Posted on 03/17/2013 8:21:36 AM PDT by markomalley
State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said on Friday that if a request were to "come forward" that the papal election be monitored by an international organization called the Organization for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), the U.S. government would take it very seriously.
Nuland made the remark only after she did some digging on the issue because Associated Press reporter Matthew Lee had questioned her at Thursday's briefing about whether the administration believed the papal election had met international standards.
At both Thursdays and Fridays briefings there was more than a little jocularity in the way Nuland handled Lees questions, and there was some laughter among the reporters who witnessed the exchanges. But Nulands ultimate answer that the U.S. would take very seriously a request to monitor the papal elections was one she did in fact research and did not need to give.
In fact, immediately before substantively responding on Friday to Lees second-day questions about the papal election, Nuland summarily declined to respond to a reporter who asked her about comments made by a former Japanese prime minister about trials held after World War II.
At Thursdays State Department briefing, reporter Lee had asked Nuland: Does the United States regard the election of the Pope to--that election to have met international standards for the election of a world leader? He is, after all, a head of state, and a head of government. You routinely criticize countries or governments for having elections where there is not universal suffrage, where there is not any possibility of appealing the results, where there is not--where there were no monitors, for example. Im wondering if this meets the standard for a free and fair election in your mind?"
Nuland responded: Well, I think the world has watched this conclave go forward as its gone forward in history down the centuries.
Lee said: Its probably the least transparent election. I mean, its more opaque than an election in North Korea or Iraq under Saddam Hussein.
But it is, nonetheless, an election with designated balloting and multiple rounds of balloting, said Nuland, who then starting joking with the reporter about whether he personally wanted to be named a monitor to the next papal election.
Yeah. Id love that, said Lee.
Lee made his own joke. I hope that the Holy See appreciates that Im just asking because I am a devils advocate.
I think you secretly aspire to some red shoes, maybe, said Nuland.
But Lee restated his question: You think the election of the Pope was okay? It meets your--the fairness, free and fairness standard?
I dont think that we have any reason to question the process, said Nuland.
What does the U.S. think about theocracies? asked Lee. No, Im curious. I mean, and with all due respect, Im not accusing the Vatican of doing anything improper. But you seem to take issue with theocracies in places like Iran, and yet you celebrate the theocracy in the Vatican.
Matt, he is the head of the church, said Nuland.
But that did not end the issueeither for reporter Lee or for the State Department. At Fridays briefing, it came up again, and Nuland now had a more specific answer.
Do you regard it as a free and fair exercise in electing a leader of a country? Lee asked Nuland again on Friday about the papal election.
We did a little bit more digging on this, said Nuland. We consider Vatican City a sovereign juridical state. As some of you know--I think Matt knows--that sovereign juridical state has about 600 resident citizens. I would simply note that in the context of the election for the pope, they were electing the head of a religion. Hes also the head of this sovereign juridical state.
Its interesting to us that since this is a European state, we have never had a request for ODIHR [Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights] monitoring of the election, ODIHR being the election-monitoring entity in the European space, said Nuland. So, obviously, were that to come forward, we would take it very seriously.
So, wait, who requests that? asked Lee.
It can be requested by citizens, said Nuland. It can be requested by parliament. It can be requested by the opposition--as it was in the case of Belarus."
So, if such a request was made, would the Vatican, would have to open up its voting process for that kind of state? asked Lee.
If such a request were made for ODIHR monitoring of the voting, then the Vatican would have to consider whether it would open itself to ODIHR monitors, said Nuland.
She then joked that the State Department could look into the possibility of making Lee himself a monitor under such a circumstance.
If you wanted to be a monitor, we could see if we could arrange it, Matt, said Nuland.
That would be great, said Lee. I would love to spend a week or two in Rome.
He eventually asked: Is it then correct that the U.S. does not take a position on whether the election of the Pope was free and fair and transparent? Without universal suffrage, without
As I said yesterday, we dont have any reason to question the process, said Nuland.
The ODIHR is part of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Fifty-seven states belong to the OSCE, including the Holy See and the United States. The ODIHR, says its website, promotes democratic election processes through the in-depth observation of elections and conducts election assistance projects that enhance meaningful participatory democracy.
The Offices democratization work, says its annual report, is aimed, therefore, at assisting participating States in meeting their OSCE commitments in areas such as democratic governance and lawmaking, the development of pluralistic party systems and political party regulation, enhancing the rule of law, strengthening parliaments, ensuring freedom of movement and migrant integration, and promoting gender equality and womens political participation.
These satire articles are only funny if they are believable.
MS. NULAND: Oh, here we go. Here we go. Matts got one.
QUESTION: Yeah, Ive got my Vatican question.
