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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Aerospace lander to fuel up on Mars

Thu Nov 18, 2010

Hugo Williams and his colleagues at the University of Leicester in the UK argue that the aerospace giant Astrium lander can gather up its own fuel in the planet Mars.

Scientists and researchers claim that a design concept in Proceedings of the Royal Society A outlines an approach to compress CO2 collected from the atmosphere of Mars, liquefy it and use it as fuel needed by nuclear decay-driven machines such as the aerospace giant Astrium lander, a jumping robot, which can give future robotic missions leaps of a kilometer.

At present, vehicles that are powered by the sun, ie the solar energy, and get around on wheels are limited in their overall range of exploration on the Red Planet.

In scientific meetings, Ideas including landers with wings or lighter-than-atmosphere balloons, or even "inflatable tumbleweeds" that are blown across the landscape have been proposed.

So far, "Nuclear batteries" have been in use in long-term space missions since the Pioneer craft of the early 1970s.

"The advantage is that the radioisotope source is long-lived and not dependent on solar energy," Dr Williams said about the CO2 collection of the machines as fuel.

"You can operate for a long time, and in areas of Mars where the amount of sunlight is relatively small. Because you're collecting your propellant from the Martian atmosphere you're not limited by having to take propellant out from Earth."

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://presstv.ir/detail/151506.html.

PREVIEW: Sri Lanka's president to start second term on Friday

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Colombo - Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapaksa is due to be sworn in for his second term on Friday, a day after his 65th birthday.

More than 1,000 local and foreign dignitaries are due to attend the ceremony in Colombo.

The government is to declare open some 54,000 development projects throughout the island during a 10-day period to mark the event. Among them is the commissioning of a new international harbor built with Chinese assistance in the south-east.

Rajapaksa was elected in 2005 but opted for early presidential elections in January this year, nearly two years ahead of the end of his term. After winning the election, he delayed the swearing-in ceremony by nearly nine months to gain the maximum period in office and continue as leader until 2016.

The president's popularity shot up after ending the war against the Tamil rebels in May 2009. He reaped the benefits of early elections and secured 57.81 per cent of the vote. His main rival, the former army commander Sarath Fonseka, got 40.21 per cent.

The ruling United People's Freedom Alliance government led by Rajapaksa is also in a strong position after securing 143 seats in the 225-seat parliament in the April elections. It later won the support of 17 more opposition members to gain a two-thirds majority.

Rajapaksa is to offer additional portfolios to some of the opposition members in a cabinet reshuffle scheduled for November 22. The move would mean the further expansion of the 41-member cabinet.

As Rajpaksa starts his second term, the opposition has vowed to step up its campaign to secure the release of Fonseka. He is serving a 30-month jail term after being convicted of favoring his son-in-law in awarding military contracts while he served as the army chief.

Fonseka was arrested two weeks after the presidential elections on January 26 and tried by two different courts martial. One of them stripped him of his rank of general after finding him guilty of involvement in politics while serving as the army chief. The other jailed him for awarding military contracts to his son-in-law.

Three more cases are pending against Fonseka in the civilian courts.

Rajapaksa also faces the challenge of finding a political solution to the ethnic tensions with the minority Tamils in the north and eastern parts of the country, after the end of the 26-year civil war.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354073,president-start-term-friday.html.

Vietnam villagers seek eviction of marauding elephants

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Hanoi - An aggressive herd of elephants is frightening villagers in Vietnam's Central Highlands, but a local official said Thursday that requests to remove the elephants were "not feasible."

About 20 elephants have appeared in a commune in Ea Sup District of Dak Lak province, destroying nearly 40 hectares of crops and causing an estimated 50,000 dollars in damage, the Lao Dong newspaper reported.

But evicting the elephants would be "very expensive and takes time," Y Rit Buon Ya, deputy director of Dak Lak Department for Agriculture and Rural Development, told the German Press Agency dpa.

The process, he said, would also require support from the central government and help from the international community.

It was the fifth time the elephants have damaged crops since the beginning of 2010.

"We have to light fires every night to scare off the elephants but they seem not to be afraid anymore," Ngo Van Luon, a villager, told local press.

The elephants even seemed attracted to fire, he said. "They show signs of coming to our place, making us too frightened, so we have to run away."

"This elephant group is really causing danger for local people because they are very aggressive," Ya said. "Local people will be starving if they continue to destroy their farms.

"The only way to help local people to avoid starvation is to grow paddy in other places."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354081,seek-eviction-marauding-elephants.html.

Death toll from dengue fever hits 724 in the Philippines

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Manila - The death toll from dengue fever in the Philippines has reached 724 since the start of the year, the Department of Health said Thursday.

The deaths, recorded from January 1 to October 30, were up nearly 50 per cent from 485 fatalities in the same period last year.

The health department also recorded a total of 119,789 cases of dengue infections, an increase of more than 140 per cent from 49,319 a year ago.

Dr Lyndon Leesuy, manager of the department's National Dengue Control Program, urged local officials to step up efforts to inform residents in their communities about how to avoid getting dengue.

"We cannot go to your houses to eliminate the breeding sites of mosquitoes or to cover your water containers where mosquitoes can breed," he said. "We need the support of those in communities."

Dengue is an infectious tropical fever causing acute pain in the joints. Symptoms include loss of appetite, general weakness, nausea and vomiting.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354085,fever-hits-724-philippines.html.

