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    Front Page
    

Why Spitzer was Bushwhacked

Disgraced New York State governor Eliot Spitzer had cause to feel frisky when he visited Washington in February. As he was paying off a call girl, the press was preparing to run a Spitzer broadside against the world's biggest financial powers and President George W Bush, whom he described as a fugitive from justice and a partner in crime with predator lenders. It was a politically fatal coincidence. - F William Engdahl (Mar 19, '08)

Bernanke running out of bliss room
US Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke and his pack of merry pranksters, having given Wall Street yet more interest rate cuts, now have only a few months before they must conjure up other tricks to end the rot in the US economy as rate levels head toward their floor and inflation concerns mount. - Julian Delasantellis (Mar 19, '08)


US aims high in Afghanistan
In remote northeastern Afghanistan close to the Pakistan border, US troops fight an elusive enemy they can seldom get their hands on. They're convinced al-Qaeda fighters are involved. But until the insurgents are rooted out from the high ground they occupy, it will remain a battle of hit and miss. - Philip Smucker (Mar 19, '08)

 IRAQ FIVE YEARS ON

THE ROVING EYE
Shocked, awed and left to rot
US Vice President Dick Cheney is spot on when he talks of "phenomenal changes" in Iraq. Millions of Iraqis have lost their homes, their jobs, their families, their dreams and in countless cases their own lives because of a pre-emptive war. And anti-American Muqtada al-Sadr will ultimately be the lord of what remains of Iraq. - Pepe Escobar (Mar 19, '08)

DISPATCHES FROM AMERICA
Already counting to six
When it comes to the American position in Iraq, short of an act of God, the sixth anniversary of George W Bush's war of choice is going to dawn much like the fifth one, no matter who's elected US president in November. - Tom Engelhardt (Mar 19, '08)

SUN WUKONG
Stumbling towards
Confucius-ville

As part a Beijing-sponsored "cultural renaissance", the 2,500-year-old teachings of Confucius are back in vogue as a counterbalance to the meteoric rise of modern China. But a plan to erect a US$4.2 billion "Chinese Cultural Symbolic City" in the philosopher's hometown has hardly inspired the peace and social harmony of which Confucius wrote. - Wu Zhong (Mar 19, '08)

Olympic clock ticks for unified Korean team
The two Koreas, which by their very rationales are involved in a highly-charged competition for legitimacy with their other "part-nation", the Olympic Games have been a particularly potent arena for political posturing. As they try to out-do each other in the runup to the Beijing Games over the possibility of a joint Korean team, China has a role to play. (Mar 19, '08)

Killing stress for India's best and brightest
Hundreds of recent student suicides attest to the sad truth that in today's India, the pressure to excel can be lethal. Gargantuan numbers of applicants face a maddening exam process for extremely limited placement at the top-notch schools needed for lucrative careers. Add to this intense family pressure, an outdated and under-funded education system and a society in intense transition and it's all too clear that many of India's young people are dying to succeed. - Neeta Lal (Mar 19, '08)



China and India: Oh to be different
Once again, with the unrest in Tibet, Beijing has been caught unprepared and has revealed its inability to deal with dissent and difference, despite the stated goal of creating a harmonious society. In direct contrast, India's diverse polity has flourished against all the odds precisely because of its ability to acknowledge difference. - Pallavi Aiyar (Mar 18, '08)

Now the Tibet blame game begins
Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao on Tuesday assured that "social order" has all but been restored in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, which has been scarred by anti-Chinese demonstrations. Beijing is now left to limit the damage from the high-profile disturbances, and is doing so by squarely blaming the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader, for not only instigating the unrest, but also for trying to sabotage China's Olympic dream. - John Ng (Mar 18, '08)

THE BEAR'S LAIR
Sorry, I wasn't pessimistic enough
Early forecasts of declines in US house prices and of mortgage bad-debt losses have fallen far short of the mark and a far grimmer picture is developing. Losses to come are probably large enough to wipe out the banking system and failure of any one major house could be sufficient to bring down the world economy. - Martin Hutchinson (Mar 18, '08)

Preventing a financial crash
The Federal Reserve has still much to do if it is to pull the US back from the financial brink. Expanding the range of institutions it deals with would be one step, reflecting the reality that lending is increasingly separated from banks. Increasing the categories of securities it accepts as collateral would be another. - Thomas I Palley (Mar 18, '08)

