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Common Ground Common Sense > National & International News > Op-Ed Articles from the Mainstream Media > Op-Ed Articles from the Mainstream Media Archive
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Snuffysmith
CHAN AKYA
Ben, beef and Buddha

The rise in food prices globally threatens to undo all the good work on the anti-inflation front by central bankers over the past two decades (excluding exposing economies to frequent asset bubbles). Ben Bernanke's decision to cut interest rates last month now looks monumentally stupid; the only solution is to encourage Americans and Asians to turn to Buddha. - Chan Akya
(Oct 12, '07)
Snuffysmith
Foreign Policy News and Commentary Update October 12, 2008

AN OPEN LETTER TO [UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS] KAREN HUGHES: YOUR DUTY IS TO DEFEND AMERICA'S REPUTATION IN THE WORLD. TO DO SO, YOU MUST PERSUADE THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION TO RENOUNCE ITS ABHORRENT AND HYPOCRITICAL POLICY ON TORTURE - SIDNEY BLUMENTHAL (SALON, OCTOBER 11): .
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/20...ghes/print.html

DIPLOMATIC LESSONS FROM CHINA - PRICE FLOYD AND NIRAV PATEL (BOSTON GLOBE, OCTOBER 12): President Bush's "go it alone" foreign policy continues to engender ill will toward the United States. Meanwhile, Beijing has taken this opportunity to develop a masterful public diplomacy strategy that capitalizes on America's public diplomacy shortcomings. While Washington anoints ice skater Michelle Kwan and baseball legend Cal Ripken as public diplomacy emissaries, China is actively signing free trade agreements and extending development assistance to dozens of countries around the world.http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...m_china?mode=PF

SHADES OF HOOVER WILLIAM M. ARKIN (WASHINGTONPOST.COM, OCTOBER 10): http://blog.washingtonpost.com/earlywarnin...10/post_18.html

PRIVATE MILITARY CONTRACTORS: PRIVATIZING TERROR, OUTSOURCING DIPLOMACY -- WAJAHAT ALI INTERVIEWS PETER WARREN SINGER OF THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTE ON THE TURMOIL CAUSED BY BLACKWATER AND OTHER PRIVATE MILITARY CONTRACTORS FUNCTIONING IN IRAQ (ALT.MUSLIM, OCTOBER 10): http://www.altmuslim.com/a/a/a/2607/

HOW TO COPE WITH GLOBAL JIHAD - ARIEL COHEN (REAL CLEAR POLITICS, OCTOBER 12): Israeli efforts to engage in strategic information operations were and remain virtually nonexistent. The budget of Al Manar is greater than the entire Israeli foreign ministry public diplomacy (hasbara) budget. The architect of this failing public diplomacy/strategic information policy under former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Raanan Gissin, has admitted himself that Jerusalem was particularly lacking on this battlefield. Winning hearts and minds is and will remain the greatest challenge for Israel -- and the West -- in the forthcoming wars against the jihadis.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/printpage...obal_jihad.html
SYRIA MAKE UP YOUR FREEKING MIND !!!! (YID WITH LID, OCTOBER 10): "Read this report from the NY Crimes below: Syria Tells Journalists Israeli Raid Did Not Occur - Hugh Naylor: 'Osama Durrah, a Ph.D. student at the Arab-European University in Syria, said ... 'Syria has valid claims to be made, like reclaiming the Golan Heights from Israel; it just doesn't have the public diplomacy skills to match the Israelis.'
http://yidwithlid.blogspot.com/2007/10/syr...eking-mind.html
GERMANY'S AFGHANISTAN CONUNDRUM: PUBLIC OPINION HAS TURNED AGAINST THE WAR - ULF GARTZKE (DAILY STANDARD, OCTOBER 12): If Germany's continued military presence in Afghanistan were to be seen as the result of trying to conform to American pressures, the public diplomacy case for sustaining the German mission there would certainly be lost at the hands of left-wing demagogues waiting to play the potent card of latent anti-Americanism. Right now, there's already a widespread perception in Germany that the Bundeswehr's Afghan deployment is, above all, part of President Bush's "global war on terror," aka the neocon crusade.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Publ...14/211fkmyn.asp
PROPAGANDA BY DEED - ROB (STEPH'S BLOG: VIVA LA REVOLUCIÓN, OCTOBER 11): There is no such thing as a free speech -- the State hold a monopoly on propaganda -- the only means to communicate is through violence -- propaganda by deed. Propaganda by deed is communication through action not words.
http://stephiblog.wordpress.com/2007/10/11...aganda-by-deed/
SEE ALSO
Karen Hughes and Her 'Diplomacy of Deeds' John Brown (Common Dreams, April 9, 2007)
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/04/09/411/
BUSH SAYS POSSIBLE US IRAN ATTACK 'EMPTY PROPAGANDA' - JOHN BYRNE AND DAVID EDWARDS (RAW STORY, OCTOBER 7)
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Bush_says_po...ttack_1007.html
CUT IRAN DEMOCRACY FUNDING, GROUPS TELL U.S.: IRANIAN AMERICANS, OTHERS SAY PROGRAM HAS BACKFIRED - ROBIN WRIGHT (WASHINGTON POST, OCTOBER 11): More than two dozen Iranian American and human rights groups have launched an appeal to Congress to reduce or eliminate new financial support of up to $75 million aimed at promoting democracy inside Iran.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...1002441_pf.html
CHINA IS THE NEW AMERICA - PAUL D. KRETKOWSKI (BEACON, OCTOBER 11): The idea of China as a symbol of potential prosperity is taking hold, seeping into the consciousness of ordinary Africans and occupying a place that the United States, and to some extent European countries, once claimed.
http://softpowerbeacon.blogspot.com/2007/1...ew-america.html
TERROR AND WORLD HUNGER: GAMES INDUSTRY DISCOVERS GITMO, HUNGER AND OTHER SERIOUS ISSUES - HILMAR SCHMUNDT (SPIEGEL INTERNATIONAL, OCTOBER 8): A new breed of computer games -- so-called "serious games" -- has been developed to help interest and educate young people about the world's political conflicts. "Darfur is Dying," for example, invites players to imagine themselves as refugees in western Sudan forced to hide from the brutal Janjaweed militias. The game was developed at the University of Southern California with the support of firms such as Reebok and MTV. "When I conduct a teach-in on Second Life, I'm able to show films, present documentaries and let eyewitnesses speak-- and I reach people all over the world," says the well-known and controversial Mark Denbeaux, 64, a law professor at Seton Hall University, in New Jersey. He also works as a lawyer for Guantánamo prisoners.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitge...,510688,00.html
ATTACKS INCREASE IN IRAQ: MILITANTS RECRUIT DISPLACED YOUNG MEN - JUAN COLE (INFORMED COMMENT: THOUGHTS ON THE MIDDLE EAST, HISTORY, AND RELIGION, OCTOBER 11): The number of attacks in Iraq has increased in recent days, frustrating US military commanders who were hoping a corner had been turned and that violence would steadily be reduced.
http://www.juancole.com/2007/10/attacks-in...-militants.html
NO, THE US IS NOT WINNING IN ANBAR WILLIAM S. LIND (ANTIWAR.COM, OCTOBER 11): No, we are not winning in Iraq. The only meaningful definition of "winning" is seeing the re-emergence of a real Iraqi state, and by that standard we are no closer to victory than we ever were.
http://www.antiwar.com/lind/?articleid=11737
WAR STORIES: WHAT CAN WE STILL ACHIEVE IN IRAQ? RECONCILIATION'S OFF THE TABLE, BUT THERE ARE OTHER DECENT WAYS OUT - FRED KAPLAN (SLATE, OCTOBER 10): To keep the sectarian violence from spreading beyond Iraq's borders, and possibly to keep it from doing too much harm within, the United States has no choice but to embark on a campaign of creative regional diplomacy involving all the states of the region.
http://www.slate.com/id/2175649/
SCAPEGOATING BLACKWATER: US SOLDIERS COMMIT WAR CRIMES AT ONE-NINTH THE PRICE ? TED RALL (TEDRALL.COM, OCTOBER 10/COMMON DREAMS): It isn't just Blackwater. Official U.S. soldiers are no less stupid or vicious or trigger-happy than their private counterparts.
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/10/4448/
A CHANGING IRAQ: NEWFOUND OPTIMISM - VICTOR DAVIS HANSON (NATIONAL REVIEW, OCTOBER 11): Over the last 90 days, there has been newfound optimism, as Iraqis are at last stepping forward to help Americans secure their country. Lost in all this confusion over Iraq is the fact that about 160,000 gifted American soldiers are trying to help rebuild an entire civilization socially, politically and economically -- and defeat killers in their midst who will murder far beyond Iraq if not stopped.
http://article.nationalreview.com/print/?q...N2FlNDU4MmNmZmQ=
THE FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE IRAQ WAR RESOLUTION: WHY WE CAN?T FORGIVE OR FORGET - STEPHEN ZUNES (COMMON DREAMS, OCTOBER 11): Support for the 2002 Iraq war resolution is not something that can simply be forgiven and forgotten.
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/10/4445/
WHO LOST TURKEY?? JUAN COLE (INFORMED COMMENT: THOUGHTS ON THE MIDDLE EAST, HISTORY, AND RELIGION, OCTOBER 12): Turkey is almost everything the U.S. could have asked for in the Middle East. But the Bush administration has, during the past five years, increasingly thrown away this asset, and now is in danger of losing a close and valued ally altogether. No dispassionate observer could avoid the conclusion that the Congressional vote condemning Turkey came at a most inopportune time for US-Turkish diplomacy.
http://www.juancole.com/2007/10/who-lost-turkey.html
NO LEGITIMATE JUSTIFICATION FOR WAR WITH IRAN SCOTT RITTER (BRITANNICA BLOG, OCTOBER 10/COMMON DREAMS)
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/10/4437/
SURGE PROTECTORS: THE MIXED MOTIVES BEHIND THE FREEDOM's WATCH AD CAMPAIGN - PHILIP WEISS (AMERICAN CONSERVATIVE, OCTOBER 8): Since 9/11, supporters of Israel have managed to convince themselves and the Bush administration that the United States is in the same war against terror as Israel is. This conviction has proved disastrous for the U.S., but it draws on a deeply imbedded understanding in the Jewish community of the intransigence of the Arab world.
http://amconmag.com/2007/2007_10_08/article1.html
LIEBERMAN WARNS AGAINST RAISING 'CORE ISSUES' AT ANNAPOLIS PARLEY - JPOST STAFF AND AP (JERUSALEM POST, OCTOBER 11): A decision to place core issues at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- including final borders, right of return for Palestinian refugees, and the status of Jerusalem -- on the agenda of a US-sponsored Middle East parley in Annapolis could break up the government, Strategic Affairs Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Thursday. "Right now, the nations of the world need to concentrate most on security and economic issues in the Middle East," Lieberman told Quartet Middle East envoy Tony Blair during a meeting.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid...ticle%2FPrinter
SELLING OUT ISRAEL BY BITS - CAL THOMAS (WASHINGTON TIMES, OCTOBER 12): Name one concession Israel has made in recent years that has been reciprocated by its sworn enemies. This is not a trick question. There are none. That's why next month's announced "Middle East Summit" in Annapolis should be viewed as one more installment payment in selling out Israel and U.S. interests in the Middle East.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.d...mplate=printart
GETTING SYRIA INSIDE THE TENT EDITORIAL (BOSTON GLOBE, OCTOBER 12): In refusing to change course on the diplomatic tracks Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has been pursuing in Northeast Asia and the Middle East, Bush appears to be heeding pragmatic skeptics in his administration such as Defense Secretary Robert Gates -- who, as a former director of CIA, may be expected to know how to evaluate ambiguous intelligence data.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...he_tent?mode=PF
THAW MISSION TO MOSCOW RICHARD LUGAR (WASHINGTON TIMES, OCTOBER 12): Until now, the U.S. proposal for a limited, regional missile defense system in Central Europe, directed at rogue states, has sparked anger in Russia and anxiety among many Europeans. However, bold and enlightened leaders can turn this into productive discussions over a more global approach to defenses against nuclear attacks. (Richard G. Lugar, Indiana Republican, is ranking member of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee.)
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.d...mplate=printart
RELEASE THE TORTURE MEMOS EDITORIAL (BOSTON GLOBE, OCTOBER 11): The Bush administration let Congress pass a law setting standards for interrogations that the administration had already decided -- in secret -- that it could ignore.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...e_memos?mode=PF
ARMED DEMOCRACY: THE BATTLES WITHIN THE WAR ON TERROR [REVIEW OF THE TERROR PRESIDENCY: LAW AND JUDGMENT INSIDE THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION BY JACK GOLDSMITH] - TERRY EASTLAND (WEEKLY STANDARD, OCTOBER 15): Surely we are fortunate that, whatever else may be said about George W. Bush's war presidency, on his watch, so far at least, the country has not seen a repeat of 9/11.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Publ...14/189dtjur.asp
THE IMPERIAL FALLACY: IS THE UNITED STATES AN EMPIRE, A HEGEMON, OR WHAT? AND WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE IDEA OF THE U.S. AS AN EXEMPLARY LIBERAL DEMOCRACY? ? MICHAEL LIND (AMERICAN PROSPECT, OCTOBER 10): If liberal internationalism is to be restored as the basis of U.S. foreign policy, then the first step must be to insist that liberal internationalism is not simply another kind of imperialism and that the United States is not simply another empire.
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?articl...mperial_fallacy
A BANG OR A WHIMPER - DAN FROOMKIN (WASHINGTONPOST.COM, OCTOBER 10): Bush appears to be facing an ever-deepening rift among his chief advisers, with Cheney and his loyalists advocating a more confrontational response to international challenges and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice marshalling support for diplomacy. Given how trigger-happy Cheney appears to be, and how little credibility this White House has on the international stage, Bush essentially faces the choice of whether to end his tenure with a bang or a whimper.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...1001272_pf.html



