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Arrogant Overreach and ‘Disastrous Decisions’

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In the US mid-term elections of November 2, which produced a setback for the Democratic Party, one slogan, in particular, “had enough; vote American”, was symbolic of a xenophobic mood.

The prejudicial impact of the depiction of Obama as a foreign outsider with an insidious agenda to undermine America poisoned the national environment. For many voters, the specter of a black couple in the White House is too much to digest.

According to columnist Maureen Dowd, the Republicans “were able to persuade a lot of Americans that the couple in the White House was not American enough, not quite ‘normal’, too Communist, too radical.”
Obama’s core problems, however, are largely the inheritance from the Bush Administration, which had launched two destructive conflicts and driven the US economy on a decline course.

According to a New York Times story of November 7 on public perceptions of George Bush, “Most Americans still do not view him favorably and a good portion still revile him for invading Iraq, waterboarding terror suspects and presiding over the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.”
Revealing are the own words of the 43d US President, George W. Bush, in his 477-page memoirs, “Decision Points”, which was released November 9, wherein the gullible Bush focuses on the pivotal decisions of his Administration after 9/11, including some pertinent to Pakistan and the region.

On Pakistan, Bush has this to say (on p. 187): “The most pivotal nation we recruited was Pakistan. No country wielded more influence on Afghanistan.” On page 212, “The primary cause of trouble did not originate in Afghanistan or, as some suggested, in Iraq. It came from Pakistan.” On page 215, he talks of cricket and of meeting Inzamam-ul-Haq.

More significantly, on pages 216 and 217, Bush admits facilitating the exit of Musharraf and then goes on to characterize the induction of his successor in the following terms: “Asif Ali Zardari took his place as president. Pakistan’s democracy had survived the crisis.”

There was not a single reference to Kashmir in the book. It echoes Obama’s silence on Kashmir during his Indian yatra. On this, Arundhati Roy, writing in the New York Times of November 9, said: “While Obama spoke eloquently about threats of terrorism, he kept quiet about human rights abuses in Kashmir.”

This is a conclusive proof of the dismal failure of sycophancy in Pakistani diplomacy and policy.

Similar, too, is the case of the US endorsement of India’s bid to get a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. To preempt and counter this move, this writer has been consistently proposing, for the past two decades, Indonesia – the world’s largest Muslim nation with no contentious disputes – to be inducted in the Security Council. Not having a Muslim voice and representation where it matters is reflective of the crushing failure of the 57-member Islamic Conference, which has been reduced to an international decoration piece after King Faisal’s assassination in 1975, following the high of the Lahore Islamic Summit of 1974.

The combined effect of the collapse of the counter-balancing Soviet Union in 1991 and the 9/11 atrocity of 2001 set the stage for America to stumble into an arrogant over-reach..

The disastrous decisions of Western leaders and Muslim governing elites have contributed to a bloody world. As for Bush, he continues to earn the tidy sum of $150,000 for each public speech. Mowahid Hussain Shah. ‘Disastrous Decisions’. By Mowahid Hussain Shah | Published: November 11, 2010. The writer is a barrister and a senior political analyst.

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Politics vs. Facts: Misunderstanding Islam

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Portrait of Charlemagne whom the Song of Roland names the King with the Grizzly Beard Wikipedia

The Muslims were bloodthirsty and treacherous. They conducted a sneak attack against the French army and slaughtered every single soldier, 20,000 in all. More than 1,000 years ago, in the mountain passes of Spain, the Muslim horde cut down the finest soldiers in Charlemagne’s command, including his brave nephew Roland. Then, according to the famous poem that immortalized the tragedy, Charlemagne exacted his revenge by routing the entire Muslim army.

The Song of Roland, an eleventh century rendering in verse of an eighth century battle, is a staple of Western Civilization classes at colleges around the country. A “masterpiece of epic drama,” in the words of its renowned translator Dorothy Sayers, it provides a handy preface for students before they delve into readings on the Crusades that began in 1095. More ominously, the poem has schooled generations of Judeo-Christians to view Muslims as perfidious enemies who once threatened the very foundations of Western civilization.

The problem, however, is that the whole epic is built on a curious falsehood. The army that fell upon Roland and his Frankish soldiers was not Muslim at all. In the real battle of 778, the slayers of the Franks were Christian Basques furious at Charlemagne for pillaging their city of Pamplona. Not epic at all, the battle emerged from a parochial dispute in the complex wars of medieval Spain. Only later, as kings and popes and knights prepared to do battle in the First Crusade, did an anonymous bard repurpose the text to serve the needs of an emerging cross-against-crescent holy war.

Similarly, we think of the Crusades as the archetypal “clash of civilizations” between the followers of Jesus and the followers of Mohammed. In the popular version of those Crusades, the Muslim adversary has, in fact, replaced a remarkable range of peoples the Crusaders dealt with as enemies, including Jews killed in pogroms on the way to the Holy Land, rival Catholics slaughtered in the Balkans and in Constantinople, and Christian heretics hunted down in southern France.

