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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Bill Blum on the Votings Rights Act "The Political Forces Behind the Attack on the Voting Rights Act"


Bill Blum on the Votings Rights Act
"The Political Forces Behind the Attack on the Voting Rights Act" -- Take it from the ultraconservative and increasingly unrestrained Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia: What's really at stake in the case of Shelby County v. Holder isn't simply the technical constitutionality of Sections 4 and 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, but the "perpetuation of racial entitlement" in the law's renewal.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_political_forces_behind_the_attack_on_the_voting_rights_act_20130228/

BOOK REVIEW "Rosa Parks: A Life"


BOOK REVIEW
"Rosa Parks: A Life" -- Nearly 60 years after the Montgomery Bus Boycott comes "The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks," the first scholarly biography of the woman who risked much and spoke little.
http://www.truthdig.com/arts_culture/item/rosa_parks_a_life_20130227/

Oscar 2013: Hollywood's CIA Celebration


Robert Scheer on "Argo's" Oscar Win
"Oscar 2013: Hollywood's CIA Celebration" -- What was Michelle Obama thinking? What if the card for "Zero Dark Thirty" had been lurking in that best picture envelope Sunday?
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/oscar_2013_hollywoods_cia_celebration_20130226/

Commentary: Defense: Mutatis mutandis By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE



Commentary: Defense: Mutatis mutandis
By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE
UPI Editor at Large
WASHINGTON, Feb. 28 (UPI) -- The United States fields 17 intelligence agencies with a combined annual budget of $100 billion. They employ 100,000 intelligence specialists. And we still got the genesis of two major trillion-dollar wars, Iraq and Afghanistan, back to front.

Syria's Foreign Legions

Syria's Foreign Legions

February 28, 2013 Mona Alami
http://carnegieendowment.org/sada/2013/02/28/syria-s-foreign-legions/fmnj

Joe Wlison and Valerie Plame Wilson: How the Bush Administration Sold the War – and We Bought It

Joe Wlison and Valerie Plame Wilson: How the Bush Administration Sold the War – and We Bought It
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/28-9

Did Obama Tax the US Into Recession?

Did Obama Tax the US Into Recession?

Here's the question of the day: Did president Obama tax the US into recession?

Trim Tab's Charles Biderman makes that exact claim in U.S. Entered Recession in January Yet Fed Fix Keeps Stocks Pumped. http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/02/did-obama-tax-us-into-recession.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MishsGlobalEconomicTrendAnalysis+%28Mish%27s+Global+Economic+Trend+Analysis%29

Walt and Mearsheimer Are Ready for their Close-Up The Idea of an "Israel Lobby" Has Entered the Realm of Pop Culture

Walt and Mearsheimer Are Ready for their Close-Up

The Idea of an "Israel Lobby" Has Entered the Realm of Pop Culture

By Gal Beckerman
So far this year, the Anti-Defamation League has felt compelled to issue press releases in response to a belligerent talking teddy bear, a mildly funny Saturday Night Live sketch, and a fictional character portrayed by Kevin Spacey.
You might think the trigger-happy ADL was responding in these cases to anti-Semitic slights (its bread and butter, if you will). But that’s not what’s going on. It’s the depiction of the ADL itself, along with other American Jewish organizations, that is causing the offense.

13,000 More Names to the List

13,000 More Names to the List

A study released by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) at the beginning of February attracted a great deal of attention and concern. The VA announced the rate of veteran suicides in the United States at 22 per day, an increase of 22 percent over the previous estimate of 18 suicides a day. This newest measure, in a decade of disgraces exuding from 11+ years of wars overseas, came from the VA looking at data with a slightly greater focus and increasing the number of states contributing data, by three, from 18 to 21 (yes, in 2013 we are currently only assembling data on veterans suicides from barely 2/5 of the country). Many veterans advocates believe this estimation to be an underestimate of the true number of daily veteran suicides due to the incomplete data assembled by the VA, the difficulties in standardizing data collection on veterans across the country, and the reality that less than 40 percent of our nation's veterans, and even less of our Afghan and Iraq war veterans, are registered and tracked by the VA. Still, with a veterans population that accounts for 7 percent of the U.S. population, but over 22 percent percent of suicides in the U.S., it is clearly not an overstatement to use the term epidemic or to note that this is one of multiple policy, economic and moral reasons why warfare over the last 60 years has been, and will continue to be, a fool's option for the United States.

