In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for September, 2010

The West has made even more mistakes in Afghanistan than us, says Russian envoy to Kabul

Posted by seumasach on September 13, 2010

Telegraph

11th Septmebr, 2010

Andrey Avetisyan, a veteran Kabul diplomat, said talk of a handover to the Afghans was currently unrealistic because the coalition had failed to build the nation’s forces or economy.

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West needs new missile shield against Iranian nuclear threat, Nato chief says

Posted by seumasach on September 13, 2010

Leaving aside for the moment the lunatic option of attacking Iran, the deployment of Blair and . now, Rasmussen to highten tensions around a supposed Iranian threat serve two purposes. Respectively, to rally British and American public sentiment behind their bankrupt elites and to tie Europe into the Anglo-American sphere. Both aims can only be attained on the basis of an overwhelming threat, which, in the face reasoned judgment, they claim is posed by Iran. Thus, short of the WW3 option, all this hysteria is basically defensive in nature, being based on the steady and inexorable haemorrhaging of US/UK power.

Telegraph

11th September, 2010

Anders Fogh Rasmussen told The Sunday Telegraph he has full American backing for a proposed €200 million (£165 million) defensive “shield”, which he hopes will be agreed in November at a summit of members in Lisbon.

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Russia Today questions the official version of 9/11

Posted by seumasach on September 12, 2010

RT

11th September, 2010

On the ninth anniversary of the worst terror attacks to strike the US mainland, many questions remain unanswered, not least of all concerning the true identities of the perpetrators.

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Kurt Sonnenfeld: A witness for the persecution

Posted by seumasach on September 11, 2010

Thierry Meyssan and Gaia Edwards

Voltairenet

10th September, 2010

Kurt Sonnenfeld’s case is outstanding for at least two reasons. He is in possession of official documentation that contradicts the U.S. Government’s account of the 9/11 events. He is a high-profile U.S. citizen forced to seek refugee status because of his government’s dogged persecution. Any relation between these two facts is not purely coincidental. Voltaire Network’s second exclusive interview of Kurt Sonnenfeld, conducted in Buenos Aires, is presented below.

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Neuf ans après le 11-Septembre

Posted by seumasach on September 11, 2010

Thierry Meyssan

Voltairenet

9th September, 2010

Le temps passe. Neuf ans après les attentats qui endeuillèrent les États-Unis, la lucidité et la ténacité de Thierry Meyssan portent leurs fruits : une large majorité de personnes dans le monde ne croit plus à la version gouvernementale des États-Unis. Ce phénomène s’observe jusqu’aux États-Unis, où un dernier sondage évalue à 74 % le nombre de citoyens pris par le doute. Même les responsables de la commission d’enquête présidentielle admettent ne pas être convaincus par le rapport qu’ils ont signé. Pour l’initiateur opiniâtre de ce débat, le temps n’est plus à discuter de l’impossibilité de la version officielle, il faut maintenant saisir l’ONU et poursuivre les réels coupables.

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Hariri exonerates Syria over father’s murder

Posted by seumasach on September 11, 2010

Sami Moubayed

Asia Times

10th September, 2010

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri this week put an end to an ongoing saga in his country’s relationship with Syria, saying that the Syrians had not killed his father, Rafik al-Hariri, on that fateful day on February 14, 2005.

Those accusations, he noted, had been “political” adding, “We committed mistakes and were hasty in accusing Syria.” Hariri added that bilateral relations between Syria and Lebanon were “historic and brotherly” and what harmed one country, by default, directly harmed the other.

He said that when visiting Damascus, he always felt he is in a “brotherly and friendly country”. The thundering declaration, made during an interview with the Saudi daily al-Sharq al-Awsat, has ripped through Beirut like a forest fire and left a big smile on the face of the Syrians.

Hariri’s u-turn speaks volumes about what happened in Syrian-Lebanese relations over the past five years, and in the entire Middle East at large: conspiracy, fraud, and plenty of political manipulation.

