10/07/2011

Liam Fox Subject of Civil Service Inquiry

The revelation of the meeting will increase the pressure on Fox, 50, who has been accused of putting national security at risk by offering Werritty regular access to his office. Questions have also been raised about whether Werritty has sought to profit financially from the relationship. Werritty ran a defence company while Fox was shadow defence secretary, and he was involved in a health company while Fox was shadow health secretary.

UK MP's To Receive Iraq Guilt Allowance


MEMBERS of parliament are to award themselves a monthly allowance based on how guilty they feel about supporting the debacle and bloodbath in Iraq.
The extent of the payments will be linked directly to the number of casualties, with some Labour MPs warning that the guiltier they feel, the more money they are going to need.
A spokesman for the Speaker said: "This is about regulating what has been an informal system. In the past, an MP would feel a bit guilty about voting to preserve his career and then ask for some free money to cheer himself up.
"But in the wake of public anger over members' expenses it is vital the new system is made transparent and accountable by establishing a formal link between the hell-catastrophe of the Iraq war and the comfort of MPs. 
And of course it applies to Afghanistan as well, so if things start to improve in Afghanistan then MPs will get less money because there will be less guilt over that disaster. Nevertheless Labour backbencher, Len Nicesuit, said: 'I strongly believe that the more recent campaigns in Afghanistan and Libya have led to more guilt on our benches and the logical conclusion would be more compensation paid to our members'.

Prime Minister, David Cameron said that the economic crisis was inherited from New £abour.

10/06/2011

Want To Join The Army

Your application to join the armed forces will be fast-tracked if under 'Any Other Questions' you write 'How soon can I start kicking in doors and killing villagers in night raids?'

2 In 3 US Veterans Say Iraq and Afghan Debacles Not Worth It

Palestinian Statehood - What Next?

Palin Leaves Gap For Nutter In GOP Race

The grotesquerie of the candidates for the leadership of the Republican Party has been reduced by one due to Sarah's decision to spend more time with her dysfunctional family. Who could emerge to fill the space who is any more bizarre than the rightist moonbats already in the fray?

10/05/2011

Rumsfeld Tying Himself In Knots

Libyan Missiles Nightmare

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Civilian Drone Victims In Afghanistan - Short Film

More at The Real News

UK Red Carpet For War Criminal

FROM TZIPI WITH LOVE
Former Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is to visit Britain, after the British government, motivated by Israel, made reforms in a law on issuing arrest warrants for war criminals.
Livni, who cancelled a visit to Britain in 2009 fearing arrest over crimes committed during Gaza war, will travel to the UK on Thursday, and will meet Foreign Secretary William Hague to discuss bilateral relations between UK and Israel.
A Foreign Office spokesman confirmed the news, saying, "We can confirm Tzipi Livni intends to visit the UK this week. As leader of the Israeli opposition she will have a number of meetings, including with the Foreign Secretary to discuss UK Israel relations and recent events in the region."
Since 2001, UK's universal jurisdiction law has given the power to British courts to prosecute suspected war criminals and torturers, even if their crimes took place in another country. The principle of the law goes back to the belief that some crimes including genocide, torture and hostage-taking must be fought wherever the criminal can be arrested.
Last month, the British government that was under constant pressure from Israel, announced a legal reform to make it harder for anti-war campaigners to get arrest warrants against those who are suspected of committing human rights abuses in other countries.
Human rights activists have condemned the government for turning a blind eye to the tyrants and torturers and their human rights violations. Amnesty International accused the government of giving war criminals a “free ticket to escape the law.”
Several other Israeli officials were affected by the former British law, including Israeli Minister for Military Affairs Ehud Barak, Deputy Prime Minister Dan Meridor and Brigadier-General Avi Benayahu, who came to Britain under a fake identity this year.
In 2007, Israeli public security minister Avi Dichter was forced to refuse an invitation from British officials after being informed he would be detained for his part in the assassination of a Hamas leader, killing 14 people, including nine children.
Speaking at a Conservative Friends of Israel meeting, director Stuart Polak insisted that Livni always wanted to come to Britain once the British officials provided change to the law and prevent her from being arrested by pro-Palestinian activists.
He added that she could now visit Britain under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act, which was assented last month.
"It has been a blot on the landscape of the relations of the UK and Israel which is why David Cameron and William Hague said in opposition that it should be rectified, which is what they have done,” Polak said.