ALLARD: Targets for Chuck Hagel’s new ax

The commentary below by a retired Army colonel (and TV analyst) makes what I believe is an essential point: in the cutting that will be occurring in coming months, start at the top--removing the civilian and military clog up there and--just as importantly--setting a moral and intellectual example that the last thing to be cut should be the sharp end of the forces.  Clearly, the current Joint Chiefs have it exactly backwards, which suggests yet another example that the new secretary of defense needs to consider making.
 
If Chuck Hagel has the gravitas that he clearly did not demonstrate in his confirmation hearings, the time to show it is now.
___________
Winslow T. Wheeler
Director
Straus Military Reform Project,
Center for Defense Information at the
Project On Government Oversight (POGO)
301 791-2397 (home office)
301 221-3897 (cell)

 

ALLARD: Targets for Chuck Hagel’s new ax

Some military spending cuts would be a good thing


http://p.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/feb/28/targets-for-chuck-hagels-new-ax/

EDITORIAL: The crisis facing Japan Atomic Power


EDITORIAL: The crisis facing Japan Atomic Powerhttp://ajw.asahi.com/article/views/editorial/AJ201302280056

Automatic Reductions in Government Spending -- aka Sequestration

Automatic Reductions in Government Spending -- aka Sequestration

blog post


We have received many questions in recent days about the budgetary and economic implications of the automatic reductions in government spending that are scheduled to occur under current law (in technical terms, a sequestration). So, we thought it would be helpful to pull together our answers to some of those questions, incorporating information from our most recent economic and budget projections released earlier this month and from CBO’s recent Congressional testimony:

Does WH Claim It Can Kill on U.S. Soil?

To Fix U.S. Budget, Reform Medical Malpractice Law

To Fix U.S. Budget, Reform Medical Malpractice Law

Peter Orszag argues that reforming medical malpractice law to include "safe harbors" that protect doctors who follow evidence-based medical guidelines could bring down health-care costs without reducing the quality of care.http://www.cfr.org/economics/fix-us-budget-reform-medical-malpractice-law/p30110?cid=rss-fullfeed-to_fix_u.s._budget%2C_reform_med-022813&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Time to be Honest about Jobs

Time to be Honest about Jobs

After his State of the Union, President Obama took a jobs tour to call for growth in the manufacturing base where only 6% of US jobs exist.  This was a charade.  It would be like a president touring horse, buggy and blacksmiths in search of jobs when Henry Ford was mass producing cars.
Real manufacturing output today is near an all-time high. What’s dropped precipitously in recent decades is manufacturing employment.
The technology of automation and robotics is ending manufacturing jobs. The president was on a quest for jobs where none exist, will not exist and should not exist. The US with 4% of the world’s population is responsible for 20% of manufacturing output. More manufacturing is not coming to the United States.http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/02/time-to-be-honest-about-jobs/

U.S. Policy Shift on Syria: Edging Closer to Direct Military Intervention

U.S. Policy Shift on Syria: Edging Closer to Direct Military Intervention

Though President Obama last year rejected a proposal from the State Department, Pentagon, and CIA to directly arm Syrian rebel fighters, his administration is once again edging closer to directly intervening in the Syrian war.
As the Washington Post reported Tuesday, “The Obama administration is moving toward a major policy shift on Syria that could provide the rebels with equipment such as body armor, armored vehicles and possible military training and could send humanitarian assistance directly to Syria’s opposition political coalition.”
White House spokesperson Jay Carney confirmed the Post‘s reporting Wednesday, stating that the U.S. is “constantly reviewing the nature of the assistance we provide to both the Syrian people, in form of humanitarian assistance, and to the Syrian opposition in the form of non-lethal assistance.”
The exact nature of the additional U.S. assistance is expected to be announced Thursday at a meeting of the “Friends of Syria” in Rome.  The U.S. has previously sent communications equipment and night-vision goggles to rebels fighting in Syria.
John Kerry the Interventionist
The – perhaps – unlikelydriver of the reported shift in U.S. policy on Syria has been none other than new Secretary of State John Kerry.  The very man many continue to insist on mislabeling a dove.http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/02/u-s-policy-shift-on-syria-edging-closer-to-direct-military-intervention/