_______________________________________________

Snuffysmith
As Americans, I know that you believe in fair play, a core American
value. Which means, I submit, that if a top official of a country that
the U.S. is in conflict with is reported as making a statement which
creates an uproar, and if subsequently an official of that country
attempts to clarify the remarks, and says that the official did not,
in fact, say the thing that it was reported that he said, one ought to
know about the attempted clarification. Which is not to say that one
has to accept that the clarification is true; nor even that if the
clarification is true, that it is mitigating; only that having a fair
and informed opinion requires that one knows of the attempted
clarification.

Therefore, I wish to share with you the following. According to a
Reuters report from October 10, published on the New York Times
website yesterday:

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran was misrepresented by
Western news media when he was quoted saying there were no homosexuals
in Iran, and actually meant there were not as many as in the United
States, an aide to Ahmadinejad said Wednesday.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-naima...-s_b_68225.html

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/10/12/12435/115
Snuffysmith
Noteworthy new reports from the Congressional Research Service that
have not been made readily available to the public include the
following.

"China-U.S. Relations: Current Issues and Implications for U.S.
Policy," updated October 1, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL33877.pdf

"North Korean Refugees in China and Human Rights Issues: International
Response and U.S. Policy Options," September 26, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL34189.pdf

"Saudi Arabia: Terrorist Financing Issues," updated September 14, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/terror/RL32499.pdf

"Terrorism in Southeast Asia," September 11, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/terror/RL34194.pdf

"Bangladesh: Background and U.S. Relations," updated August 2, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL33646.pdf

"Cuba: Issues for the 110th Congress," updated August 21, 2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL33819.pdf

"Presidential Directives: Background and Overview," updated August 9,
2007:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/98-611.pdf
Snuffysmith
Friday, October 12, 2007



Commentary: New global paradigm

By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE, UPI Editor at Large

WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 (UPI) -- So far, watching the presidential pre-debate debates, no one has suggested how he or she wants the world to look like 15 to 20 years on the high road to the future. No one seems to have noticed, let alone mentioned, a new global paradigm: the newfound importance of rivers of capital that have displaced the flow of goods for measuring national wealth. Also new actors on the global stage that defy accountability. There are some 3,000 hedge funds, sans code of conduct, with $1.7 trillion under management, which is expected to double in five years.

For years, the Bush administration discounted, even pooh-poohed, the vast amount of U.S. paper held by China. It's about $750 billion of the $1.3 trillion in the central banks of Asian countries (mostly China, Japan and Taiwan). The fact America's critics abroad were saying and writing Washington has to borrow $3 billion a day to keep up its standard of living while fighting costly wars in the Middle East and Afghanistan was dismissed as cheap shots. Bush administration experts said China would only be hurting itself if it decided to suddenly redeem U.S. paper or buy euros instead. At 1.40 to the dollar, the euro looks pretty sexy to central bankers holding mountains of dollars.

