In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘End of empire’

The European Radical Left Programme

Posted by seumasach on June 3, 2010

Cailean Bochanan

3rd June, 2010

The European radical left programme is a broadly positive document. It takes a clear stand against the austerity programmes being put into effect throughout Europe, it calls for an end to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, an end to NATO and calls for a public banking system.

However, there is a notable omission: there is no call to follow the measures implemented by Angela Merkel banning derivatives trading with a view to curbing the speculative attack on the Euro and the Eurozone as a whole. It is most striking that not only leftist governments such as those of Zapatero and Papandreou but also leftist forces on the ground have failed to pick up on this historic and possibly decisive initiative. We are thus faced in Greece and Spain with the classic scenario of class struggle, but with leftists on both sides, those in government calling for austerity and those manning the barricades opposing them. But can this conflict be reduced to this?

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A plague upon the world: the USA is a “failed state”

Posted by seumasach on June 2, 2010

Interview with Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary US Treasury, Associate Editor Wall Street Journal, Professor of Political Economy Center for Strategic and International StudiesGeorgetown University Washington DC.

Question:  Dr. Roberts,  the United States is regarded as the most successful state in the world today. What is responsible for American success?

Dr. Roberts:  Propaganda. If truth be known, the US is a failed state. More about that later. The US owes its image of success to: (1) the vast lands and mineral resources that the US “liberated” with violence from the native inhabitants, (2) Europe’s, especially Great Britain’s, self-destruction in World War I and World War II, and (3) the economic destruction of Russia and most of Asia by communism or socialism.

After World War II, the US took the reserve currency role from Great Britain. This made the US dollar the world money and permitted the US to pay its import bills in its own currency. World War II’s destruction of the other industrialized countries left the US as the only country capable of supplying products to world markets. This historical happenstance created among Americans the impression that they were a favored people. Today the militarist neoconservatives speak of the United States as “the indispensable nation.”  In other words, Americans are above all others, except, of course, Israelis.

To American eyes a vague “terrorist threat,” a creation of their own government, is sufficient justification for naked aggression against Muslim peoples and for an agenda of world hegemony.

This hubristic attitude explains why among most Americans there is no remorse over the one million Iraqis killed and the four million Iraqis displaced by a US invasion and occupation that were based entirely on lies and deception. It explains why there is no remorse among most Americans for the countless numbers of Afghans who have been cavalierly murdered by the US military, or for the Pakistani civilians murdered by US drones and “soldiers” sitting in front of video screens. It explains why there is no outrage among Americans when the Israelis bomb Lebanese civilians and Gazacivilians.  No one in the world will believe that Israel’s latest act of barbarity, the murderous attack on the international aid flotilla to Gaza, was not cleared with Israel’s American enabler.

Question:  You said that the US was a failed state. How can that be? What do you mean?

Roberts:  The war on terror, invented by the George W. Bush/Dick Cheney regime, destroyed the US Constitution and the civil liberties that the Constitution embodies. The Bill of Rights has been eviscerated. The Obama regime has institutionalized the Bush/Cheney assault on American liberty. Today, no American has any rights if he or she is accused of “terrorist” activity. The Obama regime has expanded the vague definition of “terrorist activity” to include “domestic extremist,” another undefined and vague category subject to the government’s discretion.  In short, a “terrorist” or a “domestic extremist” is anyone who dissents from a policy or a practice that the US government regards as necessary for its agenda of world hegemony.

Unlike some countries, the US is not an ethic group. It is a collection of diverse peoples united under the Constitution. When the Constitution was destroyed, the US ceased to exist. What exists today are power centers that are unaccountable. Elections mean nothing, as both parties are dependent on the same powerful interest groups for campaign funds. The most powerful interest groups are the military/security complex, which includes the Pentagon, the CIA, and the corporations that service them, the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, the oil industry that is destroying the Gulf of Mexico, Wall Street (investment banks and hedge funds), the insurance companies, the pharmaceutical companies, and the agri-companies that produce food of questionable content.

