Quantcast
Channel: Eurasia Review
Viewing all 73639 articles
Browse latest View live

India: Twin Weak Links In Modi Government – OpEd

$
0
0

Narendra Modi’s government has certainly initiated many praiseworthy steps to tone up the administration and improve governance. The latest is the crop insurance scheme that would go a long way in making the life of farmers a little more secured. Unfortunately, the problem is that the creditable steps of Modi government are not being explained to the people in a convincing way.

Apart from the fact that there is a communication gap between the Modi government and the people, there is certainly disappointment amongst the cross section of countrymen that the corrupt persons are not being caught and exposed and convicted. Many of them are going scot free, and people certainly think that Narendra Modi is not fulfilling his promise to rid the country of corruption which was the highlight of his poll promise during his Parliament election campaign and people were impressed about Modi’s claim of commitment to fight against corruption.

Obviously, the Finance Ministry which should investigate and haul the tax evaders and corrupt persons, is not rising up to the expectations of the nation. Suspicions are rising that Finance Ministry is going soft on certain people and perhaps quite a number of them in the opposition parties. It appears Subramaniam Swamy is doing more work to expose the corrupt elements than the Finance Ministry.

The media is making all sorts of vague allegations and increasingly voicing views instead of news. The information ministry has to communicate its stand to the media and to the people through media much more effectively and convincingly. The govt has to necessarily challenge the motivated media personnel who make observations almost irresponsibly. One gets the impression that the Information Ministry is conspicuous by its absence.

These two weak links namely Finance Ministry which is not going after the corrupt people vigorously for whatever reasons and the Information Ministry which is not publicising the progressive work of Modi govt are costing Narendra Modi dearly.

Sooner that Modi looks into this problem and take the necessary corrective measures, it would be good for Modi government and the country.


Middle Eastern Chaos Is A ‘Ladder’ In The Real Game Of Thrones – Analysis

$
0
0
In the wake of the heightened tensions between Gulf Arab states and Iran since the execution of the Shiite cleric Nimr-al Nimr fears of even greater regional chaos loom.  However, from a realpolitik strategic standpoint these fears are greatly exaggerated.  Even one of the most extreme imaginable outcomes, the downfall of the Saudi royal family, no longer represents a calamity on the scale it has long been considered.  As the character of Littlefinger in the popular television drama Game of Thrones once stated, “Chaos isn’t a pit. Chaos is a ladder.”  Middle Eastern chaos can actually benefit the United States if it chooses to climb the ladder rather than sink into the pit.
 
The historical assumption is that such unleashed chaos is inevitably against U.S. national interests.  But that calculus is outdated.  The new reality calls for a different approach. This author has argued that a policy of “divide and conquer” akin to Cardinal Richelieu would secure minimal U.S. national interests under the present, dark set of circumstances which are analogous to Europe’s own Thirty Years War. The continuing deterioration in the Middle East’s strategic landscape only reinforces that a Richelieu-like strategy, as opposed to some form of illusory and externally imposed peace, makes sense.  Not only should both sides of the increasingly bloody Sunni-Shia split be allowed to fight amongst themselves; the fight should be leveraged to U.S. advantage. 
 
First, clearly the prevention of ISIS terrorist attacks in the United States must be a priority. This can be largely accomplished through prudent modifications to our immigration and domestic security policies.  It does not require boots on the ground in the middle of an intra-civilizational civil war that is not our own.
 
The U.S. has been the predominant power in the Middle East for a generation.  The core element of American policy was to keep its then major geostrategic rival, the Soviet Union, out of the Middle East while also making certain that there would not be the rise of a regional hegemon that could dictate the terms of oil trade.  For most of the intervening years this was a sound strategy.  With the fracking revolution in North America it no longer is.  Today, there is no regional hegemon or external actor able to impose themselves on the region.
 
Long-standing blind support of the Saudi regime has had numerous negative ramifications, not the least of which has been the regime’s funding of exportable Wahhabism.  Unfortunately, if prior to Obama, American policy was too pro-Saudi, under Obama, policy has tilted too much towards Iran.   Pivoting between the Sunni and Shia poles of the conflict should avoid either side gaining the decisive advantage in their sectarian conflict.  This is the entire point of a “Richelieu”-like strategy.
 
This strategy would still be sound even under the so-called “nightmare” scenario of Saudi regime collapse.  Though price spikes would be inevitable given Saudi Arabia’s importance in the global oil market, it is also no longer as cataclysmic geopolitically for the U.S. as advertised.  The law of supply and demand will rectify price spikes quicker than doomsayers indicate.  For example, North American oil and gas companies that led to the fracking revolution have been sucking wind and idling a lot of rigs due to the Saudi open-spigot policy.  Price spikes will end that and supplies would increase.
 
In the shorter to medium term, it would help Russia by increasing the price of oil and thus backfilling its coffers. 
 
Though conventional American foreign policy wisdom would find that a negative outcome, it could open the door to a better relationship with Russia if skillful diplomacy, as opposed to the all too-common rhetorical chest thumping, is employed.  As this author has long-maintained, Russia is a critical pivot player in the great geopolitical drama of the 21st Century- the rise of China.  A potential Sino-Chinese axis would be, by far, America’s greatest geopolitical problem since the collapse of the Soviet Union.  Avoiding this should be of paramount importance to U.S. foreign policy makers.  Strengthening Russia combined with a more productive U.S.-Russian relationship will prove indispensible to balancing China.
 
Finally, a complete breakdown of the Middle Eastern order likely poses more problems for the U.S.’ greatest geopolitical competitor, China, than it does for the U.S. itself.  China gets a greater percentage of its oil from the region than the U.S. does. 
 
To return again to pop culture, consider the full quote from Game of Thrones mentioned above:
 
Chaos isn’t a pit.
Chaos is a ladder.
Many who try to climb it fail
and never get to try again.
The fall breaks them.
And some are given
a chance to climb,
but they refuse.
They cling to the realm
or the gods
or love.
Illusions.

Only the ladder is real.
The climb is all there is.”
 
This quote is not quite true.  There is more than just the ladder.  A nation’s own interest is in securing the best possible situation for itself and the people it represents.  The climb is about survival.  This is something too many in the Western world have forgotten is precarious and remains a struggle in a world defined more by anarchy than law.
 
 Understanding how to leverage inevitable chaos is a necessary and under appreciated skill.  It requires leadership willing to cast aside the nostrums of bygone geopolitical eras.
 
*Greg R. Lawson is a contributing analyst at the web-based geopolitical consultancy,Wikistrat. These views are his own.

Overview Of Russia’s Activities In Africa In Past Year – Analysis

$
0
0

By Kester Kenn Klomegah*

In its end-of-year official report, the Russian Foreign Ministry indicated that Russia, as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, has made a substantial contribution to resolving conflicts and crises in Mali, Somalia, Sudan and the Central African Republic and many other African countries.

Russia also provided targeted humanitarian relief aid to Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Cameroon. The report, however, did not state the total amount that was spent on humanitarian aid to Africa in 2015. In 2015, Russia’s financial and material support was overwhelming. With regards to health, Russia’s contribution to the international effort to fight the deadly Ebola virus in West Africa (mainly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone) was estimated at around $60 million, according to an international department head of Russia’s health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor.

Russia continues participating in the joint effort to create a vaccine against the Ebola virus, which is expected to be ready for mass use in early 2016, the director of the Health Ministry’s department Marina Shevyreva said. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the deadly Ebola virus has killed some 11,300 people in West Africa. Last February, to ease the situation of refugees who have been streaming from neighboring states into Cameroon, the Russian government delivered provided food aid for refugees amounting to US$ 2.5 million (1.3 billion CFA francs).

According to statistics issued by the Cameroon government and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, around 300,000 refugees from Nigeria and the Central African Republic have sought refuge in Cameroon. The Republic of Burundi on May 13 last year saw a coup attempt and as a result threw the country into chaos. Burundi descended into violence after President Pierre Nkurunziza announced he was running for a third term. The decision to run for a third term in office was seen by opponents as a contradiction to the constitution. Coup leader General Niyombare is currently on the run. The failure of their coup bid and re-election of Nkurunziza have not stopped the unrest in the country. Over the past years, Russia has played pivotal roles in helping resolve many multi-faceted conflicts on the continent. For instance last September, there was a three-way consultation, the first time within this format, with the participation of Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandour and South Sudanese Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Minister Benjamin Barnaba, to utilize the “Moscow platform” to continue the dialogue on the issues that remain in the relations between the two states. The joint meeting made some important decisions by the Sudanese and South Sudanese foreign ministers, above all, regarding the need to implement – to the maximum degree and as soon as possible – all the provisions of the document on the inter-Sudanese settlement that were signed over the past two or three years.

Russia welcomed the efforts to stabilize the situation in the Republic of South Sudan, where a conflict has been ongoing since 2013, as well as the signing of a peace agreement between the South Sudanese government and the opposition last August. Russia supported them to continue advocating for a political, diplomatic settlement of all outstanding issues, among other things, by following a corresponding approach at the UN Security Council. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, meeting separately with the Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Ministers from Rwanda, Congo and Madagascar last year, stressed Russia’s preparedness to boost humanitarian aid to natural and man-made disasters regions as well as continue helping to find lasting solutions to conflicts in Africa. “We agree that various conflicts in Africa require heightened attention of the world community and the UN, primarily in order to support the approaches of Africans who know better than others how to approach complicated issues on their continent,” Lavrov told Rwandan Louise Mushikiwabo during a joint media conference held last October in Moscow. They further shared opinions on the events in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the African Great Lakes Region as a whole, the Horn of Africa, the Central African Republic and South Sudan.

As always, Russia has agreed on the need to contribute to the subregional organizations on the continent and to continue consolidating the peacemaking potential of the African Union (AU). In addition, Russia regularly provides funds for the annual training of about 80 peacemakers from African countries. “We will help strengthen the peacekeeping potential of African countries in the form of training peacekeepers from African countries and helping them equip their peacekeeping contingents,” Lavrov said in January last year after talks with Burundi Foreign Minister Laurent Kavakure. In all discussions and consultations held throughout 2015, both African and Russian sides have had in-depth exchange of opinions on key issues on the African agenda with a particular focus on easing crisis situations in Africa. Russian President Vladimir Putin stressed at a previous ceremony when receiving credentials from ambassadors of several foreign countries, including diplomats of several African states, that Russia has planned to give all necessary humanitarian assistance to conflict-stricken African countries.

About the author:
*Kester Kenn Klomegah
is an independent researcher and writer on African affairs in the EurAsian region and former Soviet republics. He wrote previously for African Press Agency, African Executive and Inter Press Service. Earlier, he had worked for The Moscow Times, a reputable English newspaper. Klomegah taught part-time at the Moscow Institute of Modern Journalism. He studied international journalism and mass communication, and later spent a year at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. He co-authored a book “AIDS/HIV and Men: Taking Risk or Taking Responsibility” published by the London-based Panos Institute. In 2004 and again in 2009, he won the Golden Word Prize for a series of analytical articles on Russia’s economic cooperation with African countries.

Source:
This article was published by Modern Diplomacy

Lithuania Chooses Priorities – OpEd

$
0
0

In December representatives of the most peaceful profession – teachers – went on warning strikes in Lithuania twice. As was informed by Lithuanian mass media, part or all teachers at hundreds of schools and kindergarten did not give the first classes and kindergarten teachers did not work for several hours. Teachers demanded higher wages, smaller classes and groups and a larger compensation fund for retiring teachers.

People on the streets were full of resentment. “We are pushed to the corner, – Ruta Osipaviciute, a teacher at one of Vilnius schools, told journalists during the strike. – I think the government has made so many promises to the educational society that we think we need to seek their fulfillment.”

Once again they remained unheard. The ministry promises wages of lowest-earning teachers will be increased by 7% next year. Young new teachers will see their wages rise by 5%, and wages for the remaining teachers will increase by 3%. Quotha! No wonder, despite the planned increases, teachers’ trade unions say they are not sufficient. Lithuania’s authorities agreed to satisfy only some of teachers’ demands and will give them additional EUR 10 million instead of EUR 100 million needed!

It is indisputable that there are some issues that should remain among the government’s priorities in any event. I mean medical, educational, social and military spheres. But increasing in financing of one of them shouldn’t be done to the detriment of others.

Obviously, this time the Ministry of National Defence has labored harder than the Ministry of Education and Science to make sure that the new budget’ details work to their employers’ benefit. It is known Lithuania’s parliament made a decision to increase the country’s defense budget for 2016 to EUR 575.2 million, up 35.3 percent compared with a year earlier. Lithuanian Defense Minister Juozas Olekas said in a statement that the hike in military expenditures will allow the ministry “to plan further modernization of weaponry and to ensure the commitments to NATO allies.” Being great patriots most Lithuanians, including teachers, support the government in its desire to modernize the army, but some recently announced plans have nothing in common with the announced aims.

