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A ‘New Era’ Of Democracy In Taiwan: Implications For Regional Security A Economy – Analysis

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By Teshu Singh*

Elections are the bedrock of democracy. Taiwan is a multi-party democracy and the only ethnic Chinese society that can boast of being a Democracy. On 16 January 2016, 23 million citizens of the island voted to choose their sixteenth president. Dr Tsai Ing-wen of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) emerged victorious with 6.89 million votes (56 per cent of the total votes), and will become the first female president of Taiwan.

The elections results are no surprise, because during the 2014 local elections, the Koumintang Party (KMT) had already lost, and they could win only 6 out of 22 seats.

Prior to this, Taiwan was governed by the KMT majority government, headed by President Ma Ying-jeou. During the past few years, the incumbent government was becoming infamous due to unpopular domestic policies and its policies towards China. The article analyses why Dr Tsai/DPP won an outstanding victory, and the implications the new government could mean for regional security.

Cross-Strait relations were one of the central issues during the sixteenth general election. Unlike the previous government, Dr Tsai does not consider the ‘1992 consensuses’ as the only options for dealing with China. She considers this issue to be related to the identity of Taiwanese citizens and believes that it requires the full understanding and participation of the people. With her victory, there are apprehensions that there may be a lot of changes in Taiwan’s policies toward China.

Notably, Dr Tsai has a lot of experience in this area. She has been in charge of the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) during the previous DPP government. She has also been a fair trade commissioner and as an adviser to former President Lee Teng-hui, she co-authored the book, ‘two-state solution’. Hence, it is deemed that she will follow a pragmatic policy towards China and it is most certainly going to be ‘status quo’ for some time now.

In the previous year, the Taiwanese economy grew by merely one per cent. Taiwan is an export-driven economy. In 2015, both import and export saw a downfall. The 2015 unemployment rate – which stood at 3.91 per cent in November 2015, is considered its highest. Overall wages on the island are also stagnant. Housing problem too is becoming acute with a spike in property rates in Taiwan, and Taipei has become one of the most expensive places in the world. The DPP has filed a suit against the KMT on this matter, and has promised to provide state solution for both unemployment and housing issues.

Implications for Regional Security
The overarching DPP foreign policy is to deepen Taiwan’s relation with the US and Japan. Additionally, it wants to diversify its trade with the South, Southeast and East Asia. This is in sharp contrast to the KMT’s policy of greater integration with China. For this, they have promulgated a ‘new southward policy’ to strengthen its relations with Southeast Asia and India. As Taiwan seeks to diversify its trade, Dr. Tsai has said “it is natural choice for us to step up overall relations with ASEAN and India.”

Compared to the other countries in the region, Taiwan stands at a ‘crossroads’. Earlier, they had shown interest in joining the TPP, the AIIB and the RCEP. This indicates that Taiwan wants to play a larger role in the regional security architecture. Taiwan is also expected to play a proactive role in the South China Sea (SCS) dispute. The SCS issue will be a litmus test for the new government.

Markedly, Taiwan’s ‘southward policy’ and India’s ‘Act East Policy’ are extremely good opportunities for both countries to strengthen their non-official relations. India-Taiwan relations date to antiquity; India was the second non-communist country to recognise Taiwan. Bilateral trade between both countries stands at $6 billion. In 2014, Taiwan was among India’s top five machine tool suppliers.

Taiwanese companies can further participate in the ‘Make in India’ initiative. Foxconn has already committed to invest $5 billion in manufacturing units and research and development in Maharashtra state. Many Taiwanese brands such as ASUS, Acer and HTC are popular in India. Under the new government, there can be more collaborations between the Indian software and Taiwanese hardware companies and also more cultural and educational exchanges can be expected between the two countries.

The new government in Taiwan has have a huge responsibility and great expectations from both domestic and International fronts. The new regime in Taiwan is definitely looking forward to ‘greatly contribute towards peace and stability in the region’. However, it remains to be seen how the DPP government handles all these issues.

* Teshu Singh
Senior Research Officer, CRP, IPCS
Email-teshusinghdu@gmail.com


That Didn’t Take Long: US To Impose New Sanctions On Iran – OpEd

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Just one day after “Implementation Day” of the Iran nuclear agreement, where international sanctions were removed with the certification that Iran had met all of its obligations under the agreement, the US has slipped back into its old habits. Citing Iran’s work on ballistic missile development, the US Treasury Department announced yesterday that the US was imposing a new round of sanctions on the country. Several firms that are helping Iran develop its missile capability are also falling under the Treasury hammer.

Announcing the new sanctions, President Obama said, “We will continue to enforce these sanctions vigorously. We are going to remain vigilant about it.”

The sanctions are being imposed because the ballistic missiles tested by Iran in October are capable of carrying nuclear weapons. But, as Moon of Alabama blog points out, the UN certification on Saturday means that Iran does not have nor will it pursue a nuclear weapon. So the point is completely moot.

The real issue is that the US does not want Iran to have any ballistic missile capability regardless of whether they are meant to carry nuclear weapons. This despite the fact that Iran’s neighbors Pakistan, Russia and Saudi Arabia all have such missiles and Israeli and US missiles can also reach Tehran.

So what is the point of these sanctions? It is to tell Iran it has no right to develop any sort of military deterrent despite being ringed by adversarial countries many of which have threatened Iran with destruction. It is not about reducing a nuclear threat, but about making Iran more vulnerable in a hostile region.

In that, it is clear that it is the US that is now in violation of the nuclear agreement. At least, as MoA writes in the above-linked article, in spirit.

This article was published by the RonPaul Institute.

India: Unresolved Challenges In Mizoram – Analysis

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By Deepak Kumar Nayak*

On January 8, 2016, a meeting convened by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs (UMHA) on the issue of repatriation of Brus in six relief camps in Tripura remained inconclusive. “We informed the Home Ministry officials that the Brus refused to return to Mizoram despite repeated arrangements made by Mizoram Government in the relief camps for the repatriation,” Mizoram Chief Secretary Lalmalsawma stated. Lalmalsawma also disclosed that the time or venue of the next meeting was not fixed to discuss the issue in future as the Mizoram Government is of the opinion that it would be a futile exercise if more repatriation attempts are made in future.

Conversely, Bruno Msha, general secretary of the Mizoram Bru Displaced People’s Forum (MBDPF), the lone organisation representing the refugees in this imbroglio, alleged on December 1, 2015, that the Mizoram Government was yet to accept their eight-point demands in writing. These included financial support of INR 200,000 for each tribal family, free rations for four years, contiguous resettlement of the returnees with adequate security, land titles for the tribal families who are to be allotted plots to build houses, and financial aid to purchase about 2.5 acres of farmland for each family. Msha also alleged, “The experience of a few hundred refugees is very bad after their return to their villages in western Mizoram from Tripura a few years back as the Mizoram government did not fulfill its commitments.”

Indeed, the last attempt to repatriate the Brus between June 2, 2015, and September 4, 2015, had failed miserably, as only one Bru woman opted to be repatriated to Mizoram from relief camps in Tripura. Arrangements had been made to repatriate over 20,700 Brus belonging to 3,455 families, who had fled Mizoram in the wake of ethnic clashes in the 1990s.

This contentious issue appears slated to linger, with neither side demonstrating the requisite seriousness.

Meanwhile, after a long hiatus, Mizoram recorded a major (resulting in three or more fatalities) insurgency-linked incident in 2015. On March 28, 2015, Hmar People’s Convention – Democracy (HPC-D) militants ambushed a vehicle carrying R.L. Pianmawia, Chairman of the ‘Mizoram Assembly Committee on Government Assurances’, and two other Members of the State Assembly – Lalthanliana and lone woman legislator Vanlalawmpuii Chawngthu – at Zokhawthiang in Aizawl District. The legislators, accompanied by State Assembly officials, were on a tour when they were attacked. Though the legislators escaped unhurt, three of the Security Force (SF) personnel protecting them were killed. Four SF personnel and one State Assembly staffer sustained injuries in the attack. The militants escaped with two AK-47 assault rifles and four pistols taken from the slain Policemen.

The last major attack in the State was recorded on September 2, 2008, when four Police personnel, were killed when suspected HPC-D militants had ambushed a vehicle at Saipum village in the Kolasib District. Three other Police personnel were injured, while civilians who were in the vehicle had escape unhurt.

In the interim, the State has recorded only four insurgency-related fatalities – all four civilians – in three separate incidents. The last incident of killing was reported on October 15, 2014, when bodies of two non-tribals, suspected to be those of a truck driver and his helper, both believed to be from the Kamrup District in Assam, were recovered from Tuikhurhlu in Aizawl District. No further detail was available in this regard. The last militant killing was recorded on February 26, 2008, when Thangcha Kipgen, ‘president’ of the Kuki Liberation Army (KLA), was killed in a hotel room in capital Aizawl in an alleged factional fight.

The killing on March 28, 2015, was the lone fatality reported through 2015. There were, moreover, no incidents of explosion or arson through the year, as against three incidents of explosion in 2014. Further, according to the State Home Department, there had not been a single incident of abduction through 2015 (till May 2015). SATP did not record any incident of abduction thereafter.

SFs arrested six militants (all HPC-D cadres), including a ‘commander’, identified as Paul Laldemloa, in 2015. Police also arrested two civilians at Bilkhawthlir village in Kolasib District on September 17, 2015, when they were on their way to allegedly hand over INR 12,000 to HPC-D militants. In 2014, Police had arrested five HPC-D militants.

Indeed, the peace established in 1986 in Mizoram has substantially prevailed since. During the 24 years between 1992 and 2015, the State, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP) database, has recorded 49 insurgency-related fatalities, including 15 civilians, 25 SF personnel and nine militants, an average of just over two fatalities in a year, underlining the fact that a lasting peace has been established.

Several peripheral challenges, nevertheless, persist. `Small tremors of militant activity continue. In addition to the March 28, 2015, attack, HPC-D militants had also attacked a Police Outpost at Khawlian in Aizawl District on March 5, 2015, but there were no casualties in the incident.

Some incidents of recovery of arms and ammunition were also reported, suggesting that efforts to revive militancy in the State continue. In one such incident, on October 23, 2015, acting on a tip-off, Assam Rifles personnel conducted a raid in an area between Keitum and Khawlailung villages in Serchhip District and seized eight assault rifles (five AK-47s and three AK-59s) and 12 magazines from two Mizo men. The duo was arrested.

HPC-D remains the biggest threat. Admitting that the atmosphere of peace in the state was disrupted by the ambush on March 28, 2015, Mizoram Chief Minister (CM) Lal Thanhawla, in his Independence Day speech on August 15, 2015, disclosed, “Counter operation was launched by the Mizoram Police and in the ensuing operation self-styled Sergeant Malsawmkima of the HPC-D, a Police deserter, was killed near the Manipur border on May 8.” He assured the people of the State that the Government would leave no stone unturned in maintaining peace and tranquillity. On May 8, 2015, Mizoram Police Commandos had gunned down H.C. Malsawmkima at Tiaulian in the Churachandpur District. The militant was a former constable of the Mizoram Armed Police, who ran away from the Sakawrdai Border Police Outpost in July 2014 to join HPC-D. He had fled with an AK-47 rifle and an INSAS (Indian Small Arms System) rifle.