'Honeymoon killer' Watson set to return to US

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Sydney - An American convicted of killing his wife during a honeymoon scuba-dive on the Great Barrier Reef was cleared Thursday for extradition to the United States.

The Australian government has received the required assurance that Gabe Watson would not face the death penalty if he goes on trial in the US for murdering Tina Watson 11 days after their wedding.

Watson was released this month into Immigration Department custody after controversially serving 18 months in a Brisbane prison for manslaughter.

"We are confident that they will neither seek, impose nor apply the death penalty to Mr Watson on his return to the United States," Immigration Department spokesman Sandi Logan said. "We are quite confident we can trust the US government on this matter."

The 34-year-old avoided a murder charge in Australia over the 2003 death of his 26-year-old bride by entering a guilty plea to the lesser charge of manslaughter.

Chilling video footage inadvertently captured by a fellow diver showed Watson swimming away while she sank to the ocean floor.

It was alleged at his 2009 trial that Watson held his wife in a bear hug, turned off her air supply and turned the valve back on when she was dead or nearly dead.

There was outrage in both Australia and the US over the leniency of the sentence.

In Alabama, the Watsons' home state, Attorney General Troy King has vowed to put the bubble-wrap salesman on trial for murder on his return to the US.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354084,watson-set-return-us.html.

Discovery of bodies takes volcano toll in Indonesia to 275

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Jakarta - Rescue workers recovered more bodies on the slopes of Indonesia's Mount Merapi Thursday, bringing the death toll from its series of eruptions since last month to 275.

Soldiers, police and volunteers worked in two hamlets in the Cangkringan subdistrict in Central Java, searching for bodies buried under up to a 1-metre-deep layer of ash and other volcanic materials.

The death toll from the eruptions that started October 26 stood at 275 with more than 500 people injured, an official at the National Disaster Management Agency said.

The death toll was expected to rise further as more than 250 people living in the danger zones surrounding the volcano were still reported missing. About 300,000 people fled their homes and were living in emergency shelters, down from more than 380,000 late last week.

The head of the Center of Vulcanology and Geological Disasters Mitigation, Surono, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name, said that while the eruptions' intensity is winding down, volcanic activity remained high. He said the threat of hot clouds and lava continued and warned the local communities to stay alert.

Merapi, located about 500 kilometers south-east of Jakarta, erupted for the first time in four years on October 26. Its biggest eruption in decades occurred on November 5.

The 2,968-meter volcano's deadliest eruption on record occurred in 1930, when 1,370 people were killed.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354086,volcano-toll-indonesia-275.html.

Australian Government approved world's first floating LNG processing plant

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

The processing of traditional Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is expensive and environmentally unfriendly; normally requiring extensive pipelines, infrastructure and dredging. Shell Oil has developed some innovative technology that could change how we process LNG in the future. Plans are underway to process LNG on a floating platform, which will likely be on the world's largest boat. The Australian Federal Government has just helped to make those plans a reality by granting Shell approval to implement their Prelude Project north of Broome on the North West coast of Western Australia.

The LNG industry is booming in Australia, with plans in pace to rival the world's largest producer of LNG, Qatar. Environment Minister Tony Burke has approved the Shell project with strict conditions which are focused on protecting the marine life. "This is a large-scale project that is using world-first technology. We can't risk getting it wrong, so I have set very strict conditions to help ensure our precious marine environment will be protected," he said.

However, the Greens Party are not convinced and are concerned there will be impacts on the marine environment as well as gas emissions that will increase global warming. The project has also sparked concerns with environmentalists as well as some of the local Aborigines who are opposed to the planned development.

The vessel will be moored to the sea bed and extract the gas, processing it on board. It will be cooled on the vessel so that it is ready for shipping. Then the platform can be towed to a new gas field and anchored temporarily in place.

Shell's Prelude project vice president, Bruce Steenson says, "that means not only can we develop these smaller fields but it's a lower overall environmental impact”. He continues, "it does mean that we can go to the more remote places to produce gas that we previously couldn't do”. The on board processing will mean that all offshore compression platforms, pipelines and the onshore infrastructure will be surplus to requirements.

Shell are still looking at design and engineering details for the new technology and plan to make a final decision in 2011. If they decide to go ahead the floating LNG processing plant will open for business in 2016.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354087,australian-government-approved-worlds-first-floating-lng-processing-plant.html.

Spain in state of shock after Lisbon meltdown - Feature

Thu, 18 Nov 2010

Madrid - Spanish football is in a state of shock as a result of Wednesday's 4-0 meltdown away to neighbors Portugal.

The world champions suffered their heaviest defeat ever against Portugal, and questions are now being asked about the future prospects of several veterans.

Radio Marca commented on Thursday that several players !looked old and slow out there last night, too slow to keep the Portuguese forwards under control."

The radio station raised questions about aging defenders Carles Puyol, 32, and Joan Capdevila, 33, and said that "younger defenders are needed urgently."

Cadena COPE pointed out that playmaker Xavi - who will be 31 in January - looked ponderous and sluggish.

Xavi has been struggling with a chronic Achilles tendon injury this season, which is one reason why Barcelona have signed Ibrahim Affelay from PSV Eindhoven for January.

Cadena SER, meanwhile, suggested that the "minds of the players were elsewhere...mainly on the November 29 'Clasico'" (between twin giant Barcelona and Real Madrid).

Former Spain goalkeeper Santiago Canizares commented on Cadena SER that it would have been better to have fielded younger, more ambitious players, rather than those who triumphed in South Africa in July.

