Thursday, May 28, 2015

One-third of Yemeni need urgent medical care; SAUDI, STOP THE BOMBING!

What is genocide?  Has the Saudi bombing in Yemen reaches that point? Does it matter?  SAUDI, STOP THE BOMBING!

The Saudi blitzktrig could only take place with US and British technical support.  If you are a citizen of either country, please ask your elected representatives to withhold support for the Saudi Slaughter of Innocents.


From the New York Times, May 28, 2015

Medical Need Climbs Alongside Death Toll in YemenBy MOHAMMED ALI KALFOOD and KAREEM FAHIMSome 8.6 million people, or about a third of the country’s population, were in “urgent need of medical help,” the World Health Organization warned.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Saudi bombing in Yemen, with technical support from Britain and he US

The past 24 hours in Yemen under Saudi Bombardment:





----------


News from the Yemeni opposition to the bombing:Fighters of Houthi led Yemeni coalition of Shia-Sunni tribesmen and the army, together with popular resistance committees, have taken control of a Saudi military base in retaliation to Riyadh’s ongoing air campaign against their country.
Ansarullah fighters and forces of the popular committees recaptured the base in the al-Makhrouq region of the southwestern Saudi province of Najran during an operation late Monday.
Several military equipment and vehicles were destroyed in the operation.
Meanwhile, as per sources, the Yemeni tribesmen supported by the army have attacked the strategic King Khalid Air Base in southwestern Saudi Arabia near the city of Khamis Mushait.
The Yemeni army and the popular units have also scored major gains against al-Qaeda terrorists in the central Ma’rib Province. The Yemeni forces are also taking positions in region which will enable them to defeat the remnant of the Takfiri group in future.
The development comes as the Yemeni fighters and army allies on Monday attacked a Saudi military base near the border area of Tuwayliq in Sa’ada Province.
This is the latest in a series of attacks by Ansarullah as well as tribal forces against Saudi border positions over the past few weeks.
The Yemeni army, backed by popular committee forces, also on Monday destroyed four Saudi tanks after storming a base in Saudi Arabia’s southwestern city of Jezan.






A difficulty of Governing Egypt and some sympathy for Fattah al-Sisi

This news  story, reported so far as I can see  in English only in al-Monitor, gives me a small degree of respect for the Egyptian Tyrant,  Fattah al-Sisi.

Looking at certain parts of Tennessee , Oklahoma, and Texas and reading material sent to me by old friends, I try to imagine the Unite States dominated by three fervent fundamentalist Christian parties and one secular one; and each of the Christian parties interprets passages of the Old Testament to mean different commands which must be followed.

Here is one example of the problems such a president might face if confronted with such apolitical world.

A passsage from the Book of Deuteronomy , a book of the Christian Old Testament, believed by some Christians to the the Entrant Word of God…

Deuteronomy 21:18-21King James Version (KJV) 
18 If a man have a stubborn and rebellious son, which will not obey the voice of his father, or the voice of his mother, and that, when they have chastened him, will not hearken unto them: 
:1Then shall his father and his mother lay hold on him, and bring him out unto the elders of his city, and unto the gate of his place; 
20 And they shall say unto the elders of his city, This our son is stubborn and rebellious, he will not obey our voice; he is a glutton, and a drunkard. 
21 And all the men of his city shall stone him with stones, that he die: so shalt thou put evil away from among you; and all Israel shall hear, and fear.

A legislator in Tennessee has proposed that a city council, when presented with a stubborn and rebellious child, should be authorized to stone the child to death, on the authority of the passage just quoted.

And then I try to imagine what a president would have to do to govern such a country.  A military dictatorship  makes sense in such a situation.

Egypt is aced with just such a situation.


