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Snuffysmith
Snub for Iran eases nuclear crisis

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, dominated by China and Russia, has ended Iran's hopes of joining the regional grouping. This comes at a critical turning point when issues of peace and war hang by a thread. Yet the setback may be a blessing in disguise for Tehran, which, through its new interlocutor for communicating with Washington - Turkey - can now take fresh steps to resolve the crisis over its nuclear program. - M K Bhadrakumar (Jul 28,
Snuffysmith
Pakistan feels the heat in Washington
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani can expect a heated reception during his meeting with US President George W Bush in Washington, given the many top US policymakers who blame Islamabad for the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan. The Pakistan government's bungled attempt to control its rogue intelligence agency won't ease the atmosphere. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Jul 28, '08)
Snuffysmith
SPENGLER
Why do nations exist?
The sovereign nation-state as defined by ethnicity and language might be a flawed experiment, Spengler speculates after studying new books by noted thinkers Jean Bethke Elshtain and Wayne Cristaudo. Perhaps the future of the world lies in the supra-ethnic state, represented in quite different ways by the United States, China and India. (Jul 28, '08)

Strongman tightens grip on Cambodia
The Cambodian People's Party of Prime Minister Hun Sen rode a booming economy and a surge of Khmer nationalism to a landslide victory in Cambodia's general election, securing 90 of 123 parliament seats and clinching a new era of one-party rule. - Geoffrey Cain (Jul 28, '08)
Snuffysmith
India ripe for more attacks
Deadly bomb blasts in Bangalore and Ahmedabad, two cities that symbolize India's growing economic might, appear also to have been aimed at stirring communal riots. And all indications are that more attacks will follow if these ones don't succeed in that goal. - Sudha Ramachandran (Jul 28, '08)
Snuffysmith
Good cop, bad cop: Pakistan reels

Even as the United States rebukes Pakistan over its performance in the "war on terror", it hands Islamabad four F-16 fighter jets as a reward for siding with Washington. Then the US launches a missile attack into Pakistani territory, killing an al-Qaeda commander. These contradictions test Islamabad's will, to the advantage of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Jul 29, '08)
Snuffysmith
Pushover' Maliki stands his ground
Many in the George W Bush administration dismiss Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's demand for a United States timeline for withdrawal of its troops as political posturing, assuming that he will abandon it under pressure, just as he did in 2006. But Maliki now has much greater purchase to defy Bush than he did two years ago. - Gareth Porter (Jul 29, '08)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
Mercenaries at work
The ongoing process in the United States of the transfer of military and intelligence functions (and much of a US$66 billion budget) to private, often anonymous operatives, has made it easier for enemies to penetrate American intelligence. This has greased the slippery slope to the loss of professionalism within the community of intelligence analysts, in turn heightening the risks of war by accident, or by presidential whim. - Chalmers Johnson (Jul 29, '08)

Obama and the Taliban
United States presidential hopeful Barack Obama's has spoken of the close association between al-Qaeda and the Taliban. His linkage of the two groups mirrors the George W Bush administration's policy and over-simplifies a far more complex reality, against which force and violence will likely fail. - Mark LeVine (Jul 29, '08)

Olympic paranoia clutches China
The Chinese government's obsession with its role as host of next month's Summer Olympics has led to a raft of security policies - surveillance cameras, visa restrictions, forced relocations and work stoppages - that some say will take the fun out of the Games. - Cindy Sui (Jul 29, '08)
Snuffysmith
KEBABBLE
Feathered fight
clubs spur outrage

A brutal blood sport to some, a time-honored tradition for others, cockfighting is illegal in Turkey but survives in clandestine dens across the country. Defenders of the practice are fighting tooth and nail to have the sport legalized and given back to the public. - Fazile Zahir (Jul 29, '08)
Snuffysmith
Russia takes control of Turkmen (world?) gas
Gazprom, Russia's energy leviathan, has signed two major agreements in a new scheme to purchase gas from Turkmenistan. This deals the United States a huge defeat in the race for Caspian gas and strengthens Moscow's hand in setting the price of world gas. - M K Bhadrakumar

CHINA'S DOLLAR MILLSTONE
Breaking dollar's hegemony
China, by seeking growth through exports for US dollars, has trapped itself in a crisis-prone mismatch between domestic policies to assure sustainable growth and monetary policy dictated by dollar hegemony. Only sovereign credit can redress the resulting problems, including a shortage of capital needed to develop its economy. - Henry C K Liu
This is the first part of a two-part analysis.
Snuffysmith
Temple row may stall oil riches A face-off between troops from Thailand and Cambodia over contested territory surrounding an ancient temple on their mutual border threatens to delay even longer the resolution of a more economically significant border dispute between the two sides. - Andrew Symon
Snuffysmith
Sharp Attack Unwarranted
Stephen Zunes
The campaign against Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution is beyond bizarre.


Learning from the Soviets in Afghanistan
Yelena Biberman
By withdrawing from Iraq, the United States can learn from the mistakes the Soviet Union made in Afghanistan.