It should be said that Lithuanians are very politically educated and government can rely on their consciousness concerning national security. Probably it is not the case.

While teachers try to persuade the authorities to improve their living standards, Ministry of Defence some days ago reveals the plans to buy more than 50 cars. It is going to pay EUR 1.6 million for them. Let’s compare: after teachers’ strikes the government agreed to increase the retirement fund for teachers by EUR 1.5 million next year. Does it mean that all retiring teachers deserve the same amount of money as 60 generals and colonels who will use new cars?

While the dreams of Lithuanian commanding officers of comfortable new cars have come true, the teachers’ desires of better labor conditions will not change noticeably in foreseeable future.

In this situation, the worst is that Lithuanian authorities unwittingly customize Lithuanians against military. No one will understand why buying new cars for military chiefs is of urgent need while teachers’ salaries are of secondary importance. Such procurements look more than strange and injudicious. There is nothing good in setting military against other citizens. In case of war they will trench together!

*Adomas Abromaitis, a Lithuanian expatriate living in the United Kingdom

Azerbaijan And Indonesia: Dynamic Bilateral Relations – OpEd

$
0
0

On December 28, 1991, the Republic of Indonesia recognized the independence and territorial sovereignty of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Less than a year later, on September 24, 1992, Baku and Jakarta established their diplomatic relations through an official statement that was signed in Moscow.

On December 2005, the Government of the Republic of Azerbaijan opened the doors of its embassy in Jakarta and on the other hand, Indonesian Government accredited its embassy in Iran to cover its bilateral relations with Azerbaijan.
On May 12, 2008, Jakarta and Baku signed a bilateral accord on the visa exemption for holders of diplomatic and service passports, such an agreement has built up momentum to further strengthen the bilateral cooperation between these two nations.

Additionally, Azerbaijan and Indonesia have signed the following cooperation agreements:

1. Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the Government of the Republic of Indonesia and the Government of the Republic of Azerbaijan (September 24, 1992), Moscow.
2. Memorandum of Understanding on bilateral Cooperation and Consultations between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (September 24, 2004), New York.
3. Memorandum of Understanding on News Exchange Cooperation between the Indonesian News Agency and the Azerbaijan State Telegraph Agency (December 31, 2007), Jakarta.
4. Agreement between the Government of the Republic of Indonesia and the Government of the Republic of Azerbaijan on Economic and Technical Cooperation (May 19, 2008); Visa waiver Agreement for Diplomatic and Official/Service Passports, signed on May 19, 2008 in Baku.
5. Memorandum of Understanding on the Cooperation between the Constitutional Courts, signed on February 2013, Jakarta
6. Memorandum of Understanding between the Baku State University and Sumatra University, on March 14, 2013, Sumatra.
7. Memorandum of Understanding signed between the University of ADA (Diplomatic Academy) and Education and Training Center of KEMLU, signed on September, 2015.

Over the past decade, Indonesia and Azerbaijan have maintained a constant proactive cooperation in international organizations and have intensified the bilateral political relations which have brought a number of positive outcomes over the years.

Since the beginning, Azerbaijan has fully supported the territorial integrity of Indonesia; in the same vein Jakarta is a strong advocate of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and supports the legitimate position of Baku regarding the protracted Armenian Aggression in Azerbaijan. Over the last years, a number of high level officials from both countries have engaged in bilateral meetings and reciprocal visits:

  1. on June 21-24, 2009, members of the Indonesian House of Representatives led an official visit to the Parliament of Azerbaijan;
  2. on May 11-12, 2008, the Foreign Minister of Indonesia paid an official visit to Baku; 3. on June 19-21, 2006, the Foreign Minister of Indonesia visited Azerbaijan to attend the 33rd ministerial meeting of OIC where the Indonesian delegation held various meetings with members of Azerbaijani Government (including a productive meeting with Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Mr. Elmar Mammadyarov); 4. on April 22-23, 2005, Honorable Yaqub Eyyubov, Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan, visited Jakarta to attend the Asian African Conference (on this occasion he had various meetings with Indonesian senior officials).

On October 21, 2015, the Human Rights Commissioner (ombudsman) of Azerbaijan Elmira Suleymanova hosted in Baku the head of Indonesian National Commission on Human Rights Nur Kholis. On this occasion, Mrs. Suleymanova highlighted the progress that Azerbaijan has accomplished in the area of ensuring full respect to human rights and highlighted the priority given to increase effectiveness towards the protection of human rights and basic freedoms in Azerbaijan.

In the course of their bilateral meeting, Commissioner Suleymanova provided to her Indonesian counterpart an overview of the history and consequences of the Nagorno-Karabakh armed conflict and the Armenian aggression in Azerbaijan: “this occupation [of Azerbaijani territory by Armenian Armed Forces] was condemned by several international organizations. There are relevant resolutions of the U.N. Security Council and documents of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [that condemn this occupation]. But Armenia refuses to honor these documents.”

In his statement Mr. Nur Kholis, highlighted the activity of Indonesian National Commission on Human Rights and applauded the progress being made in Azerbaijan in the field of human rights. Mr. Nur Kholis underlined the importance of solving the Armenian Aggression and Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by peaceful means, while the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan are fully respected.

The Indonesian Human Rights Commissioner may play a vital role to deliver and bring in the attention of the world the facts in support of human rights violations committed by Armenian Armed Forces in the territories of Azerbaijan. Mr. Nur Kholis could help emphasize again what is mentioned in the European Human Rights Court Statement which underlines the fact that “Nagorno-Karabakh issue is not a conflict, but an open and clear aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan. As a result of this aggression and occupation more than 1 million Azerbaijani people are subjected to mass killings, genocidal acts and forced to flee from their homes. Their fundamental rights have been violated and are still being violated by Armenian Armed Forces.”

Indonesia must continue to express its support in favor of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and to denounce the Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan in front of every International Organization where Jakarta is an active player.
Indonesian Government would provide a tremendous support if it adopts, implements and supports the Resolutions issued by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) namely 10\41-POL and 10\42-POL; both documents request all the OIC member countries to impose sanctions on Armenia and terminate diplomatic relations with Armenia until the latter withdraws its troops from the internationally recognized territories of Azerbaijan as demanded by the UN Security Council’s Resolutions 822,853,874 and 884. Until today, these two OIC Resolutions have been implemented by Turkey, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan.

On November 13, 2015, the Embassy of Azerbaijan in Indonesia participated in the 48th Annual Charity Bazaar 2015 that was organized by the Women’s International Club in Jakarta. Almost sixty diplomatic representatives were gathered in this global event, including government officials, diplomats and many journalists.

The stands of Azerbaijan exhibited the country’s national culture, centuries old heritage, carpet weaving and art traditions; it also highlighted the 2015 first European Games in Baku. During the exhibition, the Embassy distributed to all participants a number of magazines and books that shed more light about Azerbaijan. On this occasion the Azerbaijani stand was visited by the wife of Indonesian Vice-President and the wife of the Deputy Foreign Minister.

The two distinguished dignitaries were informed about the country’s history and cultural heritage.

In the field of socio-cultural cooperation Indonesia and Azerbaijan have made some progress. Since 2007, Indonesian Government has awarded Fellowships and Scholarships in Arts and Culture to Azerbaijani students who want to study in Indonesia. On the other hand Azerbaijan offers scholarships to Indonesian junior diplomats to pursue a Master’s degree in the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy. More than 25 Azerbaijani students have completed and continue their studies in Indonesia and most of them are majored in the faculty of Bahasa and Culture of Indonesia.

Bilateral Trade Cooperation

In 2009, bilateral trade between Indonesia and Azerbaijan totaled US$ 757.44 million, it experienced a significant increase if compared to the bilateral trade levels of 2008, reaching only US$ 101.55 million. In 2009, the exported goods of Indonesia to Azerbaijan recorded an amount of US$ 1.10 million, while the imported goods from Azerbaijan reached a total amount of US$ 756.28 million, generating a trade deficit for Indonesia of approximately US$ 755.24 million.

Meanwhile, trade deficit was persistent in January-September 2010, bilateral trade volume reached US$ 646,97 million with Indonesia’s export value of US$ 1.40 million and import value of US$ 645,56 million.
Azerbaijan is the second largest crude oil supplier of Indonesia and trade turnover between the two countries is growing every year. Wooden and machinery products are exported from Indonesia to Azerbaijan.

Indonesia’s main exported products to Azerbaijan are: canned food, coffee, rubber product, manufactured goods, household appliances and textiles.

Both nations are in the process of establishing a Joint Commission on Economic Affairs; it is expected to strengthen the commercial ties between both countries. Baku and Jakarta, have a great potential to strengthen the economic, trade, commercial and bilateral business cooperation. The region of Nakhchivan in Azerbaijan has many attractive opportunities for Indonesian Businesses, especially in the food industry, automotive sector, carpet weaving industry and IT Technology.

During the 2005-2008, Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic has implemented important projects that have proved to be very successful and deserve a greater attention by Indonesian businesses and international community at large. Some of the sectors that have been improved are: renewed infrastructure, renewable energy projects, new industrial and logistical complexes, further development of agricultural and livestock sectors, among others. All these areas of Azerbaijani economy focused in the region of Nakhchivan are a great opportunity for partnerships between the business sectors of Indonesia and Nakhchivan (Azerbaijan).

Nakhchivan is an attractive tourist destination; there are many cultural places of interests such as “Ashabu Kahaf”, historic Islamic monuments, natural healing and treatment centers such as “Duzdag” which is a unique and a very influential treatment for bronchitis and other types of breathing and lung problems. Located in the border with Turkey and Iran, Nakhchivan can become a very attractive transit point for Indonesian tourists who want to travel to Umrah through Turkey.

Malaysian Police To Increase Social Media Scrutiny This Year – OpEd

$
0
0

Amid concern by a number of Malaysian NGO’s Malaysia’s Inspector-General of Police Khalid Abu Bakar announced on 12th January at a monthly staff assembly at police headquarters at Bukit Aman, that “police have no choice but to beef up efforts to monitor social media as many internet users in the country abuse the platform by issuing insensitive comments”.

This comes at a time where reporters and opposition politicians have been prosecuted for crimes like sedition, and arrest warrants sought through Interpol for the editor of the Sarawak Report Clare Rewcastle-Brown. Universiti Malaya law lecturer Azmi Sharom is currently on trial because of a legal opinion he gave over the Perak constitutional crisis, and activist Khalid Ismath faces 14 charges under Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 and Sedition Act 1948 for statements he made on social media. Mary Ann Jolley was deported from Malaysia for her report on the murder of Altantuya Shaariibuu. She is also under investigation under section 505(b) of the Penal Code related to “statements with the intent to cause, or is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public”.

It appears that any criticism about government politicians and issues of corruption have been defined as threats to national security by the recently appointed Attorney General Mohamed Apandi Ali, who replaced Abdul Gani Patail only a few months ago by Prime Minister Najib over the 1MDB issue.

Freedom of expression in Malaysia is rapidly declining, where any dissent is now considered a threat to public order and national security.

Ironically the former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir when the Multimedia Corridor was launched back in the 1990s gave a public assurance that the internet would never be censored. However, late last year the Malaysian Government banned the media website “The Edge” for coverage of the 1MDB issue, claiming that it threatens public order and national security for three months, and blocked access to the Sarawak Report within Malaysia.

What is of even more concern is the Malaysian Police also intend to monitor WhatsApp, and instant messaging application, which would constitute spying on private citizens. The Inspector-General of Police confirmed that the police will monitor specific people who they believe are a threat to national security.

When a 400GB cache of files from a Milan based company Hacking Team was dumped on the internet last year, it was revealed that the Prime Ministers Department in Malaysia had acquired software which according to Hacking Team’s own promotional material can “Hack into your target with the most advanced infection vectors available. Enter his wireless network and tackle tactical operations with ad-hoc equipment designed to operate while on the move….Remote Control System: the hacking suite for governmental interception. Right at your fingertips.”

This software can used an attack vector into a target computer, via Adobe software to gain access, and could read encrypted emails, skype calls, and documents, or deliver malicious software or viruses. The software ‘DaVinci’ is a remote control system which can also turn on microphones and cameras within targeted computers and mobile phones.

One can assume now that public officials are active in scanning the internet and on chat applications for potentially ‘seditious’ materials and communications. Therefore no online or telephone communications can be guaranteed free of ease dropping by authorities within Malaysia.

In Malaysia where the internet is the primary way that groups express their feelings about human rights and democracy, and alternative media is the only channel where news about corruption can be made public, the Najib Government has begun winding this medium in, which will suppress the flow of information and expression around the country.

