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Friday, August 31, 2012

Foreign Policy Night in Tampa A horror movie by Justin Raimondo, August 31, 2012

Foreign Policy Night in Tampa
A horror movie

Governor Brown Admits the Obvious "We Have Lived Beyond Our Means"; Brown Agrees to Vast Overhaul of the California's Pension System; Unions Howl Over Obvious Truth

Governor Brown Admits the Obvious "We Have Lived Beyond Our Means"; Brown Agrees to Vast Overhaul of the California's Pension System; Unions Howl Over Obvious Truth

In a long-overdue moment, governor Jerry Brown has finally admitted the obvious, the state's pension system is broke and California Has "Lived Beyond Our Means". Unions of course are howling at that obvious admission. http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2012/08/governor-brown-admits-obvious-we-have.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MishsGlobalEconomicTrendAnalysis+%28Mish%27s+Global+Economic+Trend+Analysis%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

China, Germany to Settle More Trade in Yuan, Euros; What's That Mean for Gold, the Dollar?


Germany and China: The New Special Relationship

Germany and China: The New Special Relationship  

By Stephan Richter | Thursday, August 30, 2012
http://www.theglobalist.com/storyid.aspx?storyid=9734
 
For several decades, the Americans believed they "owned" the West's relationship with China. The most recent symbol of that is the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue between the two governments. But then, a woman entered the global diplomatic game. Hint: It's not Hillary Clinton. It's Angela Merkel, the world's leading woman politician. Stephan Richter explains.

Cyber War Envelops Middle East

Cyber War Envelops Middle East

Iran has already been hit by Flame, Duqu, and Stuxnet. Now we are learning of a more mysterious attack against Iran’s oil infrastructure by malware called “Wiper:”
Wiper was an aggressive piece of malware that targeted machines belonging to the Iranian Oil Ministry and the National Iranian Oil Company in April.
…No one has ever found a sample of Wiper in order to study its code and determine exactly what it did to machines in Iran, but Kaspersky did obtain mirror images of “dozens” of hard drives that had been hit by the malware.
Although the disks were thoroughly wiped in most cases, leaving no malware behind – or much of anything else – the researchers did find evidence of its previous existence on some of the systems that weren’t completely wiped. The evidence came in the form of a registry key that pointed to files that had been on the machines before being erased.
According to Kaspersky, the wiping activity occurred between April 21 and April 30. Wiper’s erase operation focused initially on destroying data on the first half of a disk, then systematically erasing system files, causing the systems to crash and preventing them from rebooting… _Wiredhttp://peakoil.com/publicpolicy/cyber-war-envelops-middle-east/

Fishing for Trouble in South China Sea

Fishing for Trouble in South China Sea
Kor Kian Beng - Straits Times | August 31, 2012


Tanmen, Hainan. He was the veteran fisherman tasked with guiding his young cousin during a 2007 fishing expedition in the waters near the Spratly Islands.

But Chen Yibin, 48, ended up having to pack his 20-year-old relative's body into a freezer that was meant to store fish, as he made a three-day dash back to their hometown here.

To this day, Chen believes his cousin was killed by Filipino soldiers who boarded the Chinese fishermen's boat, charging that it had strayed into Philippine waters and then firing at them.

Selling War as ‘Smart Power’

Selling War as ‘Smart Power’

The latest selling point for American warfare is “smart power” humanitarianism, dispatching the U.S. military to eliminate foreign leaders designated by pundits as evildoers taking lives and resisting freedom. Ex-FBI agent Coleen Rowley warns against this latest con.

By Coleen Rowley

Why We Need a U.S.-India Bilateral Investment Treaty Now

Why We Need a U.S.-India Bilateral Investment Treaty Now

RealClearMarkets

August 30, 2012

By Manik Suri
http://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2012/08/30/why_we_need_a_us-india_free_trade_agreement_now_99851.html

CFR Update: IAEA Reportedly Confirms Expanded Iranian Nuclear Capacity

Top of the Agenda: IAEA Reportedly Confirms Expanded Iranian Nuclear Capacity
An International Atomic Energy Agency report says Iran has doubled the number of centrifuges (NYT) installed in the Fordow underground site, bringing it three-quarters of the way to the 2,800 centrifuges it needs for the production of nuclear fuel. The report, which Iran called a "political move," led the White House to warn that "the window that is open now to resolve this diplomatically will not remain open indefinitely," while Israel says the findings add credibility to its warnings about Iran's nuclear ambitions.
Analysis
"With Iran and the nuclear program, I've not given up on diplomacy, and I still think there's a chance down the road that you could come up with an outcome that would be enough for the Iranian government to wrap themselves in, but would not be too much for the United States or Israel or the rest of the world to accept. But that would really be threading the needle. I would say it's a possibility, but it's going to be extraordinarily difficult to come up with that sort of a negotiated outcome," says CFR President Richard Haass.
"The development of Iran's nuclear infrastructure and enrichment complex to date has followed what international relations theorists call a "salami tactic" path—by pushing the bounds of what is allowed under the NPT and by keeping back-end development of nuclear technologies under wraps, the country has been able to build a full-cycle nuclear infrastructure slice by slice without ever clearly pushing the proliferation envelope. Tehran may very well continue that trend and avoid the potential firestorm of economic and military consequences that a public acknowledgement of nuclear-weapons capabilities could bring," writes Chris White in National Interest.
"Perhaps supreme leader Ali Khamenei doesn't take the Israeli threat seriously, though clearly he should; perhaps he might welcome such an attack as a way to rally domestic and international support, bust out of tightening economic sanctions and justify a unqualified race for a bomb. Whatever the case, Iran's behavior has pushed the Obama administration into an awkward position," says this Washington Post editorial.
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China’s Greatest Challenge: Not America, But Itself