An Honorable Way Out of Iraq
Adil E. Shamoo
The Iraqis have reached a consensus—the U.S. should leave Iraq.
Snuffysmith
US's 'surge' in Iraq has its limits

General David Petraeus, commander of United States forces in Iraq, has once again trumpeted the success of the troop "surge" in Iraq, saying violence is declining to almost "normal" levels. Factors other than the "surge", such as Iran's change of tactics, have helped stabilize Iraq. And blind belief in it sets a bad example for when the US decides to turn its full attention to the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. - Brian M Downing (Jul 30, '08)
Snuffysmith
Iran seeks entry to the lion's den
The United Nations Security Council has imposed three rounds of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program, which President Mahmud Ahmadinejad has dismissed as "worthless papers". Now Tehran has launched a campaign for inclusion as a non-permanent member of the council, with Ahmadinejad reaching out first to the Non-Aligned Movement. Iran might not get the seat it wants, but in the process it could unblock the nuclear stalemate. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi
(Jul 30, '08)
Snuffysmith
Two tormented Chinese Catholic souls
The normalization of ties between Beijing and the Vatican comes after years of strained relations that had forced Catholics in China into "official" and "underground" camps. Neither branch, though, has responded to the Chinese government or to the Vatican - they both fear more threatened than ever before. - Francesco Sisci
(Jul 30, '08)

SPEAKING FREELY
Red neon cross lights up Koreans
A ubiquitous red neon cross rivals the national flag as a symbol for the Republic of Korea. It represents Tonghak, an indigenous religion founded by a peasant mystic in 1860. Today, the same hard peasant wisdom still commands Korean democracy and Tonghak manifests itself in rebellions and protests, perhaps most recently against American beef. - Taru Taylor (Jul 30, '08)
Snuffysmith
The death of Doha
World Trade Organization director general Pascal Lamy claims he has not given up on securing a global trade deal after rifts between rich and developing countries killed the near seven-year Doha Round of trade talks.

Thai trade tangle for Bush
Pirated DVDs and imitation designer garments are disappearing from Bangkok's tourist spots before a farewell visit to Thailand by US President George W Bush. Simmering US-Thai trade tensions are less easy to hide.
Snuffysmith
Bear's death and the
US way of banking

As US regulators seek out culprits on whom they can pin culpability for the collapse earlier this year of Bear Stearns, the more important policy question is why did the bank have to die? Was that not a feature of the business it had chosen? - Julian Delasantellis

COMMENT
Paulson still doesn't get it
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's latest effort to build trust in banks will be a tough sell because there is not much to trust in a Wall Street bank these days. What is required is systemic reform in business practices and compensation structures. - Peter Morici
Snuffysmith
SUN WUKONG
A shock to 'hand-raising robots'
Beijing's support for the so-called "Shenzhen reforms" could be an irreversible step towards the democratization of China. Shenzhen is again the test case for progressive policies, and this time the "miracle" city could drastically alter the dynastic sequence that has marked Chinese history. - Wu Zhong (Jul 30, '08)
Ill state of the Philippine nation
Seven years on, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo sounds much as she did when she assumed power in the Philippines: promises and more promises. Her state of the nation address has done little to encourage those buckling under the weight of economic woes. She is unlikely to lose the tag of "most unpopular leader" any time soon. - Joel D Adriano (Jul 30, '08)

Tooth and nail in Delhi's tiger trade
A grisly stash of tiger parts - bones, skins and testicles - discovered in Delhi underscores India's increasing role in supplying Asia's insatiable appetite for exotic animals. Meanwhile, slack implementation of wildlife laws and astronomical profits push India's poachers to adopt audacious tactics. - Neeta Lal (Jul 30, '08)


Snuffysmith
US's 'surge' in Iraq has its limits

General David Petraeus, commander of United States forces in Iraq, has once again trumpeted the success of the troop "surge" in Iraq, saying violence is declining to almost "normal" levels. Factors other than the "surge", such as Iran's change of tactics, have helped stabilize Iraq. And blind belief in it sets a bad example for when the US decides to turn its full attention to the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. - Brian M Downing (Jul 30, '08)


Iran seeks entry to the lion's den
The United Nations Security Council has imposed three rounds of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program, which President Mahmud Ahmadinejad has dismissed as "worthless papers". Now Tehran has launched a campaign for inclusion as a non-permanent member of the council, with Ahmadinejad reaching out first to the Non-Aligned Movement. Iran might not get the seat it wants, but in the process it could unblock the nuclear stalemate. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi
(Jul 30, '08)

Two tormented Chinese Catholic souls
The normalization of ties between Beijing and the Vatican comes after years of strained relations that had forced Catholics in China into "official" and "underground" camps. Neither branch, though, has responded to the Chinese government or to the Vatican - they both fear more threatened than ever before. - Francesco Sisci
(Jul 30, '08)