In the midst of increasing crackdowns on dissent, Malaysia now has one of the most repressed media in the region, and it appears the internet and social media is also to be harnessed. According to Aliran spokesman Mustafa Anuar, this indicates that the “regime …is nervous and insecure and, in turn, increasingly intolerant of legitimate criticism, the exchange of views in the public domain, and dissent”.

When the resources of the Malaysian Police are already stretched to the limit, the focus on monitoring the internet, social media, and chat applications is going to take more personnel away from where crime is really happening, out on the streets of Malaysia. This is all to catch what IGP Khalid Abu Bakar calls immature internet users, who he claims may give rise to racial and religious divisions, which could affect public order.

Since the late 1990s, the internet and social media gave Malaysians new freedoms to express their feelings and concerns about society and politics in the country. Internet freedoms played a major role in the rise of the opposition vote over the last 4 general elections. This freedom is now beginning to be eroded away with the IGP Khalid Abu Bakar specifically singling out this task to his force.

Malaysia’s police force has become heavily politicized and become a major tool in Prime Minister Najib’s hands to stay in power.

Hillary Clinton’s Africa Genocide Problem – OpEd

$
0
0

Hillary Clinton might have some explaining to do to her base, with the latest batch of emails released from her days as Secretary of State. Her supporters in the Democratic Party are particularly attuned to minority issues and the social and economic struggles of those in developing countries. Additionally, nearly two-thirds of African-American voters went Democrat in the last election, a demographic the party has come to rely on over the years.

Imagine how damaging it should be to Hillary, then, if the mainstream media decides to pick up on probably the most explosive revelation from Hillary’s latest server dump: She knew that the Libyan rebels her State Department backed were systematically committing genocide against black Africans in Libya and she did nothing about it!

The pretext for US participation in the attack on Libya and overthrow of its secular government was that Gaddafi was about to attack his own people in the eastern part of the country. The justification for the US attack was the doctrine of “R2P” – the Responsibility to Protect civilians targeted by their government. In fact, US intervention in Libya actually facilitated an attack on civilians — and especially black Africans — by mobs of US-backed jihadists. Hillary knew about it because she had been warned by her trusted advisor Sid Blumenthal. And she did nothing. She went along with the pre-decided policy even though she knew the horrors it brought to anyone in Libya with black skin — many of them simply manual workers imported to do construction and similar jobs.

As the Anti-Media points out (via Zero Hedge):

In an email on March 27, 2011 [PDF], Blumenthal informs Secretary Clinton that a Libyan rebel commander told him that “his troops continue to summarily execute all foreign mercenaries captured in the fighting.”

Summarily execute is a nice way of saying they are straight up killing anyone they see, who they think could be a “foreign mercenary.”

So, you ask, how are the rebels determining who are (and are not) foreign mercenaries based merely on sight?

The answer is based on the color of their skin. But the killings were not just cases of mistaken identity, they were part of a racial grudge connected to perceived favoritism by the Gaddafi government.

As the BBC reported in 2011, the war for the rebels extended to black Libyan civilians and sub-Saharan contract workers. The town of Tawergha, whose residents were descendants of black slaves, was “cleansed” by the rebels. The 30,000 people who lived in Tawergha were forced to flee, many unable to outrun the rebels and subjected to beatings, rape, and those summary executions Blumenthal mentioned.

Hillary you knew that blacks were being massacred in Libya solely because of the color of their skin and you did nothing. Why?

This article was published by the RonPaul Institute.

Obverse Twins: Pathankot And Mazar Attacks Tell India And Pakistan Different – Analysis

$
0
0

By Chayanika Saxena*

Unleashing simultaneous attacks on the Indian strategic assets both within its territory and on the soil of another nation, the potential role of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in orchestrating them is unknown to no one. As facts roll out ascertaining the involvement of this intelligence agency in the Pathankot and Mazar-e-Sharif attacks, what is becoming even more evident is that India and Pakistan stand at fork’s end from each other today. They might have been born together, but what has become of these two countries has made them the obverse images of one another.

Sharing political history, culture and even blood, what is it that continues to drive a wedge between these two neighbors so much so that Pakistan finds its interest served by causing harm to India? The answer lies less in what the British did to them, but more in what Pakistan chose to do unto itself.

Created with the partition of British India in 1947, India and Pakistan were the result of a ‘two-nation’ theory that began to flip the moment it was put in practice, particularly in that very country that was to be its child: Pakistan. As India and Pakistan began charting different courses, the rapid successes met by India on many fronts began to imbue a sense of fear in Pakistan which ever since the untimely death of its creator Muhammad Ali Jinnah began lurching without an effective leader and a clear vision. Pakistan’s identity came to be based on its rabid animosity, or rather envy of India’s stability, growth and relative secular inclusiveness.

In the theories of politics, we have been told that there are two ways to constructing identities: positive and negative. Where the positive formation of identity depends more on looking-within for substance, the latter conception of identity beseeches that one’s existence will be based on what the ‘other’ is not. In other words, in constituting identities, where a positive construction would depend more on self-reflection and self-assessment, the negative will be just the opposite. An identity negatively constructed will be something like this: I am what I am not because of who I am, but because I am not you, and unfortunately, it is this very feature of identity formation that Pakistan took to.

Since its creation, the identity of Pakistan as a nation has depended less on what it was, what it is or what it could be; its obsession with India replaced what should have been a process of self-constitution with a fear psychosis that fed on destructive ambitions of causing harm to India to create a sense of purpose within.

Having been dealt the first blow with the untimely death of visionary Jinnah, the country was left in doldrums; a political vacuum that was filled with the rise of military which had started to stage coups as early as in 1949 (Rawalpindi Conspiracy by Major General Akbar Khan to oust the then PM Liaquat Ali Khan). The loss of Kashmir as a consequence of its sponsored militancy punctured a big hole in the two-nation charade. Its war with India in 1965 saw the Indian Army marching into its territory all the way up to Lahore, and the 1971 war took away its eastern wing which had decided to revolt against the Pakistani oppression and second-grade treatment of the Bengali-speaking citizenry of what was till then the East Pakistan. It has been noted that the creation of Bangladesh hurt the masochism of the Pakistani Army which has since then intensified its anti-India activities.

Hurtling to the last decade of the 20th century, India and Pakistan had liberalized their respective economies in succession to one another, with Pakistan going first in 1990 followed by India in 1991. Here too, the two countries began charting different courses despite beginning at the same starting-point. While India proceeded opening its economy to the world, Pakistan took a step a back with Benazir Bhutto’s People’s Party of Pakistan (which was also the architect of Pakistan’s nationalization scheme in the 1970s) repealing the order as soon as it was put into force. Soon, India became one of the fastest growing economies in the world, making it the world’s third largest economy (by Purchasing Power Parity index) at the end of the year 2014, while Pakistan was at the 26th rank by the same measure.

Politically, the coups in Pakistan had created a tight-fisted rule in the country, stunting the growth of democracy. Starting with the military coups that made democracy to recede, the conscious Islamization of Pakistan under the regime of General Zia ul-Haq unleashed what was to hurt the social base of the country to date: extreme radicalism and conservatism. Some of the most infamous ordinances, like Hudood were enacted in the efforts of making Pakistan into a ‘true Islamic state’ replete with codes and punishment that were in order with the Sharia. The Indian political setup on the other hand was becoming a case of democratic marvel. Despite a poor economic base and rampant illiteracy, India managed to become the world’s largest democracy whose regular, 5-yearly affair turned into a spectacle for the world.

As politics in Pakistan began assuming a theological color, the thriving cosmopolitan culture in Pakistan took the beating. The secular fabric of the country which its founding father, Jinnah, had wanted to preserve was now in tatters. In contrast, India was getting projected as a country of cultural unity, with greater respect for secularism at least when compared to its neighbor.

To add to this, the imprints of India were becoming visible in the region as well. Economically, it became the largest economy in South Asia; its political setup one of the only cases of democratic success in the Third World, and culturally, a society that was immensely variegated but still together. And, Pakistan essentially became all that India was not, and primarily for its own giving.

As we pass through the second decade of the 21st century, the currency of India is experiencing a high-point on all the fronts, while Pakistan is still reeling with home-grown pressures of extremism, an interfering military and a sense of global distrust towards what it promises and what it does. The situation of Pakistan is extremely delicate today especially as the military that had once been the brigade of blue-eyed boys in politics, who were initially looked to for correcting all that was going wrong in the country, are being told to vacate the political space they had once usurped. And, as it struggles to keep its power from going, it has intensified its anti-India rhetoric and acts to show that it still calls the shots in determining what Pakistan does and will do.

The only way out of this precarious situation is to strengthen the civilian government in Pakistan, which in its earnestness has shown its conviction towards fostering peace and stability in the sub-continent and the larger South Asian region. While India cannot take the beating for trying to make Pakistan a successful democracy, but it can surely throw its weight around PM Sharif as it has of late done.

*Chayanika Saxena is a Research Associate at the Society for Policy Studies, New Delhi. She can be contacted at: chayanika.saxena@spsindia.in


Boko Haram: The African Prototype Of The Islamic State – Analysis

$
0
0

By Tuva Julie E. Smith*

On January 7th 2015, the French satire magazine, Charlie Hebdo, came under attack by Islamic extremists who were said to be supportive of the Islamic State (also known as ISIS, ISIL and Da’esh). Among the 12 people killed were four cartoonists, including the editor, and two policemen. In the days following the attack, more than three and a half million people marched through the streets of Paris, standing in solidarity with the victims and their families, while saying “Je Suis Charlie” (I am Charlie). In the front-row linking arms, were presidents and prime ministers from all over the world.

One cannot deny the solidarity shown by and among the world leaders. The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, publicly stated his opinion of the attack as, “a horrendous, unjustifiable and cold-blooded crime”. Furthermore, the response after the attack had poured out on the social media, with hashtags #CharlieHebdo and #JesuisCharlie trending media outlets like Twitter. The extent of international support was enormous. Twitter recorded with more than 6,500 #JesuisCharlie every minute, and more than 3.4 million hashtags of the same kind within the 24 hours following the attack.

But, where the besieging of a community of liberals in one of the western capitals could capture the media glare, and for long, the western ignorance of Boko Haram, another lethal Islamic terror organisation, was conspicuous by the wilful ignorance that was casted on it.

Boko Haram, for all the dramatic monstrosity it has committed this far, paralleling the IS but on a smaller scale, has become one of the deadliest terrorist organisations in the world. It has been terrorizing Nigerians since the end of the 1990s, and represents radical terrorism that has largely been left unfettered. In fact, unsurprisingly in March 2015, the radical group pledged its allegiance to the Islamic State.

Their indiscriminate killings are horrific in character, but these lack broader coverage in the media compared to ISIL`s activities. The attack and kidnapping of more than 250 schoolgirls from Chibok in Borno State in April 2014 was perhaps, one of those one-off moments that could gather world interest and as whose consequence, a worldwide solidarity campaign got launched. World leaders and people in general joined the campaign “bring back our girls”. However, even though the attack brought international outrage, the attention remained rather ephemeral in character.

While the attack that took place in Paris was horrific in itself, but that being said, only four days earlier, the radical and violent extremist group, Boko Haram had plundered its way into the town of Baga, in the northeast of Nigeria. The genocide they committed claimed the lives of more than 2,000 women, men and children who were unsuccessful in their attempt to escape Boko Haram´s men. However, the indiscriminate attack, and possibly the deadliest once since 9/11, went seemingly unnoticed among the western media outlets. One could ask oneself: if this event had occurred in any western country, killing more than 2,000 people, would the coverage have been any different? The answer is a solemn yes!

A word worth highlighting is indifference, which I believe describes the situation of western ignorance. The fact is that people in the west and western media outlets in general have a tendency of ignoring international events if it is not of a direct concern to them. One can simply reflect on a comment on the Ebola crisis made by the former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan during a BBC interview, and which I believe sums-up the wilful western indifference well: “when you look at the evolution of the (Ebola) crisis, the international community really woke up when the disease got to America and Europe”.

As such, one of the reasons for the western world’s ignorance of Boko Haram is for the reason that it is yet to do anything go all guns blazing on the American or European soil. For as long as it does not take such shape, Boko Haram will not be seen as a direct threat to the western world and thus, be of little interest to them. The ignorance could also be because of the fact that the political interests of the western world are not as much as say they are in the Middle East.

But, where these attacks certainly lack media attention, one thing that possibly impedes them from being covered is the geographical space where they take place. For instance, Boko Haram attacks often occur in remote areas where local reporting is challenging impeding access to real footage of massacres which makes the limited international reporting even more difficult.

