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Thursday, 8 March 2007
So We Can Take Your Wives As War Booty

That was one of the desires shrieked out in the Video of an Islamic Protest. Some illiterate peasant crying out from the need of his impoverishment and lack of hope in some Third World Hell Hole?


No this was in London. One of those protests about the Danish Cartoons. It seems they wish to remind
us what happened to Theo Van Gogh and let us know that someday it will be our turn.






Coming to YOUR neighborhood SOON!!!


Hat Tip Danish Cartoons: "Touchy" Muslim Found Guilty at Sugiero


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Tracked to
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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 1:50 AM CST
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Updated: Thursday, 8 March 2007 8:01 AM CST
Wednesday, 7 March 2007
THE LION SLEEPS TONIGHT
Twenty-five years ago this week - March 1982 - Tight Fit got to Number One in Britain with "The Lion Sleeps Tonight"

Yes I know this is not my usual type of post. Please, do not go into shock.


the lion sleeps tonight (animation)

Please do read the article about this song. It is fascinating. Here is a teaser to whet some appetites

Fifteen improvised notes in 1939 powered Africa's biggest selling record, an entire genre of music, and two separate hit songs on five continents. And, even though those 15 notes and the man who wrote them were buried under all the other names that encrusted to the work, in the end they're what shine through. Listen to the Soweto Gospel Choir's recording from a couple of years ago, which somehow manages to capture all three versions of the song. Or go back to Solomon Linda and the Evening Birds' original, which still sounds pretty good. Listen to that inspiration late in take three and hear a global phenomenon being born. It took seven decades and a lawsuit, but in the village, the peaceful village, the lion sleeps tonight.

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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 7:51 AM CST
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Updated: Thursday, 8 March 2007 2:12 AM CST
The New Logic for Ballistic Missile Defense
By Peter Zeihan

The commander of Russia's strategic bomber
force, Lt. Gen. Igor Khvorov, said March 5 that his forces could easily
disrupt or destroy any missile defense infrastructure in Poland and the Czech
Republic -- where the United States is preparing to set up parts of a
ballistic missile defense (BMD) system. Khvorov was hardly the first Russian
official to make such a threat: On Feb. 19, statements by Strategic Rocket
Forces commander Col. Gen. Nikolai Solovtsov left little doubt that Moscow would target U.S. BMD sites with its nuclear arsenal if Washington pushes ahead with its plans.






Exactly why missile defense -- a technology that has received little
publicity since the Cold War -- should be a source of increasingly obvious
tension between the United States and Russia is an interesting question. An
equally interesting question: Why are the Russians threatening once again to
target NATO countries -- a tactic Moscow abandoned 15 years ago?

The
answer is rooted not only in the history of BMD, but in the myriad ways the
European theater has changed -- from both the U.S. and European points of
view -- since the end of the Cold War.

BMD and the Cold War


When Ronald Reagan introduced the Star Wars system in the 1980s, his
logic was much more political than military. It was apparent that, even with
extremely aggressive funding, the United States was decades away from being
able to establish a missile shield capable of deflecting a significant Soviet
nuclear strike. Rhetoric aside, the argument for a BMD system was not really
about establishing an impregnable bubble around the United States, but rather
about shifting the strategic balance away from mutually assured destruction
and into a venue that catered to the Americans' economic advantage.


In the minds of Politburo members, the United States not only was moving
into a realm in which the Americans already enjoyed substantial technological
and economic advantages, but in which the costs of development also
threatened to overturn Soviet military doctrine. As of the early 1980s, the
United States was spending only 6 percent of its gross domestic product on
defense, whereas the Soviets are thought to have been expending more than
one-quarter of theirs. The Soviets recognized that they could not win a space
race involving defensive weaponry. Reagan's insistence on keeping the BMD
issue on the table, therefore, gave him enormous bargaining power against the
Soviets and contributed heavily to the subsequent arms-control and
disarmament treaties that ultimately heralded the Cold War's end.


European leaders, however, viewed BMD issues in much the same light as
the Soviets did. Though few Europeans were comfortable with the idea of the
Americans and Soviets being locked into a Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)
structure that would consume their homelands if anything should go awry, it
was impossible to ignore the fact that MAD had brought about 50 years of
relatively stable Great Power relations. Reagan's BMD was viewed as an
extremely aggressive effort to overturn that system and disrupt the stability
that went with it. European states were terrified of BMD at both the
political and strategic levels.

But the arguments and alignments in
favor of BMD have changed drastically in the post-Cold War era.


The New American Logic

As the Russian missile arsenal has
declined in quantity and quality, U.S. desires for a BMD protective net have
only strengthened. Though most American strategic planners in the 1980s were
well aware that the system being envisioned was merely drawing-board
material, strategic and technological realities today are starkly different.
U.S. strategic thought now is fixating on two ideas.