Tory Party Conference - Latest On Catgate From Daily Mash


THERESA May has demanded the Home Office be free to do its vital work unhindered by reality.
Speaking from inside her claw-resistant spittle chamber, May insisted it was unrealistic that she should be able to talk about things and know what she was talking about at the same time.
May said: "On any given day I might want to say that the previous government housed immigrants in a network of underground bunkers filled with champagne and chimps serving crack cocaine from bongs in the shape of Russell Grant.
"I don't have time to check whether any of that actually happened. But I do know there are immigrants in this country and clearly there is ground, therefore there must be an underground.
"So fuck you, Ken Clarke."
The home secretary will test her theory later this month by attempting to prove that the Human Rights Act can be used as a handbook on how to abuse children and knife pensioners simply by using some of the words in a completely different order and frequency.
If successful, this year's net immigration figures shoud then drop to zero on the basis that the Home Secretary will write the final report in her living room and use the number of swarthy-looking chaps hiding behind her television as a guide.
Backbench MP and May's round-the-clock handler, Denys Finch-Hatton, said: "At three o'clock this morning I had to lure her out of Old Trafford with a new pair of Jimmy Choo's because she was convinced she was Mario Balotelli.
"And on the way back to the hotel she spotted a cat and then made me eat it."

Libya - Civilians Under Nato Bombing


There’s tragedy in Bani Walid: the people are suffering, there is no food, there is no water,” she added. “In Sirte, there is another tragedy as well. They actually attack the city randomly. They say, ‘We cannot enter Sirte, because there are civilians and we don’t want to attack civilians.’ It is not true, they are attacking, bombing civilians randomly. They don’t care, all they care about is that Sirte is [what they call] ‘liberated.’
Another eyewitness from Bani Walid, who asked to be identified only as Ransi, escaped to Tripoli three days ago. The man says NATO has been bombing the city indiscriminately. More here.

US v China Trade War Looms

1 in 3 US Vets Think War On Terror A Waste

One in three U.S. veterans of the post-Sept. 11 military believes the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting, and a majority think that after 10 years of combat America should be focusing less on foreign affairs and more on its own problems, according to an opinion survey released Wednesday. The findings highlight a dilemma for the Obama administration and Congress as they struggle to shrink the government's huge budget deficits and reconsider defense priorities while trying to keep public support for remaining involved in Iraq and Afghanistan for the longer term.Nearly 4,500 U.S. troops have died in Iraq and nearly 1,700 in Afghanistan. Combined war costs since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks have topped $1 trillion.
The poll results were presented by the Pew Research Center.

10/04/2011

Baghdad Film Festival


The previous edition lasted four days in December 2007, screening 63 films at the Palestine Hotel in central Baghdad. The first film festival was held in September 2005, screening 58 locally-made short films over six days at the Mansour Melia hotel, also in the city centre.
Films this year will be judged for awards in three categories -- best drama, best short film and best documentary, with two other prizes reserved for the best young Iraqi director, and the best female Arab filmmaker.
Despite Belrhali's optimism, however, the film festival faced difficulties -- it was hampered by a shortfall in funds and a lack of interest from the authorities, obstacles that go some way towards explaining why the last film festival was held four years ago. More.

NATO Operations In Libya

NATO said in a press release on Oct 4, 2011 that it has conducted a total of 24,789 sorties, including 9,240 strike sorties, since March31 in Libya. If that's what they are saying we can take it that their activity has been much more extensive than that. 
Meanwhile at least 10,000 anti-aircraft missiles are lost in Libya, said Admiral Da Paola , Chairman of the Military Committee comprising the heads of staff of NATO countries, quoted by the German weekly Der Spiegel. This represents a serious threat to civil aviation and the weaponry could get out of Libya and being in the wrong hands as far as NATO is concerned. Of the 20,000 SAM-7 purchased by Muammar Gaddafi, "more than 14,000 were either used or destroyed or have become obsolete." Nearly 500 were found by the forces of CNT and will all be neutralized, said a report in Der Spiegel at the weekend.