On December 2, 2015, worried about recent incidents, the Mizoram Government announced a cash reward of INR 100,000 each for anyone giving information leading to the arrest of five militants of HPC-D who were involved in the March 28, 2015, ambush. The militants were identified as Thanglawmvel, Rinsang and Lalrohuol, all of them from Manipur; and Lalchawimawia and Jacob, both from Mizoram.

While the residual HPC-D insurgency is a lingering problem, the continued failure of the State to deal with the drug trade and use is worrisome. According to Mizoram’s Excise & Narcotics Department (END), in addition to 38 drug related deaths in 2014, the State recorded 27 such deaths in 2015. Of the deaths in 2015, nine died due to heroin addiction, four due to abuse of spasmo proxyvon and parvon spas, while 14 died due to consumption of a mixture of different kinds of intoxicating drugs. At least 1,342 people, including 141 women, have died in the State due to drugs since 1984, when the first drug-related death was reported, it added. The drug trade and use have had persistent overlaps with organised criminal and terrorist activity in the State and region.

Despite an enduring peace since 1986, Mizoram has failed to address residual problems, including the return and resettlement of displaced populations, as well as the remnants of insurgency, arms smuggling and drug trafficking. While these may be dismissed by the ruling establishments as mere irritants, they have a potential for disproportionate escalation in unpredictable circumstances.

* Deepak Kumar Nayak.
Research Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management

Major Snowstorm Hits Romania And Bulgaria

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Heavy snowfall and strong winds closed Romania’s Black Sea ports including the main port of Constanta, and shut dozens of roads while snowstorms and torrential rains cut electricity to hundreds of towns in Bulgaria, authorities said on Sunday.

Blizzards dumped up to half a metre of snow in 12 hours in Romania, disrupting trains and forcing authorities to shut down all schools in Bucharest and nearby counties.

There were no reports of victims but emergency services said they were prepared to intervene, with about 6,000 policemen, gendarmes and firefighters currently involved in various missions across the country, the interior ministry said.

Snowfalls are not expected to ease until Monday in Romania and forecasters predict temperatures will fall to below minus 18 degrees Celsius next week.

Dozens of villages in southern Romania were left without electricity after trees and strong winds brought down power lines.

Heavy snowfall in northern and central Bulgaria and torrential rains in the southern part of the Balkan country have left tens of thousands of people in over 1,000 villages and towns without power, Energy Minister Temenuzhka Petkova said.

An avalanche blocked a road linking the Bulgarian capital Sofia with the northwestern town of Montana. The heavy rainfall in southern Bulgaria closed the border checkpoint with Turkey, triggered mudslides and caused flooding in several villages.

No End To China’s Tibet Surveillance Program, Says HRW

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Chinese authorities have indefinitely extended an intensive surveillance program in villages across the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) that was due to end in 2014, Human Rights Watch said Monday. There are indications that the “village-based cadre teams” (zhucun gongzuodui) scheme, which is unprecedented in China, will become permanent.

In the TAR, where the fundamental rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, religion and privacy are already highly restricted, the extension of this scheme signals authorities’ intention to suppress any signs of dissent or criticism among Tibetans. Since their deployment in 2011, the teams have carried out intrusive surveillance of Tibetans in villages, including questioning them about their political and religious views, subjecting thousands to political indoctrination, establishing partisan security units to monitor behavior, and collecting information that could lead to detention or other punishment. Official reports describe the teams pressuring villagers to publicly show support for the ruling Communist Party and to oppose the Dalai Lama.

“The Chinese government’s decision to extend its Tibet surveillance program indefinitely is nothing less than a continuous human rights violation,” said Sophie Richardson, China director. “The new normal is one of permanent surveillance of Tibetans.”

In 2011, the central government, in an effort to prevent a recurrence of the protests that spread across the Tibetan plateau in 2008, launched an Orwellian campaign known as “Benefit the Masses.” The campaign involved sending some 21,000 Communist Party cadres from townships and urban areas to live in teams of four or more in each of the 5,000 villages in the TAR. The scheme, which cost more than 25 percent of the regional government’s budget, was supposed to last for three years. It was unprecedented in terms of duration and relative size in China, where in the past full-time government and Party administrators have rarely if ever been stationed for extended periods below the level of the township.

The purpose of the village-based cadre teams was initially described as improving services and material conditions in the villages, but, according to the Party leader of the TAR in 2011, their primary requirement was to turn each village into “a fortress” in “the struggle against separatism,” a reference to support for Tibetan independence and the Dalai Lama. This was done by setting up new Communist Party organizations in each village, establishing local security schemes, gathering information about villagers, and other measures. The teams were also required to carry out re-education with villagers on “Feeling the Party’s kindness” and other topics.

The village-based cadre teams are composed of Party officials, government officers, members of government enterprises and work-units, members of the People’s Armed Police and the Public Security forces, from township and urban areas of the TAR. Each team has included at least one Tibetan to translate for Chinese cadres in the team and each official remained on their tour of duty for about a year before being replaced. Routine coverage of the village-based cadre work teams in the official media states that the team members are required to carry out the so-called “five duties,” of which three are political or security operations: building up Party and other organizations in the village, “maintaining social stability,” and carrying out “Feeling the Party’s kindness” education with villagers. The other two duties involve promoting economic development and providing “practical benefit” to the villagers.

The official slogan used to describe the objective of the village-based teams is “all villages become fortresses, and everyone is a watchman.” The teams recruit and train new Party members and establish “grassroots stability maintenance” organizations such as “joint defense teams” or “patrol teams.” In the fourth year of the village-based cadre scheme in Nagchu, one of seven prefecture-level areas in the TAR, the cadre teams held 1,686 political education sessions, made 45,903 “propaganda education visits to households,” and recruited 1,194 new Party members. Teams in Shigatse municipality over all four years of the scheme recruited 10,030 new Party members, while fourth-batch teams in Lhokha prefecture held 3,625 sessions “on exposing the heinous reactionary crimes of the 14th Dalai clique.”

The village-based teams also “screen and mediate social disputes,” which involves acting to settle and contain any disputes among villagers or families, because of official concerns in China that small disputes might lead to wider unrest or “instability.” One objective is to prevent villagers from presenting petitions to higher level officials.

The village-based teams also engage in “cultural activities” such as building meeting halls and reading rooms for the dissemination of officially approved literature, films and theatrical performances aimed at inculcating “core socialist values” and discouraging “bad old traditions.” Economic activities include poverty alleviation, social welfare provisions in monasteries, vocational training, small business loans, and the “finding of paths to enrichment.”

The program was due to end in October 2014, and no public announcement has so far been made about extending it. But in December 2014, the TAR authorities issued a communique that referred to the “mechanism of village-stationed cadres’ work” as “long-term,” together with “suggestions” of ways “to consolidate and expand the excellent initial results” of village-cadres work, and noted that there should be “no changes” to the cadres’ work in villages.

In August 2015, a statement posted on a government Tibetan-language website said that the TAR authorities had called for work teams “to be constantly stationed at their village committees.” It added that “on hearing that village-based-cadre work was to continue, the rural masses were overjoyed, saying that this was one of the Party and government’s best policies to benefit rural areas.”

Since that time, the state media in Tibet has published a series of reports referring to the “fourth batch” of village-based cadres and the “fourth phase” of village-based cadre work. In November 2015, at a meeting to award outstanding and progressive village and monastery-based cadres from the fourth batch, the departure of the “fifth batch” was officially announced. This confirmed indications that no end-date had been set for the program.

Separate reports in the official media about construction plans for TAR villages indicate that the village-based cadre scheme is intended to be permanent. These reports state that between 2014 and 2015, the TAR government constructed 20,092 new buildings for office or residential use by cadres working in villages and townships. A further 12,008 buildings for these cadres are due to be built by the end of 2016. The total cost of these buildings will be 5.265 billion yuan (US$810 million) – the largest and most expensive project of its kind in the history of such building construction in the Tibet Autonomous Region, according to a report in the official media. The construction plan – which means there will be an average of six new government buildings in each village of the TAR – will radically change the nature of Tibetan villages, which until now have never had any government offices or resident officials.

“China’s surveillance scheme openly and massively infringes upon the basic rights of Tibetans protected under Chinese and international law,” Richardson said. “China’s central and regional authorities should end the repressive aspects of this scheme immediately.”

US Government Investment In Self-Driving Cars: Leading From Behind – OpEd

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The Obama administration announced that they were going to invest $4 billion in self-driving cars. Why? Private firms have already developed self-driving cars, and although none are available for purchase now, they are on their way with or without government involvement.

Is this really a good use of our tax dollars? What investments can the government make here for the benefit of American taxpayers?

Transportation Secretary Anthony Fox says, ” the government would remove hurdles to developing autonomous vehicles and set further guidelines for them within six months.” Getting government out of the way of self-driving cars seems like a good idea, but should this cost $4 billion? And as for setting further guidelines, imposing regulatory costs on the industry seems counterproductive.

Why not let the industry proceed, as it has been doing, without government interference?

This seems like a case of somebody in the Obama administration seeing what’s ahead and wanting to get in on the ground floor after most of the superstructure has already been built.

The article goes on to say, “The government’s new support includes a request in President Obama’s proposed budget for the next fiscal year for $4 billion, to be spent over 10 years, to finance research projects and infrastructure improvements tied to driverless cars.” Private firms are already doing the research, at no taxpayer expense. As for infrastructure improvements, with all the stories I read about the nation’s infrastructure problems, it is not apparent that if the federal government is going to invest in infrastructure, this is the best investment to make.

Great innovations have characterized the American economy since the nation’s founding, and this looks like a case of the government seeing another great innovation and wanting to share the spotlight.

The private sector is doing a great job developing self-driving cars. The government does not need to be spending your tax dollars to get involved.

This article was published at The Beacon.

A New Era For Iran’s Soft Power – OpEd

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By Mahmoud Reza Golshanpazhooh*

Finally, after about two years of negotiations and talks, the nuclear marathon between Iran and six big powers of the world reached its finishing point with the announcement of the Implementation Day of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and official announcement of the lifting of the European Union’s sanctions along with an important part of US sanctions against Iran.

Of course, any smart analyst and politician knows that this good ending is also a beginning for foreign obstructionist efforts, domestic conflicts, doubts on the part of trade partners about the volume and extent to which economic relations should be developed as well as magnification of any weakness by governments and media that were opposed to this process from the very beginning. Therefore, there is no doubt that maintaining the achievements of the nuclear agreement will be much more difficult than the process taken to reach the agreement. One point, however, cannot be denied: what Iran has earned through JCPOA is much more valuable than mere removal of sanctions and recognition of its right to have the full nuclear fuel cycle. This major achievement is conversion of such securitized and fabricated concepts as “Iran disturbs international peace and security,” and “Iran is an isolated country in terms of political and economic and even international cultural communications” to such new concepts as “Iran is a powerful and stable regional actor,” “self-confident in diplomatic arenas,” and “firm in its principles and logical viewpoints.”

