Daily Archives: August 29, 2008

rage against the machine at dnc

01. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2mhPpaBtZc
02. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZEK-9zUiO0
03. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBU2uGHEL3w
04. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4yz_1b2YJY
05. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hvl_xLzrEWg
06. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19iJizVuMYo
07. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ox5ZBSAHoo
08. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhyOc4uhv1k
09. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBfWEwbuOnc
10. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ELPywqoYPM

all from
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=HoaxM3Not

it’s not a ‘drone’, it’s a uav

South Ossetia Said it Shot Down Georgia’s Spying Drone
Kommersant

A spying drone of Georgia was shot down above Tskhinvali, South Ossetia, at night of August 27 to 28, RIA Novosti reported with reference to South Ossetia’s Acting Interior Minister Mikhail Mindzaev. The drone emerged from the southern direction, heading northward at around midnight. The air defense systems of South Ossetia opened defensive fire and shot it down, Mindzaev said. According to Mindzaev, subversive groups have been spotted near Tskhinvali. Georgia sent them for acts of terror and, in South Ossetia, they are setting up special units and brigades to oppose those groups. A drone was noticed above South Ossetia, the RF General Staff Deputy Chief General-Colonel Anatoly Nogovitsyn announced August 27, concluding that Tbilisi had no intention to abandon aggressive plans.

little ms. neocon

Will Turkey Abandon NATO?
Zeyno Baran, WSJ, Aug 29, 2008
Ms. Baran is senior fellow and director of the Center For Eurasian Policy at the Hudson Institute.

Will Turkey side with the United States, its NATO ally, and let more U.S. military ships into the Black Sea to assist Georgia? Or will it choose Russia? A Turkish refusal would seriously impair American efforts to support the beleaguered Caucasus republic. Ever since Turkey joined NATO in 1952, it has hoped to never have to make a choice between the alliance and its Russian neighbor to the North. Yet that is precisely the decision before Ankara. If Turkey does not allow the ships through, it will essentially be taking Russia’s side. Whether in government or in the military, Turkish officials have for several years been expressing concern about U.S. intentions to “enter” the Black Sea. Even at the height of the Cold War, the Black Sea remained peaceful due to the fact that Turkey and Russia had clearly defined spheres of influence. But littoral countries Romania and Bulgaria have since joined NATO, and Ukraine and Georgia have drawn closer to the Euro-Atlantic alliance. Ankara has expressed nervousness about a potential Russian reaction. The Turkish mantra goes something like this: “the U.S. wants to expand NATO into the Black Sea — and as in Iraq, this will create a mess in our neighborhood, leaving us to deal with the consequences once America eventually pulls out. After all, if Russia is agitated, it won’t be the Americans that will have to deal with them.” Nonetheless, Ankara sided with fellow NATO members in telling Georgia and Ukraine that they would be invited to join the alliance — albeit without any time frame. But now that Russia has waged war in part over this decision, the Turks will have to pick sides. Deputy chief of the Russian general staff Anatoly Nogoivtsyn already warned Turkey that Russia will hold Turkey responsible if the U.S. ships do not leave the Black Sea. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will travel to Ankara on Monday to make clear that Russia means it.

Russia is Turkey’s largest trading partner, mostly because of Turkey’s dependence on Russian gas. More important, the two countries share what some call the post-imperial stress syndrome: that is, an inability to see former provinces as fellow independent states, and ultimately a wish to recreate old agreements on spheres of influence. When Mr. Putin gave a speech in Munich last year challenging the U.S.-led world order, Turks cheered. The Turkish military even posted it on its Web site. President Abdullah Gül recently suggested that “a new world order should emerge.” Turkey joined Russia at the height of its war on Georgia in suggesting a five-party “Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform.” In other words, they want to keep the U.S. and the EU at arm’s length. Both Russia and Turkey consider Georgia’s American-educated president, Mikheil Saakashvili, to be crazy enough to unleash the next world war. In that view Turkey is not so far from the positions of France or Germany — but even these two countries did not suggest that the Georgians sign up to a new regional arrangement co-chaired by Russia while the Kremlin’s air force was bombing Georgian cities.