Al-Monitor, May 26, 20115

Sisi's call for religious tolerance divides Muslims 
CAIRO — On the occasion of the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Jan. 1 gave a speech in which he called for a religious revolution against extremism. He said there are ideas and texts in Islam that have been sanctified over hundreds of years and cannot be ignored. These erroneous ideas, however, have painted a bad picture of the Muslim nation as one characterized by killing and destruction, he said. It has been almost five months since Sisi's speech, in which he also blamed Al-

for rekindling such religious rhetoric. Although the goal of Sisi’s speech was to encourage tolerance and eliminate sectarian polarization, each Islamic current interpreted his words to suit its own ideas and beliefs. 
The Salafists, among them Sheikh Mohammed al-Abasiri, demanded the cancellation of Sufi holidays because of their alleged unethical and un-Islamic practices. Meanwhile, Sufi sheikhs, including Mohammed al-Shabrawi, called for the rejection of Salafism, because, he claimed, the Wahhabi ideology is the main reason behind the spread of terrorism in Egypt. 
Secularists meanwhile launched fierce verbal attacks against Al-Azhar, blaming its sheikhs for the country’s problematic religious discourse. The Al-Azhar sheikhs retorted that the secularists were trying to strip Egypt of its Islamic identity. The Muslim Brotherhood rejected Sisi’s call, which it said was directed against Islam, accusing Sisi of being unjust to Muslims and asking Muslims to disregard their holy texts. 
In an April 2015 speech at the Egyptian Military Academy, Sisi said that his call for religious reform had been incorrectly interpreted.
Ahmad Karima, professor of comparative jurisprudence at Al-Azhar University, told Al-Monitor, “Religious discourse can be divided into two parts. The Sharia texts, which are the Quran and the authentic hadith, constitute the first part, and one cannot go against them. The second part entails the Muslim scholars’ understanding of these texts, and this understanding is debatable and amendable.” 
Karima said religious discourse can be modernized through education reform, especially the reform of texts that rely on inaccurate information passed down for generations. Karima cited the “History of the Prophets and Kings” as an example of a historical source that includes false information, such as that Abu Bakr al-Sadiq was the first caliph to burn a man to death. 
Karima also claimed that it is important that only academics specialized in Islamic preaching be allowed to speak publicly in places of worship and that unqualified individuals, like many Salafists, be forbidden to preach. According to Karima, Al-Azhar graduates in audiovisual and printed religious media should be put to work in this respect, because the religious media arena is so chaotic that anyone can become involved in it.
The Islamic researcher Islam al-Buhairi disagreed that it should be Al-Azhar’s mission to modernize religious rhetoric. “The only obstacle to the reform of religious rhetoric is Al-Azhar itself,” he told Al-Monitor. “It cannot rectify anything because ideological corruption stems from within [that very institution]. How, then, can the reform take place?” 
He further stated, “Sisi has asked Al-Azhar men four times on different occasions to modernize religious rhetoric, but they did not move a finger, and they won’t. This is what pushed me and other thinkers to assume this responsibility.”
Mohammad al-Shahat al-Jundi, a member of the Islamic Research Council and former secretary-general of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, told Al-Monitor, “After Sisi’s call for a religious reform revolution, Egyptian media [began spreading] the opinions of non-specialists, questioning the holy hadith and mocking the Prophet's companions in a way that does not reflect wisdom, truthfulness or professionalism. [They propose] such religious hypotheses [that] carry an underlying organized and deliberate campaign to push Al-Azhar into a manufactured conflict. The aim is to distract Al-Azhar from its pivotal role in fighting takfir, sectarianism and division at a highly critical time for the Muslim nation and for the country.” 
Mohamed Zaki, secretary-general of the Supreme Committee for Islamic Preaching at Al-Azhar, which oversees Islamic preaching globally and locally, told Al-Monitor that the committee, which includes several government ministers, including the minister of education, has not convened since 1983. Since he became committee chair, almost a year ago, he has asked Al-Azhar’s sheikh several times to call a meeting, but there has been no response. 
Nader Bakkar, co-founder of the Salafist Nour Party, told Al-Monitor, “The failure of the religious reform revolution stems from the lack of a unified and grounded scientific discussion. Each party has its own perspective and driving forces and is not willing to cave in to maintain the trust of its advocates. The heritage books constitute a good starting point for this revolution. Al-Azhar clerics, intellectuals and researchers from outside Al-Azhar, in addition to statesmen who have the executive power to set scientific foundations, can meet to reform heritage books and eliminate the parts that are now only applicable to the distant past. Some opinions [expressed by] Islamic scholars are correct, while others are relative or belong to certain eras. Other opinions are just plain wrong, because people can make faulty judgments.” 
Sheikh Mohammed Abu al-Azayem, head of the World Federation of Sufi Orders, said, “Closing the door on juristic deduction has resulted in this backwardness in the religious rhetoric. The Muslim people have become bound by ideas that date back a thousand years, such as the [outmoded] four imams’ approach adopted by the Salafists.” 
The modernization of Islamic rhetoric remains lost amid the slew of ideologies in Egypt and various media-driven representations, some of dubious value.