An unequipped government and its reluctance to admit a state of emergency are partly to be blamed for the lack of knowledge about such incidents globally. To accept the loss of control over your country is not something that comes easily. It wasn’t until May 2013 that the former president of Nigeria, Jonathan Goodluck affirmed the real challenge his country and government were struggling with, which later that year resulted in the official listing of Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation.

The media glare or the lack of it notwithstanding, the cancer of terrorism is spreading rapidly, and one can no longer deny the deadliness set by Boko Haram. As statistics from previous years show, Boko Haram has literally exploded. The Global Terrorism Index (GTI) 2015 published by the Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP), is a study on terrorism in 162 countries with the data being collated by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START).

The GTI 2015 highlights some disturbing facts on Boko Haram. For instance, in 2014 the group increased its attacks by 300 per cent; a staggering number of an additional 5,662 individuals killed compared to 2013. The worst assault that year was the attack on a Nigerian mosque killing at least 120 and injuring as many as 270. The year 2015 did not show any signs of improvement. In January 2015 alone, more than 2,000 people were said to have lost their lives to Boko Haram attacks.

Boko Haram´s unrelenting attacks and fight for an independent Islamic State has steered the civilians in Nigeria into desolation. According to the GTI 2015 study, Nigerians had in 2014, witnessed the largest increase in terrorism incidents compared to the other 162 countries, with the outcome of 7,512 fatalities. Additionally, it is worth highlighting that the group’s violence and despoliation has openly resulted in a large number of internally displaced people (IDP). In terms of the scale of displacement, the wave in Nigeria is said to be estimated at a staggering 1,075,300 IDP at minimum (figures from December 2014). Additionally, the forecast for the neighbouring countries, such as Chad, Cameroon, and Niger, is equally dismal. Boko Haram carried out its first cross-border attack in Cameroon late December 2014, which left at least 30 civilians dead at Mbaljuel village in northern Cameroon. Furthermore, Niger experienced its first attack by Boko Haram militias in February 2015. Bosso town was reportedly attacked in which one civilian and four soldiers got killed, as well as 109 Boko Haram militants.

Furthermore, data collected and analysed in the GTI 2015 study points out that Boko Haram militias were responsible for 6,644 deaths in comparison with the Islamic State, which was accountable for about 6,073 deaths. Hence, the radical extremist group is no longer the “little brother” of Islamic extremism. Boko Haram is now triumphing on top of the chart as the world’s most deadly terrorist organisation.

We should care and we should investigate the crimes of injustice when we know for a fact it is a reality, even though is it not directly concerning us. The declaration of an Islamic caliphate back in 2014 by Boko Haram only signals their aspiration of wanting to control a larger area then Nigeria. Currently ranked as the world’s deadliest terror group, it will be interesting to see what Nigeria and neighbouring countries can expect from Boko Haram in 2016.

*Tuva Julie E. Smith is an operational assistant at SITSEN, Norwegian Armed Forces. She can be reached at tuva.engebrethsen@gmail.com

Turkey’s ‘Kurdish Problem’: Then And Now – Analysis

$
0
0

By Nick Danforth*

A decade ago many observers hoped that Turkey’s Justice and Development party (AKP) would at long last succeed in consolidating Turkey’s troubled democracy. Even as such hopes proved increasingly unfounded, it still seemed possible that the AKP would succeed in a more limited realm by finally bringing an end to the country’s long-running “Kurdish problem.” Today, though, renewed fighting between the government and the PKK has dashed these hopes as well, making stability in southeastern Turkey seem as elusive as ever.

One way to understand both the AKP’s early potential and its eventual failure in regard to the Kurdish question is to examine how the party transformed the language of Turkish nationalism while sustaining its essence.

From the outset, the AKP promised to challenge a nationalist consensus which held, in its starkest form, that Kurds simply didn’t exist. The official line, long enshrined in government rhetoric, was that everyone in Turkey was a Turk, should be proud to identify as a Turk, and should quite naturally speak Turkish. While previous politicians in the 1990s had hinted at the inadequacy of this approach and the need for a more inclusive form of national identity, their efforts had largely been thwarted by the resistance of the Turkish military. As the AKP gradually curbed the power of the military, though, it began taking steps towards acknowledging Kurdish identity that would previously have been impossible. AKP leaders referred openly to Turkey’s “Kurdish Problem” (which in the past had simply been a “terror problem”) and even initiated a government-run Kurdish language television station. Other early steps included occasionally referring to places in southeastern Turkey by their Kurdish names rather than their forcibly-imposed Turkish ones, and promising to remove slogans like “How Happy Is He Who Calls Himself a Turk” written in large letters on mountains above Kurdish villages.

But the AKP government ultimately faced two obstacles in these efforts. The first was winning support for cultural reforms from nationalist voters. The second was making peace with the PKK, a militant group whose use of violence against Turks and Kurds alike had given it a monopoly over Kurdish politics. Ironically, as a result of its failing to overcome both obstacles, the AKP ended up in the strange position of deploying a new, multi-cultural form of Turkish identity that explicitly embraces Kurds in order to justify its ongoing war against self-proclaimed representatives of the country’s Kurdish citizens.

Today, in the hands of government leaders, newspaper columnists, and ordinary citizens, a new form of multicultural identity serves as improved propaganda for many of the same oppressive policies once justified by the traditional nationalist history. Central to this new identity is a celebration of not only the Kurds but also less-prominent minorities such as Albanians, Bosnians, Circassians, and many others who came to Anatolia as refugees in the final years of the Ottoman Empire and together built the modern Turkish state. Yet acknowledging the presence of these groups—Muslim immigrants whose descendants are often proud Turkish nationalists—has become a prelude to asking why these groups assimilated when Kurds did not. Since these groups have not demanded linguistic rights or political autonomy, much less resorted to violence, they, like model minorities elsewhere, can serve as a reference point for asking what’s wrong with the Kurds. In the words of Binghamton University’s Güllistan Yarkın, the question inevitably becomes “Why do the Kurds, unlike Turkey’s Laz, Circassians, Pomaks, Arabs, Gypsies, and other ethnic groups, rebel against the state and constantly cause problems?”

Consider a few quotes to see how this approach works: In late September 2015, the AKP organized a large “anti-terror” rally in which President Erdogan took the lead in presenting Turks and Kurds—“all those who rally around our flag ”—as united in their struggle against a small and unrepresentative group of armed extremists.  It is an rhetorical style that builds well on claims he has made in the past, such as “we in this country, Turks and Kurds, Laz, Circassians, Georgians, Abkhaz, Roma, and Bosnians will be united, but we will never give in to terror.”

Prime Minster Ahmet Davutoglu, for his part, has put a historical spin on Erdogan’s argument, emphasizing the long tradition of Turks and Kurds joining together for a common cause. Writing Kurds into two foundational moments in Turkish nationalist history, Davutoglu has claimed that Turks and Kurds fought together under Alparslan in the eleventh-century Turkish-Seljuk invasion of Byzantine Anatolia, just as they did in the twentieth century during the Turkish War of Independence.

Pro-government newspaper columnists have gone to even greater lengths to ground such claims in a new version of Turkish history, one that not only emphasizes brotherhood but blames malevolent foreign powers for its disruption. In the pro-government paper Yeni Safak, for example, one writer claimed, “Yesterday, the crusaders fought against us, the Turkish and Kurdish Muslims living on this land. Today, for the same reason, they are attacking Turkey.” Two pages later, in a piece titled “We Are Turks, We Are Kurds, Together We Are Turkey,” another writer discussed the powerful, millennia-long civilization that emerged when Turks, Kurds, and even Armenians were united under the Ottoman Empire’s magnanimous rule. Until, of course, the Ottomans were “brought to their knees” during World War I.

In their efforts to challenge Turkey’s nationalist history, many serious scholars have indeed focused on Ottoman tolerance and the multicultural character of Turkey’s war for independence. Yet most would be quick to highlight what the government’s narrative omits. The brotherhood part may be true, but not the simple, often xenophobic explanation of why the brotherhood disappeared. Rather than blaming foreign intrigue, most historians would point to the role of nationalism and the twentieth-century Turkish state’s efforts to forcibly assimilate minorities over the past century. In fact, non-Kurdish minorities often faced the same restrictions as Kurds—restrictions on using their language or even acknowledging their identity. And the Turkish government denied their existence for the same reason it denied that of the Kurds, in order to force them assimilate as Turks. Turkish citizens were long discouraged or forbidden from discussing their unique geographical or cultural origins, and in time many lost familiarity with the languages their ancestors had spoken. Ironically, it was only when these efforts had succeeded in assimilating non-Kurdish groups that the government could switch tacks.

Today, many people in Turkey are increasingly proud of their family’s heritage, be it an ancestor who emigrated from the Caucasus a century ago or great-grandparents who grew up speaking Greek on Crete before the First World War. But this heritage is now understood as part of their Turkish identity, much as immigrant origins are a fundamental part of being American for many in the United States. In a sense, denying that minorities existed actually succeeded in making many of them go away. Or at least succeeded in recasting their identity in a more acceptable form. And as a result, the government can now wield these examples of successful assimilation against Kurds who want to preserve more of their cultural identity in everyday life than this model allows.

Ironically, the government’s new approach to managed multiculturalism is not as different  as it might seem from the long-standing nationalist insistence that Kurds do not exist. Historically, denying diversity to ensure assimilation and recognizing diversity to demand assimilation have always been closely linked. Many of the men who founded the Turkish state in the 1920s were themselves recent immigrants from the Balkans or the Caucasus. And many of their early statements on Turkish identity acknowledge the diversity they themselves were part of. As the sociologist Mesut Yegen observed, shortly before the Republic’s founding Ataturk himself declared:

The various Muslim elements living in the country… are genuine brothers who would respect each other’s ethnic, local, and moral norms… If one thing is certain, it is this: Kurds, Turks, Laz, Circassians, all these Muslim elements living within national borders have shared interests.

Quickly, though, an insistence on brotherhood and shared interests turned into an insistence on shared identity. As spelled out in the introduction to Turkey’s 1924 Constitution:

Our state is a nation state. It is not a multi-national state. The state does not recognize any nation other than Turks. There are other peoples which came from different races [ethnic groups] and who should have equal rights within the country. Yet it is not possible to give rights to these people in accordance with their racial [ethnic] status.

In short, Turkish leaders realized that constructing a nation paradoxically required them to deny there was any construction to be done. The promise of the constitution, then, was that everyone who was willing to do their part, play along and embrace their Turkish identity without ever admitting the hardship this might entail, would be accepted as a citizen in good standing. And so for decades, nationalists who refused to admit that anyone actually was Kurdish were still quick to point to individuals everyone knew were Kurdish who had been quite successful in modern Turkish society. Turgut Ozal, Turkey’s president from 1989 to 1993, was half Kurdish, and the Kurdish pop star Ibrahim Tatlises, who rose to fame in the 1970s, remain perhaps the most popular examples. And there are, indeed, countless others, including high-ranking military officials, who have taken the state up on its promise of equal treatment for all those willing to quietly assimilate.

But the historical question elided by the government’s current rhetoric remains: Why did some groups and individuals ultimately accept the identity offered them whereas others refused? From the beginning, Muslims seeking refuge after fleeing lost Ottoman territories in the Balkans—Albanians, Bosnians, and Pomaks from Bulgaria—were by nature of their circumstances more susceptible to the state’s efforts to assimilate them. Even in the late nineteenth century, the Ottoman government made a point of geographically dispersing such immigrants and enforcing strict settlement quotas to help ensure that they would be absorbed by their new Turkish neighbors. In spite of this, the state sometimes faced resistance from these minorities as well. Circassians, who fled Russian advances in the Caucasus, even briefly sought to form their own independent state in Western Anatolia during the chaos that followed the First World War. Yet these were marginal efforts, and participants were quickly defeated and dispersed by the Turkish state.

The Kurds, by contrast, were a much larger population, were not fleeing their home territories, and were located in a region that had been free of centralized state control before the twentieth century. When the new Turkish state sought to impose its authority, identity, and secular ideology in the 1920s and 1930s, it provoked a degree of resistance in Eastern Anatolia that was absent elsewhere. When the state violently crushed this resistance, suppressing armed rebellions with the help of planes and possibly poison gas, then executing or exiling the leaders, it entrenched a vicious and enduring cycle of violence and revolt. In time, the state came to view Kurds as inherently rebellions. Laws that officially prohibited the use of any non-Turkish language or the expression of any non-Turkish identity, were enforced with particular severity against the Kurds. Many Kurds, in turn, came to associate the Turkish state, and even Turkishness itself, with the violent repression they had suffered. The government’s current rhetoric falls short when it acknowledges the existence of Kurds but not the degree of violence they suffered.