First and most
obvious is that, though it would not be foolproof by any stretch, it is
possible that within a few years, an American-installed BMD network in
certain parts of the world could protect against secondary threats such as
Iran and North Korea. Given that the human and financial costs involved in
rebuilding a major U.S. city (should one be hit by a nuclear weapon) are well
above even the most aggressive price estimates for a global BMD network, the
original vision of BMD as an effective defensive weapon now could be within
reach.

The second idea dovetails with long-standing U.S. strategic
doctrine -- a philosophy that long predates the Cold War. That doctrine has
always aimed to push threats away from the continental United States --
initially by securing U.S. sovereignty over the North American land mass,
achieving strategic depth and controlling sea approaches. Ultimately, the
doctrine calls for the United States to project power into Eurasia itself,
establishing as much stand-off distance as possible. In the early 20th
century, naval power allowed the United States to do this just fine. But in
the early 21st century, with the proliferation of intercontinental ballistic
missile technology, naval power is only one leg of such a strategy.



Having forward-based BMD facilities not only is becoming important
for Washington, but is moving to the core of U.S. defense logic.


From Washington's perspective, establishing a BMD system is not about
taking advantage of Russia's relative military weakness, but instead about
adapting to a new strategic reality. The foes and threats facing the United
States have changed. No one is pretending that Russia's decline as a global
power has not opened the door to a U.S. BMD system in the first place, or
that the system could not be expanded and upgraded in the future as a
potential counter to Russia's nuclear arsenal. Rather, it means simply that
in the current strategic picture, the Russians really are not at the heart of
U.S. defense planning -- and certainly not so far as BMD is concerned.



(click to enlarge)





The technological
considerations are not unimportant here. With current technology, any system
would be twitchy at best -- so for best results, the United States is seeking
a layered network. The first layer of defense -- which most likely would
include airborne lasers at some point -- would be sited as close to the
launching states as possible, allowing the system to target any missile
launches during the boost phase. The second layer would involve missile
interceptors or AEGIS systems to strike during the midcourse of the missile's
flight, followed by terminal phase engagement with anti-missile systems, such
as the PAC-3 (the newest incarnation of the Patriot).

The polar
projection of an ICBM is also key to understanding Washington's logic. Any
missile launched from Iran and bound for the continental United States would
have to fly over Central Europe -- which is why the United States has pending
agreements to set up an interceptor base in Poland

and a radar station in the Czech Republic. Similarly, any North Korean
missile would have to fly over Alaska, the other major BMD interceptor
locale. A nuclear strike out of Russia, however, would travel over the North
Pole. BMD installations in Europe and Alaska would cover only the peripheries
of that attack corridor -- and with vastly insufficient numbers of
interceptors.






In short, the U.S. rationale for
BMD has evolved. In the 1980s, it was about breaking out of the MAD impasse
and wringing concessions out of the Soviets. Today, BMD has the potential to
be something that was never seriously considered in the 1980s: a viable
defensive weapon. Put another way, BMD once was wielded as a political tool
to avoid a future war; now, it is coming to be viewed as a defensive
weapon to be used in a future conflict.

The New European
Logic


The Czech Republic and Poland are not the only European
states to have changed their thinking about BMD either. A number of countries
not only are responding warmly to U.S. overtures regarding facilities, but in
some cases actually are initiating the siting requests.

For central
European states, the benefits of such deals are obvious. Most of the
political elites in these states fear a future conflict with the Russians,
and anything they can do to solidify a military arrangement with Washington
is, to their thinking, a benefit in and of itself. But even in Western
Europe, further removed from the Russian periphery, opposition to the United
States' BMD programs seems to have relaxed considerably. The United Kingdom
has specifically requested inclusion in the system (though Washington so far
has declined), and the German government has called for the United States to
address the issue of BMD in the context of NATO.

There are several
reasons for this change.

First and foremost, BMD technology -- while
still unproven -- has advanced considerably since the Reagan era, and thus is
now far more likely to work. When BMD was only a political tool and could
offer no real protection, the Europeans were understandably squeamish about
participating in the system. But if the system is actually functional, the
calculus shifts.

Second, a weak BMD system designed to guard against
Iran theoretically could evolve into a stronger system that helps to protect
Europeans against Russia in the future. Of course, the system is not designed
to target Russia at the present time, but if Russia's military capabilities
should decay further over time, the technological argument -- that the system
might actually work -- weighs heavily in the European mind. And at a time
when Moscow is growing more aggressive in economic and political terms,
laying the groundwork for a military hedge makes sense.

Third, it is
becoming increasingly difficult for Europeans to define their security
interests as separate from Washington's. Moscow's new energy
strategy

is a tool for exerting influence over Europe, making European
states more willing to view Russia through American goggles. Moreover, Iran
regularly bites its thumb at the United Nations and its nuclear watchdog,
inducing the Europeans (little by little) to morph from being apologists for
Tehran to quiet, if still primarily unofficial, enforcers of sanctions. BMD
fits into the U.S. strategic doctrine, and that logic, by association, is now
taking hold in Europe.