China’s Greatest Challenge: Not America, But Itself

Exclusive First Read
CHINA
China faces tough economic, demographic and social issues it must deal with. Foreign affairs may take a back seat.
Read this story http://thediplomat.com/2012/08/29/why-chinas-greatest-challenge-is-not-america-but-within/?utm_source=The+Diplomat+List&utm_campaign=4fa38758f8-Diplomat+Brief+2012+vol19&utm_medium=email

More Bad News Imminent: August US Auto Production Set To Plunge By Most In 16 Months

More Bad News Imminent: August US Auto Production Set To Plunge By Most In 16 Months

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/more-bad-news-imminent-august-us-auto-production-set-plunge-most-16-months

Guest Post: The U.S. Drought Is Hitting Harder Than Most Realize

Guest Post: The U.S. Drought Is Hitting Harder Than Most Realize

Submitted by Chris Martenson of Peak Prosperity,

This is an important update on the U.S. drought of 2012, the combined record-setting July land temperatures, and their impact on food prices, water availability, energy, and even U.S. GDP. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-us-drought-hitting-harder-most-realize

Essays for the Presidency


Essays for the Presidency

While campaigning for the highest office in the land, presidential hopefuls and their advisers have turned to Foreign Affairs to publish essays laying out how they see the world. Here is a collection of those articles, grouped by election year. Readhttp://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/collections/essays-for-the-presidency?cid=nlc-this_week_on_foreignaffairs_co-083012-essays_for_the_presidency_3-083012

Governor Susana Martinez's Speech to the RNC - Gov. Susana Martinez

Governor Susana Martinez's Speech to the RNC - Gov. Susana Martinezhttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/08/30/damn_im_a_republican_115266.html

Condoleezza Rice's Speech To The RNC - Condoleezza Rice

Condoleezza Rice's Speech To The RNC - Condoleezza Ricehttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/08/29/condoleezza_rices_speech_to_the_republican_national_convention_115263.html

The Obama Record: Borrowed, Spent & Wasted By Rep. Paul Ryan, RealClearPolitics - August 30, 2012

The Obama Record: Borrowed, Spent & Wasted

By Rep. Paul Ryan, RealClearPolitics - August 30, 2012

Full Text: Mitt Romney's Acceptance Speech at the RNC

Full Text: Mitt Romney's Acceptance Speech at the RNC

The full remarks as prepared for delivery at the Tampa Bay Times Forum

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Iran's Terror Plots: Delhi

For those interested in Iranian terror plots, Gareth Porter just published a 3-part series on the Delhi attempt:

http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/08/evidence-in-delhi-embassy-bombing-suggests-journalist-was-framed-part-1/
http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/08/police-case-for-iranian-bomb-plot-based-on-tainted-evidence-part-2/
http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/08/within-special-cell-of-delhi-police-a-history-of-falsifying-evidence-part-3/

China’s Real Blue Water Navy

By Andrew Erickson and Gabe Collins

Commentary: Global blivet


Commentary: Global blivet
By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE
UPI Editor at Large

Can America Compete?

Harvard Magazine reports in seven parts on the ills of contemporary U.S. capitalism, exposing a lot of issues that are sadly missing from the political debate.  Well worth taking the time to read through.

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/can-america-compete

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/the-strategic-context

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/manufacturing

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/compensation-practices-and-incentives

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/the-workforce

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/the-business-ecosystem

http://harvardmagazine.com/2012/09/the-other-commons

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

BEIGE BOOK: Full Text

BEIGE BOOK: Full Text

The Federal Reserve's Beige Book is out.

Click Here For Highlights >

Here's the Fed's summary:

Ike Was Right!


http://www.theglobalist.com/storyid.aspx?StoryId=9733

Globalist Perspective
> Global Politics
Ike Was Right!


By The Globalist | Wednesday, August 29, 2012
 
Washington elites have decimated the U.S. economy. They traded the gold of American manufacturing jobs for the silver of geopolitical power. Rather than fight for our middle class, they took false pride in the warfare state. The result, writes our "Thomas Paine" columnist, is that the world no longer listens to Washington elites. Is it time for America to do the same?

