13th August, 2011
Millions of people have taken to the streets of cities and towns in Yemen for “Friday of the Victory by God’s Will” demonstrations, which were organized by the Youth Revolutionist group.
Posted by seumasach on August 13, 2011
13th August, 2011
Millions of people have taken to the streets of cities and towns in Yemen for “Friday of the Victory by God’s Will” demonstrations, which were organized by the Youth Revolutionist group.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: Arab revolution, yemen | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 13, 2011
12th August, 2011
Um grupo de políticos e ativistas sociais brasileiros embarca neste domingo (14) rumo à Líbia, atendendo a convite do dos Comitês Populares líbios.
Posted in Libya | Tagged: NATO war crimes in Libya, Stop the bombing of Libya | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
NATO’s mission to protect civilians will go on until there are no more civilians to protect
12th August, 2011
French President Nicolas Sarkozy says his country will stick with the international campaign against Libya’s longtime leader until the end.
Sarkozy said Friday, August 12 that France’s military effort – central to the nearly five-month-old NATO-led operation – “will remain constant.”
He said there is no choice but to “go to the end of the mission.”
The U.N.-mandated campaign against Moammar Gadhafi’s forces has been deadlocked for long periods, and public support for the costly mission has waned.
Sarkozy was speaking to forces aboard the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier, which was operating off the Libyan coast for months and was crucial to the NATO campaign. The carrier is returning to port in Toulon on the Mediterranean for maintenance, the Associated Press reported.
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Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
Libya — Lather, Rinse, Repeat — Syria:
Liberal Imperialism and the Refusal to Learn
Maximilian C.Forte
10th August, 2011
Two of my favorite quotes come into play here, one by the English poet, Alexander Pope, who explained that “some people will never learn anything . . . because they understand everything too soon,” and George Bernard Shaw, much more resigned and ironic in stating that “we learn from experience that men never learn anything from experience.” From various misguided and superficial “open letters” to “the left” on Libya, to the recent renewal of righteous interventionism with respect to Syria, it seems that the greatest deficit in Western thinking about these unruly and barbarous others is not a deficit in sincerity, as I once mistakenly thought, but a learning deficit. One detects a strong tendency among liberal imperialists and assorted self-designated “progressives” to think of their actions and thoughts as being above history, as if residing in some altostratus of unimpeachable rectitude. If they pretend to act and think as if they were gods, it is not an historical accident. At the end of their day, as believers in Western progress, they remain convinced that they are at the high point of evolutionary teleology. At the last stage of a dying empire, imperial advocates (not confined to any one ideology) are still gripped by the conviction that theirs is the highest stage of human achievement. They resent history (inevitable imperial decline) as much as they resent particularity (difference they can never tolerate). High up in the clouds, perched on the wings of various stealth bombers, they preach the ideology of universal, individual human rights. Blinded by their own wind, they lose the ability to see that even their own “universal declaration of human rights” contained distinct concerns for social and economic rights — though buried at the end, past the point of the current imperial attention deficit disorder (Arts. 21-27). If people have the right to eat, but not the right to tweet, then they are judged to be living under tyranny. This is shallow humanitarianism, callous in its disregard for the materialities that make human life possible, a humanitarianism at the end of empire and as bankrupt as the state powers whose authority the humanitarians invoke.
Posted in Disband NATO!, Libya, Syria | Tagged: Stop the bombing of Libya | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
This move is on the mark as will be revealed by the reaction of Wall Street/City circles. Belatedly and reluctantly Europe is taken action to defend itself against its NATO allies
Aug 12 (Reuters) – Germany will push for a European ban on naked short-selling of stocks, government bonds and credit default swaps, a Finance Ministry spokesman told Reuters on Friday.
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Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
Sami Moubayed
13th August, 2011
DAMASCUS – When Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu landed in Damascus on Tuesday, one Syrian official was startled by how serious the Turkish guest acted on getting off the airplane. It was a chilly “How do you do?,” no doubt. Smiling, the Syrian official looked at him and said, “Mr Minister, no kisses?”
Posted in Syria | Tagged: Turkish diplomacy | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
Pepe Escobar
13th August, 2011
Suppose this was a Hollywood script conference and you have to pitch your story idea in 10 words or less. It’s a movie about Syria. As much as the currently in-research Kathryn Hurt Locker Bigelow film about the Osama bin Laden raid was pitched as “good guys take out Osama in Pakistan”, the Syrian epic could be branded “Sunnis and Shi’ites battle for Arab republic”.
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Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
Ex-terrorist from Benghazi in France recognizes that NATO and the terrorists have already lost
Leo Vershinin
Pravda
11th August, 2011
In a TV interview, Dr. Rejeb Muftakhov Budabusa, judging by numerous paraphrases and a more or less detailed digest, made a considerable impression on “all Paris” not having forgotten that in February and early March, he ardently advocated “peaceful demonstrations” in Benghazi and for “salvation from the punishment of Cyrenaica.”
Posted in Libya | Tagged: Stop the bombing of Libya | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
Voltairenet
11th August, 2011
After 150 days of bombing, NATO has razed numerous facilities while failing to achieve any convincing military results. This is largely due to its lack of strategic forethinking. In Libya, NATO assumed it could apply the same classic methods that were conceived for different settings. It is now stuck in a quandary. The greatest military alliance in history, which was initially created to confront the USSR and was then slated to become the world’s policeman, has fallen woefully short of its recycling goals.
Posted in Libya | Tagged: NATO war crimes in Libya, Stop the bombing of Libya | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2011
“The Secretary General is deeply concerned by reports of the unacceptably large number of civilian casualties as a result of the conflict in Libya,”
What then is an acceptable number of civilian casualties in an operation aiming to protect civilians?- how many civilians can you kill while protecting them?
12th August, 2011
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has expressed concern over the rising civilian casualties in Libya, saying there will be no military solution for resolving the conflict in the North African nation.
Posted in Libya | Tagged: Stop the bombing of Libya | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on August 11, 2011
Cailean Bochanan
11th August, 2011
Although everyday life seems to go on as normal, looting and burning notwithstanding, the worlds events are hurtling towards their denouement. Never has one flashpoint succeeded another with such breakneck speed and the prevailing feeling can only be one of bewilderment. This year has seen, so far, the Arab Spring, a new war against an Arab nation which has gone disastrously wrong for “the scourge of the world”, the new Tamberlaine, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, a new stock market collapse, unpredented post-modern rioting ,the Norwegian terror attacks and the implosion of the Murdoch empire, amongst other prodigies. The question is: how are these events connected?
Posted in Battle for Europe, Currency Wars, Drive to Global War, Libya | Leave a Comment »