---------- 

Children and adults are now stoned to death in compliance with various 
interpretations of Muslim religious law.





  


  











Monday, May 25, 2015

The past 24 hours in Yemen under Saudi Bombardment:

TEHRAN (FNA)- At least 135 Yemeni children have been killed and 260 more injured in the Saudi aggression against Yemen since March, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said.




Saudi Shias begin mass funeral for bombing victims



We are partnered with Iran in Iraqfor all purposes; with Iran in Syria for the IS battle; we should be partnered with Iran and Russia in support of Asaad, and aorta are, but don't tell.

Democratic nations deal in what law calls "legal fictions," a function contrary to fact but treated as fact   for certain purposes.  Democratic governments have to act as if international cooperation with some nations does not exist.  Some nations are treated by important constituencies as evil and so our necessary cooperation must be ignored.

One of the current sets of fictions is that we do not have bilateral cooperative dealings with Iran.

Everyone knows that we do.  Everyone knows that the Iraq government is closely allied with Ian, an that Iraq's economy is dependent upon Iran.

No American politician acknowledges these facts, easily learned on a small island located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.  

Republican presidential candidates know them, though they pretend not to; and Democrats do not call them on it, because Democrats also base policy on demonstrable falsehoods which Republicans don't call them on.  Democracy works in strange ways.

Iran is more our friend than our enemy.  Basher Assad is the best of the possible rulers of Syria.  When we lift sanctions on Iran, it will become an important trading partner to the US, and, if we are lucky, will join the US in opposing China's expansion of control over Central Asia.  If we are really lucky, the Green Revolution will prevail in that interesting and oppressed country.

The press in the US collaborates in silence abut our cooperative ventures with Iran, to an extent.  The article below contains news you might not see on your TV news shows. 

 The International BusinessTimes has a good-enough reputation .

International Business Times

MONDAY, MAY 25, 2015 AS OF 3:04 PM EDT
Iran Joins Iraq In Fighting ISIS, Sends Troops For Beiji Operation
By  on 
raqi Defense Minister Khaled al-Obeidi (right) stands with Iranian Defence Minister Hossein Dehghan during a welcoming ceremony in Baghdad, May 18, 2015.Reuters/Stringer  
U.S. defense officials said Friday that Iran has contributed troops in the fight against Islamic State forces in strategic areas near the capital Baghdad. According to the officials, Iran sent heavy weapons and operating artillery for Iraqi ground forces working to retake the Beiji oil refinery from the brutal militant group, which has made major advances across Iraq in recent months.
The Obama administration earlier said it would not mind if Iran wanted to contribute in the ongoing Iraqi operations against ISIS. However, it said that the Shiite militias backed by Iran would have to act in accordance with the Iraqi government.
The defense officials acknowledged Iran’s significant role in the Beiji operation. ABC Newsreported that the officials were not allowed to talk publicly about Iran’s role in Iraq. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity. According to one of them, Iran is operating reconnaissance drones, artillery and 122mm rocket systems to help Iraqi ground forces. 
The Trumpet reported that most Western media sources failed to notice that Iranian Defense Minister Brig. Gen. Hossein Dehghan had gone to Baghdad May 18 to meet Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. The meeting indicates the development of bilateral relations between the countries. In the meetings, Abadi appreciated Iran’s role in Iraq’s fight against ISIS.
The U.S. military statement on the Beiji operation does not mention Iran’s role but acknowledges the U.S. military support for Iraq. The Friday statement says that Iraqi security forces have managed to build a land route to the refinery compound. 
The statement acknowledged steady progress by Iraqi security forces against ISIS forces. “In the past 72 hours, we have seen the [Iraqi security forces] make steady, measured progress in regaining some of the areas leading to the Beiji oil refinery despite the significant [ISIL] resistance in the form of [improvised explosive devices], suicide vehicle-borne IEDs, as well as heavy weapon and rocket-fire attacks,” the statement quoted Marine Corps Brig. Gen Thomas Weidley. 
The Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve chief of staff added that a safe route to the refinery would allow reinforcements and supplies to arrive despite the constant threat from ISIS. It will also help security forces secure “contested areas in and around the refinery.”