Fourth, there is a desire to rope the United
States into a multilateral defense stratagem. Many Western Europeans begrudge
U.S. efforts to dominate the NATO alliance and regularly try to persuade
Washington to more seriously consider European points of view. But the United
States' ability to make bilateral defense deals cuts the Europeans out
completely. For countries like Germany, which considers itself a key driver
of European policy, the only way to counter unilateral American moves is to
make it worth Washington's while to discuss issues like BMD within the
framework of NATO -- which means taking BMD well beyond committee meetings
and talk shops. It means actually deploying assets. To do otherwise would
only encourage Washington to impose a security policy upon Europe without
consulting the Europeans.

Finally, there is the "If you can't beat
'em, join 'em" logic: Bilateral U.S. security agreements with Central
European states are forging BMD into reality. If is going to happen anyway,
the logic goes, you might as well jump on the bandwagon and reap some of the
benefits.

Russian Repercussions

The Russians, of
course, are not blind to the emergence of a potential threat near their
borders -- even recognizing the limitations of the BMD system as currently
envisioned.

The United States certainly does not want to trigger a
war with Moscow, but that does not mean that Washington is oozing with warm
feelings toward all things Russian. Throughout American history, only three
countries have seriously threatened the United States: Britain, which
ultimately was forced into the role of ally; Mexico, which was occupied and
half its territory annexed; and Russia/Soviet Union -- the only foe still
remaining. Traditionally, the United States does not defeat its enemies so
much as crush them until either they switch sides or are incapable of posing
more than a negligible threat.

Though the days of Russian-American
military parity are long past, the United States is not yet finished with
Moscow from a strategic perspective. Washington wants to pressure Russia
until its will, as well as its ability, to pose a viable threat completely
disintegrates. Therefore, while it is true that Russia is not an explicit
target of the BMD system being established in the Czech Republic and Poland,
it would be ridiculous to believe that BMD facilities in Europe would not
trigger evolutions in Russian policy. Washington realizes that. In fact, the
Americans are betting on it.

Establishing a BMD system on Russia's
doorstep would indeed pose a potential long-term threat for Moscow -- but
more importantly, it creates a political irritant that will generate a steady
stream of bellicose Russian rhetoric. And that serves American purposes. The
more aggressive Russia sounds, the more willing Europeans will be to see
strategic U.S. policy in general -- and BMD policy specifically -- from
Washington's point of view.

Which brings us back to the recent
statements by the men who manage Russia's warheads. Their direct threats
against European targets must have thrilled American strategic planners. With
but a few words, the Russian generals not only supplied a fresh rationale for
the BMD system, but also tilted the debate in Europe over the entire system
toward the Americans' logic.

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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 4:38 AM CST
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Updated: Wednesday, 7 March 2007 7:59 AM CST
Monday, 5 March 2007
The Open Trackback Alliance XLXVIV
I am back, new computer same station



UPDATE: Denmark Exports Soaring
After blogger Judith Klinghoffer and an army of Davids declared a "Buy Danish" campaign to combat the Muslim boycott. The Guardian says "fervent rightwing Americans" participated in the buying spree and implies that the cartoonists were responsible for the deaths of 139 people.(like it was the cartoonists who killed those people instead of the ones who shed their blood, how like the Progressive TransNazi viewpoint)


For your listening pleasure while you browse

"Der er et yndigt land" (There Is A Lovely Land)


Words by: Adam Gottlob Oehlenschlager
Music by: Hans Ernst Kr?yer
Adopted: 1844

"Derer et yndigt land" was first performed for a large gathering of Danes in 1844, and became popular quickly with the Danish people. It was adopted later that year by the Danish government as a national anthem, but not the sole national anthem. This anthem is on equal status with "Kong Christian",which is both the national and royal anthem.

When the Danish anthem is usually performed or sung, the first verse is played in its entirety, then it is followed by the last four lines of the last verse. (This is true whether the lyrics are sung or not



Recently I have been posting music to Illustrate the Diversity of America, this week I have a different motive to express Solidarity with DENMARK


I maintain my Support of Denmark, and will later today, post links to and my thoughts about a Danish Editorial "We are being pissed upon by Per Nyholm "

I think I shall title my Post, "There is no "But" in "Freedom of Speech".




When I first started upon my journey through the blogverse I created a
Statement of Purpose
Now upon reading it, one can realize that I did not hold to every detail of that original statement, but from it's basic premise, I have never swayed, in my belief that the Blogs are in fact the Committees of Correspondence of the Second American Revolution.

And that it is a Revolution of Information, no longer can we afford and allow elite gateways to control what we can see, hear and discuss.

For I believe that those bloggers who find their way, here and in particular from the Blogs associated with Sam.

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY.

Some of us are more Serious, some of us are more lighthearted and some post the common ordinary things that make one smile and recall that Life without the simple things to treasure is meaningless.

And it is important that all have a platform from which to speak.

As I understand this process you can link to this post and trackback to this post on ANY subject or post you think important. It is open. I will repeat this every Monday.

