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    Front Page
    
Myanmar courts political disaster

Myanmar's military rulers are playing with fire through their response - or deliberate lack of one - to the cyclone calamity that has claimed over 22,000 lives and damaged huge swathes of premier rice-growing areas. The generals fear that diverting the military to relief operations will compromise security in a country already on the edge of an abyss, but even then, this is a prime time for the urban-based population to revolt and for simmering ethnic insurgencies to explode. - Brian McCartan (May 7, '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)

COMMENT
US terror report misses the point
The US State Department's annual terrorism report makes no secret of the fact that al-Qaeda is back, strong as ever. But if al-Qaeda indeed exists on such a large and influential scale in so many countries, is it not time to question the logic used by the George W Bush administration's "war on terror", which was meant to weaken and destroy al-Qaeda in the first place? - Ramzy Baroud (May 7, '08)

Beijing treads a Tibetan tightrope
China's state-run media are gushing over the government's first face-to-face talks with representatives of the Dalai Lama since the March 14 riots in Lhasa, painting a rosy picture of rapprochement and progress. What is not mentioned is Beijing's dilemma, caught between Western pressure, Olympic apprehension and internal hawks who have branded the Dalai Lama "a wolf in monk's robes". - Fong Tak-ho (May 7, '08)

Warning signs of Indian heart crisis
A new study shows that India faces a crippling attack of heart diseases on an already overstretched health care sector. Genetic predisposition and non-traditional lifestyles, the study finds, are pumping cases of cardiac ailments into undermanned hospitals so rapidly that in just two years, India will have 60% of the world's heart patients. As one doctor put it, "We're sitting on a time bomb." - Neeta Lal (May 7, '08)

KEBABBLE
Tequila and Turkish nationalism
Turkey celebrates Children's Day and National Sovereignty Day on the same date, and that's just how founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk wanted it. The day celebrates youth and serves as a reminder that today's boys and girls must protect the future of the republic. But for some parents, perhaps Armenian or Kurdish, the jingoistic flavor of the raucous celebration can be most disquieting. - Fazile Zahir (May 7, '08)

Bait and switch in Russia?
As a loyal and longtime friend, there are suspicions Dmitry Medvedev, who becomes president of Russia on Wednesday, will be a puppet while outgoing Vladimir Putin continues to pull the strings. Medvedev may even stand aside early to allow Putin to return to the presidency. (May 7, '08)

   Medvedev sworn in (AFP)



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)

THE BEAR'S LAIR
Draining national prosperity
Relief engendered by the latest US GDP figures is misplaced, given recent monetary and fiscal inputs. Gradually increasing output and the optimistic stock market will sooner or later be confronted by consumer price figures. At that point, the US will suffer a monetary and political crisis. Awkwardly, that is more likely to occur before November's US presidential election. - Martin Hutchinson (May 6, '08)

New offer threatens Iran's 'red line'
The key nations negotiating over Iran's nuclear program hail their latest offer of incentives for Tehran to give up its uranium-enrichment activities as a part of a "twin-track strategy", the other being United Nations sanctions. There is actually a third "war track", the drumbeat of which can be heard in Washington and Tel Aviv. And further, the incentives directly challenge Iran's "red line". - Kaveh Afrasiabi (May 6, '08)

China-bashing is a blind man's game
China's renaissance, arguably the most significant story of our time, offers to the world as much as the world brings to China. Yet some fail to grasp the big picture, and for them, China's re-emergence generates anxiety. The result is anti-Chinese rhetoric and behavior that can only generate anti-Western attitudes within China. Meanwhile Beijing and the West could join forces to solve global problems. - David Gosset (May 6, '08)

Myanmar faces up to cyclone disaster
With the death of more than 15,000 people and millions missing or homeless following Saturday's cyclone, the junta in Myanmar is slowly opening its doors to foreign aid, even though this will expose the full extent of the disaster and the inadequacy of the government's initial response. At the same time, the junta is adamant the weekend referendum on a new constitution will go ahead. - Larry Jagan (May 6, '08)

Fuel tax cut running on empty
US presidential candidates pledging to cut fuel taxes blithely ignore the fact they are not placed to make that happen. As bad, it is not what their country needs in response to rising prices. Worse, any such cuts would hit funding of transport infrastructure that already lags behind its counterparts in Asia. - Julian Delasantellis (May 6, '08)

