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    Front Page
    

A deadly miscalculation in Lebanon

As a test of strength, the Lebanese government and its Saudi Arabian backers received a bloody nose in the confrontation with Hezbollah in Beirut. The government woefully underestimated Hezbollah's reaction to having its communications - spy - system interfered with. And the Iranian-backed Hezbollah, with its convincing display of military superiority, made another clear statement: leave our arms alone. - Sami Moubayed (May 13, '08)

  Renewed fighting erupts (AFP)

Hezbollah's shots ring in Bush's ears
Just about everything the George W Bush administration has tried in the Middle East over the past few years has undermined United States standing and influence in the region, even as it has enhanced Tehran's. Yet as Bush visits Saudi Arabia and Egypt this week, he might be able to turn Hezbollah's stunning show of strength in Lebanon to his advantage. - Jim Lobe (May 13, '08)

US misses Iran opportunity
In a busy week for Iran, key nations negotiating with it over its nuclear program will present an incentive package for the Iranians to consider. At the same time, International Atomic Energy Agency officials will thrash out the last remaining issues on the Iran-IAEA agenda. US President George W Bush will also be in the region, but he won't be dropping by, even though Tehran has indicated they might be willing to talk. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (May 13, '08)


Why Myanmar's junta steals foreign aid
To the Myanmar junta's top generals in their bunkers in the secluded capital Naypyidaw, far away from the devastated Irrawaddy Delta, their  aid distribution policy is one of political survival at all costs. With rice crops destroyed, bases wiped out and soldiers running out of food, the military leadership is scrambling to preserve control by commandeering relief supplies to channel to its own members. - Brian McCartan (May 13, '08)

China counts earthquake costs
After initially underestimating the effects of the earthquake that has claimed the lives of more than 10,000 people, Chinese authorities have appealed for help in the stricken southwestern region. With the full scale of the tragedy yet to be known, the economic impact, too, is only slowly emerging. - John Ng (May 13, '08)

  Tens of thousands dead (AFP)

Koreas not eye-to-eye on Vision 3000
South Korea's no-nonsense new president, Lee Myong-bak, has released his alternative to the Sunshine policy of his predecessor towards the North. "Vision 3000, Denuclearization, Openness" is a carrot-and-stick plan that promises a windfall of assistance should North Korea surrender its nuclear weapons. But its feasibility is likely to remain academic: Vision 3000 has not the slightest chance of being accepted by Pyongyang. - Andrei Lankov (May 13, '08)

Parsis may be silenced by success
The population of India's small but prominent Parsi community is not only aging, it is dying out. Low birth rates and conservative taboos against outside marriages have fueled fears the ancient Zoroastrian community may not survive the century. The very success of the Parsis -  exemplified by the likes of the giant industrialist Tata family and rock star Freddie Mercury - appears to be a threat to its survival. - Sudha Ramachandran (May 13, '08)



Hezbollah's street fight just a first step
Hezbollah, in taking its political grievances to the streets, was able to take military control of Beirut in less than 48 hours, while the Lebanese army looked on. The display of force by the opposition Shi'ite group does not leave the government much margin for maneuvering. (May 12, '08)

SPENGLER
Why Israel is the world's happiest country
At the 60th anniversary of its founding, it could be said that Israel is the happiest nation on Earth. It is one of the wealthiest, freest and best-educated; and it enjoys high fertility and life expectancy rates. The light heart of the Israelis in face of continuous danger is a singularity worthy of a closer look. (May 12, '08)

Another Pakistani D-Day over militants
The peace deals between the Pakistani government and militants in the tribal areas have been exposed for what they were, a delaying tactic for the Taliban to send fresh fighters into Afghanistan. The new government in Islamabad, provided it staves off a political crisis, and its United States ally now have to make the hard decision whether to fight fire with fire or risk losing the battle against militancy. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (May 12, '08)

China's weakness the greater danger
Claims that China is an emerging superpower overlook the reality that the ineffectually governed country will struggle for decades to get and stay beyond subsistence. The West, rather than fearing China's expansion, should be preparing for a dramatic setback in Chinese economic growth and resulting breakdowns in domestic order. (May 12, '08)