The Committees of Correspondence welcomes your intelligent comments. And also welcomes you to join the

OPEN TRACKBACK ALLIANCE


This week I also have shortened my usual introduction for a more important message.




In it's struggle for Freedom of Speech.

Sign the Petition NOW!

JEG opstille hos Danmark!




49023 Total Signatures 7:54 AM CST March 5, 2007 We can do better pass the word~!




From Agora a call to Support the Manifesto online by signing another Petition, why not sign both?


MANIFESTO: Together facing the new totalitarianism
Created by Mark Jefferson on March 1st, 2006 at 5:42 pm AST

After having overcome fascism, Nazism, and Stalinism, the world now faces a new totalitarian global threat: Islamism.
We, writers, journalists, intellectuals, call for resistance to religious totalitarianism and for the promotion of freedom, equal opportunity and secular values for all. "

Open Trackback Alliance


Blogs that Trackback to this Post:

On Monday
The Iman?s Prayer: It Isn?t What it Seems from Maggie's Notebook | Blog
Open Trackback Monday: Presidents Day from Faultline USA

Y'al come back now, Y'heah? ;-)
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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 12:01 AM CST
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Updated: Monday, 5 March 2007 7:58 AM CST
Friday, 2 March 2007
No Abe Lincoln
Recently Barak Obama announced his candidacy for president of the United States at the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Ill., - where Abraham Lincoln gave his "House divided" speech against slavery.

'Rock star' Obama in the land of Lincoln



Obviously this was a ploy to portray some symbolic message, but myself I found it bizarre.

Not because he is a Democrat and Lincoln was a Republican though that is part of it.

Not because Obama's father was from Kenya and thus has little direct ancestral ties to slavery in this country or to the struggle for Civil Rights.

But solely in my eyes the paradox arises from his position on politics.

What is his major platform item?

The War is a disaster, we need to pull out, bring the troops home and accept Defeat rather than strive for Victory.


And he is using Abraham Lincoln as a symbolic icon?????????


I mean, it was the dream of the Democratic Party of Lincoln's, day to drive him from the Presidency, End the War and bring the troops home, accepting Defeat rather than striving for Victory and allowing the South to go its way unimpeded.

So if Barak Obama's philosophical Democratic fore bearers had their way back then.

The North would have ended the War with Defeat.

There would have be no Emancipation Proclamation.

There would have been No Thirteenth Amendment.

The South would have become a separate Nation.

Slavery would not have ended.

I mean if you think the Iraq was is a Disaster?

What would you have called the first few years of the Civil War?

No.

The use of Lincoln as a Symbol for a Democratic Presidential Candidate is ludicrous at best and almost obscene, at worst considering that Party's desires and political aims then and now.

Barak Obama?

You are NO Abe Lincoln!!!!!!!!!


But if the Nation is fortunate?

Maybe you will be a Walter Mondale.

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Tracked to
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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 12:01 AM CST
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Updated: Friday, 2 March 2007 2:24 AM CST
Monday, 12 February 2007
Is Nothing Sacred Anymore?
I realize that attempts to create healthier food is a laudable endeavor, but really adding Fish Oil to PEANUT BUTTER?

There are some things that should be sacred and left in their pristine natural state!

But no. It seems that our childhood buddy peanut butter has been improved.



Smart Balance? Omega Peanut Butter
In addition to the right balance of fats to help improve the cholesterol ratio (HDL/LDL), all Smart Balance foods offer a healthy ratio of Omega-6 to Omega-3 fatty acids. Americans consume too few omega-3’s so Smart Balance now offers an Omega line with extra omega-3’s from land and sea.

Smart Balance? Omega Peanut Butter

Contains 1000 mg Omega-3’s per serving with great peanut taste. No hydrogenated oil; no trans fatty acid and no refined sugar. Made from premium, deep-roasted peanuts for extra toasted flavor. All natural but doesn’t need refrigeration.


One reason for this decision may be contained in the material found in the Vegetarian Journal Sept/Oct 2001 edition.

American Heart Association Calls for Eating Fish Twice Per Week - What’s a Vegetarian To Do?

Maybe you should eat meat because it is good for you and your body requires it?

Naw that is too simple an answer.

Stick your tongue up on the middle of your upper teeth. Feel the ones that stick down with a sharp point? Those are called CANINES. They are called that for a reason. Nature designed them for MEAT EATING.

You HAVE them, unless you had them pulled that makes YOU a meat eater. Whether you choose to or not.



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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 8:07 AM CST
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Updated: Monday, 12 February 2007 8:23 AM CST
Friday, 26 January 2007
Take Back the Memorial
From my email inbox to you. Read and PASS IT ON!








