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Francesco Sisci, thanks
for your great essay [Bush, Hu to meet at crucial
crossroad, Oct 29]. It presents a
well-balanced and informative view of the current
situation. I have only one comment, regarding your
paragraph dealing with Japan's worry about the
shipping lanes via Taiwan. A carefule examination
of the geography shows that this is not the case
(please see maps and discussions here.) I have also tried
a search myself, but all I could find is indirect
reporting on the "concerned Japanese" view on the
Taiwan shipping lane. I would be interested to
know the original text or speech of such concern,
and who in Japan had presented such
view. Sun Bin (Oct 31,
'05)
Francesco Sisci in
Beijing argues a good case [Bush, Hu to meet at crucial
crossroad, Oct 29]. Yet, conditions for
George W Bush have changed so dramatically in the
past week, any meeting with Hu Jintao would put
the American president at a net disadvantage. For
in the past week, more of Bush's chickens have
come home to roost. In the wake of his failure to
deal competently with the after effects of
Hurricane Katrina and his inability to rein in
spiking gasoline prices, he finds his own vice
president's right-hand man indicted for perjury
and obstruction of justice; his hand-picked
candidate for the Supreme Court taking herself out
of the running after causing cracks in his right
wing, Christian electoral base; the war in Iraq
taking the American body count over 2000. Bush has
low cards in dealing with China. He is playing
with a weak hand. Hu knows this full well and will
press his advantage. The United States is in the
grip of inertia till the end of Bush's presidency.
The 43rd president is wounded. Washington's ship
of state will willy nilly stray without a seasoned
captain. Three more years of Bush in the Oval
Office will put another nail in the coffin of an
America in decline. Jakob Cambria USA
(Oct 31,
'05)
Franceso Sisci is totally
off base in giving the impression that Japanese
victory over Russia early last century and the
victories in Asia in early World War II were
victories to free the Asian from white
colonialists. This is definitely without regard to
historical facts. The Japanese did not liberate
fellow Asians. They came to enslave. When the
Asian conquered were enslaved, they certainly did
not feel liberated. Who needs a new master in
place of another? The Japanese revisionists cannot
fool the Asians who sufffered under Japanese
brutality. And now many of us are wondering
whether the Japanese of tomorrow, free from any
real historical education, will try to subjugate
the rest of Asia once again on the back of the
US. Jack Chua (Oct 31, '05)
This is
with reference to Kaveh L Afrasiabi's prodigiously
well written piece, Iran, Israel: The good, the bad and
the ugly [Oct 29]. From Tel Aviv to
Riyadh to Dhaka to Islamabad, the world cannot
understand the high-on-rhetoric and low-on-content
statements made by the president of Iran. These
statements do nothing to support the cause of
peace and do not help the Palestinians in any way.
In fact they do the exact opposite. For a quarter
of a century Iran had fraternal relations with
Israel. Afrasiabi correctly points out that "Cyrus
the Great's edict in 534 BC which, after
liberating the enslaved Jews in the Kingdom of
Babylon, allowed them to return to their promised
land." In the 7th century Omar bin Khattab, when
he liberated Jerusalem also allowed the Jews to
return to Jerusalem. In the 12th century it was
Sultan Salahuddin Ayubi to liberate Jerusalem and
allow the Jews back into the city. The current
Iranian-Israeli tiff is a historical anomaly. If
Iran had the gumption to do anything about the
Middle East it should have. The fact remains that
it could not even remove a government in
Afghanistan, nor eliminate Saddam Hussein. Making
rhetorical and tall statements only exacerbates a
volatile situation. Jews and Muslims fought
together against the Nazis in the Battle of Bulge
and the battlefields of Stalingrad to defeat
Nazism. The 800-year Jewish-Muslim-Christian
symbiosis in Spain, the nurturing of Moses
Maimonides and the greater Jewish community in
Egypt, the nurturing of Jews under the Ottomans
and in the Mughal era are great historical facts
that should be used to build cooperation in the
present time. The government and people of Israel
know the difference between an irresponsible
statement and the greater world of Islam. It is
important for the world to know and Israelis to
know that there is no resonance of this nonsense
in the world and no resonance to this balderdash
in the Muslim world. Hopefully the press will not
use this statement to unleash a new wave of
Islamphobia and bigotry. Nothing in rejecting this
bigoted statement prevents us from supporting the
two-state solution in the Middle East, or
objecting to the Israeli government for their bad
policies towards the Palestinains. However this
can be done better with engagement, rather than
isolation of Israel. We still support the right of
the Palestinians to statehood, even though their
self-centered politicians did not even have the
decency to send a single penny or even a
condolence message to the [Pakistan] earthquake
victims. We are part of a local group focused on
building bridges of harmony and
Pakistani-Americans have been overwhelmed by the
support of our local synagogues in collecting
relief supplies for the victims of Pakistan. We
applaud this sense of community and we are
thankful of this support. This is the community
that we can be all proud of, not the one based on
hatred and bigotry. Let us work together to throw
anti-Semitism and Islamphobia into the dustbin of
history. Moin Ansari (Oct 31, '05)
Ramzy
Baroud (Rolling Back Syria, Oct
29) wrote that it's "unscrupulous" to solely
single out Damascus as the only likely suspect in
Hariri's murder. Detlev Mehlis, commissioner of
the UN-sanctioned investigation into the Feb 14,
2005 assassination of Lebanon's former prime
minister, Rafik Hariri and 22 other individuals,
concluded that there is "probable cause" that
high-level Syrian security officials, with the aid
of their Lebanese counterparts under Emile Lahoud,
conspired to murder Hariri. The evidence, taken as
a whole, is compelling. To cite just two pieces of
evidence: The bomb that killed Hariri comprised
about 1,000 pounds of TNT, and created an enormous
crater in the road. Lahoud, or his immediate
underlings, ordered the crater to be filled the
very next day! And Syrian leader Bashar Assad has
stonewalled the investigation at every turn,
taking a month to respond to Mehlis' initial
request to interview Syrian officials, only to
refuse the request. Later, he only agreed to
submit a letter containing the written responses
of several officials. Finally, under increasing
international pressure, Assad relented to allow a
few of the requested interviews (although he
himself refused to be interviewed). Beyond this,
Mehlis' report presents an array of strong
evidence, all of which points toward the probable
involvement of Syrian security officials in
Hariri's murder. None of this, of course,
constitutes proof of Syrian complicity. However,
during all the months of Mehlis' investigation,
the earlier investigation by the Lebanese, and the
forensic analyses of the bomb sites by teams from
Switzerland, Germany, Japan, etc, no one turned up
any substantive evidence to corroborate Ramzy
Baroud's implication that there are other "likely
suspects". I also doubt the accuracy of Baroud's
claim that Syria has "fully cooperated" in the war
on terror. How could anyone other than Bashar
Ashad and a few top Syrian officials possibly know
such a thing? If the US State Department has ever
stated that Syria has "fully cooperated" in the
war on terror, I think their statement should be
challenged. It seems likely that any statements
that the US State Department has made in praise of
Syrian actions, were directed toward specific
actions at specific times, and were made in the
hope that those actions would be part of a pattern
of humane behavior, rather than a
ruse. Jahiliya New York City, USA
(Oct 31,
'05)
Ramzy Baroud [Rolling Back Syria, Oct
29] may be on to something. We may just be dealing
with a simple case of private jet envy. Whatever
happened to his 777
anyway? Sullivan USA (Oct 31,
'05)
Dear Spengler, I'ma
leader of a world super power. I got my thumb on a
BIG RED botton and God keeps telling me to PUSH
it. So far I have been able to just invade and
brutalize another country into submission (the
lesser of 2 weevils). But now that this country's
neighbor says they want to Barbie-Que a whole
country full of folks on the meditar-anian(Sp?).
So my question is, Should we go ahead and SHAKE
AND BAKE that neighbor or keep going with the
standard SHOCK AND AWE thingy. Appreciate ur hep
on this pardner. Concerned at Camp D (Oct 31,
'05)
Re Hidden motives in anti-corruption
campaign, Oct 29, by Mark A DeWeaver:
It has already been proven that corruption in
China went up a thousand fold during the watch of
Jiang Zemin. It has also been proven that the
guilty parties were people with political power
and connections. So who can these culprits be if
they are not in myriad ways connected to the Jiang
administration? When Hu Jintao cast his net
around, who else but Jiang's men were found caught
in the net? As the public is no longer satisfied
with the swatting of "corruption mosquitoes", so
Hu must show his commitment to the cause by
tackling some voracious "corruption tigers". It is
no surprise that those "tigers" turned out to be
closely linked to the Jiang clique. How else could
one become such "tiger" in China without the
backing of political powers from the centre? Can
DeWeaver then conclude that the prosecution of
these men was part of the power struggle between
factions in the party and that Hu needed to take
the knives to these "tigers" just to consolidate
his power? The facts rather showed that Hu would
have to be already secure in his position before
he would even dare to confront these powerful,
entrenched "tigers". DeWeaver also sees Hu using
the anti-corruption drive to cool down China's
economy. Again he does not make the case for a
motive even though one of the side effects of the
anti-corruption campaign could very well have
cooled the investment-driven economy. Let's give
Hu a chance before ascribing unsubstantiated
motives to his government. One can believe that
tackling the corruption pandemic is essential to
the survival of the regime and that Hu is trying
to do it without adopting the recommendation of
democrats for a multi-party system or a complete
empowerment of the media in order to reap the
power of the Fourth Estate for the supervision of
the executive branch of the government. Chan
Ah Tee Malaysia (Oct 31, '05)
I wanted to
thank you all for publishing such informative
articles. I am a geography Masters student who is
focusing on East Asia and I am very grateful for
the resource that your site provides. These
thorough articles are just the sort of informed
dialogue that needs to be discussed. Hisane
Masaki's paper [Where Japan is heading,
Oct 26] is another great article and one that
brings up many serious questions. The revision of
the constitution will certainly be a major issue
in the near future and it will be very interesting
to see how it plays out with Japan's neighbors,
and at home, especially if Article 9 is
overhauled. Also of great interest, and perhaps as
much significance, will be the reaction to the
incorporation of "love of country" references in
the preamble and a possible resurgence of
nationalism if, and when, that occurs. Thank you
very much and keep up the good work. Joel
Stewart Portland, USA (Oct 31, '05)
Re
Follow the drugs: US shown the way (Oct 27): Kudos to
Ramtanu Maitra for his effulgent dissection of the world drug trade. I have
become a true fan of Maitra. His in-depth analysis gives us reason to pause,
because the drugs actually end up in our middle and high schools and affect the
future generation of America and the world. The Afghan warlords are taking the
NATO forces and America for a ride ... Future generations will never forgive us
for tolerating [Afghan President] Karzai and his drug kingdom ...
Moin Ansari (Oct 28, '05)
Re
Hu goes to the Hermit Kingdom [Oct 27], by Jing-dong Yuan.
The US is the country with the most superstitious belief in using nuclear
weapon as a means to threaten other nations and thereby achieving its national
interests. As such, the US believes that other nations will use the nuclear
threat in the same way. The US is thus petrified by the prospect of nuclear
proliferation. China has not felt and will not feel threatened to the same
degree. China was not intimidated by consistent threats of nuclear annhilation
from the former USSR and the US. Why should China be intimidated by a
nuclearized South Korea, Japan or Taiwan? The new nuclear blackmail that the US
imposes on China by hinting that it might allow Japan, South Korea and Taiwan
to be nuclearized does not constitute the rationale for China's efforts in
persuading North Korea to negotiate with the US. However, it is still in
China's interest to defuse the situation in Northeast Asia brought about by the
US's not so secret agenda. A successful resolution of the nuclear question will
bring peace to the region which will be conducive to gradual change in North
Korea, the unification of the two Koreas and perhaps consequently the removal
of the rationale for the military alliance between South Korea and the US.
China wants peace and the political and economic integration of North Korea
into the general uplifting of the Northeast Asian region, which will also
include Russia, and maybe Japan. Therefore China has its own nuclear agenda: it
will not be acting as the '"running dog'" of the US in the so called
"anti-proliferation" scam. (The US is selectively proliferating nuclear
armaments to countries like Israel and India and is continuing with its own
nuclear weapon research to perfect its nuclear stockpile.) China and Russia
back the North Koreans for their insistence on having nuclear energy for
civilian use. Japan is openly insisting that it can produce hundreds of nuclear
warheads in a short time from its own civilian nuclear technology and capacity.
This is a threat, of course, as is the US, which will decide what Japan does.
China can do likewise with North Korea. As the US can do quite a lot with
Japan's nuclear capacity in terms of a threat, so China will not let go the
option to do the same with the North Korean civilian nuclear capacity. Fair is
fair.
Chan Ah Tee
Malaysia (Oct 28, '05)
I refer to
Iran on course for a showdown (Oct 28). While the Americans
and Israelis have been threatening to bomb Iran with nuclear weapons
(threatening to wipe Iran off the face of the earth), the same way they are
wiping Iraq and Iraqis off the face of the earth, the Iranian president has
just responded to the Americans and Israelis with their own medicine. Americans
have been threatening the world with their pre-emptive strike policies and have
carried out invasions to enforce their will on others. It is time someone
stands up to this tyranny. The Iranian president has said nothing that is not
wished and desired by a majority of the Iranians but also by a majority of the
people of the Third World who feel threatened by arrogant Americans and
Israelis. Three cheers for Ahmedinjedad!
Vincent Maadi
Cape Town, South Africa (Oct 28, '05)
Tatsuo Sasaki (letter, Oct. 27), may I remind you of your opening sentence
(letter, Oct 18) which reads as follows: "[Junichiro] Koizumi's visit to
Yasukuni this Monday showed once again how great a leader he is." Followed by a
whole lot of unrealistic expectations that Koizumi's actions actually foster
peace and goodwill between the nations and demand respect for a Japanese
military-Shinto ritual. Your opening statement alone made the antennas of all
your neighbors go on red alert! At least you seem to agree with my answer to
your question (1). My answer to your question (2) you say is a hotter issue.
Perhaps you don't know that even if some ignorant people believe that all
Japanese are stupid, which is deplorable, you only need a minority of extreme
rightwing Japanese to control Japanese politicians. You were a 15- year-old boy
when the mayor of Nagasaki, Hitoshi Motoshima, was shot in the back by Japanese
fascists for daring to suggest that Emperor Hirohito had to bear responsibility
for the war in Asia. Motoshima san had made this statement on December 7, 1988,
when you were 13 years old. The following day, on December 8,1988, Nagasaki
city legislators and the regional branch of the Liberal Democratic Party
demanded a retraction of the mayor's words. So much for the "wisdom" of
Japanese politicians. I'll amend my answer to your hot-issue question (2): If
you believe and Koizumi thinks that visiting the Yasukuni shrine fosters peace
and goodwill among the nations, you demonstrate that even intelligent Japanese
don't dare to speak out for fear of meeting Hitoshi Motoshima's fate. No,
Tatsuo Sasaki, the majority of the Japanese, including you and Koizumi, haven't
learned a thing.
AL
Canada (Oct 28, '05)
You don't hear much about Cindy Sheehan these days. Not unless you want to get
your dose of hate-filled rhetoric from Michael Moore's fair and balanced
website. But if you wait long enough you may just see her take over the news
cycle and overshadow more important news such as who said what to whom when at
what time about a CIA "covert" agent whose name is even known by the local
paper boy in her neighborhood. But in order for Ms Sheehan to take prominence
over such momentous developments she may have to do something crazy, like tie
herself to a fence or something. Other than that, one wonders if Ms Sheehan
will be able to regain her celebrity mom status now that the media is more
focused on embarrassing someone else like the president or vice-president and
have all but forgotten about this avid camping aficionado.
Miguel A Guanipa
Whitinsville, USA (Oct 28, '05)
I wish to bring attention to a very sad fact that Aung San Suu Kyi has nearly
spent 10 years in detention in Burma, imposed on her by country’s brutal
military regime. The junta has been responsible for systematic and widespread
human rights violations and abuses against its people: used rape of the young
and innocent women as a weapon of fear, compulsory relocation of people, forced
labor, use of child soldiers and persecution of religious minorities to impose
its vulgar will on the people. It is one the poorest countries in the world and
the main source its revenue is illegal trafficking heroin and amphetamines
... Why has Burma gotten away with the worst crimes imaginable committed
against its people? The Security Council is just an onlooker and has failed to
apply Chapter VII of the UN Charter as it did in Afghanistan, Yemen, Rwanda and
Cambodia, thus allowing the junta to tyrannize the Burmese with impunity. The
fact of matter is that China benefits enormously in trading with the generals
and has friendly relations with the regime; Europeans are no better when it
comes to export booty. I get very curious at the double and duplicitous
standard of President George W Bush and Britain’s feeble, wink-wink and
blinkered stance in confronting the junta head-on.
Saqib Khan (Oct 28, '05)
Tasty food? Comfortable hotels? The horror! Tibet has been turned into a
veritable Las Vegas!!! I mentioned that ANYONE can go to Tibet and witness for
themselves if there's an "ongoing genocide" as claimed by Brij and
Wiejayasingha. I said I could recommend good eats and comfortable hotels (my
words twisted to "luxurious hotels" by the honest gentleman), and voila, I'm
some kind of a sex tourist revelling in the desecration of Lhasa!! This
illustrates clearly the sick minds and quantum leaps of logic that people
consumed with illogical hatred are capable of when faced with a barrage of
criticism of their support of resurgent Japanese neofascism, simply because the
target and victims are Chinese. These are people who paint the entire ethnic
Chinese population in East Asia with the brush of "mass murderers" of Tibetans.
Any normal person will know that there are always grey areas, and nothing is
absolute. "Genocide" figures are unquestioningly cited from exiled Tibetan
sites without simple caveats as to how such precise population census can be
conducted OUTSIDE Tibet, even while Brij admonished that Tibet is a vast
territory, ignoring the fact that reputed human rights organizations such as
the ICJ circumvent these "allegations" while citing specific incidents when
they raise the Tibetan issue with China. Take the astounding charge that Lhasa
has been transformed into a "flesh-trade" destination. Use some logic: the
Chinese are astute businessmen, would it make ANY sense to plough such monies
into Lhasa, instead of say, Shanghai? Further, the fact that schools,
hospitals, new homes, major infrastructure have been built isn't attributable
to "modernization" but a nefarious scheme to conduct "cultural genocide", or
worse, "rape" Tibetans who are presumed to be content to spin prayer wheels and
labor as illiterate serfs to the Dalai Lama theocracy to the end of their
lives. These concerned parties never mentioned the annexation and continued
occupation of lots of other territories in the world - Okinawa, Sikkim, Hawaii,
New Mexico, etc, which really make their "moral crusade" suspect ... This comic
exchange has reached the point of diminishing returns. All the endless
indignant harping, not to mention character assassination, only because I said
that the Asian holocaust and the Tibetan issue are clearly SEPARATE, without
even volunteering an opinion except to testify that there isn't an ongoing
genocide and bloodshed in Tibet as claimed. These people ... are doing their
cause a huge disservice.
L Kirchhoff (Oct 28, '05)
Reply to AL [letter, Oct 26]: I'm glad that you answered my question, so we can
talk about it. Reading your story I can know a little about you, and I guess
you are older than I (now I'm 30), you have a long life experience. I respect
your sentiments. Probably my words mean little, or nothing, for you, but I feel
very sorry for what happened to your mother, and you. I believe Japanese
commited many terrible mistakes during wartime, and surely I'm not proud of
what happened and I wish that it had not happened. About question 1, although
I'm not a politician as you suspected, I agree with you that Japan's past is
not clearly written in text books, or discussed and acknowledged in Japanese
society. I think that a full, open discussion, without anger or fear, about
what happened (and mainly about what is happening) in Asia and the world would
be healthy for everybody. Regarding answer 2, I think it will be a hotter
issue. I guess that your point of view about contemporary Japanese is not very
fair, because you [imply] that all Japanese are stupid, that they believe
things like "Koreans invited them to control their natural resources for them",
or "Japanese believe that they are just poor innocent victims", etc. I agree
that there are some Japanese who believe these things, but ordinary Japanese do
have some idea of mistakes that were commited in the past. So, going back to
the initial issue, when someone visits Yasukuni it doesn't mean that he or she
is proud of Japanese war criminals.
Tatsuo Sasaki (Oct 27, '05)
I am in full agreement with AL's letter with regards to the general Japanese
attitude of higaisha ishiki. Look at [Prime Minister Junichiro]
Koizumi's unrelenting habit of giving the people of China, Korea, Taiwan,
Singapore and Malaysia the finger. He lacks humility. Forty-six percent of
Japan's population think it is not right to visit the Yasukuni shrine when he
is PM. Even one of the Japanese courts agreed that he is in contravention. Yet
he continues to visit the shrine. He has no concept of humility and human
relationship. He has no concept of contrition. He is of the opinion that as
long as he has sort of apologized, he is free to pray in a shrine that worships
war criminals. Now that the Americans are his great friends, he has no real
need of his neighbours. Just like pre-WW II days when Japan was aligned with
Germany and Italy to form the axis to subjugate the world. Fortunately the
Americans are an enlightened lot and view Japan more like a cash machine for
their needs. Eventually Koizumi will be gone and hopefully a leader of
substance can be gleaned from the Japanese population whom the outside world
can respect uniformly ... Many other readers like to confuse the issue by
saying that China's government is not freely elected like those of India or
Japan. We know the Japanese election is a farce because the same party has been
entrenched in power since inception. In India they have a better democracy, but
for whom? The poor remain in abject poverty as the rich get even richer. I am
not saying China is better or India or Japan is worse. There is good and bad in
every system. Japan works because of its homogenous population and their
homogenous beliefs and not because of free elections. India is not working as
well because of too much diversity and historical millstones. China is working
now because the Chinese are true capitalists and individualists. They have
capitalized on globalization and trade, becoming the workshop of the world.
Coupled with the Internet, wireless communication and mass media, the Chinese
are relevant again.
Steven
Toronto, Canada (Oct 27, '05)
[Re
A vote, a strike and a sleight of hand, Oct 26]: The IAEA
vote against Iran by India was quite likely produced by the China factor. Even
though I would not have advised such a move, I respect the decision of the
Indian prime minister in this matter. The crucial question that the Indian
government perhaps asked itself could have been this: "Given a choice between
antagonizing India and antagonizing China, what choice would Iran make?" If one
concludes that Iran would choose [not to antagonize] China because of its UN
Security Council seat (something that US doesn't support India for), and help
with missile and nuclear technology, then India is forced to consider the
question: "What other geopolitical arrangement would enhance India's influence
materially over the continued ambivalence of the present times?" Dealing with
the US is tricky business. The US, like any major power, believes in control
over principles - with the only inexplicable exception being China, where it
has neither control nor any principle involved. Towards China, the US still has
a Kissingerian hangover. Towards India, American policies appear arrogant - the
US wants India to heed American sensitivities about Iran, but pays no heed to
Indian sensitivities about the Pakistani military being armed with American
weapons. If America fails to meet Indian concerns this time, India just might
start appreciating the fact that Iran has enough uranium for both the
countries' needs.
Brij (Oct 27, '05)
Ramtanu Maitra made a prodigious analysis on the prolific opium production in
US-puppet ruled Afghanistan in
Follow the drugs: US shown the way [Oct
27]. The proclivity of US troops and the Karzai government to clandestinely
bless the poppy growers helped Afghanistan's rise in the opium business. No
matter that millions of innocent youth get addicted to heroin and opium-related
drugs, no matter that thousands of young teens die in their salad days, no
matter that Afghanistan sails close to the wind in becoming the world’s largest
opium producer; the US would still continue to occupy Afghanistan and provide
safe haven to those illegally legal poppy farmers ... It is obvious that the US
and its allies are profiting from the heroin business, and the outcome will be
the destruction of the Western world, as Maitra pointed out. During British
rule in India, the opium processed in the factories in Calcutta used to be
exported to China. In 1880, there were 15 million confirmed opium addicts in
China, and the Chinese government collapsed from within, in 1912. As the saying
goes, "Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it." It seems
the Western world is undergoing a major attack on its civilization through
[drugs], owing to their own material greed and utter disdain for humanity.
Skanda’s blustering mail (Oct 26) lacks logic. He cannot see the reality of the
day. I would like to inform him that Afghanistan under Taliban reign was much
better than rule under the present US-puppet regime. The utter lawlessness,
disorder, anarchy, lootings, carnage and the destruction of Afghan
infrastructure are all concatenations of US invasion. True, the women were
forced to hide their bodies but the widows were never burnt to death along with
their dead husbands on the piers; true, there were harsh punishments for
robbers and murderers but the lower-ranked people were never treated as slaves
... I would also like to ask the writer, how could 40,000 people be responsible
for the sin of one Osama? And why is Osama still not caught despite the US
killing thousands of innocent civilians in his pursuit? And will he kindly tell
us why the US slogan of “war against terrorism” so abruptly changed to a
“mission to spread freedom and democracy through invasion and overthrowing the
existing system of government?”
Mohd Salekun Noor
UAE (Oct 27, '05)
[Re Hu
goes to the Hermit Kingdom, Oct 27 In spite of differences,
China and North Korea maintain the closeness which is expressed in the Northern
Sung's watchword, which in vivid imagery uses lips to protect teeth, and which
Deng Xiaoping used during his visit to Pyongyang, thereby signaling China's
good neighbor policy. Historical memory is ever-present to China. The Northern
Sung, to ward off invasion, appealed to sister and rival the Southern Sung for
aid and succor and to join battle with it. In a poetic flourish, the Northern
Sung's lips offered to protect the Southern Sung's teeth. But the Southern Sung
turned a deaf ear, and in consequence both Sung kingdoms fell to the conquering
Ming. China is not willing to let North Korea fall to the United States'
unreasonable demands. It has no interest to cede reassertion of ancient
privilege before a weakening America with an inconsistent foreign policy in
northeast Asia.
Jakob Cambria
USA (Oct 27, '05)
This goes out to the [Iranian Arab] separatist spokesman Nasser Ban-Assad of
British Ahwazi Friendship Society [letter, Oct 22]. None of us here fall for
your lies. [British Ahwazi Friendship Society] ties with the Saddamites are
well known. You have called for the integral and historic part of Iran to join
Iraq. Your members attacked the Iranian embassy in London. It is because of you
and your pan-Arab and Saddamite allies that the noble Iranian Arabs suffer ...
Iranian Arabs have proven their loyalties over and over again to Iran, and that
fact makes your blood boil. Long live Iran.
Jamshid Petrossian
Ottawa, Canada (Oct 27, '05)
I wish to correct several of the statements made by Moin Ansari [letter, Oct
26]. 1) Nowhere did I advise him as to how to live his life. 2) Xenophobic
bigotry and Islamophobia - such extremist talk amounts to cheap name calling
which tarnishes the value of a good forum such as this. Writers can disagree
and put forth their views without resorting to name calling. Religous fervor
does not replace intelligent discussion. 3) Demonizing Islam - frankly, I have
no interest in Islam nor have the time for it. With the rest of the world I am
against Islamic terrorism. 4) Vitriol (caustic remarks) in a discussion is
preferable any day to vituperative (abusive) talk from the likes of Ansari and
Noor. 5) "Travel around India and you will find that most Indians do not care
about Pakistan" - it is a fact and maybe Ansari should travel around and check
it out. 6) I wonder why Ansari assumes I am a Hindu - I never mentioned
anywhere my faith and it rightly does not matter in a healthy discussion.
Ansari again needs to check his facts before he writes in future ... I notice
there has been a healthy discussion about Japan and China between several
writers and I have not noticed anyone descending to cheap name-calling.
Skanda
USA (Oct 27, '05)
Ian C Purdie [letter, Oct 26] writes, of Miguel A Guanipa's letter: "I have
never met any pro-war supporter who has served his or her country in uniform."
Though not the only one in the US, Mr Guanipa is one of those pro-war
supporters who cheer on the lynch mob while avoiding direct participation in
the risk involved. And one of those I at every opportunity invite to put their
war-support and loud "patriotic" bravado into action: enlist, and demand to be
sent to serve in Iraq. Either that, or crawl back into dark silence.
Joseph J Nagarya
Boston, USA (Oct 27, '05)
I wish your news site could realize what a wonderful opportunity it has to let
us in the rest of the world learn about your part of the world. As an example,
look at any of your headlines for your stories though, and see it is all about
politics, and this side or that side is doing something wrong; or as we hear
all the time, playing one race against another; or the poor against the rich.
If you could only give us just the news - the good and the bad, without any
political prejudice either way - anyone can make up their own mind if there
should be a political slant to it. I have traveled many times there, and the
intelligence, warmth and "I will find a way" attitude of every person I have
met in Southeast Asia will always succeed. It might not happen by this weekend,
but it will happen. The people are too intelligent, caring and wise to fail. I
wish your website good luck, but please keep your own idea of politics and what
is fair and right to yourself.
Nelson Emery (Oct 27, '05)
You can find the news in any of the vast number of publications that subscribe
to newswires like AP and Reuters (and you will find they all run the same
articles). We at least offer an alternative to the wire services, as well as
provide an opportunity for Asians themselves to let their voices be heard
(about what they think is fair and right). - ATol
I wish to reply to Skanda’s letter of October 26 and would like to inform him
that I do study about almost anything and everything and write. I do not and
will never use subjectivity as the criterion, but use objectivity to arrive at
an opinion. If I feel impressed with something, I honestly feel encouraged to
announce it, but certain things that I find diabolical, I have no hesitation in
saying it loudly so that distinction can be made by the readers about truth and
falsehood. I would like to inform Skanda that I spent many years of my early
life in New Delhi and have many cherished memories of living around Hindu
friends and finding many of their festival rituals fascinating but some
distasteful ...
