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    Front Page
    

Bush and Bin Laden's virtual war

The George W Bush administration's "war on terror" could be summed up in three words - "fragmentation, diminution, destruction". That's fragmentation brought about by "creative destabilization", as in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine; diminution of American prestige, both military and political, and thus of American power; destruction of political consensus within the US for a strong global role. And all this to the advantage of Osama bin Laden. - Mark Danner (Mar 27, '08)

SPEAKING FREELY
September 11 was a third-rate operation
From the day of the attack, evidence has accumulated that September 11, 2001, was never more than a third-rate operation. This is evident from what the plot achieved, and what it didn't attempt, or do. The American public shares the blame for the plot's success, causes and ensuing ramifications; through its collective narcissism, dereliction of responsibility, and fear. - Bohdan Pilacinski (Mar 27, '08)



Muqtada cuts free
Fighting in the south of Iraq between Muqtada al-Sadr's Madhi Army and a rival Shi'ite organization fitted in uniforms of the Iraqi security forces mark the end of Muqtada's self-imposed ceasefire. It also signals a major defeat for the US military command's strategy of weakening the Mahdi Army. - Gareth Porter (Mar 27, '08)

Sri Lanka's wounded Tigers growl at Delhi
India's perceived "state welcome" for a Sri Lankan army chief has drawn heavy criticism from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, who have called it an "historic blunder". Some have dismissed the statements as a cry of desperation from an organization suffering severe setbacks, others warn that strident remarks could presage attacks on Indian soil or interests in Sri Lanka. - Sudha Ramachandran (Mar 27, '08)

Tibet, China, the West: Back to stereotypes
The riots in Tibet have blown a formidable flicker into China's Olympic flame, and any chance of keeping the sporting event free of politics has been extinguished. All the same, the Games still offer China the opportunity to educate the world on the daunting challenges it faces as a still-developing nation. - Kent Ewing (Mar 27, '08)

First ladies part ways in the Philippines
The hospitalization this week of Corazon Aquino has forced the former Philippine president to retreat from the front line of activists calling for the ouster of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the only other woman to ever lead the country. It may be something of a relief to embattled Arroyo, but it has left the opposition reeling. As one long-time analyst opines, "We ain't got much by way of options." - Donald Kirk (Mar 27, '08)

A sheikha, a queen and a first lady
The dazzling arrivals of three young first ladies to power in Doha, Amman and Damascus have unveiled a new and important realm of possibilities for the wives of Arab leaders. The "Big Three" have enchanted much of the world with their grace and elegance, and have taken increasingly active roles as businesswomen, entrepreneurs and nation-builders. - Sami Moubayed (Mar 27, '08)



US moves towards engaging Iran
Sunday's mortar attacks on the Green Zone in Baghdad may be a harbinger of things to come unless the United States accommodates Iranian interests. And with the George W Bush administration's grudging admission of the realities of the political alignment in Tehran, "unconditional talks" between the countries are in the offing. The real issue now is whether the emboldened leadership in Tehran shares Washington's sense of urgency. - M K Bhadrakumar (Mar 26, '08)

The fateful Battle of Baghdad
In its five years under American occupation, Baghdad has been transformed from a metropolis into an urban desert, and various American "surges" have proven, in the end, disastrous. For the residents of the battered city, it's an endless wait for the Americans to leave. - Michael Schwartz (Mar 26, '08)

Crisis looms for Myanmar's riven junta
With top junta members under investigation for corruption and the health of senior general Than Shwe deteriorating, Myanmar's leadership is in a state of paralysis. But all the while, tension between rival junta factions is building and something will likely give soon, in the form of a mutiny, purge, or palace coup. - Larry Jagan (Mar 26, '08)

India all at sea over US defense ties
A report by an independent watchdog has shot holes through a US$50-million deal the Indian navy inked to acquire the US battleship USS Trenton. The findings run from the ship's toxic leaks to fine print that prohibits it from any offensive action. The controversy has the potential to sink possible big-dollar India-US defense deals. - Siddharth Srivastava (Mar 26, '08)

THE BEAR'S LAIR
Wall St greed to feel the squeeze
The present unwinding of the US financial system, with serious and repeated losses still to come, will lead to fundamental change in the regulatory environment. Even as some new rules will prove as counterproductive as those they replace, the altered Wall Street that will emerge will be less exciting for the greedy - providing one of the few unequivocal benefits of the miserable recession ahead. - Martin Hutchinson (Mar 26, '08)

THE SHAPE OF US POPULISM
Part 3:
The progressive era
Ideological ferment at the close of the 19th century left the US with impressive political and economic reforms for future generations to build on. Yet fundamental issues - notably those involving race and economic centralization at the expense of economic democracy - dating back to the nation's birth have even now not been resolved. - Henry C K Liu (Mar 26, '08)
This is the third part in a series.

