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Friday, January 27, 2012

Growing elite opposition to strike on Iran

Growing elite opposition to strike on Iran

A number of influential members of the United States foreign policy establishment - including prominent liberal interventionists who had supported the Iraq war - are now warning against "letting a bunch of ignorant, sloppy-thinking politicians and politicized foreign-policy experts" further escalate tensions with Iran. - Jim Lobe (Jan 27, '12)

THE ROVING EYE : The Iranian oil embargo blowback

THE ROVING EYE : The Iranian oil embargo blowback

European poodles will soon discover they have cocked their legs in high wind after playing fetch to the United States on the Iranian oil embargo. The blowback is high oil prices, and the strong possibility of a Greek government bond default sparking renewed catastrophe in the eurozone. The rest of the world is dismissing sanctions and all across Eurasia trade is fast moving away from the greenback. - Pepe Escobar (Jan 27, '12)

Iraq Redux

Iraq Redux

January 26, 2012 3:51 pm ET by MJ Rosenberg
Talk about déjà vu all over again.
In September 2010 The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg wrote, in a much ballyhooed article, that "there is a better than 50 percent chance that Israel will launch a strike [against Iran] by next July," meaning the summer of 2011.
This coming Sunday, the New York Times Magazine will feature a story by Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman, who writes, "I have come to believe that Israel will indeed strike Iran in 2012."

Clueless in Davos


Posted By Clyde Prestowitz Thursday, January 26, 2012

As it always does this time of year, my inbox is filling up with messages of a certain kind. They all begin with: "I'm here in Davos" and then, in an intellectual form of name dropping, proceed to mention key words and phrases such as Geopolitical Risk, G-Zero World, and Rise of Regions. This, of course, sounds really heavyweight and important. But I am not fooled. Nobody knows what those words mean. The only purpose is inform me that the sender is among the elect glitterati who get invited to the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos.

The union’s state is dire

The Economist

Lexington

The union’s state is dire

Barack Obama’s big speech to Congress was mainly a bit of electioneering

Jan 28th 2012 | from the print edition

Will Israel Attack Iran? (And If It Does, Can It Really Stop Tehran’s Nuclear Program?)


Will Israel Attack Iran? (And If It Does, Can It Really Stop Tehran’s Nuclear Program?)

By KARL VICK

Iran Mulls Pre-empting EU Oil Embargo

Iran Mulls Pre-empting EU Oil Embargo

China’s Global Quest for Resources and Implications for the United States

China’s Global Quest for Resources and Implications for the United States

Canada Plays its China Card

Canada Plays its China Card

Antoinette Schoar: The case for unwinding Fannie and Freddie

MIT Sloan Experts



Posted: 26 Jan 2012 07:17 AM PST
From CBS News Today Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac–two government-sponsored enterprises originally designed to increase the availability of loans and thereby raise levels of home ownership–dominate the US mortgage lending market. Fannie Mae, which was established in 1938 as part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, provides local banks with federal money to finance home [...]

Thursday, January 26, 2012

State of the Union: From Climate to Clean Energy to…Fracking?

State of the Union: From Climate to Clean Energy to…Fracking?


Read more: http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2012/01/25/state-of-the-union-from-climate-to-clean-energy-to-fracking/#ixzz1kbjueayg

The State of the Union Annotated

The State of the Union Annotated

Tom Evslin, Seeking Alpha
President Obama recognized the importance of natural gas and the new, disruptive technologies which have made at least 100 years of this fuel available to us; that's the good news from the State of the Union Address. The bad news is that the President appears to have learned a lot of wrong lessons about the proper role of government in innovation and appears poised to take a lot of wrong-headed actions. Here's that section of the speech as reported in The New York Times with annotations by them (NYT) and by me (TE).

Despite the Current Oil Gas Boom, the Obama Administration Deserves No Credit

Despite the Current Oil Gas Boom, the Obama Administration Deserves No Credit

“The one person who deserves no credit for this [oil and gas] boom is Barack Obama.  In fact, this Administration has bent over backwards to make oil and gas production and exploration as difficult as possible. According to the Institute for Energy Research (IER), the Obama Administration has been issuing BLM oil and gas leases at the lowest pace of any president in the last 30 years  – in fact at half the rate of the Clinton White House and 80% slower than in the Reagan era, dragging their feet to please the environmental…
Read more...

