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India: Tejpal Rape Allegations Bring Tehelka To Its Knees

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By Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay

Journalists and analysts in India often commented that economic liberalisation, ushered in in the early 1990s when present Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, was finance minister, brought about a fundamental change in the nation’s value system: money-making stopped being a dirty word and those in pursuit of mammon were no longer considered as enemies of people. As the notorious license-quota Raj (euphemism for state control) was defanged, businesses ventured into areas that were not their core specialisation. First generation entrepreneurs also stepped outside the confines of secure jobs to chance luck, abilities and tenacity to make inroads into what had until then been a closed club. Over time, the first-timers also included media entrepreneurs who launched ambitious projects.

Tarun Tejpal was among those few journalists and writers who stepped into a realm where few of his tribe had. Riding on the first wave of the Internet boom, he launched a website in March 2000 which showed its capacity to sting with an explosive story based on clandestinely recorded interview with cricketers and officials to unearth the dirty business of match fixing in India and abroad. A year later he was back with a similar sting operation showing the murky world of defence deals. It showed the president of the Bharatiya Janata Party, which headed India’s coalition government at that time, as accepting a wad of currency notes from decoy reporters who posed as representatives of an arms manufacturer.

In the 13 years since its inception, the website has transformed into a weekly magazine and has positioned itself as a moral authority in India. It is called Tehelka – a Hindustani word loosely translatable as uproar, storm or furore. For over a week this is exactly what the magazine has created, but for non-journalistic reasons as celebrity editor and promoter of the magazine, Tarun Tejpal, has been accused of rape by a female colleague – also a close friend of his eldest daughter – still in her early 20s.

What makes matters tougher for Tejpal is that he is accused of sexual predation in Goa on the night when he was flanked by Robert De Niro and Amitabh Bachchan at the THiNK 2013, an orgy of intellectual platitudes by lavishly hosted celebrities and thinkers with tabs picked up by a bevy of corporates. Tehelka’s female staffers chaperone guests and the girl who has survived Tejpal’s assault was a reporter assigned to escort De Niro and his daughter. She has since resigned her job to join the growing list of colleagues who have put in their papers in protest.

Tejpal faces torturous months – probably years – in police stations, lockups and jails as India made its anti-rape laws more stringent after the gang rape and murder of a young girl in capital, Delhi, in December 2013. The amended law, whose rules are not yet formally notified, widens the definition of rape and this includes the acts which Tejpal’s colleague has accused him of. A basic reading of the amended law reveals that any person found guilty of the charges that Tejpal is accused of would face anything between 10 years to a life term in prison.

Tejpal and Tehelka’s story is not just a narrative that began as a considered sexual harassment and later snowballed into gory rape where two basic power equations have been used to subjugate a victim: the relationship between an employer and a subordinate; and the other with a woman who was both a friend’s daughter and a daughter’s friend. In the Indian context, the latter borders on incest, which though widely prevalent is not approved.

While the Tejpal case has focussed attention on sexual harassment so rampant in Indian media with few institutional avenues of redressal, the issue has also brought to fore several dubious business deals of the promoter who it now transpires is no longer the majority shareholder of the magazine he started. Instead, the onetime loss-making venture is now bank rolled by a businessman who has also reportedly bought his way into Indian Parliament. It has also come to light that though Tejpal used the infrastructure and brand name of Tehelka for the Goa bash, it was organised by a firm in which he hold eighty percent of the equity. The other 20 percent was split evenly between his sister and his managing editor, who is among the few senior colleagues who have stayed on since the magazine’s launch. It is this company which pockets the handsome profit it makes.

Tejpal also partnered a liquor baron who was murdered in 2012 in an internecine feud. The partnership was for an elite salon in India’s capital where select well-heeled Indian urbanites could share “great intimacy” with important people amid flowing fine drinks and exquisite cuisine. This club, currently being renovated in an upmarket Delhi locality, is to be named Prufrock – probably after TS Eliot’s poem..

The Tejpal case also has its share of political controversy because of the pronounced anti-BJP stance of the magazine and its role in shaping the discourse after the 2002 Gujarat riots. This was done with the help of several watershed reports that pinned the blame on the administration led by the party’s prime ministerial aspirant, Narendra Modi. Supporters of Tejpal have argued that there is a BJP hand in his woes and the BJP is claiming that there is a Congress party-driven cover-up operation being mounted.

Regardless of the course of the legal travails of Tejpal, Tehelka’s public image has been badly dented and the crusader has been presented as morally corrupt. Ironically, the day after the first of the two episodes of alleged sexual aggression by Tejpal, the Goa bash was deliberating on the trauma of rape and on stage were some rape survivors in a discussion moderated by Tehelka’s managing editor, who though being a woman, has been accused of attempting to hustle together a private treaty between Tejpal and the young journalist. It surely will be a long haul for Tejpal, but it’s too early to say if Tehelka will be able to recover and regain its moral authority. Reports day it is not yet clear if the next issue will be published soon.

The article India: Tejpal Rape Allegations Bring Tehelka To Its Knees appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Syrian Govt And Opposition Both Confirm To Attend Geneva 2

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Syria’s government along with the main Western-backed opposition coalition have confirmed that both will attend the UN-sponsored peace conference.

The repeatedly delayed peace talks are scheduled for January 22 in Geneva and will bring together Syria’s President Bashar Assad’s government and the opposition for the first time since the bloody conflict began in March of 2011.

Despite their confirmed participation, the two sides still see talks going into different directions. The opposition wants to see a transitional government to emerge, while Assad’s government has stated that it is not attending the conference to hand over power.

Syria’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Assad will send an official delegation to the conference, highlighting that representatives “will be going to Geneva not to hand over power to anyone,” but to meet with those “who support a political solution for Syria’s future,” AP quoted the statement as saying on Wednesday.

The Western-backed Syrian opposition coalition also said it will be attending. “We are now ready to go to Geneva,” Reuters quoted Jarba as saying during a visit to Cairo, adding that the opposition sees the Geneva talks as a way towards a transitional government and a “genuine democratic transformation in Syria,” noting that Assad cannot be a part of that government.

“There is no way that the individual responsible for the destruction of the country can be responsible for building the country,” said Jarba, referring to Assad.

The opposition group also made it clear earlier that it would need humanitarian corridors to surrounded rebel areas and the release of political prisoners.

The complete list of participants in the talks has not yet been agreed upon. The opposition is fighting against Iran’s attendance, arguing that it must stop taking part in the Syrian war if it wants to attend.

“Iran is responsible for and takes part in the killing in Syria in a very clear way. It killed thousands of Syrians with its Revolutionary Guards and mercenaries from Hezbollah, which is considered a terrorist group,” Jarba told Reuters. “If Iran is serious about resolving the Syrian crisis, it must first withdraw its Revolutionary Guards and (Lebanese) Hizbollah mercenaries.”

Negotiations were delayed in the past as attempts to bring both sides to the negotiating table failed. Key hurdles involved clarifying whether Iran, Saudi Arabia, and other regional powers should be attending the conference, and the issue of Assad remaining in power.

According to Syrian officials, Assad has no plans to give up power and is even planning to run in the upcoming elections in mid-2014.

The two-year conflict has already killed more than 100,000 people and displaced over one million refugees. According to the country’s officials Syria’s economy has lost an estimated US$100 billion during the war – the equivalent of two years of normal production.

The article Syrian Govt And Opposition Both Confirm To Attend Geneva 2 appeared first on Eurasia Review.

China Issues Subdued Response To US Overflights In East China Sea

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China appears to have stepped back from threatening military action to enforce a newly-declared air defense zone over Pacific islets that are also claimed by Japan.

Just days after warning that overflights would trigger “emergency military measures,” Beijing on Wednesday raised no objection to overflights by two U.S. B-52 bombers and a Japanese commercial airliner.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang on Wednesday told reporters Beijing has “enough determination and capabilities” to defend its claim to the disputed territory, but also said that Beijing’s response to future overflights will depend “on the different circumstances and the threat levels that we face.”

The unarmed B-52s flew through the zone Monday, two days after the Chinese Defense Ministry warned that all aircraft must identify themselves and obey all orders from Beijing.

The edict triggered a strong protest by Tokyo and challenges from the United States, where Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said there are no U.S. plans to change operational procedures in the region.