Saqib Khan
London, UK (Oct 27, '05)
Stephen Roach does an excellent job of highlighting the nature of US-China
economic codependency [Tough
flying for the global economy, Oct 26]. The reality, as Mr
Roach observes, is that China is dependent on US consumption and that demand
cannot simply be conjured up elsewhere at a moment's notice. Thus, China must
continue to loan US consumers money in order to keep the demand for their
exports high, at the expense of investing it in themselves. The question then
becomes, which position is more enviable (or perilous), the lender or the
debtor? If US consumers default on their debt, not only will demand for China’s
industry disappear, but so will the wealth that they have created and loaned
out. Conversely, the US will pay higher interest rates, but one can recover
from bankruptcy. Could it be possible that the US has reached the point with
its bank that the bank has so much of its money invested in one client it can’t
afford to allow that client to fail and continues to make loans in hopes of
success? The fact that China keeps producing at a frantic pace (ie, creating
and keeping jobs) in light of a potential drop in demand may be a sign of
concern instead of strength. These are interesting times.
Ken Arok
Vermont, USA (Oct 26, '05)
[Re
Greenspan's conundrum, Oct 26] A better title would have
been an "an abduction in absurdium". Still much of Mr Merks views reflect a
somewhat classical interpretation of what provides clues to parts of a
gargantuan economic inter- and intra-related series of interactions.
Unfortunately (?) much of the present and possibly future interactions will
require a "hip-hop" background rather than one based on the classics. The
following is abstracted from a newspaper report ... and is a simile for the
"new" wave of portraying the world through the eyes of a young
university-attending couple. The young woman aged 21 and her male companion
aged 24 reported to the authorities that over a period of eight hours they had
each consumed a total of 25 alcoholic drinks. When the bar closed at 2am they
went ot the young woman's Lexus only to find that she had locked her keys
inside the car. Whereupon a good samaritan approached and offered to open the
door for a $10 bill. In the process and according to the two young univeristy
students, the good samaritan stopped working on opening the door and "forced"
the two of them to smoke crack cocaine. The claim that China is flooding the US
and/or the world with manufactured goods is like the claim made by those two
inebriated students. Most if not all those products are manufactured at the
request of Western interests. The price of a Walmart or a Kmart/Sears share
reflects the profits those companies make on the manufacture and sale of
products "Made in China". Bureacratic record keeping such as exports and
imports statistics mean very little to multinationals located in one country
and managing several production sites in other nations. The difference in the
sums showing total exports from US to China and exports from China to the US,
with the proviso that China is "giving it to the US", is a little infantile.
When Alan Greenspan lowers interest rates to the point where individuals can
purchase real estate for as little as $2,500 for a three-bedroom condominium
that is priced at $250,000, is he not in a way proving what the young couple
claimed the good samaritan was offering them? In either scenario Mr Greenspan
will hand over his conundrum to Ben Bernanke in January 2006, and Dr Bernanke
will need all the good luck to resolve the legacy. As for myself, when I
attended college I had to take the streetcars of LA.
Armand De Laurell (Oct 26, '05)
Re Fong Tak-ho’s article
Rice tour raises China’s energy hackles,
Oct 25: What Ms Rice did or did not do would come as no surprise to the
Chinese. For a while now, two "tectonic strategies" have been grinding and
mashing against each other, the "containment" and the "anti-containment" of
China is at play here. China had anticipated that her oil supplies from West
Asia and other sources via the sea route might be threatened at some future
time and has tried to plan for such a day. Its foray into Asia’s northeast for
the Russian oil reserve was almost frustrated by the American ally, Japan. The
initiative taken with the formation of the Shanghai Five [now Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO)] must have been prompted by China's general
security concerns for its western borders as well as for the potential oil
supply from the Central and West Asian regions. A pan-Asian pipeline all the
way from Iran through the "stans" to China would certainly be a strategic oil
breakthrough for China. To think that this pipeline will encourage South Korea
and Japan to gravitate into the Chinese orbit would be pure speculation but it
is certainly something that is not outside the ken of the strategists in
Washington. Perhaps it is not too much to say at this point that the emergence
of American military and other influences in Afghanistan, etc, does complicate
the picture for the Chinese oilmen. Perhaps even China’s invitation to Iran,
Pakistan and India to come to the original Shanghai Five meetings as observers
was a counter-move to the American presence in this area. But surely the
encouragement given to the Indian navy by the Americans to extend its influence
into the Andaman Sea, the Malacca Strait and beyond, and the American and
Japanese initiatives in multi-national naval patrol of the vital Malacca Strait
are all watched nervously by the Chinese. Strategic planners in Beijing have
given serious thought to the possibility of setting up an oil terminal at a sea
port with a pipeline to China, in friendly states like Pakistan, Bangladesh or
Myanmar. The cutting of a canal through Isthmus of Kra in southern Thailand to
bypass the Malacca Strait has been considered. One thing can be said with
certainty, frustrated by the Unocal acquisition failure and the threats to her
oil supply from West and Central Asia, China is not likely to relent over the
contest with Japan for the oil in the sea it shares with Japan. It could very
well be the new flashpoint.
Chan Ah Tee
Malaysia (Oct 26, '05)
To letter writers Brij, Chrysantha Wijeyasingha, Tatsuo Sasaki, et al:
Strangely, most Japanese and some Indians are upset that China refuses to lick
the feet of the West, and if that means grabbing on to Tibet, Taiwan, Xianjing,
etc, then so be it. Using the yardstick of democracy and free speech that is
constantly parotted by the anti-China crowd, may I suggest that we hear from
the victims of China themselves. Last time I checked, the Dala Lama said Tibet
will be better off being part of China. And the Taiwan legislature won't even
pass a bill to buy US weapons. Meanwhile, I don't hear any outcry for the US to
give the states of Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and California back to Mexico,
or Hawaii back to the natives. I am not a fan of Frank of Seattle, but this
anti-China crowd makes me look at dogs more closely.
Roy
US (Oct 26, '05)
Brij (letter, Oct 24) embodies a scary vision of what might happen if people
forget too fast. Acting and living in peace for a certain number of years is no
guarantee of eradication of a conquering thirst, racial/ideological bigotry and
violent impetus. Germany was a peaceful country for a while after its defeat in
WW I, but lack of repentance for its war crimes and misguided nationalism
driven by the thirst for revenge plus world powers’ appeasement policies soon
led to new disasters of an unseen magnitude. Japan’s trivialization of its war
crimes, territorial disputes with all its neighboring countries, an ongoing
campaign to dismember restraints on its military ambitions imposed by the
US-drafted constitution, together with its economic and technological
capability to produce the world’s most sophisticated conventional as well as
nuclear weaponry almost overnight, are no jingle-bell ringings to countries
trespassed by it in the past. On the other side, Japanese war-crime apologists
had better not cheat themselves into the illusion that Japan’s remilitarization
ambitions and emboldened hostility against its Asian neighbors are directed
only at a rapidly rising China ... Americans do not have to visit Pearl Harbor
to be reminded of what Japan is capable of if left unwatched or unleashed. If
the allmighty US needs to keep 50,000 troops in Japan for over 60 years to
ensure its security, why should not China be allowed even to voice its concern?
While selling his brand of forget-and-forgive, Brij seems determined to hold on
to his collection of nostalgia and imagination ... While Brij may feel sorry
for himself that Tibet is no longer a Shangri-la wonderland where
extraterritorials land to marvel at the earth’s beauty and richness, the
reality is that Tibet was mostly uninhabitable and totally impoverished under a
cruel slavery system and centuries behind even a less-developed China in
economy before the 1950s, and it is today opened to the world and enjoying a
fast improving social and economic life.
Raymond Cui
Beijing, China (Oct 26, '05)
It seems that we are heading toward another fiery fight between readers (Tibet
and Japan). While I agree with the Chinese that Tibet cannot becompared with
Japan’s atrocities, but since China suffered under Japan’s colonial rule, it
must not replicate the same with the Tibetans, even to a lesser extent. Though
Kirchhoff's argument [letter, Oct 24] seems reasonable, to understand the
ground reality it is not enough [to note] that they are well fed or
accommodated. In the Indian part of Kashmir, separatist leaders frequently call
for strikes, and hold meetings and processions where anti-India voices can be
heard. Are Tibetans enjoying the same liberties? Unless they are provided the
same liberties it will be hard to read their minds ... China has made clear to
its citizens in many ways that if people, even mainland Chinese, revolt against
the government, they will be ruthlessly crushed. The Tiananmen Square incident
is a glaring example. Once I read, “If you cannot prevent rape, then you better
enjoy it”. I wonder whether Tibetans are happy because they have no
alternative. Only Tibetans living in China can tell.
Shivanantham
Cuddalore, India (Oct 26, '05)
This is in response to Jennifer's remarks [letter, Oct 25] that daring to
criticize China for its brutal excesses both within the nation and towards the
Tibetan people amounts to nothing but "China bashing". But Jennifer never
mentions that the leadership of China criticizing [Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro] Koizumi for visiting the Yasukuni shrine and all those who support
the Chinese stand may be "Japan bashing". In the past China considered itself
the Middle Kingdom, in other words, the kingdom around which the rest of the
world revolves. Well that "Middle Kingdom" attitude died a long time ago and
China cannot demand apologies from Japan for her past atrocities when China has
done equal attrocities of her own and has not apologized for them. This is the
21st century and China or any other major power (even the US) is no longer so
high above the rest of humanity that it cannot be held accountable for
attrocities commited in the 20th century and still threatens other nations
(Taiwan) if they dont toe the Beijing line. When China apologizes and
compensates the victims of its atrocities, maybe it will have the moral ground
to demand the same from other nations that have brutalized China. Beijing needs
to stop badgering Japan, stop its imperial threats to Taiwan, and act like a
responsible nation. Then I am sure the world will stop criticizing China for
its double standards and hypocritical attitude.
Chrysantha Wijeyasingha
New Orleans, USA (Oct 26, '05)
Well Tatsuo Sasaki, I'm a little late answering your two questions (letter, Oct
20). (1) My understanding of "taking full responsibility for your WW II
history" is that you make sure that you are fully informed of Japanese
atrocities, acknowledge them and describe them in your school history texts and
acknowledge them when you are dealing with survivors. Furthermore, full
responsibility, in my opinion, means that all Japanese politicians (and I
suspect you are one of them ) and all Japanese citizens finally, finally,
behave like responsible adults. Shall I briefly give you only one of millions
and millions of examples? My mother was a lawyer working in the Supreme Court
of the Netherlands Indies. During the Japanese occupation she became prisoner
SP1681 and vanished in December 1944. At that time I was prisoner III4001 in
another camp for 10-15 -year-old boys. We children had to carry more than 900
decomposing corpses to the camp gate between September 1944 and September 1945.
The Japanese provided neither soap nor adequate water (one unreliable tap for
2,500 prisoners) so we washed the slime off our hands and bare feet in an open
sewer that ran through the camp. Emperor Hirohito, in whose name all atrocities
were committed, had authorized the execution of all Caucasian prisoners of the
Japanese on August 26, 1945. I volunteered for a job outside the barbed wire
about two weeks before news of the capitulation of Japan filtered into our camp
on August 24, 1945 ... Hiroshima and Nagasaki saved our lives, as it did those
of millions and millions of citizens in Japanese occupied territory. Question
(2) is so foolish that all I will say is this: You know very well that your
culture is steeped in higaisha ishiki or "victim consciousness".
Japanese actually think that the Koreans invited them to control their natural
resources for them! You think that the Manchurian and Chinese "incidents" were
caused by an uncontrollable typhoon into which poor innocent Japanese were
sucked like twirling cherry blossoms. You actually teach your schoolchildren
that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were nothing but crimes against humanity and racist
to boot, on a par with Auschwitz. In your minds there is no room for any
thoughts about cause and effect. You are just poor innocent victims. Higaisha
ishiki.
AL
Canada (Oct 26, '05)
Miguel A Guanipa writes [letter, Oct 25], providing no evidence for his
inflammatory image: "Iraq-war foes will probably be storming the supermarkets
this weekend to get enough food and liquor for their 'Iraq war casualty
milestone' parties ..." Learning how to engage in name-calling and hate speech
is not "clever" or rational, even when one learns how to do it from fake
news/extremist right-wing propaganda organ Fox "News". Tip: hate harms the
hater before anyone else gets news of it. Such self-righteous irrationality is
also immature, and should embarrass those who engage in it - even though they
disguise themselves as adults. Think it through: the bullies you emulate are
still in their elementary-school yards bullying and spitting at the "different"
- those who read books, minorities, those who are for advancing civil rights
and equality for all. Or being victims of bullies and yearning for the day they
can be the bullies. Either way, Mr Guanipa, what does your hate-speech and
name-calling solve or prove, beyond smearing people you don't know but instead
imagine exist, based entirely upon presumption - prejudice - and unfounded
fantasy?
Joseph J Nagarya
Boston, USA (Oct 26, '05)
I believe Miguel A Guanipa dishonors the memory of the 2,000 American service
personnel who have lost their lives in Iraq as well as the many, many thousands
who have been wounded. As a long-time opponent of this illegal war I have never
met one anti-war supporter who took any comfort at the mounting US casualty
toll. I may also add I have never met any pro-war supporter who has served his
or her country in uniform. Obviously, they must exist. Those who have served
their country are very mindful of the horrors involved and regard war as the
extreme last resort when all else has failed. Tragically this was not the case
in this misbegotten war.
Ian C Purdie
Budgewoi, Australia (Oct 26, '05)
It is amusing that the likes of Noor want to provide the truth about
Afghanistan. His soothing account of Afghanistan, that the Taliban have been
destroyed and everything is rosy and wonderful except for the Americans there,
is pure fiction and will not fool anyone. I am not sure where Noor gets his
news or facts, but every news website including Asia Times Online have reported
that the Taliban is alive and kicking and is a growing menace in south
Afghanistan, thanks to the generous help from the loser next door called
Pakistan. [President Hamid] Karzai is having a difficult time managing the
place because of the Taliban and other warlords. Noor managed to mention at
least six times that the Americans are the killers in Afghanistan. I think he
needs to remember why the US is there in the first place. Since his memory is
short, let me remind him that a killer called Osama bin Laden, hiding in
Afghanistan, murdered 2,500 innocent souls in New York. Such a callous, cruel
deed cannot go unpunished and the perpetrator has to be brought to justice.
Remember, if you strike first, there is always the risk that you will be struck
back. Saqib Khan's reply [letter, Oct 25] is at the best ludicrous ... his
words were that one read about Islam before writing about it. By the same
token, I implore Saqib to read before he writes another word on anything.
Skanda
San Francisco, USA (Oct 26, '05)
This is with reference to Skanda's letter (Oct 24) advising me how to conduct
my life, when to write, what to write, who to favor, who to feel sorry for and
when to be happy. Skanda ... your xenophobic bigotry and Islamphobia are
apparent in your pitiful attempt at demonizing Islam. Not surprisingly, your
vitriol was directed only against against Muslims, Saqib, Noor and me. "Travel
around India and you will find that India has no time for Pakistan". Amazing
contradiction of facts, where your entire letter is a diatribe against Pakistan
and Muslims ... Skanda also reminds us about what we are fighting for ... he
will find out that the cabal of lies about Iraq is coming down like a house of
cards, hit by a hurricane called Fitzgerald! The architects of the heralded
policies in Afghanistan and Iraq have been greeted with disdain by the American
people and will probably be indicted ... Just like you being Hindu does not
eliminate your American nationality, my being a Muslim and an American is not a
contradiction. I am proud of both facts.
Moin Ansari (Oct 26, '05)
Spengler's at his best when he drops his fixation on religiosity, which is just
a mask for gaining and keeping power [A
Syriajevo in the making? Oct 25]. His comment about America's Potemkin
Village in Iraq is brilliant but it underplays the deadliness of [President
George W] Bush's gullibility as opposed to the relative harmlessness of
[Grigori] Potemkin's ruse.
Harald Hardrada
New York, New York (Oct 25, '05)
Paul Zimmet's article
Diabetes: Asia's ticking time bomb [Oct 25] draws attention towards a
very insightful issue which no [doubt] is worse than a time bomb, because the
casualties and destruction of a bomb cover certain areas, while diabetes has
reached every corner of the world. The statistics say that in Canada every
fifth person is a diabetic. [It is not valid only to] blame [Coca-Cola] or
Western foods for this killing disease. Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and several
other countries around the globe have their own typical eating habits which
excessively include starches, carbohydrates, saturated cooking oil and dairy
items. A glass of Coca-Cola might have 120 calories, but people in Pakistan and
India eat their traditional sweets (mithai) in pounds at a time, which
might have 2,000 calories as these sweets or mithai are made by 50%
addition of pure sugar and are deeply fried in oil. So you could visualize the
intake amount of sugar and oil in the body and we all know that sugar goes
directly to our blood. Plus, these foods are joined by not moving the body
adequately to burn excessive calories (not exercising) and stress of various
natures ... Stress affects your nerves and body, damaging tissues, which
further warrants various complications like diabetes, blood elevation and
shrinking of the blood vessels.
Shafiq Khan
Canada (Oct 25, '05)
China gets its dander up when it thinks anyone is poaching on its preserve -
its broadly defined geographic area of possessive historical rights. The recent
... quick tour of Central Asia by Condoleezza Rice [that] preceded Donald
Rumsfeld's visit to Asia is a case in point. Although Fong Tak-ho [Rice
tour raises China's energy hackles, Oct 25] sees the greasy hand of
Washington in an attempt to thwart China's thirst for hydrocarbons in the
former Soviet Central Asian lebensraum, the situation is more complex.
The very countries which the American secretary of state visited are of high
geopolitical and geo-military interest and importance to the United States.
This aspect takes on a darker coloring of strategic significance. America's
interests do not focus necessarily on a single consideration, although the Bush
administration has strained a raison d'etat appreciation of a nuanced
foreign policy.
Jakob Cambria
USA (Oct 25, '05)
M Ramdas ([letter] Oct 24) ... appears to enjoy the piece of news in Syed
Saleem Shahzad's Stoking
Afghanistan's resistance [Oct 22] that "US soldiers desecrated the
bodies of Taliban fighters by burning them" ... I wish to inform the writer
that the repeated tales of so-called Taliban brutality have been dogging the
Asia Times [Online] Letters page for a long time and we don't need any more
reminders. However, I would like to enlighten the writer with the fact that the
realm of Taliban has already been destroyed and he can relax. One should not
cling to the past and live therein when the present reality has badly distorted
the image of that bygone era. I would like to help the writer see the bitter
truth of the present-day Afghanistan. US bombers have conducted a reign of
terror against innocents as well as the Islamic soldiers in Afghanistan. The US
in Afghanistan has killed many more civilians than those who lost their lives
in the [New York] World Trade Center attack. The US war has increased the
numbers and suffering of hundreds of thousands of innocent refugees and has
exposed millions more to the threat of starvation. This is the fruit of
Washington's crusade of "good versus evil". The warheads with milled uranium
ore, which the US used against the unarmed Afghanis, have increased the
suffering of the plebeians manifold ... The utter destruction of Afghan
hospitals, clinics, buildings, roads, electric poles etc made the lives of the
common people very miserable. Thousands of people have to live without the
continued presence of their near and dear ones who lost their lives in the
deadly US invasion. But nobody speaks of present-day Afghanistan; they are busy
digging the graves of the past to humiliate the Muslims.
Mohd Salekun Noor
UAE (Oct 25, '05)
[Re L] Kirchhoff's comments on the "progress" he witnessed in Tibet [letter,
Oct 24]: He mentions ... how he stayed in a luxurious hotel and had wonderful
food in Tibet. I too have read of the economic progress China has brought to
Tibet ... I read of the large flesh-trade industry thriving in the former
sacred city of Lhasa. Before Tibet was annexed Lhasa was the holy city of
Vajrayana Buddhism, similar to other sacred cities such as Jerusalem for the
Jews or the Vatican for the Roman Catholics. I am assuming that Mr Kirchhoff is
a Christian and if he is, how would he feel if the Vatican was destroyed, its
sacred literature and buildings destroyed, its people ravaged by a foreign
communist entity, and the pope had to flee to another nation just to preserve
what little is left of the nation of the Vatican? Instead of being the center
of the Roman Catholic religion, this foreign communist entity builds luxurious
hotels, wonderful restaurants and thousands of brothels (courtesy from
Beijing)? The moral degradation of this sacred city of Lhasa doesn't bother Mr
Kirchhoff ... If Mr Kirchhoff is a Christian he would understand the gravity of
what has happened to Lhasa and the Tibetan culture. But if he is a communist
sympathizer or a Maoist apologist he would completely disagree with me. Instead
of him giving advice to the rest of us to visit Tibet and be "enlightened" to
the "progress" Beijing has given to the Tibetan people, he should ask the Dalai
Lama how he feels [about] how Beijing has transformed the once-sacred city to a
city for man's lewd pleasures.
Chrysantha Wijeyasingha
New Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 25, '05)
L Kirchhoff's defense of his beliefs [letter, Oct 24] is hardly amusing. Nobody
is glorifying anything here. [Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro] Koizumi has
expressed regret about the old Japan and apologized a few times. Remembering
the war dead is a spiritual thing. This whole brouhaha is about a genocidal
organization called the Chinese Communist Party, which is whipping up
nationalist hysteria using any and all excuses it can find. According to
Tibet's government-in-exile, about 1.2 million Tibetans have died unnatural
deaths under Chinese occupation between 1949 and 1979 - including 170,000
Tibetans tortured to death in Chinese prisons, 450,000 who died fighting the
Chinese army, and 350,000 Tibetans who starved to death during the same time.
Tibetans number [fewer] than 6 million worldwide right now. How is that not
genocide? L Kirchhoff says that he has been to Tibet. Assuming that is true, he
should know that Tibet is a vast 2.5 million square kilometers of land area. It
seems that if Kirchhoff were to visit Shanghai, he would conclude that there is
no poverty in China. The Genocide Convention of 1948 defined genocide as
(partially) "(b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring
about its physical destruction in whole or in part." Further, Article 49 of the
Fourth Geneva Convention (1949) states, "The Occupying Power shall not deport
or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies." Han Chinese outnumber Tibetans in Tibet now, and occupy all the
important posts, and commercial and authority positions. Tibetans are forced to
renounce their own heritage, denounce their own religious leaders, speak
Mandarin instead of Tibetan, and call it "modernization" (as letter writer Li
wrote on October 24). May all of China be blessed with a similar
"modernization" some day. Kirchhoff also calls me fascist, so I will enlighten
him on fascism: Fascism is "a philosophy or system of government that is marked
by stringent social and economic control, a strong, centralized government
usually headed by a dictator, and often a policy of belligerent nationalism."
You could say "China" and it would mean the same thing right now.
Brij (Oct 25,
'05)
The
writers in your [Letters] column who persist in
making illogical analogies between the Japanese
invasion of China and issues such as Tibet and Mao
Zedong's rule of China make a deliberate attempt
to divert attention away from past Japanese
atrocities in China, to mitigate world opinion of
Japanese aggression and to dilute the gravity and
inhumanity of the Japanese invasion of China. In
support of their views, they cite exaggerated
inaccuracies, distort historical events and make
unsubstantiated claims. It is obvious that their
agenda is China-bashing and their motive is to
incite hatred of the Chinese. This seriously
undermines their credibility and it would be
futile responding to their self-serving
accusations. Jennifer USA (Oct 25,
'05)
I
found Skanda's letter of October 24 amazingly
ridiculous and diabolical in lecturing me to read
Hindu philosophy ... Should I ask Skanda to take
off blinkers and study Islam? It is not only a
belief, but also a practice, spiritual as well as
temporal. It is in fact a complete code of human
life for all humanity ... With regard to the
Katrina disaster and those affected by [it], he
should read my letter of September 7 and would
find that I did express my profound grief at the
plight of the victims, as I would do for any human
suffering in pain and agony of life. Saqib
Khan London, England
(Oct 25, '05)
Jakob Cambria writes [letter,
Oct 21]: "Retired Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson has
spoken out against the cabal that has by stealth
taken over America's foreign policy." This is only
news to those who (1) wholly supported and
defended [US President George W] Bush and gang at
the time - as did Cambria - and (2) who weren't
paying attention. By contrast, to those who were
paying attention, and keeping faith with law and
standards, it was obvious, thus any "stealth" was
transparent; and spoke out - Cambria was not one
of those - using the term "hijacked", as did
Wilkerson. Why does Cambria change "hijacked" to
"taken over"? Because it sounds less ominous than
is the reality? Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 25,
'05)
[Re]
Chrysantha Wijeyasingha's letter dated Oct 21:
Apologies and acts of repentance by Japan for its
atrocities during the Second World War are
directed to nations it victimized. In other words,
these acts are not meant just for the Chinese
government but more importantly for the Chinese
people and [China's] cultural identity. It is an
unfortunate fact that throughout [the] centuries
more Chinese have died [at] the hand of their own
governments than [of] foreign occupiers. However,
this does not preclude the right of Chinese and
other innocent people to Japanese remorse and
atonement. Else would the Kuomintang
administration be deemed the sole legal Chinese
body to accept an apology from Japan since [it
was] the official ruling entity during the war?
World War II as prosecuted by the allies was
oriented toward the defeat of an idea, fascism,
and not to any nation or ethnic group per se. That
is the reason why the level of suffering of the
French, Dutch and Russian people was in no way
diminished even though occupation and suppression
were enacted by their governments in Indochina,
Indonesia and the former Soviet Union,
respectively. Similarly we do not erect a memorial
honoring the events of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
because we recognize that at the end of the day,
Japanese or otherwise, innocents perished. The
right of the Chinese people to demand recognition
of Japanese brutality is undeniable and at this
stage, I see the Chinese government as the
strongest representative of these demands. If the
Japanese Diet is still willing to color the facts
of the war in spite of government-to-government
(Chinese/Korean/ASEAN-to-Japanese) dealings, I do
not foresee higher effectiveness by other
representing bodies other than a multinational
coalition. Wombat Singapore (Oct 25,
'05)
Iraq-war foes will probably
be storming the supermarkets this weekend to get
enough food and liquor for their "Iraq war
casualty milestone" parties. What better way to
inflame their hatred against George W Bush than to
celebrate this milestone in your own living room
with your liberal friends and relatives, in front
of a wide-screen plasma TV and an assortment of
Moveon.org free bumper stickers? The newspapers
are probably already preparing the caption: "Iraq,
2000 dead." They will probably use the leftover
space they had prepared for Tom DeLay's mugshot,
which didn't work out so [well] for them. But this
is bound to make a few waves. I mean 2,000
soldiers dead in an illegitimate war. Or so the
liberals claim. And it's such a nice, compact
number. It just rolls off your tongue. Miguel A Guanipa Whitinsville, Massachusetts
(Oct 25, '05)
Mahan Abedin has been too
eager to take the Iranians at their word in the
article How Britain botched the Iran
stand-off (Oct 22). He suggests that the Ahwaz
bomb attacks in Khuzestan [were] the work of Arab
separatists being directed by the Iraqi Ba'ath
party and, at the very least, tolerated by the
British government. First, the well-known Ahwazi
parties favor non-violent civil disobedience and
have no involvement in terrorism or the Iraqi
insurgency. The links between the Ba'athists -
both Iraqi and Syrian - and the Arabistan
separatists were severed [after] the end of the
Iran-Iraq War in 1988. It is highly unlikely that
an Ahwazi Arab movement would commit terrorist
acts on the people it represents. It would be
totally counterproductive. Second, there is no
relationship between the Ahwazi movement and the
British government. A member of our organization
had a chance encounter with British Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw at a conference on British
foreign policy in the Middle East and this was
exaggerated by the Iranian regime as an official
meeting with Arab insurgents, which it was not. In
fact, the man in question is committed to
non-violent opposition. He was surprised that Mr
Straw knew little about the ethnic cleansing of
Arabs in Khuzestan province, nor did the foreign
secretary express much interest in the issue. We
have not had any contact with the Foreign Office
since then. Third, the Ahwaz bomb attacks in the
run-up to the June elections coincided with a
series of attacks across the country, which in an
interview with London's Guardian newspaper
reformist presidential candidate Mustafa Moin
blamed on those seeking the election of a military
candidate. Although the regime claims to have
arrested those responsible and found a British
connection, it has never put anyone on trial or
published the evidence. [The] bomb attacks in
Ahwaz are most likely to have been caused by
elements within the regime seeking to militarize
Iran, either the Pasdaran or the Basij. The notion
of British intervention in Iran serves as a
powerful rallying point for Iranian nationalism,
casting all opponents - particularly ethnic
minorities - as foreign agents worthy of violent
oppression. Such attacks also divert from the
issue of Iran's nuclear program, isolating Britain
from the negotiating process. One should not
underestimate the extent to which President
[Mahmud] Ahmadinejad, a man who has been
implicated in the murder of Iranian Kurdish
leaders in Vienna, will go to in order to achieve
his goals. Nasser Ban-Assad Spokesman, British Ahwazi
Friendship Society London,
England (Oct 24, '05)
Thanks for sharing the
fascinating story Stoking Afghanistan's
resistance [Oct 22] by Syed Saleem Shahzad
[regarding] the Taliban getting "upset" at my
countrymen (US troops). All this story does is
ignite more passion and hate in the radicals in
London and smiles (and more dollars for their help
in war on terror) from the Pakistani military
establishment. Now let's see what the Taliban have
done to deserve this ... sympathy: blowing up the
[statues] of Buddha in Bamiyan, Afghanistan;
forcing all Hindus and Sikhs in Afghanistan to
wear a patch to identify them as infidels;
butchering the Shi'a minority (now remember these
are their co-religionists), especially the Hazara
community, and throwing them into mass graves. I
didn't expect anything less from [this] lot who
name mountains after Hindu slaughter (Hindu Kush
Mountains of Afghanistan). Whipping and beating
women in public for not wearing the burqa and turning
educated women into beggars and hookers. Stoning
women to death in public for crimes of passion
while men go free or take on another wife. Denying
schools to girls and enforcing archaic rules for
young boys and men to sport regulation-length
beards. Next, hijacking an Indian Airlines plane,
and then slitting the throat of a newlywed Hindu
man in front of his wife returning from their
honeymoon from Kathmandu and then dumping his
lifeless body out of the plane. Working hand in
glove with the Pakistani ISI [Inter-Services
Intelligence] and killing of innocent Hindus and
Muslims in Kashmir in the name of their god and
freedom. Working real hard to take their country
back to the Stone Age with their Arab and
Pakistani masters. I can go on ... Regarding the
Australian TV reporter, the US Army needs to hand
him over to the Taliban, and then we will see how
long he can keep his head in place. M
Ramdas San Francisco,
California (Oct 24, '05)
Re India gets teeth against
corruption [Oct 21]: It may be a good step
taken by India to curb corruption. But the Indian
journalists have already dug [up] many scandals
without this act, and made [them] public. Present
politicians do not feel shame at being called
corrupt. Many tainted politicians winning election
and even getting ministerial berths reveal that
this act alone cannot change Indian polity. What
is the need of the hour is judicial reform.