Saudi prince warns of Middle East nuclear arms race

Saudi prince warns of Middle East nuclear arms race

Watch live: Panetta’s briefing on the Pentagon budget

Watch live: Panetta’s briefing on the Pentagon budget

Judgment day

Judgment day

 News On What is To Be Cut In the U.S. Defense Budget

Panetta Announces Fiscal 2013 Budget Priorities -- US Department of Defense
Pentagon Outlines 2013 Budget Cuts -- Defense News
Pentagon Plan Includes Base Closings and Smaller Raises -- New York Times
Pentagon budget set to shrink next year -- Washington Post
Budgeting for a new military vision -- CNN
Pentagon cuts reshape military, trim costs -- Reuters
Pentagon Unveils Tighter Spending Plan -- Wall Street Journal
US plans to cut Army, invest in future -- AFP
Pentagon budget cuts hit force size, facilities -- Army Times
DoD Unveils Major Force Reductions -- Military.com
Pentagon Asia Shift Favors Subs, Bombers, Tankers, Panetta Says -- Bloomberg Businessweek
Pentagon budget cuts will shrink military, reduce ground forces -- The Hill
Panetta: Troop numbers to fall, but no hit to active-duty pay and benefits -- Stars and Stripes
Panetta Outlines US Defense Budget Decisions -- Voice of America
New Pentagon Plan Would Cut Ground Forces By 100,000 -- FOX News
Panetta: U.S. ground forces would shrink by 100,000 -- USA Today/AP
US to cut almost 100,000 troops -- BBC
US to cut ground forces by 100,000 -- Press Association
Pentagon says to slow procurement of F-35 fighters -- Reuters
U.S. to slow F-35 procurement as billions get slashed from defence budget -- Canada.com
USAF to Kill Block 30 Global Hawks -- Defense News
Panetta Said to Seek Cancellation of L-3’s U.S. Army C-27J Transport Plane -- Bloomberg
Navy To Drop 3 Ships in 2013; May Keep 313-Ship Goal -- Aol Defense
Panetta: Navy will keep 11-carrier fleet amid defense cuts -- Hampton Roads/AP
Big cuts coming; lower pay raises start in 2015 -- Navy Times
20,000 Marines to be cut, Pentagon announces -- Marine Times
Pentagon cuts to hit defense industry -- Washington Post
Panetta: Military cuts to hit 'all 50 states' -- MSNBC
Pentagon to Request Two New Rounds of Base Closures -- Defense News
HASC Vice Chair dismisses proposed base closures -- DoD Buzz

The critical problem of children without a decent education needs to be addressed.

The critical problem of children without a decent education needs to be addressed.

Yes, you can be a neoconservative, and still be wrong by Stephen M. Walt

Yes, you can be a neoconservative, and still be wrong

Is the White House trying to turn America into France?

Is the White House trying to turn America into France?

SOTU: Much mercantilism by Phil Levy

SOTU: Much mercantilism

Fine words -- and then what?

Fine words -- and then what?

Domestic Use of Drones is Well Underway

Domestic Use of Drones is Well Underway

The use of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) within the United States is certain to increase in the years to come, as a new Army policy has recently made clear.  (“Army Foresees Expanded Use of Drones in U.S. Airspace,” Secrecy News, January 19.)  But in fact the use of unmanned aircraft or drones within U.S. airspace has already advanced to a degree that is not widely recognized.
As of 2010, the Federal Aviation Administration had already issued hundreds of “certificates of authorization” (COAs) for the domestic use of drones.
“Right now, today as we sit here, we have 251 certificates of authorization for unmanned aircraft, 140 of them are DOD related,” said Hank Krakowski of the FAA at an informative Senate hearing in September 2010.  “We have not rejected or denied any DOD COAs in 2010, and we keep moving forward.”
On the other hand, Mr. Krakowski cautioned, “While UASs offer a promising new technology, the limited safety and operational data available to date does not yet support expedited or full integration into the NAS [National Airspace System]. Because current available data is insufficient to allow unfettered integration of UASs into the NAS–where the public travels every day– the FAA must continue to move forward deliberately and cautiously, in accordance with our safety mandate.”
“Unmanned aircraft systems [were] originally and primarily designed for military purposes,” he noted. “Although the technology incorporated into UASs has advanced, their safety record warrants caution. As we attempt to integrate these aircraft into the NAS, we will continue to look at any risks that UASs pose to the traveling public as well as the risk to persons or property on the ground.”
See “The Integration of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UASs) Into the National Airspace System (NAS): Fulfilling Imminent Operational and Training Requirements,” Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Technology, September 13, 2010 (published September 2011).
In the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act, Congress included language requiring a report on “the integration of unmanned aerial systems into the national airspace system” (h/t Emptywheel).
The legality of the use of drones in CIA targeted killing programs is among the topics that is explored in the brand new issue of the Journal of National Security Law and Policy on the subject of covert war.

The MF Global Bankruptcy Filing: Did the Regulators Sell Out the Public for JP Morgan?

The MF Global Bankruptcy Filing: Did the Regulators Sell Out the Public for JP Morgan?

Avoiding a ‘Dumb War’ With Iran

Avoiding a ‘Dumb War’ With Iran

The media and the punditry have been deliberately misrepresenting facts to persuade the people of the United States to start another war, not unlike in the lead-up to the Iraq fiasco. Since 9/11, hard-liners in the United States have depicted one Muslim country after another as major threats to U.S. security

US, Israel Agree: Iran Not Building Nukes

US, Israel Agree: Iran Not Building Nukes

Has Iran decided to build a nuclear bomb? That would seem to be the central question in the current bellicose debate over whether the world should simply cripple Iran’s economy and inflict severe pain on its civilian population or launch a preemptive war to destroy its nuclear capability while possibly achieving “regime change.”

Whether or not the U.S. is declining is the wrong question

U.S. Probe of Border Attack Hardened Pakistani Suspicions Analysis by Gareth Porter*

http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=106555

U.S. Probe of Border Attack Hardened Pakistani Suspicions 
Analysis by Gareth Porter*

WASHINGTON, Jan 25, 2012 (IPS) - The Pakistani military leadership's response to the U.S. report on its helicopter attack on two Pakistani border posts Nov. 26 assailed the credibility of the investigation by Air Force Brig. Gen. Steven Clark and expressed doubt that the attack could have been "accidental".

