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President Obama — fighting wars in two countries — will arrive in Norway on Thursday to accept the Nobel Peace Prize for 2009. The president will spend 26 hours in Oslo meeting the royal family, accepting the Nobel at an afternoon ceremony and attending an award banquet that evening. At the ceremony, Obama will accept a $1.4 million prize check, a gold medal and a diploma. He also will speak at the ceremony, which will be streamed live on CNN.com starting at 7 a.m. ET. He will touch on the war in Afghanistan, for which he last week announced a surge of 30,000 U.S. troops, said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs.
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The Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony 2009
Watch the live webcast from Oslo!
The Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony 2009
Watch Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Barack H. Obama receive the Nobel Peace Prize at the Oslo City Hall in Norway.
10 December, 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. (CET).
Watch the live webcast »
[CET - Central European Time. 1-2.30pm CET today is 7 - 8.30 am EST]
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/12/09/obama.nobel/index.html
Obama to spend 26 hours in Norway, pick up Nobel Peace Prize
December 9, 2009 11:34 a.m. EST
CNN) — President Obama — fighting wars in two countries — will arrive in Norway on Thursday to accept the Nobel Peace Prize for 2009.
The president will spend 26 hours in Oslo meeting the royal family, accepting the Nobel at an afternoon ceremony and attending an award banquet that evening.
At the ceremony, Obama will accept a $1.4 million prize check, a gold medal and a diploma.
He also will speak at the ceremony, which will be streamed live on CNN.com starting at 7 a.m. ET. He will touch on the war in Afghanistan, for which he last week announced a surge of 30,000 U.S. troops, said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs.
In the evening, the president will be the guest of honor at a banquet where the king and queen and the Norwegian prime minister will be among 250 attendees, Owre said.
Nominations for the prize had to be postmarked by February 1, only 12 days after Obama took office. The committee sent out its solicitation for nominations last September, two months before Obama was elected president.
The Nobel committee said it recognized his efforts at dialogue to solve complex global problems, including working toward a world free of nuclear weapons.
Some analysts have speculated that the prize could give Obama additional clout as he forms a new strategy for the war in Afghanistan and attempts to engage Iran and North Korea.
Obama, the first African-American to win the White House, is the fourth U.S. president to win the prestigious prize and the third sitting president to do so.
The ceremony honoring the winners in the other Nobel Prize categories also will be held Thursday, but in Stockholm, Sweden. Those winners were picked by a committee separate from the one that determines the Peace Prize winner.
December 10 is the anniversary of the death of Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite and founder of the prizes.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/12/09/obamas-nobel-peace-prize-_n_386660.html
BEN FELLER | 12/ 9/09 07:54 PM |
The president departed Wednesday to Oslo in an overnight flight, in time to be there for the award ceremony and banquet, and not much more. His minimalist approach reflects a White House that sees little value in touting an honor for peace just nine days after Obama announced he was sending 30,000 more troops to the war in Afghanistan.
The contrast has been stark for weeks. Obama won the award in early October, just as his review of a revamped war plan was intensifying. He and two speechwriters pivoted attention to the Nobel address the very day after Obama announced he was escalating the U.S. forces in Afghanistan to their highest levels.
So Obama, honored for strengthening international diplomacy, will use his speech to discuss what goes into the decision to expand a war.
The president is expected to outline his vision of American leadership and emphasize the responsibilities of all nations to advance the cause of peace.
The list of Nobel peace laureates over the last 100 years includes transformative figures and giants on the world stage. They include heroes of the president, such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela, and others he has long admired, such as George Marshall, who launched a postwar recovery plan for Europe.
Obama is writing much of the speech himself. He has been reading the Nobel speeches by past winners to help shape his thinking.
But back home in a nation struggling with war and recession, the White House is respectfully but quietly viewing this as a one-speech trip, in and out.
Obama will not do a full-scale news conference or a traditional post-ceremony interview with CNN.
As part of the festivities, Obama will offer remarks at a formal dinner banquet, where he will be joined by Norwegian royalty. Yet Obama leaves Oslo on Friday and will be long gone by the time an elaborate concert featuring celebrity musicians takes place in his honor.
The Nobel honor comes with a $1.4 million prize. The White House says Obama will give that to charities but has not yet decided which ones.
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Associated Press writer Ian MacDougall in Oslo contributed to this story.

Please forward this to Human Rights organizations:
In Saudi Arabia (by policy and culture) no Jew is allowed there:
The Saudi government