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Give Up on Netanyahu, Go to the United Nations, but wait a day or so



From an opinion piece in the New York times:

Give Up on Netanyahu, Go to the United NationsBY HENRY SIEGMAN
America must stop blocking U.N. action on Mideast peace and start pushing for a tough Security Council resolution that forces both parties to negotiate a deal — and fast. 
----------

al-Monitor recently suggested that the Administration is considering An agreement to exchange the Veto for an agreement on the Peace Deal would make sense only if the Administration were satisfied that Congress would block the Iranian Peace Deal if Netanyahu objects.   

The Peace Deal is more important than a settlement of the Palestine State situation at this time.  It is more  important not because the Deal may block Iran from gettin The Bomb, but because it lifts the horrendously unfair sanctions which have been in place for a generation.  

The unfairness of Iranian sanctions and the perception of their unfairness is harming the US in Asia far more than any activity of Iran's.  

Asia is the principle field of play in the fierce economic competition between the US and China.The Great Game continues, 21st Century version.  In the 19th Century, Russia had home  field advantage, England controlled the waves. In the present version, China has home field advantage; the US controls the waves and the sky.  

The sides are sufficiently balanced that the US doesn't need any extraneous distractions.  Syria is enough.  

And if the Congress stupidly acts to block the Iranian Deal, then by all means support a security council vote for the resolutions Mr. Siegman suggests, and more.


Thee Times editorial is here.  A brief and impressive biography of Siegman is at the end of the Times article.

Thanks, Rho, for the heads-up.


----------

It's not that Palestinians don't need and deserve relief now, 






it's that Asia and the World would be worse off if China dominates the US.  Perhaps a chauvinistic view, but my own.

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Syriaan Refugees in Macedonia. We don't lift no stinkin' lamp beside no golden door. But once we did. That felt good to do. I want us to do it more.

New information for me:


The trek to Macedonia
Seven year-old Ariana, a Kurdish-Syrian immigrant, rests before crossing into Macedonia along with another 45 Syrian immigrants near the border of the Greek village of Idomeni, May 14, 2015. Hundreds of mostly Afghan, Syrian, and African immigrants cross daily from Greece into Macedonia on their way to northern European countries; most of them are turned back by Macedonian border guards. 


Macedonia is one of several Balkan countries that are dealing with increased flows of refugees from war-torn Syria and Iraq.
The usual illegal path runs from Turkey to either Bulgaria or Greece. Those who go to Greece usually cross Macedonia on their way to Western Europe.

 Spike in Syrian Refugees Crossing Macedonia :: Balkan Insight 


On the Statue of Liberty, once sacred to Americans:

“Give me your tired, your poor, 
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, 
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. 
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: 
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”

We don't lift no stinkin' lamp beside no golden door.  But once we did. That felt good to do.  I want us to do it more.

No more.  No more.  Instead, we say:

Abandon hope, Ye who enter Here. 


I recognize the impulse of the old to return to better days.
But i only want to go back 80 years.

We instead are going back 400 years, when the
Saud Muslims presently live.

Not a good place nor time to live.

Pity the poor Saudi
                       
                                     not.


Wednesday, May 13, 2015

After the Iran Nuclear Deal is signed and the sanctions are lifted . . .

The article following seems about right to me.  

Hard to know how Ms. Clinton fits in, if she is elected President.  

By then the nuclear deal will have been signed, and Iranian oil will begin to flow.  

China, India,and Pakistan will be eager for the natural gas from the Pars Field,  though China will try for a pipeline route that bypassed India.  

