United States did not go back to the Moon because…?

A couple of Apollo 15 original pictures show an unusual cigar-shaped object on the backside of the Moon The “Apollo 20” An American-Soviet Classified Mission For An Abandoned Alien Ship On The Moon? Released Controversial Footages on YouTube – Leak of Information or Skilful Fake? by Luca Scantamburlo freelance and writer May 17, 2007 from AngeliSmarriti Website A recent controversial footage of about 6 minutes (which seems a digital transfer from a film, and that we can call the “Apollo 20 footage”) released on YouTube is causing amazement inside the ufological public on the Web, all around the world. The footage would … Continue reading United States did not go back to the Moon because…?

UKBA – Terrorist Group eats away £70M!

BORDER AGENCY COSTS US ALL £70M Border officials are writing off almost £70million in bad debts, overpayments and compensation express.co.uk By Ted Jeory BUNGLING border officials are preparing to write off almost £70million in bad debts, overpayments and compensation to asylum seekers. A shocking catalogue of costly mistakes at the Home Office’s UK Border Agency meant £26million had to be written off in the last financial year. And the agency paid out £13million of benefits in error to would-be refugees since April 2008. Astonishingly, a further £41million has had to be set aside in special accounts to cover more bungles, … Continue reading UKBA – Terrorist Group eats away £70M!

UK Monet aged 7!

Art world goes mad for Britain’s ‘Mini Monet’: Boy aged seven makes £150,000 in 30 minutes by selling his paintings By Daily Mail Reporter His paintings fetch thousands and attract buyers from all over the world. But while his watercolours, pastels and oil paintings hint at a talent honed through decades of practice Kieron Williamson is barely half-way through primary school. The seven-year-old prodigy sold his latest collection of paintings for £150,000 at the weekend, with all 33 works sold within just half-an-hour. Genius at work: Kieron Williamson, painting in his parents’ kitchen in Holt, Norfolk, has sold all over … Continue reading UK Monet aged 7!

Iranian women’s rugby team

Iranian women’s rugby team take to the field wearing modesty-preserving headscarves and tracksuits By Nick Pisa If the rugby-playing women of Iran’s national sevens team had cauliflower ears, no-one could tell. Kitted out in tight-fitting headscarves and full tracksuits to protect their modesty, the players caused quite a stir when they played in Europe for the first time. Taking to the field in a women’s seven-a-side tournament in Cortina D’Ampezzo, Italy, they were dealt a 10-0 by the host nation and then suffered a further 33-0 setback in a second game. Representing Iran: Female coach Fatemeh Moolai, with arm raised, … Continue reading Iranian women’s rugby team

Cluster Bomb Ban – US Straggles

Long-Awaited Cluster Bomb Ban Enters Into Force; US Straggles Behind by: Esther Banales  |  Inter Press Service | Report An unexploded cluster bombin Lao PDR. (Photo: Steve Joyce / MAG) United Nations – Thirty-eight countries will start observing the Convention on Cluster Munitions this Sunday, Aug. 1, after a rapid entry into force since the treaty was announced two years ago in Oslo. “This new instrument is a major advance for the global disarmament and humanitarian agendas, and will help us to counter the widespread insecurity and suffering caused by these terrible weapons, particularly among civilians and children,” noted U.N. Secretary-General Ban … Continue reading Cluster Bomb Ban – US Straggles

Afghanistan – “Sacrifice Trap”

Afghanistan and the “Sacrifice Trap” by: Simon Moyle  |  Waging Nonviolence | Op-Ed (Photo: Mass Communication Specialist Senior Chief Kevin Elliott / U.S. Navy) The last month has seen six Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan, bringing our country’s total to seventeen. Yet even with a federal election looming and 61 percent of Australians wanting troops brought home, our involvement in the war has bipartisan support. In fact, far from raising questions over our mission there, these deaths seem to only strengthen the government’s resolve to remain. The same seems to be true of the U.S. and many other NATO countries. It strengthens … Continue reading Afghanistan – “Sacrifice Trap”

Accommodating the Taliban ?

Political Islam Online Accommodating the Taliban An Ill Conceived and Unprincipled Policy By: Raouf Ebeid – Editor Published: March 24, 2009 In his interview on Sixty Minutes this past Sunday, President Obama said that he was spending time in the evening reading about the problems in Afghanistan. It appears that he’s been reading Fareed Zakaria (Newsweek), as his views were echoed in the President’s suggestion that he would consider accepting some kind of accommodation with the more “moderate” elements of the Taliban in Afghanistan that, in his view, could effectively split the movement. The President should expand his reading list, … Continue reading Accommodating the Taliban ?

India must find a way to engage Pakistan Army

K Subrahmanyam: Talking to Kayani India must find a way to engage Pakistan’s all-powerful Army chief K Subrahmanyam /  July 29, 2010, 0:01 IST India must find a way to engage Pakistan’s all-powerful Army chief To no one’s surprise, General Ashfaq Kayani, the chief of the Pakistan Army, got his tenure extended by another term of three years by the civilian government. The decision was formally announced by Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gillani in a late night broadcast after he had consulted President Asif Ali Zardari, who also happens to be the chairman of the ruling party. After the recent … Continue reading India must find a way to engage Pakistan Army

Is Kayani “All-Powerful”?

Engaging Pakistan: Is Kayani “All-Powerful”? By Eric Auner, on July 29th, 2010 I am a bit late in commenting on the news that Pakistan Chief of Army Staff Ashfaq Kayani will stay in his position until 2013.  Even so, I wanted to highlight an article on the subject by widely-respected Indian strategic analyst K Subrahmanyam.  He points to something I hadn’t realized, namely that: This extension of tenure for an army chief by a civilian government is happening for the first time since 1955 when the government headed by Iskander Mirza gave an extension to General Ayub Khan, the country’s … Continue reading Is Kayani “All-Powerful”?

Winning the intelligence war with Hezbollah?

Babylon & Beyond Observations from Iraq, Iran, Israel, the Arab world and beyond « Previous Post | Babylon & Beyond Home ISRAEL, LEBANON: Who is winning the intelligence war with Hezbollah? August 1, 2010 |  8:35 am In October 2009,  Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon, a former head of military intelligence, all but confirmed that Israel had intensified spying efforts in Lebanon because of Hezbollah and would stop when the Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim militant group was disarmed and Israel’s border with Lebanon was peaceful. The intelligence war continues unabated, as the Los Angeles Times reported in a front-page article Sunday, … Continue reading Winning the intelligence war with Hezbollah?