Ironically, Kurdish politics in Turkey are undergoing a similarly radical but incomplete transformation, in which a long-standing commitment to Kurdish nationalism is competing with a new, more multicultural approach to identity. Among other sources of this transformation was PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan’s odd jailhouse encounter with the work of Benedict Anderson, a sociologist whose book Imagined Communities famously argues that nations are socially constructed. As Ocalan explained in an interview:

My realization that I was a positivist dogmatic was certainly connected to my isolation. In isolation I grasped the alternative modernity concept, that national structures can have many different models, that generally social structures are fictional ones created by human hands, and that nature is malleable. In particular, overcoming the model of the nation-state was very important for me. For a long time this concept was a Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist principle for me. It essentially had the quality of an unchanging dogma. Because real socialism hadn’t overcome the nation state model and saw it as a basic necessity for modernity, we weren’t able to think of another form of nationalism, for example democratic nationalism. When you said nation there absolutely had to be a state! If Kurds were a nation they certainly needed a state! However as social conditions intensified, as I understood that nations themselves were the most meaningless reality, shaped under the influence of capitalism, and as I understood that the nation-state model was an iron cage for societies, I realized that freedom and community were more important concepts.

In June of 2015, the HDP, a party that in previous incarnations had long operated as the political wing of the PKK, achieved unprecedented success in Turkey’s nationwide elections by rebranding itself as a liberal, democratic party that sought to represent all Turkish citizens in opposition to the AKP’s growing authoritarianism. In its rhetoric, the party set aside appeals to Kurdish nationalism and instead presented an inclusive platform with a prominent place for less popular minorities like Christians and gypsies. By almost doubling the vote share traditionally achieved by Kurdish parties in previous elections, the HDP’s success seemed to reveal the triumph of a new tone for resolving the Kurdish question.

After the June election, though, it quickly became clear how easily political and structural factors could sabotage whatever opening both sides’ ideological transformations had created. Erdogan, for his part, appeared convinced that he could only negotiate with the PKK effectively from a position of power.  The HDP’s political victory, coupled with the growing military success and international reputation of the PKK-linked Kurdish forces in Syria, created a climate in which he felt a peace deal was more likely to weaken his hand than strengthen it. Both the government and the PKK also appear to have concluded, not unjustifiably, that the other was taking advantage of negotiations to improve its position for the next round of fighting. The PKK worried the government was using the group’s partial withdrawal to build new military bases, and the government accused the PKK of stockpiling weapons and planting explosives on roads around the region.

Thus after both sides gave up on negotiations renewed fighting broke out between the PKK and the Turkish government in the summer of 2015. Some nationalistic Turkish voters saw the violence as proof that Erdogan had been dangerously naïve, if not simply treasonous, when he started negotiations with the PKK in the first place. The violence also put the HDP in a politically untenable situation. The party called on both sides to end the fighting. But some of its newfound Turkish supporters were angry that it was not more critical of the PKK while many Kurds would have been angry if it had been. The result was that both sides drew closer to their traditional nationalistic bases and fell back into more mutually antagonistic positions.

In November 2015, after a summer of fighting, the AKP succeeded in overturning the results of the June election and returning to power as a single-party government. If some optimistically hoped Erdogan might be empowered to take unprecedented steps in pursuit of peace, it seems more likely that his government will once again be tempted to keep fighting for an unrealistic solution. Initial government statements suggested that the AKP was searching for something like a unilateral path to peace. That is, it hoped to find a solution in which it was not required to negotiate with either the PKK or the HDP, but perhaps instead with some third and as of yet undetermined Kurdish partner. As the elections revealed, the AKP continues to command the support of many conservatives Kurds, a fact that undoubtedly fuels the belief that it can somehow circumvent Kurdish nationalism altogether.

The AKP seems to be pursuing the same ambitious goal that animated early Turkish nationalists: winning Kurdish loyalty without compromising the vision of a strong centralized state and a cohesive national identity. Indeed, armed with religion and a greater willingness to accommodate Kurdish cultural demands—a combination Erdogan nicely embodied by waving a Kurdish translation of the Quran at a campaign stop—the AKP has tools that the early Kemalist state lacked. But, as the current fighting demonstrate, the AKP’s vision also relies on a continued commitment to using force against those Kurds who don’t accept the state’s offer of inclusion on its own terms.

That the AKP’s new multicultural language refuses to come to terms with Turkey’s violent legacy of forced assimilation suggests the party fails to understand the resistance their current efforts will create. To bring peace and stability to Turkey, the state must respond to legitimate democratic demands for a more inclusive national identity and greater regional autonomy. This, unfortunately, requires the government to deal with the PKK, which for better and worse has come to embody these demands.

About the author:
*Nick Danforth completed his Ph.D. in history at Georgetown University in 2015 and has written widely about Turkey, U.S. foreign policy, and the Middle East for publications including The AtlanticThe Washington Post,Foreign Policy, Al Jazeera, and Foreign Affairs.

Source:
This article was published at FPRI.

Here’s What Obama Won’t Tell You About Terrorism – OpEd

$
0
0

One in 3.5 million: That’s your annual risk of dying from a terrorist attack in the United States, at least according to Cato analyst John Mueller. Rounded generously, that comes out to roughly 3 one-hundred thousandths of a percentage point, or 0.00003 percent.

And this, according to a recent Gallup poll cited by The New York Times, is the percentage of Americans “worried that they or someone in their family would be a victim of terrorism”: 51.

So that’s 51 percent of Americans who think a terrorist attack against themselves is sufficiently likely to warrant their personal concern, versus a 0.00003 percent chance it might actually happen. If you’ll forgive my amateur number crunching, that means Americans are overestimating their personal exposure to terrorism by a factor of approximately 1.7 million.

It’s no wonder people play the lottery.

A public mood that overestimates the risk of terrorism by upwards of 2 million times, you might imagine, is a pretty significant headwind for a presidential administration that — with a few notable exceptions, like the surge in Afghanistan and the free-ranging drone war — has generally sought to wind down the full-blown militarized response its predecessor took to terrorism.

But more militarization, particularly in the Middle East, is exactly what this insanely distorted threat perception would seem to demand. With Americans more fearful of terrorism than at any time since 9/11, it’s no wonder Republican presidential candidates like Ted Cruz can call for bona fide war crimes like “carpet-bombing” Syria — and then revel in applause rather opprobrium.

In a more rational world, it would be easy to explain away the problem by arguing that the risk of terrorism in the U.S. is actually quite small, while the human costs of yet another ill-considered military intervention in the Middle East could be enormous. But the politics of terrorism are anything but. “As a society we’re irrational about it,” said a former administration security official quoted by the Times. “But government has to accept that irrationality rather than fight it.”

Gawker‘s Hamilton Nolan drew a less charitable conclusion from those comments: “The public is too dumb to hear the truth about terrorism.”

Threading the Needle

All this helps explain why Obama said what he did about America’s ongoing ISIS war in his final State of the Union address. “Masses of fighters on the back of pickup trucks and twisted souls plotting in apartments or garages pose an enormous danger to civilians and must be stopped,” he allowed. “But they do not threaten our national existence. That’s the story [the Islamic State] wants to tell; that’s the kind of propaganda they use to recruit.”

In all this, Obama was essentially correct. Yet he tempered this disclaimer with the reassurance that “We spend more on our military than the next eight nations combined” — a fact more commonly cited by critics of America’s post-9/11 militarization than its supporters.

And then came an appeal to the carpet-bombing constituency.

Calling the Islamic State “killers and fanatics who have to be rooted out, hunted down, and destroyed,” Obama boasted: “With nearly 10,000 air strikes, we are taking out their leadership, their oil, their training camps, and their weapons. We are training, arming, and supporting forces who are steadily reclaiming territory in Iraq and Syria.”

Feel better?

Obama wanted to temper the hysteria of those who would look at ISIS and claim, as he put it, “this is World War III.” But given the apparently prevalent view to the contrary, he had to reassure his listeners that we’re still dropping an awful lot of bombs. It’s a college try at breaking the political taboo, identified by the Times, against lecturing people about the real — and low — risk of terrorism.

Unfortunately, that only illustrates a much deeper American taboo about foreign terrorism against the United States: namely, admitting that it’s almost always a response to U.S. foreign policies.

You know, policies like launching 10,000 air strikes.

Why Us?

Obama said something else that was pretty instructive: “In today’s world, we’re threatened less by evil empires and more by failing states.” That’s true, basically: There’s no conventional power on earth that poses an imminent military threat to the U.S.

But why, then, should “failing states”?

The usual answer is that weak or failing states offer fertile ground for militant groups to organize, train, recruit, and arm themselves. That’s how the Arab-dominated group that became al-Qaeda used Afghanistan in the years between the Soviet invasion and the 9/11 attacks (though they also plotted in decidedly stable environs like Hamburg). And it’s how the Islamic State is using Syria now after bursting out of its origins in Iraq, where it formed the core of a Sunni insurgency against the U.S.-backed Shiite government.

It makes sense that failing states might present opportunities for militant groups. And it’s reasonable to expect that failed states in the Muslim world would appeal to Islamist groups in particular. But all this explains nothing about why their militancy should uniquely threaten the United States. After all, if they’re simply religious zealots, hell-bent on killing or converting the infidels, why shouldn’t these failing states be a concern to non-Muslim powers like Brazil? Or Japan? Or South Africa?

Why aren’t they reduced to bean-counting air strikes on countries halfway around the world?

The simple answer is that no other non-Muslim country on earth has intervened in the region as extensively as the United States has.

Our Demons

Robert Pape — a political scientist who’s studied every suicide attack on record — argues that while religious appeals can help recruit suicide bombers, virtually all suicide terrorism can be reduced to political motives that are essentially secular. “What 95 percent of all suicide attacks have in common, since 1980, is not religion,” he concludes. Instead, they have “a specific strategic motivation to respond to a military intervention, often specifically a military occupation, of territory that the terrorists view as their homeland or prize greatly.”

Let’s look at some of our favorite demons.

In the years before al-Qaeda pulled off the 9/11 attacks (and since, for that matter), the U.S. propped up dictatorships in places like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which ruthlessly repressed Islamist challengers. It armed and protected Israel, even as the country bombed its Muslim (and Christian) neighbors in Palestine and Lebanon, and violated UN resolutions against illegal settlement building in occupied Palestinian lands. And in between its two full-scale invasions of the country, the U.S. imposed a devastating sanctions regime on Iraq, which restricted the flow of food and medicine and is estimated to have caused some half a million Iraqi children to die.

Some Washington policy makers have professed benign motivations for these policies — in making strategic partnerships against terrorists, for example, protecting a besieged ally, or attempting to undermine the Iraqi dictatorship. But one could forgive the victims of those policies for seeing them differently.

In his letter explaining the 9/11 attacks, Osama bin Laden mentioned all of these things and more to argue that U.S. intervention in the Muslim world had to be stopped. Aside from its anti-Semitic ramblings, social conservatism, and appeals to the Quran, in fact, parts of the letter could have been written by any reputable international human rights organization.

Similarly, the Islamic State — an avowedly murderous organization, to be sure — emerged out of a Sunni insurgency against an increasingly sectarian U.S.-backed government in Baghdad after the second Iraq War, expanding into Syria in an audacious bid for strategic depth and territory. To the extent that it’s engaged in international terrorism — against France, Turkey, Lebanon, and Russia, among others — the attacks have been levied principally against foreign powers that have thrown themselves into the Syrian civil war on the side of its enemies.

If ISIS attempts to attack the U.S., it will certainly serve a propaganda purpose like the one Obama described. But it will also serve as a counterattack for those 10,000 air strikes he boasted about.

A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

None of this excuses terrorism by al-Qaeda, ISIS, or anyone else. But if Obama or anyone else wants to take a realistic look at the threat, we can’t just look at the likelihood of it. We have to look at the reasons for it.

All things considered, given the scope of U.S. actions in the Middle East since 9/11 — by my count we’ve toppled three governments, launched a drone war stretching from Somalia to the Philippines, and sent hundreds of thousands of troops to Iraq and Afghanistan — a 0.0003 percent per capita risk of terrorism is quite modest, even if it feels much higher to some critics of the president.

But with Obama responding to those critics by launching “nearly 10,000 air strikes” and “training, arming, and supporting” a hodgepodge of armed forces in the region, there’s a very significant risk that our inflated threat perception will become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The fact is, there’s not a bomb on this planet powerful enough to heal the political divisions in Iraq and Syria that have enabled the rise of ISIS. But if Obama legitimizes his hawkish critics by papering over the problem with bombs, he’s only paving the way for the Ted Cruzes and Donald Trumps of the world to argue that if some bombs are good, more bombs are better. And our fear-fueled plunge into intervention will only deepen our exposure to terrorism.

Xi Visit Promises To Bolster Saudi-China Ties

$
0
0

By Mohammed Rasooldeen

Chinese President Xi Jinping is scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia on Tuesday when he will meet with Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman to discuss trade and other ties.