Forming a political court (as a consumer court)
where cases pertaining to politicians (especially
those who are or were ministers) [can be] disposed
speedily will help to purify Indian politics. And
these political courts must have a time frame to
dispose of the cases. If the court is unable to
dispose of the cases within the stipulated time
(say five or 10 years), then the court must
disclose to the people who is responsible for the
delay. And if the defendant (politician) happened
to the one, then he must be prevented from
contesting. Shivanantham Cuddalore, India (Oct 24,
'05)
[Re]
Pepe Escobar's article How to constitute a civil
war (Oct 15): I am very impressed by the
in-depth reporting from Iraq, not found anywhere
else. I anxiously await an article by Escobar that
focuses on any possible solutions in Iraq. Moin
Ansari (Oct 24, '05)
This refers to letters by
Nadia Shoeb and John G Scherb dated October 21
commenting on Syed Saleem Shahzad's article Waging jihad against
disaster [Oct 20]. I wonder if the referred
article even falls under the category of an
"article" ... There is nothing new or special in
the "article" but the same old narration with a
new pen. I want to remind readers that Kashmiris
couldn't do anything in the past and cannot move
an inch in the future without the support of the
Pakistani government (especially the Pakistani
military and its intelligence agency ISI
[Inter-Service Intelligence] and Pakistan-based
Islamic religious parties). For the last six
decades, it was not Kashmiris but the Pakistani
military who have been fighting the war of
independence. If you analyze the political history
of Pakistan after independence, every Pakistani
leader used the Kashmir issue as a stunt at the
behest of its military in order to get weapons,
cash and material aid from the United States,
Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states and the Muslim world
at large. On the other hand, Pakistan's religious
parties have been grinding their teeth in the name
of jihad-e-Kashmir in
order to keep alive their fanatic motives ... Shafiq Khan Canada (Oct 24,
'05)
Saqib Khan [letters below] by
his own account has been shedding an awful amount
of tears only for his Kashmir brethren. We did not
hear any remorse or grief from him for the
thousands who were affected in New Orleans. Why
would he care? They were just infidels and
non-believers. He also goes on to lecture that one
should read about Islam before writing about it.
By the same token he should spend time reading
about India, Hindu philosophy, Pakistan and
Islamic terrorism before he writes another word.
[Mohd Salekun] Noor [letter, Oct 21] is right
about one thing - that there cannot be genuine
peace between India and Pakistan. There can never
be peace until Pakistan gives up its jihadi
mentality and its spread of terrorism and nuclear
proliferation. Travel around India and you will
find that India has no time for Pakistan. Except
for the Punjabis and Sindhis, the rest of India
simply does not care about Pakistan. Moin Ansari
[Oct 20] seems to be getting his knickers in a
twist. He tries his hand at American patriotism by
saying that his heart bleeds for the Americans
coming back in body bags and then ends up saying
that Islam will triumph. I wonder were his loyalty
lies - with America or Islam. Remember we
Americans are fighting Islamic terrorism in
Afghanistan and the Middle East. Ansari needs to
check his loyalty before he writes another piece.
Skanda San Francisco, California
(Oct 24, '05)
I know I shouldn't expect
more from apologists for Japanese neo-fascism, but
what mind-altering drugs is Brij of Chicago
[letter, Oct 21] on? According to the bizarre
analogy quoted, in the history of the past
century, all the Japanese did was to kill one
person in China, it seems to be Mao [Zedong]'s
uncle, and Mao went on to send millions to
concentration camps and kill millions in Tibet,
and so Mao doesn't deserve to seek justice on his
uncle's behalf. I'm sure inquiring minds at
Yasukuni Shrine would be interested in the history
books you read. Earth to Brij, just so you
understand the concept of "scale" and
"proportion", tens of millions throughout Asia
from China to Indonesia were killed by the
Japanese, a substantially larger number than the
Nazis' Holocaust victims, not just "Mao's uncle",
and neither the Holocaust nor this can be
described as a "past offense". The victims and
survivors, ranging from slave laborers to comfort
women, and their descendants in China, Korea,
Malaysia, etc are also not mass murderers or their
relatives as alleged ... If you or Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha [Oct 21] wants to address Mao's
excesses or Tibet, Hiroshima or Dresden, I urge
you to demand that ATol cover those stories in
detail and write long letters about them and their
perpetrators. Further, I have been to Tibet, there
is no urgent "ongoing genocide" as you insist or I
would have noticed and sent [a] postcard. Don't
take my word for it, you can fly there yourself on
a tourist visa to personally stop the river of
blood. I'll be glad to recommend good eats and
comfortable hotels. Going back to the subject at
hand, we are talking specifically about the
Holocaust in Asia and the efforts by neo-fascists
to distort history and rehabilitate war criminals.
My analogy stands - if Jewish and other nationals
decry a (hypothetical) wave of German denial of
the Holocaust and worshipping of top Nazis, will
any mentally sane gung-ho human-rights activists
tell them to shut up and let the Germans glorify
the Third Reich because of what Israel is doing to
the Palestinians today? Any logically inclined
person will understand these are two separate
issues which do not cancel each other out, and
both deserve to be aired. Separately. Fortunately,
there are still some conscientious, not to mention
sane, Japanese readers like Ikeda [Oct 20] who
truly regret the horrors of World War II and
express a desire for reconciliation with Japan's
former victims which will bring about genuine
peace and stability for the region. They are a
credit to Japan, and carry the hope of putting to
rest the ghosts of World War II. If only they
[were] the ones running the country instead of the
Koizumis. L Kirchhoff (Oct 24,
'05)
Without mentioning names I
can sympathize with these "freedom-lovers" for
their hatred toward China for having possession of
Tibet, which is undergoing modernization and
[whose] people are enjoying a better life [than at
any time] in the history of that region. Crying
over spilled milk is their privilege. The Chinese
people would understand. Li (Oct 24,
'05)
Allow me to add my two cents
to the debate regarding Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi's visit to the Yasukuni Shrine.
I think focusing on the prime minister's visit
misses the point. The mistake is in enshrining the
war criminals in the first place. War criminals
should be publicly denounced, shamed and made an
example of, not venerated. If a religion does not
distinguish between the victims and perpetrators,
one seriously doubts the religion's and, by
extension, its practitioners' sense of moral
judgment. Even if no one visits the shrine, it is
still an abomination to enshrine war criminals and
a great insult to the victims of the war. If the
descendants wish to honor their war-criminal
ancestors, let them practice it in private. If we
turn the tables, how would the defendants of the
visits feel if president Harry Truman and the
pilots of the Enola Gay [were] enshrined and
honored alongside the victims of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki? Japanese politicians have also made
numerous "apologies" over Japan's World War II
atrocities, but then they turn around and honor
their war criminals, which gives the impression
that they are insincere in their apologies and
play the rest of the world for a fool. This is
worse then no apologies at all. It is also
insulting for the Japanese government to think
that they can substitute ODA [overseas development
assistance] in lieu of a sincere repentance. This
is akin to a convicted rapist telling his victims:
"Here is some money, you should stop complaining."
Not only that, the rapist proceeds to tell all and
sundry that he did not rape the victim, but rather
"entered" her, and he did it for "mutual
prosperity". With every visit, with every
whitewash of history, they re-scratch the scab of
the World War II wound, which is why the wound
never heals for the victims of their crimes, which
is why all of their apologies fell short. Some
defendants of the visits on this forum cite the
crimes perpetrated by the victims, Mao Zedong
being the prime example. Be that as it may, the
accuser's sin does not absolve the defendant's
crime. Besides, Mao's crime was not against the
Japanese. S K Wong Malaysia (Oct 24,
'05)
I
would like to reply to [the letters below] from
Raymond Cui, Wombat, Chan Ah Tee and L Kirchhoff.
Why are we here discussing all these things? I
believe we are here not to feed rage or revenge,
but peace and friendship between people.
Otherwise, it doesn't make any sense ... I think
one problem we have is about assumptions that some
Chinese make about Japanese, and vice-versa.
Raymond Cui, for instance, guesses that the
Japanese argument is: "We are a proud nation with
our own history and tradition; leave us alone when
we follow our own rituals and remember our
ancestors" ... The fact that Japanese pray for
their war dead doesn't mean that they approve of
what was done during wartime, that they don't face
the past, or that they want to commit the terrible
mistakes again. On the contrary, after World War
II, Japan has followed a way of peace and
friendship, normalizing relationships with other
nations and helping them in many ways. Being
democratic, [Prime Minister Junichiro] Koizumi and
the Japanese government [seek] conversation, [but]
others not used to [open discussion] just run away
from it (for example the case of the last visit of
Chinese Vice Prime Minister Wu Yi to Japan). And
all Japan's demands about territorial issues are
being made in a pacific and civilized way.
Nowadays, what worries Asians and other people is
the fact that the Chinese government threatens
regional peace, considering that it's not
democratic, and violence is a real option to be
used by this government. There are issues with
India and Tibet; threats to Taiwan; internal
human-rights demands; the Tiananmen Square
incident; submarine intrusions in foreign seas;
support to the dictatorship of North Korea;
military increase and control over many nuclear
weapons (what for?), etc. With these few examples
we can understand why the Chinese government is
not contributing in a positive way to peace in
Asia. If we want peace and friendship between
nations, it's essential to discuss the past, but
we should not close [our] eyes to the present too.
Tatsuo Sasaki (Oct 24,
'05)
One
wonders whether the intent of this online news
site is "Asia Today" or "Greater China Today". I
could not help but notice that in your zeal
to cover Greater China, a separate section for
India (which is Asia's second-largest country by
most parameters) is absent even though there are
separate sections for several much smaller
countries. This is definitely a big disappointment
to the millions of Indians and Indian diaspora
spread all over the world. At least the form and
content of your website leave me wondering whether
AT can be considered an unbiased, uninfluenced
news source. Neil (Oct 24,
'05)
Besides "Greater China",
which consists of several unique political
entities, only Japan and Korea, among the dozens
of countries we cover, have their own
sections; all others are grouped in a way designed
to help readers navigate the site easily and
efficiently. This is not a political decision,
it's a practical one. Besides, if it's size that
matters, Japan's economy, in terms of total GDP,
is more than six times bigger than India's, and
China's is more than double. We cannot deny,
however, that India is rising and it won't be long
before it demands its own "India Business"
section. - ATol
Unfortunately, the
scientific/public health community has it wrong
about H5N1 evolution, and thus is recommending a
less effective (and ultimately futile) method of
preventing a human pandemic of bird flu. Rather
than the H5N1 bird-flu virus becoming efficient at
person-to-person transmission through a single
reassortment event, the virus is slowly evolving
through a series of recombination events. Using
genetic sequencing, a person can take a strain of
H5N1 and analyze it for polymorphisms that are
identical to strains on file from different
geographic areas, and from different species. This
forensic microbiology tells us that different
mutations are incorporated from distant places. In
other words, the mutations that are slowly
changing the H5N1 virus are recombined from other
influenza strains, not spontaneously occurring.
Currently, the emphasis is on culling domestic
fowl to prevent amplification of the H5N1 virus.
The reasoning goes that amplification may spread
the virus to a human or pig (ie, a viral mixing
bowl) which is infected with another strain of
influenza that efficiently spreads in that
species. If the H5N1 virus reassorts with such a
strain, it will acquire the ability to spread
efficiently in that species too. Yet the genetic
sequencing of the 1918 flu strain shows that it
jumped directly from birds to humans. Furthermore,
we can see the H5N1 bird flu slowly evolving to do
the same. In fact, we can analyze these slow
changes to determine where each of these
polymorphisms came from geographically. The reason
I am writing to you is because, instead of culling
domesticated flocks, the real culprit behind this
slow evolutionary process is the cross-pollination
of disparate strains of influenza far and wide. In
other words, the real engine behind the evolution
of a flu-pandemic strain is migratory birds. The
evolution of a highly pathogenic avian-influenza
strain (HPAI) H5N1 in Qinghai Lake, China (whose
polymorphism on the PB2 segment site E627K came
from a strain of influenza from European swine
undoubtedly spread to Qinghai Lake from a
migratory bird), is an opportunity to observe
dramatically the cross-pollination of influenza
far and wide by migratory birds. This
cross-pollination has been going on all along, but
never so dramatically and clearly as is shown by
the trail of dead birds. I understand the
hesitation to cull wild reservoirs of viral
infection, even if they are the main engine in the
evolution of a pandemic strain of flu ... We could
save hundreds of millions of lives and stop a
worldwide economic depression - or we could watch
as a H5N1 pandemic (as severe as the 1918 one)
naturally and methodically evolves. Brad
Arnold St Louis Park,
Minnesota (Oct 24, '05)
Re US policy and the 'Oval
office cabal' [Oct 21]: Retired Colonel
Lawrence Wilkerson has spoken out against the
cabal that has by stealth taken over America's
foreign policy. To bring to public light the
machinations of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld
and Condoleezza Rice in subverting rules of
decency and of constitutional legitimacy is but an
indication of how fast recently the seamless cloth
of George W Bush's imperial rule is unraveling.
The president is weakened but not yet a full lame
duck without [the] ability to maneuver.
Nonetheless, his power has flagged to such a point
that that those formerly in his own administration
who kept counsel of their own now find the courage
to speak out. Has a night of long knives begun? Jakob
Cambria (Oct 21, '05) USA
Finally a semblance of sanity
(Promoting US values in Muslim
lands by Ioannis Gatsiounis, Oct 20) on ATol.
Gatsiounis correctly points out [US]
foreign-policy failures and what is needed to win
the hearts and minds of moderate Muslims around
the world. I agree with this strategy and hope
that the Islamophobes will try to learn from their
mistakes in Afghanistan and Iraq. It is poignant
that Muslims were not included in the 9-11
[Commission] report and that the think-tanks
"generally paid scant attention to Muslim
sensibilities, as has most dialogue and literature
emanating from policy circles urging revision to
the country's foreign-policy strategy". Recently
the [think] tanks have hired [people with]
Muslim-sounding names, [but] these "potatoes"
(brown on the outside, white on the inside),
neo-con clones, have been rejected by mainstream
Islam because of the vacuity of any original ideas
and the recitation of the PNAC ([Project] for the
New American Century) Xeroxed and AEI (American
Enterprise Institute) transcribed scripts. [US
Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and
Public Affairs] Karen Hughes got an earful in
Saudi Arabia from assertive, dynamic and prolific
... Saudi businesswomen and professional women who
did not want to be stereotyped as docile and did
not want to be "scantly clad", but were
intelligent, eloquent, aggressive and independent.
"Keeping on in this way runs a serious risk of
emasculating Washington's battle for hearts and
minds, as we saw the Tuesday before last in Saudi
Arabia," [Gatsiounis writes]. I disagree with
Gatsiounis that American values are different than
Islamic values. Imam Faisal in his book What's Right with Islam
says what Muslims around the world know: "The
USA is the most 'sharia compliant' country in the
world." This means that it is a country of good,
hard-working people, where honesty, rule of law,
and justice [are] available to all. Those who are
scared of Muslims on American shores must know
that Muslims sailed with [Christopher] Columbus
(Panzone brothers), before Columbus (Admiral
[Zheng] He) and after Columbus (25% of slaves) to
America. Those who still [cling] to the
now-debunked "clash of civilizations" must realize
that the USA is a conglomeration of
Judeo-Christian-Islamic and other values ... Moin
Ansari (Oct 21, '05)
In his article Is China headed for a social
'red alert'? [Oct 20] Francesco Sisci exhibits
a deep understanding of the Chinese reality, both
her past and her present. No less a revolutionaire
than Sun Yat-sen remarked that the Chinese nation
was a "tray of loose sand". And even Mao Zedong
remarked to the Japanese leader [Kakuei] Tanaka
that he had to thank the Japanese invasion of
China for his success in uniting the Chinese
people in a communist revolution. This was his way
of confessing to how difficult it would be to
unite the Chinese people in a national course.
This Chinese reality also explains the very
justified fear of Deng Xiaoping and the Dengists
who came after him for the "Chinese chaos". A
revolution of whatever ideology would most likely
end up in complete chaos or extreme tyranny.
Either of these outcomes would be disastrous for
China. This is a lesson that "democrats" both
within China and abroad had still not learned.
Even a thoroughly Westernized intellectual and
politician like Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore did not
fail to see this Chinese reality. Long before the
rise of Deng Xiaoping, Mr Lee remarked that the
Chinese nation [was] a mosaic on which Mao Zedong
had tried to draw his "one size fit all" communist
revolutionary plan. But, in Mr Lee's words, 'When
the rain comes, it (the Plan) will all be washed
away." According to Mr Lee, the Chinese are
individualists and are not "groupies" like the
Japanese or the Russians. Even Margaret Thatcher
came to realize that the Chinese are natural-born
"capitalists". For the last 20-odd years Chinese
capitalists [have] come into their own. What the
CCP [Chinese Communist Party] needs to do from now
on is to maintain this particularly Chinese
"capitalist chaos", which in my opinion is far
easier to maintain than the other kinds of chaos.
Is this Chinese "capitalist chaos" all that
different from the American one a century or so
ago? Chan Ah Tee Malaysia (Oct 21,
'05)
L
Kirchoff's analogy (letter, Oct 20) is specious. A
better analogy between China-Japan tension and
Nazi Germany would be more like this: Heinrich
Himmler filing a lawsuit against someone who
killed Himmler's uncle. And this lawsuit is filed
while Himmler is sending people to concentration
camps where they will be starved and gassed. As a
part of the lawsuit, Himmler wants the family of
the defendant to condemn him, while at the same
time Himmler is planning to steal from this family
some of their wealth (like natural-gas
reservoirs). Wouldn't such a trial be absurd
because Himmler is killing millions while seeking
revenge for past offenses? Isn't it more important
to prevent the ongoing genocide of Tibetans,
rather than dwelling on past offenses? As for "war
criminals", all wars have them. Mao Zedong was a
war criminal for Tibetans - so how come the
Chinese venerate him? Was it not a war crime to
annihilate Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Dresden etc? They
how come Harry Truman is not demonized? Why should
the Japanese be singled out for worshiping the
spirit of the men who fought for their motherland?
Why is the dead Japanese Empire any more evil than
the current Chinese empire of the Chinese
Communist Party - when 60 million Chinese died
unnatural deaths under the CCP? I ask again: Is it
not better to stop the ongoing murder of the
Tibetan nation rather than focus on memories of
past offenses? Apology is given to victims, not to
murderers. I also wish to write about Kenneth
Tennyson's pejorative letter (Oct 20), where it
seems that Indian writers just get his goat. While
his (like Seattle Frank's) infantile discomfort
made me laugh, I would like to tell him that Swati
Kundu's article [Global handset majors answer
India's call, Oct 20] did mention the
"low-base effect", and mobile-phone sales in 2005
are expected to be 35 million in India) and 85
million in China, but sales are flattening out in
China. A low-base effect and high growth [are]
certainly a lot better than a low base and little
growth. As for the Indian navy, it uses a small
VSTOL [vertical/short takeoff and landing]
aircraft carrier commissioned by the UK in 1959
and decommissioned in 1984 before being sold to
India. India has started construction of its own
aircraft carrier while acquiring a Russian one
(1982 Kiev class). Apart from the USA and Russia,
I do not believe that there is any other navy
today that can beat the Indian navy within
500-1,000 miles of the Indian coast. Brij Chicago, Illinois (Oct 21,
'05)
Syed
Saleem Shahzad: I read with great interest your
[Oct 20] article Waging jihad against
disaster. Several reports have highlighted the
role that militants have played in the aftermath
of the earthquake as well as the possibility that
the disaster may have been a serious blow to their
organizations. It's difficult from this distance
(ie, just reading press reports) to assess the
extent that certain groups such as Jamaatud Dawa
[JD] are playing in the affected areas. As I read
over one report by the UPI [United Press
International] international editor Claude
Salhani, who wrote: "Unless the West acts very
fast, areas of rural Pakistan affected by [the]
devastating earthquake will turn into a breeding
ground for Islamist recruiters looking to sign up
jihadis from among the hundreds of thousands of
victims. This crisis should be treated with the
same sense of urgency as the war on terrorism," I
couldn't help but wonder if this, while it may be
true on some level, was also a bit of an alarmed
and exaggerated cry. I believe that groups such as
Jamaat-e-Islami [JI] have helped out in natural
disasters before (such as in Indonesia after the
tsunami struck), but can one assume that while
they did indeed help out and may have done some
proselytizing/dawa on the side, the people they
helped naturally became persuaded by their
ideologies? I suppose in the case of Kashmir it's
a little different because it's a focus region for
militants. The question that's been running
through my mind is, "Yes, the militants were out
and about helping within an hour of the
earthquake, but over time dozens of other
organizations and NGOs have been on the spot as
well. Why would Kashmiris be more persuaded to
become militants simply because of their contact
with JD or JI, when they may have had just as much
contact with the army relief units or Eidhi
Foundation?" In short, my questions would be: To
what extent do you think that militant groups'
influence will have extended because of their
relief efforts? And to what extent has it been
broken because of the disaster? Nadia
Shoeb Graduate
Student, Georgetown University Washington, DC (Oct 21,
'05)
Though non-governmental
organizations are supplying goods to quake
victims, the fact is that the mujahideen are
perhaps the only ones who survived and, more
important, stayed on the ground. All other
organizations, including Jamaat-i-Islami Azad
Kashmir suffered a lot in term of human losses;
otherwise, all political liberal forces in Kashmir
either already had homes in Islamabad or left the
region immediately after the earthquake.
Naturally, in such situations mujahideen would get
sympathy, but some section of the press is
inferring too much that this kind of service would
turn Kashmir into a breeding ground for radicals.
The Kashmiri struggle has a history of more than
70 years (well beyond the partition of British
India). Assess through the pages of history the
contribution of people living in Muzaffarabad and
people living in Srinagar and you will find that
active players have always been on Srinagar's
side. - Syed Saleem
Shahzad (Oct 21, '05)
Great article in Asia Times
Online about the mujahideen and Pakistan's
earthquake [Waging jihad against
disaster, Oct 20]. Relationships are being
forged there now that will last a lifetime. John
G Scherb (Oct 21, '05)
M Ramdas in his mail to ATol
(Oct 20) built many capricious sepulchers of
so-called Kashmiri pundits over the graves of
thousands of innocent Muslims who have been
brutally and inhumanly massacred by the bestial
Indian military for many years ... No arguments
could debunk that at present Kashmiri Muslims are
in a state of war to gain their much-cherished
freedom from the clutches of a culpable Indian
government. The Muslims in Kashmir stay like
refugees in their own homeland, subjugated by the
laws of the jungle and betrayed by the traitors
who go by the name "Kashmiri Pundits". If the
mentality of Indians remains so hypocritical ... I
guess there cannot be any genuine peace between
India and Pakistan ... Mohd Salekun Noor UAE (Oct 21,
'05)
I
have never felt so disgusted and abhorrent after
reading M Ramdas' letter of October 20. When the
whole world is crying tears for the victims of the
earthquake disaster, he is indulging in gutter
politics ... At a time when a gesture of
reconciliation would be most welcoming, he has
taken the opportunity to blow his whistle to
gather his mendacious compatriots to spread hate
against those who are trying save lives and
provide the survivors with daily amenities to
reduce their sufferings. Thousands of innocent
men, women and children are fighting for every
breath to survive in horrendous conditions and
sadly, we have amongst us people who are trying to
propagate revulsion for the sake of their silly
ethos ... Saqib Khan London, England (Oct 21,
'05)
In
response to Wombat, Chah Ah Tee, L Kirchoff and
Jennifer [letters below] regarding my comments on
the article Koizumi plays it his way
[Oct 18]: they all have pertinent points regarding
the brutality of the Japanese Empire during World
War II. But they all missed the point regarding
China's role since the end of that war. Jennifer
points [out] that the Chinese deserve an apology
from Japan for [its] role in the massive invasion
and subjugation of the Chinese during World War
II. But she (nor the others) never mention that
the Tibetans too deserve even more from the
Chinese government. After the war China not only
invaded Tibet and destroyed her culture and
carried genocidal acts on the Tibetans, [it] also
invaded India and annexed part of Indian
territory. In the case of Japan the perpetrators
were tried in an international tribunal and many
were sentenced to death, others to life, and still
others followed the [tradition of] suicide by the
Samurai sword. Not so with the Chinese leaders,
chief of them being Mao [Zedong], who orchestrated
the invasion and annexation of Tibet and part of
India and was responsible for the Great Leap
Forward and the Cultural Revolution, which
resulted in the genocidal death tens of millions
of Chinese and whose tomb sits in the vast
Tiananmen Square. [Neither] he nor his cohorts
were tried in an international court for their
crimes. Some of them are still ruling from Beijing
dreaming of those "rosy" days when non-Chinese
were expendable and their lands confiscated. I am
not being sarcastic in this statement because the
Chinese leadership still has that attitude now in
the year 2005 as they threaten Taiwan [with] a
Tibet-style invasion and annexation of Taiwan if
Taiwan's leaders dare to declare independence and
guarantee freedom and democracy to [their] people
... Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 21, '05)
By calling Junichiro Koizumi
a "great leader" for visiting a war-criminal
shrine, Tatsuo Sasaki ([letter] Oct 19) certainly
speaks for a good part of the Japanese population,
especially the younger generation (remember last
month's landslide parliamentary election victory
of Koizumi?). Their argument is: we are a proud
nation with our own history and tradition; leave
us alone when we follow our own rituals and
remember our ancestors. Who can blame them for
that? We have also seen quite a few World War II
Japanese veterans visiting China each year to
apologize for what they did during the war. They
and people like letter writer Kikuharu Ikeda (Oct
20) definitely represent a large number of
peace-loving Japanese. What neither the Yasukuni
visit supporters nor opponents in Japan seem to
understand is that it has nothing to do with
regular Japanese citizens. It's the prime
minister, stupid (to use an American expression)!
Nobody would blame Hideki Tojo's children and
grandchildren for whatever way they choose to pay
tribute to their father or grandfather. But for
someone who happens to wear the title of prime
minister of a country, it's a different story,
because that title goes with responsibility and
projects the image of a nation. Few people outside
Japan care about Koizumi's hippie outlook or
whether he is a good husband/father or not, as
many Japanese voters certainly would. The world
outside Japan does care how he leads Japan, in one
direction or another. In this respective, Koizumi
is hardly a qualified world leader ... Koizumi
refuses even to sacrifice his so-called personal
"belief" and "integrity" for the benefit of his
country, including a UN Security Council seat,
better political and economic relations with its
Asian neighbors, China's and Korea's more amicable
handling of their territorial disputes, or even
their support for Japan's demand for the return of
the Northern Territories from Russia. Raymond Cui Beijing, China (Oct 21,
'05)
Raymond Cui [letter, Oct 20]
gives the impression that there is a thriving free
press in China. Critical articles may have begun
to appear in the press, but China is still a harsh
tyranny. Daring editors and reporters have been
jailed just for publishing the truth. The
"communists" ruthlessly crush anyone trying to
organize workers to resist exploitation by the
sweatshop barons ... No matter how many different
excuses are made by the expat community, China
today is simply a fascist dictatorship, much like
Imperial Japan or Chiang Kai-shek's Republic of
China. The major difference is that the Chinese
communists have been astonishingly successful at
eradicating almost all vestiges of China's
culture. Scholars were exterminated soon after the
revolution. The physical remnants of China's
culture continue to be replaced by concrete
abominations. And the universities are filled with
people with an embarrassing ignorance of China's
classical language and civilization. Were it not
for Chiang Kai-shek's rule in Taiwan and British
rule in Hong Kong, China's classical culture would
have been totally lost by now. G
Travan California, USA
(Oct 21, '05)
Frank thunders [letter, Oct
18]: "If India wants to gauge itself, it should
look to its history. China should not be India's
gauge." Well, let India's 1 billion-plus people
decide how to gauge their country. Arrogant
[people] from China cannot have that right. Let
the Chinese communists first give rights to their
own people ... For Frank's information, I and
millions of Indians like me are investing in the
Indian private sector, and at the same time giving
to charity organizations, so he better stop
arrogantly assuming things and accusing an entire
mass of people. Let me tell Frank about one more
thing - India has the largest system of
reservations and quotas for the underprivileged.
This is a reality which Frank simply cannot shrug
off. No, things are not perfect. But most relevant
Indian authors are at least being honest by
criticizing our own governments. Having said that,
things have been gradually changing for the better
in the past four decades. Poverty has gone down
and literacy improved, more so in the past decade
when India opened up its economy. This means the
repeated attacks by regressive-minded communists
against the middle class, upper castes and
capitalism are ill-founded, and are actually
counterproductive. It is the corrupt and inept
public sector, [which] controls infrastructure,
that is the real culprit, not the middle class.