Paramountcy Lost: Challenges for American Diplomacy in a Competitive World Order Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)


Paramountcy Lost:
Challenges for American Diplomacy in a Competitive World Order

The American Foreign Service Association’s Adair Memorial Lecture
at the American University School of International Service

Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)
29 August, 2012, Washington, DC                   
         

It’s a pleasure to be here among academics, aspiring policy-makers and public servants, as well – I see – as a few defunct diplomats and diplomatresses like myself.  I’m here to exchange views with you about the new era we are entering, the changing place of the United States within it, and some of the implications of this for our foreign policies.  I envy those of you who are just embarking on careers in various aspects of statecraft and diplomacy.  Both the utility of these arts and the psychic income they yield are greatest in times of adversity.  We who came before you have managed to pile up a lot of adversity for you to deal with. 

We’ve all heard that, according to the Mayan calendar, December this year will mark the end of a long historical cycle, bringing with it the end of the world as we have known it.  Those of you in the audience who are worried about this know who you are.  But, I wonder.  How did the ancient Mayans so accurately forecast the budgetary apocalypse our Congresscritters have now crafted for us?
                                                                       
Let’s be clear about the significance of the man-made “fiscal cliff” before us.  It is a monument to a unique combination of political paralysis, fiscal dementia, and a compulsion to wage unaffordable and unwinnable wars. It symbolizes everything that the world now sees as wrong with our country.  And it marks the addition of financial incapacity to the damage to American influence abroad that military blunders have already done.

The United States remains the world’s only superpower but the diffusion of wealth and power to regions beyond the North Atlantic has greatly reduced our military’s ability to shape trends and events around the world.  China, in particular, is emerging as an immovable military object, if not yet an irresistible military force.  Our political influence, economic clout, and self-confidence  are not what they used to be.  The “sequester” and the political dysfunction that led us to it promise to weaken us still more.  Major adjustments in U.S. policies and diplomacy are overdue.

Global governance was once mainly a vector of the struggle between the two superpowers and the blocs they led.  After Moscow defaulted on the Cold War and dropped out of the contest for worldwide dominance, Americans briefly imagined that our matchless economic strength and unchallengeable military supremacy would enable us unilaterally to shape the world to our advantage.   In the first decade of this century, however, the wizards of Wall Street brought down the global economy even as they discredited the so-called “Washington consensus” and emasculated the once-robust image of American capitalism. 

Meanwhile, much of the world was disappointed by the lack of U.S. leadership on other issues ranging from climate change to peace in the Middle East.  People everywhere looked hopefully to worldwide institutions, like the United Nations, the G-20, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization.  None of them proved up to the job.  Responsibility for the regulation of the planetary political economy began to devolve to its regions, if only by default. 

The globally coherent worldwide order that American power configured itself to enforce after the Cold War is clearly morphing into something new.  We can see the outlines of the new order even if we cannot yet make out its details and don’t know what to call it.  The “post-Cold War era” is long past.  The “American Century” ended eleven years ago, on 9/11.  We are exiting the “age of antiterrorism.”  We are uncertain against whom we should deploy our incomparable military might or to what international purposes we should bend ourselves.  

Call it what you will.  This is an era of enemy deprivation syndrome.  There is no overarching contest to define our worldview.  The international system is once again governed by multiple contentions and shifting strategic geometries.  In such a world, diplomatic agility is as important as constancy of commitment – or more so.

Before the Cold War, the United States twice fought in coalition with Britain, France, Australia, Canada, and a few other countries, but we had no permanent alliances.  The Soviet threat and the need to deal with the instabilities that attended the end of European empires in Asia and Africa led Americans to reverse our traditional aversion to foreign entanglements and to embrace them with a vengeance.  The United States ultimately extended formal protection to about a fourth of the world’s countries and informal protection to nearly another fourth.  In our usage, the word “ally” lost its original sense of “accomplice” and came to mean “protectorate,” not partner.

There have been huge changes in the global security environment since the collapse of our Soviet enemy.  But, there have been no adjustments at all in our alliance and defense commitments to foreign nations – other than their enlargement.   The alliance structure we built in the Cold War has long outlived the foe it was created to counter.  Remarkably, however, the preservation of our prestige at the head of that alliance structure seems to have become the principal objective of our foreign policy.  Carrying on with approaches that address long-disappeared realities rather than adjusting to new circumstances is patently dysfunctional behavior. It  represents the triumph of complacency and inertia over reason, statesmanship, and strategy.

With a few obvious exceptions like Israel, south Korea, and Saudi Arabia, the beneficiaries of our military protection do not agree that they face threats to their independence and prosperity that justify higher levels of defense spending.  Our allies have been cutting, not increasing defense budgets.  This has not, of course, stopped us from boosting our own military spending to the point that, depending on how you calculate it, it is somewhere between 7/8 and 1 1/8 as much as the rest of the world combined. 