Overlooked in Washington's comforting assumptions was the new phenomenon of "Sovereign Wealth Funds." These are a growing but little-understood trend of foreign governments converting their U.S. debt holdings into SWF, or SIF, for "sovereign investment funds." These have been set up to take advantage of investment opportunities in the United States and other countries -- e.g., a 10 percent chunk of Blackstone bought by China for $3 billion.

Many countries that now control an estimated $2.5 trillion in investment funds are emulating the example. The Dubai Ports fiasco -- $6.8 billion for the management of six major U.S. ports that was withdrawn because of congressional opposition -- grabbed the headlines, but scores of other investments by SWFs are taking place below the radar. There is, understandably, the natural fear these funds are quietly buying national assets. Some 800 U.S.-owned companies, from Samsonite to GE Plastics, were subject to foreign buyouts in 2007.

Morgan Stanley, in a widely quoted study, projects SWFs ballooning to a mind-numbing $17.5 trillion in 10 years, or one-third of today's world economy. With foreign governments now holding stocks and bonds, and not just Treasury securities, the question poses itself: Will SWFs be a stabilizing or destabilizing force? Probably both -- but at different times.

The value of global mergers and acquisitions so far this year has reached $3.85 trillion, up from $2.81 trillion at the corresponding point last year, according to data from Dealogic.

Outside of Asia, most of the other funds get their money from oil exports. Gulf oil states have been quietly doing their thing since the 1973-74 oil embargo. But of late, with oil prices soaring again, so have their foreign investments in Europe, Asia and North and South America. About $1 trillion is currently liquid in petro dollars.

As of this week, some $300 billion is looking for a parking space while $600 billion is still circling the globe on recon missions. That's almost $1 trillion right now looking for a safe haven.

We still tend to think in terms of goods and services. But these are dwarfed by a capital tsunami. Trade is phenomenal, but the driver is capital. And trade bureaucrats are measuring national wealth with outmoded yardsticks.

This week, "Retooling U.S. International Economic Policy for a Global Age" was the topic at a roundtable of experts organized by the Center for Strategic & International Studies. The alleged primacy of goods and services as the true test of a nation's wealth is the kind of thinking that anchors the United States to obsolete international organizations, said Tim Adams, managing director of the Lindsey Group and a former undersecretary of treasury for international affairs. The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, and the World Trade Organization were all spawned by the Bretton Woods system in the post-World War II era, when 1 percent of voting rights for the developing world was considered fair and normal. But this bears little, if any, relationship to the world of the 21st century.

There is now talk of merging the World Bank (10,000 employees) and the International Monetary Fund (5,000), a change that would at the same time reflect the new balance of power in the world. China, Russia, India, South Africa and Brazil are now major players on a redesigned world stage. The fundamental problem of underdevelopment is no longer a lack of capital. "We no longer have the luxury of dividing international trade and finance into separate realms, either for analysis or for policymaking," said a CSIS working paper. "In this global age they have become inextricably linked."

Most speakers at the CSIS roundtable agreed the Doha Round was "moribund." That's the round of multilateral trade negotiations in the WTO that began in January 2002, named after the capital city of Qatar. Countries that impose controls on capital are now the problem. And lowering those barriers should be the objective to enhance the transparency and predictability of financial flows in the global system.

The question for national debate is whether global financial liberalization should become the new target of U.S. trade policy. The aim should be a broader opening of global markets for financial services -- which would then boost goods and services.

The ongoing controversy over China's exchange rate, said the CSIS paper, "and the distortions that flow to the U.S. economy through our trading relationship with China begin with the lack of a functioning capital market. As a result, risks cannot be priced accurately and capital allocated efficiently while "China's misallocation of capital begins to shape the allocation of capital in the U.S. as well."

Before being seduced by the siren song of protectionism, presidential candidates should study the new paradigm. Barriers to transnational financial flows are harmful -- and the next president should take the lead in advocating their dismantlement.




--

Copyright 2007 by United Press International.

All rights reserved.



Snuffysmith


Meddling Aggressively in Iran
By Selig S. Harrison

[SELIG S. HARRISON, director of the Asia Program at the Center for International Policy, is a senior scholar of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. He has specialized in South Asia and East Asia for fifty years as a journalist and scholar and is the author of six books on Asian affairs and U.S. relations with Asia.]

The battle lines are familiar and clearly drawn in the unresolved policy
struggle over Iran within the Bush administration. Vice- President Richard
Cheney and his allies in the Pentagon and Congress, prodded by the
American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), not only want the United
States to bomb the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, but are also
calling for air strikes on Iranian military installations near the Iraq
border.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice wants to test diplomacy first by
broadening the US-Iran negotiations on stabilising Iraq that began in
Baghdad in May. But, as the price for postponement of a decision on
military action, she has agreed to a self-defeating compromise that has
directly undermined the Baghdad negotiations: increased covert action to
destabilise the Islamic Republic, formalised by a presidential "finding"
in April.

Covert action to undermine the Tehran regime has already been under way
intermittently for the past decade. Until now, however, the CIA has
operated without a finding (authorisation for covert action) by using
proxies. Pakistan and Israel, for example, provide weapons and money to
insurgent groups in southeast and northwest Iran, where the Baluch and
Kurdish ethnic minorities, both Sunni Muslim, have long fought against the
repression of Shia-dominated Persian regimes.

The presidential finding was necessary to permit accelerated non- lethal
activities by US agencies. Besides expanded propaganda broadcasts, a media
disinformation campaign and the use of US and European-based Iranian
exiles to promote political dissent, the programme focuses on economic
warfare, especially currency rate manipulation and the disruption of
Iran's international banking and trade.

Although the finding was nominally secret, it did not stay secret for long
after it was reported to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, as
required by law.

On a recent visit to Tehran, everyone was talking about it, and both
conservatives and reformers agreed that it came at an unusually damaging
moment of genuine opportunity for cooperation with the United States in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Senior officials in the foreign ministry, the
National Security Council, the office of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
and pro-government think tanks all said that stability in Iraq and
Afghanistan is in Iran's interest. Cooperation with the US is possible,
they said, but only in return for a gradual accommodation between
Washington and Tehran, starting with a complete cessation of covert and
overt regime change policies.

"The United States is like a fox caught in a trap in Iraq," said Amir
Mohiebian, editor of the conservative daily Reselaat. "Why should we free
the fox so he can eat us? Of course, if the US changes its policy, there
is scope for cooperation."

At the other end of the journalistic spectrum, Mohammed Adrianfar, editor
of Hammihan, identified with the moderate former president, Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani, said: "The atmosphere here is for starting negotiations and
relations. People want stability. The slogan 'Death to America' doesn't
work, and our leaders know it. It's an irony that two governments which
are now enemies have many of the same interests in Iraq and Afghanistan."

While officials would not discuss whether Iran is aiding Shia militias in
Iraq and, if so, which ones, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, chairman of the Majlis
(parliament) Foreign Affairs Committee, criticised US "coddling" of
Baathist and Sunni elements and made it clear that Iran expects Shia
domination as the prerequisite for stability in Baghdad and for US-Iranian
cooperation there as part of an overall accommodation.

"The US occupying authorities are not truly pursuing de- Baathification of
the security forces," he said, "and should give the Iraqi government
greater freedom to do so. That is the key to cooperation between our
countries in Iraq."

US-backed militia

The best way for the United States to start rolling back its regime change
policy, both editors and several officials said, would be to dismantle a
US-backed militia of Iranian exiles based in Iraq, known as the
Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MEK). The MEK supported Saddam Hussein in the 1980-88
Iran-Iraq war and subsequently its 3,600 fighters, many of them women,
stayed on in Iraq.

According to US sources, since the invasion of Iraq US intelligence
agencies have disarmed the fighters but have kept the MEK camps near the
Iranian border intact, using MEK operatives for espionage and sabotage in
Iran and to interrogate Iranians accused of aiding Shia militias in Iraq.

Until recently, MEK radio and TV stations broadcasting to Iran were based
in Iraq, but Iranian pressure on the Baghdad government forced their
relocation to London. When the moderate Mohammad Khatami was elected
president of Iran in 1997, the State Department made a conciliatory
gesture by listing the MEK as a terrorist organisation guilty of human
rights violations, and it is still on the list.