Bahrein - Protestataires Condamnés

Trente-six protestataires chiites, dont des étudiants, ont été condamnés lundi à de lourdes peines de prison par un tribunal spécial à Bahreïn pour des affaires liées au mouvement de contestation populaire.
Les 36 personnes étaient jugées dans trois affaires différentes, dont le meurtre d'un Pakistanais au cours du soulèvement qui a secoué ce petit royaume du Golfe de la mi-février à la mi-mars.
Quatorze hommes ont été condamnés à la perpétuité (25 ans) après avoir été reconnus coupables d'avoir battu à mort un Pakistanais "à des fins terroristes" et d'avoir "participé à des rassemblements illégaux", selon le procureur militaire, Youssef Fleifel, cité par l'agence officielle BNA.
Quinze autres ont été condamnés à 15 ans de prison chacun après avoir été reconnus coupables de tentative de meurtre de militaires, de participation à des manifestations et "d'actes de vandalisme" à l'Université de Bahreïn.

10/03/2011

Minkowski Was Wrong Say Slovenian Scientists

“Minkowski space is not 3D + T, it is 4D,” the scientists write in their most recent paper. “The point of view which considers time to be a physical entity in which material changes occur is here replaced with a more convenient view of time being merely the numerical order of material change. This view corresponds better to the physical world and has more explanatory power in describing immediate physical phenomena: gravity, electrostatic interaction, information transfer by EPR experiment are physical phenomena carried directly by the space in which physical phenomena occur.”

“The idea of time being the fourth dimension of space did not bring much progress in physics and is in contradiction with the formalism of special relativity,” he said. “We are now developing a formalism of 3D quantum space based on Planck's work. It seems that the Universe is 3D from the macro to the micro level to the Planck volume, which per formalism is 3D. In this 3D space there is no ‘length contraction,’ there is no ‘time dilation.’ What really exists is that the velocity of material change is ‘relative’ in the Einstein sense.” Full article.

Yemen - Reporte Pour 30 Septembre

Merci a AFP et France 24.

Loony Electioneering In America

Some people would say business as usual electioneering. The ceaseless bizarreness.

10/02/2011

Miles Davis Remembered

Miles Davis died twenty years ago today. But immortal really.

Blair 'Parrotting' Israeli Demands

Blair acted as a "defence attorney" for the Israelis during a debate within the Quartet in July, when its partners – the US, EU, Russia and the UN – were unable to agree on a statement on the outlines of a return to peace talks. This, Shaath said, gave cause for "serious doubt that he could carry on his duties" as a neutral. He described Blair as "a personal friend, a brilliant man, extremely intelligent, with an important record of achievement, at least in his early years".
When he took on the role of Quartet envoy, "we thought he would be a real support to the Palestinians. But he gradually reduced his role to that of asking the Israelis to take down a barrier here or a barrier there… He really escaped all the political requirements of his job as representative of the Quartet."

Contestation Au Bahrein

$3Bn Worth Of Jets Sold To Iraq

The US is selling fighter jets worth USD 3 billion to Iraq to provide nation 'air sovereignty'. Iraq has reportedly signed a deal worth three billion dollars to buy fighter jets from the United States in order to become capable of protecting their own air space after years of relying on American pilots. Iraqi military chiefs were told to say believe 18 F-16 fighter jets are desperately needed to bolster the nation's defence capabilities as US troops are set to withdraw from the country next year and instability in the region is growing.
"The air force is considered a vital factor to protect Iraq's sovereignty and security against external threats," government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said.

"Iraq needs to build its air force and to depend on its own capabilities to defend the skies instead of asking other countries to do so especially if we know that the U.S. forces will leave at the end of this year," he added. 1.4 billion dollars partial payment had been made on the jets, which would be given by next year.
US Army Lt. General Michael Ferriter said the fighters would give Iraq 'a game-changing capability', adding, 'It provides the basis for their air sovereignty.'
The deal also includes a package to train Iraqi pilots for up to 18 months with ten members of the Iraq Air Force are already training on the fighter in the United States, the paper said.
Meanwhile, Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said that the importance of the deal is 'for the world to know that Iraq is an ally of the US in the region.'
This amount of altruism and concern for Iraqi needs by America almost reduces me to tears.

Prohibition Era Lessons For Today - Short Clip

10/01/2011

3-Dimensional Chess In Afghanistan

By Ashfaqur Rahmann
Look at Afghanistan. What do you see? Other than desolate mountains, grinding poverty and senseless killings, there is not much else. Recall the famous short story of Tagore called Kabuliwala. Those of us who have seen the cinematic version hold vivid memories of the money-lender from Kabul incarcerated in a hot and humid jail in Bengal, caught up in a conspiracy which he cannot comprehend.
The old man befriends the jailer's tiny daughter who reminds him of his own offspring of the same age. He dreams of a placid life in the company of his own daughter in Afghanistan.
But unfortunately the reality is stark and painful, living out his jail term in a far-off land. By the time he gets out into the real world, the jailer's daughter is getting married. He brings a small gift of almonds and nuts for her but she cannot recall him. He goes away hurt and lost, the eternal father figure, sturdy, loving and proud.