Take Back the Memorial is sending you this message on behalf of The Save the 9/11 Memorial Foundation:
Please sign the Save the 9/11 Memorial Petition: http://www.savethe911memorial.com/petition.html

September 11th Families Launch National Media Campaign FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - CONTACT: Edith Lutnick (212) 294-7852 January 24, 2007

September 11th Families Kick-off National Campaign Appealing to the American People to Urge Change at Ground Zero Memorial

New York, N.Y., January 24, 2007 - Family members of relatives lost in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 representing major 9/11 family organizations held a press conference today in New York City and unveiled a national media campaign asking the American people to help them “Save the 9/11 Memorial” at Ground Zero. Family leaders object to current plans that will list most of the names of 2,979 people who perished in the attacks of 2001 and 1993 without reference to age, affiliation, location and, in the case of uniformed service members, rank. The group plans to place 60 second television ads in New York City markets.

The campaign’s first ad, entitled “Missing at the Memorial,” features the familiar images of the missing flyers which were posted all over New York City in the attack’s immediate aftermath by relatives of the victims and which identified their loved ones by age, company, and floor location in the World Trade Center. The flyers became the first spontaneous memorials embraced by the public. The ad says that Mayor R. Bloomberg, chairman of the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, wants a “cold, random list of names.” Families and former co-workers contend that the current plan to list victims without any personal references, and in an order intended to appear random, robs victims of the human qualities that rallied and sustained the nation. The 9/11 groups believe that narrative information associated with the names will enable future generations to better appreciate how the historic attacks were actually experienced by the country.

“We do not accept that these people died ‘randomly,’ or ‘in no discernable order’ which to future visitors will be exactly the same thing,” said Edith Lutnick, whose brother Gary, 36, worked for the firm of Cantor Fitzgerald on the 104th floor of the North Tower. “Turning human beings into featureless casualties is a distortion of history. Instead of conveying the story of 9/11, this memorial will express the dark point of view of the terrorists who murdered them.”

Family members believe that leaving the 2,400 mostly civilian victims without affiliations and in no discernable order, creates a two-tier memorial consisting of flesh and blood people on the one hand and anonymous casualties on the other. The disparity is particularly painful for families of more than 1,000 victims whose remains were never recovered.

The families and representatives of uniformed service associations contend that World Trade Center Memorial Foundation is building an extravagant memorial that will not resonate with visitors because it does not convey the attacks in personal terms. They believe that leaving the civilians without identification diminishes the noble sacrifice of first responders because it ignores the people whom they gave their lives to save.

Family members said that identifying group affiliations for New York City first responders is a step in the right direction, but stripping them of their rank is a slap in the face to their service and sacrifice. 100 officers, including Chief of the Department Peter J. Ganci, Jr. were among the 343 members of the FDNY who perished.

“My brother, Capt. Billy Burke with Engine 21, didn’t send his men into those towers,” said Michael Burke, who spoke at the press conference, “he led them in. And he did not leave, telling a friend who begged him to get out after tower two fell, ‘This is my job, this is who I am.’ How will visitors get a sense of that, if we don’t tell them?”

Family organizers, survivors and representatives of uniformed service personnel are asking the public to come to the website, Save the Memorial, and sign their online petition asking that the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation list the names of the victims in the manner leaders of 32 family groups and representative supported in a 2004 agreement.

The :60 ad can be view by logging onto www.savethe911memorial.com.

About the Organizers: The following September 11 victims family organizations supported today’s press conference: Advocates for 9/11 Fallen Heroes, Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, Coalition of 9/11 Families, 9/11 Families for Safe & Strong America, Skyscraper Safety Campaign, Take Back the Memorial, W. Doyle Support Group, Where to Turn, WTC Families for Proper Burial, WTC Family Center, World Trade Center United Family Group.

To speak with any of the leaders of these respective groups, please call: Edith Lutnick at Save the 9/11 Memorial (212) 294-7852




The Save the 9/11 Memorial Ad

Share the ad with your friends: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uhkWfjdtJGQ

Sign the Save the 9/11 Memorial Petition: http://www.savethe911memorial.com/petition.html


        

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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 1:05 AM CST
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Updated: Friday, 26 January 2007 1:22 AM CST
Wednesday, 17 January 2007
Rhetoric and Reality: The View from Iran
By George Friedman

The Iraq war has turned into a duel between
the United States and Iran. For the United States, the goal has been the
creation of a generally pro-American coalition government in Baghdad --
representing Iraq's three major ethnic communities. For Iran, the goal has
been the creation of either a pro-Iranian government in Baghdad or,
alternatively, the division of Iraq into three regions, with Iran dominating
the Shiite south.

The United States has encountered serious problems
in creating the coalition government. The Iranians have been primarily
responsible for that. With the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in June, when it
appeared that the Sunnis would enter the political process fully, the
Iranians used their influence

with various Iraqi Shiite factions to disrupt that
process by launching attacks on Sunnis and generally destabilizing the
situation. Certainly, Sunnis contributed to this, but for much of the past
year, it has been the Shia, supported by Iran, that have been the primary
destabilizing force.

So long as the Iranians continue to follow this
policy, the U.S. strategy cannot succeed. The difficulty of the American plan
is that it requires the political participation of three main ethnic groups
that are themselves politically fragmented.