Updates from the Afghansistan Study Group $500 billion for a stalemate

From ASG
1/24/12
$500 billion for a stalemate
Afghanistan Study Group by Mary Kaszynski
Between reports of violence on the one hand, and optimistic assessments of US war efforts on the other, the American public receives contradictory and incomplete assessments on the war in Afghanistan.  Case in point: the classified National Intelligence Estimate on Afghanistan.
ARTICLES
1/23/12
Taliban leader's grip on insurgency weakens
USA Today by Jim Michaels
Taliban leader Mullah Omar's grip on the insurgency is loosening as coalition battlefield successes in southern Afghanistan help sow discord among the Taliban top ranks and weaken the organization, a top U.S. commander said.
OPINION
1/20/12
Obama's only way out of Afghanistan is to talk
The Guardian by Tariq Ali

In essence both sides confront a stalemate. The insurgents cannot win militarily, but they have made a Nato victory impossible. The US could only win the "just war" by destroying the country and wiping out a million or two Afghans – but that is politically unfeasible. Negotiations are the only possible route to a settlement and US withdrawal from the country.
1/23/12
Afghanistan, An Indecent Silence
Huffington Post by Anne Nivat
Enter the discussion, and draw conclusions about this military engagement -- it has cost us many lives, and yet it is still neither approved of or understood by the public. After ten years, we still lack clear and convincing answers.
1/24/12
The Afghan War: Cause and Effect
Time’s Battleland by Mark Thompson
Wars are a tough sell to any nation. Long wars are a tougher sell. Long wars in a democracy are tougher still. And long wars with rising casualties in a democracy are the toughest sell of all.

Iran Set to Turn Off Oil Supply to Europe By: Der Spiegel and Wires | Der Spiegel

Iran Set to Turn Off Oil Supply to Europe

By: Der Spiegel and Wires | Der Spiegel
The European Union embargo on Iranian oil will only come into effect in six months, but the leadership in Tehran wants to act first: Exports to Europe are set to be halted immediately. It is a move which could mean added difficulties for struggling economies in southern Europe.

China's energy firms invade Canada

China's energy firms invade Canada

Joe Conason on the GOP's Response to Obama

Joe Conason on the GOP's Response to Obama
"Mitch Daniels: Bombast From the Past" -- Why the Republicans chose Mitch Daniels to deliver a rebuttal to President Obama's State of the Union address is puzzling. Isn't he the former Bush budget director who said the Iraq War would cost $50 billion when it ended up costing $3 trillion?
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/mitch_daniels_bombast_from_the_past_20120126/

Robert Scheer on Obama's State of the Union Address

Robert Scheer on Obama's State of the Union Address
"Obama's Faux Populism Sounds Like Bill Clinton" -- I get angry because betrayal by the "good guys" for whom I have ended up voting has become the norm.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/obamas_faux_populism_sounds_like_bill_clinton_20120126/

How to start a war with Iran

http://warincontext.org/2012/01/25/how-to-start-a-war-with-iran/

How to start a war with Iran

by Paul Woodward in War in Context on January 25, 2012

Is a Nuclear Iran Really to Be Feared?

Truthdig

Is a Nuclear Iran Really to Be Feared? 

January 25, 2012

By William Pfaff

Puncturing the hot air balloons on defense spending

Home
Investigation. Impact. Integrity.

Puncturing the hot air balloons on defense spending

By

Adelson, Gingrich, and the Selling of America

Adelson, Gingrich, and the Selling of America
Posted By Justin Raimondo on January 24, 2012
http://original.antiwar.com/justin/2012/01/24/adelson-gingrich-and-the-selling-of-america/

APNewsBreak: Pakistan’s closure of supply routes costs US 6 times more for new route

APNewsBreak: Pakistan’s closure of supply routes costs US 6 times more for new route

Saving Sam

A cartoon booklet about everything that's gone wrong with American and what must be done about it.  Lots of very depressing facts that undergird the current national malaise.  www.savingsamcollection.com

Violent Riots In America and Financial Collapse Warns Soros

Violent Riots In America and Financial Collapse Warns Soros
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/violent-riots-in-america-and-financial-collapse-warns-soros/

From time to time we get a peek inside the mind of a true insider. George Soros
knows a thing or two about destabilization and far from equilibrium situations.
He’s been on the giving and receiving ends of both. From surviving the Nazi
occupation of Hungary during World War II, to single handidly crashing the
currencies of [...]

Obama's speech and some sober talk about the oil patch

Obama's speech and some sober talk about the oil patch

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Fact Checking Obama

Fact Checking Obama

http://the-diplomat.com/the-editor/2012/01/25/fact-checking-obama/

This is very cool: The New York Times has video of Barack Obama’s State of the Union address from last night paired with a real-time transcript down the side and a fact check on some key points. On the issues I mentioned in my blog post, the fact check says of a couple of them: Claim: Bin Laden Not a Threat to the U.S. President Obama can claim a record of aggressive pursuit of al-Qaeda and its affiliates abroad over the past year, including the killing of Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda's founder, in May; Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born propagandist and plotter for the terrorist network's branch in Yemen, in September; and scores of suspected militants in Pakistan. Before the mission to kill Bin Laden, Mr. Obama made a high-risk decision to send a Navy Seal team deep into Pakistani territory without alerting Pakistani officials, a bold move that later drew praise even from some ... Read More...