In Washington Wednesday, Hagel reaffirmed that the U.S.-Japan defense treaty applies to the uninhabited islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China. The outcroppings were annexed by Japan in the late 19th century, and claimed by China in 1971. Beijing has linked its claim to ancient maps it says show the territory has been Chinese for centuries.

A Pentagon spokesman said Hagel spoke Wednesday with his Japanese counterpart, Itsunori Onodera, and that the U.S. defense chief “commended the Japanese government for exercising appropriate restraint in the wake of [China's] announcement.”

Senior Obama administration officials say U.S. Vice President Joe Biden will discuss the issue with officials in China next week as part of his upcoming three-nation tour of the region, which will include a stop in Japan.

The festering dispute is one of several maritime controversies pitting China against Southeast Asian nations, including the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei and Malaysia.

Beijing has indicated a willingness to negotiate the disputes, but has so far rejected calls for multilateral talks. It has instead sought separate talks with each country.

The article China Issues Subdued Response To US Overflights In East China Sea appeared first on Eurasia Review.

US Defense Department Wraps Climate Change Response Into Master Plans

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By Cheryl Pellerin

The effects of climate change are already evident at Defense Department installations in the United States and overseas, and DOD expects climate change to challenge its ability to fulfill its mission in the future, according to the first DOD Climate Change Adaptation Roadmap.

John Conger, the acting deputy undersecretary of defense for installations and environment told American Forces Press Service the roadmap was completed in 2012 and published early this year.

The document “had us do a variety of things,” Conger said. “But the piece that I think is the crux of the report is, rather than creating a stovepipe within the DOD organizational structure to deal with climate change, [the document says] we are going to integrate climate change considerations into the normal processes, the day-to-day jobs of everybody.”

Such language is going to be integrated into various guidance documents, he added, “and we’ve already started doing that.”

The department’s action is part of a federal government effort to address the global challenge. In June, President Barack Obama launched a Climate Action Plan to cut carbon pollution, prepare communities for climate change impacts and lead similar international efforts.

Across the United States, local communities and cities are updating building codes, adjusting the way they manage natural resources, investing in more resilient infrastructure and planning for rapid recovery from damage that could occur due to climate change.

And on Nov. 1, the president issued an executive order on climate preparedness directing federal agencies to modernize programs to support climate-resilient investments, manage lands and waters for climate change preparedness and resilience, and plan for climate-change-related risk, among other things.

The order also forms an interagency council on climate preparedness and resilience, chaired by the White House and composed of more than 25 agencies, including the Defense Department.

The foundation for DOD’s strategic policy on climate change began with the defense secretary’s publication in 2010 of the Quadrennial Defense Review. The QDR, produced every four years, translates the National Defense Strategy into policies and initiatives.

In 2010, the QDR for the first time linked climate change and national security. It said climate change may affect DOD by shaping the department’s operating environments, roles and missions, have significant geopolitical impacts worldwide, and accelerate instability or conflict.

The QDR said DOD also would have to adjust to climate change impacts on its facilities, infrastructure, training and testing activities and military capabilities.

As the acting deputy undersecretary of defense for installations and environment, Conger also is the department’s senior climate official, and his first job is to manage the installations and environment portfolio.

“That includes over 500 bases and 300,000 buildings and 2.2 billion square feet of space,” he said. “The infrastructure has a plant replacement value on the order of $850 billion. There’s a lot of stuff out there that is all going to be impacted by changes in the climate.”

Conger said the department has to plan for the contingencies that climate change poses just as it would plan for any other contingency, driven by any other force in the world.

“As I look at managing the infrastructure, I have to think about risk as well in that context,” he said. “What is climate change likely to do? What are the major changes that will occur that will affect that $850 billion real property portfolio?”

The obvious threats are things like a rise in sea-levels, storm surges and storm intensity, but there’s also drought and thawing permafrost that affects bases in Alaska, the deputy undersecretary added.

“Similarly, on our installations we have over 400 endangered species,” he said. “We manage those species through documents called integrated natural resources management plans and we manage [them] not through some degree of altruism … but the fact is that if we don’t manage those species effectively and they do appear more threatened, then other regulatory agencies will put limits on what we can do on our property and that will impact training.”

Conger added, “We said, ‘Take climate into account. Make sure you have planned for this. Make sure you have thought about it and addressed it in your [installation management] plans.’”

“These are all, in my mind, sensible, reasonable steps that don’t cost very much money today and just require a little bit of forethought in order to reduce our exposure to risk tomorrow.”

The president’s June Climate Action Plan categorized recommendations for action in terms of mitigating or eliminating emissions that cause climate change, adapting to climate change, and working internationally on climate change, Conger said.

DOD has been looking at mitigation, or the energy problem, for a long time, the deputy undersecretary added.

Energy and climate are tied together, Conger said, because energy and emissions are tied together.

“We are working very hard and diligently to reduce our energy usage, to reduce our energy intensity and to increase the use of renewable energy, which doesn’t have emissions,” he said. “And we have done each of these things not because it is good for the climate or because it reduces emissions but because they provide mission and monetary benefits.”

Conger says the department’s $4 billion annual utility bill drives the search for energy-efficiency, renewable-energy development projects and more. All have benefits from a mission perspective first, he said, and also turn out to be good for the environment.

The article US Defense Department Wraps Climate Change Response Into Master Plans appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Somalia’s Failure: A Broken System Or Lousy Leaders? – OpEd

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Somalia’s power-sharing system has failed.

By Nafisa G. Santur

In most of the world’s parliamentary democracies, it’s rare to see presidents and prime ministers bickering, since their roles and responsibilities are more or less distinct and rarely overlap. However, in many African governments, power struggles between presidents and prime ministers are quite common, even when the offices have clearly defined constitutional roles.

In Somalia, the president is the head of state. His powers include appointing a prime minister and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, which includes the power to declare of a state of emergency or war. The prime minister is the chief of the cabinet, guiding and overseeing the work of the other ministers. However, despite these neatly separated roles and responsibilities, Somalia is once again having great difficulty in governing itself under a power sharing system.

Although it’s designed to encourage collaboration between clans, the arrangement has yet to produce sustainable political stability, with a rift widening between President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon. The real issue between them is unclear, but according to media reports, the president recently asked the prime minister to resign due to incompetence, while the prime minister claims that the president has no constitutional power to request his resignation. The prime minister has complained that the government cannot achieve its goals because of the slim cabinet that the president had imposed on him, which has resulted in each minister being in charge of three to four ministries.

After its independence, Somalia had a parliamentary system based on political parties. But a coup d’état in 1969 installed the Siad Barre military regime, disrupting the democratic process and eventually plunging the country into civil war. Since then, a number of power-sharing agreements aimed at resolving the crisis have crumbled.

In 2000, a Transitional National Government was established in Djibouti that ended up disintegrating due to a power struggle that began with President Abdiqasim Salad Hassan and Prime Minister Ali Khalif Galaydh. Similarly, in 2002, the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development organized a reconciliation conference in Kenya that gave birth to a Transitional Federal Government and a parliamentary system without any political party presence. The party system was replaced with a clan-based power-sharing formula called the 4.5 system, which awarded an equal share of parliamentary seats to Somalia’s four major clans, with a fifth retaining a half-share.

But something’s not working. Somalia’s three most recent presidents have each appointed three prime ministers, a rapid turnover rate indicating ongoing infighting between representatives of competing clans who are loathe to cede power to each other. As a result, Somalia has been plagued by a political process that is based on competition rather than cooperation and compromise. The current fallout between the president and the prime minister is a continuation of the political stalemate that has hampered Somalia’s progress for decades.

Meanwhile, precious time is being wasted on political brinkmanship rather than dealing with the innumerable challenges facing the country. Security, reconciliation, the economy, education, infrastructure, and healthcare are a few of the many issues that do not get addressed so long as the president and prime minister are locked in a power struggle. Consequently, many Somalis have lost faith in their leaders’ ability to unite the nation, which may lead the country towards another civil war and away from economic prosperity.

Therefore, the time has come for Somalia to try a different system of governance. Somali constitutional experts should review and amend the constitution from a power sharing system back to political party system in which a president and vice president from the same party are elected on the same platform.

The clan-based system has had its chance. Only through a party system, overseen by an electoral commission, can Somalia put together a government with the capacity to solve the country’s unique challenges—and bring about the political stability that has eluded it for the last two decades.

Nafisa G. Santur is a political researcher and conflict analyst based in Nairobi.