John Kerry on China and the Pivot

John Kerry on China and the Pivot

When it came to China, Secretary of State John Kerry’s confirmation hearing touched on a little bit of everything. Here is what he said he wants:
- To compete with China economically in Africa—this will be tough given the extraordinary government resources China pours into its trade and investment effort in the continent;
 - To use the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) as leverage with China to ensure commonly accepted rules of the road on trade—of course the TPP has to move forward for this to happen;
 - To cooperate with China more closely on North Korea—that’s been an item on the U.S. wish list for twenty years…but the chances are better than ever before
- And to work together with China on the full range of regional and global challenges, such as climate change. Excellent, but it would really help if Secretary Kerry could persuade his former colleagues in Congress to pass climate legislation here at home.
What has garnered all the attention, however, is what the Secretary said with regard to the pivot:http://thediplomat.com/china-power/john-kerry-on-china-and-the-pivot/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+the-diplomat+%28The+Diplomat+RSS%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Woodward at War

Woodward at War

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/02/28/woodward_at_war_302973.html 

By Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei, Politico - February 28, 2013
Bob Woodward called a senior White House official last week to tell him that in a piece in that weekend’s Washington Post, he was going to question President Barack Obama’s account of how sequestration came about - and got a major-league brushback. The Obama aide “yelled at me for about a half hour,” Woodward told us in an hour-long interview yesterday around the Georgetown dining room table where so many generations of Washington’s powerful have spilled their secrets.

WMAL EXCLUSIVE: Woodward's Not Alone - Fmr. Clinton Aide Davis Says He Received White House Threat

 WMAL EXCLUSIVE: Woodward's Not Alone - Fmr. Clinton Aide Davis Says He Received White House Threat
http://www.wmal.com/common/page.php?pt=WMAL+EXCLUSIVE%3A+Woodward%27s+Not+Alone+-+Fmr.+Clinton+Aide+Davis+Says+He+Received+White+House+Threat&id=8924&is_corp=0

The Effects of Sequestration on Federal Spending


The Effects of Sequestration on Federal Spending

Veronique de Rugy | Feb 27, 2013
This chart uses the most recent Congressional Budget Office figures to show the effects of the sequester, or automatic spending reductions, on federal spending over the next ten years.

While the sequester is widely advertised as cutting spending over a ten year period, there is no actual reduction in overall spending levels. Rather, the sequester slows the overall growth in spending slightly between 2013 and 2023, with spending increasing by $2.40 trillion during that time period. Spending grows 51 percent, or $1.81 trillion, with sequestration between 2013 and 2021, the period when automatic spending procedures are to be enforced.http://mercatus.org/publication/effects-sequestration-federal-spending

Whistle Blower Crackdown

Whistle Blower Crackdown
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/whistle-blower-crackdown/

President Barack Obama is seeking new rules to allow federal agencies to fire
employees without appeal if their work has some tie to national security, a move
that advocates for whistle-blowers say may hurt efforts to keep government
transparent and free from corruption.

Ragtime: Secret NSA Domestic Spy Program Revealed


Ragtime: Secret NSA Domestic Spy Program Revealed
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/ragtime-secret-nsa-domestic-spy-program-revealed/

According to Marc Ambinder and D.B. Grady's new book Deep State: Inside the
Government Secrecy Industry, the secretive National Security Agency spying
programs have become institutionalized, and have grown, since 9/11.

Shane Harris at the Washingtonian read through the book's account of these
sweeping and controversial surveillance programs, conducted under the code name
"Ragtime":
Ragtime, which appears in official reports by the [...]

Bernanke Policy Causes Fed to Expect $500 Billion Loss

Bernanke Policy Causes Fed to Expect $500 Billion Loss
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/bernanke-policy-causes-fed-to-expect-500-billion-loss/

Economists predict that the US Federal Reserve could lose half a trillion
dollars in just three years thanks to policies enacted by the central bank under
Chairman Ben Bernanke.