The State of Obama’s 2008 Promises

The State of Obama’s 2008 PromisesThe State of Obama’s 2008 Promises

Presidential candidate Barack Obama won the Democratic primary last time around largely on the strength of his extremely limited and inconsistent opposition to the war on Iraq.  Then he chose as his running mate Senator Joe Biden, a man who had led efforts in the U.S. Senate to support the invasion. Obama’s staff told reporters that he would be inclined to keep Robert Gates on as Secretary of War (or “Defense”) — exactly the same plan proposed by Senator John McCain’s campaign. Obama said he’d like Colin Powell to be a part of his administration, and repeatedly announced that his …

It Suits 'Nuclear Israel' That We Never Forget 'Nuclear Iran'

The Ayatollah ordered the entire nuclear project to be closed down because it was the work of the devil

The Washington-Wall Street Revolving Door Just Keeps Spinning Along

The Washington-Wall Street Revolving Door Just Keeps Spinning Along

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/01/24-3

We’ve already made our choice for the best headline of the year, so far:
"Citigroup Replaces JPMorgan as White House Chief of Staff."

State of the Union Address: “An America Built to Last” Remarks of President Barack Obama – As Prepared for Delivery

Remarks of President Barack Obama – As Prepared for Delivery

by Barack Obama

The deal the West could strike with Iran

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9033566/The-deal-the-West-could-strike-with-Iran.html

The deal the West could strike with Iran

Tehran should be allowed to enrich uranium – but with the toughest safeguards.

By

What the Adelsons get for their money


What the Adelsons get for their money

The $10 million in pro-Newt money that transformed the GOP primary appears to be all about US policy toward Israel


BY JUSTIN ELLIOTT
Casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and his wife Miriam have transformed the Republican primary by pumping $10 million into a pro-Newt Gingrich super PAC, thereby enabling his surge against Mitt Romney. So it’s surprising that comments Gingrich made last week about what the Adelsons expect in exchange for their money haven’t gotten more attention. Ted Koppel asked Gingrich the key question: what do the Adelsons get if you win?

Fed extends low rates forecast to 2014

Fed extends low rates forecast to 2014
The US Federal Reserve predicted that interest rates will stay on hold at least through late 2014 in a dramatic extension to the period for which it expects to keep rates low.

The Fed’s previous forecast was of rates on hold until mid-2013. The statement acted as a significant easing in monetary policy by moving out market expectations of the first rise in interest rates and led to an immediate fall in bond yields.
http://link.ft.com/r/0QSDPP/5VEIGF/HDKQA6/97DZC4/NJ8E0R/B7/h?a1=2012&a2=1&a3=25

Davos Note: Bremmer/Clemons "Davos Issues Opener" & PDF of Report issued Today by World Economic Forum Council on Geopolitical Risk

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer and I have written an “opener” for the special Davos/World Economic Forum site that The Atlantic has put together.  We are both members of the World Economic Forum on Geopolitical Risk, chaired by our friend and colleague Douglas Rediker who has just completed his term as US Alternative Executive Director at the IMF.

Ian’s and my piece is titled “DAVOS 2012:  The Rise of Regions in a G-Zero World.”  Here is the link:
http://bit.ly/y5FUvX

Key themes, some not surprising is that the global governance institutions we have today are anachronistic, creaky, need revision.  Ten years of distraction over major financial scandals and wars are coming to an end — and while power has been reshuffled around the world to new, rising stakeholders — all the action is really regional.  Hope you find our out-loud thinking interesting.

I also wanted to share the “Report” issued today by our WEF Council on Geopolitical Risk in Davos — the pdf of our report which outlines geostrategic challenges and trends as our cluster of diverse international policy hands is available here:  
http://bit.ly/ArCfz0

All best,

Steve Clemons
Member, World Economic Forum Council on Geopolitical Risk

Steve Clemons
Washington Editor-at-Large, The Atlantic

202-276-1176 phone  @SCClemons Twitter    SCClemons Skype
sclemons@theatlantic.com

Federal Reserve Decision on Interest Rates and the Economy

Federal Reserve Decision on Interest Rates and the Economy
"Fed to Keep a Lid on Rates Through 2014" -- The Federal Reserve lent weight to economists' warnings of a long and slow recovery on Wednesday when it announced plans to keep short-term interest rates near zero for at least the next three years. The idea is that low rates will encourage borrowing and investment in American businesses, helping resurrect the economy.
http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/fed_to_keep_rates_near_zero_through_2014_20120125/

Obama Champions the Middle Class

Obama Champions the Middle Class
"Obama Aims State of the Union Address at the Working Class" -- During his State of the Union address Tuesday night, President Obama primed the electorate with a speech that cast him as a champion of the American middle class-a wise, albeit predictable move during a year in which he'll seek re-election. In their response, Republicans timidly disagreed that the economy has improved under his watch.
http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/obama_delivers_union_address_aimed_at_working_class_20120125/

Archbishop calls Obama habitual violator of Constitution

Archbishop calls Obama habitual violator of Constitution

The A-List: Bruce Bartlett - Obama tinkers with a tax system that needs fundamental reform