Virtually any substantial group can block the success of the
strategy by undermining the political process. The Iranians, however, appear
to be in a more powerful position than the Americans. So long as they
continue to support Shiite groups within Iraq, they will be able to block the
U.S. plan. Over time, the theory goes, the Americans will recognize the
hopelessness of the undertaking and withdraw, leaving Iran to pick up the
pieces. In the meantime, the Iranians will increasingly be able to dominate
the Shiite community and consolidate their hold over southern Iraq. The game
appears to go to Iran.

Americans are extremely sensitive to the
difficulties the United States faces in Iraq. Every nation-state has a
defining characteristic, and that of the United States is manic-depression,
cycling between insanely optimistic plans and total despair. This national
characteristic tends to blind Americans to the situation on the other side of
the hill. Certainly, the Bush administration vastly underestimated the
difficulties of occupying Iraq -- that was the manic phase. But at this
point, it could be argued that the administration again is not looking over
the other side of the hill at the difficulties the Iranians might be having.
And it is useful to consider the world from the Iranian point of
view.

The Foundation of Foreign Policy

It is important
to distinguish between the rhetoric and the reality of Iranian foreign
policy. As a general principle, this should be done with all countries. As in
business, rhetoric is used to shape perceptions and attempt to control the
behavior of others. It does not necessarily reveal one's true intentions or,
more important, one's capabilities. In the classic case of U.S. foreign
policy, Franklin Roosevelt publicly insisted that the United States did not
intend to get into World War II while U.S. and British officials were
planning to do just that. On the other side of the equation, the United
States, during the 1950s, kept asserting that its goal was to liberate
Eastern Europe from the Soviet Union, when in fact it had no plans,
capabilities or expectations of doing so. This does not mean the claims were
made frivolously -- both Roosevelt and John Foster Dulles had good reasons
for posturing as they did -- but it does mean that rhetoric is not a reliable
indicator of actions. Thus, the purple prose of the Iranian leadership cannot
be taken at face value.

To get past the rhetoric, let's begin by
considering Iran's objective geopolitical position.

Historically,
Iran has faced three enemies. Its oldest enemy was to the west: the
Arab/Sunni threat, against which it has struggled for millennia. Russia, to
the north, emerged as a threat in the late 19th century, occupying northern
Iran during and after World War II. The third enemy has worn different faces
but has been a recurring threat since the time of Alexander the Great: a
distant power that has intruded into Persian affairs. This distant foreign
power -- which has at times been embodied by both the British and the
Americans -- has posed the greatest threat to Iran. And when the element of a
distant power is combined with one of the other two traditional enemies, the
result is a great global or regional power whose orbit or influence Iran
cannot escape. To put that into real terms, Iran can manage, for example, the
chaos called Afghanistan, but it cannot manage a global power that is active
in Iraq and Afghanistan simultaneously.

For the moment, Russia is
contained. There is a buffer zone of states between Iran and Russia that, at
present, prevents Russian probes. But what Iran fears is a united Iraq under
the influence or control of a global power like the United States. In 1980,
the long western border of Iran was attacked by Iraq, with only marginal
support from other states, and the effect on Iran was devastating. Iran
harbors a rational fear of attack from that direction, which -- if coupled
with American power -- could threaten Iranian survival.

Therefore,
Iran sees the American plan to create a pro-U.S. government in Baghdad as a
direct threat to its national interests. Now, the Iranians supported the U.S.
invasion of Iraq in 2003; they wanted to see their archenemy, former
President Saddam Hussein, deposed. But they did not want to see him replaced
by a pro-American regime. Rather, the Iranians wanted one of two outcomes:
the creation of a pro-Iranian government dominated by Iraqi Shia (under
Iran's control), or the fragmentation of Iraq. A fragmented Iraq would have
two virtues. It would prove no danger to Iran, and Iran likely would control
or heavily influence southern Iraq, thus projecting its power from there
throughout the Persian Gulf.

Viewed this way, Iran's behavior in Iraq
is understandable. A stable Iraq under U.S. influence represents a direct
threat to Iran, while a fragmented or pro-Iranian Iraq does not. Therefore,
the Iranians will do whatever they can to undermine U.S. attempts to create a
government in Baghdad. Tehran can use its influence to block a government,
but it cannot -- on its own -- create a pro-Iranian one. Therefore, Iran's
strategy is to play spoiler and wait for the United States to tire of the
unending conflict. Once the Americans leave, the Iranians can pick up the
chips on the table. Whether it takes 10 years or 30, the Iranians assume
that, in the end, they will win. None of the Arab countries in the region has
the power to withstand Iran, and the Turks are unlikely to get into the game.


The Unknown Variables

Logic would seem to favor the
Iranians. But in the past, the Iranians have tried to be clever with great
powers and, rather than trapping them, have wound up being trapped
themselves. Sometimes they have simply missed other dimensions of the
situation. For example, when the revolutionaries overthrew the Shah and
created the Islamic Republic, the Iranians focused on the threat from the
Americans, and another threat from the Soviets and their covert allies in
Iran. But they took their eyes off Iraq -- and that miscalculation not only
cost them huge casualties and a decade of economic decay, but broke the
self-confidence of the Iranian regime.