US growth revised up to 0.1% in fourth quarter

US growth revised up to 0.1% in fourth quarter Growth in the US was revised up from an annualised fall of 0.1 per cent to a rise of 0.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2012, but the increase was much smaller than analysts had expected.

The initial report of a fall in output for the final three months of the year had caused alarm about a US economic slowdown, but it was distorted by special factors, and economists expected an upward revision to about 0.5 per cent.

However, the new estimate was dragged down by the same big falls in business inventories and federal defence spending – both temporary factors that do not reflect underlying demand from American business and consumers – suggesting that moderate growth will continue.
http://link.ft.com/r/3JFELL/XBV44Z/HDKQA6/2O1V2Q/52QBNY/VU/h?a1=2013&a2=2&a3=28

The Latest National Security coverage from FP 2/28

The Latest National Security coverage from FP

CFR Update Daily News Brief 2/28 U.S. Non-Lethal Aid to Syria Marks Major Policy Shift

Daily News Brief
February 28, 2013

Top of the Agenda: U.S. Non-Lethal Aid to Syria Marks Major Policy Shift
In a significant policy shift, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday that the United States plans for the first time to provide non-lethal aid (Reuters), including food rations and medical supplies, to Syrian opposition fighters battling Bashar al-Assad's regime. The Obama administration will also provide an additional $60 million (BBC), adding to the $385 million of humanitarian aid already given and $54 million in equipment, medical supplies, and other non-lethal assistance. Speaking at an international conference on Syria in Rome, Kerry said that the decision was the result of "the brutality of superior armed force propped up by foreign fighters from Iran and Hezbollah" (AP).
Analysis
"If the Obama administration is to lead on Syria, it must commit itself to steps that can bring about the early collapse of the regime and its replacement by a representative and responsible alternative. Only direct political and military intervention on the side of the opposition can make that happen," writes a Washington Post editorial.
"If Mr Kerry is to have any diplomatic force in discussions he must be able to threaten an alternative. Mr Assad has cynically exploited the west's reluctance to intervene to stay in power. This bluff has to be called. This applies equally to the EU, which last week rejected a UK call to lift its arms embargo to allow shipments to rebels. If western powers continue to stand on the sidelines, the war will drag on," writes a Financial Times editorial.
"[If] the past is prologue, and more arms proved insufficient, advocates of arming the rebels would soon argue for direct U.S. intervention. The only strategy that stands a chance—and not even necessarily a very good one—is for the United States, the post-Assad Alawites, and the secular Syrian Sunnis to focus relentlessly on the common goal: stopping the victory of Islamic extremists," writes CFR's president emeritus Leslie H. Gelb for the Daily Beast.

Afghanistan Weekly Reader: Reported Drop in Taliban Attacks Proves Incorrect 2/28

Afghanistan Weekly Reader: Reported Drop in Taliban Attacks P

Afghanistan Weekly Reader: Reported Drop in Taliban Attacks Proves Incorrect

roves Incorrect


The International Security Assistance Force is correcting a data error that showed a 7 percent drop in Taliban attacks over the past year. The number of attacks did not decline, officials said. The announcement coincides with an insurgent attack that left 17 dead and an ongoing dispute over U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
From ASG
2/26/13
Cut Wasteful Pentagon Spending, Starting with the War Budget

Afghanistan Study Group by Mary Kaszynski

Eliminating wasteful spending in the war budget and developing a more cost-effective strategy for our future engagement with Afghanistan is a good way to start reining in the Pentagon budget.
ARTICLES
2/27/13
Taliban attacks in Afghanistan not down after all

Christian Science Monitor by Dan Murphy

On Tuesday, NATO said there was no decline in Taliban attacks, the final year of President Obama's "surge" in Afghanistan, after all.
2/25/13
Talk of Inquiry, but Not Much Is Sure After Afghan Ban on U.S. Troops

New York Times by Matthew Rosenberg

A day after President Hamid Karzai ordered elite American forces out of a strategic province near the capital, very little was clear other than his increasing assertiveness in dictating the Western military role in Afghanistan.
2/25/13
Afghan officials say NATO ignored complaints of abuses by U.S. Special Operations forces