Khomeini's grandchild breaks her silence
The outspoken views of Zahra Eshraghi, granddaughter of Ruhollah Khomeini, the leader of the Islamic revolution in Iran, have put her at odds with Tehran's conservative hardliners and have drawn a gag order from her own prestigious family. But the recent mass disqualification of reformists in the March 14 parliamentary elections and what she feels are "delusions" maintained by the current regime have moved her to break her silence. (Mar 18, '08)

Two-horse race for Pakistan's hot seat
The battle within the Pakistan People's Party, the dominant group in the new coalition government, is a race between Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of Benazir Bhutto, and party stalwart Makhdoom Amin Fahim. Zardari carries a lot of baggage, while Fahim would be the preferred candidate of President Pervez Musharraf and Washington. The "street-smart" Zardari is up for the fight. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Mar 18, '08)

CAMPAIGN OUTSIDER
Checklists for the next big vote
There are weeks or months to go until the next vote that matters for US presidential candidates, but it's no time to relax - each campaign needs a to-do list to keep them on the winning path. (Mar 18, '08)
Muhammad Cohen puts the US presidential campaign into sharper focus from afar.

SPENGLER
The peculiar theology
of black liberation

US presidential nominee candidate Barack Obama belongs to a Christian church whose doctrine casts Jesus Christ as a "black messiah" and blacks as "the chosen people". At best, this is a radically different kind of Christianity than most Americans acknowledge; at worst it is an ethnocentric heresy. (Mar 17, '08)

India awakes to a Tibetan headache
The Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of the Tibetan government in exile based in India, is reveling in all the attention from the hordes of Western media people who have descended on his Himalayan township. For now, Beijing's crackdown on protesters in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, plays into his hands as a fierce critic of China. But a delicate three-way diplomatic tango is commencing, involving the United States and China, with India providing the turf - which can only turn out messy for India, as well as for the Dalai Lama. - M K Bhadrakumar (Mar 17, '08)

CHAN AKYA
Trust goes down the drain
The acquisition of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase at a knock-down price of $2 per share means investors cannot trust the reported book value of US financial firms any more. And if they cannot trust investment banks, can the trust of commercial banks be really all that higher? The Fed and other central banks should now understand that the bailers themselves may need to be bailed out in time. (Mar 17, '08)

My Lai probe hid policy that led to massacre
The My Lai massacre of as many as 400 Vietnamese civilians by US troops in 1968 has long been perceived as the rogue act of overzealous GIs and a clear violation of official policy on the treatment of non-combatants. But a newly obtained document suggests the responsibility for My Lai could be linked directly to the top US commander in Vietnam, General William C Westmoreland. - Gareth Porter (Mar 17, '08)

Inflation tests Vietnam's growth
Annual GDP growth of more than 8% combined with economic reforms has helped to transform and industrialize Vietnam. Now, as striking workers press for higher pay, the government's success story is threatened by rising inflation, not all of which can be blamed on global factors. - Andrew Symon (Mar 17, '08)

IRAN VOTES
A new political space opens
As widely expected, "principalists" - conservatives - have taken the majority of seats in Iran's parliamentary elections, although reformists have fared better than anticipated. With some seats going to a second round of polling over the next few weeks, the United States' anti-Iran rhetoric will further strengthen the hands of the conservatives. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (Mar 17, '08)

Russia throws a wrench in NATO's works
President Vladimir Putin has made the North Atlantic Treaty Organization an offer it will find extremely difficult to resist - making Russia a participant in the alliance's Afghan mission. The pressure is now on the United States to embrace the idea of Russia becoming a transit route for supplies going to Afghanistan. The trouble is, Washington knows Moscow will incrementally want a bigger role for itself and its allies in Afghanistan, and those allies include China.- M K Bhadrakumar (Mar 14, '08)

CHAN AKYA
Forget Spitzer, fire Bernanke
While the New York governor resigned  for what was essentially a private matter, the world's central bankers cause greater damage and have proven less accountable for their actions. Continued debasement of fiat currencies leaves the financial system unhinged and more prone to collapse. (Mar 14, '08)

THE SHAPE OF US POPULISM
Part 2: Long-term effects of the Civil War
The present deepening and widening financial crisis is laying naked the wealth-making mechanisms of society's elites while wreaking havoc with the lives of low-paid workers. It is also making imminent a wave of populist reform that may extend for several decades. In this are echoes of the New Deal era and much earlier reactions to economic depressions. - Henry C K Liu
This is the second article in a four-part series