The article Somalia’s Failure: A Broken System Or Lousy Leaders? – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Saudi Arabia King Receives Obama Call

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Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah and US President Barack Obama held talks on Wednesday by phone on the situation in the region and major issues of mutual concern, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

“The two leaders also reviewed bilateral relations,” SPA said, adding that the US president initiated the telephone conversation.

King Abdullah is now at Khoraim Gardens outside Riyadh where he arrived on Monday.

The article Saudi Arabia King Receives Obama Call appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Pakistan: Taking Umbrage At A Terrorist’s Death – OpEd

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By Nadeem Mumtaz Qureshi

Two Pakistani political parties are leading protest sit-ins on the roads that are used to supply NATO troops in Afghanistan. The two parties — Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and Jamaat Islami (JI) — are coalition partners in the provincial government of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) province. The sit-ins are being staged in Peshawar — the capital of KPK — which is the gateway to routes that connect northern Pakistan with Afghanistan.

The PTI-JI coalition is angry with US drone strikes in the KPK. They are incensed in particular about the recent assassination of Hakimullah Mehsud — leader of the Tehreeke-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP) — by a US drone. In blocking NATO supply lines they hope to pressure the US to stop drone attacks.

Why would the PTI-JI led government of this troubled Pakistani province be upset by the assassination of an arch terrorist? It seems they believe that the best way to bottle the TTP genie is by negotiation. And just prior to the drone strike some progress had been made in initiating talks between the government and the TTP. But now, with its leader’s assassination, the TTP has called everything off and is threatening major mayhem by setting off bombs in Pakistani cities.

The wisdom of negotiation with the TTP, which over the past few years has killed thousands of innocent people, is open to question. Yet, there is something even more surprising about the PTI-JI sit-ins. NATO supplies are provided by agreement with the Pakistani government. And both parties — the PTI and JI — sit in the National Assembly of Pakistan. This, rather than the streets of Peshawar, should be the forum where the demand to stop NATO supplies is made.

Consider also that Peshawar is not the only supply route to Afghanistan. There is another route through the southwestern province of Baluchistan. So even if the sit-ins succeed in closing supplies through Peshawar, the southern route would remain open. And the PTI-JI coalition would not achieve its objectives. That the coalition insists on extra parliamentary protests against the policy of a government, of which it is part, if nothing else, shows disrespect for democratic traditions. Public sit-ins are not without risk. Party workers are exposed to the cold. Normal traffic is disrupted causing widespread inconvenience. There is the constant possibility of confrontation between the protesters and the police. Lives and property are at risk.

A safer, more effective, and honorable strategy would be for the PTI-JI government in KPK to take up this issue in the National Assembly and seek an end to the agreement that allows NATO to ship its supplies through Pakistani territory.

The article Pakistan: Taking Umbrage At A Terrorist’s Death – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

The Decline Of The US (And Everyone Else) – OpEd

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The world political economy is a mosaic of cross currents: Domestic decay and elite enrichment, new sources for greater profits and deepening political disenchantment, declining living standards for many and extravagant luxury for a few, military losses in some regions with imperial recovery in others.

There are claims of a unipolar, a multi-polar and even a non-polar configuration of world power. Where, when, to what extent and under what contingencies do these claims have validity?

Bubbles and busts come and go – but let us talk of ‘beneficiaries’: Those who cause crashes, reap the greatest rewards while their victims have no say. The swindle economy and the criminal state prosper by promoting the perversion of culture and literacy. ‘Investigatory journalism’, or peephole reportage, is all the rage. The world of power spins out of control: As they decline, the leading powers declare “it’s our rule or everyone’s ruin!”

Global Configurations of Power

Power is a relationship between classes, states and military and ideological institutions. Any configuration of power is contingent on past and present struggles reflecting shifting correlations of forces. Structures and physical resources, concentrations of wealth, arms and the media matter greatly; they set the framework in which the principle power wielders are embedded. But strategies for retaining or gaining power depend on securing alliances, engaging in wars and negotiating peace. Above all, world power depends on the strength of domestic foundations. This requires a dynamic productive economy, an independent state free from prejudicial foreign entanglements and a leading class capable of harnessing global resources to ‘buy off’ domestic consent of the majority.

To examine the position of the United States in the global configuration of power it is necessary to analyze its changing economic and political relations on two levels: by region and by sphere of power. History does not move in a linear pattern or according to recurring cycles: military and political defeats in some regions may be accompanied by significant victories in others. Economic decline in some spheres and regions may be compensated by sharp advances in other economic sectors and regions.

In the final analysis, the question is not ‘keeping a scorecard’ or adding wins and subtracting losses, but translating regional and sectorial outcomes into an understanding of the direction and emerging structures of the global power configuration. We start by examining the legacy of recent wars on the global economic, military and political power of the United States.

Sustaining the US Empire: Defeats, Retreat, Advances and Victories

The dominant view of most critical analysts is that over the past decade US empire-building has suffered a series of military defeats, experienced economic decline, and now faces severe competition and the prospect of further military losses. The evidence cited is impressive: The US was forced to withdraw troops from Iraq, after an extremely costly decade-long military occupation, leaving in place a regime more closely allied to Iran, the US’ regional adversary. The Iraq war depleted the economy, deprived American corporations of oil wealth, greatly enlarged Washington’s budget and trade deficits and reduced the living standards of US citizens. The Afghanistan war had a similar outcome, with high external costs, military retreat, fragile clients, domestic disaffection and no short or medium term transfers of wealth (imperial pillage) to the US Treasury or private corporations. The Libyan war led to the total destruction of a modern, oil-rich economy in North Africa, the total dissolution of state and civil society and the emergence of armed tribal, fundamentalist militias opposed to US and EU client regimes in North and sub-Sahara Africa and beyond. Instead of continuing to profit from lucrative oil and gas agreements with the conciliatory Gadhafi regime, Washington decided on ‘regime change’, engaging in a war which ruined Libya and destroyed any viable central state. The current Syrian “proxy war” has strengthened radical Islamist warlords, destroyed Damascus’ economy and added massive refugee pressure to the already uprooted millions from wars in Iraq and Libya. US imperial wars have resulted in economic losses, regional political instability and military gains for Islamist adversaries.

Latin America has overwhelmingly rejected US efforts to overthrow the Venezuelan government. The entire world– minus Israel and Washington- – rejects the blockade of Cuba. Regional integration organizations, which exclude the US, have proliferated. US trade shares have declined, as Asia is replacing the US in the Latin American market.

In Asia, China deepens and extends its economic links with all the key countries, while the US ‘pivot’ is mostly an effort at military base encirclement involving Japan, Australia and the Philippines. In other words, China is more important than the US for Asian economic expansion, while Chinese financing of US trade imbalances props up the US economy.

In Africa, US military command operations mainly promote armed conflicts and lead to greater instability. Meanwhile Asian capitalists, deeply invested in strategic African countries, are reaping the benefits of its commodity boom, expanding markets and the outflow of profits.

The exposure of the US National Security Agency’s global spy network has seriously undermined global intelligence and clandestine operations. While it may have helped privileged private corporations, the massive US investment in cyber-imperialism appears to have generated negative diplomatic and operational returns for the imperial state.

In sum, the current global overview paints a picture of severe military and diplomatic setbacks in imperial policies, substantial losses to the US Treasury and the erosion of public support. Nevertheless this perspective has serious flaws, especially with regard to other regions, relations and spheres of economic activity. The fundamental structures of empire remain intact.

NATO, the major military alliance headed by the US Pentagon, is expanding its membership and escalating its field of operations. The Baltic States, especially Estonia, are the site of huge military exercises held just minutes from the principle Russian cities. Central and Eastern Europe provide missile sites all aimed at Russia. Until very recently, the Ukraine had been moving toward membership in the European Union and a step toward NATO membership.

The US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership has expanded membership among the Andean countries, Chile, Peru and Colombia. It serves as a springboard to weaken regional trading blocs like MERCOSUR and ALBA, which exclude Washington. Meanwhile, the CIA, the State Department and their NGO conduits are engaged in an all-out economic sabotage and political destabilization campaign to weaken Venezuela’s nationalist government. US-backed bankers and capitalists have worked to sabotage the economy, provoking inflation (50%), shortages of essential items of consumption and rolling power blackouts. Their control over most of Venezuela’s mass media has allowed them to exploit popular discontent by blaming the economic dislocation on ‘government inefficiency’.