Dismantling the MEK paramilitary forces would be an effective way to
signal US readiness to accommodate Tehran, suggested Abbas Maleki, an
adviser to the National Security Council, since it is the only militarised
exile group seeking to overthrow the Islamic Republic and is the darling
of the Washington lobby for regime change in Iran. Alireza Jaffarzadeh,
chairman of the MEK's front group, the National Council of Resistance of
Iran, appears regularly on the conservative TV channel Fox News as its
Iran expert, rather like the pro-US Iraqi politician Ahmad Chalabi before
the Iraq invasion, rallying Congressional and media support for military
action against Iran.

As its terrorist listing of the MEK showed, the Clinton administration
hoped for a diplomatic opening to Iran. When the Republican House speaker,
Newt Gingrich, pushed through an $18m appropriation for non-lethal covert
action to force the replacement of the current regime in Iran, the White
House restrained the CIA. But the Bush administration was quick to change
course. Cheney shared Gingrich's goal of regime change and he persuaded
doubters that pressure on Tehran would strengthen the United States in
negotiations to end the uranium enrichment programme. First, the
administration revived and expanded the dormant plans for direct US
non-lethal covert action. Then, in February 2006, it obtained a $75m
appropriation from Congress for an overt State Department programme "to
promote openness and freedom for the Iranian people". Finally, it cast
about for covert ways to harass the regime militarily without the need for
a formal presidential finding.

The most readily available means of doing this was to get Pakistan and
Israel to arm and finance already-existing insurgent groups in the Baluch
and Kurdish areas through well-established US ties with Pakistan's
Interservices Intelligence Directorate (ISI) and the Israeli intelligence
agency Mossad.

The ISI channelled weapons and money to an already established Iranian
Baluch dissident group, Jundullah (Soldiers of God), which inflicted heavy
casualties in raids on Iranian Revolutionary Guard units in Zahedan and
southeast Iran in 2006 and 2007. The US made no effort to hide its support
for Jundullah. On 2 April 2007, Voice of America radio interviewed its
leader, Abdolmalek Rigi, introducing him as "the leader of the popular
resistance movement of Iran." Several of my Baluch contacts recently
provided detailed proof of Rigi's ISI ties.

Mossad contacts

Mossad has built up contacts in the Kurdish areas of Iran and Iraq since
it used bases in Iran during the days of the Shah to destabilise the
Kurdish areas of Iraq. Against this background, Seymour Hersh's report
that Mossad is giving equipment and training to the Iranian Kurdish group
Pejak is credible. Jon Lee Anderson interviewed a senior Kurdish official
in Iraq who said that Pejak is operating out of bases in Iraqi Kurdistan
to conduct raids in Iran and has "received covert US support." In
retaliation, Iran bombarded these bases for two weeks in late August,
prompting Iraqi protests.

The most dangerous latent separatist threat facing Tehran is in the
southwestern province of Khuzestan, which produces 80% of its crude oil
revenue. The Arab Shia of Khuzestan share a common ethnic and religious
identity with the Arab Shia across the Shatt-al-Arab waterway in Iraq.
Ahwaz, the capital of Khuzestan, is only 150km east of Basra, where
British forces in Iraq have been headquartered.

Not surprisingly, in the light of history, Tehran accuses Britain of using
Basra as an intelligence base for stirring discontent in Khuzestan.

Backed by British forces and British oil interests, the Arab princes of
Khuzestan seceded from Persia in 1897, and established a British-
controlled protectorate, Arabistan, which Persia did not recapture until
1925. Although most of Iran's oil wealth is produced in Khuzestan,
separatist groups charge that Tehran denies the province a fair share of
economic development funds. So far, the scattered separatist factions have
not created a unified military force like the Jundullah and no evidence of
foreign help has surfaced. But they periodically raid government security
installations and bomb oil production facilities.

Several broadcast propaganda in Arabic from foreign locations that are not
clearly identified. The National Liberation Movement of Ahwaz, which
advocates independence, operates Ahwaz TV, a satellite channel with an
on-screen caption giving a fax number with a California area code. Another
satellite channel, Al-Ahwaz TV, broadcast by Iranian exiles in California,
is linked to the British- Ahwaz Friendship Society, which advocates
regional autonomy for the province in a federal Iran. Nearly half ($36m)
of the $75m 2006 US appropriation goes to support for the US-operated
Voice of America and Radio Farda and to anti-regime broadcasting outlets
run by Iranian exiles in the United States, Canada and Britain.

Another $20m goes to NGO human rights activists in Iran and the US.
Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns has revealed that "we are working
with Arab and European organisations to support democratic groups within
Iran," since getting direct US funding into Iran "is a very difficult
thing for us to do" given "the harsh Iranian government response against
the Iranian individuals."

One Iranian participant in a US-sponsored workshop in Dubai last year told
the Iranian-American journalist Negar Azimi that "it was like a James Bond
camp for revolutionaries." Four Iranian participants were later arrested.

Counter-productive attempts

My clear impression in Tehran was that covert and overt efforts to
destabilise the Islamic Republic and pressure it economically to abandon
its nuclear programme have been counter-productive. They have given
hardliners an excuse to harass Iranians working internally to liberalise
the regime, and visiting Iranian-American dual citizens such as Haleh
Esfandiari of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, who
was imprisoned for three months on vague espionage charges.

By aiding ethnic minority insurgencies, the United States has enabled
Ahmadinejad to cast himself as the champion of the Persian majority. The
minorities constitute at most 44% of the population. The largest, the
Azeris (24%) have been mostly assimilated, and the rebellious Baluch,
Kurds, and Khuzestani Arabs are bitterly divided between advocates of
secession and of a restructured federal Iran. Ahmadinejad can also blame
external economic pressures for economic problems that are mainly the
result of his own mismanagement.

Negotiated compromises on stabilising Iraq and Afghanistan are possible,
but only if destabilisation stops and not if President Bush takes the
military steps implied in his 28 August threat "to confront Tehran's
murderous activities" in Iraq. Even if the pressure is relaxed, a
definitive nuclear compromise is unlikely in the absence of changes in the
US Persian Gulf security posture, though a suspension of the Natanz
facility might be possible if Israel would agree to a parallel freeze of
the Dimona reactor. "How can we negotiate denuclearisation while you send
aircraft carriers to the Gulf that, for all we know, are equipped with
tactical nuclear weapons?" asked Alireza Akbari, deputy defence minister
in the moderate Khatami government. "How can you expect us to negotiate
when you won't talk about Dimona?"

The covert and overt pressures so far applied to Iran are just sufficient
to infuriate Iranians of all political persuasions, strengthening the
hardliners, but are not nearly enough to undermine the regime. The
economic pressures are more effective than the covert insurgency aid. Out
of 40 European and Asian banks doing business with Iran, though, only
seven have cut ties with Iran in response to US sanctions. In any case,
Iran is routing its international business though 400 Dubai-based
financial institutions, mostly Arab. With trade between Iran and the
United Arab Emirates, including Dubai, nearing $11bn this year, US
Undersecretary of the Treasury Stuart Levey's threat of reprisals against
firms dealing with Iran, in a speech in Dubai on 7 March, were pointless.
The administration is now pushing more sharply-targeted measures against
enterprises linked to the Revolutionary Guards and the conglomerates run
by clerical interests, but their impact has been limited.

Likening the US-Iran tussle to a bull fight, a respected European
ambassador long resident in Tehran asked: "What's the point of all this?
What good does it do to keep waving the red flag? It just makes the bull
more and more angry. It doesn't kill."


From: Agence Global <rights@agenceglobal.com>


Snuffysmith
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/20...ghes/print.html





An open letter to Karen Hughes
Your duty is to defend America's reputation in the world. To do so, you must persuade the Bush administration to renounce its abhorrent and hypocritical policy on torture. By Sidney Blumenthal

Oct. 11, 2007 | Karen Hughes
Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
U.S. Department of State
2201 C St. NW
Washington, DC 20520

Dear Karen Hughes:

You may recall that we met briefly in January 2001, during the transition to the Bush administration, when you dropped by my office in the White House. You were filled with enthusiasm and I wished you good luck. Now I am writing you as the executive producer of a documentary, "Taxi to the Dark Side" (directed by Alex Gibney), to invite you to a private preview in Washington on Oct. 18. The film has been described by the New York Times as "a meticulous examination of American policy on the interrogation of prisoners. It traces the scandals at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere to official changes of policy originating in the vice president's office and approved by the secretary of defense. We see documents listing approved methods of interrogation, including waterboarding, which simulates drowning."