Ambassador Li Chengwen told Arab News on Friday that Xi would hold talks on bilateral issues. The SPA said the talks would include regional and international issues of common interest.

According to Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang, Xi is on a Middle East tour from Jan. 19 to 23 and would also be heading to Egypt and Iran, where he would meet with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani.

Li Shaoxian, vice president of the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, a government think-tank, said China had to step up to the plate in the Middle East, but stressed China’s role would be different from other superpowers. “The Middle East is a touchstone for major powers,” Li said, quoted by Reuters.

“Whether it is a graveyard depends on whether a country seeks hegemony,” Li said, adding that was not China’s intention.

A Chinese president has not visited Saudi Arabia since 2009 when Hu Jintao went, and Jiang Zemin was the last Chinese president to visit Iran, going in 2002.

Ahead of Xi’s visit, China reportedly issued a policy paper on Arab countries expressing its willingness to coordinate development strategies with Arab states. “We encourage and support the expansion and optimization of mutual investment by enterprises from the two sides,” the paper said.

It also stated that China was ready to continue to provide loans on favorable terms to Arab countries, as well as export credits. Arab countries as a whole have become China’s biggest supplier of crude oil and the seventh biggest trading partner.

Saudi Arabia remains China’s largest trade partner in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, President of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto will arrive here today to meet King Salman for bilateral talks.

The Chart That Explains Everything – OpEd

$
0
0

Why is the economy barely growing after seven years of zero rates and easy money?

Why are wages and incomes sagging when stock and bond prices have gone through the roof?

Why are stocks experiencing such extreme volatility when the Fed increased rates by a mere quarter of a percent?

It’s the policy, stupid. And here’s the chart that explains exactly what the policy is.

(Richard Koo: The ‘struggle between markets and central banks has only just begun’, Business Insider)

(Richard Koo: The ‘struggle between markets and central banks has only just begun’, Business Insider)

What the chart shows is that the vast increase in the monetary base didn’t impact lending or trigger the credit expansion the Fed had predicted. In other words, the Fed’s madcap pump-priming experiment (aka– QE) failed to stimulate growth or put the economy back on the path to recovery. For all practical purposes, the policy was a flop.

QE did, however, touch off an unprecedented 6-year bull market rally that pushed stocks into the stratosphere while the real economy continued to languish in a long-term slump. And the numbers are pretty impressive too. For example, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which bottomed at 6,507 on March 9, 2009, soared to an eye-popping 18,312 points by May 19, 2015, an 11,805 point-surge in just five years. And the S&P did even better. From its March 9, 2009 bottom of 676 points, the index skyrocketed to a record-high 2,130 points on May 21, 2015, tripling its value at the fastest pace in history.

What the chart shows is that the Fed knew from 2010-on that stuffing the banks with excess reserves was neither lowering unemployment or revving up the economy. The liquidity was merely driving stocks higher.

It’s worth noting, that the Fed knows that credit does not flow into the economy without a transmission mechanism, that is, unless creditworthy borrowers are willing to to take out loans. Absent additional lending, the liquidity remains stuck in the financial system where it eventually creates asset bubbles. And that’s exactly what’s happened. Instead of trickling down into the economy where it would do some good, the Fed’s monetary stimulus has cleared the way for another catastrophic meltdown.

The chart suggests that the Fed’s primary objective was to reflate stock and bond prices to help the banks grow their way out of insolvency and avoid government takeover. Former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner alluded to this in an interview with CNBC in 2009 when he said: “We have a financial system that is run by private shareholders, managed by private institutions, and we’re going to do our best to preserve that system.” Unfortunately, the banking system was insolvent at that point in time, a fact that was confirmed in sworn testimony before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission by Fed chairman Ben Bernanke. Here’s what he said:

“As a scholar of the Great Depression, I honestly believe that September and October of 2008 was the worst financial crisis in global history, including the Great Depression. If you look at the firms that came under pressure in that period. . . only one . . . was not at serious risk of failure. So out of maybe the 13 of the most important financial institutions in the United States, 12 were at risk of failure within a period of a week or two.”

Think about that for a minute. Not only was the US banking system hopelessly underwater, but also the world’s most lucrative and powerful industry was about to be removed from private hands and “nationalized”. Shareholders would be wiped out, bondholders would take severe haircuts, management would be replaced, and credit production would be returned to the representatives of the American people, US government officials.

Do you think the prospect of nationalization might have scared the hell out of Wall Street? Do you think the banksters might have concocted some crazy plan along with Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to precipitate a crisis by euthanizing Lehman Brothers so they could extort $700 billion from Congress (TARP) before launching round after round of money printing under the deliberately-opaque moniker, Quantitative Easing?

Of course, they would. These are the same guys who had already stolen trillions of dollars from credulous investors in a fraudulent mortgage laundering scam that crashed the economy and brought the financial system to the brink of ruin. Does anyone seriously think that they’d wince at the prospect of dinging the public a second time by shifting their toxic assets onto the Fed’s balance sheet or by accessing free liquidity to fuel their illicit derivatives trades or their other pernicious high-risk activities?

Keep in mind, the Fed never could have carried off this massive looting operation without the help of both the Congress and the president. This simple fact seems to escape even the most vehement critic of the Fed, that is, that the Fed needed policymakers to strangle the economy while it implemented its plan or it would have had to abandon its reflation strategy.

Why??

Well, because if the economy was allowed to rebound, then higher employment would push up wages and raw material costs which in turn would boost inflation. Higher inflation would force the Fed to raise short-term interest rates which would put the kibosh on the cheap money Wall Street needed to buy-back its own shares or engage in other risky speculation. So the real economy had to be sacrificed for Wall Street. Hence, “austerity”.

The fact that Obama’s economics team, led by Lawrence Summers, was trying to lift the economy out of recession without creating conditions for a strong recovery was evident from the very beginning. We know now that chief White House economist Christy Romer wanted a much bigger fiscal stimulus package than the $800 bil that was eventually approved. Here’s the story from the New Republic:

“Romer calculated that it would take an eye-popping $1.7-to-$1.8 trillion to fill the entire hole in the economy—the “output gap,” in economist-speak. “An ambitious goal would be to eliminate the output gap by 2011–Q1 [the first quarter of 2011], returning the economy to full employment by that date,” she wrote. “To achieve that magnitude of effective stimulus using a feasible combination of spending, taxes and transfers to states and localities would require package costing about $1.8 trillion over two years.”
(EXCLUSIVE: The Memo that Larry Summers Didn’t Want Obama to See, New Republic)

Regrettably, Romer’s recommendations “never made it into the memo the president saw.” Obama was not given the option of providing the stimulus the economy needed for a strong recovery because Summers didn’t want a strong recovery. Summers wanted the economy to sputter-along at an abysmal 2 percent GDP like it is today. That would keep a lid on inflation and allow the Fed to pump as much money into the financial markets as it pleased.

Obama has played a big role in this austerity fiasco too. For example, did you know that more government workers lost their jobs under Obama than any other president in history?

It’s true. Since Obama took office in 2008, nearly 500,000 public sector workers have gotten their pink slips. According to economist Joseph Stiglitz, if the economy had experienced a normal expansion, “there would have two million more.”

Of course, Obama never made any attempt to rehire these workers because rehiring them would have put more money in the pockets of people who would spend it which would boost GDP. Typically, economists think that’s a good thing. It’s only a bad thing when the Fed is working at cross-purposes and trying to keep a damper on inflation so it can bail out its crooked Wall Street buddies.

For more on Obama’s belt-tightening crusade, just look at his efforts to cut the budget deficits. Here’s a clip from MSNBC:

“Strong growth in individual tax collection drove the U.S. budget deficit to a fresh Obama-era low in fiscal 2015, the Treasury Department said Thursday…. The deficit is the smallest of Barack Obama’s presidency and the lowest since 2007 in both dollar terms and as a percentage of gross domestic product. (During) the Obama era, the deficit has shrunk by $1 trillion. That’s ‘trillion,’ with a ‘t.’” (MSNBC)

Why would Obama want to cut government spending when the economy was already in distress, capital investment was flagging, and households were still trying to pay down their debts?

Basic economic theory suggests that when private sector can’t spend, then the government must spend to offset deflationary pressures and prevent a major slump. Cutting the deficits removes vital fiscal stimulus from the economy. It’s like applying leeches to a patient with flu symptoms thinking that the blood-loss will hasten his recovery. It’s madness, and yet this is what Obama and the Congress have been doing for the last six years. They’ve kept their hands wrapped firmly around the economy’s neck trying to make sure the patient stays in a permanent state of narcosis.

That’s the goal, to suffocate the economy in order to reward the thieving vipers on Wall Street. And Obama and the Congress are every bit as guilty as the Fed.

New Theory Of Secondary Inflation Expands Options For Avoiding Excess Of Dark Matter

$
0
0

Standard cosmology — that is, the Big Bang Theory with its early period of exponential growth known as inflation — is the prevailing scientific model for our universe, in which the entirety of space and time ballooned out from a very hot, very dense point into a homogeneous and ever-expanding vastness. This theory accounts for many of the physical phenomena we observe. But what if that’s not all there was to it?

A new theory from physicists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, and Stony Brook University, which will publish online on January 18 in Physical Review Letters, suggests a shorter secondary inflationary period that could account for the amount of dark matter estimated to exist throughout the cosmos.

“In general, a fundamental theory of nature can explain certain phenomena, but it may not always end up giving you the right amount of dark matter,” said Hooman Davoudiasl, group leader in the High-Energy Theory Group at Brookhaven National Laboratory and an author on the paper. “If you come up with too little dark matter, you can suggest another source, but having too much is a problem.”

Measuring the amount of dark matter in the universe is no easy task. It is dark after all, so it doesn’t interact in any significant way with ordinary matter. Nonetheless, gravitational effects of dark matter give scientists a good idea of how much of it is out there. The best estimates indicate that it makes up about a quarter of the mass-energy budget of the universe, while ordinary matter — which makes up the stars, our planet, and us — comprises just 5 percent. Dark matter is the dominant form of substance in the universe, which leads physicists to devise theories and experiments to explore its properties and understand how it originated.

Some theories that elegantly explain perplexing oddities in physics — for example, the inordinate weakness of gravity compared to other fundamental interactions such as the electromagnetic, strong nuclear, and weak nuclear forces — cannot be fully accepted because they predict more dark matter than empirical observations can support.

This new theory solves that problem. Davoudiasl and his colleagues add a step to the commonly accepted events at the inception of space and time.

In standard cosmology, the exponential expansion of the universe called cosmic inflation began perhaps as early as 10-35 seconds after the beginning of time — that’s a decimal point followed by 34 zeros before a 1. This explosive expansion of the entirety of space lasted mere fractions of a fraction of a second, eventually leading to a hot universe, followed by a cooling period that has continued until the present day. Then, when the universe was just seconds to minutes old — that is, cool enough — the formation of the lighter elements began. Between those milestones, there may have been other inflationary interludes, said Davoudiasl.

“They wouldn’t have been as grand or as violent as the initial one, but they could account for a dilution of dark matter,” he said.

In the beginning, when temperatures soared past billions of degrees in a relatively small volume of space, dark matter particles could run into each other and annihilate upon contact, transferring their energy into standard constituents of matter-particles like electrons and quarks. But as the universe continued to expand and cool, dark matter particles encountered one another far less often, and the annihilation rate couldn’t keep up with the expansion rate.

“At this point, the abundance of dark matter is now baked in the cake,” said Davoudiasl. “Remember, dark matter interacts very weakly. So, a significant annihilation rate cannot persist at lower temperatures. Self-annihilation of dark matter becomes inefficient quite early, and the amount of dark matter particles is frozen.”

However, the weaker the dark matter interactions, that is, the less efficient the annihilation, the higher the final abundance of dark matter particles would be. As experiments place ever more stringent constraints on the strength of dark matter interactions, there are some current theories that end up overestimating the quantity of dark matter in the universe. To bring theory into alignment with observations, Davoudiasl and his colleagues suggest that another inflationary period took place, powered by interactions in a “hidden sector” of physics. This second, milder, period of inflation, characterized by a rapid increase in volume, would dilute primordial particle abundances, potentially leaving the universe with the density of dark matter we observe today.

“It’s definitely not the standard cosmology, but you have to accept that the universe may not be governed by things in the standard way that we thought,” he said. “But we didn’t need to construct something complicated. We show how a simple model can achieve this short amount of inflation in the early universe and account for the amount of dark matter we believe is out there.”

Proving the theory is another thing entirely. Davoudiasl said there may be a way to look for at least the very feeblest of interactions between the hidden sector and ordinary matter.