Most middle-class people are ordinary white-collar
hard-working people and want poverty to be
eliminated, and more jobs to be created for
everyone. However, if Frank and his Frankensteins
continue to vilify people like me and others by
portraying us as anti-poor, and plan to steal our
hard-earned money, yes, we will retaliate. As
Mohan rightly pointed out [letter, Oct 19], China
by and large does not have a free press. Yet no
Indian letter writer here seems to be saying bad
things about millions of Chinese people. All we
have said is against the regime and its policies,
which Frank is unable to digest because of the
typical intolerant and bigoted communist
mentality. Like a little kid itching to throw [a]
stone, he cites the unfortunate condition of
Malaysia's ethnic Indians. Frank, trust me, you
don't even want to go there - the Chinese people
are spread all over the world, in part due to the
repressive regime at home, and it is hardly a
difficult task to find Chinese groups that are in
less than envious positions. Rakesh India (Oct 21,
'05)
We
are thankful to Frank [letter, Oct 20] for
allowing [letter writer] Mohan title to his
opinions. What does Indians trying to be wanna-bes
have to do with Frank or China? All humans will
always "wanna be" something better than they are.
I am sure Frank would "wanna be" more intelligent,
too. Frank chose not to hear the comments made by
another writer about India's common man throwing
out BJP [the Bharatiya Janata Party] perceived to
be favoring the "upper-caste Internet elite"
through the ... "anarchic" democratic system.
Frank, for the last time, no one is saying there
are no problems in India; no one is saying India
is better than China. Some readers were
highlighting the differences and strengths in
certain fields of each country over the other. So
(take some pills and) relax. Partha Australia (Oct 21,
'05)
It
is not that [letter writer] Frank has touched any
raw nerve but it is nauseating to read his racist
rants about Indians. He is guilty of all things he
accuses Indians of. He writes in English and not
Cantonese or Mandarin or what have you in China.
He lives in Seattle, Washington, which is not [in
China]. I am sure he preserves his dignity and
honor by putting all the greenbacks in the trash
bin and transacts only in yuan. Even his name is
not Chinese. So what on earth is he advocating to
Indians? According to him China is superior to
India as it won more medals in the Olympics and
sent [men into] space. But then, is China inferior
to others who win more medals than China and have
sent more men and women to space? ... China did
invent gunpowder but the white man invented the
gun while you just used it [gunpowder] to scare
birds. The same fireworks the lowly white man
turned into rocket science which you so
(shamelessly?) use ... Sure, Chinese invented
paper, but had to wait for the lowly white man to
turn it into tissue paper for you to use. Was Karl
Marx Chinese for China to adopt communism? So what
is your itch if India adopted democracy? ... D
Bhardwaj Illinois, USA
(Oct 21, '05)
The editors of Asia Times
Online need to filter out repetitive rants in
their Letters section. How on earth can Frank
claim that his arguments have not been refuted,
less so accepted? On the contrary, my constant
portrayal of a markedly common past shared by
India and China and the inherent hypocrisy
underlying his arguments have been met with
nothing but deafening silence. He argues in his
[Oct 20] letter that India did not invent anything
of substance. I quote Albert Einstein when he was
awarded the Nobel Prize: "We owe a lot to the
Indians who taught us how to count, without which
no worthwhile scientific discovery could be made."
What about the path-breaking work in astronomy in
ancient India by the likes of Aryabhatta and
Brahmagupta, who showed through their mathematical
models the Earth's rotation and revolution? This
was many years before Galileo. What about Panini's
grammar, which forms the basis of modern
Indo-European grammar? What about Baudhayana's
proving of the theorem that took centuries for
Pythagoras to figure out? What about ayurveda? If
Frank has heard of none of these, he must have
heard of the Kama Sutra. I consider myself a
"common Indian" - the one which Frank claims stays
quiet, resigning himself to his fate. He'd be
surprised at the high turnout rates in Indian
elections, especially in the rural areas. Indians
are empowered people living in a free society, and
they know how to express their will. Just recall
the 2004 elections. This discussion is fast
sinking to the levels of pure mudslinging,
treading dangerously on the line between argument
and racism. I hope sanity prevails before the line
is crossed, by Frank of course. This discussion
belongs to The Edge and not Letters,
which should be for discussion articles in the
newspaper. Aruni Mukherjee (Oct 21,
'05)
Frank from Seattle, please
stop talking to the Indians. That they don't leave
China alone doesn't mean the Chinese have to be
sucked into this meaningless low-level brawl. What
they say doesn't hurt China or her people in any
real sense. If that's how they find pleasure in
their lives then leave them be. Lloyd
Lan Beijing, China
(Oct 21, '05)
Kenneth Tennyson's letter
[Oct 20] talks about India hype by Indian authors,
but others have written positively about India as
well, most recently Tom Friedman in his book The
World Is Flat. If one were to objectively look for
today's "top Asian economic story", it would have
to be India's ascendancy. A close second would be
fretting if China will implode, because it went
through its own hype cycle seven to 10 years ago
already, just as Japan Inc had its moment in the
'70s and '80s. This is the nature of the news
business, and there's no conspiracy here. In the
big-picture historical perspective, a Google
search produced an article in the International
Herald Tribune (by a Japanese author, to set Ken's
mind at rest) [reporting] that in 1820, China
accounted for 29% of global GDP and India for 16%.
So what we're seeing today is actually a
correction of a short-term misstep by these two
regional powers, and working to a more natural
equilibrium. Jonnavithula ("Jon")
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 21, '05)
Aruni Mukherjee [letter, Oct
20] decided to compare China's transition to
market economy to that of India's West Bengal
state. While both of them might be run by
nominally communist governments, the comparison
seems to end there. Perhaps I might take the
opportunity to remind her what happens in West
Bengal under the so-called communist regime. Coal
companies that are economically unviable are kept
"alive" as a way to ensure employment. So are
numerous other industries. Besides wasting good
money on bad projects, keeping alive non-viable
companies also creates enormous amounts of
"environmental" waste in terms of offices,
factories, raw materials and so forth. The list
goes on. While [Chief Minister] Buddhadev
Bhattacharya might be considered "progressive" by
West Bengal standards, until he fixes the problem
of issuing ration cards to illegal Bangladeshis he
is not even scratching the surface. For true
sustainable development to occur, instead of
dabbling in "political" aspects of land reform,
Buddhadev might spend his time (and taxpayers'
money) to improve rural infrastructure to ensure
better access to markets for rural goods. I
actually have a very good example for comparison.
The Gujarat model for milk distribution would be
one such example, where milk that [would be]
otherwise wasted is being converted into other
products or sold where needed. In fact, if India
were a true "federation", good money from western
and southern states would not have been thrown to
basket cases like West Bengal and instead would
have been channeled into more viable projects.
This is what I would term the First Law of
Sustainable Development. Rocky (Oct 21,
'05)
To R
Davoodi [letter, Oct 19]: Bravo! Lovely, accurate,
and sharply to the point re Spengler's fashionably
cynical droolings. Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 21,
'05)
Is China headed for a social
'red alert'? [Oct 20] is another excellent
article by Francesco Sisci. It doesn't contain the
usual bias and subtle China-bashing from the
regular Western media. Instead, it gives an
insightful big-picture view of the true situation,
the government's stance on the problems and
possible solutions to deal with them. [I]
certainly wish he [would write] more often. James
Chandra Sydney,
Australia (Oct 20, '05)
At the risk of
oversimplification, it could be argued that
Francesco Sisci's article [Is China headed for a social
'red alert'? Oct 20] on protests in
"socialist" China over the increasingly visible
inequality levels (higher than in capitalist
America and Britain) [is] a testimony to what an
opportunity cost China is incurring due to its
opaque political system. The value of
qualification, deliberation, scrutiny and
accountability are of utmost importance when it
comes to realpolitik
or political economy, especially in an
important issue such as economic transition. A
comparative situation could be seen in India's
West Bengal, where Chief Minister Buddhadev
Bhattacharya is receiving flak from the opposition
over laying a red carpet to foreign capital, or
the government in Delhi, which faces questions
from its communist allies in parliament. Such
practices might delay reforms, but they will
ensure that all arguments for and against have
been laid on the table, and the consequent
decision has a greater probability of being
justified in the long term. China's environmental
degradation, raging inequality, non-performing
assets in banks and a rampant cadre-company nexus
are all attributes of translucency. As the author
mentions, it is only when the party decides to
unveil fresh data that the world gets to know what
lies dormant behind the gleaming Pudong skyline.
We need an "Argumentative Chinese", and we need
her now. Aruni Mukherjee (Oct 20,
'05)
Re
Is China headed for a social
'red alert'? [Oct 20]: The People's Republic
of China is driving in the fast lane to full-bloom
capitalism. To pacify internal unrest and the
growing gap between the rich and the growing army
of impoverished workers and peasants, the vanguard
of the revolution, the Communist Party is
encouraging settling of the poor western provinces
and overwhelming the ethnic populations of Tibet
and Xinjiang. In this, the leadership is taking a
leaf out of the Chairman Mao [Zedong]'s book on
the Cultural Revolution. Yet frontiers close and
the stage is set for putative class warfare in the
classical Marxist definition, as the country
rapidly industrializes, accumulates capital,
expands exports, and sets the foundation for the
triumph of finance capitalism. Jakob
Cambria USA (Oct 20,
'05)
Pepe
Escobar has an accurate take on the trial of
Saddam Hussein [The occupier's trial, Oct
20]. It's a kangaroo court that will never have
legitimacy as long as the US occupies the country
and controls all government action. It is probable
that Saddam Hussein has committed criminal acts
and if this is so, let a fair trial under
international rules find him guilty and take the
appropriate action. If George Bush and his cohorts
were brought to trial for all of their criminal
acts, they would be branded as butchers and
murderers of a caliber worse than Saddam Hussein.
Of course, this applies to most of the US
presidents in my lifetime. The demise of the US
and its warmongering as well as its foreign policy
based on greed and control can't come soon enough
for me. The US government is the world's biggest
hypocrite, hiding behind the Protestant Bible and
an extremely ignorant population. The trial of
Saddam Hussein will be another public relations
coup for George Bush - nothing more. Ken
Moreau New Orleans,
Louisiana (Oct 20, '05)
The commentary on the dollar
by [Jack] Crooks [Daily forex commentary,
Oct 20] lives not up to the journalistic standards
I got accustomed to when reading Asian Times
[Online]. It is a stylistic mess. I would like to
stress that I do not write this because of the
content of the article. Actually, Asia Times
[Online] has been forecasting a fall of the dollar
for a very long time. Analytically it would be
very interesting to write an article [on] why this
isn't happening so far. Dr
Arthur Bruls Nijmegen,
Netherlands (Oct 20, '05)
In reference to Waging jihad against
disaster by Syed Saleem Shahzad (Oct 20): The
author once again ... fails to tell the whole
story, or maybe he sincerely doesn't get the
latest news in Pakistan. Allow me to break the
news to him: the same "jihadis of mercy" in
Kashmir who were busy dishing out help to their
co-religionists were busy slitting throats of
innocent Hindus (mostly women and children) in the
name of their god and freedom. Furthermore, let us
not forget (Saleem Shahzad never mentioned that,
as the bulk of people are Hindus anyway) the
thousands of Kashmiri Pundits who are ethnically
cleansed every day from Kashmir and driven into
squalid refugee camps in New Delhi. Ironically the
Indian government (Manmohan Singh and Natwar
Singh, are you listening?) has all kinds of tents,
medicines and stuff to send over to Pakistan but
has forgotten its own poor refugees driven out by
fanatic Muslim radicals from their rightful homes.
What a shame! Now these "merciful jihadi" wolves
have turned to sheep, have donned a new garb of
butchers turned to doctors, nurses and cooks
overnight. They can't fool us - their propaganda
(Syed Saleem Shahzad is a good mouthpiece) is to
get the Muslim public sympathy for their devilish
cause, hide their bloodstained hands and continue
their killing mission with their Pakistani ISI
[Inter-Service Intelligence] masters ... M
Ramdas San Francisco,
California (Oct 20, '05)
Since I last wrote you, it
would seem that your articles have improved
somewhat but are still lacking in their neutrality
and accuracy. Most of the articles written by
Indian authors continue to be strewn [with] biased
statements, withholding of information, [and]
misinformed facts, or are plainly wrong. It would
seem to me that this hype that currently is
occurring about India being the next great
investment place is being produced mainly by
Indian authors from India or Western authors who
are writing after discussion with Indian authors.
Case in point is the article India bids to rule the
waves [Oct 19] by Ramtanu Maitra, whose only
claim to fame in the journalist world is being an
"independent journalist and researcher". What
exactly is that? What are his credentials that you
have let him publish in your journal? The title
itself suggests a biased frame of mind and is
sensationalist. Second, it is unlikely that India
can rule the waves given the fact that the Indian
navy, like most Third World navies, is barely even
able to maintain coastal protection against modern
countries. It utilizes an aircraft carrier from
the World War II era that other modern navies have
shelved due to the outdatedness of the technology.
Another article is by Swati Lodh Kundu, Global handset majors answer
India's call [Oct 20], which states that the
Indian market is the largest in terms of cell
phones, automobiles, travel and tourism, DVDs,
digicams and laptops. The only reason it is the
fastest [growing] market by percentage is because
there was basically no market to begin with a few
years ago. And guess what? The author is a student
at [a] Calcutta university. It just seems to me
that if you wish to become a respected journal,
you should at least screen out the [biases] and
credentials (or lack thereof) of your authors. Kenneth Tennyson (Oct 20,
'05)
The
mini-bio on Swati Lodh Kundu's article said she
"has a master's in economics from the University
of Calcutta". - ATol
In relation to the coverage
and discussions on [Malaysia's minority Indians
drift, Oct 19], I would also blame it on the
use of or non-use of the nation's assets in
assisting all the population and not just the
selected few. While the New Economic Policy was a
good idea to equalize Malay wealth, it has been
implemented recklessly and discriminately.
Taxpayers' assets have been used without any
thoughts for fair distribution, and none are
bigger then Petronas. [Supposedly] Petronas
contributes billions of dollars in government
revenue and we should be thankful to it. I beg to
differ and am sure many others do as well.
Petronas is not Shell or Esso, which are
essentially private companies funded by private
funds, so using the tax and dividend scenario is
acceptable to gather how much they contribute to
government/tax coffers. Petronas is ... basically
a government asset that has been corporatized
without any revenue in return ... Petronas was
handed free to the group of people who are running
it now. The government did not sell it to the
public such as the BP scenario in the UK. So all
the revenue and profit belong to the government of
Malaysia as well as the taxpayer and public. To
argue that Petronas pays massive dividends and
taxes is confusing the issue, as 100% of the
profit and cash flow should remain with the public
... Nation's Wealth Petaling Jaya, Malaysia (Oct 20,
'05)
This
in reference to The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! [Oct 12] by Spengler and agreeing
[with] Moin Ansari's reply of October 19. First of
all, I would ask all non-Muslim writers, before
attempting to write on any aspect of Islam, [to]
study it with clear and honest mind and not ... in
order to sully Islam for the sake of perfidious
verbosity and fun ... Let me tell Spengler that
Shi'ism is not a religion but a sect; it is not
theology but an ideology. The difference between
the two sects, Sunnis and Shi'as, is based on a
political question, whether the succession to the
Prophet should take place by election or by
inheritance among the close relatives of the
Prophet Mohammed. This became a question of dogma
to the Shi'ites and the schism split into many
branches of its own and many civil wars ... Saqib
Khan London, England
(Oct 20, '05)
I won't argue with Spengler
about the meaning of the Muslim sacrifice
[Spengler responds, letter, Oct 17]. However,
while I have not read the book he reviewed on Late
Antiquity, I have spent a fair amount of time
excavating at Late Antique sites in Israel, and
have visited many others. Somehow, there are just
a butt-load of villages, churches and synagogues
dated to the Byzantine period by coins, pottery
[and] inscriptions. They often had impressive
cisterns and dew-catching systems for agriculture
in desert regions which today seem utterly
deserted. Friends who've done research in Jordan
tell me it's the same there: dense settlement.
Many of the Hellenistic cities, like Hippos, were
not abandoned until the mid-700s, when earthquakes
seem to have destroyed the aqueducts. By the way,
on the subject of intellectual contact, Spengler
should visit Petra some day, and see just how
Hellenized an Arab kingdom could be at the time of
the High Roman Empire. The Umayyad palaces are
impressive, too. When South Arabia is better known
archeologically, I suspect that it will turn out
to be one of the great primal civilizations, like
Egypt and Mesopotamia, India and China, with lots
of commercial and intellectual relationships in
every period. Lester Ness (Oct 20,
'05)
This
letter refers to the response [letters, Oct 18] of
Tatsuo Sasaki and Chrysantha Wijeyasingha [to] Koizumi plays it his way,
(Oct 18). The Second World War was a conflict
different to the first and other major wars in at
least two respects. First, the fascist movements,
which included Imperial Japan at that time, made
extreme nationalism a central theme of their
governmental policy and carried out deliberately
planned and methodical [prosecution] of genocide.
While genocide is nothing new in human history,
the sheer scale and horror that came with it was
second to none since biblical times. The removal
and suppression of national languages and cultures
in the classrooms, the forced adoption of Japanese
names (for Koreans and Chinese in the northeastern
part of China), the coerced veneration of the
Japanese military and emperor, exploitation of the
occupied populace under extraordinarily brutal and
inhuman conditions and [wholesale] elimination of
large populations. These could only lead
historians to believe that the Japanese policy was
geared to eradication of nations with extreme
prejudice. Being a place for national remembrance,
Yasukuni should never have been the final resting
place of the 14 Class A war criminals, starting
from Hideki Tojo right down to Shigenori Togo.
These 14 persons not only [perpetrated] the
above-mentioned crimes, they also oppressed
heavily the Japanese people by deceiving the
general populace about the true nature of the war,
brainwashing impressionable students with ideas of
nationalistic and racial superiority, arresting
and torturing political opponents at home and
attempting to cow any intellectuals resisting
their policies into submission. While [Japanese
Prime Minister Junichiro] Koizumi may excuse
himself by declaring his intention of
memorializing solely non-war criminals, he should
have dissociated the names of these 14 persons
from national worship by removing their remains
from the shrine. His negligence served only to
enforce the misconception to the Japanese people
that these Hitler-like 14 were true patriots of
the noblest ideals and their acts were anything
but criminal. Politically, his error only
compounded the misunderstanding and tensions now
existing between Japan and her neighbors. On this
point, he is definitely not a great leader ... Wombat Singapore (Oct 20,
'05)
Tatsuo Sasaki's letter
published on October 18 in answering to the
article Koizumi plays it his way
[Oct 18] contributed nothing to the understanding
of the issue at hand. First and foremost I must
state that the act of some Japanese leaders making
a few choice words of apology in the international
arena for the purpose of promoting the Japanese
image of "lover of peace" cut no ice among her
former victims when viewed in the larger context
of the dismal measures adopted so far (let's
assume for argument's sake that there really
[were] such measures) to educate its own citizens
of the true nature of their previous crimes
against humanity. Such reluctance to face up to,
and learn from, history by the Japanese can only
increase the unease felt by many of her neighbors
that when the time is right and the international
environment favorable, the Japanese leaders can
easily redirect the energy of their people in the
pursuit of an imperial agenda. Many Japanese
people believe that invading Korea was good for
the Koreans and the invasion of China was actually
caused by the Chinese themselves, and that the
invasion of Southeast Asia was for the purpose of
liberating these peoples from the colonial rule of
the Europeans. Then what is to stop them from
becoming an imperial power once more, or acting as
the hit men for another imperial power when the
right excuse is available, like "countering
terrorism" or "bringing democracy to
underdeveloped regions of Asia"? Japan cannot be
viewed or treated as a "normal" country unless and
until the Japanese people have a correct view of
history and make sufficient effort to learn from
it. They must be seen by others to have
acknowledged their own past before other people
can believe that the Japanese are ready for a
fresh start as [a] leading nation. One last
observation: the world does not worry about the
Mongolians reliving the dream of Genghis Khan in
spite of their history, but the world cannot be
just as assured about the Japanese. The Mongolians
are no longer capable, but the Japanese are
regarded by many as being capable, willing and
ambitious in this imperial connection. Chan
Ah Tee Malaysia (Oct 20,
'05)
I am
amazed at the illogical excuses readers are
repeatedly using to defend [Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro] Koizumi's visits to the
[Yasukuni] shrine. Tatsuo Sasaki talks of other
nations' (especially China's) respect for the
Japanese war dead in his October 18 letter, yet
did he ever ask himself or Koizumi, what about
Japan showing some respect to [those] who died as
a result of Japanese World War II aggression, the
tens of millions who were killed by those
enshrined in Yasukuni? Did Koizumi ever pay his
respects to the victims of his country's
aggression? By honoring their killers in the
Japanese army at Yasukuni, what is the message
sent to the victims? The aggressor owes the
victim, not the other way around. Japan, a nation
which prides itself on honor and protocol, should
know better. If [the Japanese] had not invaded and
killed so many outside their country, I'm sure no
one outside Japan would care about how the
Japanese honor their dead today. Which brings us
to the issue of China not deserving the right to
protest because of what happened to Tibet, as
raised by Chrysantha Wijeyasingha in his October
18 letter. Pot/kettle? How about apples/oranges?
Take the example of Israel and Jewish World War II
suffering. The UN has repeatedly condemned past
Israeli policy against the Palestinians, yet no
one argues that this "cancels" the rights of the
Jewish people to demand that the memory of the
Holocaust be honored. Imagine [Gerhard] Shroeder
or [Angela] Merkel paying yearly visits to a
shrine that honors [Heinrich] Himmler, [Joseph]
Goebbels and [Hermann] Goering along with other
dead German soldiers. Is that at all defensible,
no matter how anyone feels about Israel today?
After all, didn't the Nazis also die for a
"greater Germany"? Shouldn't the Germans honor
them? Shouldn't others respect the Germans' right
to honor their dead? How many apologies should
suffice to atone for the Holocaust? Seventeen?
Twenty? In the end, the Germans recognized that
World War II was a terrible mistake and they
needed to make restitution and reconcile with
their neighbors. The Japanese need to show by
concrete action that they truly believe the same,
instead of the opposite. L
Kirchhoff (Oct 20, '05)
I have a solution to the
issue of strained relations between the Chinese
and Japanese. Why can't we assemble a committee of
Japanese and Chinese people willing to propose a
strategy of collaboration and peace? We can devise
a proposal to the Japanese government regarding
the inaccuracy of textbooks, proper apologies and
other accommodations that are long overdue. Maybe
the prime minister can show his respects (not to
the war criminals, of course) in privacy. We could
propose a solution to the Chinese government that
would encourage [it] to promote harmony in Asia. I
think communication is important to promote
healing and resolve. It is not in Asia's best
interest to stall these inevitable resolutions for
other generations to bear. We must endure these
burdens now to eliminate hatred. I would be the
first to apologize to the victims if it would
promote peace. Had I lived in World War II times,
I swear I would have died trying to fight against
the Japanese Imperial Army had I known of their
atrocities against humanity. I give my word of
honor that I will fight against those [who] rape
and torture the innocent. You have my assurance
that the Japanese Imperial Army will not commit
those crimes ever again. While this may seem
naive, I believe it is this type of thinking that
encourages friendships and alliances that will
become increasingly important in the upcoming
years. Kikuharu Ikeda (Oct 20,
'05)
AL
[letter, Oct 19]: I just want to ask two
questions: (1) What do you understand about "full
responsibility for history"? (2) When someone
visits Yasukuni it doesn't mean that he or she is
proud of Japanese war criminals. I don't know what
your religion is, but if you have one, you
probably have some kind of prayer for your
ancestors. So don't Japanese people have the right
to pray for the war [dead] and think about the
past, following their own religion? (Religion is a
right, isn't it?) Tatsuo Sasaki (Oct 20,
'05)
I am
responding to DirtyDog's vitriol ([letter] Oct 19)
against me. Instead of discussing any points, you
simply stooped low. I would respond to the
name-calling but am very happy to note that the
American people and the world have seen through
the bigotry and racism that is endemic in your
writings. More than 80% of the American people
like me accept the fact that [the invasion of]
Iraq was a mistake. A tectonic shift is taking
place in the attitudes of Americans. The 15
minutes of fame of the neo-cons is almost over.
With serious indictments, the "groupthink" that
"manufactured consent" in the USA is about to be
decapitated by public will that has seen through
the malaise and lies. Inability to speak truth to
justice is blindness that afflicts some who
neither have the desire nor the conscience to seek
truth. Those who are unable to accept
responsibility for the foreign-policy failures are
condemned to reap the harvest of fire. As my kids
continue to die in Iraq, and as my children
continue to come back in body bags, the body
politic of my country is changing. Islam is the
fastest-growing religion in the world and none of
your letters can or will change that. Islamophobia
will be sent to the dustbins of history, just like
we defeated McCarthyism, and as [we] fight against
anti-Semitism [and] blatant racism in the land of
the free and around the world. Moin
Ansari (Oct 20, '05)
Mohan [letter, Oct 19] is
entitled to his opinions about China. However, I
fail to see [that] China's problems have anything
to do with my arguments. My theories are that most
Indians are taught to be wanna-bes by their
masters. Lower castes want to be the upper castes.
Upper castes want to be the same as their white
masters. This observation is supported by many
historic events, India's reality and the massive
displays of servitude from Indian writers at ATol.
For example, none of the things Indians are proud
of belonged to or [were] created by Indians. I
also proved that India's democratic system only
works for the rich and powerful. To most of the
common Indians, India is anarchy. So far, none of
the Indian writers [disproved] my theory. They
confirmed my observations either [by] direct
agreements or by silence. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 20,
'05)
Is
there any way of being rid of [letter writer]
Frank's tedious, pretentious and gratuitous
sermons? It has gone beyond the ridiculous and
boring. Please shunt him off to the forum, where there are
plenty of participants who will no doubt be happy
to engage him in a slanging contest. Kivalur (Oct 20,
'05)
While I sympathize with some
of the Indian readers' frustration about [letter
writer] Frank's seemingly apathetic criticism of
India's social problems and agree that China is a
country with its own share of problems, it is my
impression that many [letter] writers on ATol,
while hammering on China's lack of a free press,
are themselves victims of Cold War-type propaganda
of Western media. Mohan (Oct 19) disserved ATol's
readers by misinterpreting China's ID system as
one to prevent poor people from getting into the
cities. It could not be further from the truth.
The ID card in China, like the Social Security
Number in the US, is for people to provide the
proper identity when they apply for jobs, go to
schools, order phone services, buy airline
tickets, check into hotels, etc. It does not
prevent anyone from traveling or staying in any
city in China, whether you are poor or rich. To
learn about China's social problems, you do not
have to go to a local college in Germany or the US
and get second-hand information from Chinese
students, the easier way is to learn a bit of
Chinese and read one of thousands of Chinese
newspapers published in China (yes, mostly owned
by the Communist Party), many of which also have
an online version, and indulge yourself in the
endless coverage on official corruption, police
brutality, poverty, crimes, crisis of the medical
system, drug trafficking, death penalties for
money-embezzling bank officials ... Raymond Cui Beijing, China (Oct 20,
'05)
Or go
to Asia Times Online's own Chinese-language site,
www.atchinese.com - ATol
Jonnavithula Sreekanth writes
[letter, Oct 17]: "It seems that [Joseph
Nagarya's] definition of 'bigots and racists' is a
bit expansive, such as eliminating 'civil rights
and labor etc protections'." In fact, Mr
Sreekanth, immediately after Hurricane Katrina,
[US President George W] Bush's first acts were to
suspend the Davis-Bacon Act, a 1931 federal
statute that requires recipients of federal
contracts to pay [the] prevailing wage, ie, a
minimum wage, and affirmative-action requirements
for those same recipients, in the area devastated.