Much later, during the Cold War, mythmakers in Washington performed a similar act, substituting a monolithic crew labeled “godless communists” for a disparate group of anti-imperial nationalists in an attempt to transform conflicts in remote locations like Vietnam, Guatemala, and Iran into epic struggles between the forces of the Free World and the forces of evil. In recent years, the Bush administration did it all over again by portraying Arab nationalists as fiendish Islamic fundamentalists when we invaded Iraq and prepared to topple the regime in Syria.

Similar mythmaking continues today. The recent surge of Islamophobia in the United States has drawn strength from several extraordinary substitutions. A clearly Christian president has become Muslim in the minds of a significant number of Americans. The thoughtful Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan has become a closet fundamentalist in the writings of Paul Berman and others. And an Islamic center in lower Manhattan, organized by proponents of interfaith dialogue, has become an extremist “mosque at Ground Zero” in the TV appearances, political speeches, and Internet sputterings of a determined clique of right-wing activists.

This transformation of Islam into a violent caricature of itself — as if Ann Coulter had suddenly morphed into the face of Christianity — comes at a somewhat strange juncture in the United States. Anti-Islamic rhetoric and hate crimes, which spiked immediately after September 11, 2001, had been on the wane. No major terrorist attack had taken place in the U.S. or Europe since the London bombings in 2005. The current American president had reached out to the Muslim world and retired the controversial acronym GWOT, or “Global War on Terror.”

All the elements seemed in place, in other words, for us to turn the page on an ugly chapter in our history. Yet it’s as if we remain fixed in the eleventh century in a perpetual battle of “us” against “them.” Like the undead rising from their coffins, our previous “crusades” never go away. Indeed, we still seem to be fighting the three great wars of the millennium, even though two of these conflicts have long been over and the third has been rhetorically reduced to “overseas contingency operations.” The Crusades, which finally petered out in the seventeenth century, continue to shape our global imagination today. The Cold War ended in 1991, but key elements of the anti-communism credo have been awkwardly grafted onto the new Islamist adversary. And the Global War on Terror, which President Obama quietly renamed shortly after taking office, has in fact metastasized into the wars that his administration continues to prosecute in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, and elsewhere.

Those in Europe and the United States who cheer on these wars claim that they are issuing a wake-up call about the continued threat of al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and other militants who claim the banner of Islam. However, what really keeps Islamophobes up at night is not the marginal and backwards-looking Islamic fundamentalists but rather the growing economic, political, and global influence of modern, mainstream Islam. Examples of Islam successfully grappling with modernity abound, from Turkey’s new foreign policy and Indonesia’s economic muscle to the Islamic political parties participating in elections in Lebanon, Morocco, and Jordan. Instead of providing reassurance, however, these trends only incite Islamophobes to intensify their battles to “save” Western civilization.

As long as our unfinished wars still burn in the collective consciousness — and still rage in Kabul, Baghdad, Sana’a, and the Tribal Areas of Pakistan — Islamophobia will make its impact felt in our media, politics, and daily life. Only if we decisively end the millennial Crusades, the half-century Cold War, and the decade-long War on Terror (under whatever name) will we overcome the dangerous divide that has consumed so many lives, wasted so much wealth, and distorted our very understanding of our Western selves.

The Crusades Continue

With their irrational fear of spiders, arachnophobes are scared of both harmless daddy longlegs and poisonous brown recluse spiders. In extreme cases, an arachnophobe can break out in a sweat while merely looking at photos of spiders. It is, of course, reasonable to steer clear of black widows. What makes a legitimate fear into an irrational phobia, however, is the tendency to lump all of any group, spiders or humans, into one lethal category and then to exaggerate how threatening they are. Spider bites, after all, are responsible for at most a handful of deaths a year in the United States.

Islamophobia is, similarly, an irrational fear of Islam. Yes, certain Muslim fundamentalists have been responsible for terrorist attacks, certain fantasists about a “global caliphate” continue to plot attacks on perceived enemies, and certain groups like Afghanistan’s Taliban and Somalia’s al-Shabaab practice medieval versions of the religion. But Islamophobes confuse these small parts with the whole and then see terrorist jihad under every Islamic pillow. They break out in a sweat at the mere picture of an imam.

Irrational fears are often rooted in our dimly remembered childhoods. Our irrational fear of Islam similarly seems to stem from events that happened in the early days of Christendom. Three myths inherited from the era of the Crusades constitute the core of Islamophobia today: Muslims are inherently violent, Muslims want to take over the world, and Muslims can’t be trusted.

The myth of Islam as a “religion of the sword” was a staple of Crusader literature and art. In fact, the atrocities committed by Muslim leaders and armies — and there were some — rarely rivaled the slaughters of the Crusaders, who retook Jerusalem in 1099 in a veritable bloodbath.

“The heaps of the dead presented an immediate problem for the conquerors,” writes Christopher Tyerman in God’s War. “Many of the surviving Muslim population were forced to clear the streets and carry the bodies outside the walls to be burnt in great pyres, whereat they themselves were massacred.” Jerusalem’s Jews suffered a similar fate when the Crusaders burned many of them alive in their main synagogue. Four hundred years earlier, by contrast, Caliph ‘Umar put no one to the sword when he took over Jerusalem, signing a pact with the Christian patriarch Sophronius that pledged “no compulsion in religion.”