The film includes interviews with military interrogators, victims and families of those tortured, and with members of the Bush administration who opposed the policy, such as former general counsel of the Navy Alberto Mora and Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell.

"Taxi to the Dark Side" has won the prizes for best documentary at the Tribeca, Newport and Ojai film festivals, will be aired this month on major television channels throughout Europe, is being shown next week by special request at the European Union's annual ministerial meeting, and will be distributed commercially by Think Films in theaters throughout the U.S. and Europe in January 2008, after which it will be broadcast on the Discovery Channel. The Times calls "Taxi" devastating." The Guardian of London says its documentation is "irrefutable."

One Defense Department official, believing the administration policy on detainees and torture to be illegal and counterproductive, told me that in his and others' efforts to reverse it they approached you as a last hope. After all, you have virtually unrestricted access to the president. But he recounted that you rebuffed them, and described your attitude as dismissive.

Your complicity in the torture policy is one reason that I am writing you. Despite the futility of those inside the administration in bringing the problem to you, you still remain in place to redress it. As the undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, responsible for defending America's reputation in the world, you must engage the issue that has most seriously damaged our image. Your obligation will continue so long as you hold your post. Those who care about the good name of the United States will not cease viewing you as a last resort, even if you disdain or ignore them, because they cling to the desperate hope that a nagging conscience or its sudden awakening will compel you actually to do your job.

If you were to start performing your mission in earnest, you would have to persuade the president and his spokespeople to acknowledge the truth of their policy. On Oct. 4, the New York Times reported that in 2005 the Justice Department under former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales issued a secret opinion justifying torture despite President Bush's repeated claim, "We do not torture." According to the Times, "The new opinion, the officials said, for the first time provided explicit authorization to barrage terror suspects with a combination of painful physical and psychological tactics, including head-slapping, simulated drowning and frigid temperatures." Then Deputy Attorney General James Comey opposed the policy and "told colleagues at the department that they would all be 'ashamed' when the world eventually learned of it." When the Times' story broke, White House press secretary Dana Perino responded with a familiar refrain: "We do not torture."

Yet the revelations in the Times fit with those disclosed by the former head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, Jack Goldsmith, in his new book, "The Terror Presidency." Goldsmith was appointed to this highly sensitive position because he was trusted politically as a conservative, a member in good standing of the Federalist Society and an ardent believer in President Bush's policies. Upon assuming office in October 2003, Goldsmith began a review of existing opinions, including those on torture. As White House counsel, Gonzales had called the Geneva Convention against torture "quaint," and the president had affirmed two opinions abrogating the convention. In a now notorious opinion, written on Aug. 1, 2002, deputy assistant OLC counsel John Yoo declared that torture consisted of pain "associated with a sufficiently serious physical condition or injury such as death, organ failure, or serious impairment of body functions." In other words, torture was whatever the president said it was. Goldsmith writes that the message of the OLC opinion was clear: "The torture law doesn't apply if you act under color of presidential authority."

In his review, Goldsmith found that the legal analysis behind these opinions on torture displayed an "unusual lack of care and sobriety" and was "deeply flawed." The stakes, moreover, put at risk the United States' "decades-long global campaign to end torture, relations with the Muslim world and the nation's moral reputation and honor." Goldsmith decided that the opinions underpinning the administration's interrogation regime could not be legally defended, and he withdrew them. While Comey supported him, "important people inside the administration had come to question my fortitude for the job, and my reliability." Goldsmith resigned on principle after serving less than a year.

You are the last member of the so-called Iron Triangle of the president's Texas political team still in government. The others have departed. In an article in the Washington Post on Oct. 7, former members of the administration gave interviews presenting themselves as increasingly embittered, disenchanted and alienated. The newspaper reports, "The long-term ideals that many of them came to the White House to pursue appear jeopardized, even discredited to many. They tell themselves that they have acted on principle, that the decisions they helped make will be vindicated. But they cannot be sure." You alone remain to alter the course of events that might somehow change the historical perception of the Bush presidency and those who served him, a legacy already deeply engraved.

The genius of your appointment is that the president and his advisors understood ahead of time that they would need your services to repair the nation's reputation. After all, this position has never existed before; and it has never been so drastically needed. While it is true that there have been organizations within the government, such as U.S. Information Agency, under directors such as Edward R. Murrow and John Chancellor, that built libraries and conducted international educational exchanges, the idea of a public diplomacy czar is novel. Having someone to paper over the country's mistakes by telling people what they should think despite the reality would in the past have been considered undemocratic. Form and content, it would have been said, needed to complement each other. But your position is one in which form and content (words and deeds) stand in opposition to each other. Ironically, therefore, your job has never been more important than now.

So far, to be honest, you have earned a reputation for being out of touch, for spouting platitudes without understanding the underlying issues. You are seen as oblivious to the concerns and sensibilities of groups of foreigners with whom you have met. However noble the abstractions of your rhetoric, your speeches are uniformly received as irrelevant propaganda. Even after objective observers have called attention to this pattern, you have done little to adjust. While it would be unfair to put the entire burden of transforming the image of the United States on you, it is a sad fact that your actions have deepened cynicism about American motives. And your inability to change has been consistent with the administration's unwillingness to shift course in the face of demonstrable failure.

If you still wish to succeed, you must finally come to terms with how you and the administration are perceived. Self-awareness is the first step to recovery. Denial has been more than this administration's pervasive state of mind; it has become its prevailing strategy. When other rationales have been shown to be false, hollow or self-undermining, denial has invariably become the last defense. Even when presented with irrefutable facts -- there were no WMD, there were no links between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden, and torture has indeed been the official policy -- the administration resorts to transparent gestures of denial: "We do not torture." But repeating a falsehood does not make it true. As one American president who was a keen student of public opinion put it: "You cannot fool all of the people all of the time." But this truism does not seem to have come to the attention of the White House or of your office. I hope it is not a shock to you that the strategy of denial is not working. It is your job, after all, not only to take into account the considered views of others but to assess objectively what works and what does not. Acknowledging that this persistent reaction is not achieving its goal is essential to learning from failure.

The issue of torture is a special case. Torture is state-sanctioned deviant behavior. It is degrading, arbitrary, cruel and illegal. As all responsible intelligence officers know, torture is the least productive technique of all, and torture yields inherently tainted information. Torture destroys the humanity of more than those tortured. It destroys the souls of those performing the torture. When Americans torture, Americans are shattered. Torture feeds secrecy. It undermines democracy. And it is shameful. Even the Gestapo and the KGB tried to hide their torture. Torture is considered uncivilized by most of the world's nations. At the Nuremberg war crimes tribunals, the U.S. tried, convicted and executed Nazi leaders for engaging in torture. Those that do not adhere to international treaties against torture are rightly branded rogue nations. Torture is the mark of tyrannies.

Moral authority is an impalpable but measurable quality in U.S. foreign policy. From our founding, the idea that the nation should be an example to the world has been central to our identity and leadership. When we have fallen short of our ideals, our willingness to engage in self-examination and self-reform has been critical to our reputation as a special nation. Our credentials for leadership have depended upon our capacity for change.

Nations may blunder and presidents may miscalculate. But nations that commit crimes against humanity and presidents who authorize torture have been deemed pariahs, subject to international quarantine and opprobrium. After World War II, the U.S. was widely admired for its leadership in establishing the Geneva Conventions and the United Nations Charter for Universal Human Rights. The American conduct at the Nuremberg tribunals set the highest standards and respect for human rights, justice and the rule of law. When U.S. officials such as yourself ask foreign peoples to embrace the ideals and values that they clearly see being violated by the administration's behavior, you succeed only in fostering cognitive dissonance at best and contempt for hypocrisy at worst.

Since the Revolutionary War, at the order of George Washington, Americans have consistently opposed torture as a policy. Only one president, George W. Bush, has adopted torture as a policy. This administration stands outside more than the international treaties we have signed and previous presidents have upheld. This administration stands beyond the American tradition and values.