The power of the United States once spoke for itself.  Americans expected automatic deference.  But the new world order that is coming into being is multipolar, neither guided nor managed by the United States.  Militarily powerful as we are and will remain, we cannot expect foreigners to follow our directives.  We must instead help them see the need to do things in their own interest that happen also to be in ours.  As Lester Pearson once put it, “diplomacy is letting someone else have your own way.”

Since they don’t perceive much need for our protection, U.S. allies do not display much gratitude for it.  They can’t think why they should object to our spending money to relieve them of the burden of defending themselves against hypothetical or unknown threats.  But – unlike the past – they also see no need to repay U.S. largesse by lining up behind us on issues in which their own interests are not directly engaged.  Some might consider it astonishing that, for our part, we Americans haven’t asked what specific interests of ours are still served by the alliance structure we built to deal with the late, unlamented USSR.

There are a lot of things wrong with a foreign policy that is mostly on mindless military autopilot.  It deploys U.S. forces abroad to perpetuate our credibility as a superpower rather than to pursue well-defined politico-military or economic ends.  It treats military spending as a perpetual industrial subsidy and ongoing fiscal stimulus rather than as a measured response to identifiable external threats.  It drives diplomacy toward a futile effort to persuade allies to join us in disinvesting in the future by borrowing money to build military rather than civilian infrastructure and engaging in a constantly expanding list of wars of choice.

As we prepare to enter a still nameless new era, it’s time for Americans to take a fresh look at the world.  In this regard, the much-feared “sequester” could be a very good thing.  It might compel us to rethink what is really necessary and to craft an affordable approach to national security as well as a foreign policy to implement it.  Our present approach is neither affordable nor effective.

China and Other Rising Powers

In a world where the United States no longer calls most of the shots and cannot hope to dominate every region of the globe, we must learn how to deal with other great powers on a basis of equality and mutual respect.  China is the most obvious test of our ability to do so.  In recent decades, it has been making a century of progress every fifteen years.  It is now our economic competitor everywhere, if still a politico-military force only on its own East, Central, and South Asian peripheries.

Russia is again a regional, not a world power.  Its huge strategic arsenal simply demonstrates the irrelevance of nuclear weapons to anything but deterrence against the nuclear weapons of others.  The European Union has made Europe a zone of peace, but it is an economic superpower that is too disorganized to act globally.  Brazil may be primus inter pares in South America and India may reign supreme in South Asia, but both are in strategic regions disconnected from the global tensions that preoccupy Americans.  By contrast, the Second World War showed us that the Indo-Pacific region was a coherent strategic zone from which hostile forces could marshal resources to project power globally, including to North America.  (That same region was where the bloodiest proxy conflicts of the Cold War unfolded in Korea and Vietnam.)  The strategic importance of the Indo-Pacific is hardwired into the American military consciousness.

China is now resuming its millennial place at the center of the Indo-Pacific region.  Rather than exploring ways peacefully to accommodate this or bend it to our advantage, the United States seems determined to resist any diminution of our own role as the ultimate arbiter of regional security issues.  As a result, we are being drawn into supporting claimants to islands, rocks, and reefs also claimed by China.  But our capacity to dominate China’s periphery has a limited half life.  China’s defense burden remains low but its spending has been doubling every five years or so apace with its civilian budget and economy.  China is focused on defending itself in its own region, not on projecting power beyond it.  Defense is cheaper than offense, which is what we specialize in.

It is not necessary to dominate a region to deter efforts by others to do so.  We don’t need to enjoy unchallengeable military superiority in Asia in order to enable our allies and friends there to learn to live with growing Chinese wealth and power, as we ourselves must do.  Dominance of Asia is unaffordable.  Even a less ambitious and more appropriate balancing role is going to be hugely expensive.  We’re talking about balancing the power of a country that is expected within forty years to have a GDP that’s at least twice the size of ours.  If we are determined for some reason to contest China’s reassertion of influence in its own region, we better have our economic act together.

The Economic Base for Foreign Policy

Otto von Bismarck once commented that “God looks after fools, drunks, and the United States of America.”  I’ve always prayed that this was a valid religious revelation.  But a belief in a special Providence for our country cannot excuse or offset the effects of self-destructive policies.  We may not be in decline but we are clearly in denial.  America is no longer setting the pace internationally. 

It is pointless to blame others for this.  Though our problems have sometimes been bound up in global supply chains, they have mostly been made in the U.S.A. by American politicians.  The depression we’re in was crafted by elected officials in Washington working with tax-pampered plutocrats on Wall Street.  There’s no denying that they did what they did with the mostly admiring endorsement of the American people. 