This is the second heavy defeat suffered by La Roja since winning the World Cup in July. In September they were thrashed 4-1 by lively Argentina in Buenos Aires.

Sports daily Marca asked on Thursday: "Was this really La Roja? Were (Andres) Iniesta, Xavi and (Iker) Casillas really playing, or were they doubles?"

Rival daily AS said that "this disgrace needs revenge", and suggested organizing a return match against Portugal "but taking it more seriously."

The problem on Wednesday, according to AS editor Alfredo Relano, was that "football cannot be played with this lack of enthusiasm...Spain went to Portugal just to pass the time of day, with the majority of the players thinking about something else."

Relano concluded by writing that "we deserved to be thrashed...Nobody is going to take the World Cup away from us, but neither should we throw it down into the mud like this. This 4-0 really hurts."

To make matters worse, according to television channel Antena 3, the match did little to promote the joint Iberian 2018 World Cup bid because only around 20,000 fans bothered to turn up, leaving the Estadio da Luz "looking empty and forlorn."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354109,lisbon-meltdown-feature.html.

Arrest order for Wikileaks' Assange

Swedish prosecutor seeks arrest of whistleblower website founder on allegations of rape and sexual molestation.

18 Nov 2010

A Swedish prosecutor has requested the arrest of Julian Assange, the Australian founder of the whistleblower website WikiLeaks, to face charges of rape and sexual molestation.

The request for the arrest of Assange, 39, comes nearly a month after he released classified military documents about the war in Iraq detailing torture, civilian deaths blamed on US and Iraqi forces.

"I request the District Court of Stockholm to detain Mr Assange in his absence, suspected of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion," Marianne Ny, the Swedish director of prosecutions, said in a statement in English.

"The reason for my request is that we need to interrogate him. So far, we have not been able to meet with him to accomplish the interrogations."

The Stockholm court was set to hold a hearing on whether to order Assange's detention, which according to Swedish media would allow authorities to issue an international warrant for his arrest.

A warrant was first issued for Assange's arrest on August 20 by another prosecutor, but was later withdrawn.

Ny reopened the rape investigation against Assange on September 1, but did not request his detention and allowed him to leave Sweden.

Source: Al-Jazeera.
Link: http://english.aljazeera.net//news/europe/2010/11/20101118102042316141.html.

Suu Kyi defends election boycott

Myanmar's pro-democracy leader tells Al Jazeera people have to stand up for themselves if they want change.

18 Nov 2010

Myanmar's pro-democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi says she has no regrets over her party's decision to boycott the general election held on November 7.

In an interview to Al Jazeera, the 65-year-old Nobel Prize laureate said the decision to withdraw her National League for Democracy (NLD) was the right one, even though some of her supporters believed it was a mistake.

Suu Kyi said that the people of Myanmar have to stand up for themselves if they want to see change in their country.

"The people have to want it, and they have to be united," she said.

In the interview, Suu Kyi was careful not to verbally challenge the current military leadership of Myanmar. However, she was defiant over her seven-year period of house arrest, which she termed "illegal".

She also said the military leadership of Myanmar was not softening its stance.

Al Jazeera's special correspondent, reporting from Yangon, Myanmar's main city, said Suu Kyi's release encouraged her further to fight for democracy, "because her following has grown significantly during her detention".

"A lot of those supporters are younger then when she campaigned for democracy in the past," our correspondent said.

"She believes her party is getting through to the younger generation and she is getting more confident that this is the key to change here [in Myanmar]."

Little choice

International monitors of the elections and some of her local following had criticized Suu Kyi's decision to boycott the national vote because it left people with little choice.

"Boycotting the elections was the only decision to make because they [the NLD] didn't believe in the election rules," our correspondent said.

"Standing up for democracy can be a very dangerous occupation in Myanmar, but she [Suu Kyi] believes the more people do that, the more perhaps the current rulers of this country will start to take notice, and will start to change."

Counting for the November 7 vote has reportedly been finalized, with the main military-backed party scoring a comprehensive victory.

Myanmar's election commission announced on Thursday that the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) of Thein Sein, the current prime minister, won three-quarters of the seats in the national and regional assemblies that were up for grabs.

Source: Al-Jazeera.
Link: http://english.aljazeera.net//news/asia-pacific/2010/11/20101118101724623904.html.

"There Is No War on Terrorism"

Omid Memarian interviews author REESE ERLICH

SAN FRANCISCO, California, Nov 10, 2010 (IPS) - "The U.S. intentionally confuses al Qaeda with other groups around the world fighting for their independence or liberation, but it's [just] a convenient way to whip up support and get people very afraid," says author and journalist and Reese Erlich.

"There is no war on terrorism," he tells IPS.

Based on original research and firsthand interviews, Erlich's new book "Conversations with Terrorists" draws fresh portraits of six controversial leaders: Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, Hamas top leader Khaled Meshal, Israeli politician Geula Cohen, Iranian Revolutionary Guard founder Mohsen Sazargara, Hezbollah spiritual advisor Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Fadlallah, and former Afghan Radio and Television Ministry head Malamo Nazamy.

"Some of them I had already interviewed prior to coming up with the book idea. For example, Bashar Al-Assad, Khaled Meshal," says Erlich. "They are very widely accused of being either terrorists or state sponsors of terrorism in the United States."

Critiquing these responses and synthesising a wide range of material, Erlich, the co-author of "Target Iraq" (2003) and "Iran Agenda" (2007), shows that "yesterday's terrorist is today's national leader, and that today's freedom fighter may become tomorrow's terrorist."