SPEAKING FREELY
Red neon cross lights up Koreans
A ubiquitous red neon cross rivals the national flag as a symbol for the Republic of Korea. It represents Tonghak, an indigenous religion founded by a peasant mystic in 1860. Today, the same hard peasant wisdom still commands Korean democracy and Tonghak manifests itself in rebellions and protests, perhaps most recently against American beef. - Taru Taylor (Jul 30, '08)

SUN WUKONG
A shock to 'hand-raising robots'
Beijing's support for the so-called "Shenzhen reforms" could be an irreversible step towards the democratization of China. Shenzhen is again the test case for progressive policies, and this time the "miracle" city could drastically alter the dynastic sequence that has marked Chinese history. - Wu Zhong (Jul 30, '08)


Ill state of the Philippine nation
Seven years on, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo sounds much as she did when she assumed power in the Philippines: promises and more promises. Her state of the nation address has done little to encourage those buckling under the weight of economic woes. She is unlikely to lose the tag of "most unpopular leader" any time soon. - Joel D Adriano (Jul 30, '08)

Tooth and nail in Delhi's tiger trade
A grisly stash of tiger parts - bones, skins and testicles - discovered in Delhi underscores India's increasing role in supplying Asia's insatiable appetite for exotic animals. Meanwhile, slack implementation of wildlife laws and astronomical profits push India's poachers to adopt audacious tactics. - Neeta Lal (Jul 30, '08)



'Pushover' Maliki stands his ground
Many in the George W Bush administration dismiss Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's demand for a United States timeline for withdrawal of its troops as political posturing, assuming that he will abandon it under pressure, just as he did in 2006. But Maliki now has much greater purchase to defy Bush than he did two years ago. - Gareth Porter (Jul 29, '08)

Good cop, bad cop: Pakistan reels
Even as the United States rebukes Pakistan over its performance in the "war on terror", it hands Islamabad four F-16 fighter jets as a reward for siding with Washington. Then the US launches a missile attack into Pakistani territory, killing an al-Qaeda commander. These contradictions test Islamabad's will, to the advantage of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Jul 29, '08)

Russia takes control of Turkmen (world?) gas
Gazprom, Russia's energy leviathan, has signed two major agreements in a new scheme to purchase gas from Turkmenistan. This deals the United States a huge defeat in the race for Caspian gas and strengthens Moscow's hand in setting the price of world gas. - M K Bhadrakumar (Jul 29, '08)
Snuffysmith
Al-Qaeda hails 'revival' in Afghanistan
Oozing confidence, al-Qaeda's operations commander in Afghanistan, Mustafa Abu-al-Yazid, talks of the progress al-Qaeda is making in consolidating its position in Afghanistan and in attracting foreign jihadis to join the Taliban-led struggle against "infidel" invaders. Abu-Yazid's assessment is backed by Pakistan's eroding commitment to battle Afghan and Pakistani insurgents, to the extent that Islamabad is expected to redeploy troops to the Pakistan-India border. - Michael Scheuer (Jul 31, '08)


The bad side to the 'good war'
From the outset in 2001, the United States-led invasion of Afghanistan has been the "good war", fought against the Taliban and their al-Qaeda guests. This belief prevailed, even as the war in Iraq turned "bad". Now, the weight of occupation and the rising number of civilian deaths is shifting the resistance toward a war of national liberation, and no foreign power has ever won that battle in Afghanistan. -
Conn Hallinan (Jul 31, '08)
Snuffysmith
China strengthens its role in Kyrgyzstan
China is expanding its role in Kyrgyzstan, helped by a huge trade imbalance, a growing population of Chinese in its Central Asian neighbor, and construction of infrastructure projects. Some even complain the country is becoming a Chinese satellite. - Daniel Allen (Jul 31, '08)

Turkey dodges a bullet
Turkey has narrowly avoided a political crisis with the Constitutional Court decision that the ruling party will not be closed down over alleged infringements of the secularist constitution. Other problems still loom, though, notably fears over terror attacks and suspected coup plotters. - David Barchard (Jul 31, '08)

The 'down side' to an attack on Iran
A military strike against Iran would have negative consequences and do little to stop Iran's nuclear program, a major defense think-tank's study for the United States Air Force concludes. But even as the outcome of an attack is questioned, top US officials are assuring Israel that the military option is still "on the table". - Jim Lobe (Jul 31,

A reminder for Iran on the revolution
Concerns that the former Soviet Union would access Iran's oil supply pushed Western powers, foremost the Untied States, to accelerate Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution by supporting religious revolutionary forces, a new book confirms. This role of the West has been largely ignored, particularly by the Iranian government. (Jul 31, '08)
Snuffysmith
Credibility crisis
at the BoT

Bank of Thailand governor Tarisa Watanagase says she has never felt her job was at risk in a two-year tenure noted for several unorthodox decisions. Yet her days in office may soon be over amid concerns about the central bank's independence and the possibility of a run on the Thai currency. - Shawn W Crispin

Chargers join China's
deadly imitations

Counterfeit chargers for devices such as game consoles can now be added to the range of fake products churned out by China and putting lives at risk around the world. An amoral fusion of Maoism and Confucianism has created the perfect economic, political and cultural laboratory for a piracy boom. - Peter Navarro

The cost of socialism
The United States is seeking to resolve its present financial crisis by socializing losses. International precedents indicate that this path leads to curbs on individual freedom and enterprise, and economic decline. - John B
Snuffysmith
Afghanistan: Shoals Ahead for President Obama by Immanuel Wallerstein
Obama is riding high on his position on the Iraq war, and will reap credit from the U.S. and world public for his stance. But he can undo that credit by failing to deliver on an impossible promise concerning Afghanistan.
more...