Thus those who lost everything are denied even
minimum wage. All but roughly 1% of federal
contracts were given, without bid, to Halliburton
and the like. Federal requirements are that ... a
minimum 5% be granted to small and minority
businesses. It isn't my definition of bigots and
racists which is "expansive", but rather the
actions of Bush and his pro-apartheid gang. Yet Mr
Sreekanth wonders "if affirmative action in its
present form is still helpful". It is certainly
not helpful to those it is intended to protect
from indentured servitude (which the constitution
prohibits) when it is suspended in behalf of the
mega-wealthy, such as Halliburton - which is not a
problem with the law, but rather with the
suspension of it. As for plumbers charging more
than Sreekanth is willing to pay: for one, welcome
to the US, where one should not expect to either
be paid, or pay, slave wages; for another, he is
willing to pay more than necessary via, as
example, an Alaskan corporation to build housing
for the evacuees in Alabama, Louisiana, and
Mississippi - to a company in Georgia. One would
think the taxpayer would be hiring those who lost
everything, instead of yet again giving no-bid
contracts to Bush-connected corporations
everywhere else but in the affected states ... Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 20,
'05)
I
want to comment on your editorial board. I used to
believe that the policy of Asia Times Online is
different from those of other newspapers I usually
read in India and the US. But now I believe it is
the same; the fact is that it is the same
everywhere. The uniform policy of the editorial
board of any newsmagazine/paper, including Asia
Times Online, is that they want their readers to
read their point of view. They do not care [about
freedom of expression] - does it exist anywhere? I
responded to one of your letter writers who
expressed his opinion on Hindu temples ... but you
did not allow me to express my opinion because my
view did not suit your line of thinking - is
[that] not it? My response [was] not derogatory at
all, at least as compared to what your readers
generally write. It is my habit to read many
newspapers in a day - New York Times, BBC, or
Times of India, and Asia Times Online; I rarely
write a letter to them or to you. This time, I
thought of making you realize that you are
hypocritical because other news boards do not
claim they are fair, but you have claimed it in
one to two of your comments in response to some of
readers' letters. Although my real intention is to
make your readers know about your dubious policy,
which I might not, because you have control over
as what news should be transmitted to your
readers. Shekhar Chicago, Illinois (Oct 20,
'05)
We
receive many letters and cannot publish them all;
those that are too long, rambling or poorly
written, or are deliberately offensive, stand the
best chance of being rejected. - ATol
Ramtanu Mitra's otherwise
comprehensive article [India bids to rule the
waves, Oct 19] has one point where it needs to
be updated: India has recently indicated that it
is going to re-route the proposed gas pipeline
through its northeast rather than go through
Bangladesh. Presumably this is due to Delhi's
dissatisfaction with Dhaka's security
arrangements, and its frustration [at] the
latter's delaying tactics over the deal. This
potentially significant development has been
ignored by the author. Frank [letter, Oct 18]: if
not learning English means preserving your "pride
and dignity", shall we conclude that China is
hell-bent on giving up its store of these, as its
leaders go all out to increase English proficiency
in the country? Aruni Mukherjee (Oct 19,
'05)
[Re]
Malaysia's minority Indians
drift [Oct 19]: Even in the days of the
British Malay states, Indians remained at the
bottom of society in the main. Independence hardly
changed this. Independent Malaysia simply took
over where the British left off. The Malay
majority instituted and institutionalized an
apartheid policy based on ethnicity, and so the
Indian minority remained where it always was - at
the bottom of the totem pole. That policy remains
firmly in place. The sops [that] Malays, for
example, throw to Indians, who have 5% of seats
reserved at the university, are risible at best
and blatantly offensive to standards of decency at
worst. Little wonder delinquency is high, and half
the felons in prison are Indian. Are these the
Asian values which former prime minister Mahathir
[Mohamad] so proudly lauded? Jakob
Cambria USA (Oct 19,
'05)
Malaysia's minority Indians
drift [Oct 19] delivered a loud message that
pride and dignity are very important. What else
can cause 8% of the population to account for a
disproportionate 15% of juvenile delinquents, to
commit 40% of all violent crime and to make up
nearly 50% of all convicts in prisons? Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 19,
'05)
This
is with reference to The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! by Spengler (Oct 12) ... I really
did not know why Asian Times Online allows
Spengler to constantly deride the religion of
Islam with impunity ... He says, "Never before has
the Shi'ite current in Islam, the religion of the
[disfranchised], held power in the Persian Gulf."
This is historically incorrect. What would one
call the Abbasid caliphs who eliminated the
Umayyads? The Sassanid and the Ismaili governments
were also Shi'a. Muslims do not have to submit to
the will of any ummah.
Islam means submission to God, not the ummah. Ummah simply means
"nation", and could be multi-religious (Spain
711-1492) or multi-ethnic (Pakistan). Spengler
erroneously defines the ummah as an exclusive
club for Muslims. Mohammed did not create a "new
ummah", rather he
called Islam deen e
Ibrahimi (religion of Abraham). Mohammed
himself was married to a Christian woman for two
decades and she was surely part of the ummah. Any student of
Islamic history would tell Spengler that the ummah
in Medina included the Jews and the Muslims. The
ummah is certainly not based on religion. Again
Spengler mistranslates the concept of Dar-al-Harb.
Dar-al-Islam is not the land of Islam, but the
"land of peace". Dar-al-Harb is the land of war,
and could include Muslim lands run by Muslim
tyrants. For example the caliphate of Yezid would
be Dar-al-Harb, and the USA today would certainly
be Dar-al-Islam (land of peace). It was not Arab
armies but Muslim saints [who] spread Islam to the
world. Arab armies never conquered lands where 80%
of the Muslims live - Indonesia, India, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, and the former Central Asian states of
West Asia, etc. "Arab tribesmen" creating "New
Israel" is unintelligible psycho-[babble] that
only Spengler can understand. Quoting Professor
Khaleel Mohammed is fine, but he has been
ostracized because of his anti-Muslim views not
accepted by mainstream Muslims. Moin
Ansari (Oct 19, '05)
Re Spengler and his The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! [Oct 12]: it is astonishing to find
such a level of conspicuously slanted
neo-conservative vitriol on an otherwise very
informative news source. This ... regular
contributor to your paper actually retains the
unmitigated gall to cite [Franz] Rozensweig,
Bernard Lewis (a former MI6 spy, not an "Islamic
scholar") and George W Bush as authority figures
in his piece, thereby discrediting much of his
credibility on Islam, certainly as far as that
particular article is concerned. We are curious,
though, as to why he stopped with just these
learned luminaries? Why didn't Spengler continue
with adequate doses of Moses Maimonides and Leo
Strauss' vitriolic writings on how inferior
Muslims are in general, just for good measure?
Please. [Shi'ite] Muslims are much more concerned
with issues involving individual and collective
justice than they are with the spilling of their
own, or anyone else's, blood. It is the core
concern of all [Shi'ites] and Muslims, be they
Arab, Persian or converts from other cultures and
nations. Getting hold of a few photos of past
Ashura demonstrations may serve propagandistic
purposes for Spengler, but it hardly enlightens
your global readership on the true past, character
and nature of [Shi'ite] Islam. Too, Spengler
assigns the term "quietism" to the Christian
viewing of Armageddon, issues of Return and the
like. As if the quasi-evangelical Bush
administration's demonstrably belligerent drive
towards securing the requisitely deemed Zionistic
environs for the Messiah's scheduled "Return" can
be credibly qualified as "quietism". R Davoodi (Oct 19,
'05)
To Tatsuo Sasaki ([letter]
Oct 18) re Koizumi plays it his way
(Oct 18). Politicians the world over have lied,
committed fraud, stolen from their people, sent
their poor to slaughter in foreign wars and
retired demanding respect. Such men don't deserve
respect. Such men are repugnant. Japanese
politicians and Japanese governments since 1945
have never taken responsibility for their war
crimes. On the contrary, they have shown by their
actions that they are proud of their war criminals
by honoring them in their Yasukuni Shrine. What on
earth does it take to convince Japanese
politicians and the Japanese people that none of
their Asian neighbors and millions worldwide will
trust them or respect them until the Japanese take
full responsibility for their history? And one man
saying "Oh my gosh I'm sorry!" does not cut it.
AL Canada (Oct 19,
'05)
I've
been lingering around the Letters section for some
time now and the highlight of this section is the
argument between a couple of Indians (Rakesh,
Aruni [Mukherjee], etc) and Frank from Seattle. As
I look at it, Frank's counter-arguments to
Rakesh's and Aruni's arguments are at best
a-mature - he sings the same tune of "don't
compare India with China", "India follows its
masters' (white men's) footsteps" and "India has a
caste system" and he breaks into an insulting
frenzy about India and its people. The truth is
Frank knows precious little about China and what
Chinese people think ... Frank, let me be frank,
what you say is true, agreed. But do you think
Indians like me will take your insults lying down?
... the caste system is there; what you don't know
is that the situation in India is changing. India
follows white [men's] footsteps; so what, it works
for us, and how could you possible know about the
caste system and discrimination unless we [had] a
free press and democracy and you read it from
Indian or international newspapers? I am a student
in Germany, and let me enlighten other readers of
ATimes about the plight of Chinese people - [this
was] information I gathered from the Chinese
students here. To start with, all the Chinese
citizens must have an identity card, and they must
carry this card with them always wherever they go,
and this ID card is used especially to block poor
Chinese and peasants from villages from entering
the cities. This one action is enough to show the
Chinese interpretation of equality. Maybe that's
why Frank says not to compare democratic India and
communist China. Most of the Chinese students here
believe the students who were butchered in
Tiananmen Square were "stupid" ... The communists
have brainwashed these young students into
believing that the students' success on that day
would have led to a breakup of China ... Their
parents won't talk about that, teachers say the
topic is taboo. There are no books or news
articles to read from, so these young [people]
just believe what the Communist Party says and
sing the same tune wherever they go. Maybe that's
why Frank says not to compare democratic India and
communist China. What else Frank, do you need more
information on your country's situation? Go
straight to [the] nearest university and talk to
some Chinese students. Frank, India too has
problems, major problems, but there is a free
press too to highlight these problems to the
society, and this helps in solving the problems,
not overnight but gradually. And China does not
have a free press - only God knows what more
problems are there and the future of China. Mohan Germany (Oct 19,
'05)
I
wish to respond to Chrysantha Wijeyasingha's
letter of October 18. You're entitled to your own
opinion on China and the question of Tibet.
However, please don't link it to the Japanese
invasion of China. These are two separate issues.
We, the Chinese people who have lost family,
relatives and friends in the brutal Japanese
invasion have every right to protest Prime
Minister [Junichiro] Koizumi's visit to the
Yasukuni Shrine. To say that we do not have a case
belittles the millions of innocent victims who
died at the hands of the Japanese. And yes, they
were victims of Japanese aggression. Jennifer USA (Oct 19,
'05)
[Moin] Ansari [letter, Oct
13]: You are typical of all jihadis [in blaming]
others for Islam's problems with the world. You
are entitled to your speculation about my
groupthink and manufacturing-consent abilities.
Nevertheless, I am pleased that you acknowledge
[that] the larger world view (world groupthink) of
Islam is negative. If you were to dwell on the
cause, it is clear that Islam's demonizing of
infidels [and] women and use of suicidal
extermination of people with opposite world views
has resulted in such a situation. Muslims like you
are more interested in blaming others than [in]
taking remedial steps. Self-denial is your steady
state while the jihadis are enjoying their 67
virgins in paradise. DirtyDog San Francisco,
California (Oct 19, '05)
[Junichiro] Koizumi's
visit to Yasukuni this Monday showed, once again,
how great a leader he is [Koizumi plays it his way,
Oct 18]. He just doesn't run away from what is
considered right. This time, the right [thing was
to] keep the beliefs and the mutual respect
between nations. Respect doesn't mean to subtract
our beliefs to please other people. Respect means
to acknowledge another nation as we would like to
be acknowledged. Japan, as any nation, has the
right to pay tribute to [its] sons dead in wars in
its own pacific way, hasn't it? So why doesn't the
[Chinese] government respect Japanese people?
Besides, Japan has apologized about the past and
stated its belief and commitment with peace many
times, and made huge efforts to help [its]
neighbors in many ways. It's a matter of mutual
respect. Mr Koizumi is showing it, despite all
risks. And that's the reason why he is a great
leader for a healthy and peaceful world. Tatsuo Sasaki (Oct 18,
'05)
The
article Koizumi plays it his way
[Oct 18] points to both China's and Korea's
objections to [Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro]
Koizumi's visits to the Yasukuni Shrine. In the
case of South Korea's protest it is
understandable, but in the case of China it is the
pot calling the kettle black. China, which invaded
Tibet, destroyed 6,000 of her monasteries, which
contained the bulk of Tibet's culture, and
butchered the Tibetan people and annexed their
land, is all so sensitive about Japanese
aggression against her during World War II. It
would be best if China cleaned her dirty laundry
before citing other nations' clothing. In terms of
[the] sheer number of people killed under a
government edict, China far surpasses the excesses
of the Japanese Imperial Empire, and now China
wants to wear the proverbial halo of a "victim" of
Japanese aggression while quaintly ignoring her
massive brutality towards Tibet and her own
people. How hypocritical could a nation be? Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 18, '05)
This is with reference to
Syed Saleem Shahzad's article Song and dance on the terror
trail (Oct 14). There is nothing new to the
old accusation on the whereabouts of Osama bin
Laden. If Mr Shahzad or the State Department ...
knows the whereabouts of the criminal, then it is
treasonous not to reveal this knowledge. Mr
Shahzad must immediately claim his reward of
[US]$25 million. His repeated claims of some sort
of Pakistani collusion with the Taliban flies in
the face of evidence that [Afghan President Hamid]
Karzai allowed the Taliban intelligence chief to
run in the elections and the insurgency in the
western part of Afghanistan. This anti-Pakistan
theory also flies in the face of facts on the
ground which show that Afghanistan is the No 1
producer of opium in the world and that the old
Pashtun elements (and Taliban sympathizers)
control 12 Afghan provinces. Mr Shahzad's wishful
thinking about the dissent in the Pakistani army
is also presented without any proof. Mr Shahzad is
wasting his expense account if after spending 21
days [with] the State Department all he could come
up with is the publicly known fact that the US has
been unable to infiltrate al-Qaeda. Michael
Scheuer's books purchased for $20 or an article by
Hamid Mir could have given him a lot more deep
insights. Moin Ansari (Oct 18,
'05)
If
India wants to gauge itself, it should look to its
history. China should not be India's gauge.
Constant boasts are not the right ways to gauge
your development. Being naturally argumentative
and deliberative can also mean [being] full of
bull. That should not be the base of pride. Hard
work should. Hard manufacturing jobs may be
trinkets to India's upper caste. If Indians do not
want to [do] those jobs, that is none of India's
business. Instead of investing [in] China and
demanding [that] Chinese follow his master's
rules, I hope Rakesh [letter, Oct 14] can invest
back [into] India's poor. Build them a restroom,
so India can have a clean street. Build them a
crematory, so poor Indians do not have to dump
dead bodies into the water resources. Most
important, build them a leveled playing field, so
lower-caste Indians can compete with the upper
ones at the same level. Indians are trilingual
people? Let them be proud of speaking their mother
languages. I hope Aruni Mukherjee [letter, Oct 14]
can understand pride and dignity are far more
important than greenbacks. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 18,
'05)
Thank you very much for your
feedback on my letter dated October 17. While I
sincerely appreciate your clarification, I am
afraid I have to disagree with you at many places.
I have some suggestions regarding what you
explained in your response. It is not only you,
but publications all over the world follow the
same pattern; certain rules and principles while
publishing articles and letters in their
publications. For instance: grammar, syntax,
punctuation, spelling, size of the printing
material, printing viability of the matter
etcetera. [These are] standard criteria and the
publisher doesn't need to remind every time
individually. Secondly, writer and editor are two
different people. Every single writer on this
planet mostly concentrates to put together his
thoughts in the perspective of the topic he is
writing. A writer does know that if by chance he
misses some punctuation, made some grammatical
mistakes or misspelled some words that would be
fixed and corrected by the editors before going to
the printing. Thus every writer could not be
necessarily watchful about his typing mistakes,
omissions and errors. If it does happen, it's not
because he is a loggerhead but he takes latter
aspect as casual as basically he is focusing on
the mainstream subject matter (please refer the
last line of my earlier letter where I spelled
"establish" as "eatblish". It is simply a typing
mistake or omission and doesn't mean that I don't
know the spelling of the word "establish"). If you
still feel that you want to caution every writer
what you explained to me in your reply, you could
simply put this information on the top of the
Letters page for a permanent notice to all writers
to defuse this confusion instead of doing [it]
discretely every time. Shafiq Khan Canada (Oct 18,
'05)
Most
editing changes are minor and are not indicated,
but in some cases, fairly substantial changes are
necessary. As well, our editors cannot in every
case be certain what the letter writer meant and
must make an educated guess. The devices you
object to such as bracketed insertions are meant
to caution readers that the editor, not the
writer, decided this was the most likely
interpretation. - ATol
Your letter was distorted, G
Travan [letter, Oct 17]? Oh really? How was it
distorted, I wonder? Did you not write, "You will
find no Xinjiang people in Beijing today"? OK, you
backtracked and wrote, "they were once rather
prominent on any of Beijing's streets, whereas
they are now hidden away in ghettoes" ... Being a
native of Beijing, it has never been my knowledge
that Xinjiang people were once prominent on any of
Beijing's streets. You made it sound like as if
they were once all over the place in Beijing,
[but] unfortunately that's not true. Before the
municipal government of Beijing revamped the areas
of Weigongcun and Ganjiakou, Xinjiang people were
mostly found in those neighborhoods, rather than
on "any of Beijing's streets". Sure, some roadside
kabob stands and restaurants were gone thanks to
the "makeover" effort, but many Xinjiang people
can still be found in Weigongcun and Ganjiakou
today, which still are the primary locations for
the so-called "Xinjiang Village". Ghettoes? What
ghettoes? Where are they? Please inform and
enlighten me, Mr Travan. First you accused Beijing
of suppressing the Xinjiang people by claiming
that there were no Xinjiang people in Beijing;
after being rebutted, you are now saying they are
hidden away in some ghettoes? Excuse me, Travan, I
thought your point was that Beijing drove them
away, and now you are saying they are still there,
but in hiding? What exactly are you saying? Make
up your mind, will you, Mr Travan? As for those
Uighur programs offered by universities in
Xinjiang ... they are not some "language courses
for curious foreigners" that you made up, they are
courses taught in Uighur or extensive Uighur
language study courses. If courses are no longer
taught in Uighur at universities, if people are
forced to give up their language for college
education, one would draw the easy conclusion that
many Uighur college graduates today can 't
properly speak Uighur. I haven't found a single
Uighur college grad, or Uighurs from Xinjiang for
that matter, who can't speak Uighur. "Beijing's
ongoing brutal suppression and assimilation
campaigns against ethnic minorities"? What do you
mean? By the way, is Niujie (the biggest Hui
Muslim neighborhood in Beijing) gone too? I have
friends from minority groups ranging from
Manchurian, Kazakh, Hui to Buyi and Yao; none of
them reported suppression and assimilation
campaigns against them. Having lived in Beijing
for several periods doesn't automatically make you
a "Beijing expert" or "China scholar"; apparently
some of your knowledge is inaccurate and out of
date. Of course, like I said, China has a lot of
problems (probably more than any other nation
does). If you are the smart guy who picks one
every day and beats it to death, this discussion
will go on forever and probably outlive both of
us. Again, I suggest that we take our next round
of exchange to The Edge forum, instead
of clogging up the Letters section. Juchechosunmanse Beijing,
China (Oct 18,
'05)
Re Song and dance on the terror
trail [Oct 14]: You are right on target.
Nailed it! And in a highly accessible - and
visceral - way. Well done. Bryant (Oct 17,
'05)
I
wish I could cut open my heart and tell the whole
world how I am feeling about the earthquake
tragedy; it is simply beyond words to express the
grief and sadness. I weep for every soul that has
perished, and for all those who are going through
the terrible ordeal of surviving in pain and
anguish, and for all those who lost their loved
ones. Saqib Khan London, England (Oct 17,
'05)
The
internal Pakistani response [to the earthquake]
has been heroic, superhuman, and "goose bump"
stuff of which legends are made [Earthquake relief on a war
footing, Oct 14]. The fantastic spirit of
volunteerism is a case study for the Harvard
Business Review. Within 15 minutes of the falling
of the Margala Towers [in Islamabad], the police
and hundreds of good Samaritans were there
scraping at the rubble with their bare hands.
Within two hours the president and the prime
minister were helping at the site. Hordes of
volunteers are collecting supplies from every nook
and corner of Pakistan. From dusk to dawn the air
force flew 800 sorties, a world record. The roads
to the most inaccessible areas have been rebuilt
several times, and today there are mountains of
relief supplies in the remotest of the remote
areas in Kashmir manned by thousands of troops and
volunteers. Today more than 100,000 Pakistani
troops are fanning out in the mountains of Azad
Kashmir looking to help Pakistanis. The
international response to the quake has been
atrocious. The Pakistani state machinery is too
polite and too overwhelmed to say anything except
"thank you". They are grateful for any scraps that
are doled out. The fact remains that the world
response to the Pakistani quake has been beyond
pathetic. The Pakistani earthquake is a bigger
catastrophe than the tsunami. The tsunami
countries got over [US]$10 billion. While many
agencies and governments are "going through the
motions", serious efforts have not been made to
help Pakistan and Pakistanis. The reasons may be
similar to the reasons why the black [Hurricane]
Katrina victims got little help and white
[Hurricane] Rita victims got a lot of aid. Racism
and Islamophobic bias are at the root of this
nonchalance not covered by the media ... The US
has 8,000 helicopters in Afghanistan. Pakistan
needs about 200 helicopters and heavy moving
equipment to assist the victims. Eight
[helicopters] were released and then an additional
four were released by Secretary of State
[Condoleezza] Rice after President [General
Pervez] Musharraf literally begged her for more
... equipment. The NATO forces in Afghanistan
refused to release any choppers. What makes it
more hurtful is the fact that Arab racism is at
its worst today. Muslim countries have different
scales for white American victims and different
scales for brown Pakistani lives. Kuwait and Qatar
gave the 20,000 Katrina victims $400 million each.
For the 3 million ... Pakistanis $100 million was
deemed enough. The Palestinian Authority has not
given anything. Egypt gave $50,000. The Japanese
teams were so late that they could not save a
single life in the schools where 1,500 children
lay buried. The good news is that Pakistanis have
come together like never before ... Volunteers are
everywhere sending materials and volunteers to the
affected areas of Azad Kashmir. Pakistan and
Pakistanis will remember the friends ...
Pakistanis see help coming from India, and Israel
and the Jewish organizations in the USA. This will
be remembered. The world knows that Pakistan
cannot be ignored. Pakistani foreign policy
realignment is under way. This will have long-term
consequences for the world. Moin
Ansari (Oct 17, '05)
Spengler responds Lester Ness (letter, Oct 14)
claims that the Muslim feat of Eid al-Adha, at
which Muslims slaughter a lamb, reveals a
"careless mistake" in my observation that Islam
has no "cult of sacrifice" (in The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! Oct 11). On the contrary: I am
merely restating the standard Muslim view of the
matter. The slaughter of the lamb on Eid ad-Adha
is not cultic at all, in that it seeks no
expiation from the Divine. Rather it commemorates
Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son
(Ishmael in the mainstream Muslim account).
Muslims emphasize the difference between their
practice on Eid al-Adha and the Judeo-Christian
cult of sacrifice. As the website AboutIslam
observes, "It is very important to understand that
the sacrifice itself, as practiced by Muslims, has
nothing to do with atoning for our sins or using
the blood to wash ourselves from sin. This is a
misunderstanding by those of previous generations:
'It is not their meat nor their blood that reaches
Allah; it is your piety that reaches him' (Surah
al-Hajj 22:37)." Similarly, Islam
Online, a mainstream Muslim website, published
a fatwa stating, "Sacrifice is not a pillar of
Islam ... Not only did the pagan Arabs sacrifice
to a variety of gods in hopes of attaining
protection or some favor or material gain, but so,
too, did the Jews of that day seek to appease the
One True God by blood sacrifice and burnt
offerings. Even the Christian community felt Jesus
to be the last sacrifice, the final lamb, so to
speak, in an otherwise valid tradition of animal
sacrifice (where one's sins are absolved by the
blood of another). Islam, however, broke away from
this longstanding tradition of appeasing an 'angry
God' and instead demanded personal sacrifice and
submission as the only way to die before death and
reach fana or
'extinction in Allah'." Mr Ness also disputes my
statement that 7th century Byzantium suffered from
a population decline. Again, the facts are clear;
I refer interested readers to Bryan Ward-Perkins'
excellent volume The Fall
of Rome and the End of Civilization, which I
reviewed on this site on September 7 [Deep in denial (or in de
Mississippi)]. Spengler (Oct 17,
'05)
I
refer to the article The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! by Spengler (Oct 11). Spengler's
article is full of distortion and
misrepresentation. Iran, which is almost 100%
Shi'a, has not seen any bloody infighting since
the Islamic Revolution. Since kicking out the
Americans in the Islamic Revolution, Iran is one
of the most stable countries in the Middle East,
and has achieved tremendous development in
spirituality, culture, economics, and military. It
is the only developing country that can stand up
to [the US]. The greatest part of the bloodshed in
Iraq is caused by the occupiers, who have killed
over 2 million people since the first Gulf War,
through 12 years of daily bombings and sanctions
... In one breath [Spengler] speaks of the Shia's
and then goes on to say: "Unlike Christianity or
Judaism, Islam has no ritual of sacrifice, nor
does it need one, for the sacrifice that Islam
demands is that of the Muslim himself. That is the
secret of Ashura." The Shi'a custom of
breast-beating and self-wounding at the time of
Ashura is strictly a Shi'ite tradition and is not
practiced by the Sunnis who form roughly 88% of
the world's Muslims. His statement "Islam has no
ritual sacrifice" is misleading. Islam has a
ritual sacrifice [that] is a tradition based on
the episode when Abraham was asked to sacrifice a
thing most dear to him, his son Ishmael. When he
was about to sacrifice his son, he [Ishmael] was
replaced by a sheep, and therefore Muslims
sacrifice an animal after completion of the
annual hajj. It is
wishful thinking by Spengler that the Iraqis will
end up in a civil war and fratricide, and that is
exactly the result the Americans and the Israelis
like to see, but it will not happen. Just as
Israel tried every trick in the trade to cause a
civil war amongst the Palestinians and failed,
they are going to fail in Iraq and we are going
to, instead, see a civil war in America and Israel
in not too a distant future. Vincent Maadi Cape Town, South Africa (Oct 17,
'05)
On
Joseph Nagarya's letter [Oct 14], we could go on
all day, but it seems that his definition of
"bigots and racists" is a bit expansive, such as
eliminating "civil rights and labor etc
protections". Why, I'm sure I've been guilty of
thinking such thoughts myself, when I wonder if
affirmative action in its present form is still
helpful, and if a plumber should really cost
[US]$140 a visit. By Nagarya's definition, most
Americans are bigots and racists, which of course
is the proper frame of mind that he would
encourage, so as to keep them receptive to his now
thoroughly discredited solutions. Jonnavithula ("Jon")
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 17, '05)
"Long Live Korean
Self-Reliance" (aka Juchechosunmanse [letter, Oct
14]) has distorted my previous letter. He has also
carefully avoided my main argument that Beijing
has a benighted view of culture, particularly that
of minorities. When I wrote that no Xinjiang
people were to be found in Beijing, I meant they
were once rather prominent on any of Beijing's
streets, whereas they are now hidden away in
ghettoes. When I wrote that Uighur language
instruction was ended in Xinjiang, I did not mean
there weren't a few language courses for curious
foreigners, but that the language of instruction
in universities is no longer Uighur, forcing the
Uighur people to give up their language for the
sake of a university education. The
window-dressing of a few Xinjiang ghettoes in
Beijing and a few Uighur classes for foreigners
are irrelevant in the wider suppression of the
Uighur peoples and other minorities. Does anyone
deny Beijing's ongoing brutal suppression and
assimilation campaigns against ethnic minorities?
I have lived in Beijing for several periods in the
past decade and have watched how the Uighur people
suddenly disappeared from the streets. As for the
issue of Shanghai cracking down on accents, I
never stated that the government was universally
enforcing the new regulations, in preparation for
the 2010 world expo ... "Long Live Korean
Self-Reliance" should know from the example of his
beloved North Korea that oppressive laws enforced
against a few will create enough fear for the
majority to comply. G Travan California, USA (Oct 17,
'05)
I am
fairly a mature guy in my early 50s and highly
educated with four university degrees including
one MA (honors) in English major. Journalism is
not my cup of tea and I write sometimes freelance
as my passion. In my life, I have never come
across such an unwarranted and disproportionate
inundated application of parentheses and brackets
in writings as you do in your Letters to the
Editor page. I understand this is a free world and
you have every right to exercise your occupancy,
not because we like it but you own the
publication. Sometimes it is really too annoying
and distracting. You are reading a letter and are
being stumbled over and over as you go further and
it also breaks the sequence and concentration.
It's okay if one or two parentheses are used to
highlight the point but an excessive use is not
only a nuisance but creates an impression that you
or the writer is in a situation of
self-diminishment and are yelling to seek
attention. I also understand that these
punctuations are not marked by the writers but by
your editorial people. Please pay attention to
Moin Ansari's letter (Oct 13) commenting on Dirty
Dog's letter. I quote one and a half lines from
the letter: "in Algeria [Islamic Salvation Front],
Pakistan ([Benazir] Bhutto) [and] Iran ([Mohammad]
Mossadegh)". You can see, there are five
parentheses and brackets, even Benazir Bhutto and
the word "and" have been punctuated three times
separately. I don't know what English language,
syntax and syntheses you are using and what you
want to eatblish [establish? - ATol] to your
readers. Shafiq Khan Canada (Oct 17,
'05)
Our
policy on the Letters page is to keep the tone and
syntax of the contributions as intact as possible,
while editing for grammar, clarity and consistency
with our editorial style. It is sometimes
necessary to insert material, and this is done in
square brackets; ellipses indicate that some
original material has been deleted. In the example
you cite, Moin Ansari's original said: "in Algeria
(ISF), Pakistan (Bhutto), Iran (Mossadagh)". Our
policy is to spell out the names of organizations
such as ISF, and to write out people's full names
on first reference; the "and" was inserted for
grammatical correctness. If letter writers find
our editorial devices confusing, they can help us
out by following our policies themselves when
making their submissions, and by checking their
spelling (this would also save us some time and
effort and ensure their original intent is
preserved). - ATol
Syed Saleem Shahzad: Thank
you for your article [Song and dance on the terror
trail, Oct 14]. You rightly point out that the
basic weakness of this "war" is lack of reliable
intelligence ... For those whose memory [has
become] hazy, consider that after the first Gulf
War (1991), the routed Iraqi army was drawn back
around Baghdad, and president [George H W] Bush
called upon the Shi'ites of southern Iraq to "rise
up against the tyrant and we will help you". They
did and were joined in revolt by the Kurds. The US
Army, the mightiest military force ever assembled,
sat back and did nothing. Saddam Hussein came back
and massacred both the Shi'ites and the Kurds.