The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 were heinous and barbarous. But they and subsequent threats are no reason for abandoning our commitment to the rule of law. Other nations that have been subjected to terrorist attacks since Sept. 11 -- Spain and Britain -- have not succumbed to torture. Even in the dark hours after Pearl Harbor torture was not adopted as a policy. During the Cold War, when the U.S. faced the potential existential threat of nuclear annihilation, torture was never adopted as a policy. Goldsmith writes, "The Bush administration's go-it-alone approach to many terrorism-related legal policy issues is the antithesis of Roosevelt's approach in 1940-1941 ... The Bush administration has operated on an entirely different concept of power that relies on minimal deliberation, unilateral action, and legalistic defense."

Not a week goes by without President Bush citing Saddam Hussein's cruelty and butchery as a justification. The tragic irony of pursuing his torture policy while denouncing Saddam's appears to be lost on him and on you. But it is not lost on the rest of the world.

Of course, as someone who has spent years in politics, you must be aware of the polls. According to the most recent Pew poll of global public opinion, taken this June, the downward trend since 2002 of the image of the United States has continued "in most parts of the world. Favorable ratings of America are lower in 26 of 33 countries for which trends are available. The U.S. image remains abysmal in most Muslim countries in the Middle East and Asia, and continues to decline among the publics of many of America's oldest allies. Favorable views of the U.S. are in single digits in Turkey (9 percent) and have declined to 15 percent in Pakistan. Currently, just 30 percent of Germans have a positive view of the U.S. -- down from 42 percent as recently as two years ago -- and favorable ratings inch ever lower in Great Britain and Canada."

Perhaps if you look closely at the problem, the solution to your dilemma may appear. Your words are not forging a new reality. Lying about the war in Iraq, or torture, is not building the bridges of understanding you are so fond of talking about in your speeches. Instead, empty words only fritter away at your ability to influence. There is power in truth.

You might also use your acquired skills in diplomacy among your colleagues in the inner circle of the White House. Perhaps you could talk to them about the dangers of politicizing and militarizing fear. They are a group, as Goldsmith has pointed out, consumed with "fear bordering on obsession." When he informed the White House that one of its counterterrorism programs was illegal, Vice President Cheney's then counsel, David Addington, angrily lashed out, "If you rule that way, the blood of the hundred thousand people who died in the next attack will be on your hands." As Addington demonstrated, when legal artifice falls, bullying takes its place. Fear has become a license for quelling not only political criticism but also the rule of law.

As you know only too well, fear-mongering, though it has worked well politically at home, has backfired abroad, breeding hatred throughout Muslim and Arab lands. Public diplomacy should assuage fear, not fan its flames; enable understanding, not hostility. Perhaps, while you're talking to your colleagues, you might explain that the opinion of the world matters, and that while it might be "soft power," not "hard power" like a piece of military equipment, it directly impinges on global stability. You might tell them that persisting in a policy of torture has threatened our national security.

While you are rethinking how to calm fears and rebuild America's image as a global leader perhaps you ought to begin to think of yourself not as a tool of the Bush administration but as a citizen of the world, not as a propagandist, constantly trying to formulate a hollow ideological phrase or distraction, but as someone who can admit mistakes and correct them.

If you receive this letter as simply a partisan broadside and can't envision your transformation into a true diplomat at large, an envoy of healing, perhaps you should just resign. Nothing will be served by continuing on your current course. Nothing different will happen. You might as well return to Texas now. To date, your diplomacy has consisted of excuses for leaving the damage to the next president to remedy.

Soon you will be reminiscing about the Bush presidency. Will you be agitated and depressed like your former colleagues described in the recent Washington Post report? Will you persist in fantasies of denial? Or you will be, as Comey suggested you should be, "ashamed"?

If you can attend the screening of "Taxi to the Dark Side," please let me know. Otherwise, I can send you a DVD and you can share it with the president.

-- By Sidney Blumenthal


Snuffysmith
The Sino-Russian Alliance Challenging America's Ambitions in Eurasia By Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya America and Britain, the Anglo-American alliance, have engaged in an ambitious project to control global energy resources. Their actions have resulted in a series of complicated reactions, which have established a Eurasian-based coalition which is preparing to challenge the Anglo-American axis.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18539.htm
Snuffysmith
PKK rebels say heading into Turkey from Iraq: Kurdish separatist rebels said on Friday they were crossing back into Turkey to target politicians and police after Ankara said it was preparing to attack them in the mountains of northern Iraq.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L1251432.htm



Turkey is ready to pay the price of any military campaign in Iraq : Erdogan also had harsh words for the United States, which opposes a Turkish incursion into northern Iraq - one of the country's few relatively stable areas. "Did they seek permission from anyone when they came from a distance of 10,000 kilometers and hit Iraq?" he said. "We do not need anyone else's advice."
http://snipurl.com/1s3pv



Israel worried by Turk-Armenian debate: Israel's government expressed concern Thursday over the U.S. congressional debate on the mass killings of ethnic Armenians in Turkey 90 years ago, but tried to deflect pressure from Turkey to take its side in the dispute
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071011/ap_on_...a/israel_turkey



Robert Fisk: A reign of terror which history has chosen to neglect : The story of the last century's first Holocaust - Winston Churchill used this very word about the Armenian genocide years before the Nazi murder of six million Jews - is well known, despite the refusal of modern-day Turkey to acknowledge the facts. Nor are the parallels with Nazi Germany's persecution of the Jews idle ones.
http://snipurl.com/1s3pw
Snuffysmith
US ready to sanction countries cooperating with Iran, warns Rice: The United States is considering imposing new sanctions on countries cooperating with Iran, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Friday after high-level Russia-US talks.
http://snipurl.com/1s3q2


Respect Iran sanctions, US warns: The US on Friday warned China, Russia and other countries opposed to tougher economic sanctions against Iran not to seize business opportunities left open by the departure of those respecting the sanctions regime.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ee250b00-78df-11...?nclick_check=1


US threatens Turkey over energy support to Iran:
The United States has suggested that Turkey could come under sanctions for its energy cooperation with Iran. The State Department has criticized Turkey for its agreement for natural gas cooperation with Tehran.
http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/news/nte74182.htm
Snuffysmith
Putin Warns Against U.S. Missile Plan: Russian President Vladimir Putin said he hopes the United States doesn't try to strike a missile system deal in Europe before U.S.-Russia talks are complete.
http://www.postchronicle.com/news/breaking...212108745.shtml


Russia threatens to discard nuclear missile treaty: Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Friday that his nation might pull out of a key nuclear missile defense treaty, a tense start to what has been hailed as a key meeting here with the U.S. secretaries of State and Defense.
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/20452.html


US rejects Russian security concern : The US has rejected Russian calls to freeze a planned missile defence system in central Europe, despite a warning from Moscow that it would move to "neutralise" the threat.
http://snipurl.com/1s3q5
Snuffysmith

Now the Saudis tool up for war

The White House line that Iraq’s extremists are all backed by Iran is a myth, writes robert fox
T his weekend, buyers from across the Gulf states and the Middle East will descend on a huge arms fair in Dubai. Sheikhs, emirs, princes and kings will be buying anything from specialised sniper ammunition by the ton, to the highest-tech surveillance gear and even the odd British Aerospace gunboat or Eurofighter.

The Arab world will use the International Defence Exhibition (IDEX), to tool up for a coming confrontation with Iran, and to arm Sunni insurgents to fight Iran's allies in Iraq, the Shia militias.

Even the Bush administration will now admit, under its collective breath of course, that Iraq is in the throes of a full-blown civil war between armed groups of its Sunni and Shia Arab communities, triggered a year ago by the destruction of the al-Laskar mosque in Samara, a revered Shia shrine.

‘The growth of Saudi and Jordanian support for the militants is one of the most worrying developments’ What the American authorities are reluctant to admit, however, is that there are signs that the Sunnis of Saudi Arabia and their allies - including Jordan - have been equipping and training Sunni extremists in Iraq for some time now. Critically, not all the weaponry and munitions have been used against the militants' Shia and Kurdish Iraqi enemies. Some of them - including lethal roadside bombs - have been aimed at US forces.

"The growth of the official and unofficial Saudi and Jordanian support for the militants is one of the most worrying developments," a senior British officer has told me privately after a visit to Iraq.

The Bush administration has kept mum about this while it tries to concentrate the minds of America and the world on their new public enemy number one, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the region's chief sponsor of terrorism and nuclear proliferation.