World oil prices will be affected, and I don’t know how.  I haven’t sen much speculation on oil prices.  My guess is that US oil companies will profit from  the deal.  I assume oil companies concur with the deal because they aren’t making much noise in opposition.

Iran’s economy will be booming; French automobiles will sell like hotcakes.

The Gulf Dictators will gnash their teeth.   They will be affected by a drop in oil prices, but only poor Yemen will suffer from the effect. 

Israel will continue to be safe.  I don’t see how it will be much affected, except in its internal politics.

No one will start a War. 

Fill me in with your guesses or knowledge.


al-Monitor
ISRAEL PULSE

ישראל פולס

US President Barack Obama hugs Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Ben Gurion International Airport in Tel Aviv, March 20, 2013. (photo by REUTERS/Jason Reed)


US willing to 'compensate' Israel on Iran deal
At the conclusion of a long, exhausting and beleaguered campaign, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will present his fourth government to the Knesset early next week. He will hope and pray that the Knesset will give him a vote of confidence. If, indeed, his fragile, narrow majority (61 Knesset members out of 120) passes the confidence vote, the government could hit the road. Numerous tasks wait for this government, and a considerable number of urgent problems need immediate treatment. Since October 2014, Israel has been running on autopilot without proper management: without a budget, without fully active ministers and without a steady, focused hand on the governmental rudder. On his way to victory in the polls, Netanyahu endangered many Israeli national interests. These include relations with the United States, domestic relations with Israeli Arabs and the state’s international image. Now the time has come to mend the fences.
Summary
 The United States doesn’t understand why Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to focus on battling the Iranian deal and rejects two large and strategic “special interest deals” with the US administration.
Author Ben Caspit
Posted May 12, 2015
TranslatorDanny Wool