Of Arab Intellectuals and State Leaders by Patrick Seale
Among its enlightened intellectuals, the Arab World has its own best critics. And although there are leaders who emulate them -- like Saudi King Abdallah -- there are too many others like Egypt's Mubarak, Libya's Qadhafi, and Bashir of Sudan.
more...

Advice to Heed by Rami G. Khouri
Thoughts worth pondering from a member of a rare species in Washington these days: the experienced, impartial, patriotic American public servant who knows both Washington and the Middle East, and speaks honestly to both.
more...

Shame and Sexual Harassment in Egypt by Mona Eltahawy
What an awful time to be woman in Egypt: 98 percent of foreign women visiting Egypt and 83 percent of native Egyptian women, who were recently surveyed, said that they have been sexually harassed.
more...
Snuffysmith
A triumph for Turkey - and its allies

On the eve of the crucial court decision that voted not to close down Turkey's ruling party, officials from Israel and Syria were in Ankara for a fourth round of peace talks under Turkish mediation. Perhaps they (and the Americans) knew a thing or two: Turkey's political stability is no longer just a national issue, it is vital for the international community. From the Israel-Syria engagement to Iran, Iraq and the United States, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is a needed man. -
M K Bhadrakumar (Aug 1, '08)


Snuffysmith
Israel picks up the pieces
Although Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has finally bowed to the inevitable and given notice of stepping down, he insists he will continue negotiations with the Palestinians and with indirect talks with Syria. His circling political foes have other ideas. (Aug 1, '08)


Snuffysmith
US twist to Thaksin court case
A pending Thai Supreme Court case against former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra for his alleged role in approving a government bank loan to help Myanmar's rulers buy satellite services - reportedly provided by his family's company - will be watched nervously in Washington. US taxpayers helped finance the technology in question, despite the sanctions in place against Myanmar. - Peter J Brown (Aug 1, '08)

US tied to unconventional warfare
The United States should maintain close cooperation with its allies, both new and old, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates says in his defense strategy released this week. This contrasts with the much more unilateralist orientation of previous Pentagon papers, but the paper does agree that the US should remain focused on unconventional threats such as "al-Qaeda and its associates". - Jim Lobe (Aug 1, '08)

Inside China's sports machine
China's relentless drive for Olympic glory has revved up a government-funded Soviet-style sports training network that has churned out gold medalists with precision and regularity. But an over-emphasis on winning and medals may be detracting from young Chinese athletes' love of the Games. - Pallavi Aiyar (Aug 1, '08)

Lebanese Christians mull conversion
Despite a national unity government deal inked in Doha during May, renewed violence shows that Lebanon remains divided between the pro-West March 14 coalition and the Iran-backed Hezbollah-led alliance, with the Christian constituency pivotal to upcoming elections. -
Simon Roughneen (Aug 1, '08)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
Living through the age of denial Thomas Moore Engelhardt was born into a soldier's family on July 20, 1944, during the thick of World War II. He's passed through the grim shadows of the Cold War era and what he calls the "age of denial" of the United States. Now, the one-man commission of Tom offers his perspective on the past 64 years of the world's war and peace. - Tom Engelhardt (Aug 1, '08)
Snuffysmith
Ukraine political clash threatens oil to Europe
Ukrainian Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko's pledge this week to halt the "shadowy privatization" of an oil pipeline threatens to choke off the expansion of oil exports from Azerbaijan and eventually from Kazakhstan to Europe. - Robert M Cutler

MARKET RAP
Testing times
The Shanghai and Taiwan markets stand out, even in a relatively placid week, for their volatility and scale of declines. Both are approaching critical tests.
R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets.