This myth of the inherently violent Muslim endures. Islam “teaches violence,” televangelist Pat Robertson proclaimed in 2005. “The Koran teaches violence and most Muslims, including so-called moderate Muslims, openly believe in violence,” was the way Major General Jerry Curry (U.S. Army, ret.), who served in the Carter, Reagan, and Bush Sr. administrations, put it.

The Crusaders justified their violence by arguing that Muslims were bent on taking over the world. In its early days, the expanding Islamic empire did indeed imagine an ever-growing Dar-al-Islam (House of Islam). By the time of the Crusades, however, this initial burst of enthusiasm for holy war had long been spent. Moreover, the Christian West harbored its own set of desires when it came to extending the Pope’s authority to every corner of the globe. Even that early believer in soft power, Francis of Assisi, sat down with Sultan al-Kamil during the Fifth Crusade with the aim of eliminating Islam through conversion.

Today, Islamophobes portray the building of Cordoba House in lower Manhattan as just another gambit in this millennial power grab: “This is Islamic domination and expansionism,” writes right-wing blogger Pamela Geller, who made the “Ground Zero Mosque” into a media obsession. “Islam is a religion with a very political agenda,” warns ex-Muslim Ali Sina. “The ultimate goal of Islam is to rule the world.”
These two myths — of inherent violence and global ambitions — led to the firm conviction that Muslims were by nature untrustworthy. Robert of Ketton, a twelfth century translator of the Koran, was typical in badmouthing the prophet Mohammad this way: “Like the liar you are, you everywhere contradict yourself.” The suspicion of untrustworthiness fell as well on any Christian who took up the possibility of coexistence with Islam. Pope Gregory, for instance, believed that the thirteenth century Crusader Frederick II was the Anti-Christ himself because he developed close relationships with Muslims.

For Islamophobes today, Muslims abroad are similarly terrorists-in-waiting. As for Muslims at home, “American Muslims must face their either/or,” writes the novelist Edward Cline, “to repudiate Islam or remain a quiet, sanctioning fifth column.” Even American Muslims in high places, like Congressman Keith Ellison (D-MN), are not above suspicion. In a 2006 CNN interview, Glenn Beck said, “I have been nervous about this interview with you, because what I feel like saying is, ‘Sir, prove to me that you are not working with our enemies.’”

These three myths of Islamophobia flourish in our era, just as they did almost a millennium ago, because of a cunning conflation of a certain type of Islamic fundamentalism with Islam itself. Bill O’Reilly was neatly channeling this Crusader mindset when he asserted recently that “the Muslim threat to the world is not isolated. It’s huge!” When Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence William Boykin, in an infamous 2003 sermon, thundered “What I’m here to do today is to recruit you to be warriors of God’s kingdom,” he was issuing the Crusader call to arms.

But O’Reilly and Boykin, who represent the violence, duplicity, and expansionist mind-set of today’s Western crusaders, were also invoking a more recent tradition, closer in time and far more familiar.

The Totalitarian Myth

In 1951, the CIA and the emerging anti-communist elite, including soon-to-be-president Dwight Eisenhower, created the Crusade for Freedom as a key component of a growing psychological warfare campaign against the Soviet Union and the satellite countries it controlled in Eastern Europe. The language of this “crusade” was intentionally religious. It reached out to “peoples deeply rooted in the heritage of western civilization,” living under the “crushing weight of a godless dictatorship.” In its call for the liberation of the communist world, it echoed the nearly thousand-year-old crusader rhetoric of “recovering” Jerusalem and other outposts of Christianity.

In the theology of the Cold War, the Soviet Union replaced the Islamic world as the untrustworthy infidel. However unconsciously, the old crusader myths about Islam translated remarkably easily into governing assumptions about the communist enemy: the Soviets and their allies were bent on taking over the world, could not be trusted with their rhetoric of peaceful coexistence, imperiled Western civilization, and fought with unique savagery as well as a willingness to martyr themselves for the greater ideological good.
Ironically, Western governments were so obsessed with fighting this new scourge that, in the Cold War years, on the theory that my enemy’s enemy is my friend, they nurtured radical Islam as a weapon. As journalist Robert Dreyfuss ably details in his book The Devil’s Game, the U.S. funding of the mujahideen in Afghanistan was only one part of the anti-communist crusade in the Islamic world. To undermine Arab nationalists and leftists who might align themselves with the Soviet Union, the United States (and Israel) worked with Iranian mullahs, helped create Hamas, and facilitated the spread of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Though the Cold War ended with the sudden disappearance of the Soviet Union in 1991, that era’s mind-set — and so many of the Cold Warriors sporting it — never went with it. The prevailing mythology was simply transferred back to the Islamic world. In anti-communist theology, for example, the worst curse word was “totalitarianism,” said to describe the essence of the all-encompassing Soviet state and system.

According to the gloss that early neoconservative Jeanne Kirkpatrick provided in her book Dictatorships and Double Standards, the West had every reason to support right-wing authoritarian dictatorships because they would steadfastly oppose left-wing totalitarian dictatorships, which, unlike the autocracies we allied with, were supposedly incapable of internal reform.