These corporate powers comprise an oligarchy that cannot be dislodged by voting. Ever since “globalism” was enacted into law, the Democrats have been dependent on the same corporate sources of income as the Republicans, because globalism destroyed the labor unions. Consequently, there is no difference between  the Republicans and Democrats, or no meaningful difference.

The “war on terror” completed the constitutional/legal failure of the US. The US has also failed economically. Under Wall Street pressure for short-term profits, US corporations have moved offshore their production for US consumer markets. The result has been to move US GDP and millions of well-paid US jobs to countries, such as China and India, where labor and professional expertise are cheap. This practice has been going on since about 1990.

After 20 years of offshoring US production, which destroyed American jobs and federal, state and local tax base, the US unemployment rate, as measured by US government methodology in 1980, is over 20 percent. The ladders of upward mobility have been dismantled. Millions of young Americans with university degrees are employed as waitresses and bartenders. Foreign enrollment comprises a larger and larger percentage of US universities as the American population finds that a university degree has been negated by the offshoring of the jobs that the graduates expected.

When US offshored production re-enters the US as imports, the trade balance deteriorates. Foreigners use their surplus dollars to purchase existing US assets.
Consequently, dividends, interest, capital gains, tolls from toll roads, rents, and profits, now flow abroad to foreign owners, thus increasing the pressure on the US dollar. The US has been able to survive the mounting claims of foreigners against US GDP because the US dollar is the reserve currency. However, the large US budget and trade deficits will put pressures on the dollar that will become too extreme for the dollar to be able to sustain this role. When the dollar fails, the USpopulation will be impoverished.

The US is heavily indebted, both the government and the citizens. Over the last decade there has been no growth in family income. The US economy was kept going through the expansion of consumer debt. Now consumers are so heavily indebted that they cannot borrow more. This means that the main driving force of the US economy, consumer demand, cannot increase. As consumer demand comprises 70% of the economy, when consumer demand cannot increase, there can be no economic recovery.

The US is a failed state also because there is no accountability to the people by corporations or by government at any level, whether state, local, or federal. British Petroleum is destroying the Gulf of Mexico. The US government has done nothing. The Obama regime’s response to the crisis is more irresponsible than the Bush regime’s response to Hurricane Katrina. Wetlands and fisheries are being destroyed by unregulated capitalist greed and by a government that treats the environment with contempt. The tourist economy of Florida is being destroyed. The external costs of drilling in deep waters exceeds the net worth of the oil industry. As a result of the failure of the American state, the oil industry is destroying one of the world’s most valuable ecological systems.

Question:  What can be done?

Roberts:  The American people are lost in la-la land. They have no idea that their civil liberties have been forfeited. They are only gradually learning that their economic future is compromised. They have little idea of the world’s growing hatred of Americans for their destruction of other peoples. In short, Americans are full of themselves. They have no idea of the disasters that their ignorance and inhumanity have brought upon themselves and upon the world.

Much of the world, looking at a country that appears both stupid and inhumane, wonders at Americans’ fine opinion of themselves. Is America the virtuous “indispensable nation” of neoconservative propaganda, or is America a plague upon the world?

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Brzezinski Decries “Global Political Awakening” During CFR Speech

Posted by seumasach on May 21, 2010

Brzezinski explained that global political leadership had become “much more diversified unlike what it was until relatively recently,”

At least old Zbigniew has an eye for reality, This couldn’t be clearer as an expression of disillusionment with a rapidly failing project:the empire is collapsing in the face of popular and national resistance throughout the world!

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Wednesday, May 19, 2010

At a recent Council on Foreign Relations speech in Montreal, co-founder with David Rockefeller of the Trilateral Commission and regular Bilderberg attendee Zbigniew Brzezinski warned that a “global political awakening,” in combination with infighting amongst the elite, was threatening to derail the move towards a one world government.

Brzezinski explained that global political leadership had become “much more diversified unlike what it was until relatively recently,” noting the rise of China as a geopolitical power, and that global leadership in the context of the G20 was “lacking internal unity with many of its members in bilateral antagonisms.”

In other words, the global elite is infighting amongst itself and this is hampering efforts to rescue the agenda for global government, which seems to be failing on almost every front.