“If this secondary inflationary period happened, it could be characterized by energies within the reach of experiments at accelerators such as the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider,” he said. Only time will tell if signs of a hidden sector show up in collisions within these colliders, or in other experimental facilities.

Juncker: Restoring Borders Will Kill Internal Market

$
0
0

By Georgi Gotev

(EurActiv) — European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker warned Friday that restoring borders in response to the refugee problem could kill off the internal market.

Outlining his priorities for the New Year, Juncker linked the EU’s borderless Schengen zone which is coming under threats to implode, with the common European currency and the internal market.

“Without Schengen, without the free movement of workers, without freedom of European citizens to travel, the euro makes no sense,” he said.

“What is the point of having one currency, which you can use across the continent, if you cannot travel across the continent, as we have been able to do until now,” said Juncker, adding that the same link existed also with the European internal market.

“Who kills Schengen will eventually put the internal market to the grave,” Juncker said, adding it would lead to “an unemployment problem which will not be manageable anymore.”

“When all this breaks down, the economic price, the loss of growth and the damage for the European growth perspectives will be enormous,” he said.

Extra costs

Juncker gave some examples illustrating the extra cost of restoring borders. At the Øresund bridge which links Sweden to Denmark, the costs of the checks have reached €300 million already, he said.

Sweden introduced border controls on the Øresund bridge in November and in the beginning of this year both Sweden and Denmark introduced ID checks.

Juncker said a similar backlog between Germany and Denmark is estimated to cost €90 million. He also said there were 1.7 million people who cross borders in the EU regularly – of which 200,000 cross the borders to go to work in his native Luxembourg.

The commission president said that there were 47 million cases of road transport every year, for which additional waiting at borders would result at extra cost of €55,000 euro per truck.

“That’s a conservative estimate. But if we continue like this the additional costs of border checks could amount to €3 billion”, Juncker said.

He further said that there were 24 million business trips per year in the European single market.

“If Schengen were to collapse, the loss in terms of growth would be unmeasurable. It would mean that the European single market would be set to fail”, Juncker said.

Juncker called on “those who take political decisions” to see beyond the refugee crisis and look at the bigger picture which he described.

He said he would not give up on the relocation of 160,000 migrants from Greece and Italy over two years to other EU countries. The scheme, agreed by member states in September, has so far succeeded in relocating only 272 migrants.

“I’m not going to allow the member states to just do what they want. Some are doing a lot, others are not willing to do anything. Some are saying – we are not accepting any refugees at all. That’s not on,” he hammered out.

Juncker said he was “getting a little tired” that the commission was coming under fire for not doing enough to resolve the migrant crisis. He hit back at member states, warning that the EU was “moving toward a serious crisis in terms of credibility” if they don’t assume their legal and political commitments.

Putting the refugees to work

Juncker said EU leaders should agree that those who come to Europe seeking refuge for a certain amount of time should regularise their situation and pursue an occupation, because – in his words – if someone is sitting at home for months or even years idly and not working, they will never going to be able to become a fully valid member of European society.

It is however unclear how EU societies would find jobs for the migrants. Europe is already struggling with a massive economic problem with more than 10% out of work, including 50% of young people in countries like Greece and Spain.

“And that’s important if we want to protect ourselves from all sorts of unpleasant things”, he said in an obvious reference to the recent sexual assaults in Cologne and other European cities.

Juncker said refugees should not “arrogantly decide” in which country they want to live.

“That’s just not possible. Absolutely not on. It’s not the refugees who are responsible for dividing up refugees, it’s the member states. No refugee has the right to refuse to be sent to a particular country”, he said.

Juncker said that in spring the Commission would announce a new version of the Dublin asylum system. The current Dublin system is not working as it should, he said, but also hinted that he doesn’t expect that the member states would easily agree on it.


Who Guided The National Discussion On Ferguson?

$
0
0

The fatal shooting of Michael Brown on Aug. 9, 2014, in Ferguson, Missouri, set off a national wave of dialogue and protests, from the streets to social media, as people nation­wide grappled with myriad complex issues, including police use of force, race relations in America, and criminal justice reform.

Now, new research from two Northeastern University professors shows that in the days following Brown’s shooting, everyday citizens–not politicians, celebrities, or other prominent public figures–were the ones who, using Twitter, shaped the national conversation. African Americans with close ties to the Ferguson area, they found, played a particularly influential role on the day of the incident.

Sarah Jackson and Brooke Foucault Welles, both assistant professors of communication studies in the College of Arts, Media and Design, examined 535,794 tweets from Aug. 9 to Aug. 15, 2014, that included the word or hashtag “Ferguson.” They identified the top 10 tweets each day that were most retweeted or mentioned and then analyzed how these Twitters users–who they described as “early initiators” and “crowdsourced elites”–drove the discussion in the days following Brown’s killing.

Twitter, they argued, catalyzed the national response. The first week of “Ferguson” tweets, from the time of Brown’s death up until the national media coverage and President Barack Obama’s public address–illustrated the power of social media to allow everyday citizens, particularly those in marginalized groups, to influence larger public debates, they said.

The research was published online in the journal Information, Communication & Society on Dec. 29.

Jackson and Welles noted that on the first day the most influential person was an African American woman from Michael Brown’s neighborhood using the Twitter handle @AyoMissDarkSkin, who had two-and-a-half times more retweets and mentions than the next closest Twitter user. They noted that she described Brown as “unarmed” and as having been “executed” by Ferguson police, who “shot him 10 times smh.” In their paper, the researchers contrasted this tweet with another from The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (@stltoday), which reported “Fatal shooting by Ferguson police prompts mob reaction.”

The woman’s tweet, they noted, was sent within minutes of the shooting. It garnered 3,500 retweets before “Ferguson” or “#Ferguson” became widely used and was retweeted or mentioned three times more than the newspaper’s tweet.

“How she tells the story in that tweet sets the tone for how the story is framed in many of the rest of the tweets about it,” Jackson said. “From my perspective, what’s significant is that Twitter can allow everyday people who otherwise have little social or political power to shape a narrative about their experiences and what matters about those experiences.”

Here are some of their findings:

  • On that first day, Aug. 9, all but one of the top 10 early initiators were African Americans with personal connections to the Ferguson area. “What is notable about this group of initiators is the centrality of black voices,” Jackson and Welles wrote. “In fact, @stltoday is the only account that does not directly reflect an African American voice or target an African American audience.”
  • Of the first-day initiators, only one–Antonio French, a St. Louis-based alderman whose district borders Ferguson–was among the “crowd­sourced elites” in the following six days. Mean­while, these elites came to include activist collectives like Anonymous, bloggers, and tweeters without personal connections to the area as well as more local and main­stream news sources.
  • African American community members appeared among the crowd­sourced elites for the entire week, even in the face of increasing competition. Jackson and Welles pointed to one “elite,” a St. Louis-based college student, @Nettaaaaaaaa, who was among the most widely retweeted and who later became well-known in the #Black­Lives­Matter movement. Another, @natedrug, tweeted from within the ranks of the Ferguson protesters, though this user has kept a much lower profile since then.
  • National mainstream news organizations played a minimal role in the network, with only one–CNN–gaining elite status on the last day of the first week. “Instead,” the researchers wrote, “the most visible media throughout the first week of the Ferguson network were mainstream local outlets and photographers and mainstream national journalists.”
  • Beyond journalists, few political or entertainment figures achieved elite status in that first week. The only politicians’ Twitter handles that appeared were President Obama and Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, and only “because so many Twitter users were tweeting at them with various pleas and criticism about the events unfolding there.”

Jackson and Welles explained that they focused on the first few days of Twitter activity in order to understand who the early influencers shaping the narrative were, rather than who became the most influential over the long term.

As Welles put it, looking at a larger time period “tells us who becomes influential once something is a national news story, but it doesn’t tell us why certain things become national news stories and how those stories get told from the get-go.”

Jackson’s research centers on how social and political identities are debated in the public sphere, with a particular focus on how race and gender are constructed in national debates on citizenship, inequality, and social movements. Welles–a member of Northeastern’s Network Science Institute and NU Lab for Texts, Maps and Networks–studies how social networks shape and constrain human behavior.

The Ferguson project builds upon their previous work on hashtag activism. In a paper published in November 2015, the professors examined how Twitter users hijacked the hashtag “myNYPD” following a police department public relations campaign, using it instead to promote counterpublic narratives of racial profiling and police misconduct.

“That paper spurred our move to this research,” Jackson said. “We found that Twitter allows everyday citizens to influence public conversation. Everyone saw how Ferguson unfolded and how social media drove that story, so we wanted to see if what we observed before was also the case here too.”

Iran’s Move To Add To Oil Glut Sends Global Markets Reeling

$
0
0

(RFE/RL) — Oil prices plummeted to $29 a barrel on an expected increase in Iranian oil exports as international sanctions are lifted this weekend, dragging stock markets sharply lower around the world on January 15.

With major indexes in New York, Shanghai, London and elsewhere plunging in a world awash in oil but lacking strong sources of economic growth, worried investors snapped up gold, bonds, and other safe-haven assets.

Iran’s re-entry into the world oil markets in a big way in coming weeks is only the latest development sending oil prices to levels not seen since the early 2000s. Primarily markets have dropped out of fear that China, once the fastest-growing consumer of oil and other commodities, has fallen into an economic slump.

But the prospect of the European Union and United States within days finally lifting economic sanctions that have held back Tehran’s crude sales for decades inspired panic among investors, who have begun to worry that nations like Russia, Azerbaijan, Venezuela, and Iraq which depend on oil sales for economic growth could be thrown into social turmoil or be bankrupted by further falls in prices.

“Iran’s going to put 500,000 barrels per day more on the market,” at a time when global supplies already exceed demand for oil by about 2 million barrels a day, said James Williams of WTRG Economics.

While India or Europe likely will step in to buy the Iranian oil, it doubtless will eat into some other country’s market share, possibly prompting more price drops and hardship for the oil producers, he said.

Big drops in energy prices and the shares of companies that produce oil have led the stock market’s downturn in recent weeks.

Major stock indices in Europe closed down more than 2 percent on January 15, while Wall Street stock indexes tumbled even more, capping their worst two-week start to the year on record.

The leading Moscow index dropped 5.8 percent, while Brazil’s Ibovespa index lost 2.4 percent. Battered Chinese stocks took another drubbing, with the Shanghai Composite Index closing down 3.55 percent.

The global crude benchmark Brent settled below $29 a barrel, capping a 13 percent decline for the week and adding to a loss of more than 70 percent since 2014.

Some oil experts said crude prices could fall as low as $20 a barrel before nations like Russia which have been pumping oil at record rates stop drilling and selling so much crude, creating a glut on world markets.

The collapse in oil prices already has created social unrest in Azerbaijan and other countries where the government depends on oil revenues to finance purchases of food and other essentials for the populace.

Further steep price declines risk plunging oil-producing nations and companies that took out debt — particularly debt denominated in the strengthening U.S. dollar — into insolvencies that lead to default, analysts say.

Besides the growing repercussions of plummeting oil prices, investors have been fretting about the dollar’s strength, the pace of rate increases planned this year by the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank, and a worldwide manufacturing recession.

Safe-haven assets have benefited from the worries. Yields on benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury notes were poised to fall below 2 percent and U.S. gold futures rose 1.6 percent. German 10-year bond yields fell 4 basis points to 0.48 percent .

It was the third week of losses for world stock markets in what has so far been a dismal start of the year. European shares fell to their lowest since December 2014, hit by losses in commodity-related stocks. MSCI’s all-country world stock index fell 2.1 percent to levels last seen in July 2013.

On Wall Street, the century-old Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2.6 percent while the blue-chip Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 2.42 percent, bringing losses on the U.S. market this year to more than 10 percent.

The steep losses of more than 3 percent in Chinese indexes raised questions about Beijing’s ability to halt a sell-off that has now reached 18 percent since the beginning of the year.

TGTE’s ‘Thai Pongal’ Festival Message – OpEd

$
0
0

The Tamil Race is endowed with an age old tradition, culture and a prestigious ancient language, Tamil that had earned the recognition of a classical language.

Worldwide only six languages, out of seven thousands spoken globally, have been classified as classical languages. It is an honor for all of us that Tamil is as one of them due to its antiquity, literary richness, and well defined grammatical rules. Besides, in terms of the most widely spoken languages in the world, Tamil ranks in 17th place. This is another aspect to be proud of. It is also said that around twenty three languages could be traced to their origin from Tamil. Tamil has also contributed immeasurably to the development of Sinhalese language. Let us recall that one of the former Prime Ministers S.W.R.D. Bandaranayake himself had referred to this.