MS. NULAND: All right.
QUESTION: But also there was a question asked yesterday --
MS. NULAND: I thought I was going to get away.
QUESTION: -- that was kind of intriguing about comments made by the Japanese Prime Minister, or former Japanese Prime Minister about the trials after the Second World War. Did you get an answer to that question?
MS. NULAND: I dont have any comment on that at all.
QUESTION: Okay.
MS. NULAND: All right?
QUESTION: No.
MS. NULAND: Okay?
QUESTION: Vatican.
MS. NULAND: What about the Vatican?
QUESTION: Well, do you regard it as a free and fair exercise in electing a leader of a country?
MS. NULAND: We did a little bit more digging on this. We consider Vatican City a sovereign juridical state. As some of you know I think Matt knows that sovereign juridical state has about 600 resident citizens. I would simply note that in the context of the election for the Pope, they were electing the head of a religion. Hes also the head of this sovereign juridical state.
Its interesting to us that since this is a European state, we have never had a request for ODIHR monitoring of the election, ODIHR being the election-monitoring entity in the European space. So, obviously, were that to come forward, we would take it very seriously.
QUESTION: So, wait, who requests that?
MS. NULAND: The it can be requested by citizens. It can be requested by parliament. It can be requested by the opposition, as it was in the case of Belarus.
QUESTION: So if (laughter) such a request was made, would the Vatican would have to open up its voting process for that kind of state?
MS. NULAND: If such a request were made for ODIHR monitoring of the voting, then the Vatican would have to consider whether it would open itself to ODIHR monitors.
QUESTION: Okay. But all right. Thats very interesting. Now --
MS. NULAND: And as I said yesterday --
QUESTION: Yes.
MS. NULAND: -- we would if you wanted to be a monitor, we could see if we could arrange it, Matt. (Laughter.)
QUESTION: That would be great. I would love to spend a week or two in Rome.
MS. NULAND: Exactly.
QUESTION: But what now but that --
QUESTION: Can women be monitors?
MS. NULAND: Say again?
QUESTION: Can women be monitors?
MS. NULAND: In the Vatican City context, I dont know. Wed have to work on that. Jill, do you want to monitor?
QUESTION: So this just brings me --
MS. NULAND: Jills volunteering, too. We could have a whole roomful of monitors.
QUESTION: Yes.
QUESTION: Is it then correct that the U.S. does not take a position on whether the election of the Pope was free and fair and transparent?
MS. NULAND: As I said yesterday --
QUESTION: Without universal suffrage, without --
MS. NULAND: As I said yesterday, we dont have any reason to question the process.
Thank you very much.
QUESTION: Thank you.
(The briefing was concluded at 1:41 p.m.)
# # #
I know it’s not satire. I left my irony on can you smell it burning?
They can take it seriously all they want. They have zero authority to do so.
Their arrogant insanity knows no bounds.
Is this a real article? Not some satire joke thing.
I found it completely believable that an AP reporter would pull crap like that.
I was going to post the transcript earlier...
The state department probably fed the question to the reporter as a means of putting it out there in hopes that a movement will grow around it.
This is not the Republic for which it stands anymore! May God help us. The Pope and Catholics are a huge threat to Marxism. The record hundreds of thousands of young people at the National Right to Life was ignored by the media, but regardless shows the youth are more faithful than ever. One in every four Americans are Catholic, John Paul II was as influential internationally as Reagan was in the US, they pushed back the disease significantly. God has sent us strong leaders again. The devil is mot pleased.
Ha! They’re too late; we just elected our last pope! :)
So, following this “article” one might be led to believe there is such a movement afoot to split the progressive Catholic from the Doctrinal Catholic.
I wonder if the Vatican and the Catholic church have reason to believe that the last U.S. Presidential elections met any standards of fair and just at all.
If you believe that we just elected the last Pope, then according to the prophecy there should arise out of the tribe of Dan opposition to this Pope. And it will split the Church... So, following this article one might be led to believe there is such a movement afoot to split the progressive Catholic from the Doctrinal Catholic.I was being facetious (I think:)), but I "do" notice (maybe it's because I'm online more than when BXVI was elected) that there IS a hostility toward Pope Francis (by a few Catholics!!) that I wasn't aware of for Benedict. They are different popes in some ways, of course. As our priest said today in his homily, "we've gone from Prada to Payless." So this "article" could be just that, as you suggest; a tool to further separate.
I sort of thought you were being facetious, but sometimes things can hit too close to reality it seems. Plus according to “the prophecy” this Pope should being killed before his inaugaral.
The church has only been doing it this way for nearly 2000 years, this is like the gun grabbers working on ways to take away guns, that have been in families for generations. These people are amazing.
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