Financial Times

FT Exclusive Comment
Wednesday January 25 2012

The A-List: Bruce Bartlett - Obama tinkers with a tax system that needs fundamental reform
There is broad agreement on both the right and left that the US tax system is a mess. Unfortunately, Barack Obama effectively threw cold water on any tax reform effort in his State of the Union address.
http://link.ft.com/r/9ULF66/HYLUB1/72VMH3/B5I7SU/PFO9J9/50/h?a1=2012&a2=1&a3=25

How the U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work

How the U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

STaTe oF THe BaNaNa RePuBLiC

STaTe oF THe BaNaNa RePuBLiC

 

http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/state-banana-republic

Sorry Folks, Europe Is Not Fine… Not Even Close

Sorry Folks, Europe Is Not Fine… Not Even Close

The financial world seems to have adopted the idea that things will somehow work themselves out in Europe. I don’t know if it’s because people don’t like to think about negative things or if someone sent out a memo to everyone that math doesn’t exist or count in Europe, but somehow investors seem to have decided that as long as we think positive thoughts everything will be fine.

The reality is that every day, Europe is approaching a debt implosion.

http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/sorry-folks-europe-not-fine%E2%80%A6-not-even-close

Iran Warns It Will Hit US Targets Worldwide If The U.S. Should Break An Iranian Blockade Of The Persian Gulf

The Obama Memos

The Obama Memos 

http://warnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2012/01/obama-memos.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+WarNewsUpdates+%28War+News+Updates%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Gold For Oil: India And Iran Ditch Dollar – Report -- Forex Crunch

Gold For Oil: India And Iran Ditch Dollar – Report -- Forex Crunch

http://www.forexcrunch.com/gold-for-oil-india-and-iran-ditch-dollar-report/

Subculture of Americans prepares for civilization's collapse

Subculture of Americans prepares for civilization's collapse 

 

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/21/us-usa-civilization-collapse-idUSTRE80K0LA20120121

The A.Q. Khan Network and its Fourth Customer

The A.Q. Khan Network and its Fourth Customer

The A.Q. Khan Network and its Fourth CustomerWhile it has been known since early 2004 that the illicit proliferation network headed by A.Q. Khan of Pakistan supplied the nuclear programs of Iran, North Korea, and Libya, certain questions have not yet been resolved.http://www.carnegieendowment.org/2012/01/23/q-khan-network-and-its-fourth-customer/95hs

IMF World Economic Outlook Update, January 2012

IMF World Economic Outlook Update, January 2012

The IMF released this update to its World Economic Outlook on January 24, 2012.http://www.cfr.org/imf/imf-world-economic-outlook-update-january-2012/p27169?cid=rss-fullfeed-imf_world_economic_outlook_upd-012412&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Republican Debate Transcript, Tampa, Florida, January 2012

Republican Debate Transcript, Tampa, Florida, January 2012

This debate between Republican candidates was held in Tampa, Florida on January 23, 2012. It was sponsored by NBC News, the National Journal, and the Tampa Bay Times, and was moderated by NBC's Brian Williams. Participants were Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, and Rick Santorum. This transcript was provided by the Chicago Tribune.

The Caging of America Why do we lock up so many people?

A Critic at Large

The Caging of America

Why do we lock up so many people?

by January 30, 2012

‘Licking Their Chops’ on K Street and Capitol Hill

What Matters Today

‘Licking Their Chops’ on K Street and Capitol Hill

The public’s disgust with Congress has been confirmed in poll after poll; Americans are fed up with the combination of partisan squabbling and inertia that since last year has led to little or nothing accomplished. Missouri Congressman Emanuel Cleaver, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, told CNN on Tuesday, “I think that the 11 percent of Americans who think we’re doing a good job need therapy.”

In Police Training, a Dark Film on U.S. Muslims

In Police Training, a Dark Film on U.S. Muslims

By MICHAEL POWELL
Published: January 23, 2012

Storm warning in the strait

Storm warning in the strait As the US and EU impose oil sanctions, the worry is that Tehran will produce a bomb or act to provoke a military conflict, write Roula Khalaf and James Blitz
http://link.ft.com/r/DHGUVV/C4NI7W/KEIJMC/EXQ2FN/XHMY9N/9A/h?a1=2012&a2=1&a3=24

Monday, January 23, 2012

Chris Hedges on Challenging the Corporate State

Chris Hedges on Challenging the Corporate State
"Thank You for Standing Up" -- We can vote for Romney or Obama, but Goldman Sachs and ExxonMobil and Bank of America and the defense contractors always win. However, the iron grip of corporations over our lives will, eventually, be broken.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/thank_you_for_standing_up_20120123/

E.J. Dionne, Jr. on Gingrich: Exploiting the Politics of Class and Culture

E.J. Dionne, Jr. on Gingrich: Exploiting the Politics of Class and Culture
"What Newt Learned From Nixon" -- By shrewdly combining the politics of class with the politics of culture, Newt Gingrich won his first election in 14 years.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/what_newt_learned_from_nixon_20120122/

Europe Debt Crisis Still Likely to End Badly By: Simon Johnson | Bloomberg

Europe’s Debt Crisis Is Still Likely to End Badly: Simon Johnson

Israel Needs Blockbusters

Israel Needs Blockbusters

“Israel has no foreign policy, only a domestic policy,” Henry Kissinger once remarked. This has probably been more or less true of every country since the advent of democracy. Yet in Israel, this seems even truer. (Ironically, it could almost be said that the United States has no foreign policy, only an Israeli domestic policy.) [...]