During all the years that Iran’s nuclear issue was considered under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter and various resolutions were adopted against Iran by the UN Security Council, most members of the international community either tried to add to daily claims about Iran’s detrimental role to international peace and security, or remained silent and preferred to witness this process from afar. During past years, the negative atmosphere against Iran was so heavy that few countries were ready to pay the cost of taking sides with Iran. However, a combination of the patience of the tolerant Iranian citizens and the self-confidence and self-esteem of the highest ranking officials, along with simultaneous maintenance of the country’s military might and diplomatic finesse, managed to create an atmosphere in which Iran not only managed to defuse the negative atmosphere against it in international environment, but prove correctness of its viewpoint and discourse about many regional developments without any special effort. Now, there are few people, who do not know where is the origin of a large part of instability that stems from terrorism in the Middle East and the world; which countries’ support has made continued presence and behavior of Daesh possible; what will be the fate of the futile wars in Yemen and Syria; or what countries can be forced to cut their relations with other countries through financial incentive or threat. All these facts have been proven without any major effort or propaganda campaign on the part of Iran, and this is a great achievement for the Iranian diplomacy.

On the other hand, the sudden plan to swap a number of Iranian and American prisoners between the two countries, and the positive outcomes that it will have, at least, for the human rights atmosphere that surrounds Iran at international level, are sign of a well-thought rationality in both diplomatic apparatuses of Iran and the United States. This development, along with peaceful resolution of the case of American Marines nabbed by Iranian forces, reaffirmed further strengthening of the roots of Iran’s soft power, both in the region and at international level.

At any rate, if removal of sanctions had taken place two years ago, perhaps it would not have changed the general atmosphere in Iran’s favor to such an extent. Today, and inside the country, both people and officials are more realistic about the extent and scope of the impact that removal of sanctions will have on their everyday lives. They know that in view of very low oil prices and possible obstructionist efforts against the implementation of JCPOA, they should not expect an economic miracle overnight. Meanwhile, during the past year, experts have laid much more emphasis on the need to focus on improving economic structures and eliminating weaknesses and vulnerabilities of domestic economy than improvement of international conditions for the Iranian economy following the implementation of JCPOA. At the same time, the public opinion in Iran, on average, is more self-confident now than previous years, and at present, people do not consider diplomatic might of their country less than other big countries in the world. At the same time, they are very happy that a large part of their approach and viewpoint about the most effective way of fighting Daesh terrorism in Syria and Iraq has been taken onboard by international institutions and influential countries.

Goethe has a beautiful remark in the tragedy of Faust where he says, Lucifer thinks evil, but creates good. This sentence is a good description for the current situation of Iran and those countries that tried for years to securitize the case of Iran and promote Iranophobia project in order to hide the reality and grandeur of the greatest, most stable, most united and most honorable actor in the Middle East region, which at the same time, pioneers the most merciful interpretation of Islam. As the Persian prover goes: “the truth will out.”

* Mahmoud Reza Golshanpazhooh
Executive Editor of Iran Review

Environmental Policy Behind Imbalance In North Sea Levels Of Phosphorus And Nitrogen

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New research shows that European measures aimed at improving water quality through the reduction of nitrogen and phosphorus loads in the North Sea have resulted in an imbalance of these two nutrients in surface waters.

In recent decades, European environmental policy has aimed to improve water quality through the reduction of nitrogen and phosphorus loads in surface waters. The measures taken were much more effective at the removal of phosphorus than nitrogen, resulting in a large imbalance of these two nutrients. Scientists from the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and the NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), led by Prof. Jef Huisman, have now demonstrated that the unbalanced nutrient reduction has caused a major shortage of phosphorus in coastal waters of the North Sea.

Nitrogen and phosphorus are essential building blocks for life. Historically, the concentrations of these nutrients have shown major changes in surface waters. Due to intensified agriculture and the use of phosphate additives in detergents, the input of nitrate and phosphorus sharply increased between the 1960s and 1980s, which resulted in harmful algal blooms, anoxia and fish kills in lakes and coastal waters. In recent decades, policy measures have been implemented to reduce the discharge of nutrients, but the overall reduction of nutrients was much more successful for phosphorus than for nitrogen.

Severe shortage of phosphorus

The North Sea is a prime example of a coastal zone experiencing pronounced shifts in nutrient inputs. During a series of research cruises, scientists from the UvA and the NIOZ discovered that this has created an imbalance of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) in North Sea waters.

UvA researcher Amanda Burson explained, “Generally, the N:P ratio in sea water rarely exceeds 20:1; however, in the coastal waters of the North Sea we now measure sky-high values of up to 375:1. As a result, algae in the North Sea experience a severe shortage in phosphorus.”

The researchers confirmed this by on-deck experiments, where small supplements of phosphorus caused explosive growth of algae. Not all species, however, showed similar responses. The good news is that foam-producing algae grow less well under phosphorus limitation. Unfortunately, the experiments indicate that dinoflagellates, some of which are potentially toxic and bloom-forming species, may profit from decreasing levels of phosphorus. Furthermore, the phosphorus content of the algae themselves was extremely low.

According to Burson, algae from the North Sea therefore form a poor nutrient diet for zooplankton and shellfish, although the impact on higher trophic levels in the food web is still unknown.

Remedial action needed

These findings show that, beside climate change and intensified fishing, an increasing shortage of phosphorus is an under-studied but emergent stressor for coastal waters such as the North Sea. If current trends continue, the shortage of phosphorus in coastal waters will become even more pronounced. The researchers warn that this can endanger the carrying capacity and functioning of coastal waters.

“It is crucial to restore the balance between nitrogen and phosphorus loads in order to sustain our coastal ecosystems,” said Jef Huisman, professor of Aquatic Microbiology. “This can be achieved by putting a halt to the drastic removal of phosphorus and combining this measure with a more effective reduction of nitrogen from surface waters.”


Pope Francis Names Thai Priest Chaplain Of His Holiness

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Father Thasanai Komkris of Thailand has been appointed by Pope Francis as chaplain of His Holiness, an honorary title granted to long-serving diocesan priests.

Father Komkris spent 20 years working to prepare a Catholic edition of the Bible in the Thai language, which was published in 2014.

The new chaplain of His Holiness was born Sept. 18, 1935, in Songhkla, in southern Thailand, one of 10 children.

Father Komris studied at the Pontifical Urban University in Rome from 1954 to 1961 He was ordained a priest on Dec. 21, 1960.

Father Komkris recalls a meeting he had with St. John XXIII, who visited the college in November 1958, a month after his election: “His Holiness said jokingly: ‘My house is right on the other side. My window is on the side opposite to yours, then open the window, so we’ll see you in the face.'”

Sri Lanka: Sirisena Says Peace And Reconciliation Can’t Be Built Only Through Constitution And Laws

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“Building of the peace and reconciliation among the people in the country cannot be done only through enacting laws and adopting a new constitution. It can only be done through the religious philosophy,” said Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena.

“Therefore, I request every religious leader to come forward to take forward the program commenced by the government to build the peace and brotherhood by alleviating the fear and suspicion among every community in the country,” Sirisena added.

Sirisena made these remarks, participating at the Thaipongal ceremony held Monday in the Hindu College in Payagala, Kalutara, organized, under the program to use religious and cultural activities as a tool to promote national peace and reconciliation among school children.

Sirisena who arrived in the college was welcomed by the children according to Hindu customs and escorted him inside the college. President Sirisena was blessed by ritualistic Hindu religious performances.

Sirisena, addressing the gathering at the ceremony pointed out that the divisions of communities in accordance with their race and religion should not be a barrier for the task of building the country. “It is my objective to see every community in this country living in peace and unity in a free and fair society,” Sirisena said.

Sirisena said that the religious leaders of the country can fulfill more responsibilities than the politicians to achieve success in the process of national reconciliation. He also requested the Maha Sangha, and religious leaders of Hindu, Islam and Catholic religions to join with the government to lay the foundation to prevent recurrence of the war and to strengthen the national reconciliation process.

Implementation Day: What Just Happened? – Analysis

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By Adam Garfinkle*

What just happened? Several American citizens unjustly incarcerated in Iran have been released in return for the release of seven Iranians held in U.S. jails for violating the terms of congressionally mandated trade sanctions on Iran, and the revocation of warrants against a dozen or so others not in custody. This occurred in tandem with Implementation Day of the July 2015 nuclear agreement, for the IAEA testified this past week that the Iranian side has met its obligations under that agreement. It also occurred just days after the Navy sailor arrest-and-quick-release incident, and scant weeks after the Iran missile tests/new sanctions business erupted into political play. How (if at all) are these events connected, and what does it mean?

The answer is twice “we don’t know.” The first aspect of “we don’t know” is simple and literal, and it applies to you, typical but still dear reader, and me both. There are aspects of all these puzzle pieces about which we remain in the dark. The second aspect is interpretive and longer range: What does this entanglement mean for the future of Iranian politics and policy, of U.S.-Iranian relations, and the broader security of the Middle East? We don’t know that either.

Don’t Know, Type I

As to the prisoner exchange, how long have these negotiations been going on in secret? Apparently, about 14 months. Knowing that helps us recreate the sequence of juxtapositions with the other issues, which might help us infer something about their connectedness. But it helps only a little, as it turns out. So what else do we know?

Press reports suggest that it was the Iranians who wanted to accelerate the swap, leaking a few weeks ago that such a deal might be possible. That jives with the statements in the press that the details of the swap were agreed only very recently to coincide with Implementation Day, that the Iranians were pressing for a larger number on their side, something like 19 or 20, but President Obama reportedly refused to include anyone who had been involved in any violent or terroristic behavior—and the Iranian side relented.

Maybe. One U.S. national in Iranian custody was not released, suggesting that the exchange was partial: If we demurred on some names, the Iranians demurred on at least one other. Ah, but maybe they demurred on more than one other, because one of the Americans citizens released had not been previously known to be in Iranian custody. Maybe there are more.

Secretary of State John Kerry said that the prisoner exchange was not part of the nuclear deal, despite the parallel discussions that apparently were going on before July 14, but that they were related in that the nuclear deal talks normalized relations at least enough to allow the other negotiation to get traction. This sounds like typical diplomatic obfuscation: not “part of,” but “related”? It reminds me of President Clinton’s hilarious and infamous parsing of what “is” is, but this is part of what diplomats actually and sometimes usefully do—deploy ambiguity for good purposes. So the entertainment value here is more limited than it might at first seem.

Now what about the Navy incident, which occurred just hours before the President’s State of the Union address this past Tuesday? Well, the Defense Department has still not explained what happened with those 10 U.S. sailors on those riverine boats that, everyone seems to agree now, were within Iranian territorial waters. What were they doing there anyway? Who were these particular servicemen—in other words, what if any was their special training?—and how did they get caught? We don’t know, leading one to wonder whether they were on some kind of intelligence collection adventure. One sort of hopes so.