Overall, the US offensive in Latin America has focused on a military coup in Honduras, ongoing economic sabotage in Venezuela, electoral and media campaigns in Argentina, and cyber warfare in Brazil, while developing closer ties with recently elected compliant neo-liberal regimes in Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Panama, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic. While Washington lost influence in Latin America during the first decade of the 21st century, it has since partially recovered its clients and partners. The relative recovery of US influence illustrates the fact that ‘regime changes’ and a decline in market shares, have not lessened the financial and corporate ties linking even the progressive countries to powerful US interests. The continued presence of powerful political allies –even those ‘out of government’ – provides a trampoline for regaining US influence. Nationalist policies and emerging regional integration projects remain vulnerable to US counter-attacks.

While the US has lost influence among some oil producing countries, it lessened its dependence on oil and gas imports as a result of a vast increase in domestic energy production via ‘fracking’ and other intense extractive technologies. Greater local self-sufficiency means lower energy costs for domestic producers and increases their competitiveness in world markets, raising the possibility that the US could regain market shares for its exports.

The seeming decline of US imperial influence in the Arab world following the popular ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings has halted and even been reversed. The military coup in Egypt and the installation and consolidation of the military dictatorship in Cairo suppressed the mass national-popular mobilizations. Egypt is back in the US-Israel orbit. In Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia the old and new rulers are clamping down on any anti-imperial protests. In Libya, the US-NATO air force destroyed the nationalist-populist Gadhafi regime, eliminating an alternative welfare model to neo-colonial pillage – but has so far failed to consolidate a neo-liberal client regime in Tripoli. Instead rival armed Islamist gangs, monarchists and ethnic thugs pillage and ravage the country. Destroying an anti-imperialist regime has not produced a pro-imperialist client.

In the Middle East, Israel continues to dispossess the Palestinians of their land and water. The US continues to escalate military maneuvers and impose more economic sanctions against Iran – weakening Teheran but also decreasing US wealth and influence due to the loss of the lucrative Iranian market. Likewise in Syria, the US and its NATO allies have destroyed Syria’s economy and shredded its complex society, but they will not be the main beneficiaries. Islamist mercenaries have gained bases of operations while Hezbollah has consolidated its position as a significant regional actor. Current negotiations with Iran open possibilities for the US to cut its losses and reduce the regional threat of a costly new war but these talks are being blocked by an ‘alliance’ of Zionist-militarist Israel, monarchist Saudi Arabia and ‘Socialist’ France.

Washington has lost economic influence in Asia to China but it is mounting a regional counter-offensive, based on its network of military bases in Japan, the Philippines and Australia. It is promoting a new Pan Pacific economic agreement that excludes China. This demonstrates the US capacity to intervene and project imperial interests. However announcing new policies and organizations is not the same as implementing and providing them with dynamic content. Washington’s military encirclement of China is off-set by the US Treasury’s multi-trillion dollar debt to Beijing. An aggressive US military encirclement of China could result in a massive Chinese sell-off of US Treasury notes and five hundred leading US multi-nationals finding their investments in jeopardy!

Power-sharing between an emerging and established global power, such as China and the US, cannot be ‘negotiated’ via US military superiority. Threats, bluster and diplomatic chicanery score mere propaganda victories but only long-term economic advances can create the domestic Trojan Horses need to erode China’s dynamic growth. Even today, the Chinese elite spend hefty sums to educate their children in “prestigious” US and British universities where free market economic doctrines and imperial-centered narratives are taught. For the past decade, leading Chinese politicians and the corporate rich have sent tens of billions of dollars in licit and illicit funds to overseas bank accounts, investing in high end real estate in North America and Europe and dispatching billions to money laundering havens. Today, there is a powerful faction of economists and elite financial advisers in China pushing for greater ‘financial liberalization’, i.e. penetration by the leading Wall Street and City of London speculative houses. While Chinese industries may be winning the competition for overseas markets, the US has gained and is gaining powerful levers over China’s financial structure.

The US share of Latin American trade may be declining, but the absolute dollar worth of trade has increased several-fold over the past decade.

The US may have lost right-wing regime clients in Latin America, but the new center-left regimes are actively collaborating with most of the major US and Canadian mining and agro-business corporations and commodity trading houses. The Pentagon has not been able to engineer military coups, with the pathetic exception of Honduras, but it still retains its close working relations with the Latin American military in the form of (1) its regional policing of ‘terrorism’, ‘narcotics’ and ‘migration’, (2) providing technical training and political indoctrination via overseas military ‘educational’ programs and (3) engaging in joint military exercises.

In sum, the structures of the US empire, corporate, financial, military and political-cultural, all remain in place and ready to regain dominance if and when political opportunities arise. For example, a sharp decline in commodity prices would likely provoke a deep crisis and intensify class conflicts among center-left regimes, which are dependent on agro-mining exports to fund their social programs. In any ensuing confrontation, the US would work with and through its agents among the economic and military elite to oust the incumbent regime and re-impose pliant neo-liberal clients. The current phase of post-neo-liberal policies and power configurations are vulnerable. The relative ‘decline of US influence and power’ can be reversed even if it is not returned to its former configuration. The theoretical point is that while imperialist structures remain in place and while their collaborator counterparts abroad retain strategic positions, the US can re-establish its primacy in the global configuration of power.

Imperial ‘roll-back’ does not require the ‘same old faces’. New political figures, especially with progressive credentials and faint overtones of a ‘social inclusionary’ ideology are already playing a major role in the new imperial-centered trade networks. In Chile, newly elected “Socialist” President Michelle Bachelet and the Peruvian ex-nationalist, President Ollanta Humala, are major proponents of Washington’s Tran-Pacific Partnership, a trading bloc which competes with the nationalist MERCOSUR and ALBA, and excludes China. In Mexico, US client President Enrique Peña Nieto is privatizing the ‘jewel’ of the Mexican economy, PEMEX, the giant public oil company – strengthening the Washington’s hold over regional energy resources and increasing US independence from Mid-East oil. Colombian President Santos, the ‘peace president’, is actively negotiating an end to guerrilla warfare in order to expand multinational exploitation of mineral and energy resources located in guerrilla-contested regions, a prospect which will primarily benefit US oil companies. In Argentina, the state oil company, Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales (YPF) has signed a joint venture agreement with the oil giant, Chevron, to exploit an enormous gas and oil field, known as Vaca Muerte (Dead Cow). This will expand the US presence in Argentina in energy production alongside the major inroads made by Monsanto in the powerful agro-business sector.

No doubt Latin America has diversified its trade and the US share has relatively declined. Latin American rulers no longer eagerly seek ‘certification’ from the US Ambassador before announcing their political candidacy. The US is totally alone in its boycott of Cuba. The Organization of American States is no longer a US haven. But there are counter-tendencies, reflected in new pacts like the TPP. New sites of economic exploitation, which are not exclusively US controlled, now serve as springboards to greater imperial power.

Conclusion

The US economy is stagnant and has failed to re-gain momentum because of its pursuit of ‘serial’ imperial wars. But in the Middle East, the US decline, relative to its past, has not been accompanied by the ascent of its old rivals. Europe is in deeper crisis, with a vast army of unemployed, chronic negative growth and few signs of recovery for the visible future. Even China, the new emerging global power, is slowing down with its growth falling from over 11% to 7% in the current decade. Beijing faces growing domestic discontent. India, as well as China, are liberalizing their financial systems, opening them up to penetration and influence by US finance capital.

The main anti-imperialist forces in Asia and Africa are not composed of progressive, secular, democratic and socialist movements. Instead, the empire is confronted by religious, ethnic, misogynist and authoritarian movements with irredentist tendencies. The old secular, socialist voices have lost their bearings, and provide perverse ‘justifications’ for the imperialist wars of aggression in Libya, Mali and Syria. The French Socialists, who had opposed the Iraq war in 2003, now find their President Francoise Hollande parroting the brutal militarism of the Israeli warlord, Netanyahu.

The point is that the thesis of the ‘decline of the US empire’ and its corollary, the ‘crises of the US’ are overstated, time bound and lack specificity. In reality, there is no alternative imperial or modern anti-imperial tendency on the immediate horizon. While it is true that Western capitalism is in crisis, the recently ascending Asian capitalism of China and India face a different crisis resulting from their savage class exploitation and murderous caste relations. If objective conditions are ‘ripe for socialism’, the socialists – at least those retaining any political presence- are comfortably embedded with their respective imperial regimes. The Marxists and Socialists in Egypt joined with the military to overthrow an elected conservative Islamist regime, leading to the restoration of imperialist clientelism in Cairo. The French and English ‘Marxists’ have supported NATO’s destruction of Libya and Syria. Numerous progressives and socialists, in Europe and North America, support Israel’s warlords and/or remain silent in the face of domestic Zionist power in the executive branches and legislatures.