Obama's Head-Fake on U.S. Energy Development

Obama's Head-Fake on U.S. Energy Development

By Gary Jason

Keystone XL and Obama's Subjugation Economics

Keystone XL and Obama's Subjugation Economics

By J. Robert Smith

Obama to Use Pension Funds of Ordinary Americans to Pay for Bank Mortgage “Settlement”


Obama to Use Pension Funds of Ordinary Americans to Pay for Bank Mortgage “Settlement”

The Myth of Defense Cuts by Lee Wrights,

The Myth of Defense Cuts
by ,

How About Not Bombing Iran?

Bill Keller - The Op-Ed columnist\'s exchanges with readers, afterthoughts and riffs on other subjects.
January 22, 2012

http://keller.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/how-about-not-bombing-iran/

How About Not Bombing Iran?

If you need more convincing of the grave risks of a preemptive bombing attack on Iran, I recommend these freshly published arguments from Colin H. Kahl, who was until recently Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East in the Obama administration; R. Nicholas Burns, who was Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs in the George W. Bush administration; and my Times colleague Roger Cohen, who sums it up this way:
Here’s the bottom line: an Israeli attack unites Iran in fury, locks in the Islamic Republic for a generation, cements the Syrian regime, radicalizes the Arab world at a moment of delicate transition, ignites Hezbollah on the Lebanese border, boosts Hamas, endangers U.S. troops in the region, sparks terrorism, propels oil skyward, triggers a possible regional war, offers a lifeline to Iran just as Europe is about to stop buying its oil, adds a Persian to the Arab vendetta against Israel, and may at best set back Iran’s nuclear ambitions a couple of years.
But if not bombing, then what?

U.S. could hit debt ceiling again around election

U.S. could hit debt ceiling again around election

Sustaining China’s Economic Growth after the Global Financial Crisis

Sustaining China’s Economic Growth after the Global Financial Crisis
Nicholas Lardy’s account of China’s economy is dry but nonetheless important, writes Simon Rabinovitch
http://link.ft.com/r/A1TNOO/YB48QI/QFRUDM/7AWLND/U1AMQH/W1/h?a1=2012&a2=1&a3=23

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Press Release 12-011 New Report Outlines Trends in U.S. Global Competitiveness in Science and Technology

Press Release 12-011
New Report Outlines Trends in U.S. Global Competitiveness in Science and Technology

 Aspects of this report were digested in the Washington Post on January 17 (http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/us-losing-high-tech-manufacturing-jobs-to-asia/2012/01/17/gIQA9P1S6P_story.html).  But the overview (http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind12/) contains a lot of information not covered in the press.  The full report is at: http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=122859&org=NSB&from=news  It turns out that if you disinvest enough in education and foster anti-science attitudes sufficiently, there can be long-term consequences.

The bottom line:
The United States remains the global leader in supporting science and technology (S&T) research and development, but only by a slim margin that could soon be overtaken by rapidly increasing Asian investments in knowledge-intensive economies. So suggest trends released in a new report by the National Science Board (NSB), the policymaking body for the National Science Foundation (NSF), on the overall status of the science, engineering and technology workforce, education efforts and economic activity in the United States and abroad.
"This information clearly shows we must re-examine long-held assumptions about the global dominance of the American science and technology enterprise," said NSF Director Subra Suresh of the findings in the Science and Engineering Indicators 2012 released today. "And we must take seriously new strategies for education, workforce development and innovation in order for the United States to retain its international leadership position," he said.
****
According to the new Indicators 2012, the largest global S&T gains occurred in the so-called "Asia-10"--China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand--as those countries integrate S&T into economic growth. Between 1999 and 2009, for example, the U.S. share of global research and development (R&D) dropped from 38 percent to 31 percent, whereas it grew from 24 percent to 35 percent in the Asia region during the same time.
In China alone, R&D growth increased a stunning 28 percent in a single year (2008-2009), propelling it past Japan and into second place behind the United States.
"Over the last decade, the world has changed dramatically," said José-Marie Griffiths, chair of the NSB committee that oversees production of the report. "It's now a world with very different actors who have made advancement in science and technology a top priority. And many of the troubling trends we're seeing are now very well established."

New York Times Tells Us Only Chinese Near Slave Labor Could Handle Steve Jobs’ Demands

New York Times Tells Us Only Chinese Near Slave Labor Could Handle Steve Jobs’ Demands

A New York Times story, “How U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work,” uses an Obama dinner with Silicon Valley titans to frame its tale of why the US middle class should roll over and die. I am of course exaggerating for effect. But not by as much as you might think. The story by Charles Duhigg and Keith Bradsher does a very good job of explaining why Asia, and China in particular, has come to dominate consumer electronics manufacture, using the iPhone as focus

Obama outsources defense jobs to Brazil

Obama outsources defense jobs to Brazil

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Hotspots Of Potential Conflict In The Geo-Energy Era -- Michael Klare, Al Jazeera



Hotspots Of Potential Conflict In The Geo-Energy Era -- Michael Klare, Al Jazeera

Tensions are rising at potential flashpoints, as new bottlenecks for the flow of energy are identified.