The tale reminds us that Afghans are simple people but extraordinarily proud. They never bow before anyone or any power and refuse to be humiliated.
So why are these proud people now subject to another bout of national and international humiliation? Why do they remain targets of death and destruction? Throughout history they showed their mettle before invaders and proved them wrong. Be it the British or the Russians and now the Americans.

A look at the map of Afghanistan and a little knowledge of the region will make things clear. The real reason for military involvement of the West now, especially USA, is largely hidden.
Afghanistan sits next to the Middle East. The countries there are rich in oil and natural gas. Afghanistan itself has little of these resources. However, it borders Iran and Turkmenistan. Iran has the second largest gas reserves in the world, while Turkmenistan has the third largest. So what has that to do with Afghanistan?

Till 1991, Turkmenistan was a part of the Soviet Union, so all gas from there was piped only north through Soviet pipelines. The Russians are now working on another new pipeline to funnel Turkmenistan gas to their territory to the north. The Chinese in the meantime have contracted with Turkmenistan to take natural gas out towards them.
But the US is unhappy. It wants a share of this vital resource too. It is pushing for multiple oil and gas export routes. The US already has envoys working on Euro-Asian energy diplomacy.
Now this competition for pipeline routes and energy resources is the major cause for the struggle for power and control in the region. Pipelines it is said, like railways in the past, connect trading partners and have a bearing on the regional balance of power.

Afghanistan stands astride the path of this geo-political struggle. It has unknowingly, like our Kabuliwala, been caught up in the bigger chess move for power and dominance in the region.
Recall the statement of Richard Boucher, US Assistant Secretary of State in 2007: "One of our goals is to stabilise Afghanistan and to link South and Central Asia, so that energy can flow to the South."
The American pipeline is called TAPI as it involves four countries, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. The Asian Development Bank is aware of and has participated in many planning meetings. The actual work may begin next year.

Iran in the meantime is also looking at building another pipeline to sell gas to Pakistan and India. This alternative pipeline to the one from Turkmenistan will rival the one sponsored by the USA. It will give Iran a geo-strategic leverage in the region. This pipeline will pierce Afghanistan and move from west to east to reach Pakistan. The US is reluctant to see the Iranian pipeline become a reality.
Amidst all this the US president, because of political pressure at home, had to announce phased withdrawal of US troops now stationed in Afghanistan. This will mean leaving much of the oversight of routing these pipelines in Afghan hands.
Add to this, the porous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Militants from across the Afghan border in Pakistan swoop down into Afghanistan and create security problems. The US is already quite unpopular as it uses unmanned drone aircraft to take out these militants with missiles. Many innocent people who are not militants also die due to collateral damage. This angers the Pakistanis as well as the people residing along the eastern Afghan border adjoining Pakistan.

The recent bombing of the US embassy in Kabul as well as incidents of violence and death are suspected by the US as the work of an extremist group called the Haqqani network based in Pakistan. It thinks that the network has connections with Pakistan's security and intelligence units.
The US is therefore angry. There are now serious moves within US Congress and in the US administration to find out the exact nature of this connection. The US is also reported to be contemplating to take unilateral military action against the perpetrators inside Pakistan.

Last week the Pakistan government, alarmed by the developing situation, conferred with all political parties to show a semblance of unity against any US designs.
The pipeline diplomacy will become anfractuous and the US may lose out if the militants rule the roost in Afghanistan and western Pakistan.
But do not forget that inside Afghanistan there are other elements besides the Taliban who also do not support the US plans. They are mainly from the Pashtun tribes. The recent assassination of the former president of Afghanistan Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was mediating peace between the government of Karzai and the Taliban, was to sabotage the talks and to show the US that any of their plans could be easily derailed. These elements are also aligned politically and militarily with tribes living in the northwest of Pakistan and in the Waziristan part of that country.

