Ага - его резидент разведслужбы Свазиленда в Кении завербовал. Тем не менее - элементы системы ПРО в Европе, мягко говоря , совсем не нужны. Другое дело - что систему быстрого реагирования на выбрыки новоядерных "типа государств" всё равно придётся создавать. И может даже - международные силы по поддержанию мира.
Жизнь дается человеку один раз и прожить ее надо так, чтобы не ошибиться в рецептах.
Строить Асгардию побуждает тьма, посетившая людские души
Wikipedia
In the United States, the term czar has been used by the media to refer to appointed executive branch officials since at least the early 1940s.[3] In 1942, The Washington Post reported on the "executive orders creating new czars to control various aspects of our wartime economy."[4] Positions were created for a transportation czar, a manpower czar, and a production czar, all to solve difficult problems in coordinating the resources necessary to fight World War II.[5] Not only did the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt advocate their creation; in December 1944, Republicans in Congress advocated that a "food czar" position be created that would have almost unlimited control over food pricing and distribution.[6]
Since then, a number of ad hoc temporary as well as permanent United States Executive Branch positions have been established that have been referred to in this manner. The trend began again in earnest when President Richard Nixon created two offices whose heads became known as "czars" in the popular press: drug czar in 1971,[7] and especially energy czar in December 1973[8] referring to William E. Simon's appointment as the head of the Federal Energy Administration.[9] Nixon told his cabinet that Simon would have "absolute authority" in his designated areas, and compared the intended result to Albert Speer's role as the person in unquestioned charge of armaments for the Third Reich.[10] Simon found both the informal title "czar" and the Speer comparison unsettling.[10] However, at the height of the Arab oil embargo, Simon gave the position a good name by successfully putting into place a mandatory fuel allocation program and calming public fears about shortages without resorting to explicit gasoline rationing.[11]
Other examples of this usage include "drug czar" for the head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, "terrorism czar" for a Presidential advisor on terrorism policy, "cybersecurity czar" for the highest-ranking Department of Homeland Security official on computer security and information security policy, and "war czar" to oversee the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy |
|