Two other neighbors — Azerbaijan and Armenia — are watching the Turkish-Russian partnership with concern. Azeris remember how the Turks — their ethnic and religious brethren — left them to be annexed by the Soviets in the 1920s. Armenians already fear their giant neighbor, who they consider to have committed genocide against them. Neither wants to have to rely on Iran (once again) as a counterbalance to Russia. Oh, and of course, Iran had its own sphere-of-influence arrangements with the Soviets as well. Though Turkey and Iran are historic competitors, Turkey has broken with NATO countries recently by hosting President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad on a working visit. As the rest of NATO was preoccupied with the Russian aggression in Georgia, Turkey legitimized the Iranian leader amidst chants in Istanbul of “death to Israel, death to America.” A few days later, Turkey played host to Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, who is accused of genocide by the rest of NATO — but not by Russia or Iran, or by the Muslim-majority countries who usually claim to care so much about Muslim lives. Where is Turkey headed? Turkish officials say they are using their trust-based relations with various sides to act as a mediator between various parties in the region: the U.S. and Iran; Israel and Syria; Pakistan and Afghanistan, etc. It may be so. But as more American ships steam toward the Black Sea, a time for choosing has arrived.

scott horton interviews luke ryland

Antiwar.com Radio, Aug 27, 2008

Luke Ryland discusses the A.Q. Kahn nuclear secrets peddling network, its correlation to the Sibel Edmonds case, the CIA’s knowledge of the network since the mid ‘70’s, the six years of deafening silence by Congress and the media about Sibel’s case and how the nuclear black market, neocons, and the Israeli and Turkish lobbies are connected.

name rings a bell

Former Aipac Head Leads Push for
American-Syrian Rapprochement
(extract)
Marc Perelman, Forward.com, Aug 28, 2008

[…] The Syrian delegation to the United States was composed of economist Samir Seifan, political analyst Sami Moubayed and Samir al-Taqi, a think-tank director who advises the government and has been involved in unofficial peace negotiations with Israel in recent months. Among the American members of the working group are Samuel Lewis, former ambassador to Israel, and Theodore Kattouf, former Syrian ambassador. Also included are former Rep. Steve Bartlett of Texas, former Clinton administration Middle East adviser Robert Malley and John Marks, president and founder of Search for Common Ground. The Syrian delegation was supposed to include a close aide to President Bashar al-Assad and to hold a meeting with the State Department’s top Middle East official. But Riad Daoudi, a legal adviser to the foreign ministry, stayed in Baghdad, and the delegation did not get to see David Welch, assistant secretary for Near Eastern Affairs. Dine said that Daoudi canceled the meeting because he had to attend a briefing about Israeli-Syrian negotiations in Damascus. The State Department said the encounter was canceled due to scheduling conflicts. Joshua Landis, a Syria expert at the University of Oklahoma, offers another explanation: “Syria wanted to use Dine to open up doors in Washington, and he was supposed to get a meeting between Daoudi and Welch but could not deliver.”[…]

mullen meets kayani on us aircraft carrier

U.S., Pakistani military leaders secretly meet
Xinhua, Aug. 28

US and Pakistani military leaders met earlier this week to discuss the growing terror threat in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Pentagon sources said Thursday. Sources in Pentagon were quoted by US news outlets as saying that participants included Michael Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff and Pakistani Army chief of staff Ashfaq Pervez Kayani. The talks, held Tuesday aboard US aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln in the Indian Ocean, focused on how to “better work together to defeat extremists on the border and to help Pakistan deal with its own internal threats from extremism.” The meeting came amid a growing acknowledgment by US officials that the Taliban has shifted tactics and is now conducting military-style attacks against US troops. The US military has been pressing Kayani for months to crack down on militants in the border region in part because of the growing number crossing into Afghanistan to attack American troops. Mullen said after the meeting that he is not satisfied with the efforts to thwart the threat of terrorism in Pakistan, but thought the US-Pakistani cooperation is moving toward a “right direction.”

mccain gets illegal lubavitch endorsement

McCain asks Chabad for support

McCain appealed to the Chabad-Lubavitch movement to support his presidential run. McCain made the appeal in a conference call Wednesday with 40 of the movement’s rabbis. “I believe this is going to be a tough race,” he says in the report and recording posted on Shmais.com, which reports on news and activities within the Chabad-Lubavitch community worldwide. “We have for the first time gone ahead in the polls. But I think we are the underdog. We’ve got a lot of work to do. I’d be grateful for your support; it would mean a great deal to me.” Chabad-Lubavitch is a tax-exempt, non-profit organization and is forbidden from endorsing candidates, a status that the Shmais report stressed. The McCain campaign initiated the call. McCain also pledged never to “allow another Holocaust” and to keep Israel “secure and peaceful and prosperous.” – JTA

obama not worried enough about iran yet

[…] a new McCain ad, released August 27, quotes phrases from Obama’s May 18 campaign speech in Oregon, where he said Iran “doesn’t pose a serious threat.” As pictures go from Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to armed soldiers and finally to a bird’s eye view of Jerusalem, the narrator asks: ”Terrorism? Destroying Israel? Those aren’t serious threats?” and then concludes: “Obama. Dangerously unprepared to be president.”

extracted from Nathan Guttman, Forward