The food habits and living styles of Tamils are based on science. They drink anything by raising tumbler little high without touching the lips. They take cooked vegetables and meat along with food. Nowadays they are given scientific explanations. Today medical world says that “Food itself is medicine” and “Physical exercises are the best remedies for the diseases.” Tamils have known this and have been following it for almost 2500 years. The famous two-line poetry of Thiruvalluvar, the Thirkkural, gives testimony for this fact as it says, “If we take food only which suits our health, there will be no need for medicine.”

We hear nowadays the slogans such as “Let us hail the Nature” all over the world and also see conferences held on these topics. However, even before 2500 years, our ancestors revered and worshipped the Nature and have been celebrating ‘PONGAL’ festival in praise of the nature, as a thanksgiving to Sun that sustains everything on earth. Since then we follow the tradition.

On the day of ‘Pongal’ we worship the Sun with high spirits of gratitude in our hearts of hearts, which raises the water on the sea as clouds in the sky, and shower the same as rains on the earth, and helps to raise the green crops by giving light and thus all other wealth and prosperity for the humanity.

We see the celebration of Pongal festival in “Objective Four hundred” (Puranaanooru poems of Sangam Period) as eating the newest.

As far as Eelam is concerned, all these cultural values are destroyed by the Singhalese Governments. The sociologists know well that all that happened after the Sri Lanka got freedom from the British and until now is the destruction of all the arts and cultural life of Tamils. For example, there had been a tradition that both men and women of Tamils used to pierce the ear with a needle and wear ear rings. This is similar to the acupuncture. During the 1956 racial attacks Tamils were identified with their ear piercing and tortured or killed. Consequently Tamils gave up the tradition of ear piercing. Thus the customs and traditions of Tamils eroded one by one.

Forty years have gone since the Vaddukkoddai Resolution passed which declared that the only way for redemption is to attain freedom for Tamils by winning separate Tamil Eelam. Now, in this year again we are celebrating Thai Pongal with the hope that Tamil Eelam will be a reality soon.

At this juncture, the strategy of Transnational Govt. of Tamil Eelam to make a draft constitution for Tamil Eelam under the leadership of its Hon. Prime Minster Mr.V.Rudrakumaran will accelerate our resolve to establish an independent state of Tamil Eelam which is the aspiration of the people of Tamil Eelam in the homeland and in the Tamil Diaspora.

If the goal of attaining the independent state of Tamil Eelam is to be achieved, it is crucial for all the organizations among the Tamils, especially in the Tamil Diaspora, to build up solidarity and work in union.

In Canada, the month of ‘Thai’ is being celebrated as the ‘Tamil Heritage Month’. This is made possible due to esteemed tradition of multiculturalism in Canada. It helps to promote the growth of the Tamil community as an influential force to be reckoned with. At the provincial level, the Province of Ontario had officially declared the month of ‘Thai’ as the Tamil Heritage Month. We are happy and proud that many municipalities and school boards have also passed resolutions to this effect. I am happy to announce that, in an earnest hope to popularize this concept of ‘Tamil Heritage Month’ worldwide, the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE) also has passed a resolution recently.

Therefore, in this month of ‘Thai’ let us all resolve to promote Tamil language, Tamil culture, its values and noble traditions.

Let the ‘Thai Pongal Day’ bring hopes and prosperity for all the Tamil people, Also, I wish to extend my best wishes to everyone for a “Happy and Prosperous Thai Pongal”. Let us hope that all our problems will be resolved and we shall live peacefully.

The thirst of Tamils is Tamil Eelam

Thank you.

*Nimal Vinayagamoorthy, TGTE Minister for Diaspora Affaires

The TGTE is a political formation to win fundamental civil, political and human rights including the right to self determination for the Tamil people in the North and East of the island of Sri Lanka, providing a political space to articulate and realize their aspirations, that’s not available to them in the island. The TGTE upholds democratic values, non-violence and abides by the laws of the countries that its elected members and the Senate represent.

Army Investigation Says US Public Never At Risk From ‘Mistaken’ Anthrax Shipments

$
0
0

By Jim Garamone

An extensive examination of the Army’s mistaken anthrax shipments found “no evidence to suggest in any way, shape or form, that lab technicians or the American public were at any time at risk,” the Army’s investigating official said during a Pentagon news conference today.

Army Maj. Gen. Paul A. Ostrowski, a Pentagon acquisition official appointed to head the investigation that began in July, said there was no single event, no individual, nor group directly responsible for the inadvertent shipment of active anthrax to labs around the world.

“We did find through evidence that a combination of events including gaps in science, institutional issues and personal accountability when taken together each contributed to this event,” he said.

The Army uses small amounts of anthrax to test U.S. equipment designed to detect or defeat biological organisms, said Army Lt. Gen. Thomas W. Spoehr, who commands the Army’s Biological Select Agents and Toxins Task Force.

Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, was the heart of the problem, the two generals said. The lab there sent more than 180 questionable samples to labs in all 50 states and nine countries.

Recommendations Benefit Program

Spoehr said his task force has made recommendations that will benefit the entire program, not just address the problems at Dugway.

The recommendations will be implemented as quickly as possible. The first recommendation is to establish a DoD executive agent, that will perform technical review, harmonization of procedures and integrate the inspections for this program. The Army Surgeon General Office has been named the executive agent.

“We will establish a standing DoD biological safety review panel, consisting of prominent scientists from both within and outside of the Department of Defense, and that review panel will review and validate procedures for working with biological select agents and toxins,” Spoehr said.

DoD will also put in place a process to screen and validate all requests for biological products from outside DoD to see if they are valid and to see if a less-dangerous product can be substituted for what has been requested, the general said.

Tracking, Monitoring

The department also will put in place a central process “to track and monitor all requests and transfers,” Spoehr said.

This, he added, includes a new information technology system not tied to the Dugway lab.

“We have – and are – in the process of developing new DoD procedures for the inactivation and testing of bacillus athracis, which, when the underlying scientific research is completed … will serve as our single DoD and Centers for Disease Control validated procedure for this procedure,” he said.

Control of the Dugway laboratory has been transferred from the Army Test and Evaluation Command to the Research, Development and Engineering Command, Spoehr said. This also eliminates the lab’s mission of producing biological agents for export.

“So that production mission will no longer be conducted at Dugway Proving Ground, it will be done at other laboratories within the DoD,” he said.

And, there will be one DoD inspection program teamed with the Centers for Disease Control rather than the eight teams previously.

“The totality of all these decisions will greatly improve the safety in this critically important program for both U.S. government workers and the American public,” the general said.

The Menacing Jewish Settler Movement – OpEd

$
0
0

The Jewish settler movement has been growing like a cancer for decades. It is partly organic and partly inorganic, made up of Jews born inside and outside Israel, respectively. It has become a real threat to peaceful solution of the Palestinian problem.

As I have noted a few times before many of the rank and file of this menacing movement come from the western world. They are financed by rich Jewish donors and the Christian evangelical movement – the latter more properly known as the Christian Zionists – from the USA and Europe. They are more radicalized than most Israeli Zionists who were born inside Israel, and consequently, have been terrorizing Palestinians in the Occupied Territories.

So religiously charged these settlers from the western countries are that most of them prefer to settle inside the Occupied West Bank creating newer illegal, Jewish settlements there while making the lives of ordinary Palestinians simply miserable.

It is worth mentioning here that though the Israeli government considers these settler outposts in the West Bank unauthorized, it provides them with electricity, running water and security. (The international community, rightly, considers all the exclusively Jewish settlements Israel has established in the territories it conquered in the 1967 Six Day War to be illegal.)

The criminal activities of the members of the settler movement, although known inside Israel, has been almost a taboo in the west. Last week (Jan. 11, 2016), Naomi Zeveloff, the Middle East correspondent of the Jewish daily – Forward – wrote an article about them in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Many of the young Jewish American settlers live with the so-called hilltop youth, a loosely affiliated group of Jewish settlers in their teens and 20s who live away from their parents on the hilltops surrounding established settlements. The hilltop youth are now an established entity. Several hundred adolescents from both sides of the Green Line — including some girls — roam the West Bank hills. Some are yeshiva dropouts. Others are students of Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh of Od Yosef Chai yeshiva, in Yitzhar. Ginsburgh, a prominent scholar of Kabbalah and a member of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement, has concocted a potent ideological brew for this new generation of Jewish radicals, spouting mystical admonitions to live in nature and Kabbalah-based rationales for Jewish racial superiority and violence against Arabs.

Meanwhile, two other prominent rabbis at Od Yosef Chai have given the hilltop youths’ penchant for attacking Arabs even stronger religious legitimacy. In their 2010 book, “The King’s Torah (Torat Hamelech), Part One: Laws of Life and Death between Israel and the Nations,” Rabbis Yitzhak Shapira and Yosef Elitzur declared, “The prohibition ‘Thou Shalt Not Murder’ applies only ‘to a Jew who kills a Jew’.” Non-Jews, they wrote, are “uncompassionate by nature” and assaults on them “curb their evil inclination,” while infants and children of Israel’s enemies may be killed, since “it is clear that they will grow to harm us.” It is worth noting that up until 2013, Od Yosef Chai yeshiva received government funding and support. It has also received money from American donors.

Members of the hill-top youth group have perpetrated so-called “price tag” attacks, using firebombs and spray paint to damage Palestinian property.

Many of the Jews living inside Israel are willing to overlook such crimes by their fellow youths. Even any interrogation by the Shin Beth is unwelcome, as they say: “Jews don’t torture other Jews. Stop the inquisition.”

The hilltop youth have always had power, which they wielded through violent acts, often under the cover of night. But for most Israelis, these were distant events perpetrated by extremists in the West Bank, a kind of Wild West they rarely think about or visit.

For years, hill-top youth members have been committing vigilante acts against Palestinians, torching olive groves and defacing mosques. But until recently, Israeli leaders in the mainstream have been reluctant to label them terrorists — a term usually reserved for Arabs. Israeli courts have also done little to punish this kind of behavior. In 2013, Israel’s defense minister, Moshe Ya’alon, defined price tag activity as “illegal organizing.” And according to a report by the Israeli rights group Yesh Din, just 7.4% of complaints filed by Palestinians from 2005 to 2014 have ended in indictments against Israeli civilians.

Now, the arson attack in the Palestinian village of Duma last July, which killed an 18-month-old infant and his parents, appears to show that the hilltop youth are capable of not only destruction, but murder, too.

It also turns out that several of those detained as part of the Duma investigation have U.S. citizenship. That may reflect the disproportionate presence of Americans among settlers overall. According to Sara Yael Hirschhorn, an Oxford University scholar, some 15% of all settlers are Americans, compared with 2% to 3% of all Israeli citizens. The prominence of Americans among those detained echoes the historic leadership roles Americans have played in Israel’s contemporary right-wing radicalism, from Meir Kahane, a native New Yorker, to Ginsburgh, who was born in St. Louis and spent much of his youth in Philadelphia, and Baruch Goldstein, the Brooklyn born-and-raised physician who in 1994 murdered 29 Muslims at prayer at the Cave of the Patriarchs, a site in Hebron holy to Muslims and Jews.
Eliezer Shekhtman who moved to Israel from Chicago believes that Jewish civilian violence, which he calls ‘values’, against the Palestinian civilians has a place in the greater political scheme.

During Hanukkah, Shekhtman was a guest at a Jewish wedding at which a group of young men danced while waving guns in the air. One thrust a knife through a photograph of Ali Saad Dawabsheh, the infant killed in the Duma fire. Video footage of the wedding was leaked to the press, causing mainstream Israelis to recoil at the radicalism in their midst. Shekhtman said he did not see the man stabbing the photo. But the idea did not scandalize him: “It doesn’t bother me. I don’t know if the father threw stones or if he didn’t, or if the baby would have thrown stones or wouldn’t have if he lived till the age of 15 or 20. Come on, it’s a picture.”

Shekthman’s statement says volumes about the criminal mindset of these Jewish American settlers who see the Occupied Territories as a land to plunder, pillage and slay the indigenous Palestinian people to make the land kosher for the Jews only, and of course, their Christian evangelical patrons.

The indigenous Palestinians see themselves abandoned by the powerful nations of the UN. In sheer hopelessness and a sense of dehumization they are, regrettably, now resorting to nihilistic activities trying to harm Israeli Jews and getting killed every day by the trigger happy Israelis – civilians and security forces alike. It is a sad development in a region that has cried for justice for too long – almost 70 years – only to be ignored and severely punished for their noncompliance to the Zionist dream of Eretz Israel.

While the western governments continue to close their eyes to the heinous crimes of the Jewish settlers in the Occupied Territories they are not so nonchalant about misguided Muslim youths. Even an intention to join or live in a territory that is administer by a radical organization, deemed terrorist here, can land them in the prison with probably no chance of ever getting out. What do you call such an attitude? In my dictionary, it’s called double-standard. Pure and simple!

Viewing all 73639 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images