Archive for September 9th, 2008
Are we in Cold War II?
Two days ago I wrote about the S300 that Russia had sold to Iran. Then we knew that Syria wants to have Russian missiles on its soil.
Syria raised the prospect yesterday of having Russian missiles on its soil, sparking fears of a new Cold War in the Middle East. President Assad said as he arrived in Moscow to clinch a series of military agreements: We are ready to co-operate with Russia in any project that can strengthen its security.
Fear of new Mid East ‘Cold War’ as Syria strengthens military alliance with Russia – Times Online
h/t Theo Spark.
Chávez has also announced Venezuela will be making a joint military exercise with Russian naval deployment in the Caribbean in November. Remember that Chávez announced Russia was planning to build an AK-47 rifle factory in Venezuela.
And then we have China: Chinese are supporting Russian deployment in South Ossetia to support their own expansionism.
Fears of Cold War? I really believe this is more than just fear…
Obama slips on TV: ‘My Muslim faith
Uh-huh… what an error… was it an error?
Obama, speaking to ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on “This Week,” was talking about what he described as “smears” that were claiming he was a Muslim when he maintains he is a practicing Christian.
“Let’s not play games,” Obama stated. “What I was suggesting you’re absolutely right that John McCain has not talked about my Muslim faith. And you’re absolutely right that that has not come.”
Stephanopoulos immediately interrupted Obama, stating, “Christian faith.” “My Christian faith,” Obama quickly said.
“Well, what I’m saying is that he (McCain) hasn’t suggested that I’m a Muslim. And I think that his campaign’s upper echelons have not, either. What I think is fair to say is that, coming out of the Republican camp, there have been efforts to suggest that perhaps I’m not who I say I am when it comes to my faith something which I find deeply offensive, and that has been going on for a pretty long time.
Obama slips on TV: ‘My Muslim faith
UK: The process against plotters of exploding airlines ends
Remember this? Well, a jury has not reached a verdict about some key aspects of the accusation and the Crown Prosecution Service is seeking a retrial:
Police and prosecutors were locked in crisis meetings last night after what they believed to be the strongest terrorism case ever presented to a court was rejected by a jury. At the end of a £10 million investigation and trial lasting more than two years, jurors were unable to decide whether or not a group of British Muslims were part of a plot to blow transatlantic airliners out of the sky. The outcome of the case – which featured al-Qaeda-style martyrdom videos made by six defendants – will be seen as a severe blow to Britains anti-terrorist effort.
Police in crisis after jury rejects £10m terror case – Times Online
If you read that, you would think no one was convicted: in fact, the three who pleaded guilty, Abdullah Ahmed Ali, Assad Sarwar and Tanvir Hussain, actually were convicted.
But the problem here is that four others weren’t and that jurors were unable to decide whether or not they were Al-Qaeda members.
Expanding Violence: Germany Discovers a War in Afghanistan
A very good title: Germany discovers a war in Afghanistan. I guess people are not considering what is going on there, because a) politicians do not want to call it a war, as that is not popular, among their citizens and b) the MSM only report what they want to report… and then it’s normally a bit late…
For years, Germans have preferred to see their country’s presence in Afghanistan as armed development assistance. That myth is now becoming more difficult to maintain as the violence spreads to the north where the Germans are based.
Seen from the air, downtown Kunduz looks like a large board game, a series of symmetrically interlocking rectangles and streets intersecting at precise right angles. But this aerial image is merely an illusion of a perfect order. In reality, life is everything but orderly in this northern Afghan city, where German soldiers have been stationed for the past five years.
No one is more aware of this than Mohammed Sharif, a general with the Afghan intelligence agency. When he greets a visitor in his office, sitting in a large velour armchair, Sharif is barefoot, his shirt unbuttoned down to his chest. His skin is deeply tanned and his head is covered with a thick mat of hair. Fans help keep the room cool on this hot, late summer day.
(…)
Kunduz, of all places, is where the Germans and the rest of the world had hoped to prove that the war against terrorism could also be waged with peaceful means. It is a place where German soldiers could have been mistaken for aid workers, if it weren’t for their weapons — where men in camouflage built schools, delivered supplies to hospitals and dug wells, while their NATO allies in the country’s south and west waged a brutal and costly war.
Those allies whose troops were stationed in Kunduz managed to avoid the deadly W word — W as in War — or so it seemed. The coalition governments in Germany, under former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder and now under Chancellor Angela Merkel, had various terms for what the Bundeswehr was doing in Afghanistan, calling it “networked security,” a “civilian-military approach,” “stabilization” and “reconstruction assistance.” But the W word was one they preferred not to use. Two-thirds of German citizens are opposed to the Bundeswehr’s Afghanistan mission, and politicians in Berlin read opinion polls more often than reports on the military situation.
But now, after the death of a young German paratrooper at the end of August and the first civilian casualties at the hands of German soldiers a few days later, Bernhard Gertz, the chairman of the German Armed Forces Federation, has finally uttered the unmentionable word. Last week, Gertz, a colonel, said that the mission in Afghanistan was nothing other than a “war against a fanatical enemy willing to do anything.” The dead soldier did not merely “lose his life,” as Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung said at the memorial service, but “gave his life for Germany,” as Gertz said.
Expanding Violence: Germany Discovers a War in Afghanistan – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International
So both Government and MSM had been lying about the real extent of the mission in Afghanistan and that could be lethal for elections. Meanwhile, the situation worsens, because the soliders are not working in ALL that they should (humanitarian aid is very good, but Armies are not built only for that, they are built mainly for defending a country, using weapons). So, finally some of them are killed in action and people say they “lose their lives”, just as if they were dead in a traffic jam. They also kill people but as you’re not in a war, soldiers are nearly crucified as they have, not only killed people, but just destroyed the vision of them being only humanitarian workers.
Governments should be more clear about their missions and be prepared to stop them (or not beginning them) if citizens do not want them to. But citizens should also know that, IF the adequate fight is not given where it should, then the causes of that fight can come nearer.
Oh, yeah, of course, I’m exaggerating…





