Brzezinski then explained another significant factor in that, “For the first time in all of human history mankind is politically awakened – that’s a total new reality – it has not been so for most of human history.”

Brzezinski continued, “The whole world has become politically awakened,” adding that all over the world people were aware of what was happening politically and were “consciously aware of global inequities, inequalities, lack of respect, exploitation.”

“Mankind is now politically awakened and stirring,” said Brzezinski, adding that this in combination with a fractured elite “makes it a much more difficult context for any major power, including currently the leading world power, the United States.”

During a subsequent question and answer session, Brzezinski was asked if he thought another organization should replace the United Nations as the de facto “one world government,” to which Brzezinski responded, “There should be such an organization,” before pointing out that the UN was not it in its current role.

As the text at the end of the video makes clear, Brzezinski’s admission that humanity has undergone a political awakening is not a positive development in the eyes of the elite.

In his 1970 book Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era, Brzezinski wrote the following.

“The technetronic era involves the gradual appearance of a more controlled society. Such a society would be dominated by an elite, unrestrained by traditional values. Soon it will be possible to assert almost continuous surveillance over every citizen and maintain up-to-date complete files containing even the most personal information about the citizen. These files will be subject to instantaneous retrieval by the authorities.”

The “elite” to which Brzezinski refers included many of those who were in attendance for his speech at the CFR meeting. The global political awakening which Brzezinski discussed represents part of the resistance to that very elite dominated society and the systems of control, subjugation and surveillance that they have imposed upon the human race in pursuit of a “more controlled society” and a one world government.

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45 US-led forces killed in Bagram

Posted by seumasach on May 19, 2010

PressTV

19th May, 2010

At least 45 US-led forces have been killed during an attack by Taliban militants on the US-run Bagram airbase in Afghanistan, the group claims.

A Press TV correspondent quoted a Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid as saying that 45 US-led soldiers including several army generals have been killed during the attack.

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UK names foreign secretary, sets up American-style NSC

Posted by seumasach on May 13, 2010

Clegg offers change, but change a la Obama.(Plus ca change…..) He represents an update of atlanticist thinking which has fallen behind on this  side of the Atlantic since the election in the US of the greener, hipper, pseudo-charismatic conman, Barak Obama of Goldman

.What does Nick Clegg stand for?

Laura Rozen

Politico

12th May, 2010

After naming William Hague as the UK’s new foreign secretary, Britain’s new prime minister David Cameron set up the UK’s first American-style National Security  Council, whose first priority would be coordinating UK policy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The new NSC was to hold its first meeting Wednesday, including Cameron, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, Hague, and other ministers.

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“The council will discuss the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and review the terrorist threat to the UK,” the prime minister’s office said, according to the AFP.

“It is our most urgent priority here in my work to make sure we have a grip on what is going on in Afghanistan,” Hague told Sky News.

“And I know that will consume a lot of our time and energy and effort,” he continued. “We have been fighting some political battles here but they are in a real battle out there.”

Hague served as Tory leader from 1997 to 2001, and as Secretary of State for Wales in the UK’s last conservative government of John Major.

“The advent of the kind of international co-operation at least discussed at recent summits of the G20, and of a new United States administration with a multilateral approach to foreign policy that provides other nations with a fresh opportunity to respond positively, both give some cause for optimism in international relations,” Hague said in a speech last year to the International Institute for Strategic Studies about what a Conservative UK foreign policy would look like.

“It is not unreasonable at least to hope for advances in the Middle East Peace Process, for success in a new approach in Afghanistan, for a better era in U.S.-Russia relations and for a more constructive response to the international community from the leadership of Iran, or a more determined effort by the international community to overcome Iranian intransigence,” he continued. “While the prospect of any of these hopes coming to fruition survives it is vital for America’s allies to work hard to bring that about for the good of all.”

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met Hague last October when he visited Washington in his capacity as the Shadow Foreign Secretary, the State Department said Wednesday.

