A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 24, 2019
US Voices On Terrorist Attack In Sri Lanka
Before
I make my announcement regarding our pressure campaign against the
Islamic Republic of Iran, I want to address yesterday’s terrorist attack
in Sri Lanka.
What was supposed to be a joyful Easter Sunday was marred by a horrific wave of Islamic radical terror bloodshed.
It’s heartbreaking that a country which has strived so hard for peace in
recent years has been targeted by these terrorists. We mourn the loved
ones of the victims, some of whom, we can confirm, were indeed U.S.
citizens. This is America’s fight too. I spoke with the prime minister
of Sri Lanka this morning. And our embassy and other parts of the U.S.
Government are offering all possible assistance to Americans and the Sri
Lankan Government alike. We urge that any evildoers be brought to
justice expeditiously, and America is prepared to support that.
We also stand with the millions of Sri Lankans who support the freedom
of their fellow citizens to worship as they please. We take confidence
in knowing that not even atrocities like this one will deter them from
respecting religious freedom. Today our nation grieves with the people
of Sri Lanka, and we stand committed, resolved to confront terrorism
together.
Now, turning to Iran:
Almost one year ago, after withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal,
President Trump implemented the strongest pressure campaign in history
against the Islamic Republic of Iran. The goal remains simple: to
deprive the outlaw regime of the funds it has used to destabilize the
Middle East for four decades, and incentivize Iran to behave like a
normal country.
Up to 40 percent of the regime’s revenue comes from oil sales. It’s the
regime’s number one source of cash. Before our sanctions went into
effect, Iran would generate as much as $50 billion annually in oil
revenue. Overall, to date, we estimate that our sanctions have denied
the regime well north of $10 billion. The regime would have used that
money to support terror groups like Hamas and Hizballah and continue its
missile development in defiance of UN Security Council Resolution 2231,
and it would have perpetuated the humanitarian crisis in Yemen.
Our goal has been to get countries to cease importing Iranian oil
entirely. Last November, we granted exemptions from our sanctions to
seven countries and to Taiwan. We did this to give our allies and
partners to wean themselves off of Iranian oil, and to assure a
well-supplied oil market.
Today I am announcing that we will no longer grant any exemptions. We’re
going to zero – going to zero across the board. We will continue to
enforce sanctions and monitor compliance. Any nation or entity
interacting with Iran should do its diligence and err on the side of
caution. The risks are simply not going to be worth the benefits.
I want to emphasize that we have used the highest possible care in our decision to ensure market stability.
The United States has been in constant discussion with allies and
partners to help them transition away from Iranian crude to other
alternatives. And we have been working with major oil-producing
countries to ensure the market has sufficient volume to minimize the
impact on pricing. Both the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates have assured us they will ensure an appropriate supply for the
markets. And of course, the United States is now a significant producer
as well.
I can confirm that each of those suppliers are working directly with
Iran’s former customers to make the transition away from Iranian crude
less disruptive.
And as I said, we’re doing our part here in the United States too. In
2018, crude production increased by 1.6 million barrels per day over the
2017 levels. And the U.S. Energy Information Agency projects an
increase of an additional 1.5 million barrels per day in calendar year
2019.
Look, with the announcement today, we have made clear our seriousness of
purpose. We are going to zero. We – how long we remain there at zero
depends solely on the Islamic Republic of Iran’s senior leaders.
We have made our demands very clear to the ayatollah and his cronies.
End your pursuit of nuclear weapons. Stop testing and proliferating
ballistic missiles. Stop sponsoring and committing terrorism. Halt the
arbitrary detention of U.S. citizens.
Our pressure is aimed at fulfilling these demands and others, and it
will continue to accelerate until Iran is willing to address them at the
negotiating table.
Finally, as I have said before, these demands are not just coming from
the United States Government and many of our allies and partners. They
are similar to what we hear from the Iranian people themselves. I want
the Iranian people to know that we are listening to them and standing
with them.
We will not appease their oppressors, as the last administration did.
Our hopes are for a better life for them, and all people afflicted by
the regime’s violence and destruction.
I will now take a few questions.
MS ORTAGUS: Matt.