COMMENT
The problem with dictators and disasters
The Myanmar junta's botching of cyclone relief efforts is part of a larger trend of authoritarian regimes mismanaging disaster response. The long-term "NGO-ization" that occurred in Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami has the fiddling Neros in Naypyidaw afraid that the United Nations, not to mention the United States, might use the occasion to promote grassroots democracy in Myanmar. - Sreeram Chaulia (May 12, '08)

 ASIA HAND: The case for invading Myanmar 
(May 9, '08)

   
NOTE: These images may upset some viewers

China and Japan tiptoe into a 'warm spring'
Chinese President Hu Jintao's five-day visit to Japan was an important step towards stabilizing relations between the two powers. Clearly, a positive Sino-Japanese relationship serves the interests of the region - and the United States - but territorial disputes, food safety issues and rising nationalism in both countries remain unresolved. - Jing-dong Yuan (May 12, '08)

THE MOGAMBO GURU
Stranger than fictional balance sheets
The US Federal Reserve is taking a whole lot of potentially dodgy assets from banks as security against Treasury bonds. So far so horrible. Now, Standard & Poor's has cut assumptions for how much will be recovered after defaults on some of those assets. So where does that leave the value of the Fed's "security"? Or put another way, how big is the hole in the Fed's balance sheet now? (May 12, '08)

ASIA HAND
The case for
invading Myanmar

If ever there was an opportunity for the United States to take out an "outpost of tyranny", as Washington likes to call Myanmar, it is now. The tardy response of the junta in allowing in foreign aid for its cyclone-devastated population provides a strong moral case for a United Nations-approved, US-led humanitarian intervention. Such a move would also allow President George W Bush to burnish his legacy, which to date will be judged harshly due to his pre-emptive military policies waged exclusively in the name of fighting terror. - Shawn W Crispin (May 9, '08)

'All we can do is drink whisky'
Myanmar's people have again been forced to weather a catastrophe on their own, banding together with little help from the government. Food and water supplies are growing scarce, disease looms and power is expected to be out for months. The whisky, too, will soon run out. - Zao Noam (May 9, '08)

CHAN AKYA
Cyclone cowards
fear ultimate market


Curbs by cyclone-hit Myanmar on overseas help for its devastated population is merely an extreme example of a government cowering in fear of information. At a more prosaic level, Asian authorities concerned with improving their citizens' well-being should let markets with their abundance of information act in their favor. They should start with currencies, and then laugh all the way to the bank. (May 9, '08)

An oil-addicted ex-superpower
The United States' brief reign as the world's sole superpower is over, its status crumbling as surely as the unlamented Berlin Wall. Last month's NATO summit is merely recent evidence of the decline. America's utter addiction to oil, which once powered its climb to might, is its undoing, and an aid to Russia's resumption of power. - Michael T Klare (May 9, '08)

US tightens its grip on Pakistan
It is no coincidence that US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte chose the National Endowment for Democracy to deliver a key-note speech on Pakistan. For years, the US government-funded NED has specialized as a handmaiden of US policies by funding and supporting foreign politicians. Now it is Pakistan's turn to get the full treatment, for as Negroponte says, US national security is inextricably linked to the success, security and stability of that country. - M K Bhadrakumar (May 9, '08)

Iran woos Farsi-speaking nations
Tehran has stepped up its initiative to forge closer links with the two other Farsi-speaking nations in the region, Afghanistan and Tajikistan. Not only will the move kick-start slow trade ties, it signals a greater degree of Iran's integration into a region deemed important by the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, to which Tehran is pressing its claims to join. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (May 9, '08)

SEX IN DEPTH
The young ones
In Japan, where the age of sexual consent can be as low as 13, the practice of an older man hiring a teenage schoolgirl for a "date" is about as firmly established as Mt Fuji. The time-honored custom of enjo kosai has for years caused screams of outrage about innocence gone bad, but efforts to regulate the practice are proving difficult. - William Sparrow (May 9, '08)

China's submarine progress alarms India
Reports of China building a massive strategic naval base capable of housing nuclear-powered submarines on Hainan island in the South China Sea have India on red alert. The fear is not so much that China will launch any offensive against India, but that India is falling far behind in the race to dominate the region's seas. - Siddharth Srivastava (May 8, '08)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
The US: Your masters of the universe
The US Air Force's new slogan, "Air Force - Above All" conveys the basic precept that mastery of the air means mastery of the ground. Yet the air force seeks more than that. It wants to extend its "mastery" to space and even to cyberspace. This is a disturbing manifestation of the military's quest for "full spectrum dominance", achieved at debilitating cost to the American taxpayer - and a potentially destabilizing one to the planet. - William J Astore (retired lieutenant colonel, USAF) (May 8, '08)