Washington Post by Richard Leiby

Afghan officials said Monday they demanded the pullout of U.S. Special Operations forces from an insurgency-wracked province because the U.S.-backed NATO command here for months has ignored residents’ allegations of severe abuses committed by the elite American troops and armed Afghan irregulars working with them.
OPINION
2/26/13
How Not to Withdraw from Afghanistan

Foreign Policy by Jim McDermott and Lawrence Wilkerson

Eleven years of costly war have confirmed that there is no military solution in Afghanistan. As one U.S. commander in Afghanistan retires and another takes his place, it's time to focus on a political and economic transition to Afghan rule. It's time to finally bring U.S. troops home.
2/25/13
Involving the Taliban in Afghanistan Solution

The Atlantic by William R. Polk

Over time: Afghanistan can evolve into a relatively peaceful society in which citizens will have a chance for a considerably improved standard of living and, in the context of Afghan cultural norms, will come to share an acceptable form of participatory democracy.

The inherent shallowness of "market-based" arguments against nuclear

The inherent shallowness of "market-based" arguments against nuclear

In the middle of a lengthy takedown of Taxpayers for Common Sense's recent publicity stunt press release proclaiming their "Golden Fleece" award over the DOE's recent award of $452 million for NRC licensing assistance to B&W to construct a first-of-a-kind SMR at the Clinch River site, +Rod Adams brings up an extremely insightful point almost universally neglected in "market-based" critiques of described subsidies for nuclear energy. Specifically, Rod points out a perverse, unintended regulatory consequence brought on by anti-trust laws addressed by the Price-Anderson Act, which governs financial liability in the event of a nuclear accident. (The whole thing is of course well-worth reading.)

Rod points out:
The shared liability approach [inherent to Price-Anderson], if taken without permission, would violate the anti-trust laws that prevent competitors from cooperating. Price-Anderson’s system rewards the industry for sharing detailed technical information that would normally be carefully protected trade secrets. The nuclear industry’s habit of widely sharing important information and lessons learned from experience is one of the foundations on which its excellent safety record is built.
http://neutroneconomy.blogspot.com/2013/02/the-inherent-shallowness-of-market.html

Woodward claims White House threatened him

Woodward claims White House threatened him


http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/285423-woodward-claims-white-house-threatened-him

Step Inside the Real World of Compulsive Hoarders


Step Inside the Real World of Compulsive Hoarders

Recent research has changed the way clinicians treat hoarding as well as refuted popular assumptions about people with excessive clutter
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=real-world-hoarding

The Outpost


Like many habitues of antiwar.com, I generally do not find much time for sitting down and reading a book since I have become accustomed to obtaining most of my information in easily digestible bites over the internet. This year for Christmas I received a copy of The Outpost by ABC’s White House correspondent Jake Tapper, which was particularly daunting as it is nearly 700 meticulously researched pages in length. I was given the book by my daughter because it tells the tale, among many others, of a friend of hers from high school who went to Afghanistan with the Fourth Infantry Division and was killed there. My daughter had seen her friend on his last home leave and he had described the base in Nuristan province that he was posted to as a death trap where he and his comrades were attacked every day with little ability to defend themselves. He predicted that he would not be coming home again. He was twenty-one years old when he died.
The book jacket’s subtitle is "An Untold Story of American Valor," which I presume to be a marketing blurb originating with the publisher, because the book is much more nuanced in its message than that would suggest. It is, in fact, one of the most powerful antiwar books that I have ever read precisely because it does not wrap itself into an explicit antiwar theme. Tapper explains in an epilogue that he set out to "better understand what our troops go through, why they go through it, and what their experience has been like in Afghanistan." He tells his tale dispassionately, inexorably demonstrating the human cost of a war that need not have been fought on a small stage where blunder after blunder killed quite ordinary Americans who under other circumstances, in another place and time, might have been our next door neighbors. The book describes in detail the devastating wounds that kill and maim a succession of soldiers posted to the indefensible Combat Outpost Keating, located inexcusably in a depression overlooked by mountains on three sides. He follows the wounded through their hospitalizations, writes about their grieving families, and chronicles the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and even suicides that afflict many of them when they try unsuccessfully to return to civilian life.