 Part 1: A rich free-market legacy - for some

Fallon falls: Iran should worry
Admiral William Fallon's resignation as the United States' top commander in the Middle East removes one of the most outspoken opponents of the George W Bush administration's hard line on Iran. Defense Secretary Robert Gates immediately dismissed as "ridiculous" suggestions that Fallon's departure signaled that the US planned to go to war with Iran, but certainly now "all options" are back on the table. - Gareth Porter (Mar 12, '08)

COMMENT
American Icarus flirted with fire
The widespread view is that US CENTCOM commander Admiral William "Fox" Fallon was sacrificed by the George W Bush administration because he disagreed with its policies on Iran while also saving the US from marauding Chinese. This is bunk. Fallon fell because he committed a far worse crime for a military veteran - he talked out of turn. - Mark Perry (Mar 12, '08)
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An inflation
reality check

With US monetary policy setting the pace for inflation in as much as 60% of the global economy, unconcerned central bankers - and investors - should hold their next meeting in Zimbabwe; other destinations from Vietnam to Venezuela also offer evidence of the damage uncontrolled price rises can cause. And this is not going to stop in the near future, abroad or at home.

Malaysia rocked to
the economic core

In the wake of opposition party victories in Malaysia's industrialized states of Penang, Perak and Selangor, new state governments are scrambling to make good on campaign promises to end the decades-old New Economic Policy in favor of their own economic agendas. It's no easy task as ethnic Malays will fight hard to avoid being sidelined. - Anil Netto

Green challenge to
China's mega-projects

China's fast pace of growth has come at huge cost in pollution and degradation of the countryside. Residents are now making their voice heard in protest against projects ranging from refineries to train lines. Assessment reports by the high-powered State Environmental Protection Administration will now play a key role - once it has some updated rules to follow. - Candy Zeng

 THE MOGAMBO GURU

Stepping up
the spending surveillance

US consumers blew twice as much on their credit cards in January as they did a month earlier, so the American way of life remains blissfully blind to the impending doom all around. Yet inflation-adjusted spending actually stalled for a second month. So nobody bought more! Things just cost more! A lot more. And those suckers weren't buying gold.

CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
The worst-case scenario - live
The Fed's failure to forestall a run on Bear Stearns indicates that the US financial crisis has attained alarming momentum, with confidence in leveraged securities finance possibly irreparably damaged. The worst-case scenario is unfolding before our very eyes, and it all imparts a bad feeling. (Mar 17, '08)
Doug Noland reviews the previous week's events each Monday.




[Re Sorry, I wasn't pessimistic enough, Mar 19] ... As the horror story of the subprime scandal unfolds, discussion has shifted from Voltaire's character Dr Pangloss to the ill-fated Trojan princess Cassandra. And as such, gloom and doom prevail as the numbers climb higher and higher into the trillions of dollars in the debt outstanding ...
Jakob Cambria
USA
   Go to Letters to the Editor



 <IT WORLD>

Google eye too
close for comfort

Internet giant Google came across something even bigger than itself when it used its Street View service to display the interior of a US military base. Civilians so far seem to be taking a more lenient view of a remarkable technology that has dark implications. (Mar 17, '08)  
Martin J Young surveys the week's developments in computing, gaming and gizmos.



1. The peculiar theology of black liberation

2. Sorry, I wasn't pessimistic enough

3. China and India: Oh to be different

4. Now the Tibet blame game begins

5. Obama's women reveal his secret

6. Preventing a financial crash

7. Khomeini's grandchild breaks her silence

8. The worst-case scenario - live

9. Two-horse race for Pakistan's hot seat

10. India wakes to a Tibetan headache

11. Trust goes down the drain

(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, Mar 18, 2008)




ATol Specials


The Gates
Inheritance
By
Roger Morris
 
(June '07)



Syed Saleem Shahzad reports on the Afghan war from the Taliban side
(Dec '06)

How Hezbollah defeated Israel
By
Mark Perry and
Alastair Crooke
(Oct '06)

Mark Perry and
Alastair Crooke
talk to the 'terrorists'
(Mar '06)

China: The
Impossible
Revolution

By
Francesco Sisci 

The Coming
Trade War


By Henry C K Liu

A series
by Henry C K Liu
 

Sinoroving

Pepe Escobar in China

Money, Power
and
Modern Art


A series by Henry C K Liu

Andre Gunder Frank on Uncle Sam and his shrinking dollar


By Pepe Escobar with photographs by Kevin Nortz

   Nir Rosen goes inside the Iraqi resistance

Nir Rosen rides with the US 3rd Armored Cavalry in western Iraq

Vietnam Travel & Hotels in Vietnam. Book now!

On an Australian island: Real estate for sale -- Accommodation.

Air Purifier

 
 


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