British strategic advisers to the Pentagon and the National Security Council report that, undeterred by their unfinished business in Iraq and Afghanistan, President Bush and

Vice-President Cheney are now intent on opening up a third front against Iran. Their argument runs that Saddam Hussein was bad and al-Qaeda even worse, but the threat to world peace now comes from Ahmadinejad. He must be stopped before he gets a nuclear weapon and uses it against Israel.

In Baghdad this week US forces have displayed 'shaped charge' roadside bomb kits - also known as EFPs (explosively formed penetrators) - which have killed 170 American service personnel in Iraq. This figure is surprisingly precise, in contrast to much of the rest of the American presentation: the officers and intelligence analysts would not give their names, and could not substantiate their claim that the deployment of the EFPs was sanctioned "at the highest level" of the Ahmadinejad regime.

It was also reported this week that a consignment of Steyr Mannlicher HS50 sniper rifles sold by Austria to the Iranian police force had ended up in the hands of Shia militias in Iraq. This was reported by the Daily Telegraph, but no one followed it up. The

Bush and Cheney are ramping up the case for an attack on Iran, just as they did before invading Iraq innuendos – if not the facts – are clear: Bush and Cheney are ramping up the case for an attack on Iran, just as they did before invading Iraq.

David Kay, whose Iraq Survey Group torpedoed the claims about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, says: "If you want to avoid the perception that you've cooked the books you come out and make the charges publicly" - and, he might have added, you name your sources and define the quality of your information. Something the Bush administration has failed to do.

The Americans have also been coy about the threat to their helicopters. At least six are now admitted to have been downed by hostile fire, and the number could be as high as 50, including a Chinook loaded with dozens of troops. Who is doing this and how, the Americans will not say - for obvious security reasons. But the chances are that at least some of the helicopters have been downed by those Sunni extremist pals of Saudi Arabia and Jordan - which hardly helps the case for war against Iran.

FIRST POSTED FEBRUARY 15, 2007

http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk?storyID=4846

Snuffysmith
General Sanchez Points Finger Generals don't seem to be able to speak their minds when in uniform.

Well, with the exception of Eric Shinseki -- and very possibly David Petraeus who seems to be driving his own machinery on Iraq spin.

But now -- out of uniform -- former top Iraq commander (during Abu Ghraib watch) Ricardo Sanchez shared his views in public. Here are some clips from David Cloud:

~ In a sweeping indictment of the four-year effort in Iraq, the former top American commander called the Bush administration's handling of the war incompetent and warned that the United States was "living a nightmare with no end in sight." ~ "After more than fours years of fighting, America continues its desperate struggle in Iraq without any concerted effort to devise a strategy that will achieve victory in that war-torn country or in the greater conflict against extremism," Mr. Sanchez said, at a gathering here of military reporters and editors.

~ "There was been a glaring and unfortunate display of incompetent strategic leadership within our national leaders," he said, adding later in his remarks that civilian officials have been "derelict in their duties" and guilty of a "lust for power."

Note to Generals today -- it would help us to know your real views about attacking Iran NOW -- rather than after the fact if we go that direction.

-- Steve Clemons


Snuffysmith
Who Will Own the Climate Change Franchise? The Clintons or Al Gore?

I really did mean every word in my tribute earlier today to former Vice President Al Gore. Emails from campaigns, Senate and House press operations, the White House, NGOs, and even some in corporate America have been streaming into my email box congratulating him. I can't imagine what Gore's own email inbox looks like.

Hillary Clinton's campaign site posted a big banner here:



But Jim Lobe called today and asked what the political implications of the Gore Nobel Peace Prize win (shared win, of course) are. I gave him an earful of thoughts -- but the thing most folks have not thought about is what tension this creates for the next President of the United States.

Continue Reading "Who Will Own the Climate Change Franchise? The Clintons or Al Gore?"
06:39 PM | Permalink
Snuffysmith

NBC: Insurgent groups condemn al-Qaida tactics

By Evan Kohlmann


Rich Gardella and the NBC News Investigative Unit have picked up on my recent postings here on the CTBlog about the growing infighting pitting Sunni insurgents (including avowed jihadists) against Al-Qaida's "Islamic State of Iraq":


"In a development experts call a significant shift, Iraqi insurgent groups are speaking out against al-Qaida and its brutally violent tactics. Last week, two groups, Asaeb al-Iraq al-Jihadiya (aka 'the Iraqi Jihad Union') and the 1920 Revolution Brigades (aka 'Hamas in Iraq') issued statements accusing al-Qaida's Iraq wing, al-Qaida in Iraq, of brutally killing their fighters and commanders, as well as women and children. 'They have killed them and mutilated their bodies,' reads an English translation of the Iraq Jihad Union's statement prepared for the NEFA Foundation, a non-profit terrorism research organization... NBC News terrorism analyst Evan Kohlmann first reported the statements on counterterrorismblog.org. Kohlmann believes such strong public criticism of al-Qaida in Iraq by other insurgent groups in Iraq is a very significant development. With these two new statements last week, Kohlmann says, 'every single major insurgent group — with the exception of the Ansar al-Sunna Army — has now issued a statement condemning al-Qaida. These are hard-core jihadi groups saying this. These are former al-Qaida allies saying this'... Kohlmann, who closely monitors jihadi Web sites, says the statements are causing an online ruckus in jihadi chat forums, with heated exchanges dividing nationalist Islamists who are increasingly critical of al-Qaida and al-Qaida believers who defend it. 'The reaction has been incredible,' Kohlmann says. 'There's a huge outpouring of resentment.' He says there are many angry postings against the groups who have criticized al-Qaida. He says one of the groups just put out a second statement in response, arguing that al-Qaida's online defenders 'don't know what's going on' in Iraq."
For more on this issue, plus further reaction from Brian Fishman at the U.S. Military Academy's Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) at West Point, N.Y., check out the story over at MSNBC. See also: [CTBLOG] Khawaarij and Jihad: Is Al-Qaida's Network in Iraq Doomed to the Fate of the GIA?


Snuffysmith

G.I.s Hunt Iran's Terrorist 'Surrogates' in Iraq

By James Gordon Meek


Is the U.S. military building a public case against Iran? No, we're not talking about nukes this time. It's Iran's meddling in Iraq, where top Army Gen. David Petraeus this week accused Tehran's ambassador to Baghdad of being a card-carrying member of the Revolutionary Guards' elite Quds Force.

U.S. officials tell me the Quds Force is arming "surrogates," Iraqi-Shia militants, with such nasty things as the Explosively-Formed Penetrator, a type of improvised explosive device (aka roadside bomb) that has killed more than 200 American troops by penetrating their vehicles' armor like a hot knife through butter with a bomb in the blade.

Petraeus' broadside wasn't an isolated incident. In recent weeks, the military command in Baghdad has stepped up its offensive -- both public and tactical -- against Iranian-backed "special groups militias" south of Baghdad, which have led to dozens being killed or captured. The military has also emphasized any seizure of "Iranian-made" weapons, such as mortars, IEDs and hand grenades, no matter how small the cache.

Where once the military complained of non-Iraqi Arabs flocking to join Al Qaeda-in-Mesopotomia, now they are complaining about Iranian influence on the battlefield. "That's their whole thing now: Special Groups. It has the same flavor as 'foreign fighters,'" observed one colleague bravely covering Iraq's Red Zone.

On Oct. 10, the military practically begged for press coverage of these operations, requesting that "anyone interested in covering a cordon and search combat operation" by the 3rd Infantry Division the next day in an area south of Baghdad and east of the Tigris River should apply for an embed to observe troops fighting to "disrupt Shia extremists." (A search of LexisNexis suggests no one may have accepted the offer.)

There's much more about the U.S. military and political offensive against the Quds Force at the New York Daily News' Mouth of the Potomac Blog, including comments by America's UN ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad.

October 12, 2007 05:17 PM Link
Snuffysmith

Tightening the Financial Squeeze against Iran

By Michael Jacobson


On October 12, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a relatively obscure Paris-based organization, took a significant step in ratcheting up the international financial pressure against Iran. The FATF, launched by the G7 in 1989, seeks to set global standards on combating money laundering and terrorist financing. 34 countries are now members of FATF, including the US and the European Commission.

For the first time, FATF specifically addressed the dangers that Iran poses to the integrity of the international financial system. In a statement, FATF concluded that “Iran's lack of a comprehensive anti-money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism regime represents a significant vulnerability within the international financial system.” According to the press release, FATF members would be advising their financial institutions to use enhanced due diligence in evaluating the risk of transactions with Iran. Treasury Secretary Paulson applauded the move by FATF, calling it a “dramatic step in highlighting the significant threat Iran poses to the international financial system.”