Neither has forgotten just what the word of the US
is worth. Consider then that [this and other]
incidents have damaged US credibility beyond
repair, to the point that nobody in the region
will provide serious, reliable "humint" [human
intelligence], which is fundamental to prosecution
of any war, let alone the shadowy war against
terrorists. I'm sure you can follow the thread to
today's events, through the regular fiasco of
false terrorist alerts in this country [US]. In
short, what should be a police problem in hunting
for the terrorist mosquito has been warped beyond
repair by hunting with a military sledgehammer,
wrecking the homes of the neighbors who might have
helped us. But for a police investigation to
succeed across the world, there must be
cooperation with other police forces; alas, the
word "cooperation" does not exist in the US
government dictionary. Mike Tsoukias Houston, Texas (Oct 14,
'05)
[Re]
Song and dance on the terror
trail [Oct 14] by Syed Saleem Shahzad: Here we
go again. I am not sure whose payroll you are on -
CIA [US Central Intelligence Agency], Mossad or
RAW [Indian Research and Analysis Wing]? Please
write truth and not
fabricated stories. Bob (Oct 14,
'05)
And
you please do not make blind allegations. Rather
debate the contents of the article. - Syed Saleem
Shahzad
Chietigj Bajpaee makes too
much of energy rivalry between the United States
and China in Africa [The eagle, the dragon and
African oil, Oct 12]. China takes about as
much [interest in] its own energy needs as does
[the US]. Take Sudan for example. It has proven
reserves of 563 million barrels of oil. Lest we
forget, the United States under the Clinton
administration imposed sanctions on Khartoum, and
the Bush administration has publicly denounced the
policy of genocide that Sudan is waging against
its own African Muslims in Darfur. Nonetheless,
Washington has not blinked to see China drilling
for oil in Sudan while the [US] company Marathon
Oil is prospecting there in its own oil patch.
Let's face it, there is not such a scramble for
oil by China in Africa which would challenge
American oil companies, giant or independent. The
flapdoodle over Union Oil had more to do with
domestic policy in the United States than in a
heated international race for staking out one's
claim for oil here, there and everywhere. Jakob
Cambria USA (Oct 14,
'05)
Spengler has made quite a lot
of careless mistakes in his [Oct 12] essay The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld! The phrase "the blood is the life"
is [from] Deuteronomy 12:23: "Only be sure that
you do not eat the blood; for the blood is the
life, and you shall not eat the life with the
flesh." Most of Bram Stoker's readers would have
recognized this. Muslims sacrifice annually, on
the Eid al-Adha; even a Catholic like me knows
this. Christians do not see the Second Coming of
Jesus as a quietist thing; rather "he will rule
them with a rod of iron" (Revelation 2:27).
Paganism is not a single thing (rather it is a
blanket term for everything outside the Abrahamic
tradition), but Roman religion was based on do ut des or "I am doing
you a favor; you do me a favor." Greek religion
was quite similar. Inscriptions "to the god who
listens to prayers" are very common from
Greco-Roman Syria. The Roman Near East was not in a population
decline in late antiquity; quite the reverse. The
7th century CE Arab conquerors were intimately
familiar with the countries bordering Arabia, had
been for millennia. Certainly they were familiar
with the Christians, who were not rare in Arabia.
All this is not just a matter of scholarly
pedantry. "He who is faithful in little will be
faithful in much" (Gospel of Luke 16:11) and if
Spengler can't get something as simple as "the
blood is the life" or the Muslim sacrifice right,
why should we trust what he says on more esoteric
subjects, like Shi'ism, Iraqi politics, etc? By
the way, is that Spengler's photo at the head of
his article? Lester Ness Kunming, China (Oct 14,
'05)
Could
be. - ATol
Re Frank's last half a dozen
letters that are loaded with nothing but
misinformation and prejudice ... Frank claims some
Indians think they are superior to other colored
people and that is because they follow "white
man's" [systems]. Well, let me say that his
mind-reading abilities leave much to be desired.
Little does Frank know (or I bet would even care
to know) that most Indians are proud not because they follow
"white man's" [systems], but because our country's
freedom fighters had the vision to fight in a
non-violent way to liberate ourselves from
exploitative colonial rule, and at the same time to
firmly establish a structure that provides the
necessary checks and balances and vents for
people's opinions. True, there are some
institutions that we carried over from the
colonial days, but the people [who] wrote the
constitution and guided our fledgling democracy
were Indian, and they did so keeping in mind the
huge diversity of India. We Indians thank them for
this ... In one of his previous letters Frank made
the argument that India takes orders from the US,
while China does not. Well, I am not sure which
planet he is from, but let me remind him that for
three decades, India has been either spearheading
the [Non-Aligned] Movement or had firmly aligned
with the Soviets. Aruni Mukherjee [letter, Oct 7]
correctly pointed out the misinformation that
Frank was spreading about Iranian oil, but I guess
Frank's allergies to Indian writers makes him run
away from reason. One other unique pearl of wisdom
Frank throws in is that India always looks good on
paper. Just recently, India became one of the top
five investment destinations, but I guess all
those people/corporations investing are just plain
stupid. In Frank's world, it seems, real wisdom,
real hard work and real entrepreneurship exist
only in Shanghai and Beijing. Not satisfied with
the amount of investment China is getting, Frank
pleads [with] the readers in one of his recent
letters to invest in trinket manufacturing in
China. Hey, Frank, I don't mind investing in your
trinket-manufacturing companies - I like trinkets,
really - but my only condition is that the Chinese
government doesn't try to gag me, my countrymen,
and the poor workers [who] toil in slave-like
conditions. Rakesh (Oct 14,
'05)
The
saying goes, "You can't clap with one hand." In my
past [two or three] letters I have tried to
explain to Frank how he rapidly needs to qualify
his views about India and her people, most of
which are not even pro
tanto close to reality. This is where I rest
my case. But not before I point out the fallacies
in his [Oct 13] letter. First, the interest that
many Indians share about the developments in China
are quintessential for a country that sees itself
as a developing power and wants to gauge its
relative strengths and weaknesses vis-a-vis other
countries on similar trajectories of development.
In strategic terms, China has always compared its
military power with that of Taiwan and the United
States. Second, I fail to see any superiority
complex among Indian letter writers of Asia Times
[Online] about their proficiency in English. As I
have mentioned almost innumerable times, Indians
are trilingual people - they speak their local
tongue, Hindi (usually) as well as English. If
there is something so inherently degrading about
learning a foreign language, then why is China
desperately trying to catch up on its own English
strengths? Wake up and smell the coffee, Frank -
it brings us the greenbacks. Third, Indians are
naturally argumentative and deliberative people.
This is recorded in our ancient traditions.
British colonialism has merely given us a modern
modus operandi to
translate this into a democracy Westminster-style.
Even there, India is a unique hybrid between
American federalism and British unitarism. Fourth,
if Frank admits that China too is learning from
the West aka India, then his argument has no locus standi. For if
India is learning from the West and acknowledges
the fact (according to his own letter), and China
doesn't, then this [amounts] not only to
"differences in attitudes", but [to] intellectual
plagiarism - plain and simple. In any case, since
when did socialism or capitalism (depending on
whether you're looking at the political or the
economic China) become Chinese concepts? ... Aruni
Mukherjee (Oct 14, '05)
I am humbled that I have fans
and a forum discussing my letters. If you pay
attention, I only commented about the funny
articles comparing India with China. I meant no
harm to Indians. I just want them to leave Chinese
people alone. The ideas of democracy originated
from ancient Rome and were adopted by many
countries. I am sure the democratic political
system will eventually be adopted by China.
However, history proved that if a political system
was adopted voluntarily, not imposed by force,
that system would last longer and work better.
Indians did not adopt democracy themselves. White
men imposed their political system on Indians.
That is the reason India's system [has] worked
well. For example, the laws in India are either
references or bargaining chips for bribery. The
caste system is superficially outlawed. However,
that law means nothing to Indians. The situation
of dalits is the same
as before. If you ask every Indian you know, you
[will] find out that none of the wealthy ones [is
a] dalit. Twenty
percent of Indians are dalits. Let me challenge
all Indian readers and writers here. Show me one
dalit reader of ATol
who likes the current situation of India. The
so-called Indian democracy means nothing to them.
They want clean water, basic food, clothes,
shelter, health care and schools. The existence of
[the] caste system is a serious human-rights
violation. It is a shame that those Western
human-rights supporters will look the other way
when it comes to India's dalits. Some white
masters think if Indians can keep their servitude,
why care about India's poor? They do not have the
media resources or English skills to voice their
objections anyway ... Poverty is the largest enemy
in Asia, not your neighbors. Please leave them
alone. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 14,
'05)
G
Travan made so many wild and laughable claims in
his letter [Oct 13] which consequently cost him
his entire credibility. "Anyone speaking Mandarin
with an accent in Shanghai will now be fined and
forced to attend classes"? Are you kidding me?
Almost every person in Shanghai speaks Mandarin
with a Shanghai accent; as powerful as the Chinese
government might be, there is no way that it can
forcefully put 20 million people to Mandarin
classes. Mr Travan, maybe you are implying that
China's economic success, particularly Shanghai's,
is funded by fines from people who speak Mandarin
with an accent? "You will find no Xinjiang people
in Beijing today"? Again, are you kidding me? Come
to Ganjiakou and Weigongcun and see for yourself.
Some neighborhoods were bulldozed as part of the
grand effort of "reconstructing Beijing", which
did affect Xinjiang Village in those areas, but
there are still plenty of Xinjiang restaurants and
Xinjiang people left. As a matter of fact, there
is a Xinjiang restaurant in the very hutong that my home is
at, and I have grown familiar with one of their
employees, a Kazakh lad by the name of Askar. Mr
Travan, obviously you have no idea what's going on
in Beijing, writing from your home thousands of
miles away in California, and I figured that I,
being from Beijing, might have a better say than
you on this matter. As for whether or not Uighur
is being taught at universities in Xinjiang, since
I don't want to bore other letter readers with the
details here, I suggest that you visit the thread
that I created on The Edge forum titled Uighur is not being taught in
Xinjiang? where you will find information of a
couple of universities in Xinjiang which have
quite dynamic Uighur programs. In short, either
the BBC's reports were unintentionally inaccurate
or they were blatantly lying. Mr Travan, this
isn't about pro-China or not, this is about facts,
one of which is [that] China has made huge strides
in the past two decades, no matter how some people
like you might choose to ignore or twist it. That
being said, it is clear to everyone that China is
far from being a "harmonious society", it has got
its plate full of problems such as corruption,
unemployment, the widening gap between the rich
and the poor, the deteriorating environment,
public health and education etc. But who doesn't
have problems? If the US is so awful as you have
suggested, why don't you worry less about foreign
countries like China and spend more time worrying
about your own and try to make it a better place?
Juchechosunmanse Beijing, China (Oct 14,
'05)
Jonnavithula Sreekanth (while
avoiding the issues in my letter) writes [letter,
Oct 12]: "Joseph Nagarya must have correctly
concluded from my name that I'm not of white
Christian origin, so the charge of racism is the
nuclear weapon meant to bring me scurrying back
into the fold." My statement of the fact about the
Republican Party as concerns deliberate use and
exploitation of racism is intended to wake Mr
Sreekanth to that reality; if he thinks he is
exempt from it, he doesn't think, he sleepwalks.
He continues with avoidant rationalization: "There
are scary individuals on the fringes of each
party." Wake up: [Richard] Nixon was not on the
"fringe" of the Republican Party, yet it was he
who designed and implemented his "Southern
Strategy", the essence of which was to go after -
as "base" - those disaffected with the Democratic
Party because of its furtherance of civil rights.
That meant welcoming with open arms the hardcore
racists who opposed - and oppose - civil-rights
legislation. Most around [US President George W]
Bush are leftovers from Nixon, and others carrying
the racist banner have such names as DeLay, Lott
and Ashcroft ... And those extremists, Mr
Sreekanth, are hardcore bigots and racists - not
"soft racists", whatever that means. Their entire
agenda is based upon the elimination of civil
rights (and labor, etc) protections; and their
appeal could not be more obviously and directly -
and deliberately - to the full range of
fellow-traveling extremist bigots, primarily white
supremacist racists. Many of the latter hide
behind "Christian" pieties - while basing their
racism directly upon the "Bible" itself ... Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 14,
'05)
I very much appreciated
your article Hu brought down to earth
[Oct 13]. Detailed news about China is hard to
come by here in Canada and one of the reasons I
check into Asia Times [Online] every day. I wanted
to know more, though. For example: "Instead, the
communique issued at the close of the plenary
session concentrated on economic reforms. There
was no endorsement at all of macro-control nor the
enhancement of China's stance on the international
stage. Political reform did get some space in the
final plan. It was cited with the qualification of
'proactively and stably' and placed among a list
of miscellaneous issues, such as building a
spiritual civilization, strengthening defense,
maintaining the prosperity and stability of Hong
Kong and Macau, and the betterment of relations
with Taiwan. These issues were all mentioned only
briefly, meaning that while they might not be
trivial, they were not a focus of the plenary
session." It would be very helpful to have more
detail on what actually was endorsed, and those
issues that were not. Perhaps a follow-up article?
Second, the way in which [President Hu Hintao and
Premier Wen Jiabao] were blocked is very
revealing. I think most Westerners imagine the
Chinese political system to be very similar to Big
Brother in [George] Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.
This sort of large-scale internal - but
official - conflict shows that the system is
typical of most political organizations where
there is a continuous battle of ideas, influence,
policies and perception rather than simply one
small group of old geezers sitting around in a
plush office behind closed doors charting out the
course for hundreds of millions of citizens. In
this context, any articles that help show in more
depth and detail how the political process in
China actually works in practice would be most
helpful. Finally, within the article were several
references to local versus central issues. I
suspect that this will be the major battleground
in China's internal affairs for decades to come,
now that the coastal and industrial sectors have
essentially rejoined the post-Industrial
Revolution world economic system, so more articles
on this would also be most welcome. Ashley Howes Cape Breton Island, Nova
Scotia (Oct 13, '05)
The problem with Rabindra P
Kar's article [The flip side of outsourcing
to India, Oct 13] is that he tries to gauge
the "general" from the "particular". He
necessarily draws a brazen conclusion without
looking at the overarching picture. First,
outsourcing is not the cornerstone of the Indian
IT/ITES [information technology enabled services]
industry. In fact, it is only worth [US]$4 billion
or so vis-a-vis $16 billion that is contributed by
software development. Indian companies are now
developing bespoke applications tailor-made for
companies such as ABN Amro. Second, there is a
difference between offshoring and outsourcing,
which the author has erased. In China, Western
companies have opened plants to produce and export
commodities. In India, Indian companies are
developing solutions for Western companies. Third,
the author has no understanding of the concept of
"positive externality". Even if the IT/ITES sector
is not a mass employer, the cumulative effect on
the economic engine of the increased disposable
income of the hundreds of thousands of software
professionals is tremendous. Their increased
consumption will aid industries and employment
across the sectors. Fourth, India submitted the
second-highest number of proposals for patents at
the WTO [World Trade Organization] after the US
last year. It shows that ... companies have a lot
to gain from the intellectual-property regime -
they can protect their innovative applications,
and even market them to generate additional
revenues. Fifth, the [Indian] government should
indeed be spending more on water resources and
reusable energy sources (a curious argument, since
the government has kept out of the IT industry),
and it can only spend more with the increased tax
receipts it gets from the burgeoning IT/ITES
companies. Aruni Mukherjee (Oct 13,
'05)
Your
China Travel map has an
error. It says Hong Kong has really bad winters
and dust storms. I suspect someone pasted the
wrong data in the box. Mark Bardwell (Oct 13,
'05)
Our
web host server in the US malfunctioned briefly
and served you an early version of the map from
the design stage, not meant for public viewing.
The problems are over now, and if you click the
refresh/reload button on your browser you will get
the correct version. Apologies to you and all
readers who may have been served the wrong pages
lately. - ATol
This is [regarding]
DirtyDog's letter (Oct 12) in response to my
comment on [Ehsan] Ahrari's article [It's the radicals,
stupid, Oct 8]. I guess DirtyDog suffers from
the "groupthink" and "manufactured consent" that
demonize Muslims and consider Muslims as "them".
The immigrant population in the US have always
lived in barrios and ghettos and always been
discriminated against. The Jews lived in New York
ghettos, isolated from the rest of the community,
as did the Italians, and the Greeks, the blacks
and the Puerto Ricans. Today Queens in New York
City is a Pakistani and Indian ghetto. [That is]
what differentiates Muslims from other immigrant
communities. Most of the media outlets in [the
United States of] America are owned by six
companies. They never allow Muslim speakers on
their programs. The discussion is between the
ultra-rightist and the rightist and neo-cons and
the paleo-cons. The 9-11 Commission could not find
a single Muslim to participate as an author. Imam
Faisal [Abdul-Rauf], a wonderful Jewish rabbi and
a great Christian pastor [were] interviewed by a
major network right after [September 11, 2001].
All of Imam Faisal's condemnation of [the events
of September 11] were edited. On democracy in the
Muslim world, may we remind the writer that
Indonesia, Malaysia [and] Bangladesh are all
democracies and Pakistan is very close to [being]
one. Additionally, may we also remind him and
others that democracies have been specifically
smothered due to foreign influences ... in Algeria
[Islamic Salvation Front], Pakistan ([Benazir]
Bhutto) [and] Iran ([Mohammad] Mossadegh) by
eliminating the elected leaders just like the
leaders were eliminated in South America
([Salvador] Allende, etc). Moin
Ansari (Oct 13, '05)
"Long Live Korean
Self-Reliance" (aka Juchechosunmanse) writes that
Uighur is taught at Xinjiang University [letter,
Oct 12]. This is contradicted by reports in the
BBC and other sources that Beijing has ended
Uighur-language instruction at the university as
part of an aggressive effort to suppress the
Uighur language in favor of the "superior" Chinese
language. Interestingly enough, the home page of
Xinjiang University has an English version, but no
Uighur version. Even Chinese dialects are being
suppressed in an effort to promote standard
Mandarin. Anyone speaking Mandarin with an accent
in Shanghai will now be fined and forced to attend
classes. Anyone who watches China's
English-language television will see that culture,
to the "communist" leaders of China, is nothing
but a trinket to be displayed in a glass case. In
the late 1990s, Beijing was filled with people
from Xinjiang. Many of them had roadside kabob
stands and restaurants in Xinjiang Village and
Xinjiang Street. Their neighborhoods were razed
and the people apparently expelled. You will find
no Xinjiang people in Beijing today. The
"communists" are so paranoid that they fear
restaurants and roadside stalls. Further, the fact
that the US is not a wonderful society is obvious.
Just because the US is awful in many ways doesn't
make China any less awful. China is fast becoming
as heartless a society as the US. The only
argument of the pro-China group is that things are
better now than under Mao [Zedong]. Well, by those
standards, I suppose Russia is a utopia compared
to [Josef] Stalin's time. When will people stop
looking for a savior nation to shield them from
the truth? G Travan California, USA (Oct 13,
'05)
Please allow me to say a few
words to the readers [who] replied to my letters.
First, I was just complaining [about] Indian
writers' obsession about China. If you visit the
South Asia section, there
are a large number of articles about China. Why?
China is not a South Asian country. Then the
discussions of India's political system and
language were brought up by Indian readers. Some
Indian readers think they are superior to other
colored people because they have white men's
language and political, financial, and judicial
system. Chandan [Oct 11] apparently summarized my
observations correctly. However, he forgets my
main points of the argument. Both China and India
are learning from the West or whites. The only
difference is the attitude. I criticize the
attitudes of those upper-caste Indians. I respect
India's unique cultural and history. Those are
what Indians should be proud of, not their
capabilities of imitating the white men. I find it
funny that Indian upper-caste men would accuse
others [of being] racist. They are the largest
racist group in the world today. By the way, do we
have any sour spacecraft comments? Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 13,
'05)
No
explanation can convince Frank. But there are a
few more facts which Frank must know before he
writes another India-bashing letter. Democracy is
not a unique qualification which Indians are proud
of maintaining. We know it is successfully
practiced in many countries and even [has been]
for centuries. But they are not proud because it
has many followers there. We [are] able to
maintain democracy in a region [in other parts of
which] democracy [has] failed to survive. Our
neighbors don't understand that corrupt
politicians can hinder progress but cannot destroy
a nation, while dictators and kings can. Indians
are not following English or democracy just
because it is their master's language. English
successfully penetrated the world and became the
only language which finds many followers
(including Frank), and Indians are simply taking
advantage of it. As regards democracy, it is the
best way to govern people, and any system that
helps the people, we humans must accept. If
following others' footsteps is a shame, then what
about China, which has followed communism and
later capitalism? China also embraced Buddhism,
and Buddha [was] technically an Indian and a
Hindu. People taking to the street for their just
(or unjust) cause is not uncommon in democracies,
since elected governments are always afraid of
taking stern action against lawbreaking citizens
due to their vote-bank concern. And even if they
do they will never use tanks (Tiananmen Square) to
threaten their own citizens. As regards the Indian
caste system, it is truly a disease which we are
trying to eliminate. And the only remedy is making
people educated. Half a century may be enough for
small countries to make progress, but for a big
country like India it is Herculean task. India
[has been] unable to spend more on education
because, at the time of its birth, it inherited
(90%) uneducated people, weak infrastructure,
[and] culturally divided neighbors, due to which
it had to spend a large portion of money for
defense. The Western democracies, luckily, are not
in that position. Shivanantham Cuddalore, India (Oct 13,
'05)
It
amuses me how many nerves (mostly Indian nerves)
Frank's letters have touched here in ATol. I hope
my comments won't add fuel to the fire. It seems
to me the Indians do have a tiny little bit [of
an] issue when thinking about the Chinese.
Remember a few years ago [when] the Indian
government and its prime minister openly
criticized the Chinese government about cooking
the books for annual growth? Ironically, later
that year the Chinese government revised [upward
its] annual growth, while the Indian government
[downward its] growth rate three times in the same
year. Remember the Indian government's
moon-landing plan immediately after the Chinese
sent a man to the space? Well, [the Indians]
abandoned their plan the next year. So chill,
Indians, and keep it up, Frank. By the way, this
is no endorsement [of] your writing, Frank, but
you did make this board funnier, which is a good
thing after so many lives lost in this bad year.
A
Frank fan, sort of California, USA (Oct 13,
'05)
In
Asia, when one talks about morality, it is always
about pornography or sex. We must get rid of these
obsessions with sex when discussing morality as
morality is far more then just narrow-mindedness
among some nincompoops. It seems that our
youngsters are to be watched like a hawk as they
cant do anything right. It appears that in our
country, when those in power [say our morality]
has deteriorated, they only talk about pornography
as well as dressing and the free mixing of people
of opposite sexes. While this may not necessarily
be wrong, I think the fixation with this sort of
definition has camouflaged an even bigger malaise:
we are a nation that is morally corrupt in many,
many things. We don't value excellence apart from
giving award days and publicity stunts. Many don't
think twice before giving or accepting bribes.
Some so-called big CEOs get ghost writers to write
articles appearing in the papers for them. People
are not ashamed to be earning a humongous salary
while away at golf courses and tea stalls. If we
are serious in wanting to address moral
deficiency, we should start with our elders; stop
all this corruption and the senseless bickering in
public and lead by example. I doubt if anyone can
show the correlation between pornography and
morally decay. If that is true, how come certain
states in Malaysia which watch our youngsters and
females like a hawk keep reporting high incidences
of sexual crimes and incest? Let's us have a
meaningful discussion rather then hysteria and
paranoia. Have a Break Petaling Jaya, Malaysia (Oct 13,
'05)
OK, Mr Spengler [The blood is the life, Mr
Rumsfeld!, Oct 12], you've been tantalizing us
for years with your analysis of the mistakes made
by the US in confronting radical Islam and the
psycho-religious underpinnings of the
confrontation. Time to belly up to the bar and
devote a column to the advice you would give [US
President George W] Bush for the successful
prosecution of the "war against terror". You've
made the "why" clear enough, let's move on to the
next step: how, in your view, can the US win or at
least extricate itself from this quagmire with
some semblance of dignity? A
Faithful Reader (Oct 12, '05)
In reference to the article
Tehran builds bridges with
India's left by Siddharth Srivastava on Asia
Times Online on October 7, I regret to say that I
as the spokesperson of the Iranian Embassy-New
Delhi have been completely misquoted. I had
clearly said that "[Siamok] Burhani hasn't met any
person from [a] left party" and in reply to his
question: "Isn't Mr Burhani first
secretary-political?" I pointed out, "There are
several first secretaries in [the Iranian]
Embassy, even in [the] political section." But he
has written that "a spokesperson of the Iranian
Embassy told [ATol] ... "Several officials of the
Iranian Embassy have been meeting left party
leaders" and mentioned "Siamok Burhani and a
couple more officials" as who met [Communist Party
of India national secretary D] Raja. Moreover, I
clarified to him that Iranian diplomats have had
[casual] and regular meetings with the
personalities of different parties ... S
Asadi Press Section The Embassy of the Islamic
Republic of Iran New
Delhi, India (Oct 12, '05)
At no point did the
spokesperson say that the Iranian diplomats have
had casual meetings with different political
parties. I had asked a specific question about
meetings with left parties in the context of the
International Atomic Energy Agency vote, to which
the spokesperson said, "Yes, there have been
interactions by not one but several Iranian
diplomats." I then asked whether I could speak to
any of the officials involved in the talks, to
which the spokesperson said, "This will not be
proper, I hope you understand." Regarding Siamok
Burhani, it is true that the spokesperson said
that Mr Burhani did not personally meet the left
party leaders as "he does not talk to people
directly". But in the article the said information
about Mr Burhani meeting left party leaders is not
attributed to the spokesperson. There are credible
sources who do confirm interactions between
Iranian officials, including Mr Burhani, and the
left parties. My asking the spokesperson about Mr
Burhani was only to double-check, but the Iranian
spokesperson is well within his rights to deny it,
just as I believe that the meetings have happened.
- Siddharth
Srivastava
Dear
Spengler: Your article [China must wait for
democracy, Sep 27] made a salient, valid point
that China must deliver urban democratic systems.
The framework that is appropriate is already in
existence and you may be surprised to know was a
child of the French Revolution. It can be found in
such diverse examples as Montreal, Canada; the
Tokyo Metro Government system; Seoul, Korea;
Hamburg and Berlin, Germany; London and
Birmingham, UK along with the three-tier non-urban
system of England (its first foreign adaptation);
the Twin Cities Metro system and Portland Metro
system in the US amongst numerous variations. The
examples I mentioned are all urban systems, with
the exception of the British systems. But rural
systems exists as well; and for the Indians it
will come as a surprise that an urban system was
[the] beginning of what they recognize as the panchayat system of rural
India. But how to effectively implement such a
system where illiterates constitute a significant
constituency can be found in the example of the panchayat system of the
state of West Bengal, India, which in the late
1970s revived the British export of their
non-urban framework to the Indian colony in the
colonial era. Other Indian states have panchayat frameworks,
which were encouraged by the 1990s constitutional
amendment in India inspired by the West Bengal
success; but the West Bengal example remains
unique in what has been delivered in this context.
This difference lies in the mentality of the state
government, which has applied a framework exported
by the UK, but which ironically it has used to
greater effect in a more challenged environment
than the British themselves. By the way, the
weakness of your argument lies in your holding the
US as an example. It seems you haven't been
keeping up with changing dynamics there ... You
should also know that the UK government
commissioned a study of cities that contributed
most in GDP [gross domestic product] to their
country. The result was the unpleasant proof that
German cities led by huge margin, not only
top-tier German cities but also second-tier ones.
There were some non-German cities in the mix, but
the majority were German (the top three were
Frankfurt, Karlsruhe and Paris). The UK's highest
entry was London at 23. The top 20 was chock full
of German cities. It seems to me you have some
outdated materials that you are considering when
discussing the US example. May
Sage USA (Oct 12,
'05)
Moin
Ansari [letter, Oct 11]: Your point [that] Muslims
who reside in the West with shared values are the
ones to be given a patient ear is a noble one.
Unfortunately it's unrealistic, since [the]
numbers of Muslims with shared Western and
democratic values are marginal. It's the very
problem that every single media outlet in the
West, whether in the USA or in Europe, or even for
that matter Asia Times [Online], harps on: That is
the incompatibility and lack of assimilation of
Muslims within a secular and democratic fabric and
framework of any country [where] they are in a
minority. Let's not even go near the case of full
majority, since except for Saddam [Hussein]'s Iraq
no Muslim country had a secular constitution, not
to mention democracy. (Saddam of course had no use
for democracy.) Take a look at the Iraqi
constitution - is this is what the USA had in
mind? Of course not. I rest my case. DirtyDog San Francisco, California
(Oct 12, '05)
The world's most populous
Muslim country is a democracy. - ATol
G Travan [letter, Oct 11]
underestimated the flow of information in China
and the power that comes with it by citing the
absence of "a free press". True, the Chinese media
are frequently censored by the government to deny
the public access to certain information and news
stories. However, the Internet has increasingly
become the source for all sorts of information,
both real and fake. No matter how hard the Chinese
government tries to control it, the information on
the Internet has [proved] to be too difficult to
monitor and control. In addition, the more
conventional media in China have gone a long way
in terms of revealing the ills of the Chinese
society; some of the stuff you read today [was]
considered taboo just a few years ago. So Mr
Travan, most of us are well aware of "the hundreds
of millions of poor Chinese" you mentioned. Most
parts of China today (Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan
are the exceptions) are not yet democratic, but
that's not to say "the wonderful Chinese society"
only exists in Taipei and Kaohsiung (by the way,
did you enjoy the latest brawls in the Legislative
Yuan?). You don't have to be a democracy to have a
wonderful society, and having a democracy doesn't
guarantee you a wonderful society, does it? For
many people, it took events like [Hurricane]
Katrina to find out the champion of democracy is
just like the rest of us, far from being
invincible and ills-free. By the way, Mr Travan, I
wanted to tell you that Uighur is being taught at
universities in Xinjiang, contrary to what you
have alleged. Juchechosunmanse Beijing, China (Oct 12,
'05)
Joseph Nagarya [letter, Oct
11] must have correctly concluded from my name
that I'm not of white Christian origin, so the
charge of racism is the nuclear weapon meant to
bring me scurrying back into the fold. There are
scary individuals on the fringes of each party
(dare I say penumbra?) such as Pat Robertson, who
described Hinduism as "demonic", and Jesse
Jackson, who described New York as "Hymietown".