The most urgent issue of all is that of relations with the United States. Since the elections on March 17, quite a number of US officials have visited Israel, including active members of Congress and former high-level officers of the administration. A summary of the conversations by these visitors with their Israeli hosts brings to light painful observations on the future of bilateral relations between Israel and the country that is perceived as Israel’s greatest ally, the United States.
“The personal relations between Netanyahu and [US President Barack] Obama have soured beyond repair,” a US source who is an expert on the topic said this week, in regard to the talks he held here with Israeli colleagues. “There is no chance to patch things up or turn the clock back. President Obama knows that Netanyahu has long since wiped him off the map. Netanyahu knows that President Obama knows, and both of them yearn for the day that one of them finishes his term of office. Most probably, it will happen first to Obama,” the US visitor said. This diagnosis was shared by almost everyone who was asked questions on the subject in recent weeks. “It is a poisonous relationship,” another US source said. “The two don’t believe each other, don’t care about each other and express no interest at all in changing the situation or believing that it can be changed.”
Note of caution: In politics in general, and in Middle East politics in specific, the rule is, “never say never.” Former Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman, who only yesterday sat with Netanyahu and was viewed as Netanyahu’s ally, stormed Netanyahu May 11 with a pitchfork and called him a liar and a cheater in full view of the Knesset cameras. However, that will not prevent Liberman from returning to cooperate with Netanyahu in his fifth government (in another six months or two years), if he decides that such a move suits his political interests.
That’s the way it is in Israel, and it could be that that’s the way it is regarding the stable and magnificent relationship that used to exist between Jerusalem and Washington. For instance, Alon Ben-David, Israeli TV Channel 10's much-esteemed defense correspondent, reported May 8 that Obama told several of his interlocutors that he had decided, despite it all, to cast a veto on the French proposal regarding the Middle East conflict (for a UN resolution on Palestinian statehood), if and when it comes to a discussion and vote in the UN Security Council. This is despite recent assessments that the Americans had decided not to cast such a veto.
This leak is viewed as a US attempt to sweeten the pot and show goodwill vis-a-vis the tough Israeli antagonist from Jerusalem. A sort of carrot-and-stick game in which the Americans try to entice the recalcitrant, weaseling Netanyahu by extending a hand, or half a hand, in peace. But there’s something else that’s been going on. High-echelon sources in the US administration have recently been expressing great amazement about Netanyahu’s pattern of behavior: The Israeli prime minister could now opt for pushing forward two large “special interest deals” with the administration. The first is called the “small deal,” and the second we will refer to as the “big deal.”
The “small deal” involves putting a stop to frenetic Israeli activity in Congress to torpedo, postpone, delay or change the emerging arrangement between Iran and the superpowers. According to the Americans, Israeli logic should dictate the following: Most likely, an arrangement will be reached; its outlines are already clear. And most likely, Obama will get Congress to approve the settlement. Therefore, the wise thing for Israel to do at this point in time is to ''cash in'' on halting the heavy pressure exerted by Jerusalem on US legislators (mainly Republicans) in exchange for military, diplomatic and general support, assistance, weapons, ammunition and the like from the United States. The Americans are ripe for this deal, but the hints they send to Jerusalem hit a brick wall. Netanyahu won’t budge; he continues to fight with all his might, backed by Sheldon Adelson’s money and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee lobby (the two don’t work together) in Washington.
The “big deal” involves the same upgrading of strategic relations and alliance that is supposed to be signed between Israel and the United States, should an agreement be signed with Iran. Clearly, an agreement with Iran worsens Israel’s strategic position in the region (an Israeli defense source said behind closed doors), and, clearly, the United States will be willing to try to provide Israel with strategic compensation to offset this deterioration. For that to happen, discussions should be taking place right now. But there are no discussions, no talks, no connections and no overtures. Jerusalem doesn’t answer. Netanyahu won’t move an inch.
“We have an irrevocable strategic opportunity to receive things from Washington that we have never before received,” an Israeli source, who until recently served in a senior position in the defense apparatus, said at the beginning of the week in a closed meeting. “Israel could upgrade itself regarding the quality of US assistance in the future; it could update and consolidate agreements and arrangements that were closed in the past, but without clear expiration dates. Every time that something happened in the international arena that harmed Israel’s defense position, and every time that Israel took chances regarding security, America knew how to compensate it. Only this time, despite US willingness, it’s not happening,” he said.
Not everyone in Israel’s diplomatic and security systems agrees with Netanyahu’s policy, which is deeply influenced by Adelson. This approach advocates gambling on one toss of the dice, and not conducting negotiations. Meanwhile, scathing words of criticism are being voiced in Israel’s diplomatic and defense systems regarding the current disruption of relations between the United States and Jerusalem. The critics, who measure their words and are careful to retain their anonymity, say that Netanyahu is mortgaging many of Israel’s weighty strategic interests in the throes of the war of destruction he has declared against Obama.
“That is not wise and not correct,” the critics say, “You have to think about the day after.” In contrast, Netanyahu’s people say, “There will be time on the day after for these kinds of things too. Meanwhile, now we have to focus on the goal and not loosen our grip.” In their view, the goal is that the United States should internalize the fact that the agreement about to be signed with Iran is a bad agreement.
Jerusalem received a large boost this week when Saudi Arabian King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud refused an invitation to attend a landmark summit hosted by Obama at Camp David, in an effort to appease his Arab allies in the Middle East. “See, the Saudis also think like us and are giving Washington the cold shoulder,” a source close to Netanyahu said, with great satisfaction.
Only time will tell who was right in this debate. Meanwhile, Obama’s administration is adjusting itself to Netanyahu’s fourth government as someone would resign himself to a serious chronic disease. There is still no invitation for Netanyahu to come to Washington, and it will not be extended until after June 30. Meanwhile, in the mistrustful overtures between the two capitals, another option was raised: that the focus of the Israel-US relationship should switch from the broken Netanyahu-Obama alignment to the efficient, friendly and better functioning axis of Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and his US counterpart, Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter. At least this channel has continued to operate effectively in recent months.



d

Sunday, May 10, 2015

RUSSIA WON WWII

Russia won World War II!

Just look at the beaming faces!

Congratulations, Russia!
Well you deserve
the Joy of the Victory
your grandparents and great-grandparents
won against overwhelming odds!

Well done indeed!