BOOK REVIEW
Tarnished 'truth'
The New Paradigm for Financial Markets by George Soros
Economists teaching us that we are creatures of the market claim a universal "truth" that limits questions about what life is for. As the US financial crisis deepens and, Soros argues, heralds the end of an economic era, his message should get a hearing in the debate over what system of exchange replaces it. - Nicholas Kiersey

Snuffysmith
Credit Crunch Reaches Critical Mass - Global Trend Analysis
Snuffysmith
Facing the Facts on Terror by Nikolas Gvosdev U.S. regional allies in the war on terror will never be at our beck and call. We can either learn to live with that reality or try something different. Poking the Bear by Ted Galen Carpenter U.S. policy sometimes seems engineered to anger Russia for no good reason. That isn't wise.
Snuffysmith
SPENGLER
Israeli pre-emption better than cure

The critical mass of three Islamist states - Iran, Turkey and Pakistan - threatens to create an upheaval that can be contained only by wars of attrition. The outlook is grim, not least because the US State Department is repeating in Turkey the errors that helped bring Islamist governments to power in Iran and Pakistan. Israel is the only player with the perspicacity and power to stop the slide to regional war. (Aug 4, '08)

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/JH05Ak02.html
Snuffysmith
Iran heartened by India's nuclear vote
The United States-India nuclear agreement, which has been endorsed by the International Atomic Energy Agency, represents a timely diplomatic boon for Iran, which can now point at the US's flexible application of its nuclear policies with regard to Delhi as a reference point in Tehran's nuclear negotiations. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (Aug 4, '08)

Delhi risks a stumble at the finish line
Now that its nuclear accord with the United States has been endorsed by the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, India has only the 45-member Nuclear Suppliers Group to win over. Any obstacles here will be made worse if Delhi insists on gaining "clean and unconditional" approval. - Sudha Ramachandran (Aug 4, '08)
Snuffysmith
South Korea and the US at odds
South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak and US President George W Bush will have very different agendas when the two meet this week in Seoul. Lee has to deal with rapidly deteriorating relations with North Korea, while Bush wants a greater contribution from South Korea in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. - Donald Kirk (Aug 4, '08)
Snuffysmith
Beijingers feel the Olympic pinch
In the final countdown to Friday's Olympic debut, Beijing is a far cry from the frenzied metropolis of the recent past. Beautified streets, brushed-up manners and millions of jobs have been accompanied by forced relocations, work stoppages and driving restrictions. What's a Beijinger to do? As always, make the best of things. - Cindy Sui (Aug 4, '08)

Sex and politics in Malaysia
Malaysia's opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim hopes his bid to re-enter parliament through a by-election this month will encourage defections from the embattled ruling coalition. But Anwar faces new sodomy charges, and he might not remain a free man long enough to contest the poll in person. - Anil Netto (Aug 4, '08)
Snuffysmith
Israeli pre-emption better than cure

The critical mass of three Islamist states - Iran, Turkey and Pakistan - threatens to create an upheaval that can be contained only by wars of attrition. The outlook is grim, not least because the US State Department is repeating in Turkey the errors that helped bring Islamist governments to power in Iran and Pakistan. Israel is the only player with the perspicacity and power to stop the slide to regional war. (Aug 4, '08)
Snuffysmith
Beijing plays it cool
over US arms deals

In a flurry of conflicting disclosures, United States officials have reversed and reiterated Washington's stance on impending arms deals with Taiwan. But China has yet to take the bait, and there may be more behind Beijing's cool composure than this week's Olympic Games opening. - Wu Zhong (Aug 5, '08)

US distractions let in 'foes'
The George W Bush administration's continuing pre-occupation with Iraq, as well as its growing concern about Afghanistan and Pakistan, has effectively put an end to its larger transformational ambitions in the Arab world. The vacuum is being filled in part by US adversaries, a new report by an influential Washington think-tank concludes. - Jim Lobe (Aug 5, '08)
Snuffysmith
China tries to put its best face forward

President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao have launched the largest personnel reform scheme of the Communist Party in China in over a decade in an attempt to halt the recent spate of potentially disastrous "mass incidents". The aim in raising the quality of the "servants of the masses" is to improve communication with peasants and workers who have grievances - as well as to present a new face of China to the world. - Willy Lam (Aug 5, '08)

Beijing jittery after attack on police
With security uppermost in mind ahead of Friday's opening of the Olympic Games in Beijing, Chinese media are scrambling to allay fears following Monday's attack in the northwestern region of Xinjiang in which 16 paramilitary police officers were said to have been killed. (Aug 5, '08)
Snuffysmith
Iraqi Army Willing, But Not Ready, to Fight - Campbell Robertson, IHT
You Still Can't Write About Muhammad - Asra Nomani, WSJ
The Challenge of Hiroshima - Hideko Tamura, Japan Times
Games Spur Little Progress on Human Rights - Peter Ford, CS Monitor
Is Obama Too Cool for US Voters? - Rupert Cornwell, The Independent
Snuffysmith
Palestinian Kids Who Conquer Tree Houses by Rami G. Khouri
This is a dark day for the Palestinians, but not the end of the line. When they hit bottom -- and they are almost there -- the Palestinians will find better leadership that can regain their cohesion and credibility, and their self-respect.
more...

Ten Principles for US Policy in the Middle East by Rami G. Khouri
Rami Khouri has been in Washington in recent months, talking with friends and colleagues, and generating a list of ten principles and policies that should define American policies in the Middle East.
more...

Turkey's Narrow Escape by Patrick Seale
Turkey’s Constitutional Court decided on 30 July not to close down the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and not to ban its leaders from politics for their alleged “anti-secular activities.”
more...