America has shown uncommon resilience in the past.  But there is no reason to believe that the structural predicaments now afflicting us will automatically correct themselves.  We must change a wide range of policies and practices if we are to restore our traditional socioeconomic vigor and buoyancy.  We need to do this for its own sake.  But it’s also the key to assuring ourselves the role in shaping the global future which our interests demand.  Some aspects of our current condition are disheartening.

The United States was founded on a promise of equality of opportunity.  Yet we now rank 100th out of the top 140 nations in income equality.  Horatio Alger would be horrified to learn how much less social mobility there now is in America in comparison with much of Europe, not to mention China.  Many here have come to doubt that hard work will pay off in financial and social success.  But, then, it’s now notoriously hard for Americans to find work at all.

Economists define depression as “a chronic condition of subnormal activity for a considerable period without any marked tendency either towards recovery or towards collapse.”  We may not like the word “depression,” but we’re in one.  The “unemployment rate” is going down largely because people are dropping out of the job market.  Over the past five years, the labor participation rate – the percentage of our fellow citizens who are either employed or actively looking for work – has fallen to the point where there are now 100 million working-age Americans without jobs.  There will be a lot more if our Congress does not rise to the challenges before it.   Fiscal suicide will not cure the public policy problems Americans have made for ourselves.

The U.S. government is currently borrowing 25.9 percent of what it spends, an amount equivalent to 11 percent of GDP.  Despite all this spending, our transportation and other infrastructure is decaying, the results of our educational system are ever more mediocre, our investment in science and engineering is going down, and our public health system, which costs more and delivers less for the money than any other in the world, is becoming an even costlier burden on our economy. 

As other nations invest in competitiveness, we are disinvesting in it in favor of wasteful spending on hyper-expensive weaponry and insolvent welfare and pension programs.  Our balance of trade and payments deficits are not being corrected.  There is no prospect our budget will be balanced anytime soon.  The only sector of our economy that is prospering is its bloated military-industrial complex.  This cannot go on forever.  So, sooner or later, it will end.

Economic, Trade, and Investment Policies

Technology has annihilated distance, linking people across the globe with unprecedented immediacy.  As the Ghanaian diplomat, Kojo Debrah put it: “Radio enables people to hear all evil, television enables them to see all evil, and the jet plane enables them to go out and do all evil.”  He might have added that the internet enables them to tweet each other as they do it.

Businesses are no longer limited to national labor and capital markets.  They locate their operations anywhere they want to maximize their profits.  They hire where labor costs are lowest in relation to productivity and they borrow where rates are most favorable to their competitive participation in worldwide supply chains.  Their executives may feel patriotism.  Their business plans treat it as an advertizing gimmick.

In this highly competitive environment, the advantage goes to those nations and regions that excel at the education of their workforces, the modernization of their infrastructure, and the crafting of intelligent industrial policies to empower entrepreneurial innovation and the exploitation of new technologies.  The decisive factors in all these elements of competitiveness are the competence of a nation’s politicians, the coherence of its policies, and the quality and timeliness of its decision-making.  Now, more than ever, the domestic policies of societies determine the success or failure of their foreign interactions as well as their domestic conditions. 

To restore American dynamism, we need a great deal more results-oriented reasoning on the part of our politicians than we’ve seen so far this century.  Instead of railing at our foreign competitors, we should be learning from them.  We have a tax code stitched together by a million special interests acting over the course of a century.  This serves as our de facto industrial policy, directing investment and other business decisions in ways that subsidize vested interests and secure the status quo.  Our tax system obstructs rather than facilitates economic restructuring to make our economy more productive, prosperous, and competitive.   It’s got to go.

It’s been decades since the United States dominated global manufacturing or was the world’s greatest creditor, not debtor nation.  And it’s been a while since we drove the liberalization of trade and investment regimes at the global level.  The Doha Round failed.  There is no successor to it.

We can’t afford to continue to base our trade and investment policies on assumptions drawn from circumstances that no longer exist.  These policies badly need adjustment to promote innovation, ensure efficient infrastructure, improve the business climate, and raise the quality of the workforce.  But many of the international trade agreements we’re currently pursuing seem aimed less at leveraging foreign prosperity to our advantage, expanding our exports, attracting investment, repositioning our industry in regional markets, or increasing our competitiveness than at shoring up our ebbing standing abroad.  We need to refocus our trade and investment policies on job creation.

Western Values as a National Interest

I want to conclude by returning briefly to a vitally important aspect of the evolving world order that is far too seldom discussed.

For two centuries, North Atlantic societies set the pace of economic and technological advance and wrote the rules for the international system.  Trans-Atlantic solidarity enabled capitalism, liberal democratic values, the rule of law, and the idea of the nation-state to prevail over challenges from all the alternatives.  The ideals of Atlantic civilization found expression in the universal acceptance of a rule-bound international system and institutions of global governance based on Western norms.