 Part 1: A rich free-market legacy - for some

 Part 2: Long-term effects of the Civil War

KEBABBLE
Turkey seeks a
more modern Islam

Turkish highest religious authority has instructed top theologians to re-evaluate the oral traditions relating to the Prophet Mohammad. It's an ambitious attempt at a fundamental revision of the holy texts and Turkey has the capacity to do nothing less than recreate Islam, changing it from a religion whose rules must be obeyed, to one designed to serve the needs of people in a modern secular democracy. - Fazile Zahir (Mar 26, '08)


Tibet, the 'great game' and the CIA
The main beneficiary of the death and destruction in Tibet could be the United States. For Washington and the Central Intelligence Agency, with its deep involvement in the Free Tibet Movement, this is a heaven-sent opportunity to create significant leverage against Beijing, with little risk to American interests. For China, the seriousness with which it is treating the unrest is illustrated by the deployment of a large number of important army units. - Richard M Bennett (Mar 25, '08)

SPENGLER
The mustard seed
in global strategy

With Pope Benedict's baptism of Magdi Allam, a prominent Muslim-born journalist who converted to Catholicism during Easter services, the global agenda is changed through the soul of a single man. Since September 2001, the would-be wizards of Western strategy have tried to conjure variations of Islamic "reform" or "democracy". None of this matters now, as Magdi Allam's case confirms.
(Mar 25, '08)

CAMPAIGN OUTSIDER
Black and white and
barely read at all

US presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama gave an intelligent speech on race relations to the wrong country. America doesn't want to think about much, least of all about a topic on which everyone's already an expert. - Muhammad Cohen (Mar 25, '08)

   What Obama's pastor really said (video)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
Bonfire of puppy-tossers, and the beer test
A widely viewed Internet video of a US Marine throwing a cute puppy to its death in a ditch in Iraq has Americans gnashing their teeth at the appalling actions of a native son. It's disturbing stuff, but where's America's all-consuming concern for the hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqi humans? It's this dicshotomy that exposes the real reasons for the war, and the real risks that those who advocate its quick conclusion are taking. - Julian Delasantellis (Mar 25, '08)

Pakistan's new leaders target militants
Freshly installed Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani has already made his mark by freeing judges detained last year on President Pervez Musharraf's orders. In dealing with militancy, many expect the government to similarly unravel Musharraf's policies by treading softly. This will not mean an easy ride for al-Qaeda and radical jihadis, however. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Mar 25, '08)

THE MOGAMBO GURU
Economic stupidity is no solution
The International Monetary Fund surprises nobody with its call for taxpayers to bail out everybody caught in the subprime crisis. But it's another matter when a Financial Times editorial urges inflation. Don't folk understand that keeping the existing structure intact requires the same degree of economic stupidity all over again? (Mar 25, '08)

Same game, new rules in Afghanistan
Obituaries for the Taliban's spring offensive are premature, though instead of trying to engage opposition forces head-on, the Taliban will open up new fronts in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. In return, North Atlantic Treaty Organization and United States-led troops will target the Taliban's safe havens straddling the border with Pakistan. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Mar 20, '08)

CHAN AKYA
Why markets love dictators
This week's developments once again highlight the reasons for markets to prefer dictatorships over freewheeling democracies. Clarity in decision-making is more important than preserving the rights of individuals, for the benefit of society at large, as seen by the market reactions to recent political changes in India, Taiwan, Japan, Malaysia and China. (Mar 20, '08)

SEX IN DEPTH
My short time with Tito
It all started innocently enough: a simple research outing to uncover the underworld of Western sex workers in Asia. But then, at the unsubtle urging of an over-bulked Baltic bouncer named Tito, the venture became a tour of the sex trade "circuit". What came out was the naked truth about organized crime, immigration, sex and the story behind some of Asia's most notorious ports of call girls.
William Sparrow writes a weekly column looking at issues relating to sex in Asia. (Mar 20, '08)