US to give direct help to Syrian rebels

US to give direct help to Syrian rebels The US is for the first time to provide some Syrian military opposition groups with non-lethal supplies and an additional $60m to help them oust President Bashar al-Assad, John Kerry, secretary of state, said.
Announcing the policy shift, Mr Kerry said the initiative was designed to increase the pressure on Mr Assad and help the opposition govern liberated areas and blunt the influence of extremists.
Mr Kerry was speaking on Thursday in Rome, on the sidelines of an international conference on Syria. European nations are also expected to signal their intention to provide fresh assistance to the opposition.
However, the US is still opposed to providing arms to rebel groups, US officials say, underlining the limits on any new stage in US involvement in the two-year-old Syrian civil war.
http://link.ft.com/r/3JFELL/6AX9WH/JIYS70/L9WJTD/UL7JXH/6C/h?a1=2013&a2=2&a3=28

India taps ‘super rich’ in budget

India taps ‘super rich’ in budget India plans to increase spending on capital investment and large-scale social programs by 29 per cent in the next year, while imposing a one-year 10 per cent tax surcharge on the “super-rich”.

In presenting the budget on Thursday, Palaniappan Chidambaram, the country’s finance minister, said India had to revive growth closer to the 8 per cent recorded before the global economic crisis, which has seen India’s economy sharply decelerating. Growth is expected to be about 5 per cent this year.

“Achieving high growth is not a novelty or beyond our capacity,” he said. “We have done it before and we can do it again.”

http://link.ft.com/r/3JFELL/EKSPNI/D45D0H/HY7ESN/1OD1ZU/ID/h?a1=2013&a2=2&a3=28

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Expelling the American 'frenemy'

 

 

Expelling the American 'frenemy'

Will Afghan claims of misconduct by US special forces strangle the fraught relationship between Kabul and Washington?
Anti-US protests have been held in Afghanistan's Maidan Wardak province where US special forces troops have been asked to leave within two weeks over accusations that Afghans working with them have tortured and killed innocent people.
The row is further complicating talks between the Washington and Kabul over the presence of American troops once NATO's mission comes to end in 2014.

EU Slams Israeli Settlements, Urges Sanctions in New Report

EU Slams Israeli Settlements, Urges Sanctions in New Report
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/02/27-2

Richard Eskow: Lords of Disorder: Billions For Wall Street, Sacrifice For Everyone Else

Richard Eskow: Lords of Disorder: Billions For Wall Street, Sacrifice For Everyone Else
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/27-5

Challenging the Neocons on Iran

Challenging the Neocons on Iran

Despite the Iraq debacle, neocons remain in the driver’s seat setting official U.S. attitudes toward Iran, mixing worst-case assumptions with unrelenting hostility. But national security experts Flynt and Hillary Mann Leverett have stood up to this neocon-driven conventional wisdom, says Gareth Porter at Inter Press Service.

By Gareth Porter
Going to Tehran arguably represents the most important work on the subject of U.S.-Iran relations to be published thus far. Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett tackle not only U.S. policy toward Iran but the broader context of Middle East policy with a systematic analytical perspective informed by personal experience, as well as very extensive documentation.
More importantly, however, their exposé required a degree of courage that may be unparalleled in the writing of former U.S. national security officials about issues on which they worked. They have chosen not just to criticize U.S. policy toward Iran but to analyze that policy as a problem of U.S. hegemony.

All for War William Pfaff

All for War

William Pfaff


Paris, February 27, 2013 – A Gallup poll issued February 21 says that 99% of the American public now has become convinced that Iran’s civilian nuclear program will threaten “the vital interests of the United States in the next ten years.” Eighty-three percent say this will be “a critical threat.” Why?

Because Iran in the next decade will rain down nuclear missiles on American cities from coast to coast? Or sacrifice its own survival by making a suicide attack on Israel, which possesses what may be the fourth largest nuclear arsenal in the world?

Whatever the expectation, this fear of Iran in America is apparently now greater than the level of American fear of the Soviet Union – which actually could have devastated the U.S. with a nuclear attack – as reported by Gallup during the most dangerous of the Cold War years. 
 

 The URL for this article is:
http://www.williampfaff.com/article.php?storyid=614

Neocon ‘Veto’ Fails to Block Hagel

Neocon ‘Veto’ Fails to Block Hagel

Exclusive: The neocons and their Republican allies bloodied former Sen. Chuck Hagel with ugly smears, but he won Senate approval to become Defense Secretary. The neocons’ failure to exercise this “veto” now stands as a sign of their diminished standing with the Obama administration, writes Robert Parry.