“The @Foreign Office have uploaded a selection of photos from my first day in the office,” hetweeted today

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Doubts grow on McChrystal’s war plan

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2010

Gareth Porter

Asia Times

12th May, 2010

Although General Stanley McChrystal’s plan for wresting the Afghan provinces of Helmand and Kandahar from the Taliban is still in its early stages of implementation, there are already signs that the setbacks and obstacles it has experienced have raised serious doubts among top military officials in Washington about whether the plan of the commander of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces in Afghanistan is going to work.

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The UK elections: a very British fraud

Posted by seumasach on May 9, 2010

Cailean Bochanan

9th May, 2010

Thursday’s election has been described as a shambles, a complete farce which shames the nation, after scenes of thousands being turned away from polling stations without being able to vote. Is this just another instance of chaotic Britain muddling along, like Dad’s Army, or is there a more sinister element, of systemic fraud? That malpractice had been at play in previous elections, in 2005, the Scottish elections of 2007 and the infamous Glasgow North East by-election last year, was more than evident. My view was that it could become the central focus of this election rather than the pseudo-conflict between three City-backed politicos.

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The Devaluation of the US Dollar

Posted by seumasach on April 27, 2010


Now we have the Goldman Sachs fraud civil suit case. A closer check would raise suspicion from numerous corners. Five key red flags are raised, each worthy of future investigations.1) The Securities & Exchange Commission announced the fraud charges during a time when the Inspector General report was due for release. 2) The SEC fraud charges were announced during the time when a vote is soon coming for the Financial Reform Bill before the USCongress. 3) The SEC fraud charges were announced during the middle of the day, during stock market trading activity, a sharp break from proper information release. 4) Worse, the SEC gave Goldman Sachs a tipoff in the two weeks beforehand of the fraud charges to be made public. 5) Goldman Sachs has been privately accused of profiting from the adjustment in stock price due to its own problems. Stories are numerous of large S&P stock index puts purchased. Stories are numerous of a suspiciously high volume of ‘Out of Money’ stock option puts on GS, the Goldman Sachs stock share. They turned out to rise 140-fold, yet not much official talk about them.

So Goldman are making money out of speculating on the consequences of being prosecuted!!

Jim Willie

Financial Sense

22nd April, 2010

Click on link above for full article

The stream of events in the last four years casts extremely bad light on the US financial system, soon to reflect lower value. The subprime mortgage bonds were not isolated in damage done or loans gone bad. The prime mortgages, the Option ARMs, the second mortgages, the commercials, they almost all sport delinquencies and defaults that rival the subprimes. Details are shown in the last few Hat Trick Letter reports. The TARP Fund episode was an open extortion exercise, perpetrated on a hapless yet compromised USCongress, which now makes its own futile efforts to at least achieve disclosure of what the $700 billion or $500 remaining billion went. The US Supreme Court appears to be running interference for the US Federal Reserve, in blocking legal attempts to force disclosure of the USFed balance sheet, and disclosure of the TARP Fund disbursements. The overseas wars involve their own black eyes, what with $50 billion missing from the Iraq Reconstruction Fund. The United Nations drug task forces have pointed a finger at the US Security Establishment as funneling money into the US banking system, without which they claim the US banks would have collapsed in the autumn 2008. The nationalizations of Fannie Mae and American Intl Group took place amidst widespread charges of fraud, both in mortgage bonds and credit derivatives. Lawsuits were thwarted. The Credit Default Swap, an invention of Wall Street, has come under fire. It is being blamed for some distress in the European Govt debt markets. The CDSwap contract is under fire inside the United States even more so. Imagine a financial instrument that benefits from the implosion of financial firms, caused by policies and actions taken by the designers of the instruments. Only in America!

Now we have the Goldman Sachs fraud civil suit case. A closer check would raise suspicion from numerous corners. Five key red flags are raised, each worthy of future investigations.1) The Securities & Exchange Commission announced the fraud charges during a time when the Inspector General report was due for release. 2) The SEC fraud charges were announced during the time when a vote is soon coming for the Financial Reform Bill before the USCongress. 3) The SEC fraud charges were announced during the middle of the day, during stock market trading activity, a sharp break from proper information release. 4) Worse, the SEC gave Goldman Sachs a tipoff in the two weeks beforehand of the fraud charges to be made public. 5) Goldman Sachs has been privately accused of profiting from the adjustment in stock price due to its own problems. Stories are numerous of large S&P stock index puts purchased. Stories are numerous of a suspiciously high volume of ‘Out of Money’ stock option puts on GS, the Goldman Sachs stock share. They turned out to rise 140-fold, yet not much official talk about them.