That possibility is made more likely by the fact that they were apprehended by the IRGC, not the regular Iranian Navy and, as we all know, they were released very quickly. That might suggest that the Iranian side did not want to mess with the prisoner exchange talks or the optic of Implementation Day. We don’t really know.

Some, including Secretary Kerry but also others, have crowed about this quick release, suggesting that it validates the investment of all those hours Kerry spent talking up Foreign Minister Zarif. What they don’t say is that the whole catch-and-release episode could have been avoided if the IRGC had simply warned the sailors away, as ordinary etiquette in such matters might have called for—but admittedly that depends on the specific circumstances of the encounter, and we don’t know enough about the details to say. Nor do they say that using photos of detained uniformed American military personnel for propaganda purposes—which they did—is a violation of the Geneva Conventions—which it is. Clearly, some key facts are missing here, as far as normal people not privy to the intel are concerned, so we just cannot be sure about the sequence of events and hence their interconnectedness.

Some connections are clear, however. It seems the Iranian side, long before a few weeks ago, wanted to connect more explicitly the prisoner exchange business with the nuclear negotiations and we, for very good reasons, rejected the linkage. In short, we were faced with a prisoner’s dilemma…… When some journalists asked why back in July, the President explained it well: “Think about the logic that creates. Suddenly, Iran realizes, ‘You know what? Maybe we can get additional concessions out of the Americans by holding these individuals.’”

Other American officials at the time rejected the linkage and the very idea of an exchange because of garden-variety moral hazard risks. The Iranians in jail in the United States broke the law and were convicted by real courts, while the American citizens held in Iran had violated no laws, were (supposedly) not involved in any espionage or other illegal activity, and were incarcerated by a judiciary firmly in the hands of hardliners whose respect for any rule of law they do not dominate and cannot manipulate at will is modest, to say the least. To equate the two kinds of prisoners was simply beyond the pale, and do to so would only encourage the IRGC or others to grab other innocent Americans for future leverage.

That was and remains true, which is why the U.S. government went out of its way on Saturday to fend off expectations of moral hazard. One senior official said for public consumption that the exchange was a “one-time arrangement because it was an opportunity to bring Americans home” and should not be considered something that would “encourage this behavior in the future” by Iran, or, presumably, any other actor. But if you have to say it, it means it’s a problem, and it’s not clear that saying it helps or hurts to avoid the problem in future. (Whatever the case, within hours of my writing this paragraph, news broke that Americans have been taken hostage by Shi’a militias in Iraq. Its great to be proven correct so quickly, but for it to happen so fast that I could not even get into print beforehand is a little deflating, truth to tell).

This is not a new issue. Some people (and U.S. officials) who have preferred to wear human rights on their sleeves have been guilty of a similar kind of moral hazard. For example, the more we used to berate the Chinese in public about their egregious human rights violations, the more incentive we gave them to beat and arrest dissidents, so that these poor pawns could be used as leverage—as part of some supposed “humanitarian gesture”—the next time some Sino-American meeting or summit popped onto the diplomatic calendar. It is not good statecraft to encourage the other side’s cynicism, and eventually we learned to be more careful about this sort of thing. The Obama Administration got the essence right here: Don’t link the issues and drag innocent Americans into the middle of a muddle because it does make it harder, all else equal, to walk away from an unequal deal.

So then why did the Administration agree in the end to this exchange? It was a judgment call. “After the Iranians raised the prospect a few weeks ago,” one American official (probably Ben Rhodes) said, according to the press, “it was clear this would be the only way.” A “window opened” and as President “you have to make a decision: Would it be better to leave these Americans there with sentences that stretched on because we don’t want to make a reciprocal humanitarian gesture? . . . Our determination was that it was a better decision to get our people home.”

That account is not hard to credit as sincere and accurate, since in the U.S. government the circumstances of what are called “Amcivs” ranks very high in government priorities, as well they should. If one insists on being a moralist in office, then one does not deal with “evil” and one does not equate lawful prisoners in U.S. jails with innocent hostages in Iranian jails, and so on. But if one is a realist about these things, as we generally were when we dealt with Soviet officialdom for decades and as we have been in dealing with the Chinese government for decades too, one takes for granted that the other side will lie, cheat, steal, dissemble and in any way possible seek a unilateral advantage. But we still have our interests and we still have to deal with them as they are, as opposed to how we wish they were. One does what one can and has to do under the circumstances. The world as it is is multi-hued, not two-toned. These are hard choices and no one should pretend otherwise.

In what amounts to very short-term retrospect, then, it seems clear that the Iranians wanted to get rid of this problem of holding Americans for having done nothing wrong except to have dual citizenship, which the Iranian government does not recognize as valid. Why? Hard to say.

Maybe, as with the embassy hostages many years ago, the Iranians figured that these people had exhausted any possible value to them and that it was becoming counterproductive to keep holding them. Perhaps it had something to do with Iranian domestic intrigues that are more or less opaque to us—not just “us” out here in ordinary land but also to our intelligence community. Our releasing seven Iranians and revoking indictments on a dozen or so others was just a sweetener, it appears, to help the Iranians save face and make Rouhani’s government look good. Maybe we figured that this was in our interest as well as Rouhani’s. It wasn’t much of a concession in any case, since the law under which they were arrested goes by the boards anyway with the lifting of nuclear technology-related trade sanctions anyway, thanks to Implementation Day.

Finally on “we don’t know” type I is the connection between the prisoner release and sanctions we mooted but then pulled back after two Iranian missile tests violated the July 2015 accord—that according to the UN Security Council. Here there clearly is a connection, and the Administration has admitted it: We did not want to screw up the prisoner exchange by spraying lemon juice into the atmosphere until that deal was done and consummated. There were also, it is worth noting, some sensitive exchanges just shy of Implementation Day about the nature of centrifuge research Iranian scientists can and cannot do during the next decade or so. So the Administration did pull that new sanctions punch—but at the time it was hard to know if it would be temporary, or not? That question is a perfect lead-in to the second and grander aspect of the “we don’t know” theme.

Don’t Know, Type II

Even before all the facts are known about recent incidents and their connections established (if ever), many observers claim to know what it all means in larger strategic terms. The Administration, as may be expected, has been spinning wildly about the value of diplomacy and the wisdom of the nuclear deal in having prevented an Iranian nuclear breakout and hence another war. The President’s language on this in this past Tuesday’s State of the Union address constitutes the fastest spin of all.

But lots of commentators, not all of them Administration supporters or shills, have claimed that the Iranian meeting of the technical demands of the nuclear deal before we expected them to be done, the “catch-and-release” episode, and now the prisoner exchange are all manifestations of a new era in U.S.-Iranian relations and even of a new Iran, an Iran headed speedily toward Thermidor, to use Crane Brinton’s classic terminology—normalcy in the aftermath of the Iranian revolution. Of course, these observations come with the usual self-protective caveats, but the trajectory of the comments is clear enough. The Administration claimed that the transformation of Iranian politics in the aftermath of the deal was not a condition or even a relevant expectation, but the logic of the situation declared otherwise. And now some observers are ratifying these unclaimed expectations, leaping forth to say, as it were, “See, we told you so.”

Not everyone is convinced. Critics contend that the Administration is still, as ever, giving away the store. Some Republican candidates for President have said that the exchange makes us look weak and that we should not have negotiated with these jerks in the first place while they were illegally holding innocent U.S. citizens as hostages. Their release, some say, should have been a precondition of the negotiations. That’s a great applause line, but what if we tried this and it didn’t work?

A negotiation between states that do not like or trust one another is not a favor one does for the other. If there is nothing in a prospective negotiation for the U.S. side, we should not be negotiating, preconditions or no preconditions. So it comes down to whether any preconditions we might wish to insist upon will fly, and if there is anything we can do on the side to make their fulfillment more likely. If not, then insisting on preconditions is merely a demonstration of petulance without much of a practical purpose—or, as is the case with the almost inevitable Palestinian Authority demand for preconditions for negotiations with Israel, is a sign that there is no interest in an actual agreement to start with. It is easy for someone like Donald Trump to make such statements, and for his supporters to enthusiastically endorse them, because he has never been near any consequential government decision on such matters, and so has no idea what he is talking about.

Other critics, like Marco Rubio, have pointedly raised the moral hazard problem, and rightly so. And it’s not just the Iranians who will notice. So we shall see if other U.S nationals soon get snatched for purposes of collecting leverage. I would not be surprised. (As indicated earlier, that appears to have already happened.)

But all these peregrinations over the prisoner swap, both in support of it and in criticism against it, are mostly overblown. What really are we taking about here? We’re talking about a few unlucky people who got caught up in machinations they knew little to nothing about, probably on both sides, who have now been released from their nightmares. This is a human-interest story that is ultimately of very minor strategic importance.

It is highly “spinable,” however, and that’s why many media mavens are claiming that this swap marks a major Administration triumph. Alas, our celebrity culture has become very outsized and our mainstream press’s pandering to it tends to reward optics rather than substance. It tends to reduce all issues to biography, to the who’s-up/who’s-down metric that obscures the actual news and what it means. It all about “flaps and chaps,” Owen Harries used to tell me, all about scandal and personalities and, preferably, some combination of the two that produces high outflows of intrigue, innuendo, and moral umbrage. That’s what people like to read about, and it is so much easier for jaded journalists to write that way than to tackle genuinely complex and often abstract issues about which they may understand rather little.

In this case one can forgive the highly personal and parochial nature of the Washington Post coverage, since one of the released prisoners is a Washington Post employee. But otherwise, we are better served by keeping our eye on the strategic ball. And if we do that, a lot of the suggestions and claims put out there over the past 48 hours start to look a little distended.

To return to the matter of the Iranian missile tests for a moment, is the punch that the Administration pulled to seal the prisoner exchange temporary or not? Well, Bill Burns, who was Under Secretary of State for Policy when the sanctions regime against Iran got launched during the Bush Administration, defends the nuclear deal in terms that do not entirely pass my credulity test. He claims, as many do, that the deal effectively freezes Iran’s nuclear ambitions for ten to fifteen years, that this “is a real advantage to us,” and that it was “achieved by tough-minded diplomacy and not war.” But I and others have laid out a plausible path for Iranian cheating on the verification scheme and reneging on the deal well before a decade has passed, having first copped the front-loaded financial gains and the advantages, if any, of the cheating. Hillary Clinton agrees with Burns, who worked closely with her when she was Secretary of State, but even she admits that it is in the Iranian “nature” to try to cheat. She would know, because she read all the intel about that nature and past cheating while she was in office. So in this context it is noteworthy that Burns urged Obama to issue new sanctions against Iran over the missile tests to demonstrate that we will keep up the pressure in what will inevitably be a mixed relationship going forward, with lots more pushing and shoving than “humanitarian gestures” and other niceties. He wants to keep the diplomacy tough-minded, and here he is certainly correct. Happily, the President agreed with him.

But that does not a happy ending necessarily make. Several benchmarks that optimists point to lately as evidence that things are going well with the implementation of the nuclear deal strike me as much more ambiguous.