The Iranians also have
miscalculated on the United States. When the Islamic Revolution occurred, the
governing assumption -- not only in Iran but also in many parts of the world,
including the United States -- was that the United States was a declining
power. It had, after all, been defeated in Vietnam and was experiencing
declining U.S. military power and severe economic problems. But the Iranians
massively miscalculated with regard to the U.S. position: In the end, the
United States surged and it was the Soviets who collapsed.

The
Iranians do not have a sterling record in managing great powers, and
especially in predicting the behavior of the United States. In large and
small ways, they have miscalculated on what the United States would do and
how it would do it. Therefore, like the Americans, the Iranians are deeply
divided. There are those who regard the United States as a bumbling fool, all
set to fail in Iraq. There are others who remember equally confident
forecasts about other American disasters, and who see the United States as
ruthless, cunning and utterly dangerous.

These sentiments, then,
divide into two policy factions. On the one side, there are those who see
Bush's surge strategy

as an empty bluff. They point out that there is no surge, only a
gradual buildup of troops, and that the number of troops being added is
insignificant. They point to political divisions in Washington and argue that
the time is ripe for Iran to go for it all. They want to force a civil war in
Iraq, to at least dominate the southern region and take advantage of American
weakness to project power in the Persian Gulf.

The other side wonders
whether the Americans are as weak as they appear, and also argues that
exploiting a success in Iraq would be more dangerous and difficult than it
appears. The United States has substantial forces in Iraq, and the response
to Shiite uprisings along the western shore of the Persian Gulf would be
difficult to predict. The response to any probe into Saudi Arabia certainly
would be violent.

We are not referring here to ideological factions,
nor to radicals and moderates. Rather, these are two competing visions of the
United States. One side wants to exploit American weakness; the other side
argues that experience shows that American weakness can reverse itself
unexpectedly and trap Iran in a difficult and painful position. It is not a
debate about ends or internal dissatisfaction with the regime. Rather, it is
a contest between audacity and caution.

The Historical
View


Over time -- and this is not apparent from Iranian rhetoric
-- caution has tended to prevail. Except during the 1980s, when they
supported an aggressive Hezbollah, the Iranians have been quite measured in
their international actions. Following the war with Iraq, they avoided overt
moves -- and they even were circumspect after the fall of the Soviet Union,
when opportunities presented themselves to Iran's north. After 9/11, the
Iranians were careful not to provoke the United States: They offered landing
rights for damaged U.S. aircraft and helped recruit Shiite tribes for the
American effort against the Taliban. The rhetoric alternated between intense
and vitriolic; the actions were more cautious. Even with the Iranian nuclear
project, the rhetoric has been far more intense than the level of development
seems to warrant.

Rhetoric influences perceptions, and perceptions
can drive responses. Therefore, the rhetoric should not be discounted as a
driving factor in the geopolitical system. But the real debate in Iran is
over what to do about Iraq. No one in Iran wants a pro-U.S. government in
Baghdad, and blocking the emergence of such a government has a general
consensus. But how far to go in trying to divide Iraq, creating a pro-Iranian
government in Baghdad and projecting power in the region is a matter of
intense debate. In fact, cautious behavior combined with extreme rhetoric
still appears to be the default position in Tehran, with more adventurous
arguments struggling to gain acceptance.

The United States, for its
part, is divided between the desire to try one more turn at the table to win
it all and the fear that it is becoming hopelessly trapped. Iran is divided
between a belief that the time to strike is now and a fear that counting the
United States out is always premature. This is an engine that can, in due
course, drive negotiations. Iran might be "evil" and the United States might
be "Satan," but at the end of the day, international affairs involving major
powers are governed not by rhetoric but by national interest. The common
ground between the United States and Iran is that neither is certain it can
achieve its real strategic interests. The Americans doubt they can create a
pro-U.S. government in Baghdad, and Iran is not certain the United States is
as weak as it appears to be.

Fear and uncertainty are the foundations
of international agreement, while hope and confidence fuel war. In the end, a
fractured Iraq -- an entity incapable of harming Iran, but still providing an
effective buffer between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula -- is emerging as the
most viable available option.

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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 1:22 AM CST
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Updated: Wednesday, 17 January 2007 1:27 AM CST
Monday, 15 January 2007
The Open Trackback Alliance XLXV
UPDATE: Denmark Exports Soaring
After blogger Judith Klinghoffer and an army of Davids declared a "Buy Danish" campaign to combat the Muslim boycott. The Guardian says "fervent rightwing Americans" participated in the buying spree and implies that the cartoonists were responsible for the deaths of 139 people.(like it was the cartoonists who killed those people instead of the ones who shed their blood, how like the Progressive TransNazi viewpoint)


For your listening pleasure while you browse

"Der er et yndigt land" (There Is A Lovely Land)


Words by: Adam Gottlob Oehlenschlager
Music by: Hans Ernst Kr?yer
Adopted: 1844

"Derer et yndigt land" was first performed for a large gathering of Danes in 1844, and became popular quickly with the Danish people. It was adopted later that year by the Danish government as a national anthem, but not the sole national anthem. This anthem is on equal status with "Kong Christian",which is both the national and royal anthem.