If imperialism is declining, so is anti-imperialism. If capitalism is in crisis, the existing anti-capitalists are in retreat. If capitalists look for new faces and ideologues to revive their fortunes, isn’t it time the anti-imperialists and anti-capitalists did likewise?

The article The Decline Of The US (And Everyone Else) – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Tehran Told To Shut Down Offices, Schools Due To Pollution

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The environment branch of Iran’s ministry of health wants offices, schools and colleges in Tehran to be shut down due to heavy air pollution.

Ministry officials report that Tehran’s air quality has been deteriorating at an alarming rate, and in three letters to the Tehran governor, they have called for the implementation of legal measures to prevent air pollution.

The report indicates that the correspondence has resulted in the establishment of an emergency air pollution committee, which has decided that all schools and public offices are to be shut down.

The ministry officials say the current level of pollution requires that all activities be reduced and all organizations and offices remain closed until air quality is normalized.

Meteorological reports indicate that severe air pollution will linger in Tehran until next Saturday.

The article Tehran Told To Shut Down Offices, Schools Due To Pollution appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Iran: First Draft Of Rights Charter Headed For Public Comment

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The Iranian presidency’s legal advisors have published the first draft of the Charter of Citizen Rights, as promised earlier by President Hassan Rohani.

The President’s Office reports that the charter was prepared with “input from universities, seminaries, thinkers and scholars across the country” and was published together along with the 100-day report of the government.

The reports indicate that the charter draft will be subject to public examination, and public input will be collected within the next month in order to complete a final draft and officially present it to the president.

The proposed charter has been laid out in a 20-page document in three parts.

The article Iran: First Draft Of Rights Charter Headed For Public Comment appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Syria: Al-Qaeda Seeks To Indoctrinate Schoolchildren

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By Waleed Abu al-Khair

Syrian businessman Bassel al-Hardan left Idlib province for Cairo with his children when the situation began to deteriorate in the schools his children attended.

Al-Hardan told Al-Shorfa his twin daughters, 13, and his son, 10, had been suffering from the presence of militant groups attempting to impose their own interpretation of Islamic sharia on students and teachers.

A month and a half ago he decided to leave Idlib “for the sake of securing a decent education for my children, which is the main reason why I decided to leave Syria for now”, he said.

“The state of education is near catastrophic in opposition-held areas and the conditions are not conducive to an educational atmosphere,” al-Hardan said. “The militant Islamist groups are using their power to influence the educational boards in schools and are forcing principals to separate the sexes even in schools with not many students or teachers.”

His daughters were forced to wear headscarves and abayas to school so they would not be harassed by members of the “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant” (ISIL) and Jabhat al-Nusra, he said.

“My daughters do not wear the veil and I argued more than once with militants about this issue,” he said.

His son did not fare any better, he added, as some militants preached to students while they were at school about “jihad” and other such issues and attempted to brainwash the children in order to later recruit them into their ranks.

“After their lectures, they hand out promotional brochures to students and request that they attend their religious classes so the militants can continue their brainwashing,” al-Hardan said.

Recent reports indicate al-Qaeda affiliated ISIL is pressuring some schools in the areas it controls to impose an “Islamic dress code” for girls.

On November 21st, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights warned about this trend.

“Members associated with the ISIL distributed leaflets at a girls’ school in the city of Saraqeb in Idlib province instructing female students from fifth grade primary till third year secondary school to dress according to the group’s interpretation of an Islamic dress code, and they warned that students who refuse to dress accordingly will be banned from entering the school,” the Observatory said.

Interfering in school affairs

This is not the first time ISIL has interfered in school affairs and education and imposed rules related to behaviour, dress code and teaching.

Several weeks ago, ISIL elements stormed a school in Tariq al-Bab area and forced the teaching staff to leave the school at gunpoint, claiming they were male teachers teaching female students. They ordered school officials to stop teaching until an all-female teaching staff became available.

For about two months in Tweihineh village in the countryside of northern Aleppo province, ISIL has forced students to wear “Islamic clothing”, which for girls means an abaya, gloves and face cover. Boys are also made to wear “sharia compatible clothing”, which these groups interpret as Pakistani-style shalwar qamiz and a skull cap, the Observatory said.

Mohammed al-Khaled of the Saraqeb unit associated with the Local Co-ordination Committees in Syria, said ISIL distributes leaflets that warn girls they have to wear the veil and abide by the group’s mandated dress code in schools. The leaflets also stress the need to separate the sexes in the classroom.

“These groups ignore the deplorable situation in schools and instead focus on imposing their views,” he said. “Most schools are almost destroyed and some are completely destroyed.”

There are now just four schools in Saraqeb, al-Khaled said, while in the past, there were 15, including primary schools, secondary schools, one secondary boys’ school and another for girls.

In the surrounding countryside, just 10 schools are open and operating, and all serve no more than 5,000 students, he said, as many local families have fled to other parts of Syria, Turkey or other countries in the region or elsewhere.

“Although Saraqeb’s community was known to be conservative even before the revolution and there are a lot of veiled girls in the city that are usually secondary school students, there also are girls that do not use the veil,” al-Khaled said. “Most families also oppose the interference of ISIL in schools.”

“In Saraqeb, there are people who are aware and educated and they did not demand freedom for the sake of imposing an Islamic dress code or denim pants,” he said.

Level of education declines

“The war in Syria has started to directly impact the level of education in the country,” said Hisham al-Maallah, a former administrative staff member in Aleppo’s educational district. “Each faction is trying to take advantage of the younger generation to serve their purposes.”

“The militants, particularly those affiliated with al-Qaeda, are using their influence to spread their ideology and to impose dress codes and teaching subjects on people,” he said.

This has become a common occurrence in the provinces of Aleppo, al-Raqa and opposition-controlled areas of Idlib, he said.

Meanwhile, the opposition-controlled areas are cash strapped and are unable to meet the needs of the schools and students, al-Maallah said.

“Each student costs 4,000 Syrian liras ($28) for primary and lower secondary education and 7,000 liras ($50) for upper secondary education,” he said.

It is essential that the needs of these students be met and that a suitable educational atmosphere be established for them, al-Maallah said, rather than focusing on issues such as the Islamic dress code or separating the sexes, as the jihadist groups are doing.

The article Syria: Al-Qaeda Seeks To Indoctrinate Schoolchildren appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Morocco Tightens Ties With US

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By Siham Ali

Sahel-Saharan security topped the agenda of new talks between King Mohammed VI of Morocco and US President Barack Obama.

The two leaders reaffirmed their commitment to expanding civilian and military co-operation in terms of non-proliferation and counter-terrorism, according to a joint statement issued at the end of their Washington meeting last Friday.

“To address their concern for the continuing threat posed by terrorism, the United States and Morocco intend to continue co-operation to bolster democratic criminal justice institutions and to counter the threat of violent extremism in the region,” the November 22nd statement read.

The US President urged Morocco to join the United States in setting up the International Institute of Justice and the Rule of Law in Malta, which is intended to train a new generation of criminal justice officials from across Africa.

The Malta programme will focus on addressing counter-terrorism security challenges through the rule of law.

The two leaders vowed to continue participation in the Global Counter-Terrorism Forum and to strengthen political, economic and security ties through a reinvigorated Arab Maghreb Union.

Morocco and the United States also agreed to work together on ways to improve mutual understanding and interfaith dialogue between young people of the two countries.

Discussions between the leaders included ways to foster a closer economic partnership. According to political analyst Jamal Farhani, the 2006 Free Trade Agreement still favours the United States.

“This matter will be discussed during the second strategic dialogue meeting between the two countries, which is scheduled to take place in Morocco in 2014,” Farhani underlined.

Above all, the monarch’s visit provided an opportunity to reiterate the unity of vision between the two countries in terms of security, he said.

“Security is a highly important issue, as the region is plagued by instability due to the proliferation of Libyan arms and the difficulty of tracking down all terrorist groups because of the enormity of the Sahel-Sahara,” the analyst told Magharebia.

