Guy Taylor
Articles by Guy Taylor
Obama administration looks to cut Iran’s access to gold
Democrats appeared eager Wednesday to poke holes in the seriousness of President Obama's vow to deter Iran from developing a nuclear warhead, raising tough questions about whether the White House is squeezing hard enough on sanctions against the Islamic Republic's economy. Published May 15, 2013
Benghazi talking points carefully trimmed; possible terror links scrubbed
Under growing pressure, the White House on Wednesday released emails that showed the talking points crafted to explain the deadly terrorist attack in Benghazi last year were changed at the behest of a State Department worried about political fallout. Published May 15, 2013
Russia employs Cold War-era flair in spy charge against U.S. diplomat
The Obama administration responded cautiously to the very public detention, then release by Russian authorities, of an American diplomat accused of spying in Moscow, saying that the U.S. remains committed to close relations with Russia and downplaying the possibility of retaliation against Russian intelligence agents in the U.S. Published May 14, 2013
John Kerry urged to pressure China over treatment of Chen Guangcheng’s family
In a letter written Friday and released to the public Monday, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle expressed concern to Secretary of State John F. Kerry over "harassment and abuse" that Chinese authorities are believed to be inflicting on family members to Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese activist living in the United States. Published May 13, 2013
Defensive Dems reject Benghazi ‘misperceptions’
Democrats said Friday this week's dramatic House oversight committee hearing on the Benghazi terror attacks had created "potential misperceptions" among the public, charging Republicans had "attempted to distort and manipulate" the record at the hearing. Published May 10, 2013
Boehner sees proof of Benghazi cover-up in Obama administration emails
House Speaker John A. Boehner on Thursday called on President Obama to release a cache of emails that Republicans say clearly prove senior White House and State Department officials sought to mislead the American public about the Benghazi terrorist attack during last year's election campaign. Published May 9, 2013
Hillary Clinton absent from Benghazi hearing, but ‘What difference’ words were looming
Hanging over Wednesday's hearing on administration failings during the Sept. 11 attack in Benghazi, Libya, was former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's question: "What difference at this point does it make?" Published May 8, 2013
Obama’s Libya pick vows to press Benghazi probe
President Obama's nominee to be the next ambassador to Libya vowed Tuesday to keep up the hunt for those responsible for the September attacks that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans in Benghazi. Published May 7, 2013
Obama, South Korea’s Park are likely to temper any tensions
South Korean President Park Geun-hye and President Obama no doubt will look to project a unified front when the two leaders meet Tuesday at the White House to discuss how best to address the North Korean nuclear threat. Published May 6, 2013
Benghazi investigations included CIA activities; personnel had secret base in Libyan city
Raising the stakes in the high-profile clash with congressional Republicans over last year's terrorist attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, a person familiar with the State Department-chartered inquiry said investigators talked last year with CIA personnel who were on the ground during the attack and were briefed about the CIA's activities at their secret base in the Libyan city. Published May 2, 2013
White House denies any Benghazi muzzling; hearings planned to probe cover-up
The White House denied Wednesday that State Department officials are muzzling would-be whistleblowers about last year's terrorist attacks on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi by blocking security clearances for their attorneys. Published May 1, 2013
Republicans cite attacks in Benghazi, Boston as Obama security failures
The Obama administration found itself in the cross hairs of mounting Republican frustration Tuesday over national security policy, with particular focus on unanswered questions surrounding the Boston Marathon bombings last month and the terrorist attack last year on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya. Published May 1, 2013
State Department downplays reports of Benghazi bullying
The State Department sought Tuesday to discredit a media report that claimed the Obama administration has threatened CIA and State Department officials in an attempt to intimidate them from cooperating with lawmakers seeking information about the September 2012 attack on a U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya. Published April 30, 2013
Boston bombings show a changing face of U.S. terrorism
The Boston Marathon bombings have ignited a debate in Washington and among terrorism analysts over how the wider threat facing the U.S. has evolved since the 9/11 attacks of 2001. Published April 29, 2013
For Boko Haram, U.S. tries to handle with care; Nigerian Islamists tied to al Qaeda
Collusion between the shadowy northern Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram and al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb is raising the specter that internationally linked Islamic terrorism may be reaching deeper into the heart of Africa than the Obama administration is willing to acknowledge. Published April 28, 2013
Syria likely crossed the ‘red line’ with chemical weapons: Now what?
The White House said Thursday that military forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad probably used chemical weapons on a "small scale," reigniting the debate over what role the U.S. should play in trying to topple the regime. Published April 25, 2013
Russia never replied to U.S. requests for more info on Tsarnaev warning
U.S. authorities tried three times in recent years to get more information from Russian officials about the activities of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, but the Kremlin did not reply, according to a U.S. lawmaker briefed Wednesday night about the investigation into the Boston Marathon bombings. Published April 24, 2013
Russia never replied to U.S. requests for more info on Tsarnaev warning
U.S. authorities tried three times in recent years to get more information from Russian officials about the activities of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, but the Kremlin did not reply, according to a U.S. lawmaker briefed Wednesday night about the investigation into the Boston Marathon bombings. Published April 24, 2013
Syria ‘increasingly’ used chemical weapons on own people: Israel
Israel's top military intelligence analyst claimed Tuesday that forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad repeatedly have used chemical weapons during the past 12 months of that country's 2-year-old civil war. Published April 23, 2013
U.S. human rights report cites Iran, Venezuela, Russia
A number of the globe's most powerful countries "continued to repress or attack the means by which individuals can organize, assemble, or demand better performance from their rulers," according to the State Department's annual review of human rights worldwide released Friday. Published April 19, 2013