According to the new “Islamo-fascism” school — and its acolytes like Norman Podhoretz, David Horowitz, Bill O’Reilly, Pamela Geller — the fundamentalists are simply the “new totalitarians,” as hidebound, fanatical, and incapable of change as communists. For a more sophisticated treatment of the Islamo-fascist argument, check out Paul Berman, a rightward-leaning liberal intellectual who has tried to demonstrate that “moderate Muslims” are fundamentalists in reformist clothing.

These Cold Warriors all treat the Islamic world as an undifferentiated mass — in spirit, a modern Soviet Union — where Arab governments and radical Islamists work hand in glove. They simply fail to grasp that the Syrian, Egyptian, and Saudi Arabian governments have launched their own attacks on radical Islam. The sharp divides between the Iranian regime and the Taliban, between the Jordanian government and the Palestinians, between Shi’ites and Sunni in Iraq, and even among Kurds all disappear in the totalitarian blender, just as anti-communists generally failed to distinguish between the Communist hardliner Leonid Brezhnev and the Communist reformer Mikhail Gorbachev.

At the root of terrorism, according to Berman, are “immense failures of political courage and imagination within the Muslim world,” rather than the violent fantasies of a group of religious outliers or the Crusader-ish military operations of the West. In other words, something flawed at the very core of Islam itself is responsible for the violence done in its name — a line of argument remarkably similar to one Cold Warriors made about communism.

All of this, of course, represents a mirror image of al-Qaeda’s arguments about the inherent perversities of the infidel West. As during the Cold War, hardliners reinforce one another.

The persistence of Crusader myths and their transposition into a Cold War framework help explain why the West is saddled with so many misconceptions about Islam. They don’t, however, explain the recent spike in Islamophobia in the U.S. after several years of relative tolerance. To understand this, we must turn to the third unfinished war: the Global War on Terror or GWOT, launched by George W. Bush.

Fanning the Flames

President Obama was careful to groom his Christian image during his campaign. He was repeatedly seen praying in churches, and he studiously avoided mosques. He did everything possible to efface the traces of Muslim identity in his past.

His opponents, of course, did just the opposite. They emphasized his middle name, Hussein, challenged his birth records, and asserted that he was too close to the Palestinian cause. They also tried to turn liberal constituencies — particularly Jewish-American ones — against the presumptive president. Like Frederick II for an earlier generation of Christian
fundamentalists, since entering the Oval Office Obama has become the Anti-Christ of the Islamophobes.

Once in power, he broke with Bush administration policies toward the Islamic world on a few points. He did indeed push ahead with his plan to remove combat troops from Iraq (with some important exceptions). He has attempted to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to stop expanding settlements in occupied Palestinian lands and to negotiate in good faith (though he has done so without resorting to the kind of pressure that might be meaningful, like a cutback of or even cessation of U.S. arms exports to Israel). In a highly publicized speech in Cairo in June 2009, he also reached out rhetorically to the Islamic world at a time when he was also eliminating the name “Global War on Terror” from the government’s vocabulary.

For Muslims worldwide, however, GWOT itself continues. The United States has orchestrated a surge in Afghanistan. The CIA’s drone war in the Pakistani borderlands has escalated rapidly. U.S. Special Forces now operate in 75 countries, at least 15 more than during the Bush years. Meanwhile, Guantanamo remains open, the United States still practices extraordinary rendition, and assassination remains an active part of Washington’s toolbox.

The civilians killed in these overseas contingency operations are predominantly Muslim. The people seized and interrogated are mostly Muslim. The buildings destroyed are largely Muslim-owned. As a result, the rhetoric of “crusaders and imperialists” used by al-Qaeda falls on receptive ears. Despite his Cairo speech, the favorability rating of the United States in the Muslim world, already grim enough, has slid even further since Obama took office — in Egypt, from 41% in 2009 to 31% percent now; in Turkey, from 33% to 23%; and in Pakistan, from 13% to 8%.

The U.S. wars, occupations, raids, and repeated air strikes have produced much of this disaffection and, as political scientist Robert Pape has consistently argued, most of the suicide bombings and other attacks against Western troops and targets as well. This is revenge, not religion, talking — just as it was for Americans after September 11, 2001. As commentator M. Junaid Levesque-Alam astutely pointed out, “When three planes hurtled into national icons, did anger and hatred rise in American hearts only after consultation of Biblical verses?”

And yet those dismal polling figures do not actually reflect a rejection of Western values (despite Islamophobe assurances that they mean exactly that). “Numerous polls that we have conducted,” writes pollster Stephen Kull, “as well as others by the World Values Survey and Arab Barometer, show strong support in the Muslim world for democracy, for human rights, and for an international order based on international law and a strong United Nations.”

In other words, nine years after September 11th a second spike in Islamophobia and in home-grown terrorist attacks like that of the would-be Times Square bomber has been born of two intersecting pressures: American critics of Obama’s foreign policy believe that he has backed away from the major civilizational struggle of our time, even as many in the Muslim world see Obama-era foreign policy as a continuation, even an escalation, of Bush-era policies of war and occupation.