Sadly, this heritage is now slipping into the past or in danger of doing so.  The North Atlantic is clearly being displaced  by the Indo-Pacific as the global economic center of gravity.  Most strikingly, Western societies no longer present compelling models that other nations and regions wish to emulate.  Our democracy is increasingly equated with political venality, shortsightedness, indecision, and lack of strategic resolve.  But the problem has been compounded by the foundering of the trans-Atlantic consensus since 9/11.  Our own divisions now cast doubt on the core values of Western civilization and their durability.

Europeans and Americans have come to disagree about an expanding array of issues bearing on the rights of the individual.  These differences are passionate and fundamental.  They include arguments about the propriety of “enhanced methods of interrogation” [otherwise known as torture], “extraordinary rendition” [meaning kidnapping and disappearance], the suspension of habeas corpus [in favor of indefinite detention without charge], the withholding of evidence from the accused, and the extrajudicial administration of capital punishment. 

North Atlantic societies are still vastly more respectful of the dignity and rights of individuals than others, but the region as a whole no longer shares a coherent code of values with which to challenge the conscience of humanity.  Lacking both consensus and conviction, its member states cannot effectively defend, let alone advance, the Western notion of the rule of law against competing ideologies derived from Islam or Confucianism.  For the first time in centuries, non-Western values are coming to be seen as realistic alternatives to Western norms.  

Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law

America’s recent departures from the rule of law are in many ways the greatest menace our freedoms have ever faced.  Our country faces no external existential threat comparable to that of the Cold War.  Yet we’re building a garrison state that is eating away at our liberties in the name of saving them.  Peace is the climate in which freedoms grow.  We need an end to war in order to address the many threats to our ability to “secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.” 

Americans believe that societies that respect the rule of law and rely upon democratic debate to make decisions are more prosperous, successful, and stable than those that do not.  Recent efforts to impose our freedoms on others by force have reminded us that they can be spread only by our setting an example that others see as worthy of emulation.  Freedom cannot be sustained if we ourselves violate its principles.  This means that we must respect the right of others to make their own choices as long as these do not harm us.   It also presupposes a contest of ideas.  Our ideas will not prosper unless we maintain solidarity with others who value and also practice them. 

That is why a first priority of American diplomacy must now be to reforge the unity of the Atlantic community behind the concept of the rule of law.  This cannot be done unless we confront and correct our own lapses from the great traditions of our republic.  To re-empower our diplomacy by inspiring others to look to our leadership, we must restore our respect for our Bill of Rights as well as our deference to the dignity of the individual both at home and abroad.  Let me be specific. 
                                                           
We must revive the Fourth Amendment’s ban on searches and seizures of persons, houses, papers, and other personal effects without probable cause.  No more “extraordinary rendition.” No more universal electronic eavesdropping, warrantless seizure of paper and electronic records at the border, and intrusive inspection of anything and everything in the possession of passengers using public transportation.

We must reinstate the Fifth Amendment’s protections against deprivation “of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”  No more suspension of habeas corpus or executive branch assertions of a right to detain or even kill people, including American citizens, without charge or trial.

We must return to respect for the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of the right of anyone accused of a crime to be informed of the charges and confronted with the witnesses against him and to be represented by a lawyer.  No more “secret evidence.”  

We must reinstate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments,” including torture.  And we must reaffirm our adherence to the several Geneva Conventions.  We Americans can have no credibility as advocates for human rights if we do not practice what we preach.

In short, the path to renewed effectiveness in American diplomacy lies not just in wise and dexterous statecraft and the professionalization of those who implement it abroad.  It rests on the rebuilding of credibility through the rediscovery of the values that made our country great. 

Red dawn: China aims for global dominance

Red dawn: China aims for global dominance
Red dawn: China aims for global dominance
Missile tests. Espionage. Territorial claims and an endless quest for oil. Across the board, China is positioning itself for global dominance. The Middle Kingdom continues to expand its influence and leverage its gains by purchasing U.S. debt. While our elected leaders bicker, communist China works to take pole position as the world's top superpower. Read & Comhttp://times247.com/pset/22china-page-set1/page/0

Republican Party Platform, 2012

Republican Party Platform, 2012

The Republican Party of the United States released its 2012 platform on August 28, 2012.http://www.cfr.org/us-election-2012/republican-party-platform-2012/p28890?cid=rss-fullfeed-republican_party_platform%2C_201-082812&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Christie's Speech at the Republican National Convention, August 2012

Christie's Speech at the Republican National Convention, August 2012

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie gave these remarks at the Republican National Convention on August 28, 2012. Among his themes, Governor Christie discussed the economy, jobs, and debt.http://www.cfr.org/us-election-2012/christies-speech-republican-national-convention-august-2012/p28892?cid=rss-fullfeed-christie_s_speech_at_the_repub-082812&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Taibbi: The True Story of Mitt Romney and Bain Capital

Taibbi: The True Story of Mitt Romney and Bain Capital

There’s Bride at the End of the Tunnel


There’s Bride at the End of the Tunnel

By Mohammed Omer - http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/theres-bride-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel

Obama Should Extend His Compassion


Obama Should Extend His Compassion

The Obama administration’s Treasury Department recently partially lifted some economic sanctions against Iran for 45 days to allow selected nonprofit groups to collect funds for victims of huge earthquakes in that country. These monetary donations are exempt from U.S. government sanctions until Oct. 5; donations of food and medicine were already permanently exempted from the embargo. According to a Treasury Department statement, the new exemption on monetary donations “is a demonstration of [the] administration’s commitment to supporting the Iranian people affected by this tragedy, and responds to the American people’s desire to provide immediate assistance.”
The administration should be commended for this humanitarian gesture, which allows American aid to flow to Iranian earthquake victims but doesn’t create a new U.S. government program or bureaucracy in doing so. The new exemption, along with existing targeted sanctions against Iranians involved in terrorism or the Iranian government’s alleged nuclear weapons program, is also designed to show that the United States is not trying to focus its potent economic weapon against the people of Iran.
The Obama administration should extend this compassion and realize that many of the United States’ more general economic sanctions against Iran for its nuclear program, which would not be lifted by the temporary relaxation, are also harming the Iranian people. Unlike more defensible targeted sanctions against items that can be used in the nuclear program and against Iranians who are connected with it or terrorism, more general economic sanctions — such as bans on the importation of Iranian oil or financial transactions associated with such trade — are blunt instruments of statecraft that do hurt the Iranian people. Because oil is Iran’s predominant export, the money the economy does not receive from those sales egregiously hurts every Iranian, including the poorest and even the previously mentioned earthquake victims. More generally, for example, if Iran, because of sanctions, cannot get parts for machines in hospitals or electric-power generation, water purification, and waste-treatment plants, average Iranians suffer significantly.
Supposedly, more general economic sanctions, despite the harm to the Iranian population, are worth it because they will put pressure on Iran to miraculously give up its nuclear program. This favorable outcome is a pipe dream. It is not a good thing for a radical Islamist regime to obtain a nuclear weapon or even get close, but Iran’s primary motivation for having a nuclear program is the threats facing it. Its “rough neighborhood” includes possible attacks by the United States, unfriendly Arab states with possible nuclear ambitions of their own, and a hostile Israel, already possessing 200 to 400 nuclear weapons. Iran looks at the respect the United States shows the likely nuclear North Korea and the lack of respect it showed the non-nuclear Libya and Iraq by attacking them and deposing their leaders. Thus, economic pressure, no matter how intense, likely will not cause Iran to back off on such a perceived vital national security requirement for national survival.
If the history of economic sanctions is any indication, the pressure on Iran will lessen over time as Iran finds ways to evade the measures. Yet in the meantime, those fruitless economic weapons will hurt the Iranian people without achieving their political purpose of compelling the Iranian government to give up its nuclear program.

Tough Chris Christie Convention Speech Articulates Paul Ryan’s Message


 

Tough Chris Christie Convention Speech Articulates Paul Ryan’s Message

The New Jersey governor’s eat-your-broccoli speech to the RNC on Tuesday night was pure Paul Ryan—not Mitt Romney. Peter Beinart on how the vice-presidential nominee has transformed the Romney campaign. http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/08/29/tough-chris-christie-convention-speech-articulates-paul-ryan-s-message.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Farticles+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Latest+Articles%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

 

Israeli Impunity, US Indulgence, and Rachel Corrie

Israeli Impunity, US Indulgence, and Rachel Corrie

August 29th, 2012 - http://www.lobelog.com/israeli-impunity-us-indulgence-and-rachel-corrie/

Mitchell Plitnick

The Platform From Hell

The Platform From Hell

In response to the well nigh universal jeers that greeted his endorsement of Mitt Romney, Sen. Rand Paul (son of Ron Paul) tried to reassure us: Oh, don’t worry, because the Paulians will have a major influence on the party platform. How so? Well, it seems the Republicans want to audit the Federal Reserve — [...]http://original.antiwar.com/justin/2012/08/28/the-platform-from-hell/

Here's The Truth About What's Responsible For The Debt And Deficit Problem by Henry Blodget

Here's The Truth About What's Responsible For The Debt And Deficit Problem

The Real War In Syria Is Between Saudi Arabia And Iran by Felix Imonti

The Real War In Syria Is Between Saudi Arabia And Iran

DEAR AMERICAN COMPANIES: Here's How To Fix The Economy by Henry Blodget

DEAR AMERICAN COMPANIES: Here's How To Fix The Economy

Jim Rogers: It's Going To Get Really "Bad After The Next Election"