US trains Pakistani killing machine
United States Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, drawing on his experience in the Philippines and Nicaragua, is behind an initiative for the US to train up special Pakistani forces to go after high-level al-Qaeda and Taliban targets in Pakistan's tribal areas. The move is an admission that operations by massed Pakistani troops have failed, but it gives the US further inroads into Pakistan. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (May 7, '08)

Yes, the Pentagon did want to hit Iran
Since soon after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks, it has been an open secret that the George W Bush administration wanted to attack Iran. Now comes further confirmation from a document quoted in then-under secretary of defense for policy Douglas Feith's recently published account of Iraq war decisions. It is confirmed, too, that this was part of a broader plan, explicitly supported by the US's top military leaders, to also take out Syria, Libya, Sudan and Somalia. - Gareth Porter. (May 6, '08)
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SUN WUKONG
'Devalue' call undermines
yuan true faith

China for two years has let its currency steadily appreciate against the US dollar, all the time berated by the US and other leading trade partners who insist the yuan should strengthen even faster. Now a Bank of China analyst argues that Beijing should throw its currency policy into reverse and devalue. What gives? - Wu Zhong

Sears: From majesty
to hedge-fund dust

The life and near death of one store charts the rise and decline of the American economy, from frontier innovation to the present crisis of overconsumption. The great US money-creation machine of the past few years has shut down. As the dust settles, we see that very little of real worth remains. - Julian Delasantellis

THE BEAR'S LAIR
Productivity's poisoned legacy
The Wall Street welcome to improved US labor productivity may be short-lived, with the prospects far less positive. Among other factors, capital will probably become more expensive in the years ahead, trade protectionism will intensify and more regulation will burden manufacturing. The next US president will not be responsible, but will take the blame. - Martin Hutchinson

Food bill comes in
for liberalization

Two decades of liberalization in international agriculture have seen poor countries open up to cheap food imports and their farming infrastructure underdeveloped or turned over to growing products for export. That has left them ill-prepared for the present surge in prices. The "experts" now urge more of what got them into this mess.

 THE MOGAMBO GURU

'Unemployed' now a valid job description
Not only are close to a quarter of a million more people on the US government payroll than a year ago, the number on that payroll is more than the folk out there making real things - not even counting the thousands so utterly jobless they have signed up to government programs. And don't even think about that "hospitality" headcount. This is inflation hell!

CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
A new inflationary epoch
The world is awash in excess funds, large amounts of these in the form of foreign currency reserves, available to bid up prices of critical tradable resources. A key question is how much will China, India, Russia and others be willing to pay to procure adequate supplies of food and energy for their populations and economies? (May 12, '08) 
Doug Noland reviews the previous week's events each Monday.

MARKET RAP
Shadows lighten over Asia
The receding fear of an immediate downturn in the US has lightened the shadows over Asian markets. National issues such as inflation or the attraction of regional stocks to Chinese investors found room to assert themselves. Confidence, however, remains in short supply. (May 9, '08) R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets.



[Re Iran woos Farsi-speaking nations, May 10] ... To use Farsi in the context of his argument is self-defeating in that [the writer] should know that the intentional differentiation between Farsi, Dari and Tajiki is another Western ploy to weaken the territorial impact and literary influence of one of the world's richest languages, ie, Persian, which was once the literary and administrative language of a large part of Asia, from Istanbul to Delhi ...
Fatema Soudavar Farmanfarmaian
Tehran
   Go to Letters to the Editor




1. Why Israel is the world's happiest country

2. The case for invading Myanmar

3. An oil-addicted ex-superpower

4. Stranger than fictional balance sheets

5. Hezbollah's street fight just a first step

6. Another Pakistani D-Day over militants

7. China's weakness the greater danger

8. The problem with dictators and disasters

9. China and Japan tiptoe into a 'warm spring'

10. War funding and war rhetoric

(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, May 12, 2008)




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