Here is the irony: alongside the indisputable rise of fundamentalism over the last two decades, only some of it oriented towards violence, the Islamic world has undergone a shift which deep-sixes the cliché that Islam has held countries back from political and economic development. “Since the early 1990s, 23 Muslim countries have developed more democratic institutions, with fairly run elections, energized and competitive political parties, greater civil liberties, or better legal protections for journalists,” writes Philip Howard in The Digital Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy. Turkey has emerged as a vibrant democracy and a major foreign policy player. Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, is now the largest economy in Southeast Asia and the eighteenth largest economy in the world.

Are Islamophobes missing this story of mainstream Islam’s accommodation with democracy and economic growth? Or is it this story (not Islamo-fascism starring al-Qaeda) that is their real concern?

The recent preoccupations of Islamophobes are telling in this regard. Pamela Geller, after all, was typical in the way she went after not a radical mosque, but an Islamic center about two blocks from Ground Zero proposed by a proponent of interfaith dialogue. As journalist Stephen Salisbury writes, “The mosque controversy is not really about a mosque at all; it’s about the presence of Muslims in America, and the free-floating anxiety and fear that now dominate the nation’s psyche.” For her latest venture, Geller is pushing a boycott of Campbell’s Soup because it accepts halal certification — the Islamic version of kosher certification by a rabbi — from the Islamic Society of North America, a group which, by the way, has gone out of its way to denounce religious extremism.

Paul Berman, meanwhile, has devoted his latest book, The Flight of the Intellectuals, to deconstructing the arguments not of Osama bin-Laden or his ilk, but of Tariq Ramadan, the foremost mainstream Islamic theologian. Ramadan is a man firmly committed to breaking down the old distinctions between “us” and “them.” Critical of the West for colonialism, racism, and other ills, he also challenges the injustices of the Islamic world. He is far from a fundamentalist.

And what country, by the way, has exercised European Islamophobes more than any other? Pakistan? Saudi Arabia? Taliban Afghanistan? No, the answer is: Turkey. “The Turks are conquering Germany in the same way the Kosovars conquered Kosovo: by using higher birth-rates,” argues Germany’s Islamophobe du jour, Thilo Sarrazin, a member of Germany’s Social Democratic Party. The far right has even united around a Europe-wide referendum to keep Turkey out of the European Union.

Despite his many defects, George W. Bush at least knew enough to distinguish Islam from Islamism. By targeting a perfectly normal Islamic center, a perfectly normal Islamic scholar, and a perfectly normal Islamic country — all firmly in the mainstream of that religion — the Islamophobes have actually declared war on normalcy, not extremism.

The victories of the tea party movement and the increased power of Republican militants in Congress, not to mention the renaissance of the far right in Europe, suggest that we will be living with this Islamophobia and the three unfinished wars of the West against the Rest for some time. The Crusades lasted hundreds of years. Let’s hope that Crusade 2.0, and the dark age that we find ourselves in, has a far shorter lifespan. The Politics Behind Misunderstanding Islam. John Feffer: The Myths Underpinning Islamophobia Share a Long History.

(CBS) John Feffer is the co-director of Foreign Policy in Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies, writes its regular World Beat column, and will be publishing a book on Islamophobia with City Lights Press in 2011. This piece first appeared on TomDispatch.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

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United States Navy Admiral Michael G. Mullen, ...

Pakistan forces US to pressure India to disavow 'Cold Start'

United States Navy Admiral Michael G. Mullen, ...

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The New York Times in a front page story tries to portray the impression that the Cold Start Strategy does not exist. It is amazing the Stephen Cohen one of the authors of “Cold Start Strategy” who has eulogized it on National Television now says that “Cold Start Strategy” does not exist. Many Bharati journals have been talking about it since Mumbai, and Bharat Verma has written multiple articles on it in the Indian Defense Journal.

  • Senior American military commanders have sought to press India to formally disavow a  military doctrine called Cold Start
  • Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top commander in Afghanistan, is among those who have warned internally about the dangers of Cold Start
  • Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Richard C. Holbrooke, the special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, share these fears.
  • Pakistani officials have repeatedly stressed to the United States that worries about Cold Start are at the root of their refusal to redeploy forces away from the border with India
  • That point was made most recently during a visit to Washington last month by Pakistan’s army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

Much of this so called “Cold Start Strategy” is based on the Israeli strategy which it tried to implement in Lebanon. Israel was unable to implement its objectives in Lebanon and had to withdraw even from the Litani River. Israel failed to achieve its goals in Lebanon. In Lebanon, Israel was unable to stop the barrage of missiles from Lebanon even on the last day. Many consider this Israel’s defeat.India’s Cold start war strategy and the Pakistani Nuclear response.