By Robert Parry

Two Cautionary Tales

ttp://www.lobelog.com/two-cautionary-tales/

Two Cautionary Tales

Published on February 27th, 2013 | by Henry Precht

Rare is the Middle East scholar or diplomat who departs from his customary groove in analyzing events in that region. Alas, I am — or was — one of the latter. Now, however, there come two books that just may cause a minor swerve from the usual rut of thinking about Iran, especially by Iranians. Nothing revolutionary to be sure — that’s out of style — but prompting reflection.

The first volume is a biography of Mohammed Mossadegh, Patriot of Persia, by Christopher de Bellaigue, a British journalist resident in Tehran for the past 10 years where he has spent a fair amount of time in archives and interviews with figures from the fifties. The product is like a novel of the upper classes, rich with small stories and psychological quirks that lead us from the ancient land that was Iran in the 19th century to the state struggling against imperialism and trying awkwardly to become modern in the mid-20th century.

(Part 1) Col. Douglas Macgregor on Pentagon Reform | The Michael Ostrolenk Show

 Col. Douglas Macgregor, USA (Ret.) is a decorated combat veteran with a Ph.D. in  international relations from UVA.  He is the author of Breaking the Phalanx  Warrior’s Rage: The Great Tank Battle of 73 Easting and Tranformation Under Fire and is a frequent guest on television and radio news shows.
 
On the show we cover-
  • Cold War as extension of World War Two
  • Liberal interventionism
  • Global War on Terror as mistaken conception
  • Al Queda;  Afghanistan, Pakistan , North Africa, Iraq, Philippines
  • Threats v. Opportunities  (black and white thinking v. multiperspectival thinking)
  • Arab/ Muslim Awakening
  • Iran as boogeyman, Hezbollah in Lebanon
  • U.S. alliances

Why There Will Be No New Bretton Woods

Why There Will Be No New Bretton Woods

Unlike the United States in the 1940s, China is in no position to refashion the global monetary architecture.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323468604578251443013101984.html?mod=WSJ_topics_obama

Cross Talk: US Defense Budget Boom Vs. Social Cuts

Cross Talk: US Defense Budget Boom Vs. Social Cuts - a good debate that Anthony Shaffer participated in with COL Doug Macgregor and Kelly Vlahos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUhbNDUpBcg

Boots on Campus

 
Boots on Campus
Posted By Kelley B. Vlahos  12 Comments
Have American university campuses become so inured to the militarization of policy, culture – our thought – that they can’t see the Trojan horse sitting in the quad, its occupants pouring out and passing out sweets and credits to all the Ivy Leaguers passing by with goggled eyes and open arms?

Testimony on CBO's Appropriation Request for Fiscal Year 2014

Testimony on CBO's Appropriation Request for Fiscal Year 2014

report


Testimony before the Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch, Committee on Appropriations, U.S. House of Representatives
CBO requests appropriations of $45.7 million for fiscal year 2014. That amount represents an increase of $1.6 million, or 3.7 percent, from the $44.1 million (on an annualized basis) provided to CBO under the continuing resolution for fiscal year 2013.

UFO: 10 Most Documented



UFO: 10 Most Documented
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/ufo-10-most-documented/

They've been where no man has gone before. "Unidentified flying objects,"
commonly called UFOs, have fascinated the public since the dawn of the
commercial aerospace industry just after the end of World War II.

With the help of our partners at WatchMojo.com, who compiled a list of the top
10 most documented UFO sightings of all [...]

Town Wants Authority to Disarm Citizens During Emergency

Town Wants Authority to Disarm Citizens During Emergency
http://www.darkgovernment.com/news/town-wants-authority-to-disarm-citizens-during-emergency/

A proposed disaster emergency ordinance in Guntersville is causing controversy.

The city council and mayor are considering a new ordinance that gives the city
more power.

