jay: (stopthat)
jay ([personal profile] jay) wrote2003-03-20 07:26 pm

Nearly speechless

After a long day at JPL, I arrived back here at my hotel and checked email... and was shocked. A broadcast message to employees:

Effective immediately, all Agencies at the U.S. Embassy in Paris must submit a complete and current list of all travelers in France on a weekly basis. In addition, all Paris agencies must have the ability to quickly contact travelers in the event that the Embassy's emergency cascade system is activated.

France? France??? Yes, things have been tense, but do they seriously think US Government employees or their dependents might have to be evacuated en masse? Or rescued? This is the sort of precaution that we used to have to take when visiting East Bloc countries during the Cold War, or when going into a third-world trouble spot.

(shakes head in disbelief)

Or perhaps violent anti-war protesters...

[identity profile] shadopanther.livejournal.com 2003-03-20 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
UK Guardian article on around the world anti-war protests, including violent protests around the world. The article starts:

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Hundreds of thousands of people marched on American embassies in world capitals Thursday to protest the war against Iraq, including a violent clash in Cairo, where demonstrators hurled stones and metal barricades and pounded on cars. [...more at the link.]

(I found the Guardian article c/o [livejournal.com profile] lkeele's journal. She is a US citizen making her home in Cairo, Egypt.)

-- Shadopanther

Re: Or perhaps violent anti-war protesters...

[identity profile] brian1789.livejournal.com 2003-03-21 07:30 am (UTC)(link)
That might apply to Americans elsewhere in the Middle East... or perhaps fixed targets like embassies. But why France, and not, say, Germany or Greece?