Hariri, young and politically inexperienced at the time of his father’s death in 2005, aged only 35, was made to believe that Syria was guilty of killing his father, who was killed when a bomb ripped through his motorcade as it drove past the St George Hotelin the Lebanese capital.

A team of veteran politicians surrounding Hariri, headed by men like Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, former premier Fouad Siniora and former Telecoms minister Marwan Hamadeh, wanted him to believe, for political reasons, that Syria had killed their former patron.

Many took their cue from the George W Bush White House, whose relations with Damascus had plummeted after the war onIraq in 2003. They reasoned that with Syrian-Saudi relations in turbulence, and Syrian-US relations reaching rock bottom, it was politically unwise to stand in the way of what Bush wanted for the Middle East.

The young Hariri, furious with the murder, seemingly swallowed the bait presented to him by trusted aides of his father and spearheaded a campaign against Damascus, which lasted until he became prime minister last December.

Today, five years down the road, Hariri has clearly matured, outgrowing the small group of politicians who helped bring him to power in 2005. He has proven to be a wise man, realizing that there is something fishy about the International Tribunal established to investigate his father’s murder, given the resignation of judges in recent months.

A tremendous amount of false witnesses have also turned up over the years, and contrary to what the Hariri family wanted – a clean judicial investigation – the tribunal has been politicized by various international players.

Thanks to Saudi advice, Hariri is beginning to ask questions put forth by both Syria and Hezbollah since day one. Namely: why has there been no investigation into possible Israeli involvement? And why did Detlev Mehlis, the first commissioner of the United Nations-backed tribunal process, base his October 2005 report on the testimony of false witnesses?

The original Mehlis report read like an Agatha Christie crime novel, with imaginative stories of Syrian officials meeting at the Meridian Hotel in Damascus to plan the murder of Hariri. It added that a Mitsubishi van had been loaded with explosives in broad daylight, with no cover, at the summer resort of Zabadani, then sent to Beirut to carry out the attack.

Those reports have been completely discarded by all prosecutors who succeeded Mehlis in the Hariri probe, including the current chief judge, Daniel Bellemare. None of these witnesses have ever been arrested or brought to court and several of them, like central witness Zuhair al-Siddiq, have disappeared under the watchful eyes of the international community.

Also, why is that the four generals arrested in 2005, accused back them of involvement in the murder, were released four years later, declared innocent of the charges originally brought against them by the Hariri investigation? What kind of an investigation is this, Hariri suddenly seems to be asking himself.

Hariri reportedly is starting to see the tribunal, and his father’s entire murder, as part of a large conspiracy targeting his country’s relations with Syria. This is being repeated by those close to him, namely Walid Jumblatt, who did his own u-turn earlier in 2010, and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, who was opposed to internationalizing the Hariri affair from the start.

The King of Saudi Arabia is clearly no longer convinced that Syria had anything to do with the Hariri murder. Had he thought otherwise, simply, he would not have mended his country’s relations with Syria in early 2009 and made two state visits to Damascus since then.

The same applies to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who charted a new course with Syria after succeeding Jacques Chirac, one of the architects of the “Blame it on Syria scenario”. Bush has left the White House, and his successor, Barak Obama, is clearly no longer interested in pursuing a crash course with Syria, vis-a-vis the Hariri affair.

For all practical purposes, the Hariri saga, as far as blaming it on Syria, is finally over. Neither the world community believes that Syria had anything to do with the case anymore, nor does the international tribunal, and nor does Hariri’s own family.

It would be a mistake, however, to believe that the Hariri affair is over, given increased speculation that the upcoming indictment, originally earmarked for this September, will blame members of Hezbollah, Syria’s prime ally in Lebanon, of the Hariri murder.

Hariri after all said that Syria was not guilty of killing his father, but said nothing about Hezbollah in his al-Sharq al-Awsat interview. As far as Syria is concerned, pleased as it may be by the Lebanese premier’s recent statements, blaming Hezbollah is a red line that Syria will not tolerate.

It is as dangerous blaming Hezbollah as Syria. Contrary to what some in the West may believe, a trade-off with the Syrians is not an option for Damascus, which is firmly convinced of Hezbollah’s innocence.