Gen Kapoor’s provocative doctrine: Pakistani countermeasures

  • The essence of the Cold Start doctrine is reorganising the army’s offensive power that resides in the three strike corps into eight smaller division-sized integrated battle groups (IBGs) consisting of armour and mechanised infantry and artillery, closely supported by helicopter gunships, air force and airborne troops (parachute and heliborne).
  • The IBGs are to be positioned close to the border so that three to five are launched into Pakistan along different axes within 72 to 96 hours from the time mobilisation is ordered.
  • Cold Start thus envisages rapid thrusts even when the defensive corps’ deployment is yet to be completed, and high-speed operations conducted day and night until the designated objectives are achieved
  • The probable objective areas for Cold Start could be (1) Ravi-Chenab corridor from two directions, an IBG along Jammu-Sialkot-Daska axis and another across the Ravi to link up with the first IBG, and (2) in the south against Reti-Rahim Yar Khan-Kashmore complex.
  • To counter Cold Start, the Pakistan Army will have to create more armour-dominated brigade-sized reserves from the existing resources if possible, and a more flexible military system and structure.
  • For Pakistan the dimensions of time and space assume paramount importance as it lacks territorial depth, is opposed by a larger adversary and lacks the resources to fight a protracted war.
  • The strategy of pre-emption is thus imposed on Pakistan in the same way it was imposed on Israel prior to the 1967 war.
  • The fact that the Pakistani Army can occupy their wartime locations earlier than the Indian army confers on it the ability to pre-empt Cold Start;
  • failure to do so could lead to firing of low-yield tactical warheads at IBGs as they cross the start line or even earlier
  • Pakistani countermeasures to Cold Start Strategy–battle-ready nuclear weapons
  • India said on Monday it is monitoring the situation following media reports suggesting Pakistan is allegedly digging tunnels in Sargodha district
  • “We are attempting to establish the purpose of digging up such large tunnels,” an intelligence official was quoted as saying in the reports. “These clearly cannot be meant for transport as is obvious from the images available; they don’t lead on to roads,” he added.
  • Delhi’s Cold Start Strategy Frozen DOA (Dead on Arrival)

The US had taken up concerns by Pakistan on the perceived ‘Cold Start’ strategy of the Indian Army that envisages rapid deployment of troops on the western border to escalate to a full blown war within days but has been told that such a doctrine does not exist but is a term that has been fabricated by think tanks.

The matter was repeatedly taken up by senior US Defence delegations after Pakistan voiced concerns that diverting more troops to the Afghan border would not be feasible given the Indian ‘Cold Start’ strategy that could bring offensive elements of the Indian Army to its eastern border within four days.

While the US has been assured that no such doctrine exists, the Army has now come on record to say that ‘Cold Start’ is not part of its doctrine. Army Chief General V K Singh has told this newspaper that India’s basic military posture remains defensive.

NEW DELHI — Senior American military commanders have sought to press India to formally disavow a  military doctrine that they contend is fueling tensions between India and Pakistan and hindering the American war effort in Afghanistan.

But with President Obama arriving in India on Saturday for a closely watched three-day visit, administration officials said they did not expect him to broach the subject of the doctrine, known informally as Cold Start. At the most, these officials predicted, Mr. Obama will forecfully encourage India’s leaders to do what they can to cool tensions between these nuclear-armed neighbors.

India now denies the very existence of Cold Start, a plan to deploy new ground forces that could strike inside Pakistan quickly in the event of a conflict. India has argued strenuously that the United States, if it wants a wide-ranging partnership of leading democracies, has to stop viewing it through the lens of Pakistan and the Afghanistan war.

Some in the administration who agree that the United States and India should focus on broader concerns, including commercial ties, military sales, climate change and regional security. However vital the Afghan war effort, officials said, it has lost out in the internal debate to priorities like American jobs and the rising role of China.

“There are people in the administration who want us to engage India positively,” said an administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss internal deliberations. “They don’t care about Afghanistan. Then there are people, like Petraeus, who have wars to fight.” NY Times.

Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top commander in Afghanistan, is among those who have warned internally about the dangers of Cold Start, according to American and Indian officials. Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Richard C. Holbrooke, the special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, share these fears.

The strategy calls for India to create fast-moving battle groups that could deliver a contained but sharp retaliatory ground strike inside Pakistan within three days of suffering a terrorist attack by militants based in Pakistan, yet not do enough damage to set off a nuclear confrontation.

Pakistani officials have repeatedly stressed to the United States that worries about Cold Start are at the root of their refusal to redeploy forces away from the border with India so that they can fight Islamic militants in the frontier region near Afghanistan. That point was made most recently during a visit to Washington last month by Pakistan’s army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. NY Times.

  • Responding to the “Surgical Strikes”: Neutralizing Delhi’s Cold Start strategy:
  • Nuclear deterrence & Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) blunts Bharat’s Cold Start Strategy
  • Why India did not attack Pakistan in 2002 and 2008?
  • The India-Pakistan war
  • Delhi’s Cold Start Strategy Frozen DOA (Dead on Arrival)
  • Responding to the “Surgical Strikes”: Neutralizing Delhi’s Cold Start strategy:
  • Pakistani response to “India’s Cold start strategy”: Limited strikes against targets vs Hot War leading to Nuclear Armageddon
  • Indian Airforce crying wolf? or facing shortage of jets?
  • India’s Cold War strategy guarantees hot war—Nuclear annihilation
  • India knows that it can never win a conventional warfare because of the Nuclear Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD). However it still harbors notions of winning a sort of a mini war. India may think it has a Cold Start Strategy, but it may end as a hot nuclear war. Indian Defense planners cannot guarantee that a limited strike will not escalte into a full fledged war. A full fledged war witha nuclear armed labor may destroy both countries. Responding to the “Surgical Strikes”: Neutralizing Delhi’s Cold Start strategy:

    While engaging the Kashmir question must be the priority, a much more serious problem is that in less than a decade India has twice threatened us with all-out war in less than a decade, in December 2002 and 2008, using terrorist action by non-state actors as a pretext both times. As the name suggests, the Indian “COLD START” strategy envisages moving Indian forces without any warning or mobilisation into unpredictable locations at high speeds against Pakistan (on the Israeli pattern of 1956 and 1967) seeking to defeat Pakistan by achieving total surprise at both the strategic and the operational levels (remember Pearl Harbour), striving for a decision before the US or China could intervene on Pakistan’s behalf. An unspoken assumption seems to be that “rapid operations would prevent India’s civilian leadership from halting military operations in progress, lest it have second thoughts or possess insufficient resolve”. Does this particular Indian military psyche conform to the so-called civilian control of the Indian military? Facing a foe having 3:1 superiority, and with such a history and such an offensive strategy, we may be forgiven for our “India fixation”.

    The military challenges for Pakistan posed by COLD START derails any resolve for sustained peace with India, re-constituting Pakistan’s strategy to take on all five of India’s “Strike Corps” with all our three “Army Reserve” formations presently occupied in FATA, Dir and Swat. Please forgive also our suspicions as to what the many Indian consulates in Afghanistan are doing on our western borders! Ikram Sehgal. The News

    The administration raised the issue of Cold Start last November when India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, visited Washington, Indian and American officials said. Indian officials told the United States that the strategy was not a government or military policy, and that India had no plans to attack Pakistan. Therefore, they added, it should have no place on Mr. Obama’s agenda in India.

    For Mr. Obama, politically wounded by the midterm elections and high unemployment at home, such deals are also important to bolster his argument that the relationship between the United States and India can create American jobs rather than simply siphoning them away.

    For all the talk of shared interests, India still lies at the nexus of America’s greatest foreign policy crisis. Its archrival, Pakistan, is a crucial  American ally in the war in Afghanistan. The United States has struggled to find a way to mediate between them.

    Some administration officials have argued that addressing Cold Start, developed in the aftermath of a failed attempt to mobilize troops in response to an attack on the Indian Parliament by Pakistani militants, could help break the logjam that has impeded talks between the countries.

    But India has mostly declined to discuss the topic. “We don’t know what Cold Start is,” said India’s defense secretary, Pradeep Kumar, in an interview on Thursday. “Our prime minister has said that Pakistan has nothing to fear. Pakistan can move its troops from the eastern border.”

    Indian officials and some analysts say Cold Start has taken on a nearly mythical status in the minds of Pakistani leaders, whom they suspect of inflating it as an excuse to avoid engaging militants on their own turf.

    “The Pakistanis will use everything they can to delay or drag out doing a serious reorientation of their military,” said Stephen P. Cohen, an expert on South Asia at the Brookings Institution.

    India’s ponderous strike forces, most of them based in the center of the country, took weeks to reach the border. By then Western diplomats had swooped in.

    The military began devising a plan to respond to future attacks. The response would have to be swift to avoid the traffic jam of international diplomacy, but also carefully calibrated — shallow enough to be punitive and embarrassing, but not an existential threat that would provoke nuclear retaliation.

    But American military officials and diplomats worry that even the existence of the strategy in any form could encourage Pakistan to make rapid improvements in its nuclear arsenal.

    When Pakistani military officials are asked to justify the huge investment in upgrading that arsenal, some respond that because Pakistan has no conventional means to deter Cold Start, nuclear weapons are its only option.

    Still, many analysts are skeptical that Cold Start could be the key for the Obama administration to promote talks between India and Pakistan, which have been stalled since Pakistani militants attacked Mumbai in 2008. Agencies and NY Times Reports. Lydia Polgreen reported from New Delhi, and Mark Landler from Washington. David E. Sanger contributed reporting from Washington. Obama Is Not Likely to Push India Hard on Pakistan. Rajanish Kakade/Associated Press. A sign in Mumbai on Friday signaled preparations in India for President Obama’s visit. Mumbai is his first stop on Saturday.  By LYDIA POLGREEN and MARK LANDLER. Published: November 5, 2010

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during her campaign for the presidency of the United States mentioned “Pakistan’s paranoia” about India’s intentions about Pakistan. Pardon us Ms. Clinton but Bharat has threatened Pakistan will all out war, not once but twice in the past few years. Additionally, it was the Pakhtuns that liberated Azad Kashmir and it is Delhi that occupied Kashmir, Junagarh, Manvadar, Sir Creek and Siachin–not the Pakhtuns (aka Taliban).

    Terrorism across the borders works for Bharat–in China, Sikkim Bhutan, Nepal, Lanka, and Pakistan. RAW is good at hiring and sending mercenaries to murder innocent civilians–as witnessed in Karachi last week.

