you have to
go through Congress. If you guys win, you'll both most likely be
working with a Democratic Congress. It's gonna be a slow process. What
I'm trying to find out from you -- from John McCain as well, day one,
people want a difference, to make a difference in the economy, as we're
seeing daily, swings in the stock market, houses going foreclosed on --

Palin:
Mm-hmm. Well, day one, you bring in everyone around that table, too,
you bring in the congressional leadership, and, assuming that there
will be, certainly, Democrats, at that table, that's good, too, these
are gonna be bipartisan approaches that must be taken, I have that
executive experience also having formed a cabinet up there in Alaska
that, you know, we've got independents and Democrats and Republicans
whom I have appointed to our administrative positions to that, we have
the best of ideas coming together in order to best serve the people.
John McCain, too, he's been known as the maverick to take on his own
party when need be, to reach over the aisle and work with the other
party also. Now, Barack Obama has not been able to do that, he's gone
with, what is it, 96 percent of the time with Democrat leadership. Not
having that, I think, ability or willingness to work with the other
side. So as an executive, we need to create that team that is full of
good ideas and not let obsessive partisanship get in the way, as we
start taking the measures to shore up our economy, which already
Congress is working on with the rescue package, with some of the
bailout packages, the provisions in there that can work, too, but it's
gonna take everybody working together.

CNN: Will you and John McCain appoint Democrats to cabinet positions?

Palin:
I don't know why you wouldn't, if they, if these Democrats are best
suited to serve, and if they will not let obsessive partisanship get in
the way of just doing what's right with a team effort, and support of
the president to get this economy moving, and to win these wars, to
meet these great challenges, I wouldn't have as my litmus test a party
affiliation.

CNN: Yeah. Uh, Joe the plumber?

Palin: Yeah.

CNN: Socialism, it's come up on the campaign trail now.

Palin: Sure.

CNN: Governor, is Barack Obama a socialist?

Palin:
I'm not gonna call him a socialist, but, as Joe the plumber had
suggested, in fact he came right out and said it sounds like socialism
to him and he speaks for so many Americans who are quite concerned now,
after hearing finally what Barack Obama's true intentions are with his
tax and economic plan, and that is, to take more from small businesses,
more from our families, and then redistribute that according to his
priorities. That is, that is not good for the entrepreneurial spirit
that has built this great country. That is not good for our economy,
certainly it's not good for the opportunities that our small businesses
should have, to keep more of what they produce, in order to hire more
people, create more jobs. That's what gets the economy going. So,
finally Joe the plumber and as we talked about today in the speech,
too, he's representing, you know, Jane the engineer and Molly the
dental hygienist and Chuck the teacher and, and all these good,
hard-working Americans who are, finally, were able to hear in very
plain talk the other night, what Barack Obama's intentions were to
redistribute wealth.

CNN: Do you think his intention though, if not a socialist, is to move away from capitalism, true capitalism?

Palin:
Well, anyone who would want to increase taxes at a time like this,
especially with economic woes that are adversely affecting all of us,
anybody who would want to do that to take more from businesses and our
families, and then dole those dollars out according to their
priorities, that, that is not a principal of capitalism.

CNN:
Some are saying we're already moving towards socialism with the
bailout, the banking industry investment that this government has made,
that John McCain and Barack Obama have signed on for. What is your
views on that and yet another possible supplement to the income of
Americans.

Palin: We cannot start moving closer and
closer to socialism. That will destroy the entrepreneurial spirit in
America. That will punish hard work and productivity, and that work
ethic that we try to instill in our children so that they will know
that they can be rewarded for their productivity, for their hard work.
We cannot move in that direction, that it should be so concerning for
any American voter to consider that perhaps there are some who would
like us to go there. Now, as for the economic bailout provisions and
the measures that have already been taken, it is a time of crisis and
government did have to step in playing an appropriate role to shore up
the housing market to make sure that we're thawing out some of the
potentially frozen credit lines and credit markets, government did have
to step in there. But now that we're hearing that the Democrats want an
additional stimulus package or bailout package for what, hundreds of
billions of dollars more, this is not a time to use the economic crisis
as an excuse for reckless spending and for greater, bigger government
and to move the private sector to the back burner and let government be
assumed to be the be-all, end-all solution to the economic challenges
that we have. That's what's scaring me now about hearing that the
Democrats have an even greater economic bailout package, but we don't
know all the details of it yet and we'll certainly pay close attention
to it.

CNN: On its face are you against that?

Palin:
On its face, I want to make sure that this is not being used by the
Democrats as a time for bigger government, more dollars being taken
from taxpayers to bail out anybody, any entity that's been engaged in
corruption, in self-dealing, in greed, there on Wall Street or in D.C.
that has adversely affected Main Street, so, on its face, I, what we're
gonna need to know more about what the Democrats have in mind for this
additional bailout.