When the Danish anthem is usually performed or sung, the first verse is played in its entirety, then it is followed by the last four lines of the last verse. (This is true whether the lyrics are sung or not



Recentlty I have been posting music to Illustrate the Diversity of America, this week I have a different motive to express Solidarity with DENMARK


I maintain my Support of Denmark, and will later today, post links to and my thoughts about a Danish Editorial "We are being pissed upon by Per Nyholm "

I think I shall title my Post, "There is no "But" in "Freedom of Speech".




When I first started upon my journey through the blogverse I created a
Statement of Purpose
Now upon reading it, one can realize that I did not hold to every detail of that original statement, but from it's basic premise, I have never swayed, in my belief that the Blogs are in fact the Committees of Correspondence of the Second American Revolution.

And that it is a Revolution of Information, no longer can we afford and allow elite gateways to control what we can see, hear and discuss.

For I believe that those bloggers who find their way, here and in particular from the Blogs associated with Sam.

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY.

Some of us are more Serious, some of us are more lighthearted and some post the common ordinary things that make one smile and recall that Life without the simple things to treasure is meaningless.

And it is important that all have a platform from which to speak.

As I understand this process you can link to this post and trackback to this post on ANY subject or post you think important. It is open. I will repeat this every Monday.

The Committees of Correspondence welcomes your intelligent comments. And also welcomes you to join the

OPEN TRACKBACK ALLIANCE


This week I also have shortened my usual introduction for a more inportant message.




In it's struggle for Freedom of Speech.

Sign the Petition NOW!

JEG opstille hos Danmark!




48008Total Signatures 4:53 PM CST January 15, 2007 We can do better pass the word~!




From Agora a call to Support the Manifesto online by signing another Petition, why not sign both?


MANIFESTO: Together facing the new totalitarianism
Created by Mark Jefferson on March 1st, 2006 at 5:42 pm AST

After having overcome fascism, Nazism, and Stalinism, the world now faces a new totalitarian global threat: Islamism.
We, writers, journalists, intellectuals, call for resistance to religious totalitarianism and for the promotion of freedom, equal opportunity and secular values for all. "

Open Trackback Alliance


Blogs that Trackback to this Post:

On Monday

Y'al come back now, Y'heah? ;-)
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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 1:27 AM CST
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Updated: Monday, 15 January 2007 1:32 AM CST
Sunday, 14 January 2007
Revising a Line from the Dixie Chicks Just so you know, I'm embarrassed that San Francisco is part of the United States.
I ask you is succession from the United States a bad idea in every case? How about expulsion?

Anti-military bigotry by the bay


"In the first place God made idiots," observed Mark Twain . "This was for practice. Then he made school boards." The San Francisco Board of Education's 4-2 vote last week to abolish the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program , which has been active in the city's high schools for 90 years, tends to support his view.

Why is JROTC being done away with? It isn't for lack of interest. More than 1,600 San Francisco students currently take part in its voluntary activities. "Kids love this program as if it's family," notes the San Francisco Chronicle . It is "a program that students and their parents wholeheartedly support."

Finances aren't the problem either. Operating JROTC costs the city less than $1 million out of an annual school budget of $356 million.

Nor is the problem bad management. The Chronicle reports that "no one has offered an alternative as coherent and well-run as JROTC."

Safety? Also not a problem. Though cadets have uniforms, they carry no weapons; the nonviolent programs emphasize leadership, self-discipline, citizenship, and teamwork . "This is where the kids feel safe," says one JROTC instructor, retired Army Lieutenant Colonel Robert Powell.

And the problem certainly isn't an absence of diversity. In a story on JROTC cadets at Galileo High School , Chronicle reporter Jill Tucker writes: "These students are 4-foot-10 to 6-foot-4. Athletic and disabled. College-bound and barely graduating. Gay and straight. White, black, and brown. Some leave school for large homes with ocean views. Others board buses for Bayview-Hunters Point." Several of the students come from immigrant families. At least one is autistic.

So what is the problem with JROTC? There isn't one.

The problem is with the anti military bigotry of the school board majority and the "peace" activists who lobbied against the program on the grounds that San Francisco 's schools should not be sullied by an association with the US armed forces.




There is a lot more, read it, don't wait for the movie! I have a neat idea. We need to find out what corporations have HQs in San Francisco and write them that we will refrain from using their sevices, purchasing their products until they have the good sense to vacate that armpit.
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Posted by ky/kentuckydan at 1:33 AM CST
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Updated: Sunday, 14 January 2007 1:40 AM CST

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