Jim Rogers: It's Going To Get Really "Bad After The Next Election"http://moneymorning.com/ob/jim-rogers-issues-dramatic-warning/?utm_expid=5485297-8&utm_referrer=http%3A%2F%2Fpaid.outbrain.com%2Fnetwork%2Fredir%3Fkey%3D9b749afe0a597feb817e74899db1b05b%26rdid%3D370103665%26type%3DCAD_d%2Ft1_ch%26in-site%3Dfalse%26pc_id%3D9513251%26req_id%3D35aeb7b6e2dfd6c1570029b4cfdae097%26agent%3Dblog_JS_rec%26recMode%3D4%26reqType%3D1%26wid%3D100%26imgType%3D0%26adsCats%3D1708%2C-1%2C-1%26refPub%3D533%26prs%3Dtrue%26scp%3Dfalse%26fcapElementId%3D6439%26version%3D67297%26idx%3D0

The Myth of an Affirmative-Action President by Ta-Nehisi Coates

The Myth of an Affirmative-Action President

Top 75 cities of 2025 and cities of the future

Top 75 cities of 2025 and cities of the future

Foreign Policy magazine and McKinsey have a list of the cities that will have the most economic growth between 2010 and 2025

Foreign Policy also features the 29 cities from China that are in the list of the top 75

Although Shanghai had no skyscrapers in 1980, it now has at least 4,000 -- more than twice as many as New York. In 2010, 208 million square feet of real estate, nearly 80 times the square footage of New York's massive One World Trade Center, was constructed in the city. Above, the Jinmao Building and Oriental Pearl TV Tower can be seen dominating the Shanghai skyline as its rises from the banks of Huangpu River. http://nextbigfuture.com/2012/08/top-75-cities-of-2025-and-cities-of.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+blogspot%2Fadvancednano+%28nextbigfuture%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

How the Obama Administration Helped Revive the U.S. Auto Industry

How the Obama Administration Helped Revive the U.S. Auto Industry

The Obama administration is about to promulgate fuel-economy and carbon-pollution limits for 2017 to 2025 model cars. These essential standards will reduce oil use, save families money from lower gasoline purchases, create jobs, and reduce emissions responsible for climate change. Under these new standards U.S. companies will produce vehicles that employ modern fuel-saving technologies and ensure that their cars remain competitive with foreign models during future oil and gasoline price shocks. Recent events reemphasize the importance of reducing…Read more...http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/How-the-Obama-Administration-Helped-Revive-the-U.S.-Auto-Industry.html
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Voters Favor Obama over Romney on Energy

Voters Favor Obama over Romney on Energy

US voters apparently favor President Barack Obama’s energy policy over the energy independence plan unveiled by Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, according to two new polls conducted this week.  According to a Washington Post/ABC News poll, 49% of registered voters surveyed preferred Obama’s energy policy, while 41% preferred Romney’s. Voters were specifically asked who they trust more to come through with a successful energy policy. In the same poll that considered adults who are both registered voters and non-registered…Read more...http://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Voters-Favor-Obama-over-Romney-on-Energy.html

Egypt's Morsi Firms China Ties

Egypt's Morsi Firms China Ties http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444230504577617271550304082.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

The Jobs Crisis Obama, Romney and the Low-Wage Future of America

The Jobs Crisis

Obama, Romney and the Low-Wage Future of America

August 27, 2012 By Dan Froomkin
http://nieman.harvard.edu/reports/watchdogarticle.aspx?id=100005

Revolt of the Rich

Revolt of the Rich

Our financial elites are the new secessionists.

Ron Paul’s Victory

The American Conservative
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/ron-pauls-emerging-legacy/

Ron Paul’s Victory

Martin Indyk: Israel “cried wolf”

Martin Indyk: Israel “cried wolf”

August 27th, 2012 | Printable version |

Marsha B. Cohen

Marsha B. Cohen
Having pulled all the stops to avert an Israeli attack against Iran last spring that never happened, has the Obama administration given all that it has to Israel’s hawkish leaders only to learn that it has been played? If so, how might this affect the US response to Israeli warnings that it will attack Iran before the 2012 presidential election?
Martin Indyk, a former US Ambassador to Israel during the Clinton years who now heads foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, is reported by the Sheldon Adelson-owned Israel Hayom to have told Israel Army Radio on August 23 that:http://www.lobelog.com/martin-indyk-israel-cried-wolf/

Facebook: The Real Presidential Swing State

Facebook: The Real Presidential Swing State
by David Talbot
The outcome of the 2012 campaign could have less to do with grand vision than with online data analytics and peer-to-peer voter targeting.
Read More »http://www.technologyreview.com/news/428530/facebook-the-real-presidential-swing-state/?nlid=nldly&nld=2012-08-29

Apple/Samsung: The Verdict on Innovation

Apple/Samsung: The Verdict on Innovation
by David Talbot
The uncertainty over Android could slow the development of technology.
Read More »

West's Idea of No Nukes Doesn't Include Itself (Part 5)

Nonproliferation - Foreign Policy in Focus
The West insists on nuclear nonproliferation, but refuses to reciprocate with meaningful disarmament.
www.fpif.org/.../wests_idea_of_no_nukes_doesnt_include_itse...