Amherst, Massachusetts - Welcome to an edgy world - where a single incident at an energy "chokepoint" could set a region aflame, provoking bloody encounters, boosting oil prices, and putting the global economy at risk. With energy demand on the rise and sources of supply dwindling, we are, in fact, entering a new epoch - the Geo-Energy Era - in which disputes over vital resources will dominate world affairs. In 2012 and beyond, energy and conflict will be bound ever more tightly together, lending increasing importance to the key geographical flashpoints in our resource-constrained world.

Read more
....

The Israel lobby's role in American politics from Stephen M. Walt by Stephen M. Walt

The Israel lobby's role in American politics

Stop Warmongering in the Middle East

Stop Warmongering in the Middle East

There are some lonely voices calling for a nuclear free Middle East and a just settlement of the Israeli/Palestine conflict, but even with credentials like long service in the CIA or U.S. State Department, these calls are almost totally absent in the mainstream discourse that controls debate in the United States and Israel.

Saudi Arabia pivots towards Asia

Saudi Arabia pivots towards Asia

As the exploitation of its own gas and oil resources leads to a future in which the United States washes its hands of Middle Eastern intractables and oil, Saudi Arabia's primacy in US energy concerns is weakening. The kingdom needs a Plan B, and its latest effort this week to strengthen ties with China, perhaps already its largest customer, highlights an awkward transition to an anxious oil and gas partner to Asia's surging economies. - Peter Lee (Jan 20, '12)

Is Homeland Security Watching You Online?

Is Homeland Security Watching You Online?

FindLaw columnist Eric Sinrod writes regularly in this section on legal developments surrounding technology and the Internet. Are George Orwell's fears of a governmental "Big Brother" from his novel 1984 coming true now? Well, let's hope not, but read on.

Lucid Derangement by David Swanson

Lucid Derangement

by David Swanson

Who Wants War With Iran? by Patrick J. Buchanan

Should Embassy Damascus be closed? Posted By Marc Lynch

Posted By Marc Lynch

More Elderly Find They Can't Afford Not to Work

More Elderly Find They Can't Afford Not to Work

Evangelicals, Ron Paul and War

http://www.theamericanconservative.com/blog/2012/01/20/evangelicals-ron-paul-and-war/


Evangelicals, Ron Paul and War

Jon Basil Utley     January 20th, 2012

Is supporting war more important for evangelicals than their social values? Isn’t Ron Paul a social conservative? He opposes abortion, gay marriage and promiscuous sex, he has never been divorced and certainly supports family values, but he believes in limited government. Two of his brothers are ministers. Why then are evangelical leaders now opting for Santorum, and before him Gingrich? The one big area of disagreement with Ron Paul is war; foreign wars and the domestic one against drugs. For this they oppose him. Santorum supports unending war in Afghanistan, backing Israel without limit and a new war against Iran.

An unavoidable challenge Now is the time to make the case for military action against Iran John Yoo | National Review

An unavoidable challenge
Now is the time to make the case for military action against Iran
John Yoo | National Review

"An attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, though it would impose costs in human lives and political turmoil, would serve these interests and forestall the spread of conflict and terror."-- John Yoo

http://www.aei.org/article/foreign-and-defense-policy/regional/middle-east-and-north-africa/an-unavoidable-challenge-now-is-the-time-to-make-the-case-for-military-action-against-iran/

Jewish publisher is an idiot - but his hatred is shared by many

Jewish publisher is an idiot - but his hatred is shared by many

Andrew Adler’s suggestion in the Atlanta Jewish Times that Israel assassinate President Obama is a blot both on Israel and on American Jews.

By Chemi Shalev

Bush’s CIA director: We determined attacking Iran was a bad idea

Bush’s CIA director: We determined attacking Iran was a bad idea

“When we talked about this in the government, the consensus was that [attacking Iran] would guarantee that which we are trying to prevent — an Iran that will spare nothing to build a nuclear weapon and that would build it in secret,” Hayden told a small group of experts and reporters at an event hosted by the Center for the National Interest…
“What’s move two, three, four or five down the board?” Hayden said, arguing that an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities was only a short-term fix. “I don’t think anyone is talking about occupying anything.”
Hayden then said he didn’t believe the Israelis could or even would strike Iran — that only the United States has the capability to do it — but either way, it’s still a bad idea.
“The Israelis aren’t going to [attack Iran] … they can’t do it, it’s beyond their capacity. They only have the ability to make this [problem of Iran's nuclear program] worse. We can do a lot better,” he said. “Just look at the physics, the fact that this cannot be done in a raid, this has to be done in a campaign, the fact that neither we nor they know where this stuff is. [The Israelis] can’t do it, but we can.”