CNN: You know, as, you're a fiscal conservative.

Palin: Yes.

CNN:
As a fiscal conservative, I'm looking at the McCain proposals. And all
of them seem to involve heavy amounts of government money, or
government involvement, whether it be home mortgages or propping up the
banking industry. I mean, are you square with that?

Palin:
I beg to differ with that, because what McCain has talked about with
shoring up the home mortgage market also to make sure that we, we're
gonna have a level playing field here. He's not asking for an
additional hundreds of billions of dollars, he's saying, OK, with the
$700 billion that his colleagues and he there in Congress have already
approved, let's make sure that the priority is, we're gonna help the
homeowners who had been kinda sucked into the wrong mortgage, and that
was via predatory lenders taking advantage unfortunately and exploiting
too many Americans. He's saying let's take the dollars that are already
there and let's best use them. Let's, he's not saying, more, more, more
government intervention and more dollars. He's saying, let's best use
the dollars that have already been approved.

CNN: What is your role going to be as vice president?

Palin:
Well, we've talked a lot about that, John McCain and I have, about the
missions that I'll get to embark on if we are so blessed to be hired by
the American people to work for them. It's gonna be government reform,
because that is what I've been able to do as a mayor and as a governor.
You take on the special interests and the self-dealings. Yep, you
ruffle feathers and you have the scars to prove it afterwards, but you
have to take that on to give the American people that faith back in
their own government. This is their government and we gotta put it back
on their side. So, government reform and energy independence, can't
wait to work on that. That's been my forte as the governor of an
energy-producing state and as a former chair of the energy regulator
entity up there in Alaska. So, look forward to that and that's a matter
of national security and our economic prosperity opportunities. That
though, too, the other mission that John and I are anxious for me to
lead on is helping our families who have children with special needs,
ushering in that spirit to Washington, D.C., where we saw, we're gonna
give every child a chance and a good educational opportunity will be
provided. That's gonna be a matter, too, of prioritizing the federal
dollars that are already there and making sure that every child is
given opportunity.

CNN: Yeah. Governor, you've been
mocked in the press. The press has been pretty hard on you, the
Democrats have been pretty hard on you, but also some conservatives
have been pretty hard on you as well. The National Review had a story
saying that, you know, I can't tell if Sarah Palin is incompetent,
stupid, unqualified, corrupt or all of the above.

Palin: Who wrote that one?

CNN: That was in the National Review, I don't, have the author.

Palin: I'd like to talk to that person.

CNN:
But they were talking about the fact that your experience as governor
is not getting out. Do you feel trapped in this campaign, that your
message is not getting out, and if so who do you blame?

Palin:
No, I'm getting my message out right now, through you and with you,
Drew, to the American people who are watching CNN, and I appreciate
this opportunity. No, you know that, I am obviously an outsider of the
Washington elite and of the conventional, I think, media, targets or
media characters that have been a part of this for years and, I think
that is fine, that is good for the American electorate to understand.
They have a choice here in our ticket of having the experience and the
reputation that comes with John McCain as being the patriot and the
maverick in the Senate, you take that and you combine it with a team
member who is new and fresh with new ideas, new vision, new energy that
needs to be infused into Washington, D.C., with that commitment to
clean it up in D.C. Put government on the side of the people and fight
hard for Americans. You have that, that combination and I think that
some in the media, maybe in The National Review, they don't know what
to make of that, they're like, gee, she's, you know, where'd she come
from, surely, you know, it should be our job I think they assume is to,
pick and, and be negative and, and find things to mock and, that's just
I guess part of the political game, I guess. But we're very committed
and focused and moving forward between now and November 4, getting that
message out to the American people that our plan to get this economy
back on the right track, and to win the wars, put government on the
side of the people. It's the right thing to do, and, I think we have
the right message, despite the mocking that comes our way.

CNN:
Governor, our time is very short and I must ask you just two questions,
one is on [Palin's former brother-in-law, Alaska State Trooper Mike]
Wooten, if there's one thing that's followed you negatively --

Palin: Tasergate, right, right,

CNN: You call it Tasergate,

Palin: We sure do.

CNN:
Troopergate, whatever. The Branchflower Report said you were perfectly
in your right, to fire [Alaska Public Safety Commissioner Walt] Monegan.

Palin: Right.

CNN:
But also found out that you violated the ethics. Was it a mistake to
allow your husband to use your office to try to pressure the troopers
to fire Mr. Wooten.

Palin: Not at all because A, that,
the trooper who had tasered his kid and had, you know, made death
threats against my family and said he was gonna bring the governor down
and all that. My husband did exactly, I think, what any sensible,
reasonable father, husband would do who was concerned about their
family's safety.