Why Spitzer was Bushwhacked
Disgraced New York State governor Eliot Spitzer had cause to feel frisky when he visited Washington in February. As he was paying off a call girl, the press was preparing to run a Spitzer broadside against the world's biggest financial powers and President George W Bush, whom he described as a fugitive from justice and a partner in crime with predator lenders. It was a politically fatal coincidence. - F William Engdahl (Mar 19, '08)

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What's up with
Asian currencies?

The strength of the yen and euro has been a dominant recent feature of global markets. Yet Asian currencies, even the Chinese yuan, have yet to show comparable gains against the US dollar. Economic fundamentals argue that these gains should come; local politics can argue otherwise. Therein lie the risks and the opportunities. - Axel Merk

India hungers for
BlackBerry juice

The Indian government, claiming terrorism-related concerns, wants to get hold of the codes that give users of BlackBerry-enabled mobile devices secure Internet access. Capitulation will expose high-level businessmen and politicians to prying eyes and undermine the country's near $2 billion e-commerce market. And just who are these authorities demanding the codes? - Raja M

Markets' weak spot
is bad ad vice

Capitalism "discovers" wants that people did not realize they had - and is sustained by conversion of greed and envy into virtues. As globalization and wage inequalities become ever more evident and the US economic model appears in disarray, a solution is not to abolish markets but to remoralize wants. The simplest way of doing this is to restrict advertising and create room for other motives to fourish. - Robert Skidelsky

Flight, pain mark latest
China revolution

Small-time foreign investors in China are closing their factory doors and catching the next flight home, leaving debts and unpaid workers behind, as they fail to keep pace with the country's changing industrial focus. Taking their place on incoming flights are better-heeled investors, more fully equipped to survive in the fast-modernizing economy.

 THE MOGAMBO GURU

Inflation in heart-attack territory
It makes you choke on the breakfast cereal - not just that wheat prices are up by a third in one year or that things cost roughly 10 times what they did 48 years ago. The US national debt is 32 times higher than it was in 1960! Our only prayer is that gold can rise faster than everything else - and we know that just isn't going to happen.

CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
Nationalization and dislocation
Many investors may believe the Fed and the administration have discovered the right antidote to the credit crisis - witness the recent stocks rally. Yet rule changes regarding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are nothing less than a transfer of massive prospective credit losses directly to the taxpayer and the US and global markets in reality had "dislocation" written all over them. (Mar 25, '08)
Doug Noland reviews the previous week's events each Monday.

MARKET RAP
What goes up must come down The purchase of Bear Stearns by JP Morgan Chase marks another turn in the US financial drama as it deepens even further into a solvency crisis. The Fed's latest rates cut persuaded few investors that the end is in sight, with most markets barely breaking their downward slide on the news. (Mar 20, '08)
R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets.




I am writing this letter to point out the fallacies in Spengler's argument in The mustard seed in global strategy, Mar 26] ... There is more violence, and more support for violence and hatred in the Old Testament than one would find in any other religious book. It's unfortunate a book with "more errors in it than there are words in it" ... continues to sway over so many otherwise intelligent persons.
Abul
USA

Dear Abul, thank you for writing. I don't proselytize for any religion. That is not my job. But I am glad that you have begun to read the Bible, and hope you learn more about it. As Benjamin Franklin put it, "A city and a maidenhead are lost once they begin to parley." - Spengler
   Go to Letters to the Editor



 <IT WORLD>

One down, many to go
"Spam King" Robert Soloway's guilty plea in a Seattle court this week marked a notable victory in the battle against junk mail, but Internet users have no reason yet to lower their defenses against unwanted emails.
Martin J Young surveys the week's developments in computing, gaming and gizmos.



1. Tibet, the 'great game' and the CIA

2. US moves towards engaging Iran

3. The mustard seed in global strategy

4. India all at sea over US defense ties

5. Wall St greed to feel the squeeze

6. The fateful Battle of Baghdad

7. Crisis looms for Myanmar's riven junta

8. Turkey seeks a more modern Islam

9. The progressive era

(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, Mar 26, 2008)




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