From my personal experience, [the US] is about
average in terms of "soft racism", meaning loose
self-association of like ethnicities, and I've
seen little "hard racism" among individuals or
politicians. Your personal mileage may vary. Jonnavithula ("Jon")
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 12, '05)
[Letter writer] Frank's
constant criticism of India's caste system, her
mastery of the English language and her democracy
is becoming tedious, so let's turn the tables and
look at the US democratic system and culture. I
was born and raised as an English-speaking
Christian in Sri Lanka. My father chose to
immigrate to the US mainly for the above reasons.
Once here we went through many "cultural shocks".
For myself as a Christian I immediately found that
the largest Christian nation seldom practices the
words of Christ ... Love, forgiveness and
compassion are seldom truly practiced in this
highly, racially divided US ... If one needs
first-hand truth, just ask a black woman, ask a
native American. Frank talks of America's
"affirmative action". Well, do a poll of how many
Americans support affirmative action - most don't.
Frank points to India's "anarchy" when America has
more prisoners than any industrialized nation (bar
China) and her streets in all her major cities are
not safe to walk at night; compare that with many
European cities and America fails the grade ...
Forgotten the scenes of [Hurricane] Katrina? The
world got to see, maybe for the first time, ...
the ingrained poverty of the black people in the
US, so sharply. Behind what reasoning can the
Christian leaders of this democracy hide for the
bad effects of an ever-persistent racial issue in
the US? ... India on the other hand is fighting a
battle whose roots go back 3,500 years at least
and is supported within the holy scriptures of the
Hindus. The caste system isn't going against any
Hindu tradition, it was and is part of it, and yet
India has managed to pass laws against it and
actively fight against its hold on Hinduism and
Indian society as a whole ... Finally on the issue
of democracy being solely a Western idea, [that]
is incorrect, as India herself has had city
republics such as the city of Vaishali and has had
a grassroots democracy in almost all her villages
across the nation where the village council,
elected by the town, speak for the people. Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 12, '05)
Ehsan Ahrari [It's the radicals,
stupid, Oct 8] correctly identifies the
problem for all of us: it is "religious
extremists" who may be Jews, Christians, Muslims,
Hindus, Buddhists, Taoists etc. Bicultural Western
Muslims are not only ambassadors to the West, they
are also representatives of the West to the Muslim
world. Those Muslims like Ahrari who reside in the
West enjoy the shared values. We need to listen to
these ideas that will help eliminate terror and
terrorism. It is imperative that we win this "war
of ideas" that will rule the hearts and minds of
the moderates. Stealth bombers, M-16s, or cluster
bombs cannot destroy terror. Terrorism has to be
destroyed by draining the swamp of injustice and
finding the kernels of truth in "the war of ideas"
... Ahrari makes a brilliant point also made by
Thomas Friedman on poverty in Pakistan. The US
government spends $6 billion on subsidies to
American cotton farmers. If this subsidy were
eliminated (over the dead body of Senator Jesse
Helms and others), this $6 billion would flow to
the poorest cotton farmers in Pakistan who would
then send their children to the "enlightened
moderation" schools. [But] Ahrari falls prey to
exaggerated and non-factual Neocon propaganda on
madassas in Pakistan. This is a bogey created by
those who want to obfuscate the line between good
Muslims and bad Muslims and demonize all Islam.
According to a seminal study conducted for the
World Bank, less than 1% of school-going children
go to the madrassas... The madassas are but a
reflection of society and their elimination serves
no purpose other than denying hot meals to kids
who are learning the Koran. Even if all the
madrassas were closed tomorrow, the swamp of
illiteracy, unemployment, hunger and disease would
continue to fuel the class divide in Pakistan,
Kashmir and Palestine ... The problem is that the
media gives a pass to the "white looters"
(McVeigh, Dahmer, Calpoe, Baruch Goldstein),
without blaming their religion, but never fails to
identify a Muslim evil-doer by his religion. The
"terrorist" in Ecuador or Guatemala is not called
a Christian terrorist. The British bombers were
educated in British public schools. Should we shut
down the British education system? The 9-11
bombers trained at the flight school at the
University of Oklahoma. Should we shut down the
state's education system? The "Unabomber" came
from the Ivy League. Should we examine the MIT
[Massachusetts Institute of Technology curriculum
to see what problems lie there? ... Moin
Ansari (Oct 11, '05)
I must admit, I have read the
debate between Frank and Rakesh [letters below]
and admire their patriotism for their respective
countries. But it is evident the flavor of the
debate has taken a vicious turn where “Frank” has
chosen to lean towards racists overtones that no
longer make this an intelligent exchange of
opinions. I have learned much from both sides’
commentary but the learning curve has reached its
limits as we degenerate to petty, foolish comments
from Frank. It is easier to toss profanities at
your adversary when you aren’t face to face. When
exchanging opinions, the winner is not necessarily
the person with the popular views but rather the
person who remains composed. Although Frank
appears to be an intelligent reader, the counter
arguments by Rakesh have forced Frank to lose
self-control. Regretfully, Asia Times Online has
found the perpetuation of these letters to be
within their mandate of free speech. And I applaud
the effort, but do not trivialize it to the extent
where Frank degenerates your publication to the
likes of a tabloid. Take the higher ground. Martin Toronto, Canada (Oct 11,
'05)
In
case someone somehow takes Frank's endless
insulting of India seriously ...The difference
between China and India is that a free press in
India has shown the ills of that society, while
the "communists" in China have succeeded through
censorship in sweeping the hundreds of millions of
poor Chinese under the rug. Why? To entice the
white (and Japanese) men to build more sweatshops
with the illusion of stability. The wonderful
Chinese society Frank dreams of does exist, not in
Beijing or Shanghai, but in Taipei and Kaohsiung,
which are run according to the "white men's"
democratic principles of Sun Yat-sen. G
Travan California, USA
(Oct 11, '05)
Frank from Seattle seems to
have an unending gripe about India and all things
Indian. He has a problem with Indians speaking
English, the native tongue of our former colonial
master . He also has a problem with Indian
democracy which he has frequently claimed to be a
white man's political system. Essentially, what
Frank is trying to put across is this ... the
extensive use of English in our daily lives and
the adoption of the white man's democratic form of
government even after our independence is a sign
of our servitude to our past masters and also a
sign of our lack of pride in our own culture and
civilization. Well, Mr Frank, Indian (or Hindu)
civilization has always been open to accepting new
ideas from all cultures from times immemorial. We
have never been a closed society for most part of
our history except during periods of Islamic and
colonial power, which is to say only the last few
centuries when we were subjugated. Indian
civlization has repeatedly demonstrated a
tremendous capacity to absorb external ideas and
influences and ultimately Indianize them and make
them its own. The absorbtion of democratic ideals
and the English language is yet another example in
this on-going saga of assimilation and Indian
civilization's quest for self-improvement. Just
like Hindi, English has become a link language
connecting the diverse Indian people. Over several
decades, millions of Indians have learnt and
mastered the English language, so much so that
today English is an Indian language and a Western
one. Indians have already contributed to the
growth of English literature ... and the day is
not far off when the soul of English will shift to
India. The same is true of democracy; though we
borrowed it from the British we have made it our
own ... Chandan Bangalore, India (Oct 11,
'05)
Jonnavithula Sreekanth
writes, regarding my letter, "... let's not
discuss Bush, since that obviously sends you into
a frenzy". Your effort to avoid the issue - Bush -
by being "provocative" is a failure. Bush is the
issue, as are his serial violations of US and
international law, such as those prohibiting the
war crime - defined as such by the US - of
torture. You are "right" to want to avoid
discussion of the facts about Bush, as those
refute your irresponsible and irrational
fuzzy-feelgood sleep-walker's illusions about him
and his fellow white supremacists. Sreekanth
further writes: "... law is too important to be
left to the lawyers". Slogans are a substitute for
thought. In contrary reality: better that law be
"left to" those who actually have an education in
actual law, and thus actually understand it, and
its evolutions, than to those incapable of
distinguishing between, on one hand, extremist
ideological propaganda, and on the other, actual
law. As concerns Griswold and your illiterate
smearing of it with rightwing extremist
distortions: that case simply expressly recognized
a right of privacy which already exists in the
constitution; it is not only not especially
complicated, but is also thoroughly and solidly
grounded. As for my "indignation": I leave the
cheap ad homina shots to you, the fruits of your
hollow, smug arrogance; I am too old to waste my
time with false supremacisms and the foolish
conclusions which flow therefrom. And further
writes: "... you'll notice that I did not say that
Americans should not have the right to
contraception, it's that it was [sneaked] in by
the back door". When will you be reading the
actual decision, and by that means learn that the
question before the court concerned the right of
married couples to use contraception? Nothing at
all "sneaky" about it ... I've noted from time to
time that I am a legal professional. I've also
noted that a central focus of my legal studies is
constitutional law, that grounded in extensive
study in legal history. You'll lose any "argument"
on that topic - as you do above - so I recommend
you avoid the issue yet again by calling me names,
exactly as is the practice of Fox fake-news
addicted extremists who swallow rightwing
extremist anti-constitutional lies as if
legitimate. Perhaps soon you'll wake up and
realize that the fake "conservatives" you worship
- including Bush - base their politics on racism -
look up Nixon's "Southern strategy"; and contrast
that with Lyndon Johnson's statement, upon signing
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law, that his
doing so would lose the Democrats the Southern
vote for a generation. You clearly know nothing
about the history of racism in the US, as
demonstrated by your infatuation with the very
political party which welcomes rightwing white
supremacists/racists with open arms, and does
everything it can to arouse and exploit racism. Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts, USA
(Oct 11, '05)
Obviously Mr Cambria [letter
below] does not have good information when he
blames the Bush administration for failing to stop
the September 11, 2001 attacks. Perhaps he should
be reminded that it was a Democrat president, Bill
Clinton, who did basically nothing to get back at
the al-Qaeda elements in spite of numerous attacks
on US interests during his eight years in office.
Clinton and his Democrats ignored all these
ominous signs. Bin Laden was offered to him on a
silver platter but he chose not to accept this
offer from the Sudanese authorities. As to some of
the current espionage cases, this is not unusual.
There [were] several similar incidents during
Clinton’s time. At least at present these are
being uncovered. One wonders how many spies
Clinton allowed to escape undetected while he was
distracted by his domestic troubles. J
Chua New Jersey, USA
(Oct 11, '05)
Dear God, next time you talk
to George would you please tell him to resign? And
do tell Georgey that screams from American torture
chambers do not bring joy to your heart. Alexander "Sandy"
Treutler New York, USA
(Oct 11, '05)
[Re] Todd Crowell's article
For Taiwan, American rock,
Chinese hard place [Sep 30], a few
facts. The biggest arms purchase deal in the
history of Taiwan, concocted by the Chen
[Shui-bian] government and the Americans, and
consistently rejected by the [Taiwanese]
opposition, suffers from two glaring flaws. The
major items are those that Taiwan does not need
for her defense, and secondly those that Taiwan
would need to rely on were priced at two to three
times the market rate. For reasons known to both
the Americans and Taiwanese and never openly
discussed, this deal was extortionistic in
character. Many Taiwanese on the street believe
that the Americans do not want to sell to
Taiwanese sophisticated weaponry while at the same
time they want the Taiwanese to continue to pay
[the US] high "protection" money for standing by
Taiwan. Taiwanese believed that the stolen
second-term presidential election for Chen was
endorsed by Washington precisely because Chen
agreed to this arms deal. Now the opposition, with
a majority in the legislature, will fight to
ensure that this "defense budget" will never get
through the house. Chan Ah Tee Malaysia (Oct 11,
'05)
I
refer to your coverage Working for Malaysia's
workers (Oct 6) ... [There is a]
perennial complaint that we Malaysians ill-treat
our foreign workers who are supposed to be helping
us. While there are some truths to that matter,
not all of us are evil monsters waiting to squeeze
the last pint of foreign blood dry. On the other
hand, one would expect the respective embassies to
be top notch in looking after their own people,
which is not always the case. Every day I drive
past the Indian High Commission and often spot
workers sleeping on the pavement outside in
pitiful conditions. Surely it is incumbent on the
high commission to ensure that if there is no
space inside the high commission, decent
accommodation is provided until the matter is
sorted out ... Compassionate Petaling Jaya, Malaysia (Oct 11,
'05)
Alas, it is not "almost a
physical pleasure to watch President George W Bush
fall from grace", as Ira Chernus writes [Where fear can't take us,
Oct 7]. Mr Bush's talk [on Oct 6] before the
National Endowment for Democracy was a sorry sight
to see. The American president served up old
bromides; he tugged at his audience's hearts by
repeating tired sound bites. His listeners
responded lukewarmly on cue. It is anachronistic
to state that Mr Bush has lost momentum. He is
sinking deeper into the quagmire of his own
mendacious making in Iraq. He is willing to
sacrifice to the last drop of blood American lives
as the jaws of defeat eat up American troops and
Iraqis of all walks of life. On the very day Mr
Bush held forth on the need to wage a war against
terrorism, the United States press ran stories on
allegedly low espionage in Vice President
[Richard] Cheney's office. It is [common sense] to
ask whether we are looking at a repeat of an
administration [that] is either so inept or
lackadaisical or sluggish in character and [that]
is so unmoved by the necessity to batten down the
hatches of security of the nation and its
citizenry as Mr Bush & Co were in August 2001
when they disregarded a warning of a terrorist
attack on the United States. Mr Bush is the
personification of what Talleyrand is supposed to
have said of the Bourbons: "They have learned
nothing, and they have [forgotten] nothing." Jakob
Cambria (Oct 7, '05) USA
The position of leftist
political parties in India over the country's
recent vote at the IAEA [International Atomic
Energy Agency] to report Iran to the UN Security
Council displays flagrant lack of credibility (Tehran builds bridges with
India's left, Oct 6). For one, the cadres were
silent in the early '90s when V P Singh's
government went back on its word so blatantly and
denied Iran the supply of a nuclear reactor. They
were supporting the government even then - so why
this sudden
volte-face? Moreover, as Foreign Secretary
Shyam Saran pointed out, it was India that pushed
for a particular clause in the resolution that
left open the path of further dialogues between
the European-3 and Tehran. Therefore, India was
instrumental in providing leeway to Iran - how
could it go back on a resolution it had helped
draft? Finally, the leftists forget that by its
own independent analysis, Iran does need to do
more to comply with the standards of the IAEA. So
do the Marxists prefer nuclear proliferation to
following a moribund foreign policy? Moreover, the
Iran they support - just like their other
favorite, China - is not exactly an
exemplification of a free society where human
rights are respected. Therefore, all that the
cadres have based this on is anti-Americanism,
pure and simple. Also, Frank's preposterous
statements [letter, Oct 6] know no bounds in his
most recent - as with his earlier - letters. Who
said India doesn't like Iranian oil? There is a
strong consensus within the South Bloc to prefer
renewable energy sources over perishable ones, but
the fact remains that India still imports 70% of
its oil needs. Moreover, the very fact that
Indians are never happy with their leadership is
the beauty of democracy - you don't see people
under tyranny complain because they will vanish
and/or they don't have a choice but to live with
it. Indians can go out to the polling booth and do
something about it. Finally - but by no means
lastly - if Indians don't know how to speak
English, why do all the BPO [business process
outsourcing] firms prefer India vis-a-vis other
countries? Even in the most remote village, you
will probably be able to find an English speaker.
Before he returns to the "slave mentality" again,
note that (1) Indians generally speak three
languages, local, Hindi and English; and (2) China
itself is trying to catch up in English
proficiency. Aruni Mukherjee (Oct 7,
'05)
Ehsan Ahrari's article Ousting Assad without a
backup plan [Oct 5] is an interesting read,
but Ahrari fails to state what benefits Syria
would accrue by assassinating Lebanon's former
prime minister, Rafik Hariri. Yet in the same
article, he mentions how Israel has benefited from
this sordid murder and will continue to do so for
the immediate future. Unlike some nations, Syria
is not led by a bloodthirsty psychopath with
ulterior motives. The US military is literally in
Syria's back yard. And with the White House
neo-cons willing to use the flimsiest of excuses
to invade Syria and bring the shock and awe of
"American-style democracy" to Damascus, Syria
would have to be suicidal to assassinate Hariri.
Bottom line, there is no benefit for Syria or its
leaders. However, one country stood to benefit
immensely from Hariri's murder: Israel. For proof,
we need to go no further than a report prepared in
1996 by the Institute for Advanced Strategic and
Political Studies [titled] "Study Group on a New
Israeli Strategy Toward 2000." The authors are the
usual collection of suspects that puts Israel on a
pedestal and then castigates the rest of the
region as a troublesome problem to work on, with
brute force. Throughout the report, the authors
repeatedly mention Syria and how much trouble this
country has become and discuss ways to neutralize
this threat and believe me, the authors aren't
touchy-feely types when it comes to dealing with
Syria. To help facilitate Syria's demise, the
authors also opine that removing Saddam Hussein
would be beneficial. Of course, all of this would
be accomplished by having Israel's 900-pound
gorilla in place, namely the US. So again, one
must ask who truly benefits from Hariri's murder.
An emasculated Syria? Hardly. But how about the
nation that will no longer worry about those pesky
borders and can now roam at will in the Middle
East, without facing consequences? One that can
now turn its complete fury against the last
impediment for it creating its own empire by
nuking Iran. Yes, Israel is the true winner in the
Hariri murder sweepstakes ... Greg
Bacon Ava, Missouri
(Oct 7, '05)
[Vincent] Maadi should be
congratulated for his pertinent comments [letter,
Oct 6] regarding what basically are further
attempts at so-called "shell games" of the West.
[A recent] major news item makes note of [British
Prime Minister] Tony Blair's studied conclusion
that military hardware used by the Iraqis [is]
definitely of Iranian origin. Which obviously
makes Iran an automatic "evil enemy". As compared
to the millions of bullets that the Coalition of
the Willing either buys from Israel or are
probably donated to the cause of bringing
democracy to Iraq at the rate of some 250,000
bullets per insurgent. Leading one to posit the
following: Is the West any closer to accepting the
East as co-equal? Or will it have to commit more
in human and financial sacrifices before accepting
the words to the ... song, "Those were the days,
my friend, we thought they would never end." That
could be the challenge promised on ATol's Edge between [Pepe]
Escobar and Spengler. Armand De Laurell (Oct 7,
'05)
Regarding Joseph Nagarya's
letter [Oct 6], let's not discuss [US President
George W] Bush, since that obviously sends you
into a frenzy. In one of your previous letters, I
think you said you were a lawyer (or a law
student?), but law is too important to be left to
lawyers. It's interesting that you should cite
Griswald [vs Connecticut], of the famous penumbras
and other emanations, certainly a solid foundation
to build upon! Also, if you suspend your perpetual
indignation for a bit, you'll notice that I did
not say that Americans should not have a right to
contraception, it's that it was [sneaked] in by
the back door, as opposed to legislative intent.
On partial-birth abortions, a quick Google search
shows the bill passed in the House by 282-139 and
in the Senate by 64-33, with many Democrats voting
in favor, and a Gallup poll supposedly showing 70%
of Americans supported it. Which exactly proves my
point, which is that extremists like yourself
prefer the back-door approach of judicial activism
to enforcing your peculiar brand of opinions upon
the majority, rather than the legislature. Jonnavithula ("Jon")
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 7, '05)
Rakesh [letter, Oct 6] never
claimed that all Indians speak English? Well, read
his [Oct 3] letter and judge yourself ... I can
tell that Indians are proud of their English. Why?
Is that because that is their master's language?
The same goes to their white men's political
system. India shows the strength of democracy and
freedom of expression? That is the joke. None of
the democratic [countries] has a sick caste
system. Yes, the caste system is outlawed in
India. So are many other things practiced daily
inside India. Law and order are the most important
elements distinguishing democracy and anarchy.
India is a country without laws. If you want to
know if India is anarchy or not, just look for the
trash, human and animal waste on India's major
streets; half-baked dead bodies inside poor
people's water sources; public displays of
disrespect of the laws; and those uncontrolled
noises. Compare that with other democratic
countries which never boasted about their shining.
Then make a judgment yourself. If the rich and
[powerful] Indians have to hire armed guards in
front of McDonald's to protect their 99-cent
cheeseburgers inside India, it would be hard to
believe that India is not anarchy. I was
suggesting an American way to level the [playing]
field for the lower-caste people in India. That is
called affirmative action in the democratic
[countries]. We do not see that in India, do we?
That is because India's democracy is on paper
only. All the beauties are inside the hot air. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 7,
'05)
I refer to the article Western-trained,
Western-armed, enemies [Oct 6] by Ramtanu
Maitra. As long as Americans, the British and
other European powers occupy foreign lands and try
to impose their domination over other people, they
will learn that local people will find ingenious
ways of fighting them. Cleverness is not confined
to the white-skinned people only. Peoples of
occupied lands have every right to find ways and
means to abort the occupation and drive the
invading armies out. The Americans went into
Afghanistan and Iraq thinking that they [would]
use their technology and their bribes to conquer
these people, but no people want any foreign
occupation and especially not the military,
cultural and economic type. Europe, which has
received a large number of ordinary refugees and
people who have been driven out of their lands by
... the European powers and their wars, are now
becoming xenophobic and want foreigners out.
Neo-Nazis in Europe are setting fires to homes and
hotels housing immigrants. Why should not then the
occupied people turn the tables on their
occupiers? Vincent Maadi Cape Town, South Africa (Oct 6,
'05)
The
eye-opening effulgence and profound investigation
decorously narrated by Syed Saleem [Shahzad], US back to the drawing board
in Afghanistan (Oct 6), is the most
disquieting perspicacity that I have seen in
years. I must congratulate Asia Times [Online for]
giving us a vignette to the stark truth ... By
attacking Iraq, we have created an export
industry. The export industry is not oil. By
occupying Iraq, we seem to have created a
university of terror that is now fueling the
insurgency in Afghanistan far away from the
Pakistani border. This seems to indicate that the
insurgency is independent of any link to the
heavily guarded border areas with Pakistan. While
many who have selective amnesia have been wrongly
blaming Pakistan for the failure of the NATO
forces in Afghanistan, President [General Pervez]
Musharraf and many in the US government have gone
hoarse saying "I told you so." It must be
remembered that the incompetent Northern
Alliance-led non-Pashtun government minority
government was not the idea of Islamabad. Pakistan
did not want these incompetent and corrupt people
in office ... Had the policymakers not been
blinded by Pakistanphobia, and had they not been
swayed by the bad advice of New Delhi, there could
have been a better result in Afghanistan. Had they
listened to sanity and their Pakistani allies, the
war in Afghanistan would have been over. Building
Afghanistan as the next Switzerland [or] Dubai
would have been under way ... The nation-builders
of Afghanistan wanted to force a non-Pashtun
government in Afghanistan. This had never happened
in the past 500 years in Afghanistan. The sad
truth is that the survival of the whining
incompetent jokers in Kabul is improbable. This
dark prediction is not mine but [that] of Michael
Sheuer, Mark LeVine, and others who know the
Afghan landscape well. Today our boots on the
ground are fast reaching exhaustion and unable to
deliver more. The problems for the NATO forces
[in] Afghanistan are the tip of the iceberg. If
two universities begin exporting terror, then the
dominos will begin to fall, from Duhambe to
Bokhara to Khorasan, and may engulf Islamabad, and
Istanbul. So how do we get out of this one? The
solution is the total and immediate outsourcing of
the war effort in Afghanistan and Iraq to the
friendly governments of Indonesia, Malaysia,
Pakistan and Turkey. This Muslim army should help
create [a] face-saving exit strategy in
Afghanistan and Iraq. Moin Ansari (Oct 6,
'05)
Re
Talking Turkey: Now the hard
part [Oct 6]: Federico Bordonaro cites several
reasons why the US supports Turkey's accession
into the EU [European Union]. I believe the second
reason, which he mentions rather casually, is by
far the most important. The fact is that the US
and UK know that rejecting Turkey will precipitate
some sort of Islamic Economic Union in the Middle
East. That prospect is the most frightening
scenario to the Brits and Americans. However, the
consequences of absorbing Turkey into the EU, and
bringing the EU's borders to Iran, Iraq, and
Syria, will significantly weaken the EU. With
Turkey in the mix, the EU is constitutionally and
politically dead. This is the price the Europeans,
especially non-Britons, will pay for sabotaging an
Islamic unity in the Mideast. From the US
viewpoint, two birds have been killed with one
stone - a weaker EU and a disunity of the Islamic
Middle East. Roy (Oct 6,
'05)
Frank's attacks and double
standards continue unabated [letter, Oct 4]. A
large chunk of the Indian population has some
basic knowledge of English, even though a majority
may not speak English at home. This fact is common
knowledge, but Frank's inherent prejudice never
stops chewing on it. I never claimed that all
Indians speak English. All I meant was that Frank
and his intolerant brigade hate those Indians
[who] speak English. And I dare say that they do
so because they are ignorant of the past [and/or]
present and/or are jealous because the large
number of outsourced jobs that are going to
middle- and lower-middle-class Indians. Frank
should make a trip to India instead of relying on
what appears to be typical devious communist
propaganda aimed at vilifying middle classes. How
many Indians can express their opinions freely, he
questions. Answer: 1 billion plus. And through
various means - not just through the Internet
alone. Let me remind Frank of a momentous event he
might have missed since he is usually busy
arrogantly vilifying Indians. A little more than a
year ago, the nationalist BJP [Bharatiya Janata
Party] government was shown the door because the
benefits of the economic reforms did not reach the
rural poor. This shows the strength of democracy
and freedom of expression. The Chinese regime
slaughtered innocent students at Tiananmen Square;
it makes its Chinese workers toil in slave-like
conditions while the "white" CEOs of the Western
corporations mint money; it is a regime that
throws poor people out of Shanghai and Beijing
just because they don't have a job and can't
afford a place and jails honest journalists. Yet
there seems to be nothing that the ordinary
Chinese can do about it. The Chinese government
seems to be telling them, "Here, accept
Western-style consumerism and shut up. Don't ask
for rights, or else we'll throw you in jail."
Frank boasts about leveling the play[ing field]
for the lower classes ... Well, the brutal manner
in which the Chinese communists have stolen
hard-earned money of [their] own people under the
guise of "leveling" is hardly acceptable and fair.
The real leveling is what happens when you uplift
the poor by creating
opportunities, and not by playing Robin Hood.
Oh, and I searched for the Chinese search engine
Baidu that Frank was bragging about in his
previous letter. All the top references that came
up were related to how top music companies are
suing Baidu for indulging in mindless piracy, and
how Baidu filters all opinions that the Chinese
government doesn't like. Also, most interestingly,
Baidu became popular in China only after the government
blocked its users from accessing Google and other
search engines for two weeks. There is also
evidence that the higher the educational level
among the Chinese, the more likely they are to use
other search engines like Google. Interesting! Rakesh India (Oct 6, '05)
Frank's comment [letter, Oct
4] that India does not speak English is partly
true. In a nation like India the term "continent"
is more appropriate [than "nation"] considering
her geographical size, population and diversity
... India is one of the largest English-speaking
nations in the world, even surpassing the
population of England. India is also a nation with
the most number of newspapers in the world. Many
of India's languages far surpass in numbers [of
speakers] the languages of Europe. Tamil alone has
at least 60 million speakers. But when dealing
with a continental-sized nation like India any
pluses can easily be negated by the negatives,
simply because of dealing with the astronomical
scale that is India. Yes, India has a large pool
of highly efficient English speakers, but they are
dwarfed in comparison to her population. If this
English-speaking population were to form a nation
it would have more English-speaking people than
Australia, Canada or England. As for the rural
population living in "anarchy", time and time
again these rural folks have ousted Indian
governments and elected governments that reflect
their point of view with uncanny wisdom. Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 6, '05)
I refer to Frank's letter of
October 4 and would like to inform him that when
Indians and Pakistanis write English, they are
grammatically correct because from a very early
age in their schooling great importance is given
to constructing a sentence and its grammar ...
With regard to speaking English, Indians do speak
with an oriental accent but they do their best to
use correct grammar ... Saqib
Khan London, England
(Oct 6, '05)
I think Partha [letter, Oct
5] confused democracy with elections. In
[anarchic] states or villages, there are elections
too. Gang leaders are usually elected. In the
animal world, there are elections. The strongest
animal is usually elected to be the group leader.
India has elections too. However, the voters do
not know exactly [whom] they are voting for. The
real Indians cannot express themselves in public
because they cannot speak English. It is funny
that those so-called Indian elites are also
frustrated with their leaders. At the same time,
these Indians ask other people to trust their
leaders, and keep investing their money in India's
manufacturing sectors. [As] Rakesh indicated
[letter, Oct 3], Indians do not like manufacturing
jobs. Those jobs are trinkets. So why not invest
[in] China? Let Chinese people work hard to earn
your money. Chinese people like [hard work]. They
want to build things for this world. They have
been doing that for more than 2,000 years by
supplying this world with silk, pottery,
porcelain, compasses, paper, stirrups, etc. Let
Indians keep their sour-grape fantasy, empty talks
and shameless boasts. I also find it laughable
that some Indians told us that India does not like
Iranian oil. Even America [would like] to have
Iranian oil. Those are not sour oils. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 6,
'05)
Jonnavithula Sreekanth writes
[letter, Oct 5]: "Joseph Nagarya took the trouble
to filter out exactly his hot-button topics" -
without cliche, Mr Sreekanth: my central point, of
which you make no mention, is that [US President
George W] Bush is a phony, and a liar. He is
neither a conservative, despite your sleepwalking
swallowing of that lie, nor a Christian: compare
his actions with not only his mouth, but also with
the rules which apply to Christians in both word
and conduct. Further: "I'm not a Christian, but
I'm speculating that 'thou shalt not kill' does
not mean that Christianity is a suicide pact."
