1/26/19 Former Bush Mideast Adviser Elliott Abrams named U.S. special envoy for Venezuela |
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By Amir Tibon From Haaretz | Original Article Abrams is considered a foreign policy hawk, a proud 'neo-Conservative,' who signed a plea agreement in the Iran-Contra affair WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Mike Pompeo anounced on Friday that Elliott Abrams will be the State Department’s special envoy for dealing with the crisis in Venezuela. Abrams was a senior Middle East adviser in George W. Bush’s White House, and also worked for the Republican administrations of George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan. >>Read Elliott Abrams in Haaretz: >> Thanks to Trump, the Entire Mideast Now Knows: You're Either With America, or Against Us >> Bravo, President Trump, for Standing Up to Palestinian Blackmail on Jerusalem In the 1980's, Abrams served in the State Department under the Reagan administration. During that period, as part of his responsibility regarding Latin America, Abrams was involved in the Iran-Contra affair, and eventually signed a plea agreement, pleading guilty to withholding information from Congress regarding the administration's attempts to support the Nicaraguan Contra rebels. Abrams was sentenced to two years probation and was pardoned by George H.W. Bush, in 1992, after Bush lost the election of that year to Bill Clinton. Under the George W. Bush administration, Abrams was involved in crafting Middle East policy, including the 2002 “Road Map for Peace” and the U.S. support for Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza in 2005. Abrams was the first American official to learn about Israel's intent to evacuate its settlements in Gaza, during a meeting he held with then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in Rome.
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