In the following weeks we will see how much Goldman Sachs earned from their own legal challenges. In fact, a source informs me that his legal beagles regard the Paulson Abacus case as perhaps the weakest of all potential fraud cases against GSax. It might be designed to fail and be rejected by the courts. In fact, they mention that GSax might revert to a private investment bank, now that the TARP Funds were taken and returned, its commercial bank sham status no longer needed. The need instead is for privacy and no more prying eyes. GSax will not escape the lawsuits, but might face criminal charges. Watch the Germans, who are angry at being defrauded. Germany seems in many ways to act as the spearhead to disrupt, dislodge, and dismantle the US-UK streak of corporate fraud perpetrated by those wearing USGovt & UKGovt suits. The Goldman Sachs fraud case, and cases to follow, will render severe damage to the image of the USDollar, the USTreasury, and the USGovt leadership that is dominated by the GSax alumni. My belief is that the fraud charges have opened Pandora’s Box, for other complaints, other lawsuits, even class action lawsuits to be handled in federal court. The whiff of Pandora will be next seen in Germany from a broad swift response.

The White House connection to Goldman Sachs is not as clear as the USDept Treasury control by GSax. While GSax lawyers negotiated with the SEC over the high profile risk filled civil fraud charges, the GSax CEO Lloyd Blankfein visited the White House at least four times. White House logs show that Blankfein traveled to the national capital for at least two events with President Obama. Furthermore, the Obama 2008 presidential campaign received $995 thousand in donations from the GSax political action committee, its employees, and their relatives. The response included appointment of yet another GSax alumnus as Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner. Worse, GSax has retained former Obama White House counsel Gregory Craig as a member of its legal team. The GSax connections to the White House and the Obama Admin are raising a lot of eyebrows. Influence is clear, as it might be bought. Watch the financial regulation overhaul grant even more power to Wall Street firms and more impunity for their actions. See the McClatchy Washington Bureau article entitled “Goldman White House Connections Raise Eyebrows” (CLICK HERE).

The crushing weight of lost integrity is vast. My suspicion is that the greatest impact from the Goldman Sachs stream of lawsuits and felony charges, complete with potential restitution attempts, will be on the USDollar and not the GS stock price or its balance sheet. What comes next is the survival reactions by nations under deep distress, weakend by sluggish if not moribund economies, weakened by exported toxic bonds from Wall Street, weakened by Credit Default Swap attacks lodged by Wall Street and London firms, weakened by years of accepted USTreasurys as legitimate payment for exported finished products, weakened by broad usage of the USDollar within their banking system. The Jackass maintains a firm conviction that the first few nations that break ranks from the USDollar embrace will become the leading nations in the next chapter. A shock this way comes, from a Paradigm Shift in progress, recognized across the world, but not in the United States or England. A sudden USGovt-led devaluation could come soon, ordered by the United States banking and government leaders. It might turn out to be a vain arrogant maneuver to achieve instant stability, to maintain chokehold control, and to attempt to prevent creditor abandonment.

A grand backfire comes, since numerous platforms and paper support beams can no longer bear the weight of US insolvency, US dishonesty, and US arrogance. A grand backlash comes. My best sources warn to expect flash events. Either the US will attempt to control the sudden rash of events, or foreign sources (dominated by US creditors) will pull the rug from under the US-UK controllers. The maestros in New York and London are fast losing control and credibility. The next victim front & center is information flow. The CFTC hearings to reveal the gold & silver market rigs is one item. The empty gold vaults at the London Bullion Market Assn is another item. The insider trading schemes in flash trading mechanisms by Goldman Sachs is another item. The involvement of Wall Street firms in European debt machinations is another item. The revealed USTreasury monetization and accounting is another item. The usage of the IMF and World Bank as financial weapons is another item. The narcotics trafficking under USGovt and USMilitary aegis is another item, complete with Wall Street money laundering. These highly important factors are all recent exposures of the US information machine losing its grip. These factors combine to invite a global response. It will be felt and realized eventually in the USDollar. The Euro is nowhere near as weak and fraught with insolvency as the USDollar, not to mention deep pervasive fraud. Time will prove this out.