SUN WUKONG
Blowing the whistle
on 'Big Brother'

Fundamental problems exist in China's railway system, not the least of which is that the behemoth Ministry of Railways is both the monopoly operator and industry regulator for all rail transport. If this system is not restructured, nothing will change, and accidents such as the recent crash that claimed 70 lives will continue. - Wu Zhong (May 6, '08)

CAMPAIGN OUTSIDER
Democrats do have a nominee
No matter who wins this Tuesday's votes in Indiana and North Carolina, the Democratic US presidential nomination remains a foregone conclusion. But it may be a different foregone conclusion than the one of two weeks ago. - Muhammad Cohen (May 5, '08)

Speculators knock OPEC off oil-price perch
The bulk of price gains in oil is attributable not to supply problems but to speculative activity by hedge funds and others with no direct use for the fuel beyond profiting from its changing value. The door to much of this unregulated trade was opened by the US energy futures regulator under the George W Bush administration. - F William Engdahl (May 5, '08)

Energized Iran builds more bridges
In terms of whom it conducts its energy business with, Iran keeps all its options open, and it will not allow itself to be pushed out of the European market as exports are the bridge that will facilitate its all-round integration with the Western world. Tehran's hectic diplomatic activity in this regard has put the "Iran Six" countries dealing with its nuclear dossier on the defensive: none of them wants confrontation with Iran. - M K Bhadrakumar (May 5, '08)

SPENGLER
The heart has its own unreason
In one of the weirder acts of recent diplomacy, a delegation of robed and turbaned Iranian mullahs went to Rome to declare with due solemnity they shared the pope's view that reason and faith are compatible. The issue, however, will not be decided by the Iranian clergy or the Holy See, but by people such as journalist Magdi Allam. - Spengler (May 5, '08)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
The last war and the next one
There is no end in sight to the war in Iraq, but United States Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has been criticizing the military for not getting fully behind an imperial strategy for "the next war", counterinsurgency battles across the globe similar to the (futile) one now raging in Sadr City in Bagdad. - Tom Engelhardt (May 5, '08)

COMMENT
Just blame it on China and India
US President George W Bush's blaming China and India for global warming and food shortages shows that the rise of these two countries is a problem for Washington. Besides, the real blame can be placed on Western over-consumption and exploitation of resources. - Sreeram Chaulia (May 5, '08)

THE MOGAMBO GURU
Gold price suppression scheme
How long the present relatively low price of gold will stay that way may depend on whether the US Federal Reserve has sold half the country's gold and if it is prepared to stop at half. At least that would give us the opportunity to buy more gold cheaply for a while longer yet. (May 5, '08)

How under-the-gun Iran plays it cool
What Iranian leaders dream of is an Iran respected as a major power. To this end, they have little choice, faced with the enmity of the globe's "sole superpower", but to employ a sophisticated counter-encirclement foreign policy. And given President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's place in the country's politico-religious politics, he might be betting on the usefulness of an American air assault. - Pepe Escobar (May 2, '08)

Iran moving into the big league
From the Persian Gulf to the Caspian region, the Caucasus, Central Asia, South Asia and beyond, Iran thanks to its geographical location is an ideal connecting bridge that has not until now fully exploited its advantageous equidistance from India and Europe. This is exemplified in the US$7.6 billion gas pipeline that will flow from Iran to Pakistan to India, and which is finally close to reality. Tehran is ambitiously moving from regional power to global power. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (May 2, '08)

CHAN AKYA
Abandoning USS Titanic
As the world comes to grips with declining United States power both in political and economic terms, it is surreal that global media appear so keen to paper over the cracks. But with even the corrupt and unctuous Gulf dictators rebelling against the US dollar, this is the beginning of the end. (May 2, '08)

Taliban claim victory from a defeat
In their first offensive since arriving last month, thousands of US Marines have captured the town of Garmsir in the southern Afghan province of Helmand from the Taliban. The Taliban are unconcerned. They claim the mass of foreign troops will now be tied down chasing shadows and battling drug cartels, while the Taliban concentrate on the east of the country. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (May 2, '08)