However, just as there are supporters for Pakistan operating inside Afghanistan there are people and tribes who largely look with favour on the interest of India. They are elements within the Uzbeks and the Tajiks living in Afghanistan. Once they belonged to the "Northern Alliance." They would not oppose the proposed Turkmenistan gas pipeline if it becomes a reality.
he jockeying for position in Afghanistan is however a cause of great concern for the government in Kabul. It needs the US to further its own internal security interest and support development work. But it is not ready to give in to any foreign interest, be it Pakistan or India or Iran or even the USA, which will jeopardise the sovereignty of Afghanistan in the long run.
So Afghans who dream dreams need to continue to pay the price a little longer to make them come true. The country is indeed a thick book, if you know how to read it.
The writer is a former Ambassador and Chairman of the Centre for Foreign Affairs Studies.

Labour MP's Who Backed The Invasion Of Iraq

A bit 'unfashionable' to remind people of this at a time when the Labour Party is making laughable attempts to recover any moral and ethical standing it once had. The full list of shame is here. Most of them are still in their jobs. But a few names stick out in the obtrusive and hard-to-clear fashion of a gas leak. Step forward:
Gordon Brown (no comment)
Stephen Byers ('taxi for hire')
Peter Mandelson(no comment)
Elliott Morley(now in jail for expenses fiddle)
Phil Woolas (disqualified for illegal electioneering - smearing opponent as Muslim extremist)
Jacqui Smith (good estate agent and Porn reviewer)
John Prescott (bruiser on the make)
Geoff Hoon ('taxi for hire')
Patricia Hewitt ('taxi for hire')
Fiona Jones (expenses bandit, parliamentary slut - died of alcoholism in 2007)
Ann Keen(claimed £1.7M expenses in 7 years, lost seat as a result in 2010)
Alan Keen (married to Ann Keen and shared in the fraud. Died 2011)
Hazel Blears (How many houses now, Hazel?)
Beverly Hughes (Stood down due to expenses scandal)
Louise Ellman (Labour Friends of Israel all of  whom voted for the invasion)
Barbara Follett (£42,458.21 owed in over-claimed expenses)
Dennis MacShane (Labour Friends of Israel and fraudster)
Margaret Moran (stood down - faced 21 criminal charges).
Clive Betts - Employs partner and former rent-boy as Parliamentary Assistant. 
And many more.
The 'let's move on' brigade within what remains of New Labour have the luxury to say let's move on. Millions of Iraqis, unless you count the 2 million displaced, don't have that luxury.

US Foreign Policy - The Intelligence Factor

'These twin “intelligence failures” — “a two-verse mantra,” Pillar calls them — were addressed by president and Congress with a noisily announced program of “intelligence reform.” The biggest change was to move intelligence headquarters into a different building under a new official with a new title: director of national intelligence. Pillar’s purpose is not to turn the clock back but to unravel the skein of misinformation, deceit and what can only be characterized as White House bullying that managed to pin the blame for 9/11 and Iraq on the one organization enjoined by law and custom from taking its case to the public.' Full story.

Logements A Jerusalem-Est


Israéliens et Palestiniens vont reprendre leurs négociations gelées depuis plus d'un an avec comme objectif d'aboutir à un accord final fin 2012. Pour y parvenir, les deux partenaires doivent se rencontrer dans un mois pour établir «un calendrier et une méthode de négociations» et trouver trois mois plus tard un terrain d'entente sur les frontières et les arrangements de sécurité.
Au vu des positions de départ, le pari semble totalement irréaliste. Avant même qu'il soit lancé, Danny Ayalon, le vice-ministre des Affaires étrangères a cru de bon de souligner qu'aucun 'calendrier n'est sacré'. Jusqu'à présent, aucune des dates figurant dans les multiples plans de paix discutés dans le passé n'a été respectée en raison des divergences de fond sur des questions telles que l'avenir de Jérusalem, le tracé des frontières du futur État Palestinien et les garanties exigées par Israël pour s'assurer que la Cisjordanie ne devienne pas, comme la bande de Gaza, 'une base terroriste Iranienne' contrôlée par les islamistes Palestiniens du Hamas. Or, sur tous ces dossiers, Benyamin Nétanyahou, à la tête d'un des gouvernements les plus nationalistes de l'histoire du pays, ne dispose de pratiquement aucune marge de manÅ“uvre. Mais pendant ce temps Netananyahou autorise la construction destructif de plus de mille nouveaux logements à Jérusalem-Est.