Facing Mass Layoffs, Taliban Protest US Sequester


Facing Mass Layoffs, Taliban Protest US Sequester

http://www.duffelblog.com/2013/02/facing-mass-layoffs-taliban-protests-against-automatic-us-budget-cuts-from-sequester/

Wall Street bonuses rise 8% for 2012 but industry warns of looming layoffs

Wall Street bonuses rise 8% for 2012 but industry warns of looming layoffs

Profits are rebounding, New York state comptroller says, but securities industry is still poised to lay
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2013/feb/26/wall-street-bonuses-rise-layoffs

Natural gas exports a strong positive for economy, API tells DOE

Natural gas exports a strong positive for economy, API tells DOE
Exporting some U.S. natural gas in the form of LNG would be an unequivocal plus for American workers and the economy, according to API’s group director for upstream and industry operations.
Full Articlehttp://www.pennenergy.com/articles/pennenergy/2013/02/natural-gas-exports-a-strong-positive-for-economy-api-tells-doe.html?cmpid=EnlDailyPetroFebruary272013

Bipartisan coalition calls for reforming sequester’s defense cuts

Bipartisan coalition calls for reforming sequester’s defense cuts

A diverse collection of 22 interest groups has signed a new letter urging Congress to make cuts to the Defense Department on the scale of the sequester but to shift the cuts to different areas of the defense budget.

California, Illinois and New York have ‘have more-or-less become European,’ argues author

California, Illinois and New York have ‘have more-or-less become European,’ argues author

Scare Cuts

Scare Cuts

From an emboldened Iran to unsafe beef, the eight most hysterical warnings about how automatic spending reductions could harm U.S. national security.

BY JOHN HUDSONhttp://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/02/26/scare_cuts_sequester_national_security

Most. Dangerous. World. Ever.

Most. Dangerous. World. Ever.

The ridiculous hyperbole about government budget cuts.

BY MICAH ZENKOhttp://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/02/26/most_dangerous_world_ever?wp_login_redirect=0

Name Calling by Steve Coll


Name Calling

by March 4, 2013


Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2013/03/04/130304taco_talk_coll#ixzz2M6xJY377

The Latest National Security coverage from FP 2/27

The Latest National Security coverage from FP

China unveils new stealth missile frigate


China unveils new stealth missile frigate

http://rt.com/news/china-unveils-new-stealth-missile-frigate-485/
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Lew’s Latest Shows US Increasingly Out of Step in Holding Wall Street Accountable

Lew’s Latest Shows US Increasingly Out of Step in Holding Wall Street Accountable

Deborah Burger
How far behind the rest of the world can we continue to fall on holding the Wall Street traders and tycoons to account for the mess they made of our economy? The sharp contrast Monday between the Obama administration and Europe in statements about a financial speculation tax shows the gap appears to be widening.read morehttp://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/27

Walling Ourselves Inside a Militarized-Police State

Walling Ourselves Inside a Militarized-Police State

Tom Engelhardt
It was, in a sense, so expectable, so leave-no-child-behind.  I’m talking about the arming of American schools.  Think of it as the next step in the militarization of this country, which follows all-too-logically from developments since September 11, 2001.  In the wake of 9/11, police departments nationwide began to militarize in a big way, and the next thing you knew, the police were loo
read morehttps://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/27-1

Locked Out of Jobs, Formerly Incarcerated Struggle to Reintegrate

Locked Out of Jobs, Formerly Incarcerated Struggle to Reintegrate

Michelle Chen
Thanks to our harsh criminal justice policies and anti-drug laws, an extraordinary number of Americans will spend some part of their lives in the prison system.To help the recently incarcerated overcome hiring bias, programs such as the Center for Employment Opportunities assemble them into work crews, paid at fair rates. (Photo: Center for Employment Opportunities)
read morehttps://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/27-3

Lords of Disorder: Billions For Wall Street, Sacrifice For Everyone Else by Richard Eskow

Richard Eskow
(Background image via New York Magazine)The President’s “sequester” offer slashes non-defense spending by $830 billion over the next ten years. That happens to be the precise amount we’re implicitly giving Wall Street’s biggest banks over the same time period.
read morehttps://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/27-5

Iran nuclear talks end without breakthrough

Iran nuclear talks end without breakthrough

Six world powers conclude talks on Tehran's nuclear programme in Almaty, but agree to meet in Istanbul next month.http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/02/201322762913285669.html
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