Afghanistan: Shoals Ahead for President Obama by Immanuel Wallerstein
Obama is riding high on his position on the Iraq war, and will reap credit from the U.S. and world public for his stance. But he can undo that credit by failing to deliver on an impossible promise concerning Afghanistan.
more...

Of Arab Intellectuals and State Leaders by Patrick Seale
Among its enlightened intellectuals, the Arab World has its own best critics. And although there are leaders who emulate them -- like Saudi King Abdallah -- there are too many others like Egypt's Mubarak, Libya's Qadhafi, and Bashir of Sudan.
more...

Advice to Heed by Rami G. Khouri
Thoughts worth pondering from a member of a rare species in Washington these days: the experienced, impartial, patriotic American public servant who knows both Washington and the Middle East, and speaks honestly to both.
more...
Snuffysmith

A Dangerous Neighbor

By Daveed Gartenstein-Ross


As the situation in Afghanistan worsens, many military officials have come to see the growing safe haven for insurgent groups in Pakistan as the key to the Afghanistan war. Today Bill Roggio and I have an article at the Daily Standard examining how Pakistan's deterioration harms coalition efforts in Afghanistan:

The primary advantage that terrorist sanctuaries in northwestern Pakistan provide to the Afghan insurgency is the ability to operate with relative freedom in that country. The U.S. military is constrained in cross-border strikes and hot pursuit because Pakistan views the tribal areas as sovereign territory. Not only is Pakistan a U.S. ally, but there are also serious concerns that too heavy a U.S. hand in the tribal areas will destabilize the government and push more members of Pakistan's military and intelligence communities and civilian population into the extremists' camp.

Thus, the American military is handcuffed in its ability to respond to attacks when the enemy melts back over Pakistan's border. Reluctance to strike in Pakistani territory also prevents the U.S. military from disrupting the enemy's bases and supply lines. The safe havens in northwestern Pakistan give the Taliban and allied groups a virtually untouchable rear area, where they can recruit, arm, train, and infiltrate fighters into Afghanistan....
The second advantage that Afghan insurgents derive from Pakistan is the ability to train and gain combat experience. American military and intelligence officials have told us that more than 100 training camps are operating in the North-West Frontier Province and tribal areas, up from an estimated 29 camps last year in Waziristan. The camps vary in size and specialty, and some are temporary.

At these camps, a host of extremist groups--including local Taliban organizations, hardcore al Qaeda recruits, and Pakistani terror groups focused on Kashmir--are trained in a variety of tactics, techniques, and procedures. Training for the Taliban's military arm focuses on the fight against the Pakistani army or NATO forces in Afghanistan. Other camps focus on training suicide bombers or preparing al Qaeda operatives for attacks in the West. One camp exclusively services the Black Guard, Osama bin Laden's elite bodyguard.

The complete article can be found here.


August 6, 2008 07:00 AM Link
Snuffysmith

Establishing the next president's national security agenda: How to confront the defense budget morass
By Gordon Adams | 4 August 2008 When we think about controlling the budget, we think about things like Medicare, Social Security, and urgent domestic needs such as education and alternate minimum taxes. But the most urgent fiscal and planning challenge the next president will face is the defense budget. The bottom line: Either presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama or presumptive Republican nominee John McCain must gain control of defense strategy, planning, and spending the moment the inauguration ends on January 20, or it will be almost impossible to deal with new options for any other spending program.

Already, the White House has informed every federal agency that it doesn't intend to submit a budget for the next fiscal year--standard operating procedure for an outgoing administration--meaning the next president will need to prepare the first real budget for fiscal year 2010 in a hurry since it's due the first week of February.

There's no point in canceling military programs just for budget savings. The real question is whether programs that are increasingly out of control financially are critical to future military missions."
Making matters much harder, the Office of Management and Budget exempted three agencies from this guidance--the Defense Department, the international affairs agencies (mainly the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development), and the Department of Homeland Security. So the defense secretary and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs are preparing a little surprise for the new president: While the White House won't transmit a formal budget, the Pentagon is currently undertaking a full budget plan. How the results will get to Congress isn't clear, but they will most certainly be made public, daring the new president to change the plan.

Although the future defense budgets anticipated in the 2008 budget proposal to Congress project a marginal decline in defense spending, the new Pentagon plan will seek to significantly increase future defense budgets--as they have since 9/11. Thanks in large part to emergency supplemental funding related in part to combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, the last nine defense budgets have grown from $381 billion to more than $680 billion.

As I've pointed out in previous columns--see "The True Cost of U.S. Defense Spending" and "A Look at the 2008 Defense Budget"--while supplemental budgets are supposed to cover the incremental costs for the Iraq War and conflict in Afghanistan, the distinction between these budgets and the basic Pentagon budget has been lost as more and more regular Pentagon procurement and force-structure funding is showing up in the supplementals. The availability of this additional money has made it unnecessary for Defense to think about the long-term, make choices, set priorities, or link budgets to strategy, destroying any semblance of discipline in the planning and budgeting process.