“Morocco is a stable partner for the United States and is capable of playing a leading role in combating extremism and terrorism, especially since the situation in Libya and Tunisia remains critical,” he added.

For his part, US Congressman James Moran said: “Morocco is actually one of our best friends in a region that still faces many difficulties.”

To put the pledges into effect, a mutual assistance agreement was signed during the Moroccan monarch’s visit to Washington. It is a legal and partnership framework for intelligence-sharing and co-operation between the customs authorities of the two nations.

The new accord will enable Morocco and the United States to co-operate over a wide range of issues related to revenue collection, cross-border crime prevention and protection against threats to security, with both countries making counter-terrorism a shared priority.

The article Morocco Tightens Ties With US appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Spain: Tourist Spending Sets New Record In October With Growth Of 16.8% To 5.48 Billion Euros

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Spending by inbound tourists in Spain set a new all-time record in October, growing by 16.8% to 5.48 billion euros. According to the Tourist Expenditure Survey (EGATUR) drafted by the General Sub-directorate of Tourism Information and Studies of the Ministry of Industry, Energy and Tourism, this strong growth in spending by inbound tourists was caused by both a 6.9% increase in the number of tourists and a 9.3% increase in the average spend per tourist in the month.

The United Kingdom was the top emitting market in October in terms of spending volume: 1.17 billion euros and an increase of 19.2%. The French market also posted noteworthy year-on-year growth of 41.3%, putting the country in third position in absolute terms with 500 million euros. The German market grew by 24.2% year-on-year to a spending figure of 1.09 billion euros, while spending by inbound tourists from the Nordic countries grew by 21.4% to a total of 518 billion euros.

The top autonomous regions in terms of where this spending took place were: Catalonia (1.25 billion euros); the Canary Islands (1.11 billion euros); the Balearic Islands (923 million euros); and Andalusia (828 million euros).

In the period January-October, total spending by inbound tourists also posted a new high since current records began at 52.55 billion euros – an increase of 8.2% on the previous year. Over this ten-month period, it is worth noting the 3.2% increase in the average spend per tourist (to 970 euros) and the 2.7% increase in the average spend per day (to 109 euros).

Emitting markets

With 21.4% of total spending by inbound tourists in Spain in October and 20.8% of the total in the first ten months of the year, the United Kingdom maintains its traditional position as the top emitting market for inbound tourists in Spain. In October, the Canary Islands and Andalusia together accounted for approximately half of total spending by inbound tourists; a month in which the average spend per British tourist stood at 875 euros (up 12.7%) and the average spend per day stood at 101 euros (up 10.7%).

Germany maintained its position as the second-most important emitting market with 19.9% of total spending by inbound tourists in October and 16.3% of the total for the ten-month period in question. This market also recorded strong growth in the average spending figures this month. The average spend per German tourist rose by 12% to 1,054 euros, while the average spend per day rose by 10% to 115 euros. Almost all spending by German tourists took place in the Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands.

The Nordic countries climbed to third place in October in terms of spending volume and spending growth, accounting for 9.5% of total spending by inbound tourists in Spain. 40% of spending by tourists from the Nordic countries took place in the Canary Islands. The average spend per day by this market rose by 8.5% to 132 euros, while the average spend per tourist from the Nordic countries rose by 3% to 1,094 euros. However, this market fell below France over the first ten months of the year. France maintained a share of 10.1% of the total, compared with the 9.1% corresponding to tourists from the Nordic countries.

The growth of 41.3% posted by France in October was the highest in the month. The same market also posted the highest increases in the average spend per tourist (up 22.6% to 663 euros) and the average spend per day (up 14.4% to 88 euros). It is also worth noting the data on this market for the period January-October: year-on-year growth of 20% to 5.32 billion euros, 10.1% of the total volume and a 3.5% increase in the average spend per day to 83 euros.

Other markets posting highly positive results in October include Russia, with a spending increase of 46.7%; the Netherlands, with an increase of 13% – mainly in the Balearic Islands and the Region of Valencia; and Italy, with an increase of 3.2% – thus posting two consecutive months of growth.

Main destination autonomous regions

With a 20.5% increase in spending in October, Catalonia is the autonomous region with the highest percentage of spending by inbound tourists in Spain over the two periods in question. Tourists spent 1.25 billion euros in the month and 12.67 billion euros in the first ten months of the year. The French market performed particularly well in this autonomous region.

The Canary Islands posted a 16% increase in revenue from tourists (1.11 billion euros) in October, with increases in both the average spend per tourist of 7.9% to 1,106 euros and the average spend per day of 5% to 117 euros. Over the first ten months of the year, revenue from tourists in the Canary Islands amounted to 9.21 billion euros (up 8.5%).

With an increase of 18.3%, 923 million euros were spent by inbound tourists in the Balearic Islands in October – mainly from the German market. This autonomous region posted the highest year-on-year increase in the average spend per day – up 12% to 119 euros. Between January and October, a total of 10.51 billion euros were spent by inbound tourists in the Balearic Islands – up by 8.3%.

With significant growth of 16.4% and revenue of 828 million euros in the month, Andalusia also posted strong increases in the average spend per day of 11% to 109 euros and the average spend per tourist of 10.8% to 1,116 euros. The top emitting markets were the United Kingdom and Germany. Hence, inbound tourists spent a total of 7.6 billion euros in Andalusia – an increase of 7.8% on the first ten months of last year.

The Region of Madrid posted an increase in tourist spending of 4.6% to 487 million euros due to an increase in the average spend per tourist of 10.3% to 1,126 euros, while the actual number of tourists fell by 5.3% in the month. The top emitting markets were France and Germany. Revenue received from tourist spending in the first ten months of 2013 amounted to 4.18 billion euros.

The article Spain: Tourist Spending Sets New Record In October With Growth Of 16.8% To 5.48 Billion Euros appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Egypt: Court Sentences 21 Girls To Prison Over Pro-Morsi Rallies

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A court in Egypt has sentenced 21 female supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi to 11 years in prison, according to BBC news.

They were found guilty of multiple charges, including belonging to a terrorist group, obstructing traffic, sabotage and using force at a protest in the city of Alexandria last month. Seven are under 18 years of age and will be sent to a juvenile prison.

The court also sentenced six Muslim Brotherhood leaders to 15 years in prison for inciting the protest. One report said the men had been tried in absentia.

Some 17 clerics linked to the Islamist movement, to which Morsi belongs, were meanwhile arrested in the Nile Delta town of Gharbiya, the state news agency Mena reported. They are accused of using mosques and sermons to incite unrest against the army and police.

Mena also said that eight people would be put on trial on charges of abducting and torturing a lawyer during the 2011 uprising that toppled former President Hosni Mubarak.

The defendants include Mahmoud al-Khodeiry, a former judge close to the Brotherhood, Osama Yassin, who served as youth minister under Morsi, and Ahmed Mansour, a presenter for al-Jazeera television.

Since the army deposed Morsi in July, thousands of Muslim Brotherhood members and other Islamists have been detained in a crackdown the interim authorities have portrayed as a struggle against “terrorism”.

Hundreds of people have also been killed in clashes with security forces since security forces cleared two sit-ins in Cairo by people demanding Morsi’s reinstatement in August.

The article Egypt: Court Sentences 21 Girls To Prison Over Pro-Morsi Rallies appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Hard-Line Iranian Politicians Slam Nuclear Deal

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Hard-line Iranian politicians have publicly criticised the country’s nuclear deal reached in Geneva last week, according to the Associated Press.

MP Ruhollah Hosseinian said it was so vague and conditional that it may finally lead to a shutting down of Iran’s uranium enrichment programme. Hamid Rasaei, another hard-liner, has called it “a poison chalice.”

Most MPs supported the deal, saying it eased sanctions that world powers have placed on Iran and prevents them from imposing new ones.

“We should tell the people what we have lost and what we have gained and why,” Mr Hosseinian said. “It practically tramples on Iran’s enrichment rights… Uranium enrichment restrictions in the final stage and constraints in the first stage mean that enrichment in Iran is headed toward self shut-down.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state matters, has publicly supported the country’s nuclear negotiators. Yet, it has not stopped others from criticising the agreement.

“A chalice of poison has been given to the people but (the government) is trying to show it as a sweet drink through media manipulation,” Rasaei said.

Foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has argued that the deal has caused serious cracks in the sanctions regime and prevents the UN Security Council and world powers from imposing new ones. The deal, he said, also provides sanctions relief in return for Iran scaling down its enrichment programme but allows it to continue enriching under 5%.

Government supporters have hailed him as “ambassador of peace,” calling negotiations a diplomatic victory for Iran. Others say Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s angry reaction shows it was a triumph.

Netanyahu called the deal last week a “historic mistake” that makes the world a “much more dangerous place.” He added that Israel is not bound by it.

Israel believes Iran is trying to develop a nuclear bomb, and Netanyahu has been sceptical of recent moderate gestures by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, whom he has called “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

Hossein Shariatmadari, a representative of Khamenei and editor of hard-line newspaper Kayhan, said Iran has given too many concessions in return for too little.

“This slippery achievement is not consistent with the huge volume of propaganda that is being pumped into society over its significance,” he said. “It leads to the assumption that government is not honest in its reports to the people.”

The article Hard-Line Iranian Politicians Slam Nuclear Deal appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Iran Deal Exposes Limits Of Israel Lobby’s Power – OpEd

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Mohammed Ayoob writes: The impact of the Iran nuclear deal is unlikely to be limited to the nuclear proliferation arena. While the question whether the deal has prevented Iran from ever developing nuclear weapons capability or has merely postponed the inevitable by a few months or years will continue to be debated, one should not ignore the wider strategic consequences of the agreement for several reasons.

First, it has the potential of introducing a sea change in the relationship of the United States that could unfetter Iranian diplomatic capabilities that can be used in pursuit of its broader regional goals. This is the reason why Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies have reacted so harshly and negatively to the agreement. If things proceed down the path of an Iranian-U.S. rapprochement in the context of a war weary American public opinion, Riyadh can no longer automatically depend upon U.S. diplomatic and military support against Iran in its competition for power and influence in the Persian Gulf.

Second, it has demonstrated unequivocally that on vital strategic issues in which U.S. and Israeli interests diverge Washington does possess the residual political will to make hard decisions in the teeth of Israeli opposition, something that analysts of all hues had doubted for a long time. This may signal the beginning of the unraveling of the prevailing myth that U.S. policy toward the Middle East is shaped in Tel Aviv and not in Washington. It also explodes the myth that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is an all-powerful force when it comes to fashioning U.S. policy toward the Middle East. Its consequences, therefore, go beyond the Iranian nuclear issue and are likely to impact public perceptions in the United States and abroad regarding the deadlock over the Palestinian issue and the likely direction of U.S. policy on the unending Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This explains Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s uncompromising hostility toward the Geneva agreement even at the expense of doing grave damage to Israeli-U.S. relations. [Continue reading...]

One of the paradoxes of the practice of railing against power — be that the power of the Israel lobby, or government, or corporations — is that those who persistently issue such warnings can be reluctant to acknowledge that such power has limits.

Thus in the current situation there are those who will insist that sooner or later Congress, on the command of AIPAC, will impose new sanctions and destroy the agreement Iran. Or, that due to pressure from Israel and Saudi Arabia the current agreement will expire without a permanent agreement being reached.

Both of those scenarios are certainly possibilities but my sense is that what this weekend’s agreement reveals is that the opponents of U.S.-Iranian rapprochement are manifestly swimming against the international tide.

The neocon trolls, beguiled by their own apocalyptic rhetoric, are convinced that the evil Islamic republic, hellbent on its pursuit of nuclear weapons, can pursue no other course. Yet what all the evidence makes clear is that Iran’s leaders — like those of any other state — are acting in accordance with what they perceive as their own interests and currently they see those interests best served by improved international relations.

The lesson here is about flexibility. Those with the skill to hold on to power are often more pragmatic than their opponents.

The article Iran Deal Exposes Limits Of Israel Lobby’s Power – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Maldives: President Yameen’s ‘Conciliatory Mode’, But Will It Last? – Analysis

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By Dr. S. Chandrasekharan.

Soon after he took over, the first thing President Yameen did was to take a swipe at the losing candidate Mohamed Nasheed, by declaring that “People have proved that they do not want a puppet of foreign powers.”

Better sense prevailed and soon he quickly made some conciliatory gestures to make up for that indiscreet statement.

Though Nasheed lost, nearly fifty person of the electorate had voted for him and this cannot be ignored. The international community also stressed that the new government in view of the close contest, should engage the opposition in a conciliatory manner.

International Reaction:

The UN statement pointed out that the close contest highlighted the need for the new administration to engage the opposition in a constructive manner and lead the country in the interest of all Maldivians.

The UN Secretary General urged all political leaders of Maldives to work urgently towards reconciliation.

The State Minister for Foreign Affairs and the Commonwealth called upon the new government to avoid any act of recrimination or retribution.

Canada while praising Nasheed for being magnanimous in defeat also urged reconciliation.

Nasheed and the MDP:

There is no doubt that Nasheed took the defeat in his stride and promised full cooperation of the opposition. In the first major rally of the party after the defeat he said that the MDP is a ship for all seas- equally fit for governance and opposition. He stressed that freedom of assembly and freedom of expression should be defended at all costs.

One wonders what would have happened if the reverse had happened with Nasheed winning by a narrow margin. Yameen, going by the history would have in all probability got the elections annulled with the ever helpful Supreme Court!

It is said that the Government and the MDP are holding talks on reconciliation.

This process of conciliation could not have moved if if the Commissioner of Police Abdulla Riyaz had continued in his post. Thankfully he has been ‘allowed’ to resign. It is said that Riyaz was first offered the post of High Commissioner or Ambassador in Singapore or China and that he declined. He is now planning to enter politics and may join PPM or the Jumhooree.

On a definite understanding with the government, the MDP MP Hamid Abdul Ghafoor who was holed up in the Majlis left the building unharmed after 26 days.

While the PPM did not pursue the no confidence motion against the Speaker Shaheed, the MDP returned the gesture by withdrawing the no confidence motion against the Dy. Speaker belonging to the PPM.

Appointments and Disppointments:

Some appointments have been disappointing. The selection of Umar Nasir, a loose canon as the Home Minister is one. This perhaps has been done more to quieten him and as part of the deal with the Jumhooree with whose cooperation Yameen has come to power. It may be recalled that Umar Nasir in losing his bid for becoming the party candidate for presidentship in the PPM had abused Yameen of having used the convicted and the drug smuggling network to get elected. He was out of the party for a while and now he says that he either wants to join the PPM or the Jumhooree again!

The appointment of the Foreign Minister is another disappointment. Yameen’s niece and Gayoom’s daughter Dhunya Maumoon has been elevated and reappointed as the foreign minister. In one of the first interviews he gave, Yameen said that his priority would be on the Maldives- India relations that had taken a downturn in the last two years. As a minister of state in Waheed’s government, Dhunya looked after the foreign relations and the relations with India deteriorated mainly because of her.

Mundhu, former spokesman in Gayoom’s regime is back in President’s office as a minster. He is an active and an ebullient personality and is a good choice.

It is good that Aisath Bisam former Attorney General was not reinstated in the same post but given an advisory role in the President’s affairs for legal affairs.

Elections to the Local Councils and the Majlis:

The local council elections are set for 18 January 2014 to be followed by elections to the Parliament (Majlis) on 22nd March 2014.

The attempt of President Yameen would be to get a majority for the PPM or its coalition in both and particularly in the parliamentary elections. Now that PPM is not in a majority in the parliament, the cooperation of MDP is needed now, but once and if it gets a majority it is not certain whether Yameen would continue with this reconciliation mode.

Another development that needs to be watched is how long the honeymoon between Yameen and Gasim Ibrahim, the leader of Jumhooree would last. Both are strong personalities and were not known to be on good terms even in the best of times.

But for the present, till the Majils elections in March, it looks that the reconciliation mode will continue.

The article Maldives: President Yameen’s ‘Conciliatory Mode’, But Will It Last? – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Australia’s Maritime Intentions: To Expand Or Not To Expand? – Analysis

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The October 2013 Australian fleet review illustrates naval trends in the Indo-Pacific and shows that Australia is currently set on a strategic policy of maritime expansion and forward engagement. There are, however, doubts about Canberra’s future defence spending under an Abbott government.

By Geoffrey Till

EARLY LAST month, Australia’s Fleet Review in Sydney saw the participation of 18 international warships, including the RSS Endeavour, Singapore’s 6,500 tonne Landing Platform Dock (LPD). The Singapore warship with a crew of 65, a battery of missiles as well as 12 vehicles and bulk cargo, is normally involved in multinational naval peace support, disaster relief and other humanitarian operations.