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Old habits die hard in Kyrgyzstan

Posted by seumasach on April 13, 2010

Richard M. Bennett

Asia Times

13th April, 2010

On March 17, the head of United States Central Command, General David Petraeus, met President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in the capital of Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek, to discuss bilateral cooperation and the situation in Afghanistan.

The visit came a day after the Barack Obama administration had confirmed the provision of some US$5.5 million to the Bakiyev regime for the construction of a counter-terrorism training center in southern Kyrgyzstan.

Within three weeks of this visit, Bakiyev, who had originally come to power in the “Tulip” revolution five years ago, had been overthrown and replaced by a provisional government headed by opposition leader and former foreign minister, Roza Otunbayeva.

Russia quickly recognized the new regime and was seemingly more than a little pleased with the outcome, thoughMoscow has since firmly denied playing any actual role in the unrest.

There is every reason to believe that the events cited above were actually closely related.

Russia under both Prime Minister (and former president) Vladimir Putin and now President Dmitry Medvedev had been growing ever-more displeased with the Bakiyev regime and its failure to close down the US Transit Center at Manas near Bishkek.

This Moscow has asserted had been promised in return forsignificant Russian financial support and technical aid. Moscow still firmly holds to the view that the only foreign forces that should be based in Kyrgyzstan are those of Russia.

The Russians have about 400 service personnel at Kant, north of Bishkek, and one of Moscow’s first actions following the change of regime was to send at least 150 additional paratroopers and special forces to reinforce the garrison there.

At the same time, the US reportedly confined its 1,200 or so personnel to the safety of Manas and also suspended all air operations through the base from April 7.

Bakiyev regime
The Bakiyev regime had gained a reputation for brutality and the tough measures organized by the GKNB (State Committee ofNational Security) to suppress any and all opposition to what had become an inefficient and corrupt government.

The tools most widely used were the GKNB and since 2001 the SNB or Sluiba Nacional noj Bezopasnosti (Intelligence Service) – effectively a barely reformed local version of the old Soviet KGB, and the SGO, or Sluiba Gosudarstvennoj Oxpany (Secret Police).
When, however, thousands of protesters came out onto the streets of Bishkek it soon became apparent that few members of the armed forces or even the SNB/SGO were prepared to support Bakiyev to the bitter end.

Rumors were to quickly spread that Bakiyev and some of the more hardline elements of the SNB/SGO had brought in gunmen from as far afield as Latvia and Chechnya to do their dirty work.

Some supporters of the new regime claim that most of the protesters shot were killed by these hired assassins.

The situation remains uncertain and Bakiyev may not yet be finished.

Kyrgyzstan is ethnically divided between the Kyrgyz, who make up nearly 70% of the population, largely in the north, and the Uzbeks, making up about 15% and concentrated in the Fergana Valley in the south.

Bakiyev fled the capital on April 8 and is now hidden in an area that may still contain the remains of his original power base, mainly in and around Jalal-Abad and the city of Osh.

While supporters of the ousted president admit that the armed forces in the capital and north have gone over to the newregime, a question mark may still hang over the real loyalties of the southern military command, with numerous units based in and around Osh.

If these units, which include the 1st Motor Rifle Brigade (Mountain) in Osh and elements of the 25th Special Forces Brigade were to remain loyal to Bakiyev, then the seeds of a civil war based mainly along ethnic and geographical lines would be a distinct likelihood.

If, however, the southern-based units accept, even reluctantly, the change of regime, then Bakiyev’s options would become very limited and his chances of regaining power slim.

Consequences for Washington
It is unclear just how seriously the Obama administration in Washington misjudged the true nature of the situation in Kyrgyzstan.

The long-term consequences of the provisional government finally bowing to pressure from Moscow and refusing to renew the US lease on the base at Manas in July this year are likely to be more than a little unfortunate for Washington.