If combat operations end, especially in Iraq, the risk from Defense's view is that those extra resources could disappear. So Defense believes now is the time to try to build these funds into its base budget, regardless of what happens in Iraq. So it is working on adding funds to its basic budget, creating a whole new "defense baseline" for the future. Rumors suggest that this new, elevated baseline could be at least $60 billion above what the Pentagon projected when it submitted this year's budget.

Even if not formally transmitted to Congress by President George W. Bush, the new, elevated baseline will be out there, allowing defense planners and military chiefs to argue that anything less will sacrifice national security--the aforementioned dare. Their hope is that any new president, but particularly Obama, will be faced with a political risk if he changes the plan.

No matter the backlash, the next administration must steel itself to ignore this political maneuver and go back to basics in setting out the defense portion of its national security strategy.

We're at a turning point with respect to defense spending and the military's role in preserving national security. Today, the U.S. defense budget is larger than the defense budgets of every other country in the world combined, and it's more than one-half of all discretionary spending in the federal budget. Worse yet, we're asking the military to execute missions far beyond its core competence--virtually all of our dialogue on national security is conducted in terms of the roles and missions of the military. This has seriously diverted attention from the need to rebuild our civilian national security tools.

The next president and defense secretary must make fundamental decisions about the country's true defense needs. Some suggestions:


Shrink the strategy
The new president and defense secretary should simply set aside the plan the Pentagon is already writing and announce its own defense and military strategy review. Such a review needs to closely examine today's conventional wisdom that the military should focus on counterinsurgency, stabilization, and military occupation missions. It should ask the fundamental question: Where--and under what conditions--are such missions likely to happen? And also, how truly demanding would they be given the likely scenarios? Along with, what capabilities need to be built to maintain the military side of a balance with China or Russia?

But missions are only part of the problem. Beneath the surface, there are severe pressures on defense planning and budgeting, pressures that grew out of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's failure to impose any strategic or budgetary discipline at the Pentagon. Today's Defense Department would prefer to avoid these pressures, so planning is now based on taking a bigger share of federal spending while avoiding choices and priorities driven by strategy.


"Right-size" the force
The first pressure is about personnel. The army and navy are currently well on their way to adding 92,500 more men and women to the ground forces, bringing the army to more than 550,000 troops and the marines to more than 200,000 troops. While force stress due to combat activities in Iraq and Afghanistan is offered as the official rationale for this expansion, these forces likely won't be combat ready until that stress is gone. And like any other industry, adding more employees is going to be expensive. Additional troops will cause upward pressures on the military's training, exercising, and operating accounts and increase equipment needs. There's an urgent need to review this personnel expansion, and right-sized the force according to the strategy, which could mean a smaller ground force.


Review benefits for military personnel
The additional personnel must also be given benefits--i.e., housing, allowances, health care, and retirement, all of which are also rapidly increasing in cost. Today, military pay and benefits are more than 30 percent higher per enlistee than in fiscal year 2000.

It will be difficult to resist pressures for continued future growth in personnel spending, including the compelling need to provide benefits and health care for veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan--though much of that is paid for by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Costs for the military health-care system have skyrocketed to $40 billion a year, and the Congressional Budget Office projects that this number will double by 2025.

Although a benefits review is likely to be highly unpopular, economics may dictate that an overhaul of the current architecture be broached.


Get operations and maintenance expenses under control
The forthcoming Pentagon budget plan will almost certainly continue a time-honored tradition of projecting that the costs of operating, educating, training, and exercising the force will suddenly become cheaper in the future. Yet, with metronomic regularity over the years, operations and maintenance costs have annually increased at 2.5 percent above inflation, rising from around $30,000 per soldier a year in 1955 to around $110,000 today (in constant dollars).

Given the overall budget pressures, it's now urgent to dig more deeply into these costs. A lesser-known reality is that pay for the Pentagon's civilian staff of more than 710,000 (about one-third of all federal civilian employment) is funded through the operations and management (O&M) accounts. Alongside the careful scrub of the size of enlisted forces, there needs to be a careful scrub of the size of the Pentagon's civilian staff and a bottom-up analysis of the inefficiencies and redundancies in O&M activities.


Conduct a zero-based review of procurement plans
The cost of military equipment also continues to increase. Defense's "major acquisition programs" were projected to cost $782 million in 2000. In comparison, the portfolio of "major acquisition programs" in 2007 were projected to cost more than $1.6 billion over their lifetime. The unit cost of the air force's F-22 fighter has risen 160 percent, the space-based infrared radar is up 300 percent, and the army's Future Combat System is up more than 45 percent, according to the General Accounting Office. (For more, see "A Poisoned Chalice? The Crisis in National Security Planning, Programming, and Budgeting.")