QUESTION: Thank you. Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Good morning, sir.
QUESTION: Thank you. I just – broadly on Iran, aside from this, your
goal – you just said bring them back to the negotiating table. But are
you really interested in renegotiating the JCPOA or negotiating
something like that, or are you just looking for – are all these steps
that you’re taking aimed at just getting them to change their behavior
without getting anything in return?
And then secondly, if you could just address a report about comments you
allegedly made to Iranian diaspora leaders last week in Texas.
SECRETARY POMPEO: What comments? What in particular?
QUESTION: That the – you’re not interested in any kind of military
intervention, that it’s basically economic, diplomatic pressure, and
that – and some – I don’t know, some kind of comment about the MEK, and
you’re not --
SECRETARY POMPEO: Let me – Matt, thank you. Let me try and take those;
I’ll take them in reverse sequence. We’ve not supported any outside
group. We’re supporting the Iranian people. And so I get questions all
the time about outside Iranian groups, including the MEK, and I – every
time I engage with anyone – and this was a meeting with folks who have
family, often had family inside of Iran – wanted to make clear to them
we’re supporting the Iranian people, not any particular group. That’s
the U.S. administration’s policy.
Second, with respect to our objectives, we’re happy to receive the –
we’re happy to get the outcome however we can achieve it. The
President’s always made very clear, we’ve made clear to Iran’s leaders,
that if Americans are attacked, we will respond in a serious way. And so
I don’t think there should be any doubt about the fact that if it is
required for us to take an action in response to something that Qasem
Soleimani does or the Iranian leadership, or a Shia militia somewhere in
the world, that we will respond to that in a way that is appropriate to
protect American interests wherever we find them.
With respect to our goal, we laid them out. We laid them out. There are
12 things we’re looking for. When we get to those things, we are happy
to re-engage with Iran as a normal nation. If they’re prepared to come
to the table and negotiate those things to get to that outcome,
fantastic. If not, the campaign with which we’ve been engaged since,
frankly, the administration took office, but more clearly since the
President’s decision to withdraw from the JCPOA, the campaign will
continue. And we built that enormous coalition to work on this, right.
Gulf state partners, Israel, lots of countries that are working
alongside us to achieve these objectives.
You see the Europeans with increasing risk from the assassination
campaign that’s taking place inside of their country. We watch as Iran
continues to try and have a role in protecting Maduro in Venezuela. This
is causing countries in South America to understand that the
expeditionary nature of the Islamic Republic is something that threatens
citizens all across the world. And so this is not the United States
alone; it’s a true coalition working to achieve the ends which we have
laid out.
QUESTION: Thank you.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Thank you, Matt.
MS ORTAGUS: (Off-mike.)
QUESTION: Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yes, ma’am. Good morning.
QUESTION: With the maximum pressure campaign, have you detected any
change in the Iranian behavior, with the few exception that you mention I
think before, which is short of cash of the Hizballah and maybe to not
giving all to the Syrian regime? And also talking about senior
leadership, do you have any comment about the appointment of the new
leader of the IRGC – I think his name is Mr. Hossein Salami.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yeah, yes.
QUESTION: Because he’s been praised as a hardliner, anti-U.S.
SECRETARY POMPEO: So we have watched Iran have diminished power as a
result of our campaign. Their capacity to wreak harm around the world is
absolutely clearly diminished. I talked about it with respect to
Hizballah not being able to make payroll in a timely fashion. I’ve
talked about it in other places as well. What we’re announcing this
morning, the designation of the IRGC a couple of weeks back, actions
that we’ll take in a handful of weeks – each of these things will
continue to support the Iranian people so that they can get what they
ultimately are so desperately seeking.
I don’t have any comment on the new appointment of the IRGC other than –
IRGC leader other than this: You described him as a hardliner.
QUESTION: (Inaudible.)
SECRETARY POMPEO: It is the case that every Iranian leader – that
includes President Rouhani and Foreign Minister Zarif – has accepted the
notion, has accepted this fundamental notion of the nature of the
regime itself, right. So they accept that the Islamic Republic of Iran
is the appropriate method for which Iran to engage – when – once they’ve
conceded that, in our view, these distinctions are often – are often
insignificant. That is, if you are pushing and you are supporting Qasem
Soleimani’s efforts in Iraq, if you’re supporting the efforts of the
IRGC’s Qods Force and Hizballah, and you’re supporting the underwriting
of Hamas, by definition that is working against what America has laid
out as our objective.