Excerpts from the interview with IPS correspondent Omid Memarian follow.

Q: What can your readers learn from interviews with those who are being accused of being a terrorist or supporting them?

A: The theme of the book is to get people to look at who is accused of being a terrorist or might be considered being a terrorist, and what do they really stand for and what's really going on in their countries.

Q: In one of the chapters, you say that Ayatollah Mohammad Fadlallah is a "CIA victim". What do you mean by that?

A: Well, the U.S. was absolutely convinced that Fadlallah was the mastermind of the Marine Corps [barracks] bombing in Beirut [in 1983]. They hired a Saudi and Lebanese agent to kill him. And this is all revealed in Bob Woodward's book called "Veil".

We confirmed it with Fadlallah in the interview. It's a very well-documented case that was reported at the time. In 1985, an agent working for the CIA blew up an apartment building where Ayatollah Fadlallah lived. It killed 80 civilians but he was out of the building at the time.

Ironically, later it was shown Fadlallah had nothing to do with the bombing actually. That was confirmed to me by Bob Baer [a former CIA operative in the Middle East], who was in Beirut at the time and who was investigating who was responsible. It's a serious warning that every time you hear in the U.S. press that this militant or this terrorist has been killed, keep a sceptical attitude.

Q: In one chapter you interview Mohsen Sazegara, a former member of Iran's Revolutionary Guards. What's your take on this military organisation?

A: There is no question that the Iranian government has engaged in terrorist tactics. For example, they assassinated some Kurdish leaders of KDP in Germany; that is a classic terrorist attack outside its borders.

I make a distinction between that and a legitimate group that is fighting for independence of their country or liberation of some form of occupation. If they are supporting groups inside Iraq or in Afghanistan that doesn't automatically qualify for calling them terrorist, depending on what they are doing.

Q: How about Hamas and Hezbollah?

A: I spent some time with both of those groups. Politically, I strongly disagree with them and make it clear that they've done some horrific things and if I were Lebanese or Palestinian I would not vote for them in the elections, I would vote for other people that want to see progressive political development in both countries.

But they are also legitimate political forces; they win significant numbers of seats. Hezbollah is a part of the ruling coalition in Lebanon today. Hamas actually won the Palestinian elections, free and fair. So to simply vilify them as terrorists doesn't do any good. They have to be a part of the political negotiating process.

Q: If a legitimate political group gets involved in killing random people, does it qualify them to be named as a terrorist organisation?

A: Both Hamas and Hezbollah have used terrorists' tactics, no question about it. The Israeli government has used terrorist tactics against Lebanese and Palestinians; I think there is no doubt about that.

But Hamas and Hezbollah are very different than al Qaeda. [The latter] has a borderless campaign that they want to carry out and they are not part of any national liberation movement and they put terrorism at the core of their beliefs and tactics. That's not the case for Hezbollah and Hamas. And the U.S. knows it, actually.

Q: What is your assessment of the Taliban in Afghanistan, where you interviewed the former Taliban leader, Malamo Nazamy?

A: Nezamy saw the Taliban as a legitimate liberation group that was bringing stability, Islamic law and justice to Afghanistan. He certainly wouldn't consider himself a terrorist. He was the head of Afghan radio and TV and he refused the demand of other Taliban leaders to destroy the country's TV archives and he is very well known for that.

Today, he has many of the same views about Islam, the ruling government and attitudes towards women and so on. But he is willing to allow the U.S. and the U.S. troops for some time until negotiations can take place and that seems to be enough to make him currently an ally of [President Hamid] Karzai and the U.S.

Source: IPS News.
Link: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53525.

Behind Drone Issue in Yemen, a Struggle to Control Covert Ops

By Gareth Porter

WASHINGTON, Nov 10, 2010 (IPS) - The drone war that has been anticipated in Yemen for the last few months has been delayed by the failure of U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF) to generate usable intelligence on al Qaeda there.

That failure has given the CIA a new argument for wresting control of the drone war in Yemen from the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) which now controls the drone assets in the country. But some key administration officials are resisting a CIA takeover of the war in Yemen, as reported by the Washington Post Nov. 7.

The struggle between the CIA's operations directorate and SOF officials over management of a drone war in Yemen has been a driving force in pushing the war against al Qaeda and affiliated organizations into many more countries – along with President Barack Obama's eagerness to show that he is doing more than his predecessor on terrorism.

Both the CIA covert operations directorate and SOF brass regard the outcome in Yemen as the key to the larger struggle over control of a series of covert wars that the Obama administration approved in principle last year.

The CIA directorate and the two major figures in the Iraq- Afghanistan wars, Gen. David Petraeus and Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, lobbied Obama in 2009 to expand covert operations against al Qaeda to a dozen countries in the Middle East, the Horn of Africa and Central Asia.

In spring 2009, McChrystal, then director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, persuaded the White House to give U.S. combatant commanders wider latitude to carry out covert military operations against al Qaeda or other organizations deemed to be terrorists, according to a May 25 report by Marc Ambinder of The Atlantic.

Based on the Obama decision, on Sep. 30, 2009, Petraeus issued an order creating a Joint Unconventional Warfare Task Force to plan and execute covert intelligence gathering in support of later covert military operations throughout the CENTCOM area.

The Petraeus order was followed within weeks by an influx of surveillance equipment and as many as 100 SOF trainers, as well as additional CIA personnel in Yemen, according to the Post Nov. 7 report.