The RSS Endeavour’s presence, at the invitation of Canberra, added to the diversity of participation in the Fleet Review, held to commemorate the arrival on 5 October, exactly 100 years earlier, of the so-called British-built (but in large measure Australian paid-for) ‘Fleet unit’ which more or less started the Royal Australian Navy. It was a spectacular display of Australia’s naval ambitions, marked by, among other things, a grand march-past of the participating naval contingents, a big naval arms fair and several related international conferences.

Long history of fleet review

There was, however, some opposition. On 7 October, The Sydney Morning Herald ran its letter page under the heading ‘Navy spectacle glorifies war and wastes our money’ although most of its letters did not support that view.

Fleet reviews have a long history. Once, these were occasional, formal occasions in which the Sovereign inspected his fleet to assess its current capability for future operations. As ways of confirming fleet readiness, they were a form of quality control. The last time there was such a purely functional review was in May 1944 – a secret one – held just before the Allies invaded Normandy.

But fleet reviews soon took on other characteristics and justifications. They became a means of showing the public what the Government was spending its taxes on, and of eliciting their support for further such efforts. As one commentator described, the Sydney event was a means of binding the navy and the community together. It was also designed to convey strategic messages to the outside world, most often as a display of military might – and technological prowess – intended to impress and to encourage respect from other powers.

Starting perhaps in the Indo-Pacific with the Indian Navy’s ‘Bridges of Friendship’ fleet review off Mumbai in 2001, such naval gatherings also sought to illustrate the benign aspects of naval power by providing a practical display of international togetherness. ‘Look,’ they seem to say, ‘at how cooperative we are, and how much we contribute together to humanitarian operations, to keeping shipping safe and to preserving your peace and prosperity.’

Whatever their motivation and impact, Fleet Reviews as very public and discrete events are important and attract a lot of interest both for what they tell us about the international environment and about the country that hosts and organises them. Aficionados of such issues can spot who’s in and who’s out, can compare technologies and capabilities between the participating navies, can speculate about the priorities of the organiser and deduce the domestic and international reaction.

What the review tells us

So what did it tell us about the international context? Some clues emerged from who were there and who were not. The Russian contingent pulled out at the last minute, perhaps because of their current focus on Syria-related deployments; the Chinese ship’s company was not allowed ashore; the Canadians saw their two ships colliding with each other on the way and had to withdraw. There was significant presence of the Spanish navy’s replenishment oiler Cantabria which is currently part of the Australian fleet (Spain has a central role in Australia’s fleet construction programme). Then, surprisingly, there was the presence of the Nigerian frigate NNS Thunder – an indication of a navy on an upward trajectory in response to a deteriorating security situation in the Gulf of Guinea.

Naval technologists and capability ‘spotters’ compared platforms and systems in the assembled fleet and reviewed the stands in the huge naval arms fair. They were especially interested in HMS Daring, a modern cruiser masquerading as a destroyer, (now in Singapore) clearly a different generation to everything else in the review, and according to Britain’s current First Sea Lord, symbolising a ‘naval renaissance.’

Shedding light on Australian intentions

But what does this all tell us about Australia? No-one could have missed the pride of the Australian navy in its past and its determination and confidence in its future. It has a very ambitious building programme that includes two large amphibious assault ships, ‘the most capable ships ever operated by the navy,’ advanced air warfare destroyers, a frigate and patrol boat replacement programme and the much-discussed 12- strong submarine project.

Significantly, at one of the connected conferences, LieutGeneral David Morrison, Chief of Army – a position not normally associated with ‘dark blue’ thinking — went out of his way to endorse Australia’s adoption of a thoroughly ‘maritime’ strategy in the wake of its Iraq and Afghanistan experience.

He spoke of the Army’s determination to work closely with the Navy’s current and projected power projection fleet to build up a substantial amphibious element. This signalled a shift away from the Army’s traditional ‘continental’ and counter-insurgency mode of thinking. If all this comes to fruition, it would contribute significantly to an Australian strategic policy of forward engagement in Southeast Asia, the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean.

But it is a big ‘if.’ Some wonder whether the money needed to support such aspirations will actually be forthcoming. While the new Abbott government has promised an uplift in Australian defence spending it has remained vague about by how much and when. Others wonder at the capacity of the country’s defence industrial base to deliver the capabilities needed, or of its military system to grow the necessary skill sets – despite all the external help the country is getting.

Still others wonder about the impact of future governmental changes, shifts in key personnel and, most obviously of unpredictable international events. Only time will tell, but for now, to judge by this review at least, Australian intentions are clear: Canberra wants to sustain its policy of a forward engagement with the wider Indo-Pacific region through a naval presence.

Geoffrey Till is Visiting Professor in Maritime Studies with the Maritime Security programme at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University. He is also Emeritus Professor in maritime studies at King’s College London and Chairman of the Corbett Centre for Maritime Policy Studies.

The article Australia’s Maritime Intentions: To Expand Or Not To Expand? – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Cyber Command And NSA Breakup Looming Over Snowden Leaks – Report

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The fallout over the Snowden affair hits “critical stage” as Washington continues the push to separate Cyber Command, which oversees cyberspace operations, from the National Security Agency.

Following the most devastating leak of sensitive information in US history, the White House is preparing not only to separate the two entities, but bring aboard a civilian director, which would mark a first for the 61-year-old agency, Reuters reported, citing unnamed individuals who were briefed on the issue.

News of the proposal comes amid a steady stream of stunning revelations, made public in May by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, which showed the long arm of America’s spying operation that targeted the internet and telephone communications of allies and enemies alike.

Presently, US Cyber Command and the NSA are overseen by Army General Keith Alexander, 61, who is retiring in March.

When Snowden revealed in June that he was the source of the leaks, Alexander offered to resign from his post, but was refused by President Obama.

Reuters reported last month that Vice Admiral Michael Rogers, commander of the US Navy’s 10th Fleet and the Navy’s top cyberwarfare officer, was a top candidate to be the next NSA director.

Critics say splitting off Cyber Command, the agency responsible for carrying out cyber warfare operations, from the NSA, which is tasked with monitoring internet and telephone traffic to detect national security threats, will provide for better oversight, as well as guard against any future attempts at inside espionage.

Two government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the discussions over the separation of powers are “nearing a critical stage,” Reuters reported.

Meanwhile, White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said Obama remains undecided on the matter.
“With General Alexander’s planned departure next spring, this is a natural point to look at this question to ensure we are appropriately postured to address current and future security needs,” Hayden said. “We have no new decisions to announce at this point.”

The report hinted a decision could be announced soon and possibly simultaneously with the results of the Obama administration’s review of NSA activities, tentatively scheduled to be released in mid-December. This has become a source of intense public debate since the Snowden disclosures went public.

In May Snowden handed over highly classified documents to the Guardian newspaper, detailing the electronic surveillance by the NSA and its British counterpart, Government Communications Headquarters GCHQ.

This week, US and British officials admitted they are concerned about a “doomsday” collection of top secret, heavily encrypted information they believe the former NSA contractor may have stored away.

The classified information, protected by elaborate encryption that requires multiple passwords to access, is said to contain documents listing the identities of US and allied intelligence personnel.

Snowden, who is considered a fugitive in the United States, is now living in Russia where he has been granted temporary asylum status.

The article Cyber Command And NSA Breakup Looming Over Snowden Leaks – Report appeared first on Eurasia Review.

UNSC Equates Mortar Shelling Of Russian Embassy In Damascus To Terrorist Act

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The UN Security Council issued a statement on Thursday, most strongly condemning the mortar shelling of the Russian embassy in Damascus, equating it to a terrorist act. One Syrian was killed, nine people, including Syrian security guards, were injured in the attack.

The Council members expressed condolences to the families of victims and sympathy for those who suffered as a result of the terrible terrorist act, pointed out the UNSC statement for the press.

The United States has condemned the attack on Russian embassy in Damascus and expressed “concern for those killed and injured in the incident.”

“We condemn any attack against individuals or facilities protected by international law. The United States continues to emphasize that those responsible for atrocities on all sides must be held accountable,” the US State Department said in a statement Thursday.

The article UNSC Equates Mortar Shelling Of Russian Embassy In Damascus To Terrorist Act appeared first on Eurasia Review.

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