Assuming that the FATF members follow through and issue alerts to their financial sector about the risks of doing business with Iran, this could have a significant impact on the Iranian economy. Until this point, the US Treasury Department has been the lone voice decrying the risk that Iran's deceptive practices pose to the global financial system. While the US warnings carry serious weight, there are companies and financial institutions which do not do business in the US and are less concerned about invoking the wrath of the US government. These companies will be far less inclined to ignore the proclamations of their supervisory regulatory agencies.

In evaluating the significance of the FATF action, it is important to look at the composition of this international body. China and Russia - the two permanent members of the UN Security Council which have been most reluctant to move forward on UN sanctions against Iran -- are both members, as is the Gulf Cooperation Council. As FATF is an organization that works by consensus, the fact that this statement was issued indicates that none of the 34 members opposed. This should send an important message to Tehran that international concern about their activities is growing. It may also bode well for a possible third round of sanctions at the UN later this year.

While FATF said that it would work with Iran to address its deficiencies, the Islamic Republic is unlikely to make the necessary systemic changes. Iran's efforts to address terrorist financing are non-existent -- hardly surprising in a country that US government officials have described as the "central banker of terror," and where support for terrorist groups is official government policy.

In fact, Iranian state-owned financial institutions have played a role in furthering the government's illicit activity. For example, Bank Saderat has been involved in transferring funds to terrorist groups and Bank Sepah has provided financial services to support Iran's ballistic missile program.

To read my previous op-ed, which called upon the FATF to blacklist Iran, click here.

October 12, 2007 04:04 PM Link
Snuffysmith

Pakistani sieve

By Aaron Mannes


One of the helicopters escorting Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf crashed Monday, a brigadier and three others were killed. There is no evidence of terrorist activity. It was a technical problem. Nonetheless, the crash highlights one of the most serious concerns about Pakistan.

The danger is not that Islamists would grab power if Musharraf were killed. There are sound reasons to believe the army would maintain control and continue following Musharraf’s overall policies. It is even possible, according to former Pakistani intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Assad Durrani, that the Pakistani military would return power to a civilian leader. The concern is that there are cracks at the very apex of Pakistan’s most powerful institution and core systems (human and machine) are not adequately supported and prone to failure.

Of course helicopters crash, but Marine One does not. One would imagine that helicopters attached to the President’s detail would receive the most stringent maintenance. This failing is not unique. In 1989 Pakistan’s then President General Zia al-Haq was killed in a plane crash. (Pakistani conspiracy theorists believe the United States was behind the crash, but the U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan was also killed in the plane crash.)

These failings are not limited to air safety issues. A pair of assassination attempts that missed Musharraf by minutes in December 2003 occurred in Rawalpindi – the headquarters of Pakistan’s army. Most famously, A.Q. Khan – father of Pakistan’s nuclear program – managed to run an extensive international smuggling network.

The leaks and cracks at the very core of the Pakistani state should be a matter of concern on many levels – but none more so than Pakistan’s nuclear program. Considering that the United States occasionally loses track of its nuclear weapons – concerns about Pakistan’s nuclear command and control system should be taken extremely seriously. Should a component of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal slip through one of these many cracks there should be little doubt that some of very bad people are waiting to snatch it up.


October 12, 2007 01:52 PM Link
Snuffysmith
Who Lost Turkey?

Turkey has been the strongest ally that the United States has had in the Middle East since the end of WW II. The Marshall Plan started with Northern tier states like Turkey and Greece. Turkey joined NATO and was a key player in the American victory in the Cold War. As a secular government, Turkey stood against the rising tide of Muslim radicalism. To the extent that Turkey is moderating its long-term secular militancy, and moving toward fair elections, it may be providing a model for a moderate, democratic Middle East. Its economy is growing rapidly, foreign investment is in the billions. Turkey is in short, almost everything the US could have asked for in the Middle East.

But the Bush administration has, during the past five years, increasingly thrown away this asset, and now is in danger of losing a close and valued ally altogether. It is unclear what US interests are served by this repeated and profound damage inflicted by Washington on Turkey, or what Ankara ever did to us that we are treating them so horribly. (The dismissive treatment in some ways began when the US promised Turkey $1 bn in aid to offset the damage to its economy of the Gulf War in 1990-1991, but then Congress formally decided by the mid-1990s to renege on the pledge. No one has ever explained why we stiffed them.)

<a href="http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article3052372.ece">The threat of a Turkish hot pursuit of PKK guerrillas into Iraqi Kurdistan is starting to have an effect on Kurdistan's economy and stability. Inflation is high and some Turkish businesses that had won bids to operate in the Kurdistan Regional Authority (KRG) are going back home in fear of trouble. Getting banks to underwrite economic enterprises is getting harder, which could result in a slowdown for Iraqi Kurdistan. This area was the last in Iraq not to be hit hard by instability, but tensions are growing.

Imagine what things look like from a Turkish point of view. Remember that Turkey is a NATO ally, that it stood with the US during the Korean War (in which its troops fought), during the Cold War, and during Bush's war on terror. Turkey gives the US military facilities, including the Incirlik Air Force base, through which large amounts of materiel for the US forces in northern Iraq flows.

First, the Bush administration insisted on invading Iraq and overthrowing the secular Iraqi government. It thereby let the Salafi Sunni and the Shiite fundamentalist genies out of the bottle and created vast instability on the southeastern border. It would be as though a US ally had invaded Mexico and inadvertently unleashed a Marxist peasant rebellion against San Diego. Secular Turkey already felt itself menaced by the Shiite ayatollahs of Iran and by the rising Salafi and al-Qaeda trends, and the US made everything far worse.

Then, the US gave the Kurdistan Regional Authority control over the Kirkuk police force and unleashed Kurdish troops on the Turkmen city of Tal Afar. (The Turks look on Iraq's 800,000 Turkmen as little brethren, over whom they feel protective, and don't want them dominated by Kurds).

The Kurds promptly announced their aspiration of annexing 3 further provinces, or at least big swathes of them, including the oil province of Kirkuk, and including substantial Turkmen populations. Not only was that guaranteed to cause violence with the Arabs and Turkmen, but it would give Kurdistan a source of fabulous wealth with which it could hope to attract Kurds in neighboring countries to join it, a la German Unification after the fall of the Berlin Wall - except that this unification would dismember several other countries.

Then the Kurdistan Regional Authority gave safe haven to 3,000 to 5,000 Kurdish guerrillas from eastern Anatolia in Turkey who have been killing Turks and blowing up things, reviving violence that had subsided in the early zeroes. Despite the US military occupation of Iraq, Washington has done nothing to stop what Turkey sees as terrorists from going over the border into Turkey and killing Turks. Turkish intelligence is convinced that the camps in Iraqi Kurdistan are key to weapons provision for the PKK, and that funding is coming from Kurdish small businessmen in Western Europe.

PKK guerrillas have just killed 13 Turkish troops on Sunday and in the past few weeks have killed 28 altogether. If guerrillas were raiding over the border into the United States and had killed 28 US troops I think I know what Washington's response would be.

The the US Congress abruptly condemned modern Kemalist Turkey for the Armenian genocide, committed by the Ottoman Empire, provoking Ankara to withdraw its ambassador from Washington. I have long held that Turkey should acknowledge the genocide, which killed hundreds of thousands and displaced more hundreds of thousands. The Turkish government could then point out that it was committed by a tyrannical and oppressive government-- the Ottoman Empire-- against which the Kemalists also fought a long and determined war to establish a modern republic. I can't understand Ankara's unwillingness to distance itself from a predecessor it doesn't even think well of--the junta of Enver Pasha and the later pusillanimity of the sultan (the capital is in Ankara and not Istanbul in part for this very reason!)

But no dispassionate observer could avoid the conclusion that the Congressional vote condemning Turkey came at a most inopportune time for US-Turkish diplomacy, at a time when Turks were already raw from watching the US upset all the apple carts in their neighborhood, unleash existential threats against them, cause the rise of Salafi radicalism next door, coddle terrorists killing them, coddle the separatist KRG, and strengthen the Shiite ayatollahs on their borders.

The Congressional vote came despite the discomfort of elements of the Israel lobby with recognizing the mass killing of Armenians as a genocide.