With the support of McChrystal and Petraeus, who was then still CENTCOM chief, JSOC was given control of the covert operation in Yemen.

But JSOC stumbled badly and failed to generate usable intelligence on al Qaeda targets, as the Post reported Nov. 7.

On Dec. 17, less than three months after the Petraeus order, a cruise missile was launched against what was supposed to have been an al Qaeda training camp in Abyan province in south Yemen.

But the strike, which was supposed to have been attributed to Yemen's tiny air force, was based on faulty intelligence. The Yemeni parliament found that it had killed 41 members of two families, including 17 women and 23 children. It was known almost immediately to have been a U.S. strike.

By all accounts, it was major political gift to AQAP, which has its sights set on toppling the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. AQAP seized on videos of the carnage to step up its attack on Saleh as a U.S. stooge.

Al Qaeda has also been able to justify targeting the United States as revenge for the Dec. 17 attack. In June and July, the AQAP announced that it was planning a "catastrophe for the enemies of God" in response to the Abyan attack, according to Gregory Johnsen, a Princeton doctoral candidate who has done research in Yemen.

That may have been a reference to the two parcels from Yemen to an address in Chicago intercepted Oct. 29, one of which was discovered to have "explosive material".

On May 27, another cruise missile strike killed a popular deputy province chief who was apparently mediating between the Yemeni government and al Qaeda officials. Local tribesmen retaliated by attacking an oil pipeline in the vicinity.

After that strike, the CIA went on the offensive to get the administration to take control of the drones away from the SOF. A series of articles in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and the Associated Press in mid- to late August cited unnamed officials referring to the possibility of CIA drone operations in Yemen.

Col. Pat Lang, a former Defense Intelligence Officer for the Middle East with operational experience in Yemen, told IPS the CIA had benefited from JSOC stumbling.

"The agency has taken advantage of every criticism of the performance of the SOF as an argument to regain control over cover operations," said Lang.

"The competition between the military clandestine services and the CIA is greater than ever before," Lang told IPS.

But according to U.S. officials quoted in Sunday's Post, ever since the errant late May strike, U.S. drones have been present in the skies over Yemen searching for AQAP targets. The Post reported that the drones are still under the control of JSOC, operating under the overall command of the chief of the Central Command.

The Post article quoted a "senior Obama administration official" as hinting strongly that the CIA's operations branch is lobbying the White House hard for control over the drones in Yemen but not convincing some key officials.

"There are a lot of people who are really feeling good about what they're doing in certain parts of the world," said the official. That was an apparent reference to the drone war in Pakistan, which is run by the CIA's operations directorate.

"But that doesn't mean that, oh, if you'll just let us do this over here, you're going to have a different picture or different results" than the past in Yemen, the official said, clearly referring to the lack of actionable intelligence.

The report suggests that key officials now realize that neither JSOC nor the CIA is going to be able to obtain actionable intelligence on al Qaeda under present circumstances.

Former DIA intelligence officer Lang agrees. He believes the Yemeni Intelligence Service, which is a "very effective secret police force" with "considerable penetration capability", is not fully sharing the intelligence it has on al Qaeda with U.S. officials.

"I'm sure Saleh is concerned about AQAP," Lang said, "but he can't allow himself to be seen as serving the United States." And Saleh may figure that AQAP has penetrated his intelligence service as well, according to Lang.

For the time being, it appears the drone war in Yemen is abeyance. But powerful bureaucratic forces will be continuing to make the case that they can justify the beginning of drone strikes there.

AQAP leaders are hoping to see the U.S. use more military force in Yemen, according to Johnsen. "They would like nothing better than for the U.S. to invade Yemen," Johnsen told IPS. "The more they can show active U.S. intervention, the better it is for them."

*Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specializing in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in 2006.

Source: IPS News.
Link: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53517.

Mubarak's Critics See Hypocrisy in U.S. Support

By William Fisher

NEW YORK, Nov 15, 2010 (IPS) - The Egyptian government's crackdown on political opponents continues unabated in advance of parliamentary elections Nov. 28, even as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week hailed the "partnership" between the two countries as "a cornerstone of stability and security in the Middle East and beyond".

In the latest example of a widespread campaign of media repression, Kareem Nabil, an Egyptian blogger who completed a four-year prison term, was still being detained and beaten at the State Security Intelligence (SSI) headquarters in Alexandria by security officers, according to the New York- based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information.

Nabil had been released from Burj al-Arab Prison on Nov. 6. He was subsequently re-arrested by security officers in Alexandria without charges.

A student at Cairo's state-run religious university, Al- Azhar, Nabil was convicted in 2006 by an Alexandria court of insulting Islam and President Hosni Mubarak, who he called a dictator.

Nabil's re-arrest was seen by human rights activists as, in the words of an unnamed opposition figure, "another nail in the coffin of Egyptian democracy".

The government's efforts to stifle opposition to the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) have included firing an influential newspaper editor, revoking the licenses of TV channels, arresting bloggers, changing the rules governing political slogans, and fabricating infractions to disqualify opposition candidates from running.

As the government's campaign continued, Clinton hosted a Nov. 10 visit by Egypt's foreign minister, Aboul Gheit, and Egypt's intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman. Gheit confirmed that he and Clinton did not discuss the forthcoming election.

The administration of U.S. President Barack Obama has come under increasing criticism from both conservatives and liberals for not being forceful enough in speaking out publicly regarding the parliamentary election and the presidential election, which is to follow.