Tell that to Christ. And I also pointed to the
rule, of which you make no mention, "Thou shalt
not lie." One of Bush's lies was that of lying the
US into the illegal invasion and occupation of
Iraq. Lying to Congress and "We the People" is not
only a federal offense, a felony, a felony is a
high crime. Read the constitution you will
doubtless defend out the other side of your
non-conservative mouth. ... "On the topic of
abortion ... [Roe vs. Wade] was plainly judicial
excess and invention." When you get an education
in law, perhaps you'll cease to be superficial -
and uninformed about the history and foundation of
Roe. In 1968, in Griswald vs Connecticut, the US
Supreme Court held that married couples have the
right to use contraception - which to that point
had been illegal - and thereby enunciated a
privacy right which obviously exists in the
constitution. (Freedom of conscience is itself a
right of privacy.) Roe is based upon and is an
extension of Griswald; thus it properly recognizes
an additional right of privacy in reproductive
matters. In so doing, it also recognizes that
abortion can be required as medical necessity - a
reality your anti-abortion fanatics refuse to
recognize for anyone whatsoever; thus the effort
to criminalize the falsely named - by lying
"Christians" - "partial-birth abortion". Last but
not least: I suggest you overcome your greed-based
dreamy-eyed infatuation with a fake "conservatism"
which is in fact anti-constitutional - which you'd
know if you had grounding in actual law instead of
extremist excuse-making for the sociopathic. And I
suggest you outgrow the dishonesty inherent in
attacking as "haters" - of Bush, in this instance
- those who tell truths you hate: in fact, Bush is
a proven liar; and it has long been well known
that he went AWOL [absent without leave] from the
Air National Guard. And even a superficial look at
Bush's history will see the glaring consistency of
his being AWOL from responsibility, most recently
being both hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Stating
those known facts does not
ipso facto constitute hatred of Bush; but
attacking me instead of the issue does imply
hatred for those who tell the truth about such a
transparent fraud as your hero Bush. "Further
discussion is useless." Especially when one hopes
to avoid the issue yet again. Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 6,
'05)
Kunal Kumar Kundu (India's road to glory strewn
with potholes [Oct 5]) told us that Indian
business leaders are much more optimistic about
the future than their international peers. Isn't
that true for all Indian writers at ATol? Then he
argues that India has better potential than China
and Brazil. Does he sound like a gypsy
fortune-teller? Kunal admits that India has
infrastructure and corruption problems. What is
the solution he offered? Liberalization. Wow ...
It should not take a genius to figure out India
needs ... more construction to resolve the
infrastructure problem. Sure, [that is] hard work
only for Chinese. Upper-class Indians would not do
such low-level work. However, I agree with the
comments [on] the Front Page. India always looks
good on paper. All the Indian beauties are on the
lips. Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 5,
'05)
I
refer to the article by [M K] Bhadrakumar [A storm sweeps the
post-Soviet space], Oct 5 ... Ukraine's prime
minister is not an ethnic Russian as the author
claims. [Yuri] Yekhanurov's mother is Ukrainian
and [his] father is a Buryat from Yakutia. In
addition, there is no indication that Yekhanurov
is pro-Russian. He is acting on instructions from
President [Viktor] Yushchenko and is doing what is
in Ukraine's interests. Stop publishing trash
which is speculative and inaccurate, and stop
being so Russo-centric in your approach. Orest
Steciw (Oct 5, '05)
Yakutia, now known as the
Sakha Republic, is in northeastern Siberia, which
is part of Russia. Buryats are ethnically mixed,
but those in the Buryat Republic - also in Russian
Siberia - speak a Mongolian language. - ATol
[Ehsan] Ahrari's article The indefatigable
insurgency [Oct 4] sounds on the surface
logical, but in the details it reads like a litany
of praise of the Iraqi insurgency and a doomsday
scenario for the US coalition. For example, he
points to the success of the mujahideen without
mentioning once the enormous support they received
from the US (such as intelligence logistics and
training, the funding of arms and cash etc) in
defeating the USSR. Secondly he mentions the
"suicide attacks" by the Islamic terrorists as
"unfathomable to the US military". How far from
the truth is that statement? During World War II
the US military faced a formidable enemy in the
Japanese Empire and the Japanese soldiers were
zealous in their quest to dominate Asia and knock
off the Western powers. The US military had to
face scores of kamikaze fighters whose planes were
loaded with bombs and did take down many US naval
ships, and yet the US won. The US military knows
well about the use of suicide bombers during war,
and after [September 11, 2001] during peace. The
US military in the Middle East is not just
[confined] to ground troops but has a strong naval
presence (including nuclear-powered submarines
with satellite-guided missiles) in the region. But
most important, the Islamic insurgents, unlike the
mujihadeen, don't have a global power backing them
up. Finally "the war zone" is located in the
Middle East where most of the world's oil is
derived. Whether the US wins or loses the battle
against these insurgents in Iraq is not the issue.
In order that the Middle East is not drawn into a
regional upheaval, affecting the global economy,
the US coalition will have to stay. Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 5, '05)
I hope [letter] writers such
as Frank (who said on October 4, "For the poor
common Indians, India is anarchy") and Saqib Khan
(Oct 4, "strip-tease dancers and whores as in the
Western countries as well as in India") will think
before making sweeping generalizations. Frank, if
anything, the opposite of what you say is actually
true in the case of India. Many of us whom you
call "educated Internet elite" are sometimes
frustrated but resigned to the fact that we have
to live with the leaders that the "poor common
Indian" elects. But that's democracy. Saqib,
again, the question is about the choice given to
women in Islamic societies to wear a burqa, drive a car, or
even be a model in a commercial (which you appear
to detest). Let the women exercise such a choice.
In other words, you (men of Islam) please don't
choose for them ... Partha Australia (Oct 5, '05)
Saqib Khan's lengthy essay
[letter, Oct 4] is nothing but a depiction of
paradise that simply does not exist. As usual, his
response is loaded with the habitual denial. Just
like a fundamentalist, he cites scriptures as
evidence to support his denial. He says many
Muslim women are doctors, academics, teachers,
lawyers, solicitors, engineers, nurses, social
workers, policewomen, army officers and even
pilots. Well, I have to say that "many" is a
highly relative term. Statistics speak for
themselves. Most women [in Islamic countries] are
not allowed to obtain education and work and the
reasons cited are from the scriptures ... Rakesh India (Oct 5, '05)
Saqib [Khan] probably doesn't
realize it, but his letter [Oct 4] is similar to
the historical prejudices and justifications that
American whites made about blacks, or the dalit situation in India,
something like "they are happiest working in the
fields, they don't need an education". In both the
US and India, there is awareness about the
problem, and corrective action, but it baffles me
that a seemingly educated person would continue to
defend discriminatory treatment of women. As
usual, Joseph Nagarya [letter, Oct 4] took the
trouble to filter out exactly his hot-button
topics from my original letter, which was about
the treatment of women. Interesting arithmetic
about the two-thirds - darn, they must have
miscounted the votes in 2004 (again). I'm not a
Christian, but I'm speculating that "thou shalt
not kill" does not mean that Christianity is a
suicide pact. On the topic of abortion, I'm not
necessarily trying to disturb today's fragile
equilibrium, but it was plainly judicial excess
and invention. There have been discussions on
other forums as to whether the American founders
intended the government to be religion-neutral, or
irreligious, and it's tedious to reproduce them
here. Your comments about [President George W]
Bush make it clear that you don't have a normal
political difference of opinion with him, but hate
him at a visceral level ("liar Bush", AWOL), so
further discussion is useless. Jonnavithula (Jon)
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 5, '05)
Chrysantha Wijeyasingha's
letter (Oct 4) reminds me of one of those typical
pro-India letters - long on bombast, short on
substance. With India unlikely to have Iranian
oil, he paints a picture to comfort himself that
India won't lose much on not having Iranian oil.
Or is it a case of sour grapes - China won't
really get to enjoy much since the "world"
(another coalition of the willing?) and the US
will force Iran to abandon its nuclear program and
make its supporters (like China) [eat] humble pie.
India has supplicated to one Western power before,
so I guess it's probably a case of "old habits die
hard". Why, he even brags about the alliance that
the US has signed with India as if it mattered to
the US. Even India's businesses and media have
complained about the treaty's bias to the US. And
one more thing - Wijeyansingha signs off from New
Orleans. You mean they have power back on already?
Wouldn't Hurricane Katrina have given us an
understanding to the limits of a "superpower"? Asad
Ul-Haq Lahore,
Pakistan (Oct 5, '05)
Again Spengler with this
tired thesis of "America is not an empire." In his
review of Robert Kagan's
Imperial Grunts titled Do you call that an
empire? [Oct 4], Spengler uses flawed
arguments to explain how the US is not an imperial
power. First, he bases much of his commentary on
the comparison between the US and the British
Empire. But if there's one thing there is no lack
of examples of in history, it is empiredom. The
British could (and I'm sure they did) compare
their own empire favorably to the Spanish or the
Ottomans or even the French. Many things go into
the application and even the nature of an imperial
agenda - history, culture, religion, demographics
and even the geopolitical structure of the time.
The Spaniards descended on the New World with a
brute, bare lust for precious metals. Their
initial "empire" was one big exercise in ravaging.
As Spengler points out, the English were masters
of inculcation, but they had to be. Compared to
the civilizations they were leeching from, their
available manpower was minuscule. Many of
Britain's former colonies still love the Empire.
The Spanish are loathed throughout Central and
South America. American imperialism is just as
varied. First, it's a tremendous contradiction
from a society that disavows empire. But the
will-to-power isn't part of national character,
it's a human urge. [The United States of] America
has imperialists and aristocrats, and even serfs
and peasants. Spengler argues that the US is not
an empire because its foreign policy is inept and
its soldiers aren't smooth. That's faulty
reasoning. Just because the tools are lacking
doesn't mean there isn't the desire to do the job,
or that the job can't and hasn't been done. And
frankly, Kagan might already be the American
Rudyard Kipling, because the latter was certainly
critical of both the tools and implementation of
the British Empire. The US makes up for its
brutishness by having a thousand times more guns
than everyone else and a million times the money,
both used to quite lethal effect - especially in
Latin America. Then there's this "flow of wealth"
argument that America can't be an empire because
it's not extracting wealth directly from the
subject world. No jewel-laden procession of camels
is marching into New York. But again, this is the
21st century. The English weren't forcing the
native American tribes to dig for silver and gold.
Does that mean they weren't an empire? You can
extract wealth from another country in many ways.
You can bribe or coerce them to sell their mineral
wealth at far below its value. You can force them
to open their markets to your massive
corporations, against whom they cannot compete.
You can force them to sell off their public
utilities to your massive corporations, who can
then price-gouge the native people. That's how
21st-century imperialism works. Who knows what the
next empire will look like, but I'm sure they'll
have their apologists as well. Hollis Henry (Oct 4,
'05)
[Ehsan] Ahrari in his article
[The indefatigable
insurgency, Oct 4] speaks of two ways to deal
with the Iraqi Insurgency. There is a third way.
That is to negotiate a peace with the insurgents.
Robert Shule (Oct 4,
'05)
[Siddhardt] Srivastava's article Payback
time [Sep 29] fails to take into account what
will happen to China's mega-investment in Iran if
sanctions fail and a military confrontation were
to take place. It is now clear that Iran will
protect her nuclear program no matter what the
international community demands are. Iran is now
actively using her oil reserves to punish those
nations that don't back up her nuclear stand and
reward those [that] at the least stayed neutral.
Unlike China, India had signed a broad,
comprehensive alliance with the US coalition, and
partly due to that agreement sided with the
coalition and world opinion at large. China on the
other hand does not have any equally significant
alliance with the US and was instrumental in
helping Iran with her nuclear program, assuming
her investments will be safe under any condition.
The drums of war have already begun. Recently the
leadership of Israel has threatened to take out
Iran's nuclear program with or without US help,
citing that a nuclear-armed Iran poses too great a
risk to Israel. When military confrontation breaks
out between Iran and her opponents and they see
that China's is the single biggest investment in
Iran, with promises of more cash which Iran will
use to fund her defenses, those pipelines,
refineries, and oilfields will be the first to go
after Iran's nuclear program is taken out. Since
India has been "penalized" by Iran, India like
Japan will find greener pastures, she like Japan
will sit pretty, while China may see blockage of
gas from Iran, a "colder" relationship with the US
coalition, and a negative effect on her economy
from the gas shortage and from nations [that]
trade with China, like the US and her coalition.
One will then see who really "sits pretty". Chrysantha
Wijeyasingha New
Orleans, Louisiana (Oct 4, '05)
In light of [G] Travan's [Sep
27] letter, I would also like to take a different
view on Spengler's China must wait for
democracy [Sep 27] in that those who have less
of an "education" in Chinese society might be even
better suited to govern themselves since they are
less apt to follow established patterns and
therefore make decisions that are relevant to each
specific township rather than ones based upon
theory. The education and migration from the
countryside of energetic youth [serve] to keep
them pacified with a decent standard of living in
centralized areas and to make sure that the eldest
and least likely elements of society to cause
instability remain in the relatively unchecked
portions of the countryside. It should also be
noted that those I know who make money in the
cities currently send not a small percentage of it
back home to support their families. Now Mr
Travan, I don't want to take anything away from
your synopsis of the current demographic disaster
taking place here as each of your points is well
validated, but the Chinese government has no
choice but to gamble with some pretty draconian
measures by Western standards, and the ends may
well justify the means. What I think the
government understands is that in order to keep
the "backward countryside from overwhelming the
progressive metropolis", the citizens of the
interior must be allowed to experience the
prosperity of the cities reaching the countryside
and the permission to manage their own affairs by
a strong central government that guarantees the
right to do so. Whether this aggressive
urbanization and simultaneous loosening of the
reins of government in the countryside will indeed
have this effect, only time will tell. While
Spengler's lecture on the necessity of faith in
democracy and his description of peasants may have
offended some, the fact cannot be overlooked that
while many nations have experimented with
democracy in one way or another, none have
experienced the rapid urbanization of a generally
poor and uneducated populace on this scale.
Therefore we must realistically discuss the
various means of performing this feat while being
willing to dream of a government that allows the
most freedom possible. Jody Barr Shanghai, China (Oct 4,
'05)
Just
want to send you a kind "thank you" for [adding]
the new China Business Section to
your already wonderful content and insightful
journalism. As a longtime reader of ATol this
addition is very much welcomed. Thank you and keep
up the good work. Ryan Oklewicz (Oct 4,
'05)
[Re
Jonnavithula] Sreekanth's letter of October 3 ...
I am baffled as to why he should be so obsessed
with the notion that for a Muslim [woman] to have
a driving license would mean some sort prestigious
award, when so many of them are doctors,
academics, teachers, lawyers, solicitors,
engineers, nurses, social workers, policewomen,
army officers and even pilots. It is a
preposterous and perfidious thing to say that
Muslim women are restricted and housebound and
maidservants when as a matter of fact, they are
ones who are at the wheel and driving force in the
running of their families and the households. They
are far [more] empowered than the non-Muslims
think and in many cases are the decision-makers,
and good ones. Muslim women are participating
fully and equally in the construction of Islamic
societies and contributing positively in the
development of their countries. They are
respected; have their dignified status and are not
considered as objects of bare flesh, lust, good
for TV commercials, good-time girls, strip-tease
dancers and whores as in the Western countries as
well as in India. Finally, I would like to say
that Islam demands that a woman should remain a
reasonable being as everyone else. It does not
expect her to become either an angel or a demon.
If non-Muslims wish to compare or contrast her
position with other civilizations or legal
systems, one should look into all facts and not
merely isolated practices as wearing a burqa or
not having a driving license etc. In fact, with
regard to certain aspects of morality, Islam is
more rigid and more puritan than other systems and
non-Muslim societies. Since Islam attaches
particular importance to morality, it [suppresses]
promiscuity by every means. Muslim women are
entitled to enjoy and exercise those rights which
are considered to be [the] privilege of men, as
Islam treats both men and women at par as far as
their rights are concerned. In the Koran it is
mentioned that if women have duties, they have
equal rights also. Both sexes have distinct roles
but their duties and rights regarding marriage,
divorce, inheritance, property, litigation, family
matters etc have been defined in clear-cut terms
and transgression is forbidden. Islam does not
permit a woman to be subjugated by a man/husband
but [she must be] treated with affection, respect
and dignity; and above all afforded all rights
entitled to her as a wife, mother, daughter and
even if she becomes a widow with children. Men and
women are subjected to same restrictions or
prohibitions upon themselves as far the tenets of
Islam are concerned but some leniency has been
allowed to women in many matters concerning
biological and physiological compulsions. Saqib
Khan London, England
(Oct 4, '05)
Rakesh [letter, Oct 3] claims
Indians speak English. That is a lie. Most of the
Indians do not speak English ... And how many
Indians can express their opinions freely on the
[Internet]? Only a very limited few of those
so-called upper-class Indians have access to [the
Internet]. The so-called Indian democracy and
freedom of expression are only available to
English-speaking wealthy Indians. I seriously
doubt that the poor Indians would prefer to live
in the same conditions they are in right now. Only
the English-speaking upper-class Indians prefer
the current situation. That way, they can take
poor Indians' money to buy motels, cars and other
luxuries in the USA. I advocate that China needs
to learn from the USA. I am proud that China will
not take orders from the USA. India is completely
opposite. India's government never leveled the
playground for lower-class Indians. Yes, for the
rich and powerful, India is a democratic country
with a political system imposed by Englishmen. For
the poor common Indians, India is anarchy ... Frank Seattle, Washington (Oct 4,
'05)
Jonnavithula Sreekanth writes
[letter, Sep 29]: "The American left is up in arms
against Bush." US politics isn't so simple-minded
and black-and-white as being limited to "left" and
"right"; in fact, the broad range from far left
through to and including moderate middle, and even
some actual conservatives, is "up in arms" against
[President George W] Bush; ie, at least two-thirds
of the US population. "Because as a self-described
born-again Christian" - there are rules to being a
Christian; one is "Thou shalt not kill"; another
is "Thou shalt not lie." Bush's actions shout
while his mouth lies. "He does not" - according to
whom? liar Bush? - "recognize a natural right" -
the US is not a "natural law" system - "to view
pornography, have abortions on demand" - those
being choices properly obscured by the right of
privacy in a multi-valued culture - "never mention
God" - for the existence of which hypothesis there
is no evidence - "in public, and so on. So Bush's
'crusade' would probably be the opposite of lewd,
and more towards conservative" - "conservative"
means "to conserve", which excludes wiping out the
surplus and growing the largest deficit in world
history - "or conventional morality". There is
nothing whatever about Bush's non-existent
"morality" which is conventional, as extremist
anti-intellectualism and incompetence are not
usually considered to be conventional. Neither is
his seriality at being AWOL [absent without leave]
from responsibility - at latest concerning two
hurricanes in a row. A true conservative was Teddy
Roosevelt, who established the US's national parks
system - which Bush has done everything he can to
turn over to private corporations for their
profitable destruction. Joseph J Nagarya Boston, Massachusetts (Oct 4,
'05)
[We
in the] US now have three choices. We need to make
our choice now before it is too late. (1) Let
Saddam Hussein make up for his crime (the best
choice). (2) Transfer him to [an] International
court. (3) Delay his trial until Iraq is stable.
Our best choice is to work with everybody and the
UN to let Hussein out and run for the national
election. He [will not] win ... This shows US
compassion to help rebuild Iraq. The Sunnis will
be happy to participate in the constitution and
the government. The US went to war alone. Now we
cannot ask anyone to joint us helping Iraq. The
whole world will be glad to help if the US shows
compassion. After the election, Iraq will have a
legitimate government of all citizens. It [will
be] under the UN supervision, not under US
pressure. The UN suddenly becomes very important.
It makes the UN look very good all over. Russia,
China, France, Germany and many Muslim and Arab
nations for their great benefit and their interest
for business - that is really an attractive
invitation for them to jump in. We are home free.
Who killed Saddam? This question will be asked by
a lot of people for a long, long time. Of course
the majority [will] blame the US, especially
President [George W] Bush, even if Saddam [is]
killed by [Iraq's] Shi'a government. The US could
play a delay tactic saying that Saddam could be
given a second chance f at the same time US could
talk to the Sunnis, the al-Sadr group and all
parties involved to participate in what we want (a
legitimate strong government for all Iraqis). All
Iraqis will decide their own future without much
needed from the US. Later we could persuade the
new government to transfer Saddam to the
international court [which] will decide his fate.
US soldiers become the
liberators. We go home with all the fanfare
from all over the US and the world. Now our
president could smell ... victory. He writes [a]
very important chapter in the US history book for
many generations to come. This is the second-best
choice. The last thing the US can do is to make a
very big noise that Saddam [will] get a second
chance if this will lure Sunnis to participate in
establishing the new constitution and their own
new government. The power between the Iraqi Sunnis
(including Syria, Saudi Arabia and many others)
and Shi'as is balance. The threat of a bloodbath
and civil war now disappears. Again the Iraqi
government depends less on the US. They will be
happy to escort our military out of that country.
Our liberators go home with joy and happiness. A
smart US decision helps to have peace not only for
America but also for the whole Middle East and
perhaps for the entire universe. The US mission is
now actually a complete victory. The US president,
George W Bush, is a world hero. Terrorism, Iran,
North Korea [are] now easier to handle. America is
still the only great superpower (in love and
compassion). Our wars in Afghanistan and in Iraq
are justified. There will be no civil war, no more
killing, no more bloodshed. Van A
Nguyen USA (Oct 4,
'05)
With reference to Pepe
Escobar's article Who's in charge, Qom or
Najaf? [Oct 1], I would like to make these
comments. By creating two centers of gravity
within Shi'ism, the real goal of the "divide and
conquer" schism is not to create a civil war
between Shi'as and Sunnis, but to create a civil
war within Shi'adom; between the Mahdi Army and
the Badar Army, between Khalq e Mujahideen and the
Iranian Revolutionary Guards, between two founding
fathers of SCRI (Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq), Iranian-born Iraqi Ayatollah
[Ali al-]Sistani and Iranian-born Ayatollah
[Ruhollah] Khomeini's successors ... Does Pepe
describe three power centers, Najaf, Qom and
Beirut? A similar fratricidal drama in Catholicism
is known as the "Great Schism". It had devastating
consequences for the world ... The "schism" and
civil war sowed the seeds of unimaginable bigotry.
By March 30, 1492, the inquisitor general Tomas
Torquemada had drummed up the worst possible
tragedy for Europe - the expulsion of Jews and
Muslims from Spain. The Great Schism's religious
rivalry unleashed events in Europe that ended the
800-year-old Jewish-Christian-Muslim symbiosis in
Spain. This Great Schism along with political
intrigues, greed, and other events were
responsible for exacerbating anti-Semitism,
Islamphobia [and] the Spanish Inquisition and
creating the conquistador monsters that rained
untold misery on South America for centuries. This
was the beginning of colonialism that brought
sorrow to India, China, and the world, ultimately
ended in World War II and the Holocaust. With the
entire Middle East and West Asia in turmoil, are
we sowing the seeds of a human tragedy the world
has not seen? I take strong umbrage to the
comments of Partha (letter, Sep 26) in which she
incorrectly suggests that I, in any way, hope for
or desire or support the Taliban in any form ...
To set the record straight, I do not support the
Taliban in any form whatsoever. My letter was in
response to M K Bhadrakumar's article predicting
the demise of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's
government (Karzai grabs a tiger by the
tail, Sep 23). I simply point out the widely
reported fact that Mr Karzai's "Vichy on the
Kabul" poor excuse for a "government" running on
opium dollars is in serious jeopardy of being torn
apart by the warlords and the Taliban who already
own most of Afghanistan ... Moin
Ansari (Oct 3, '05)
Jeffrey Robertson [North Korea plays politics
with food aid, Oct 1] makes a good point: food
donations from South Korea and China fall outside
the United Nations' and foreign humanitarian
organizations' purview and accounting. North Korea
thus has a margin of maneuver to elude the United
States' eagle eye, and frustrate Washington's
never-ending pursuit to declare check and
checkmate in the shadow game of chess it has
engaged in with Pyongyang. America has yet to
learn that the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea is fiercely proud of its independence, and
that [to] any move which it feels threatens its
sovereignty, Pyongyang will react swiftly and
decisively. So it should come as no surprise [that
with] North Korea's perception of Washington's
playing politics with food in the United Nations,
and with John Bolton as its [the United States']
spokesman, Pyongyang has taken its distance from
Washington's blackmail. And lest we forget, it was
the bellicose words of John Bolton at the
six-power talks in Beijing that caused North
Korea's withdrawal for a year from negotiations.
We should never lose sight of the fact that [US
President George W] Bush's objective is complete
victory at the expense of North Korea - which is
doubtful given the crumbling foreign and domestic
policy goals of his administration. Jakob
Cambria USA (Oct 3,
'05)
Saqib Khan's letter [Sep 30]
about "licentious statues" shows, among other
things, a lack of historical awareness. The
squeamishness about sexual matters was a
Victorian-era hangup which propagated to the
colonies, and still seems to be alive in his mind.
The more ancient cultures were refreshingly
straightforward about the topic - just do a Google
search for Richard Burton and his translations of
Arabic, Persian and Indian writings of his time.
It's a pity that some people who are inheritors of
those traditions should want to turn back the
clock to an even more repressive system, such as
the restrictions on women that I mentioned (even
though the rent-an-audience in Saudi Arabia
assured [US Under Secretary of State for Public
Diplomacy] Karen Hughes that they didn't mind).
Jonnavithula (Jon)
Sreekanth Acton,
Massachusetts (Oct 3, '05)
In Saqib Khan's September 30
letter to Asia Times [Online], he defines lewdness
as "encompass[ing] adultery, fornication,
homosexuality, sexual perversion, nudity,
pornography, promiscuity, giving free
contraception injections to girls as young [as]
nine to 10 years old and supplying free condoms to
youngsters, incest and perverted under-age sex by
adults". What's more, he seems to be implying that
these "values" are rife within, and promoted by,
the "West". His list reads like he just rattled
off a number of subjects that made him
uncomfortable, but two in particular come across
as very amusing ... incest and under-age sex.
Islamic nations are the only societies outside of
sub-Saharan Africa that still allow, and defend,
marriage between adult men and prepubescent girls.
And he should bear in mind that the "West" has
much stricter standards than Islam when it comes
to defining incest - most "Westerners" see
marriages between first cousins as distasteful, if
not outright illegal ... Andrew M Canada (Oct 3,
'05)
It is
arguable whether "most 'Westerners' see marriages
between first cousins as distasteful"; such
marriages are legal in Europe, Australia and your
own country, and in some US states. - ATol
I think I wasn't clear enough
in my [Sep 28] letter, ergo [Moin] Ansari is
quoting a dubious argument [letter, Sep 29]. The
states of Hyderabad or Junagadh could not have
joined Pakistan because any princely state that
didn't border East or West Pakistan could not
[cede] its territory to anyone but India. Only
those princely states that shared a common border
with Pakistani territory (which was previously
under direct British rule) could join the
Pakistan. Hyderabad and Junagadh had no legal leg
to stand on when it came to trying to join
Pakistan. Besides, at that time the nawabs had no Islamic
credentials at all as they were mostly drunks and
perverts ... Aryan Singh Rathore (Oct 3,
'05)
Frank [letter, Sep 27] claims
I am putting words in his mouth. Hey Frank, any
person with a little bit of intelligence will get
a similar drift by reading your e-mails, which are
consistently loaded with loathing for ordinary
Indians. A loathing that is based largely on
exaggeration, lies, and ignorance - on mere facts
that Indians speak English and Indian writers
don't have problems expressing their opinions
freely on the website. Yes Frank, most of us
Indians don't have problems taking our own
government bodies and politicians to task. We
don't have problems talking about our country's
problems, including poverty, illiteracy and
corruption. Similarly, we don't have problems
expressing opinions about other regimes. This may
be a culture shock for China's communists [who]
try to gag every mouth that sings a different
tune, but such gag policy cannot succeed for long.
Sooner or later, people will ask for more rights,
greater freedoms, and accountability. What is your
regime's plan then? It is common for people [who]
fear such freedoms and rights to brand other
countries as "anarchies" without trying to do any
impartial analysis. Yes, the government bodies
that control our infrastructure are corrupt and
inept. Yes, they have failed to establish a
private sector that can create jobs and provide
employment for the poorest of the poor. But still,
Indian democracy works.
Period! And Frank, a lot of people would
prefer this "anarchy" rather than living under a
kind of regime that sets up regulations on which
of [its] citizens can settle in the glossy areas
of Shanghai and Beijing. So much for the
much-hyped communist equality. Frank, you admit
China needs to learn from America - in other
words, you are okay with being a "white man's"
pupil yourself. If so, ranting about other
countries just because they follow democratic
systems is nothing but hypocrisy. Oh and by the
way, before bragging about some search engine,
please find out how many books written in China
are actually virtual duplicates of stuff written
in English. How common is real R&D [research
and development] versus, let's say, trinket
manufacturing? Rakesh India (Oct 3, '05)
September Letters
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