First, yes it’s true—if we believe the IAEA—that to reach Implementation Day the Iranians have shipped 98 percent of their enriched uranium out of the country, in this case to Russia. I’m not sure I do trust the IAEA’s judgment, seeing as how this is the same underfunded organization that agreed to let Iran supply its own soil samples from Parchin and elsewhere for testing, and passed on the PMD (possible military developments) portfolio in a way that did not make me feel all that warm and cozy. But even putting that aside, who thinks that the Russian government, which has recently contracted to build more Iranian nuclear power plants and which hopes to pierce the Iranian arms market in a serious way, is beyond shipping some or all of that enriched uranium back to Iran during and just after a future verification crisis? Pardon me for buzzing the ointment, but the current Russian government is not our friend, and the fact that Russia is the repository for this material gives them more leverage, and the Iranian government more options, than I would prefer they have. There was no other way to get agreement on this aspect of the deal—that’s clear. Still.

Then, second, there is the Arak reactor, the plutonium route to a bomb. The Iranians claim they have disemboweled the core, and the IAEA has testified to same. They did this, and other technical tasks, faster than the CIA and the Energy Department thought they could. They did so supposedly because they have been in a huge hurry to get their hands on their money, and some argue that Rouhani’s sensitivity to the calendar turns on an upcoming, late-February parliamentary election. Maybe so.

But what the speedy engineering work also demonstrates is that if Iranian engineers can denature the core of the Arak reactor quickly, they can reconstitute it quickly as well. Same goes for mothballed advanced centrifuges. So what many look to for evidence that all is well with the deal or even better than well, others see as evidence that all may not be so well after all. People tend to see what they expect to see—by dint of what cognitive psychologists refer to as “the evoked set”—and when expectations merge with partisan political alignments, predictably conflicting certainties emerge. That’s politics, often enough.

Those of us whose interests, training, and experience are not in partisan politics but in social science analysis tend to be more focused on explaining why what happens happens before we go running off to chase down heroes and villains and, in the process, satisfy our own evoked desires and expectations. But the truth of the matter is that we rarely can know for sure why what happens happens and what the longer-term strategic implications may be. Events rarely provide clean test cases to score who turns out to be right and who turns out to have been wrong even in retrospect. That’s because situations get overlaid with new factors that make teasing it all apart in a postmortem very difficult.

So not only do we still not know how the larger, strategic bets will play out, of which this prisoner swap is just a tiny and marginal part, we may never know, even if we live long enough for the dust to (mostly) settle. Alas, the question “What just happened?” turns out to be a lot easier to ask than to answer.

About the author:
*Adam Garfinkle
is a Robert A. Fox Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute and Editor of The American Interest magazine.

Source:
This article was published by FPRI.

Rajoy Stresses Importance For Spain Of Having ‘Government That Reflects Elections’

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During an interview on the Las Mañanas programme on RNE [Spanish National Radio], Spain’s acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy underlined the need for a government with “extensive parliamentary support capable of tackling the significant challenges currently facing Spain”. “There is a great deal of room for reaching an understanding,” Rajoy said.

As regards whether the round of talks with the political groups begun earlier on Monday by King Felipe VI has been sped up, Rajoy explained that it is taking place “at the appropiate time”; in other words, three or four days after the constitution of Parliament. “I believe we are proceeding on time and in due form, and that nothing out of the ordinary has taken place,” he said.

Rajoy said that, despite the freedom afforded by the fact that a budget has already been approved for 2016, “the sooner a government is in place and fully capable of exercising its duties, the better”. He went on to say that “the truly important thing” is for “Spain to have a government, above all a government that reflects the election results and a government with an agenda and clear objectives in order to tackle the issues that genuinely matter to the people of Spain”. He added that this should be done “as soon as possible”.

In this regard, he underlined the need for an agreement with “extensive parliamentary support capable of tackling the significant challenges currently facing Spain”. In his opinion, the Partido Popular [People’s Party], the PSOE [Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party] and Ciudadanos [Citizens] are united by such “fundamental” issues as the unity of Spain, the principle of equality among all Spaniards, European policy and foreign affairs policy. They also agree on certain objectives, such as defending the welfare state, economic growth and employment.

“Therefore, even though there are indeed issues on which we disagree, I believe there is a great deal of room for reaching an understanding,” Rajoy said.

Continuing with the reforms

Rajoy said that the formation of this government “would send a positive message out to everyone in Spain and abroad, would generate security and would generate certainty in Spain and in the markets”. This would allow the country to enjoy “four very positive years” because reforms would be undertaken “with extensive support and for a long time”, and would be able to consolidate the economic recovery. He went on to say that the main objective continues to be creating two million jobs over the next four years.

Rajoy then underlined the importance of the reforms undertaken during the previous legislature. “The greatest mistake we could make now would be to go back on ourselves, return to old policies since we all know where they led us”, he said. He highlighted three major objectives looking forward. The first and most important is to create jobs, for which “we need an economic policy like the one we have had in recent years”. Secondly, to maintain and improve the pillars underpinning the welfare state. Thirdly, to fight Jihadi terrorism.

Catalonia

As regards Catalonia, Rajoy stressed that the Government of Spain’s position remains “very clear”: it will resort to the courts whenever any decision is taken that violates the Spanish Constitution, the Statute of Autonomy or the law, because that “is the duty of the Government of Spain.”

Furthermore, he stressed that if the new President of the Regional Government of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont, calls him, he will respond; as he always has and continues to do with any president of any regional government.

Venezuela and Argentina

When asked about the situation in Venezuela, Mariano Rajoy stressed that he wants the same for that country as for Spain: democracy, freedom, human rights, free enterprise and a welfare model. For that reason, he urged the political leaders of Venezuela to “transform the country into a free and democratic nation.”

As regards the change of president in Argentina, Rajoy stressed the good relations he has always maintained with Mauricio Macri, the new President of Argentina. “The first steps are highly positive for Argentina and for the people of Argentina as a whole,” he said.

Geckoman? Explaining Why Spiderman Can’t Exist

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Latest research reveals why geckos are the largest animals able to scale smooth vertical walls – even larger climbers would require unmanageably large sticky footpads. Scientists estimate that a human would need adhesive pads covering 40% of their body surface in order to walk up a wall like Spiderman, and believe their insights have implications for the feasibility of large-scale, gecko-like adhesives.

A new study, published today in PNAS, shows that in climbing animals from mites and spiders up to tree frogs and geckos, the percentage of body surface covered by adhesive footpads increases as body size increases, setting a limit to the size of animal that can use this strategy because larger animals would require impossibly big feet.

Dr David Labonte and his colleagues in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Zoology found that tiny mites use approximately 200 times less of their total body area for adhesive pads than geckos, nature’s largest adhesion-based climbers. And humans? We’d need about 40% of our total body surface, or roughly 80% of our front, to be covered in sticky footpads if we wanted to do a convincing Spiderman impression.

Once an animal is big enough to need a substantial fraction of its body surface to be covered in sticky footpads, the necessary morphological changes would make the evolution of this trait impractical, suggests Labonte.

“If a human, for example, wanted to walk up a wall the way a gecko does, we’d need impractically large sticky feet – our shoes would need to be a European size 145 or a US size 114,” said Walter Federle, senior author also from Cambridge’s Department of Zoology.

The researchers say that these insights into the size limits of sticky footpads could have profound implications for developing large-scale bio-inspired adhesives, which are currently only effective on very small areas.

“As animals increase in size, the amount of body surface area per volume decreases – an ant has a lot of surface area and very little volume, and a blue whale is mostly volume with not much surface area,” said Labonte.

“This poses a problem for larger climbing species because, when they are bigger and heavier, they need more sticking power to be able to adhere to vertical or inverted surfaces, but they have comparatively less body surface available to cover with sticky footpads. This implies that there is a size limit to sticky footpads as an evolutionary solution to climbing – and that turns out to be about the size of a gecko.”

Larger animals have evolved alternative strategies to help them climb, such as claws and toes to grip with.

The researchers compared the weight and footpad size of 225 climbing animal species including insects, frogs, spiders, lizards and even a mammal.

“We compared animals covering more than seven orders of magnitude in weight, which is roughly the same as comparing a cockroach to the weight of Big Ben, for example,” said Labonte.

These investigations also gave the researchers greater insights into how the size of adhesive footpads is influenced and constrained by the animals’ evolutionary history.

“We were looking at vastly different animals – a spider and a gecko are about as different as a human is to an ant- but if you look at their feet, they have remarkably similar footpads,” said Labonte.

“Adhesive pads of climbing animals are a prime example of convergent evolution – where multiple species have independently, through very different evolutionary histories, arrived at the same solution to a problem. When this happens, it’s a clear sign that it must be a very good solution.”

The researchers believe we can learn from these evolutionary solutions in the development of large-scale manmade adhesives.

“Our study emphasises the importance of scaling for animal adhesion, and scaling is also essential for improving the performance of adhesives over much larger areas. There is a lot of interesting work still to do looking into the strategies that animals have developed in order to maintain the ability to scale smooth walls, which would likely also have very useful applications in the development of large-scale, powerful yet controllable adhesives,” said Labonte.

There is one other possible solution to the problem of how to stick when you’re a large animal, and that’s to make your sticky footpads even stickier.

“We noticed that within closely related species pad size was not increasing fast enough to match body size, probably a result of evolutionary constraints. Yet these animals can still stick to walls,” said Christofer Clemente, a co-author from the University of the Sunshine Coast.

“Within frogs, we found that they have switched to this second option of making pads stickier rather than bigger. It’s remarkable that we see two different evolutionary solutions to the problem of getting big and sticking to walls,” said Clemente.

“Across all species the problem is solved by evolving relatively bigger pads, but this does not seem possible within closely related species, probably since there is not enough morphological diversity to allow it. Instead, within these closely related groups, pads get stickier. This is a great example of evolutionary constraint and innovation.”

Online Dating Of Partners In Jihad: Case Of The San Bernardino Shooters – Analysis

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The San Bernardino shootings highlight the emergence of the online dating platform as a means to unite potential jihadists or to radicalise future partners. This represents an additional dimension of the cyber space exploitation to spread jihadist ideology.

By Sara Mahmood and Shahzeb Ali Rathore*

The San Bernardino shootings on 2 December 2015 raised some interesting questions about the radicalisation process of a reclusive Muslim couple in California. Tashfeen Malik and Syed Farouk stand out from similar attackers because they were a married couple, who perpetrated the attack in unison. However, one overlooked aspect of this attack is the online dating platform that possibly acted as a channel for the eventual incident.

Farouk and Tashfeen were unknown to each other two years ago. Farouk, born in Illinois, was a religious man, who worked as an environmental health specialist, prayed five times a day and preferred to remain in solitude. He was allegedly linked to a group of would-be jihadists, who were arrested in 2012 while attempting to travel to Afghanistan to link up with Al Qaeda. In the same year, Farouk and his friend also planned to conduct an attack in the U.S. However, these plans were abandoned after a spate of Al Qaeda-linked arrests.