CNN: But was it a mistake to allow him to use the governor's office to that extent?

Palin:
Not when you look at other governors' track records when they had their
spouse as for instance [former Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski] had his
spouse as his top adviser, and she was in meetings, she was in the
office so, you know, kinda, of a double standard here. But what Todd
was what any reasonable husband and father would do. He followed the
instruction of the Department of Public Safety's own personal security
detail that is our personal protection. They asked Todd, you have a
problem with this state trooper, he is a threat, you need to take that
to the commissioner of the Department of Public Safety. Todd did
exactly that and then of course, he got clobbered for it, now in the
media because there's a misunderstanding of what he's done. Our
Department of Law in Alaska has right there on its Web site -- it said,
if you have a problem with an Alaska state trooper, the paragraph says,
you go to the Commissioner of Department of Public Safety and you share
that concern with him. That's what Todd did. So no, I don't think that
it was an abuse of power of my office at all. And I was very thankful
that that report cleared me of any illegal dealings or anything else. I
replaced the commissioner because he was not doing the job that I
expect of my cabinet members. That is, you serve the Alaskan population
up there. Of course he's a cabinet member who was assigned to do that,
to the best of our team's ability and you have a lotta energy, you
fulfill the vision that we have laid out for you, and he wasn't doing
that and that's why he was replaced.

CNN: Governor, if in two weeks you're not elected, do you come back at the top of the ticket in 2012?

Palin:
I'm concerned about and focused on just the next two weeks, Drew, and
again getting that message out there to the American public.
Thankfully, too, the American public is seeing clearer and clearer what
the choices are in these tickets. I think, some revelation just
occurred, not just with Joe the plumber but revelation occurred with
[Democratic vice presidential candidate] Joe Biden's comment the other
night that, he telling his Democratic financial donors saying that, he
said mark my word, there's gonna be economic, and, or international
crisis he said, if Barack Obama is elected, because he will be tested
and he said there are four or five scenarios that will result in an
international crisis with an untested presidential candidate in Barack
Obama and -- first I think we need to thank Joe for the warning there.
But, Joe's words there I think, can shed some light, too, in terms of
the contrast you have in the tickets. John McCain is a tested leader.
He has gone through great adversity. He has the scars to prove it. He
has shown his true leadership. It hasn't just been all talk, and Joe
Biden's comments there about an untested, as he had said in the
primary, unprepared candidate to be president, I think was very telling.

CNN: Have you guys been briefed on any scenario like this?

Palin:
On the four or five scenarios, that, well, who knows what Joe Biden was
talking about, you know? It, all you have to do, though, is look back
at Obama's foreign policy agenda and you can assume what some of those
scenarios may be. As he considers sitting down and talking to [Iranian
President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad or [former Cuban President] Fidel Castro
or [North Korean President] Kim Jong Il, some of these dictators,
without preconditions being met, essentially validating some of what
those dictators have been engaged in, that could be one of the
scenarios that Joe Biden is talking about is, as a result of that, that
proclamation that he would meet without preconditions being met first.
That could be a scenario that results in a testing of our country, and,
the four or five other scenarios that he's talking about, I don't know,
I hope that Joe Biden will explain it.

CNN: I guess we have to wrap it up.

Palin: Yes.

CNN: I mean I could go on with you forever.

Palin: So could I, on that one especially.

CNN: [LAUGHS] I mean, did Joe Biden get a pass?

Palin:
Drew, you need to ask your colleagues and I guess your bosses or
whoever is in charge of all this, why does Joe Biden get a pass on such
a thing? Can you imagine if I would've said such a thing? No, I think
that, you know, we would be hounded and held accountable for, what in
the world did you mean by that, VP presidential candidate? Why would
you say that, mark my words, this nation will undergo international
crisis if you elect Barack Obama? If I would've said that you guys'd
clobbered me.

CNN: You're right. [LAUGHTER] You're right. Can I ask one more question?

Palin: Sure, good.

CNN: You've talked about America. And certain parts of
America, that are maybe more American than other parts of American, Are
there?

Palin: Ehhh, ahh, I don't want that
misunderstood. No,... I do not want that misunderstood. You know, when I
go to these rallies and we see the patriotism just shining through
these people's faces and the Vietnam veterans wearing their hats so
proudly and they have tears in their eyes as we sing our national
anthem and it is so inspiring and I say that this is true America, you
get it, you understand how important it is that in the next four years
we have a leader who will fight for you. I certainly don't want that
interpreted as one area being more patriotic or more American than
another. If that's the way it's come across, I apologize.

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Works to block mobile card readers and ID scanners