In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for December, 2010

Afghanistan: Opium, the CIA and the Karzai Administration

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

Peter Dale Scott

Voltairenet

13th December, 2010

According to Peter Dale Scott, there is no point in deploring the expansion of drug production in Afghanistan and the heroin epidemic gripping great parts of the world. Conclusions must be drawn from the established facts: the Taliban eradicated poppy cultivation; NATO promoted it; drug money corrupted the Karzai government but it is especially inside U.S. institutions that drug corruption is rife. Therefore, the solution does not lie with Kabul but with Washington.

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Debt crisis threat to Spain and Belgium

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

The next stage of the attack on the euro has begun with the rating agencies as usual providing the cue to the media and the City hedge funds, with the IMF lurking in the wings. Spain’s interest rate jumped dramatically whilst Britain, with its traditional “good housekeeping”, its virtual economy and still intact AAA rating, still offers only 0.75%. (The road to success lies, it seems , in economic destruction.) The answer would seem to be to curb speculative inflows from outside the Eurozone, notably from the City of London; but is Europe read yet for this dramatic fissure in the unity of the West? For the moment, it remains wide open to continued attack.

This is Money

15th December, 2010

Spain and Belgium were dragged deeper into the European debt crisis on Tuesday as financial turmoil continued to rock the Continent.

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Moscow moves to counter NATO

Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

“In sum, Russia trusts the need for a “reset” in ties with NATO, but is under compulsion to “verify” its sincerity. As Lavrov put it, “serious questions arise” out of the contradictory tendencies in NATO’s posturing toward Russia. Moscow decided to keep the CSTO as an effective counter-alliance – just in case McCain’s school of thinking gains ground in Washington.”

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

14th December, 2010

Many people wouldn’t know that former United States president Ronald Reagan’s signature phrase “trust, but verify” is actually the translation of a Russian proverb – doveryai, no proveryai. Two decades into the post-Cold War era, Moscow wants to reclaim the self-contradictory phrase from the American repertoire and apply it to Russia’s “reset” of ties with the United States.

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Gerry Adams welcomes ‘MI5 offer’ to disclose files on Pat Finucane murder

Posted by smeddum on December 15, 2010

Sinn Féin president says existence of files on murder of Finucane, who was shot dead in 1989 by loyalist gunmen working with members of the security forces, is significant

  • Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent
  • guardian.co.uk,
  • Monday 13 December 2010 10.49 GMT
  • Article history
  • Gerry Adams. Gerry Adams. Photograph: Julien Behal/PA

    Gerry Adams welcomed the disclosure that MI5 is prepared to hand over files on a high-profile murder. 

    The Sinn Féin president said the existence of MI5 files on the murder of Pat Finucane, the civil rights lawyer who was shot dead in 1989 by loyalist gunmen working with members of the security forces, could be significant. Read the rest of this entry »

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    Britain ‘pioneer in rights violation’

    Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

    13th December, 2010
    Mohammad-Javad Larijani, the Secretary of Iranian Judiciary’s Human Rights Headquarters, has said that British government is pioneer in human rights violation.

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    ‘Britain should mind its own business’

    Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

    PressTV

    14th December, 2010

    Iran’s human rights chief Mohammad Javad Larijani says Britain should take care of its own domestic affairs rather than resorting to baseless allegations to cover up its own problems.

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    China Expanding its Influence in Europe

    Posted by seumasach on December 15, 2010

    Spiegel, a longstanding atlanticist outfit, delights in portraying China’s engagement with Europe as “political”. So, of course, is the campaign to undermine the euro. China’s deployment of soft power in Europe illustrates the shift of power away from the West: after all, Greece, Ireland at al could simply withdraw from Europe and throw themselves into the arms of the Americans, but they know that would be suicidal.

    Spiegel

    14th December, 2010

    China is seizing on Europe’s debt problems to expand its influence on the continent with large-scale investments and purchases of government bonds issued by highly-indebted states. The strategy could push Europe into the same financial dependency on China that is posing a dilemma for the US.

    Posted in Battle for Europe | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

    Washington’s geopolitical nightmare: China and Russia boost economic cooperation

    Posted by seumasach on December 14, 2010

    F.William Engdahl

    Voltairenet

    11th December, 2010

    Whatever internal factional battles might be going on inside Kremlin walls between Medvedev and Putin, there are clear signs of late that both Beijing and Moscow are moving decisively after long hesitation to strengthen strategic economic cooperation in the face of the obvious disintegration of America as the sole Superpower. If the recent trend is deepened it will create Washington’s worst geopolitical nightmare: a unified Eurasia landmass capable of challenging America’s global economic hegemony.