Match Made in Cyber space

Thousands of miles away was Tashfeen, who was born in Pakistan and had spent most of her life in Saudi Arabia. She travelled to Pakistan to study pharmacology in the Bahauddin Zakariya University, where she was enrolled part-time in the Al Huda institute. During this period, Tashfeen donned a hijab, refrained from communication with the opposite sex, and spent most of her time studying the Quran.

What brought these two individuals together to kill more than a dozen people? Despite the geographical distance and lack of common friends, the two deeply religious individuals met, ironically, through an online dating platform.

Cyber Domain: Emergence of Online Jihadi Dating

The strategic incorporation of the cyber space to spread extremist propaganda, recruit members and incite fear is not uncommon. The first wave of cyber domain utilisation came through Al Qaeda’s propagandist forums, chat-rooms and websites that disseminated calls to jihad. The second wave was ISIS’ revolutionary incorporation of social media portals, such as Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr and private messaging applications, including Telegram for recruitment purposes. Another aspect of the second wave lay within the coincidental exposure of the San Bernardino perpetrators through cyber dating. Even though it has been ascertained that the couple had no links with ISIS, the group itself has already made use of online dating sites.

For instance, in 2014, it was reported that a 15-year old British teenager, Yusra Hussein, joined ISIS after contacting a jihadist through the group’s online dating service known as ‘Jihadi Matchmaker’. The latter was a Twitter account that attracted hundreds of young women who were infatuated by the idea of being with an ISIS ‘jihadi’. However, the case of the San Bernardino Shooters suggests that radicals, ISIS sympathisers or otherwise, might be avoiding prying eyes by seeking their potential partners through actual dating sites. These sites provide an individual with a better chance to meet someone of similar interest. As such, it makes it easier for radicals to seek each other since the dating site provides the necessary tools to find one themselves.

Partners in Jihad

After maintaining an active presence on online dating platforms for a substantial period, it was in 2013 that Farouk came across his future wife. Farouk had profiles on multiple dating forums including iMilap and Dubai Matrimonial, which stated that he was a religious man, looking for a hijabi who was willing to live life to the fullest. On a more ominous note, his profile added that he enjoyed target shooting with friends in his spare time. After talking to multiple women, Farouk finally came across Tashfeen, and developed a close relationship. They decided to marry less than a year afterwards.

According to the FBI, both individuals were discussing jihad and martyrdom online before they met and eventually got married. This love story, which now lies tainted with the blood of their victims, suggests the possible utilisation of online jihadi dating by other attackers.

While jihadi matchmaking through dating sites might represent a love story for some, for others it could be a façade. Recently, Afsha Jabeen, a 38-year old woman, living in Dubai with her husband and three children, had a fake online presence as a young Christian convert to Islam. Salman Mohiuddin, who was from Hyderabad in India, fell in love with the fake online persona, and was convinced to crossover to the dark-side by joining ISIS. Even though this incident took place on social media, it does not negate the possibility of similar replications on online dating sites.

However, online dating is not solely a source of radicalisation for potential and would-be jihadists, similar to social media platforms. Instead, it could simply act as a channel for bringing like-minded radicals and extremists together amidst their search for a life partner. Hence, the partner could either act as the impetus for engaging in jihad, or one could find a partner in crime with similar interests and perpetrate an attack together. Tashfeen and Farouk apparently fell in the latter category.

Possible Lessons

The lack of attention paid to the cyber aspect of this attack is a cause of concern. Avenues and tools in the internet sphere are being manipulated by extremist groups. There is no consolidated framework to counter online websites, nor is there a coherent policy to confront the social media presence of extremist groups and individuals. In fact, all security checks conducted before Malik was granted the US green card were unable to pinpoint her extremist leanings because she openly discussed them through Facebook. This information, alongside Tashfeen and Farouk’s communication via an online dating site, was only revealed after the attack. While official responses are reactive rather than preventive terrorists are thriving on the innovative use of these online avenues.

It is likely that extremists and radical individuals will make increasing use of online dating platforms to search for their soul mates or recruit others to their cause. This platform permits unmonitored conversations between two people, separating this medium from the likes of Twitter, Facebook and Ask.fm. Unless, a specific framework to counteract the presence of radical and extremist individuals online is present, this strategic exploitation of the cyber space is bound to grow.

*Sara Mahmood and Shahzeb Ali Rathore are Research Analysts with the International Centre for Political Violence & Terrorism Research (ICPVTR), a constituent unit of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

India’s ‘Look East’ And ‘Act East’ Policies Reviewed 2016 – Analysis

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By Dr Subhash Kapila*

India’s ‘Look East ‘Policy was impelled by economic and political imperatives whereas India’s ‘Act East ‘Policy was impelled by India’s strategic imperatives to establish its strategic footprints in South East Asia, a region where India has had established its footprints centuries back and where China has been muscling-in its way for decades.

Requires noting is the fact that while India’s visionary Prime Minister P V Narasimha initiated the ‘Look East’ Policy in the year 1992. India’s ‘Act East’ Policy has taken substantive shape in declaratory terms only with the advent of Prime Minister Modi’s regime. More notably, India’s ‘Act East’ Policy was not only impelled by India’s own strategic imperatives but also a call by United States and Indo Pacific countries that India’s ascendant strategic profile warranted India should also implement an ‘Act East’ Policy to emerge as a net provider of security in this vital region.

The picture obtaining in 2016 is that India is engaged in an integrated and seamless implementation of both its ‘Look East’ and ‘Act East’ policy befitting its emerging power profile. However India cannot rest complacently on its oars and expect that the momentum gained would enable a further smooth sailing ahead.

China looks with disfavour on India’s ‘Act East’ Policy implementation because China believes that South East Asia and the Western Pacific littoral is China’s strategic backyard and India has no business in interloping into the region. China can therefore be expected to indulge in some deft manoeuvring in limiting India’s growing influence especially enlisting countries like Indonesia, Laos and Cambodia and possibly Thailand also.

Comparatively, India under Prime Minister Modi has been successful in establishing a Special Strategic Partnership with Japan and strategic partnerships with South Korea and the Philippines. India also has a strong and traditional Strategic Partnership with Vietnam where defence and security relationships are being substantially being reinforced.

Notably, India’s ‘Act East’ Policy strengthening of defence and security relationships coincides and rests on Indo Pacific countries which constitute the Outer Perimeter of United States security ring of defence of Continental United States. It may just be coincidental arising from these countries similar strategic concerns on China’s not so peaceful rise endangering regional security.

Strategically fortuitous is the emerging strategic reality that portends well for the future stability and security of Indo Pacific Asia is the growing strategic congruencies of India with the United States, Japan, Vietnam and Australia. While this does not portend the emergence of a military alliance of these strategically like-minded nations but it is a strong pointer that despite the absence of a formal military alliance structure there exists strategic space for a loose military cooperative framework. This itself puts in place an existential strategic counterweight of balancing a China bent on crafting a China-centric order in Indo Pacific Asia.

In Indo Pacific Asia, in the years to come, India would be expected to play a significant role upholding the security and stability of the region. Leadership roles do not come cheaply or handed on the platter and India should not expect that it’s ‘Act East’ Policy by itself would rhetorically endow it with a salient leadership role. It comes with a price and the price that India would have to pay in this direction is to stand firmly upto China both in the context of the China-India military confrontation but more importantly in measuring upto Indo Pacific nations expectation that it stands upto China in the interest of overall security and stability of Indo Pacific Asia. This is the salient concluding observation that emerges if India is really to achieve the intended end-aims of its ‘Act East’ Policy.

*Dr Subhash Kapila is a graduate of the Royal British Army Staff College, Camberley and combines a rich experience of Indian Army, Cabinet Secretariat, and diplomatic assignments in Bhutan, Japan, South Korea and USA. Currently, Consultant International Relations & Strategic Affairs with South Asia Analysis Group. He can be reached at drsubhashkapila.007@gmail.com


Danger Of Southeast Asian Jihadi Returnees: Need For An ASEAN-Wide Policy – Analysis

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More than 1,000 Southeast Asian combatants of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) are poised to return home in the near future. Much needs to be done to pre-empt the serious political and security implications that these returnees will pose.

By Jasminder Singh*

Of the more than 1,000 Southeast Asian combatants for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, together with 2,000-3,000 camp followers, some are poised to return home in the near future. This is likely to have serious political and security implications for the region.

The majority of Southeast Asian fighters are from Indonesia and Malaysia with a token presence from Thailand, Philippines, and possibly Myanmar. About 70 Southeast Asians are believed to have been killed in combat while another 200 or so are said to have returned. Many of the returnees in Southeast Asia were captured in transit en route to Syria. For example, more than 170 Indonesians were detained on the Turkish-Syrian border before they could cross into Syria. What is in store for Southeast Asia with IS returnees is far more serious than the Afghan returnees in the 1980s. Only a coordinated regional policy will be able to manage this potentially grave threat. This is because Southeast Asia will have to overcome a regional and extra-regional terrorist threat under the auspices of Katibah Nusantara, the IS’ affiliate in the region, besides many Southeast Asians fighting for other groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra, an Al Qaeda affiliate.

Reasons for Returning from the Islamic State

While for some, the aim was to permanently stay in the so-called Islamic State (IS) under its self-appointed Caliph, the geo-political and military realities, however, have dictated many to return home, with more likely to join the train. Many have returned due to disillusionment with IS. For them the dream of an Islamic paradise was shattered by the brutalities and atrocities they witnessed, especially the beheadings and wanton killings of civilian Muslims, Shias and Sunnis alike.

The highly disciplined, demanding and rigorous life style of IS was something many had not expected, especially in an environment where the Southeast Asians were a minority. Many who also hoped for glamorous jobs and assignments were given menial tasks that also disenchanted them forcing them to abandon IS.

Danger of the Returnees

The danger posed by IS returnees is three-fold. The first is dealing with individuals who have adopted and been exposed to the radical ideology of IS; it promotes intolerance and hatred towards non-believers who can be killed for not accepting its ideology. The fear is that the returnees who are steeped in radical ideology would promote the ‘ISISification’ of Southeast Asian religious tenets and practices, leading to cognitive and ideological shifts that would promote inter and intra-religious conflicts. It would also lead to the spread of the IS’ ideology and propaganda in an attempt to win new adherents. With many issues and challenges facing local Muslims, this could pose a danger to moderate mainstream Islam in the region.

Secondly, there is also the danger that the returnees would be accepted as natural leaders of militant movements in the home country as happened following the return of fighters from Afghanistan in the 1980s and 1990s. The returnees’ prestige of having fought in ‘Bumi Allah’ (God’s Land) can be expected to draw many recruits who have already been radicalised towards the cause of IS and greater radicalisation and terrorism. The battle-hardened and ideologically fortified returnees, with experience of having lived in the ‘Islamic Caliphate’, would also be able to act as a powerful magnet to recruit supporters and fighters for local militant groups and even IS.

