3301 News Items Found
December 11, 2020
Secretary Baker releases statement on Morocco and Western Sahara
President Trump on Thursday announced a U.S.-brokered deal between Morocco and Israel to normalize relations. To get the pact done, Trump overturned decades of U.S. policy by recognizing Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara — which Morocco has been fighting for control of against the territory’s Indigenous Sahrawi people.
On Friday, former Secretary of State James A. Baker, III, released the following statement on the issue:
"While I strongly support the Abraham Accords, the proper way to implement them was the way it was done with the UAE, Bahrain and Sudan, and not by cynically trading off the self-determination rights of the people of Western Sahara. I agree with Senator James Inhofe when he characterized this development as 'shocking and deeply disappointing.' It would appear that the United States of America, which was founded first and foremost on the principle of self-determination, has walked away from that principle regarding the people of Western Sahara. This is very regrettable."
Read more December 10, 2020
San Antonio Shortlisted for U.S. Space Command HQ
George Abbey, senior fellow in space policy, talked about the future of commercial space development in San Antonio.
Listen to the discussion at Texas Public Radio. December 9, 2020
A Possible Return to 1990-Era U.S. Migrant Policies
President-elect Biden's pick to head the Department of Health and Human services, Xavier Becerra, could signal hope for migrants seeking asylum in the U.S., said fellow Tony Payan. Payan is the Françoise and Edward Djerejian Fellow for Mexico Studies.
Read more at the Washington Examiner. December 8, 2020
How U.S. Foreign Policy Is Likely to Change
Tune in: Baker Institute Director Edward Djerejian discussed potential U.S. foreign policy changes in a Biden administration.
Listen at Houston Public Media. December 8, 2020
Coronavirus Continues to Spread in Houston
Houston's COVID-19 case count recently surpassed 100,000, but the Thanksgiving surge has yet to peak, said health policy fellow Peter Hotez.
Read more at KHOU11.