    As the Chinese proverb has it, we indeed live in “interesting times.” Just when it seemed Moscow was moving closer to Washington under President Medvedev, agreeing to cancel Russian sale of a controversial S-300 missile defense system to Iran and moving to cooperate with Washington on NATO issues including possibly missile defense, Moscow and Beijing have agreed a series of measures which could have major geopolitical implications, not the least for the future of Germany and the European Union space.

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    UK Govt Moves Against 12-Year-Old Dissident

    Posted by smeddum on December 13, 2010

    UK Govt Moves Against 12-Year-Old Dissident

    Jason Ditz

    uruknet.info

    December 12, 2010

    Pointing to the Cameron government’s growing impatience over student protests, British officials have reportedly moved against 12-year-old Nicky Wishart, henceforth known as the Notorious Nicky of Oxfordshire, threatening him with arrest for threatening the public peace. Read the rest of this entry »

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    Scenes from a shut down

    Posted by seumasach on December 13, 2010

    eon3emfblog

    10th December, 2010

    California’s Bellwether ‘Smart Meter’ Fight
    Heats Up

    The message?
    A Wireless Grid Ain’t ‘Smart.’
    For a Wise Grid, Put it in the Wires!

    Three determined women – two young mothers and an ecofeminist author – risk arrest demanding a moratorium on installation of smart meters and essential technical information describing exactly what the emissions are composed of that are making people sick. But PG&E refused to have police make arrests, people theorized, in order to prevent more publicity about the widely criticized meters and the health problems increasingly associated with them. Many PG&E customers are reporting headaches, dizziness, nausea, tinnitus and heart palpitations that began when the new wireless meters were installed. About thirty demonstrators from throughout the Bay area participated.

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    Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

    Peter Ross: some Scottish demonstrations over fees are a more sedate affair

    Posted by seumasach on December 13, 2010

    Scotland on Sunday

     

     

    12th December, 2010

     

     

    ‘AWRIGHT, let’s go,” says Sean. “We’re gonna do HSBC.” This, on a late morning in Glasgow when the temperature is minus 12, is as close as you get to a cri de coeur.

     

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    Sean Clerkin, a 49-year-old call centre worker, is an organiser of Citizens United, an eclectic group of pensioners and anarchists, students and academics, public and private sector employees who are angry and fearful about the government’s spending cuts.

    Their response has been to occupy banks – entering, protesting and refusing to leave. So far they have occupied three: Glasgow branches of HBOS, Lloyds TSB and the Royal Bank of Scotland were all hit last month. Now they are on their way to a fourth occupation: HSBC on West Nile Street.

    Citizens United consider themselves fellow travellers of the student protesters who recently brought chaos to Millbank and, last Thursday, brought violence to Westminster. Though Citizens United insist they are non-violent, they are driven by the same anger and sense of injustice which led to blood and bonfires in Parliament Square. They feel, to paraphrase David Cameron, that they are all in this together.

    “It’s more than just the students. There’s something deeper happening in our society,” says Clerkin. “There’s definitely an undercurrent of militancy growing among people. This is the beginning of something.”

    Citizens United make a motley band, slogging up slushy streets, the air around them clouded with frozen breath and the smoke from roll-ups. They don’t resemble the usual rent-a-mob. They range in age from mid-twenties to early eighties; visually, it’s a real mix of mohicans, black anarchy flags, young women dressed as Dorothy from The Wizard Of Oz, white hair and sensible anoraks. The OAP wing is very striking in this context. When they walk into a bank, it looks like the cast of Still Game gatecrashing an episode of The Apprentice.

    There is no denying the seriousness of their intent, however. Citizens United argue that the economic crisis was caused by recklessness within the financial sector and that, despite this, bankers continue to enjoy “obscene salaries and bonuses” while the poor bear the brunt of the cuts. “This reminds me of the conditions in Paris in 1968 – the way the student occupations blossomed out into workers’ struggles, and then the state repression that came afterwards,” says Ian Cowan, 47. “That’s what’s coming.”

    We find ourselves, suddenly, in a new winter of discontent. Though the various causes may seem diverse – from anti-tuition fees to rage against the financial machine – they are all being driven by the economic crisis, by dismay at the coalition government’s response, and by a visceral revulsion at a Cabinet which includes 23 millionaires.

    Posted in UK economy | Leave a Comment »