Finally, and probably the most dangerous consequence, could be the launching of terrorist operations at home by these returnees. Armed with battlefield experience, adept in technical skills of weapons’ handling, and bomb making, including killing of combatants and civilians, these combat veterans will pose an existential threat to their home countries and the wider region. They may want to continue their violent struggle against local political and religious leaders, and communities dubbed as ‘enemies of Islam’ and pursue a struggle in support of the IS as part of its effort to establish an Islamic Caliphate. There is also the possibility of other combatants from outside Southeast Asia entering the region in support of regional operations as seen with the Uighurs’ support for Indonesian militants.

What Can the Returnees Do?

There are at least three scenarios of possible actions by returnees:

1. Regroup in the Philippines with old jihadi networks such as Jemaah Islamiyah in Indonesia and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) in the Philippines;

2. Resume violence and sectarian conflict in Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia;

3. Target foreigners in the region including foreign embassies and iconic Western economic and political interests such as hotels and shopping malls. Revive dormant groups such as Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia, Rohingya Solidarity Organisation, Arakan Rohingya National Organisation and the Pattani United Liberation Organisation. Escalate domestic violence against governments seen as pro-Western or being anti-Islamic.

The returnees’ military attacks could possibly be undertaken through the following avenues:

a. By a single terrorist, either local or external;

b. By a single group, say the East Indonesia Mujahidin (MIT);

c. By a combination of groups as is currently ongoing in the Philippines involving the BIFF, Abu Sayyaf Group, MILF faction, Ansar Khalifa Philippines and various Malaysian and Indonesian elements; and/or

d. By a combination of local and external terrorists, say a joint operation between the MIT and Uighurs.

What Needs to Be Done?

It has become clear that no one state can manage the threat posed by IS. It will require regional and international cooperation, including the need to get assistance from Turkey and Iraq to send captured local fighters back for charges. To begin with, states would need strong legislations to criminalise citizens fighting for terrorist groups, involvement in war or military operations other than for national purpose, and even pledging of loyalty to another state an act of betrayal and crime.

In addition to strong and deterrent punishment, Southeast Asians should be stripped of their citizenship for participating in criminal acts on behalf of another state. There would also be the need for effective de-radicalisation measures in order to rehabilitate and reintegrate returnees into the society at large.

The danger posed by the ‘Daesh Alumni’ (as IS-linked militants are also referred to) and returnees is real and this should be addressed head-on to prevent these ideological and battle-hardened individuals from causing damage to their respective societies. This would, however, require an ASEAN-wide effort to neutralise the threat from IS in the region.

*Jasminder Singh is a Senior Analyst with the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

Six Responses To Bernie Skeptics – OpEd

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1. “He’d never beat Trump or Cruz in a general election.”

Wrong. According to the latest polls, Bernie is the strongest Democratic candidate in the general election, defeating both Donald Trump and Ted Cruz in hypothetical matchups. (The latest Real Clear Politics averages of all polls shows Bernie beating Trump by a larger margin than Hillary beats Trump, and Bernie beating Cruz while Hillary loses to Cruz.)

2. “He couldn’t get any of his ideas implemented because Congress would reject them.”

If both house of Congress remain in Republican hands, no Democrat will be able to get much legislation through Congress, and will have to rely instead on executive orders and regulations. But there’s a higher likelihood of kicking Republicans out if Bernie’s “political revolution” continues to surge around America, bringing with it millions of young people and other voters, and keeping them politically engaged.

3. “America would never elect a socialist.”

P-l-e-a-s-e. America’s most successful and beloved government programs are social insurance – Social Security and Medicare. A highway is a shared social expenditure, as is the military and public parks and schools. The problem is we now have excessive socialism for the rich (bailouts of Wall Street, subsidies for Big Ag and Big Pharma, monopolization by cable companies and giant health insurers, giant tax-deductible CEO pay packages) – all of which Bernie wants to end or prevent.

4. “His single-payer healthcare proposal would cost so much it would require raising taxes on the middle class.”

This is a duplicitous argument. Studies show that a single-payer system would be far cheaper than our current system, which relies on private for-profit health insurers, because a single-payer system wouldn’t spend huge sums on advertising, marketing, executive pay, and billing. So even if the Sanders single-payer plan did require some higher taxes, Americans would come out way ahead because they’d save far more than that on health insurance.

5. “His plan for paying for college with a tax on Wall Street trades would mean colleges would run by government rules.”

Baloney. Three-quarters of college students today already attend public universities financed largely by state governments, and they’re not run by government rules. The real problem is too many young people still can’t afford a college education. The move toward free public higher education that began in the 1950s with the G.I. Bill and extended into the 1960s came to an abrupt stop in the 1980s. We must restart it.

6. “He’s too old.”

Untrue. He’s in great health. Have you seen how agile and forceful he is as he campaigns around the country? These days, 70s are the new 60s. (He’s younger than four of the nine Supreme Court justices.) In any event, the issue isn’t age; it’s having the right values. FDR was paralyzed, and JFK had both Addison’s and Crohn’s diseases, but they were great presidents because they fought adamantly for social and economic justice.

Ideological War Against Terrorism – OpEd

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By Dr. Sudhanshu Tripathi*

Although terrorists are the worst enemies of humanity and eternal moral values, yet their corporal elimination is no answer as regards fight against terror. Instead, new and progressive ideas be generated and propagated to substitute the idea of violence.

The terror attack on Indian Air Force base in Pathankot again proves that any reasonable or bold attempt by Indian Prime Minister to normalise continuing tense relations with Pakistan will not be permitted to go through smoothly by the powerful pillars of Pakistani ruling establishment- its Army and secret agency, Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) and hardliner Mullahs, as they have all along been very decisive in Pakistani governance. This had already happened prior to Kargil war or in 26/11 Mumbai terror attack and many times earlier and the result was a long deadlock with mounting terror strikes on Indian soil, killing hundreds of innocent civilians and brave security forces and also destroying properties worth millions.

Unfortunately, most of terrorists and their networks operating against India have their logistical support in Pakistan from where they carryout successful strikes inside India. Also, it is clear that merely discussing with the civilian government of Pakistan is not of much significance as several earlier rounds of talks have always failed. But the positive response of Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for nabbing the terrorists responsible for Pathankot air base attack and the US’ pressure on Pakistan for this end have aroused some hope in India and that appears to be materialising with the report of Pakistan’s crack down on Maulana Masood Azhar’s outfit and several leaders, although there is a suspense over this report in both the neighbours. Maulana Azhar is the founder leader of the notorious terror organisation ‘Jaish-e- Mohammad’, which is the deadliest terror outfit in South Asia and had been involved in many terror cases committed into India in the past, including attack on Indian Parliament in 2001.

Difficult situation

Unfortunately, India is still groping in the dark as to how to deal with Pakistan’s supported cross border terrorism into the country. But one thing is clear that India has always been perceived by terrorists as a soft target where they can easily enter and attack even the most secure and sensitive places. Earlier, the Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir and the Indian Parliament were not spared from such attacks, besides several other important public places like Bombay Stock Exchange, markets, railway stations etc.. These besides, the continuing adhocism, prevailing corruption from top to bottom and unfortunate party-politics on this sensitive issue have further added to woo the prevailing chaos which has demoralised even army, paramilitary and other security forces fighting against terror. Indeed, that has engulfed the general Indian psyche as they mostly remain detached and unconcerned, until personally affected by this menace.

Despite its frequent occurrences in India, the issue has not yet become an electoral one and no political party, nor any political leader, has come out openly against it. Is it not a self-killing public apathy? Is it not only for preserving the Muslim vote bank by these political leaders? The vote-bank for them is more precious than the innocent lives of their fellow countrymen whose families are left to bear unbearable trauma and agony throughout their lives. Against this scenario, what should India do to protect its innocent citizens and brave soldiers besides destruction of valuable property. Nevertheless, talks between the two governments must continue as communication gap between them will further heighten their mutual suspicions and the terrorists will exploit this situation for their nefarious designs.

Tough stand with progressive ideas

As a way out, India’s soft approach to terror for vote-bank politics must stop immediately and must follow the firm and strict course like that of the US, Russia or Israel as regards prevention and war against terrorism. But above these, the eternal values of Indian cultural ethos advocating peace, love, piety and non-violence must prevail over violence because violence as a deterrent against violence will not be of much use except for a short period as a temporary relief. What is very much needed is to fight an ideological war against terrorism by generating and propagating new progressive ideas characterised by these eternal values yet suited to the present day modern world and which may ultimately inspire them (terrorists) to give up the logic of terror for redressing their grievances. After all terrorists are the distorted selves devoid of sanity, which is caused due to some deeply agonising and unfulfilled longing marked by an extreme feeling of grave injustice to them and consequently forcing them to take the course of violence.

This habit of taking recourse to violence among present day youth who go to any extreme of macabre violence, as is being committed by Daesh or Islamic State (ISIS) terrorists in Syria and Iraq, is a particular cause of serious concern today for the whole world because that poses a grave threat to the very existence of humanity in the world. In such a scenario, the irrelevance of violence and terror be so highlighted through education, religious-cultural enlightenment and global mass-movement that their substitution by the new progressive ideas, as mentioned above, be easily accomplished for establishing a new just and peace-loving society as well as a new world order characterised by truth, peace, justice, love, brotherhood and non-violence as against the present day world marked by power-politics, hierarchy, violence and injustice.

Conclusion

Hence, now this must be clear to Pakistan that if India is bold enough for establishing friendly relations with them as it has firm faith in the Indian cultural ideas of ‘peace’ and ‘non-violence’, it will not hesitate in taking recourse to strong actions against them and the terrorists supported by them if they (terrorists) commit terror in India and then take shelter in Pakistan. Again, Islamabad must know that terrorists are the worst ever enemies against humanity and eternal moral values, therefore they ought to be fought with firm determination and iron hand, if all attempts to bring them into national and global mainstream, characterised by these values like truth, peace, love, brotherhood, non-violence and justice, result into complete failure. This can be done as nothing is beyond human endeavour.

*Dr. Sudhanshu Tripathi, Associate Professor, Political Science, M. D. P. G. College, Pratapgarh (UP)

Saudi Arabia Or Iran: A Choice Must Be Made – OpEd

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Some would claim that there is nothing to choose between Saudi Arabia and Iran, that they are Tweedledum and Tweedledee.  Both, it is argued, are authoritarian, dictatorial regimes, espousing their own extreme interpretation of sharia law – albeit one from a Sunni and the other from a Shi’ite perspective.  Both persist in judicial beheadings, amputations, and whippings, while persecuting gays, imposing restrictions on women, and bearing down heavily on any dissenting voices.  Now that the two rival bastions of Islamism are at daggers drawn, some might say a plague on both their houses.

Such an argument is simplistic.  For whereas the Saudis over many years proved themselves staunch supporters of US policies. and are today still cooperating closely with the West on security and intelligence issues while maintaining the flow of vital oil supplies, Iran has consistently denounced America and Western democracies, pursued  policies aimed at disrupting their governments, and sponsored numerous, and often horrific, terror attacks against the US and the West.