Conservatives - and neoconservatives - are urging Obama to reinstate the "democracy-building" programs implemented by the George W. Bush administration, Obama's predecessor. But they appear to be far more concerned about Egypt's continuing role as "mediator" in the Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.

Liberals are pushing for more unequivocal rhetoric from the White House condemning the renewal of Egypt's 30-year-old "emergency" laws and the widely-reported harassment of opposition political institutions and individuals.

The country's 82-year-old leader since 1981, Hosni Mubarak, promised the U.S. he would repeal the emergency laws, which give Egypt's security services the unfettered right to arrest and detain people without due process or judicial review.

The Obama administration has been most outspoken regarding the emergency laws, whose renewal it regards as a broken promise. It has also publicly condemned the June murder of blogger Khaled Saeed, who was dragged out of an Internet café and beaten to death on the street. He had recently posted a video online exposing police corruption.

Human rights advocates charge that the government has kidnapped bloggers and Internet activists, tortured them, and then imprisoned them until the bruises on their bodies have disappeared so there is no evidence of abuse.

One of those advocates, Hossam Bahgat, told IPS that democracy-building programmes can only be effective if they are "inside-out" – adopted by indigenous people who live and work in a country or a community, and not superimposed on them.

Bahgat, who heads a not-for-profit organization known as the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), was in New York to receive an award from Human Rights Watch (HRW) celebrating the "valor of individuals who put their lives on the line to protect the dignity and rights of others".

His group recently won a case against the Interior Ministry on behalf of Egypt's Baha'i citizens, a minority facing frequent violence and discrimination. Egyptians may now obtain official documents without revealing their religious convictions, or being forced to identify themselves as Muslims, Christians, or Jews.

The EIPR recently launched an advocacy campaign to combat sectarianism in Egypt and "strengthen the values of equal citizenship and shared existence in our common nation without religious or faith-based discrimination".

"While the movement is being launched by the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights as part of our ongoing efforts to defend equality and freedom of religion and belief, we realize that it cannot be successful if it remains ours alone," Bahgat said.

"We firmly believe that this campaign will not meet with success unless it becomes a voice for Egyptians who believe that we are all in this together and those united by a common fear for our future due to rising social divisions, sectarian tension and a mindset that divides the country into an 'us' and a 'them,' he said.

The Mubarak regime has been criticized for many years for what opponents call a nationwide campaign of persecution and discrimination against the Egyptian Coptic church. Copts are Christians who make up about five percent of the Egyptian population.

From a U.S. perspective, despite the "cumbaya" diplomacy on display during the Egyptian foreign minister's visit to the U.S. State Department, Egypt is likely to continue to be the target of both liberal and conservative scorn.

But neither end of the political spectrum believes Washington has the clout to influence the upcoming elections. And Egyptian voters are both powerless and uninformed.

As one prominent activist, Bahey el-din Hassan, director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, wrote recently, "The outcome of the elections has already been determined - all that remains is the official announcement of the results after 28 November, in favor of the ruling National Democratic Party."

Source: IPS News.
Link: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=53558.

Saudi king names son natl. guard chief

Thu Nov 18, 2010

Saudi King Abdullah has appointed his son, Prince Miteb bin Abdullah, as both minister of state and commander of the National Guard.

King Abdullah also accepted the resignation of his brother Prince Badr bin Abdul Aziz as deputy head of the National Guard over health reasons.

Earlier the king had received a request from Prince Badr to relieve him from his post on health grounds, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The National Guard -- a fully trained army of between 100,000 and 120,000 men -- operates in parallel, and as a palace-directed counter-balance, to the Saudi ground forces under the defense ministry. The monarch has been head of the National Guard since 1962.

The palace announcement suggests that Prince Miteb maybe the likely replacement for aging King Abdullah.

Saudi and US officials say a large number of the 178 attack and transport helicopters included in a 30 to 60 billion dollar arms deal with the US announced in October are destined for the national guard.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/151456.html.

Iran ends 2nd day of air maneuvers

Thu Nov 18, 2010

The Iranian military has wrapped up the second day of its five-day drills dubbed 'Modafean Aseman Velayat 3 (Defenders of Velayat Skies).'

Iran's defense capabilities where the radar system cannot be used were demonstrated on the second day of air maneuvers.

The air maneuvers are being held near Iran's "nuclear and others vital landmarks." The long-range anti-air missiles are being tested in the maneuvers.

A new kind of walkie talkie and an upgraded surface-to-air shoulder-launched missile system were successfully tested.

The main purpose of holding the military maneuvers is enhancing response capabilities in countering threats against the strategic centers.

State-of-the-art equipment used for communication and exchange of intelligence along with modern electro-optical systems were successfully tested and utilized on the second day of military maneuvers.

The spokesman for the military drills, Brigadier Hamid Arzhangi, told Press TV that the exercises on Wednesday mainly focused on assessing monitoring instruments installed across the country.

"Thousands of monitors have been positioned along the seven thousand kilometers of Iranian borders, as well as the central areas of the country," Arzhangi added.

During the drills, the aerial monitoring network passed on intelligence to control and command headquarters using highly advanced telecommunication instruments in the shortest possible time, he added.

The command headquarters then processed the incoming intelligence and took appropriate measures as part of the exercise, the official said.

Iranian military officials say the drills convey a message of peace and friendship to neighboring countries and a strong warning against enemies.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/151452.html.

'Israel eyes more US F-35 fighter jets'

Thu Nov 18, 2010

Israel is holding talks with the US to acquire an additional 20 Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 fighter jets, a top Israeli military official says.

Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi said that Israel would welcome another 20 fighter jets on the heels of a deal signed in October to buy about 20 of the radar-evading jets at a cost of about $96 million per aircraft.

"As I understand (and that's the latest information I have on this issue) it's still under negotiation between the Israeli government and the US administration," he said at a joint press conference with the Chairman of the US Joints Chief of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen in Washington on Wednesday.

Ashkenazi said that he did not know anything about the final decision.

Some media had reported that the US administration has offered the additional jets to Israel in exchange for a three-month freeze on construction of new settlements.

Israel signaled on Tuesday it had delayed deciding on the US proposal, saying it wanted the ideas in writing.

Israeli sources said the proposals, made verbally during a meeting between US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in New York last week, included an F-35 offer worth $3 billion and pledges of enhanced US diplomatic support at the UN.

Israel has said the first batch of the fighter jets will be received from 2015 through 2017.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/151447.html.

'Iran designs local S-300 system'

Thu Nov 18, 2010

Iran has designed an air defense system that has the same capability as the Russian-made S-300 system, a top military official says.

"We have developed the system by upgrading systems like S-200 and we have tested it successfully using all our potential and experience in the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), the Army and the Defense Ministry," Brigadier General Mohammad Hassan Mansourian told Press TV on Wednesday.

This comes as Russia canceled a deal involving the sale of its S-300 system to Iran in September, the general added.

General Mansourian noted that the details of Iran's long-range missile defense system will be unveiled soon.

On November 3, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad criticized Russia for its "one-sided and illegal" cancellation of the military deal.

"This agreement must be implemented. If they (Russians) refrain from fulfilling their commitment, the Iranian nation will ask for its rights and damage inflicted to it," President Ahmadinejad said.

Based on an $800 million contract signed in 2005, Russia agreed to provide Iran with at least five S-300 systems.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev issued a decree in September to prohibit the delivery of the S-300 to the Islamic Republic under the pretext of a US-engineered sanctions resolution imposed against Iran over its nuclear program.

Iran criticized Russia, arguing that Resolution1929 does not justify Moscow's refusal to commit to the deal as it does not specifically ban the delivery of the defensive missiles to Tehran.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/151443.html.

US report: China seeking to forcibly return Uighurs, Tibetans

Wed, 17 Nov 2010

Washington - China has been seeking the forcible return of Tibetan Buddhists and Uighur Muslims who have voiced criticism of Beijing over the lack of religious freedom, the US State Department said Wednesday.

In its annual report on international religious freedom, the State Department said that China has sought to have the individuals returned from Middle East and South Asian countries "because of their religious activities and defense of religious freedom."

The report also cited a UN finding that China forced the return of three Tibetan Buddhists, including a monk, from Nepal - the first since 2003.

The report, which assess religious freedom in all of the world's countries, covers a period beginning in July 2009 through the end of June. China, along with Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan, remained listed as countries of "particular concern."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354024,forcibly-return-uighurs-tibetans.html.

Obama awards Merkel highest US civilian honor

Wed, 17 Nov 2010

Washington - German Chancellor Angela Merkel is among 15 people named by President Barack Obama to receive America's highest civilian award.

Obama will present Merkel with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in a ceremony early next year, the White House said Wednesday.

Also slated to receive the award is former president George Bush, who served as president 1989-93, billionaire investor and philanthropist Warren Buffet, as well as civil rights activists, athletes and members of the culture and arts community.

These outstanding honorees come from a broad range of backgrounds, and they have excelled in a broad range of fields, but all of them have lived extraordinary lives that have inspired us, enriched our culture and made our country and our world a better place," Obama said in a statement.

The Presidential Medal of Freedom is awarded individuals who have made exceptional contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors, the White House said.

Others notables receiving the award are cellist Yo-Yo Ma, Congressman John Lewis, an icon of the black civil rights movement of the 1960s, and author and poet Maya Angelou.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/354047,highest-us-civilian-honor.html.

Jordan's Elections: An Observer's View

Michele Dunne
Carnegie Commentary, November 17, 2010

The committee supervising ballot box 31 in the Red Sea city of Aqaba arrived before dawn on November 9 to outfit the schoolroom with the necessary equipment: a plywood booth with a blue curtain mounted on the wall for voting, a clear plastic box for ballots, a computer for verifying voter registration, printed ballots, and tent cards identifying the civil servants supervising the process. After showing that the ballot box was empty and closing it with numbered seals, the chairman opened the poll promptly at 7:00 a.m. and the half-dozen women acting as poll watchers for candidates cast their votes. Then we all sat and waited for the voters to come.
As an international observer of Jordan’s parliamentary elections invited by the International Republican Institute, I find myself confronted with a paradox: although last week’s voting process can be characterized as credible, the elections unfolded within a broader political system that lacks credibility. The Jordanian government clearly put a great deal of effort into improving the mechanics of elections and deserves credit for opening up the process to scrutiny by domestic monitors and international observers. At a minimum, the government risked embarrassment, but its careful preparation prevented this from occurring.

On the other hand, the government put much less effort into crafting an electoral law that would have been broadly acceptable within Jordan, thereby alienating the country’s principal opposition party, the Islamic Action Front (IAF). And structural problems within the political system—namely the chronic underrepresentation of citizens in urban areas and the general powerlessness of the parliament—will dog the newly elected assembly, however properly elected.