Both Obama and McCain have said that they will undertake a review of the services' hardware plans to ensure that the country is buying equipment that meets its strategy. Even before such a review, McCain's federal budget plan already suggests that the Future Combat System and the air force's airborne laser and C-14 Globemaster cargo aircraft "should be ended." (That all three are Boeing programs, and the senator was a severe critic of Boeing's actions around the new air force tanker program may be more than a coincidence.) Thus far, Obama hasn't identified program changes, but he has promised a procurement review.

To be effective, however, such a review needs to be closely tied to the strategy review. There's no point in canceling programs just for budget savings. The real question is whether programs that are increasingly out of control financially are critical to future military missions, which the strategy review should determine.


End mission creep
As I've written elsewhere, Defense has already developed new programs and authorities to conduct foreign assistance--from the Commander's Emergency Response Program, which has grown from $300 million a year to a requested $1.7 billion, to a program to train and equip security forces that the Pentagon would like to make permanent and fund at a cost of $750 million a year. The new African Command wants to expand its growing cooperation, training, and assistance program. And the Latin American Command says it wants to be a "Velcro cube" to which other national-security and foreign-policy agencies can attach in carrying out U.S. foreign and security policy in the region.

Similarly, U.S. military forces are now building clinics, schools, wells, and roads in many countries throughout the world. The new 2008 National Defense Strategy, recently leaked from the Pentagon, expands these missions further, pointing to the challenges of "natural and pandemic disasters and a growing competition for resources." It argues, "The Department of Defense must respond to these challenges, while anticipating and preparing for those of tomorrow."

In the wake of Iraq and Afghanistan, it's critical to sort out the programs that truly support military missions from those that belong to other agencies and departments. (See "Integrating Twenty-First Century Development and Security Assistance.")

If Obama or McCain wants to define and execute his own national security strategy; if he wants to get control over defense spending; if he wants to invest in diplomacy and foreign assistance and development; and if he wants the flexibility to address a growing agenda of domestic issues or a persistent deficit, it will be important to establish strategic guidelines early on and restore strategic and budgetary discipline to the Pentagon. This means ignoring the resource plan the Pentagon is currently producing and returning to the basics.

Copyright © 2008 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. All Rights Reserved. Source URL (retrieved on 08/06/2008 - 04:14): http://www.thebulletin.org/node/3923
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China Not a Power to be Feared - Malcolm Rifkind, The Telegraph
Violence Runs Through 'Stable' India - Pankaj Mishra, The Guardian
Does Israel Need Tough Love? - Jonathan Tobin, Jerusalem Post
Stalinism Just As Bad As Nazism - Mart Laar, Wall Street Journal
Snuffysmith
CHAN AKYA
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Sporting success is a source of nationalist pride, an avenue for chest thumping or more usually an opportunity to make money. Americans love and respect sportsmen, which is why they consistently produce some of the world's best athletes. Perverse incentives force ex-communist countries to rely on producing the world's best chemists. India doesn't win medals because it simply isn't profitable for individuals to do so. (Aug 7, '08)

India's failure of Olympic proportions
Since its Olympic debut in 1900, India has won only 17 medals, 11 of which came in its national sport of field hockey. In Athens 2004, India brought home just one silver, and this year Delhi is sending almost as many officials as athletes. Poor funding, cronyism and an emphasis on education keep populous India off the podium. - Neeta Lal (Aug 7, '08)

Miss Manners meets the average Zhou
"To queue is glorious," reads a new catchphrase festooned across Beijing as part of the government's frantic push to improve social etiquette for the Olympics. Swearing, spitting, littering, not smiling and raising livestock at home are just a few of the banned habits as Beijing strives to refine its "civilizational levels". - Pallavi Aiyar (Aug 7, '08)
Snuffysmith
ASIA HAND
US and Thailand:
A conflicted alliance

President George W Bush's farewell address to Asia was made symbolically in Thailand, where he heaped praise on the kingdom as his country's oldest Asian ally. Unaddressed was speculation from supporters of ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra that Washington has backed the Thai military and put strategic interests before commitment to democracy. - Shawn W Crispin (Aug 7, '08)

Blunt Bush changes Korean tune
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US hopes pinned on Musharraf
President Pervez Musharraf's fate hangs in the balance. The general who ruled Pakistan for eight years faces impeachment by the civilian government elected in February. If Musharraf falls, grand United States plans to tackle militancy in the country's tribal areas will also come tumbling down. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Aug 7, '08)
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Russia-Georgia Conflict Matters to the West - Richard Beeston, The Times
Defend Malaysian Democracy - Sandra Day O’Connor & A. Wahid, FT
Europe's Immoral War Against Immigration - Philippe Legrain, Guardian
Will China See the Light? - James Lawton, The Independent
Tracking Congo's Misery - Tim Butcher, Int'l Herald Tribune
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Real Clear World


Russia Turns War Machine Loose - O'Flynn & Fletcher, The Times
Georgia's Action Could Prove Reckless - Hearst & Orr, The Guardian
Chinese Culture Shock and Awe - Rowan Callick, The Australian
Will Sport Save China? - John Derbyshire, National Review
China's Olympics: In It to Win It - Charles Moore, The Telegraph
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