QUESTION: Thank you, sir.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Take one more, Morgan? Yeah.
MS ORTAGUS: Lesley.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Good morning, Lesley. Hi.
QUESTION: Hello. How are you, Mr. Secretary?
SECRETARY POMPEO: I’m very good, thank you.
QUESTION: Mr. Secretary, I want to ask you about the timing of your
announcement. Oil supplies are pretty tight given that a lot of oil’s
come off Venezuela as well. What are your discussions – China said today
that the U.S. had reached beyond its jurisdiction. What have your –
what assurances do you have from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, to supply the
market in a timely fashion?
And second, do you believe that, I think it’s the five largest importers
of Iranian oil, will abide by what you are asking of them?
SECRETARY POMPEO: With respect to your second question, we’ve made
clear: If you don’t abide by this, there’ll be sanctions. Right? This is
what we’re laying out this morning. We have a requirement and – to
conduct these transactions, one almost always needs to participate in
the financial markets, and we intend to enforce the sanctions. We don’t
lay out sanctions that we don’t have any intention of encouraging
countries to cooperate with.
With respect to – I’ll leave others to talk about the details of what
the Saudis and the Emiratis have agreed to, but I’ve had conversations,
the President has had conversations with these countries, and they have
committed to making sure that there is sufficient supply in the markets.
And I’m confident that we’ll achieve that. I’m confident that they’ll
support this policy that is consistent with their objectives as well.
One more? Take one more. Yes. Go ahead, sir.
QUESTION: Thank you, sir.
QUESTION: You could stay all day.
QUESTION: Very quickly --
SECRETARY POMPEO: What’s that?
QUESTION: You could stay all day.
SECRETARY POMPEO: (Laughter.)
QUESTION: Very quickly, sir.
SECRETARY POMPEO: Got to get to the Easter egg roll. (Laughter.)
QUESTION: Sir, you said that you are at zero level today. Is that effective today, or do they --
SECRETARY POMPEO: It’s May 2nd.
QUESTION: May 2nd.
SECRETARY POMPEO: The current waivers expire on May – midnight May 1st, I think it is.
QUESTION: So they’re not getting, like, any grace period beyond May 2nd? That’s it? It all must stop?
SECRETARY POMPEO: There are – there are no – there are no SRE waivers that extend beyond that period, full stop.
QUESTION: And so in the interim, they need to look at other sources like --
SECRETARY POMPEO: That’s right.
QUESTION: To make up the (inaudible).
SECRETARY POMPEO: Look, we’ve always tried – and I think we’ve always
been very fair about this – if there is a particular transaction that is
incidental – all right, so I don’t want to foreclose the possibility,
but there will be no waivers that extend beyond the 1st of May.
Great, thank you all.
QUESTION: Can I ask about Sri Lanka?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Thank you all very much.
QUESTION: Can I ask about Sri Lanka, sir?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yeah, sure.
QUESTION: Do you think the incident there says anything about the
dangers ISIS continues to pose now that the – they’ve been defeated on
the battleground?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Yes. Radical Islamist terror remains a threat. The
President’s been very clear about that; I think I’ve been very clear
about that. We are continuing to do real work against these evil human
beings that went into places of worship on Easter Sunday. Yeah, the –
we’ve taken that threat down substantially. The destruction of the
caliphate was important, and it mattered, and the takedown of these
threats from other geographies as well. But sadly, this evil exists in
the world, and the United States and all of its partners that are
cooperating in the D-ISIS campaign – some 80 countries, and other
nations too that are assisting us in defeating this terrorism around the
world – we have to remain active and vigilant and it’s going to require
attention. There’s no doubt about that.
So thank you all very much.
QUESTION: May I ask about North Korea?
SECRETARY POMPEO: Thank you. Have a great day.
QUESTION: Thank you.
QUESTION: Thank you, sir.