During the most recent summit in Beirut, Saudi Arabia pushed for postponement of the tribunal indictment, while Syria called for complete abolishment of the tribunal, because it had been “catastrophic” for Syria and Lebanon. Whatever transpires in that regard requires a lot of heavyweight diplomacy, by the Syrians, Saudis and Lebanese, and at this stage all options remain on the table on what direction the tribunal will take.

If Syria had nothing to do with the Hariri murder, then who exactly killed the Lebanese premier? The Syrians and Hezbollah believe that Israelis murdered Hariri. Another theory says Hariri was murdered by al-Qaeda-style terrorists. A third argument blames it on different players within Lebanon, who wanted to get rid of the Sunni heavyweight who had prevented the rise of anybody in Beirut politics who was not operating underneath his direct umbrella.

A fourth argument blames it on Hezbollah. A fifth – and the most probable – is that we will never know for sure who really killed Hariri, due to the complexity of the crime and the involvement of so many different and contradicting accomplices. That would place the affair side-by-side with classic mysteries like the murder of former US president John F Kennedy.

Forty-seven years down the road, we still don’t really know if it was Lee Harvey Oswald who gunned Kennedy down on November 22, 1963. And we may never know who killed the former prime minister of Lebanon on February 14, 2005.

Sami Moubayed is editor-in-chief of Forward magazine.

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Munis, Bank Layoffs, and Anti-Bailout Fervor

Posted by seumasach on September 11, 2010

David Goldmen

Asia Times

8th September, 2010

Full disclosure: I just unloaded a large part of my municipal portfolio. I am restricting my holdings to bulletproof bonds with ring-fenced revenue streams. New York City, my home town, went bankrupt once in my lifetime, and with financial industry employment vaporizing and real estate values falling, the Apple is lookng pretty wormy. Meredith Whitney yesterday forecast what everyone in financial industry management has been saying private for weeks: mass layoffs are coming in the banking sector. The banks simply can’t make money with a still-shrinking loan book, a flattening yield curve, and stupid-tight mortgage spreads (thanks to the Fed’s purchasing program).

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If cell phones are behind the bee decline, what are they doing to humans?

Posted by seumasach on September 6, 2010

The Atlantic

30th June, 2010

See also:

ITNT Archive: Disappearing Bees

For years, scientists have been trying to explain why the bee population has been drastically declining. A new study may hold the answer, CNN reports, and it could have an impact on humans, too. First, the study:

In a study at Panjab University in Chandigarh, northern India, researchers fitted cell phones to a hive and powered them up for two fifteen-minute periods each day.

After three months, they found the bees stopped producing honey, egg production by the queen bee halved, and the size of the hive dramatically reduced.

Andrew Goldsworthy, a biologist from Imperial College, London, told CNN that the reason may have to do with radiation from cell phones and cell towers disturbing the molecules of the chemical cryptochrome, which bees and other animals use for navigation. The “other animals” part there is key: it includes humans.

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US becoming a Third World country?

Posted by seumasach on September 6, 2010

As the US/UK faces oblivion it is hardly coincidental that they are trying to reactivate a key “asset” with a view to stirring up further evil: I refer to the inimitable liar and charlatan Tony Blair who is not only still at large but is being presented as a senior statesman. This is the epitomy of desperation.

PressTV

6th September, 2010

Some of the warning signs that indicate America’s fantastic fall from a First World nation include rising unemployment and poverty.

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Syria wasn’t behind assassination of Hariri

Posted by seumasach on September 6, 2010

PressTV

6th September

“At some point, we made a mistake,” AFP quoted Hariri as telling the Saudi-owned daily Asharq al-Awsat on Monday.

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A cunning bid to shore up the ruins of the IPCC

Posted by seumasach on September 6, 2010

Christophere Booker

Telegraph

4th September, 2010

A report on the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, on behalf of the world’s leading scientific academies, last week provoked even some of the more committed believers in man-made global warming to demand the resignation of Dr Rajendra Pachauri as chairman of the IPCC. But is the report all that it seems?

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