The Saudis’ decision at the start of 2016 to execute the Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, as well as 46 other prisoners convicted on terrorism charges, has provoked a major crisis between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The schism has long been brewing.  In Yemen, the Saudis and their Gulf allies have spent most of the past year fighting attempts by Iranian-backed Houthis to seize control of the country. In Syria, while Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and its puppet organization, Hezbollah, are fighting to support the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Saudis are backing groups committed to overthrowing him – in line with the policy of the US and the West, who are convinced that there is no future for Syria while Assad remains in power.

So as between Saudi Arabia and Iran it should be a clear-cut no-option choice, but a major complicating factor is the long-term strategic objective of the Obama administration in the Middle East. President Obama came into office feeling guilty about America’s strength. He began his presidency by declaring as often as he could that he believed much was wrong with America.  His apology tour began on April 3, 2009 in Strasbourg.  Throughout the nation’s existence, he said, “America has shown arrogance and been dismissive even derisive” of others.  If the power of the US could be reduced, then America would have the “moral authority” to bring murderous regimes such as Iran into the “community of nations”.  So, claim some, he set about reducing America’s strength and authority in the world.

It is significant that he mentioned Iran at that early stage in his presidency.  A widely-held view among political analysts is that the “signature issue of Obama’s diplomacy”, as political scientist Amiel Unghar puts it, has been transforming US-Iranian relations.

Ungar traces this policy back to the 2006 Iraq Study Group headed by former US Secretary of State, James Baker, and former Democratic representative Lee Hamilton.  The great struggle of the time was against al-Qaeda, the Sunni Islamist terror organization that had been responsible for the 9/11 attacks, and was then totally disrupting American attempts to reconstruct Iraq.  Baker and Hamilton dreamed up the clever-clever notion that a working relationship between America and the two major Shia powers, Iran and Syria, would encourage them to fight Sunni al-Qaeda for their own sake, thus incidentally assisting America’s struggle. Additionally, the group expected Iran ‘to use its influence, especially over Shia groups in Iraq, to encourage national reconciliation’.

Ungar believes that this recklessly flawed analysis is what has been behind Obama’s willingness to accommodate Iran on the political front, and to offer it major concessions on the nuclear issue. When the Obama administration came into office, its overt aim seemed to be to eliminate Iran’s potential to produce nuclear weapons. But was it in fact working to a different and secret agenda?

During 2014 it emerged that in secret correspondence with Iran’s Supreme Leader, Obama actually attempted to engage Iran in the anti-Islamic State conflict.  In November the Wall Street Journal reported that Obama had written to Ayatollah Khamanei concerning the shared interest of the US and Iran in fighting IS militants.

“The October letter,” asserted the Wall Street Journal, “marked at least the fourth time Mr Obama has written Iran’s most powerful political and religious leader since taking office in 2009, and pledging to engage with Tehran’s Islamist government.”

By 2016 it had become clear that in the process of facilitating Iran’s journey out of the cold and into the comity of nations, the Obama administration had boosted Iran’s efforts to extend its influence across the Middle East, and in consequence had lost the confidence, and much of the respect, of its erstwhile allies such as Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States and Egypt, all of whom had good reason to regard Iran as their prime antagonist.

Did Obama’s placatory approach result in any softening of Iran’s visceral hatred of the “Great Satan”?  Not one jot. “The slogans ‘Death to Israel’ and ‘Death to America’,” proclaimed Ayatollah Khamenei just after the nuclear deal was announced, “have resounded throughout the country…. Even after this deal, our policy towards the arrogant US will not change.”

So much for the assumptions and vain hopes of the 2006 Iraq Study Group, and for the policy of appeasement. Taking every concession offered in the nuclear deal talks, and subsequently reneging in several vital respects on the final agreement, Iran’s leaders have not budged an inch on their ultimate ambitions, namely to become the dominant political and religious power in the Middle East, to sweep aside all Western-style democracies, and to impose their own Shi’ite version of Islam on the whole world.

And yet, while the Saudis have time and again demonstrated the value of their alliance with the West, influential voices in the US and the UK are still arguing that since Iran has agreed a deal over its nuclear programme, the West’s long-term interests may be better served by building closer relations with Tehran.

Iran’s revolutionary regime is not, and never could be, an ally of the West.  Its aim, like that of Islamic State, is to disrupt and eventually to dominate the democratic world. It has established a firm grip on the Iranian people and ruthlessly crushes all opposition – though the opposition exists, and one day may succeed in genuinely restoring Iran and its people to the community of nations.  But as matters stand, between a staunch ally and a declared enemy, one might well wonder why there is any question of which to support. That the question even arises speaks volumes about the misconceived policies that have dominated Washington’s thinking for the past seven years.

US Interests In Eastern Mediterranean: Geopolitics Trump Control Of Energy Resources – Analysis

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By Matthew Bryza*

The United States has important national interests at stake in the Eastern Mediterranean. This is the region where the U.S.’ two most serious national security threats converge – ISIS and a revanchist Russia. It is also where two of Washington’s most important allies, Turkey and Israel, once enjoyed a strategic partnership, which may now be rising again after collapsing 5 years ago. Additionally, while four decades of political conflict in Cyprus have aggravated tensions between NATO members Greece and Turkey and obstructed military cooperation between NATO and the EU, Cyprus settlement talks may be approaching a breakthrough. Finally, two of the world’s largest natural gas discoveries in the past 15 years are located in the Eastern Mediterranean: the Leviathan field in Israel and the Zohr field in Egypt.

While many observers worry that Turkey’s shooting down of the Russian air force fighter on November 24 threatens to engulf the region in a war between Russia and NATO, in reality, Russia’s response has been restrained. Moscow’s sanctions against Ankara have been relatively mild, while President Putin has never termed Turkey’s action an “act of war,” calling it, instead, a “stab in the back” and a “hostile action.” Futher, despite crude language accusing Ankara of doing Washington’s bidding, President Putin received U.S. Secretary of State Kerry on December 15 in search of cooperation on Syria issues.

President Putin knows his case against Turkey is weak. Ankara repeatedly warned Moscow to stop its violations against both Turkish airspace and its bombing of ethnic Turkomen in northern Syria. The Russian President realizes he cannot object too much to Ankara’s claimed right to protect these ethnic Turks who found themselves on the Syrian side of the border after the Ottoman Empire collapsed, lest he risk undermining his own justification for invading eastern Ukraine and annexing Crimea, namely, to protect Ukraine’s Russian minority.

Thus, Mr. Putin’s crude belligerence has done nothing to advance Russia’s strategic interests. On the contrary, his actions have cleared the way for a Russian strategic defeat and the normalization of relations between Turkey and Israel. Ankara and Tel Aviv now recognize they share a strategic interest in helping Turkey reduce its energy dependence on a potentially unreliable Russia by buying Israeli natural gas. They are, therefore, eyeing a potential pipeline connecting Israel’s Leviathan field with Turkey’s growing gas market, which would translate diplomatic commitments into tangible economic and strategic benefits for both countries. Furthermore, an Israel-Turkey gas pipeline could also enable Cyprus to export its future natural gas production to Turkey’s lucrative market, which, in turn, could help cement a comprehensive settlement regarding the Cyprus Question.

The combination of Israel-Turkey rapprochement and a comprehensive Cyprus settlement would create powerful new strategic vectors in the Eastern Mediterranean that would strengthen the cohesion of an extended Euro-Atlantic community stretching from the United States to the Levant. This would undermine President Putin’s reckless attempts to weaken transatlantic solidarity since invading Ukraine in February 2014 through overt military operations, hybrid warfare, and harassment of NATO airspace.

Washington is keenly interested in helping its critical ally, Israel, bolster its national security by using natural gas exports to improve relations with many of its Muslim-majority neighbors. Thanks in part to strong but quiet U.S. encouragement, Israel will likely export a portion of the Leviathan field’s gas to Jordan, with modest volumes also delivered to Israel’s Palestinian population. However, to ensure the development of the giant Leviathan field is commercially viable, significantly more gas must be exported than Jordan’s market can bear.

Egypt provides another option. Cooperation between Israel and Egypt has been a cornerstone of U.S. policy in the Middle East since the historic Camp David accords of 1979, and remains crucially important today, given all three countries’ shared interest in countering ISIS and the Muslim Brotherhood. At first glance, Egypt’s underutilized natural gas export terminals seem to offer a commercially attractive way to export Leviathan gas to European and global markets. In reality, however, the economics may not be so attractive. To finance exports of Leviathan gas to Egypt’s LNG terminals, banks may require terminal operators (e.g., British Gas and/or Royal Dutch Shell) to sign long-term take-or-pay contracts, which the operators may be unwilling to sign.

Turkey, on the other hand, provides a more attractive export market for Israeli natural gas. Turkey has the largest and fastest growing gas market and the most creditworthy buyers in the Eastern Mediterranean. Unlike in Egypt, a consortium of creditworthy Turkish companies with European partners are prepared to put in place all necessary contractual commitments to secure the financing of natural gas production and export projects.

Thus, a natural gas pipeline from Israel to Turkey makes commercial sense; it would also be highly attractive to Washington for geopolitical reasons, given the U.S.’ desire to see its two friends in the Eastern Mediterranean restore their strategic partnership. Until recently, political animosity between Ankara and Tel Aviv had blocked progress on an Israel-Turkey pipeline. But, at the time of writing in mid-December, Turkey and Israel seemed on the verge of a breakthrough in their bilateral relations, catalyzed both by Russia’s antagonism of Turkey and by recognition of the commercial and strategic benefits of an Israel-Turkey natural gas pipeline.

Cyprus poses both a challenge and an opportunity to such a project. An Israel-Turkey pipeline would need to cross the Exclusive Economic Zone of Cyprus. Though international law, specifically the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, is ambiguous on whether Cyprus could legally block such a pipeline, Cypriot permission would likely be required by banks to finance such a project. On the other hand, if a breakthrough can be reached in negotiations on the comprehensive settlement of the Cyprus Question, the Cypriot government will likely welcome an Israel-Turkey pipeline and its prospect of incorporating significant volumes of Cypriot gas, which are expected to be discovered in the near future, for export to Turkey.

It should therefore be clear that conspiracy theories assuming control of hydrocarbon resources is what drives U.S. foreign policy are incorrect. Eastern Mediterranean natural gas will have little direct impact on U.S. energy security. No major U.S. oil companies have shown interest in developing natural gas prospects in Israel, Cyprus, or Egypt. Indeed, the only U.S. commercial entity in the game is Noble, a mid-sized company that is a world-class driller but not an oil major experienced in exploration and production.

Rather, Washington views recent discoveries of natural gas in the Eastern Mediterranean as relevant to key U.S. geopolitical interests, namely, strengthening Israel’s relations with Turkey (as well as Egypt), and catalyzing a Cyprus settlement. An Israel-Turkey pipeline, which could incorporate future gas exports from Cyprus as well as Egypt’s mammoth Zohr field, could be marketed not only in Turkey, but perhaps also in the EU via the Southern Corridor, thereby linking the U.S.’ key Middle Eastern region, the Caspian, and European friends and allies.

*Ambassador (ret.) Matthew Bryza Non Resident Senior Fellow The Atlantic Council of the United States and Board Member of Turcas

**Turkish version of this op-ed was first published at Analist monthly journal’s January 2016 issue.

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