Afghanistan’s Soldiers Step Up Killings of Allied Forces




January 20, 2012

Afghanistan’s Soldiers Step Up Killings of Allied Forces

Imperial by Design

Imperial by Design

Like his two most recent predecessors, President Obama is embarking on a disastrous foreign policy bent on global domination.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Post-Keystone, Canada Takes its Business Elsewhere

Post-Keystone, Canada Takes its Business Elsewhere

How will the Economy Fare if High Oil Prices Continue

How will the Economy Fare if High Oil Prices Continue

Truthdigger of the Week Truthdigger of the Week: Chris Hedges

Truthdigger of the Week

Truthdigger of the Week: Chris Hedges

The “anti-Semitism” smear campaign against CAP and Media Matters rolls on


THURSDAY, JAN 19, 2012 4:59 AM EST

The “anti-Semitism” smear campaign against CAP and Media Matters rolls on

World Politics Review WPR Articles 14 Jan 2012 - 20 Jan 2012

World Politics Review

WPR Articles 14 Jan 2012 - 20 Jan 2012

Strategic Posture Review: Iraq

By: Richard Weitz | Strategic Posture Review
External threats and internal tensions have characterized the history of Iraq since its emergence as a nation-state. Now that all U.S. military forces have left the country, Iraq’s government once again faces the challenge of overcoming internal divisions, even as it becomes fully responsible for Iraq’s security for the first time since 2003. Iraqi leaders must manage these interrelated challenges while trying to reintegrate Iraq into the regional and international order.

Over the Horizon: The Defense Budget Revolution Won't Be Televised

By: Robert Farley | Column
Two weeks ago, President Barack Obama released a new strategic document intended to provide guidance for cuts in the growth rate of the defense budget. Though the planned cuts had already been announced in principle, the strategic priorities laid out in the document make it official: There’s going to be a knife fight at the Pentagon. Unfortunately, the American public won’t be watching.

Global Insights: Ahmadinejad's Latin American Tour Highlights Iran's Isolation

By: Richard Weitz | Column
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Latin American tour last week was noticeable for its lack of achievements. The trip again underscored the gap between Tehran’s global ambitions and its constrained capabilities. Iran has yet to establish the means to challenge core U.S. economic, security and other interests in Latin America, and there is little likelihood of that changing in the future.

The New Rules: China Must 'Pay Globalization Forward' in Africa

By: Thomas P.M. Barnett | Column
Throughout globalization's historical expansion from Europe to North America to Asia, the last region "in" has become the integrator of note for the next region "up." Europe was the primary investor, customer and integrator for the U.S. economy in its rise, and America subsequently "paid it forward" with East Asia. Recently, it has been Asia's turn, primarily through China, to pay it forward once again with Africa.

Azerbaijan LNG Deal Boosts Ukraine's Energy Leverage

By: Michael Cecire | Briefing
The standoff between Ukraine and Russia over gas prices will be accompanied by an added wrinkle this year, with news that Ukraine plans to ink a deal with energy-rich Azerbaijan for supplies of liquefied natural gas. The partnership will finally introduce unconventional energy sources to Ukraine, and underscores the flagging fortunes of Russia’s pipeline monopoly and the dwindling leverage it commands.

The Realist Prism: Iran's Nuclear Pipedream, and Washington's

By: Nikolas Gvosdev | Column
With the possibility of a clash between the U.S. and Iran over Tehran's nuclear program looming, one cannot help but wonder: Is it worth it for Iran, now grappling with increasingly onerous sanctions, to continue its pursuit of a nuclear capacity? By all indications, Iran's leaders believe so, based on their read of recent history, by which only nuclear weapons provide a deterrent to U.S. intervention.

More

Why Crisis Footing With U.S. Serves Iran's Interests

By: Eric Sterner | Briefing
Conventional wisdom holds that it is in Iran’s near-term interest to calm tensions with the West, particularly the United States. But it’s worth considering the dynamics at work in Tehran’s relationship with the rest of the world. In fact, the Iranian leadership’s incentives may run counter to our expectations, making a continuation or escalation of tensions more, not less, likely.

Iran's Fading Deterrent Could Increase the Lure of Going Nuclear

By: Zachary Keck | Briefing
Recent events have underscored that the three pillars of Iran’s long-standing deterrent-based military doctrine have become wasting assets. This is likely to influence the regime’s continued debate over whether to cross the nuclear threshold. As Iranian policymakers lose confidence in their deterrent capabilities, the rationale for a nuclear arsenal will become increasingly apparent.  

World Citizen: Divided Syrian Opposition a Sign of Post-Assad Risks

By: Frida Ghitis | Column
Protesters calling for the end to the dictatorship of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad are waving two different versions of the Syrian flag. It may seem like a small detail, but it points to deep divisions among anti-Assad forces that are keeping them from coordinating their efforts and creating concerns about how well the fractured opposition's leadership would be able to function if it toppled Assad.

In Liberia, Rhetoric but No Action on U.S. Gay Rights Initiative

By: Robbie Corey-Boulet | Briefing
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton traveled to West Africa this week to highlight the Obama administration’s efforts to promote democratic institutions and credible elections. But in Liberia, a staunch ally that receives more than $200 million annually in American foreign assistance, the conversation prior to the visit concerned the U.S. effort to combat the criminalization of homosexuality overseas.

Romania Protests Bring Long-Brewing Anger to the Surface

By: Andrew MacDowall | Briefing
With anti-government protests in Romania moving into their second week, demonstrators are showing a persistence unusual for this part of the world, underscoring the importance they have placed in calling attention to their grievances. The woes that have brought Romanians to the streets are familiar to many in Eastern Europe, leading some to suggest that this is the European incarnation of the Arab Spring.

From Trend Lines:

Continued U.S. Engagement, Pressure the Keys to Further Progress in Myanmar

Global Insider: France-India Relations

Global Insider: Egypt's International Borrowing

Qatari Foreign Policy Driven by Personal Ambition, Not Wider Vision