Manas international airport near Bishkek has been an important supply transit base for the US since late 2001. Bakiyev had indeed stated his intention to close it in October 2008 after agreeing to the Russian loan. He only reversed the decision, to the irritation of Moscow, when the US agreed to more than triple its annual rent for the base, to about US$60 million annually.

Its loss would be a severe blow to US diplomatic prestige in the region and could have potentially serious military consequences for US forces in Afghanistan in the event of terrorist activity causing significant disruption to the major supply routes passing through an increasingly unstable Pakistan.

The US Intelligence community is also likely to suffer from the loss of its facilities embedded within the US base.

Putin was the first foreign leader to offer recognition of Kyrgyzstan’s provisional government. This was in sharp contrast to the US State Department’s pronouncement of its ill-judged decision to continue to cooperate with Bakiyev, at least until he formally resigned.

Correct diplomatically speaking, but a decision that failed to click with many supporters of the new regime who had only very recently experienced the brutality of Bakiyev’s gunmen.

Putin made an immediate hit by providing recognition of the bravery of those who had fought and died on the streets of Bishkek.

Unsurprisingly, the provisional government of Otunbayeva proved equally quick to express its gratitude to the Kremlin, thanking Russia for its “significant support” and confirming that it would be sending envoys to Moscow for talks. Otunbayeva said in an interview with Ekho Moskvy on April 8:

We are grateful to the Russian Federation and to the Russian prime minister, because in those days there was the support, significant support from Russia that exposed the family of a criminalregime. This regime resisted until the last bullet yesterday, and unfortunately we have dead, and wounded.

Another opposition leader, Omurbek Tekebayev, later told Reuters that Russia had “played its role in ousting Bakiyev” and that there was a “high probability that the duration of the US air base’s presence in Kyrgyzstan will be shortened”.

The bear bites back
So what exactly was the role played secretly by Russia in the overthrow of the pro-American regime of Bakiyev?

Despite Moscow’s claims to have no part in the events of the past few weeks, it seems certain that Russia did indeed encourage and to some degree facilitate the revolution. The opposition was assured of early Russian diplomatic recognition and were kept closely informed of Bakiyev’s activities and his attempts to retain power.

Emissaries from the Russian SVR (Foreign Intelligence) and the GRU (Military Intelligence) are rumored to have played asignificant covert role in neutralizing Bakiyev’s military and security power base by persuading senior Kyrgyz officers to keep most of their forces off the streets.

Significantly, they appeared to have also persuaded the Kyrgyz High Command to throw their weight behind the provisional government, a crucial element in establishing the bone fides ofthe new regime and the stability of the country.

The great game, the struggle for power, influence and strategic position in Central Asia, has been in play since long before the days of Rudyard Kipling and the British Raj in India. This latest round appears to show that the “Old Bear” has not lost all its claws.

Russian strength and confidence has been growing again in an area that Moscow still feels should remain firmly within Russia’s orbit and is now quite clearly at the expense of Washington’s own regional ambitions.

Richard M Bennett is an intelligence analyst with AFI Research, a leading authority on national security, global intelligence, conflicts and defense.

(Copyright 2010 Richard M Bennett.)

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In Kyrgyzstan chaos, Russia burnishes its image

Posted by seumasach on April 10, 2010

Philip P.Pan

Washington Post

10th April, 2010

BISHKEK, KYRGYZSTAN — In a remarkable role reversal, Russiahas positioned itself as a supporter of democratic reform and the protests that toppled this nation’s autocratic president, while the United States is increasingly viewed here as a cynical bully, backing a corrupt, abusive leader who refuses to resign.

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US reaps bitter harvest from ‘Tulip’ revolution

Posted by seumasach on April 9, 2010

“as of now, the US’s entire future strategy in Central Asia is up in the air.”

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

10th April, 2010

BEIJING – This is not how color revolutions are supposed to turn out. In the Ukraine, the “Orange” revolution of 2004 has had a slow painful death. In Georgia, the “Rose” revolution of 2003 seems to be in the throes of what increasingly appears to be a terminal illness.

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