ASIA HAND
What's eating Thai Tesco?
British-based superstore operator Tesco has notched up remarkable growth in Thailand, where shoppers appreciate the clean and air-conditioned environment of its outlets along with the low prices. With success comes enemies, some armed, and government legislation that could curb growth. Now the company is fighting back in the courts, risking even more local wrath. - Shawn W Crispin (May 2, '08) 


Economy takes US center stage
A major new survey finds that oil prices and other economic issues are edging out foreign policy concerns on the US public's worry list. Seventy percent of respondents say they worry "a lot" about soaring energy costs, and the survey's aptly named "Anxiety Indicator" shows that 84% worry about the way things are going for the US. - Jim Lobe (May 1, '08)


The heat is on Muqtada
The fierce battle raging in Baghdad's Sadr City between Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army and United States and Iraqi forces has claimed more than 1,000 lives over the past few weeks. What is not clear is the motive behind the offensive against the Shi'ite militia. It could be the Americans, trying to nip in the bud any united front between Muqtada and Sunnis. Or the Iranians, wanting to eliminate a potential thorn in their side. Either way, Muqtada has a fight on his hands. - Sami Moubayed (May 1, '08)

China's pride versus Western prejudice
The Chinese government did not expect the Olympic Games to be politicized to the extent they have been and the result is a big loss for Beijing. It has also damaged the image of China's "harmonious society" and prompted a new wave of Chinese nationalism. Many Chinese now feel, for the first time in many years, antagonized by Western ideology. - Da Wei (May 1, '08)
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The delusion
of markets


Markets buoyed by the illusion that US GDP rose in the first quarter ignore the impact of years of stagnant workers' earnings and rising unemployment. A significant portion of the middle class is being squeezed - and their votes will count come the November presidential election. - Max Fraad Wolff

Bangladesh turns
to tainted tycoons

Bangladesh's interim government is finding that getting rid of corruption has a downside. Two years after arresting 200 businessmen and politicians, including two former prime ministers, in an anti-corruption drive, it is now looking to get some back to work to help revive factories flagging in their absence.

Public water, privately
bottled profits

Coca-Cola and other companies meeting soaring demand in India for bottled water face protests over their access to public supplies of groundwater, particularly in drought-prone areas. The government is being urged to impose tighter regulations, while traditional water treatments are being shunned. - Raja M

The Fed's deformed maturity
The purportedly independent US Federal Reserve betrays its origins with its knee-jerk response to downturns from technology stocks to housing prices, its willingness to finance large fiscal deficits through low interest rates and its blindness to the impact of inflation and demands for economic justice. The US Congress and policymakers should remain indifferent no longer. - Hossein Askari and Noureddine Krichene

 THE MOGAMBO GURU

Downsizing on the menu
The ghastly mess that is the US economy is giving consumers plenty to chew over - such as how producers mask inflationary horrors by cutting portion sizes while pushing up the cost-per-mouthful of your breakfast favorite. Even so, eat while you can before your local state government starts figuring out how to plug the gaping hole in its finances.

CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
More than one step backwards
American economist Hyman Minsky warned a decade ago that evolution in the financial world is not necessarily a progressive process. Since that insight, a whole new financial structure appears to have evolved, one that is definitely retrograde with its need for ever-expanding non-productive debt. (May 5, '08)
Doug Noland reviews the previous week's events each Monday.

MARKET RAP
Pacific remains pacified
Traders taking a break from their labors in Asia could do so reasonably satisfied with unfolding events. Once heady share-price declines appear to be halted with prospects of strengthening markets ahead. That apparent local stability may be welcome if the sense of panic returns to Wall Street. (May 2, '08)
R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets  



[Re letter from Dennis O'Connell, May 5] ... The truth of the matter is that what the US has had since the end of World War II is not "democracy" as in "rule by the majority", but a mixture of democracy, plutocracy, and militarism with the balance favoring the latter two. ... Ironically, it is China's foreign policy that hews much more closely to George Washington's warning to seek commerce with all but enmity with none.
Jonathan X
   Go to Letters to the Editor




1. Yes, the Pentagon did want to hit Iran

2. Gold price suppression scheme

3. Draining national prosperity

4. New offer threatens Iran's 'red line'

5. Speculators knock OPEC off price perch

6. China-bashing is a blind man's game

7. Just blame it on China and India

8. Myanmar faces up to cyclone disaster

9. Democrats do have a nominee

10. The twilight of irredeemable debt

(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, May 6, 2008)




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