Heavyweights to rise and fall

By Sami Moubayed DAMASCUS – As is customary on New Year’s Eve, a colorful assortment of astrologers, oracles and soothsayers appeared on Arabic satellite TV predicting what 2010 has in store for the Arab world. Some went full-board with what many people wanted to hear – predicting annihilation of the State of Israel; others stated the obvious, claiming that the Arab-Israeli conflict will not be solved and that Lebanon will remain divided among its different sects in 2010. One oracle stood out with relatively wise predictions: Lebanese Magi Farah. She predicted Arab reconciliation in February, medical breakthrough discoveries in April, … Continue reading Heavyweights to rise and fall

US push feeds Yemen’s gun culture

by Thalif Deen NEW YORK – When Yemen refused to vote in support of a United States-sponsored Security Council resolution against Iraq during the 1990-1991 Gulf War, a visibly angry US delegate turned to the Yemeni diplomat and said: “That will be the last time you will ever vote against a US resolution.” Washington’s subsequent retaliation, in the aftermath of that negative vote, was predictable. The US not only downgraded its relationship with Yemen but also cut off all military aid to a country once heavily armed with Soviet weapons. Since that much-talked-about confrontation in the SecurityCouncil chamber, there has … Continue reading US push feeds Yemen’s gun culture

Iran’s Guards tighten economic grip

By Omid Memarian BERKELEY, California – A move by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to withdraw US$1 billion from the country’s Foreign Reserve Fund to complete Phases 15 and 16 of the gigantic South Pars gas project could provoke a serious crisis in view of looming sanctions over Iran’s nuclear program, according to analysts. The IRGC cash grab reveals the military organization’s power over Iran’s economy and control over the country’s sensitive oil, gas and nuclear industries. Last month, Rostam Ghassemi, the commander of Khatam-ol-Anbia Construction Complex, the contractor for the two South Pars fields, told Mehr News Agency that … Continue reading Iran’s Guards tighten economic grip

Russia-India ties sour in Central Asia

By Peter Lee Unsound strategy, mutual mistrust and opportunism are combining to frustrate the efforts of Moscow and India to blunt China’s soft-power push into Russia’s “near beyond” – the oil and gas-rich former Soviet republics that line the path of the ancient Silk Road from the Caspian Sea to China’s doorstep at Xinjiang province. Russia’s unwelcome efforts to cobble together a Central Asian security bloc and claim a central role in a new, multi-polar Euroasian security structure have been the main stumbling block to advancement of its interests in the region. It has not received a lot of help … Continue reading Russia-India ties sour in Central Asia

Putin opens oil-export route

With the click of a mouse, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin last week announced Russia’s readiness to feed Asia’s economic tigers. Putin’s action started loading oil onto a 100,000-ton tanker at the far east port of Kozmino, east of Vladivostok, launching a much-anticipated new export route to Hong Kong that will help satisfy Asia’s growing need for energy. The oil had already traveled far just to reach Kozmino, located near Russia’s borders with China and North Korea. Russia’s new East Siberia-Pacific Ocean (ESPO) oil pipeline originates in Tayshet, to the northwest of Lake Baikal in Russia’s Irkutsk Oblast. From there, … Continue reading Putin opens oil-export route

Christian tests Pyongyang’s resolutions

By Donald Kirk WASHINGTON – Despite being a self-declared atheist, German human-rights activist Dr Norbert Vollertsen applauds the daring of a Korean-American missionary who on Christmas eve walked into North Korea bearing a message of peace and goodwill for Dear Leader Kim Jong-il. “I have to pay my respect to the Christian radicalism of Robert Park,” said Vollertsen, who was kicked out of North Korea a decade ago for attempting to expose cruelty he had witnessed when working as a doctor with a non-governmental organization. // <![CDATA[// <![CDATA[ //<![CDATA[ var m3_u = (location.protocol=='https:'?'https://asianmedia.com/GAAN/www/delivery/ajs.php&#039;:'http://asianmedia.com/GAAN/www/delivery/ajs.php&#039;); var m3_r = Math.floor(Math.random()*99999999999); if (!document.MAX_used) document.MAX_used … Continue reading Christian tests Pyongyang’s resolutions

The year in retrospect – Talat Masood

The year in retrospect Monday, January 04, 2010 Talat Masood 2009 was one of the most tumultuous, and in many ways defining, years for Pakistan. The country was in a state of war. Incidents of violence reached new heights as several cities across the country became targets of militants’ response to operations in Swat and FATA or became victims of sectarian conflict. Peshawar was the nation’s frontline and suffered the most. While the army was regaining lost territory in Swat and South Waziristan, attacks against security personnel and innocent citizens continued. A wave of angst in the people turned the … Continue reading The year in retrospect – Talat Masood

The way out

Shemrez Nauman Afzal In an ideological war, it is neither people nor interest groups who win or lose; it is the overarching ideology binding together the winning side, which occupies the coveted slot of sacrosanct. Therefore, it is important to have a collective and vibrant revival of the Pakistani identity Much has been said about the ethnicity, roots and motivation of the terrorists that now threaten the security and order of Pakistan. Some say they are Afghan-based Taliban, others say they are renegades funded by India or Israel. There are even those who purport that America is behind the Tehrik-e-Taliban … Continue reading The way out

Come, then, comrades

Frantz Fanon Come, then, comrades; it would be as well to decide at once to change our ways. We must shake off the heavy darkness in which we were plunged, and leave it behind. The new day which is already at hand must find us firm, prudent and resolute. We must leave our dreams and abandon our old beliefs and friendships of the time before life began. Let us waste no time in sterile litanies and nauseating mimicry. Leave this Europe where they are never done talking of Man, yet murder men everywhere they find them, at the corner of … Continue reading Come, then, comrades

Old predictions and new

Dr Syed Mansoor Hussain The 17th Amendment will eventually go this year but not until the PPP, without whose parliamentary support no new amendment can be passed, has extracted its ‘pound of flesh’ (and blood) from the N-League leadership My first article for this newspaper in the new year is about predictions I made the previous year, how right I was, and then my predictions for the new year. So, first my predictions about the last year (Old predictions and new, Daily Times, January 5, 2009). I was right that Mr Zardari will remain president and Mr Gilani will continue … Continue reading Old predictions and new