Tthe Disheartning Present of Droning; the Dismal Future of Dronning

Remember the halcyon days "after America won the War" and America had a monopoly on The Bomb?  No?  You don't?  We lived in fear that Russia would develop The Bomb.  It did, and then we lived in terror that it would use it. 

Now we live in halcyon days when we have a near monopoly on drones, and we use them freely on countries with whom we are not at War.  


[This is the boy; this is what a Hellfire missal left of him, his 19-year-old cousin, and four of their young friends . . .


. . . except for a scrap of flesh, used for the burial.  The waste still burns and festers in me, made worse because done by my country, and therefore in my name.  Imaging what the burning death does to Yemen grandparents, you who can imagine such things.]


We use drones when it would be possible to use police tactics without the attendant civilian death and injury, as the US did when it killed Osama ben Laden.  We use drones when we know millions hate us for using them, because of the dead and wounded relatives and friends.

What a precedent we set!  What a world is a-borning!



Soon enough all countries worthy of the name will have silent, undetectable drones.  For that great day, I've  got a lovely bunch of drones, sweet as coconuts:

 --  There they are a-standin on a row (Bom bom) 
      Big ones small ones some as big as your head . . . .

 Try to imagine the day when Uruguay is displeased with a decision Hawaii's governor makes, and acts out its displeasure by dropping a tiny, undetectable powerful drone on peaceful, beautiful Aina Haina on Oahu, Hawaii -- presently unthinkable.

Then these will be the Good "ol Days, indeed.

Elect Bernie Sanders president!

From

Sunday, May 10, 2015

China Preparing for Drone Warfare!




PLA plans to build 42,000 UAVs, Pentagon says


China’s military plans to produce nearly 
42,000 land-based and sea-based unmanned 
weapons and sensor platforms as part of its
 continuing, large-scale military buildup,
 the Pentagon’s annual report on the
 People’s Liberation Army (PLA) disclosed Friday.

China currently operates several armed and 
unarmed drone aircraft and is developing 
long-range range unmanned aerial vehicles 
(UAVs) for both intelligence 
gathering and bombing attacks.

“The acquisition and development of longer-range 
UAVs will increase China’s ability to conduct 
long-range reconnaissance and strike operations,” 
the report said.

China’s ability to use drones is increasing 
and the report said China “plans to p
roduce upwards of 41,800 land- and 
sea-based unmanned systems, 
worth about $10.5 billion, between 2014 and 2023.”

Four UAVs under development include the 
Xianglong, Yilong, Sky Saber, and Lijian,
 with the latter three drones configured to 
  fire precision-strike weapons.

“The Lijian, which first flew on Nov. 21, 2013, 
is China’s first stealthy flying wing UAV,” 
the report said.

The drone buildup is part of what the 
Pentagon identified as a decades-long 
military buildup that last year 
produced new multi-warhead missiles 
and a large number of submarines and ships

-------------------------
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity.
W. B. Yates,The Second Coming 
fragment) (1865-1939) 


Friday, May 8, 2015

Reap thw whirlwind: Are the Saudi laying a basis for their own defeat?

From today's New York Times:


By ALISSA J. RUBIN and KAREEM FAHIM
The Saudi foreign minister said the five-day cease-fire could be renewed, and called upon Houthi rebels to “come to their senses.”

The Saudi bombing campaign, brutal beyond measure, has made the now more-fundamentalist Saud family less safe and therefore more fearful and brutal.

That is the way human animals work.

The Saudi have now increased the likelihood o f unrest among the Shia in their oil-rich Eastern Province, where there has been violence in the recent past.





To give you the flavor of the relationship, here is a quotation from the Wikipedia article:


In 1997, Saudi official Sheik Ali Khursan declared Ismaelis (the Shia who live closest to the Houthi) to be infidels because they did not follow the Sunna and do not believe that the Qur'an is complete, stating `We don't eat their food, we don't intermarry with them, we should not pray for their dead or allow them to be buried in our cemeteries.`

Reminds one of some attitudes in some parts of the US, sadly.  According to Vali Naasr, that attitude from Sunni toward Shia is common.


For a brief history of the Sunni-Shia relations in the Arabian Peninsula, see the Wikipedia article reprinted after the jump.