Voting and Counting Process

At the micro level, Jordanian officials were impressively well prepared and organized for the elections. They seemed at pains to demonstrate meticulous compliance with procedural requirements and to maintain a high level of integrity and transparency during the actual voting and counting processes. Police officers sometimes seemed taken aback by the arrival of international observers with their large blue credential tags, but the Ministry of Interior officials to whom they turned were prepared for our arrival and welcomed us.

Candidate representatives and Jordanian civil society observers were also credentialed and stayed to witness the process from the early morning set-up until ballots were counted and the tally delivered in the evening. Still, I saw several flaws in procedure: some electoral committees failed to actually count their ballots at the beginning of the day (in order to do a full reconciliation of the vote at the end), and uniformed police officers remained in the room at the vote count I witnessed, in violation of the law, although I saw no evidence that they influenced the results in any way.

Stepping back from the micro level, however, this image of transparency begins to blur. First, no independent electoral commission exists in Jordan. Elections are run by two government ministries—the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Political Development—very much in that order. Second, the concept of virtual sub-districts in the electoral law raises the possibility that government officials could have stacked the deck in favor of certain candidates. While each voter could cast only one vote within a given district, candidates actually competed against each other in small groups or sub-districts (with the highest vote-getter in each group winning). In theory, candidates did not know against whom they would compete when they chose a sub-district, but it seems possible that government officials could have encouraged a favored candidate to run in a certain virtual sub-district against weaker rivals. Indeed, it is difficult to understand any other rationale for the virtual sub-district system.

Finally, while the voting and counting at each individual ballot box was open to scrutiny, the aggregation process that yielded the final results and voter turnout figures was not, and results from individual polling stations were not posted in a way that would allow outsiders to check the credibility of what was announced.

Was There Real Competition?

Aqaba on election day was noisy and festive. Large hospitality tents hosted by candidates dotted the city, cars and trucks festooned with candidate photos and blaring slogans or music were everywhere, police were working hard to keep chanting groups of young campaigners at a distance from poll entrances, and to block parties of adults sitting in plastic chairs in the street sipping coffee—and children zipping around them on bicycles—made driving increasingly hazardous as the day progressed.

At each of the 30 voting places that my observation partner and I witnessed, candidates sent representatives who stayed from the beginning of the process to the end with only the shortest bathroom breaks, keeping a parallel vote count and speaking up promptly to question anything that might constitute a violation of protocol. Candidates stopped in at voting stations, careful to avoid talking to voters but greeting poll workers and observers politely and checking in with representatives about the turnout.

Certainly it seems that there was real competition among these candidates at the local level, but at the national level this picture breaks down. Without the participation of the IAF—the country’s only political party with a broad base of support—competition and debate remained local and had a sterile quality. Electoral slogans were soporifically similar: “your candidate,” “national unity,” “reform,” “Jordan for all,” and so on. My own favorite was “no slogans,” used by Reem Badran, the only female candidate to win a seat in her own right rather than via the women’s quota (12 out of 120 seats).

Voter Turnout Doubted

Another aspect of the elections that seemed dubious, at least to Jordanians, was the officially announced voter turnout of 53 percent—not ridiculously high, but not as low as expected in light of historical trends, the unpopularity of the electoral law, and the IAF boycott. It is difficult for international observers to second-guess such results without the full data; my own extremely informal estimate suggested a turnout of some 45 percent of registered voters in Aqaba, although that is not necessarily reflective of the national average.

Jordanians, in any event, received the announced turnout figure with skepticism, viewing it as the government’s attempt to prove that it could hold meaningful elections without real opposition. A cartoon published on the back page of the independent daily al-Ghad on November 10 showed a small, pathetic figure with a blackened eye popping out of a battered box labeled “Democracy,” bearing a flag with the official turnout of 53 percent. The caption read, “The mark of success.”

Two Questions and One Precedent

However perfect or imperfect the November 9 elections, two important questions remain unanswered. First, will the incoming assembly enjoy more credibility with the public than the one elected in 2007, which was so delegitimized by election rigging and irresponsible behavior that the public applauded King Abdullah’s 2009 decision to dissolve it? Second, what steps, if any, will the Jordanian government take to address festering concerns about the electoral system and the role of the parliament?

These two questions are more closely linked than might be apparent at first. The cleaner and more transparent electoral process conducted on November 9 should mean fewer questions about whether the deputies seated in the new assembly were fairly elected. Aspects of the electoral law, however—particularly the obscure virtual sub-districts system—will still raise doubts about whether government officials created more favorable circumstances for some candidates. In addition, the underrepresentation of urban populations will continue to dog the assembly.

Moreover, it will be difficult for the parliament to be taken seriously and for deputies and political parties to gain credibility with the public if the parliament has few real opportunities to shape public policy. Thus, unless the Jordanian government is willing to allow significant amendments to the electoral law and consider giving the parliament greater powers—such as more meaningful budgetary oversight and the ability to initiate legislation without government approval—the goal of a more credible assembly is likely to remain elusive.

Whether or not the new parliament is deemed a success, Jordan’s elections established the precedent of opening much of the process to scrutiny by domestic and international monitors. It was easy enough for the Jordanian government to do that this time, with no serious competitors at the national level. Reversing precedent in future elections, however, when the IAF or other serious competitors might well participate, would be difficult. Therefore we will have to wait for another election to learn whether 2010 represented an important step forward or a brief moment of transparency in Jordanian politics.

Source: Carnegie Endowment.
Link: http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=41954.