    Posted in Current AffairsComments (2)

    Turkey and Iran

    Iran's brilliant strategy to win friends, influence countries using Turkish playbook

    Turkey and Iran

    Image by Truthout.org via Flickr

    When the Islamic government of Turkey came to power in Ankara, it instituted a zero problems policy towards all her neighbors. Withing a few months all disputes with neighbors were resolved and the Turkey concentrated on trade issues. The Iranians have new seen the efficacy of this approach and are brilliantly mending their fences with all her neighbors. Trade relations between Turkey and Iran have increased exponentially. Iran is building energy and investment links with Pakistan. It is working with Iran and Turkey to expedite the exit of occupation forces from Kabul. Iran is also building relations with China and Russia. A recent article in Radio Fre Europe describes the brilliance of Iran’s strategy to win friends and influence people.

    To the uninitiated, the shady handover of a stash of cash in a plastic bag seems more akin to a Martin Scorsese movie than part of a diplomatic strategy.

    But when Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai, confirmed that his chief-of-staff had been the recipient of just such a transaction to the tune of nearly $1 million from the Iranian ambassador to Kabul, he shone a light — perhaps unwittingly — on Iran’s dynamic foreign policy toward its neighbors.

    For the disbursement of such financial aid, described by Karzai as “transparent” despite an initial denial — later rescinded — from Iran’s Kabul Embassy, is merely one manifestation of the Islamic republic’s frenetic efforts to curry favor with nearby states, as Tehran seeks to foil Western attempts at isolating it.

    In recent years, Iran has sought — and earned — the friendship of governments in Turkey, Iraq, the Caucasus, and even Pakistan, with whom relations had previously been uneasy and occasionally tense. Attempts to buy friends and influence people in Afghanistan is consistent with that strategy and may even become a focal point, some analysts believe, as Iran seeks a role in the country, when NATO forces eventually withdrawal.

    Regional Persuasion

    Richard Dalton, a former British ambassador to Tehran, says Iran’s payments to Afghanistan — however unconventional — are in keeping with its national interests and its approach to other neighbors.

    “[The Iranian government has] participated in the international pledging conferences for both Iraq and Afghanistan. They have a vital interest in the stability of both countries,” Dalton says.

    While Dalton says he had not heard of such payments, he admits the news doesn’t surprise him at all.

    At a news conference on October 25, Karzai insisted relations between Kabul and Tehran were a two-way street.

    “We’ve also asked for things in return for this relationship, so it’s a relationship between neighbors, and it will go on. We will continue to ask for cash help from Iran,” Karzai said.

    While the U.S. has accused Iran of effectively playing both sides by backing the Taliban insurgency, the benign signs of Tehran’s role are apparent in the form of new roads it has funded in Afghanistan’s western provinces.

    Dalton says Iran’s contacts with different sides in the Afghan conflict have been established with an eye to the future.

    “When the foreign troops go, the other governments of the region have to get on with their Afghan neighbor, and Iran has been working for the best possible contacts with the different political forces inside Afghanistan for some time now,” Dalton contends.

    Pledges To Pakistan

    Concern over Afghanistan’s long-term future has partly driven Tehran to seek rapprochement with another neighbor, Pakistan, despite concerns about the treatment of that country’s estimated 30 million-strong Shi’a minority.

    In September, while other Muslim countries were being criticized for being slow to help, Iran pledged $100 million in reconstruction assistance to Pakistan, following catastrophic floods that left millions of people homeless.

    Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born commentator with the Middle East Economic and Political Analysis Company in Israel, believes the size of the pledge was indicative of an Iranian desire for closer ties with a country that has been an ally in the United States’ “war on terror.” It came on the back of improved intelligence-sharing and intense efforts by President Mahmud Ahmadinejad of Iran to court his Pakistani counterpart, Asif Ali Zardari, according to Javedanfar:

    “[Iran] sees that Pakistan is an important player in Afghanistan, and that’s important for Iran’s own security concerns, because Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan are Iran’s security concerns as well,” Javedanfar says. Additionally, Javedanfar claims that Iran sees any leverage over Pakistan as a channel through which Iran could pressure the U.S.

    Influence Bearing Fruit

    Improved relations may already have borne fruit for Iran in the form of Pakistani help earlier this year in the capture of Abdolmalek Rigi, the leader of the Sunni militant group, Jundallah. Rigi, who was accused of masterminding several deadly attacks on Iranian forces and officials in Sistan-Baluchistan, and was arrested aboard a flight from Dubai to Kyrgyzstan in February. He has since been executed. Iran had previously complained that Rigi and other Jundallah fighters were being sheltered in Pakistan.

    Dr. Harsh Pant, a lecturer in defense studies at Kings College, London, says burgeoning Iran-Pakistan links may also have an economic component, as Tehran seeks customers for its oil and natural-gas reserves in the face of ever-tightening sanctions over its suspect nuclear program.

    “The much-hyped Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline project for a long time was not going anywhere. But in recent months, we have seen movement on that front. Iran and Pakistan have decided to go ahead with the project,” Pant says.

    Harsh thinks Pakistan’s decision has greatly helped the two countries’ relationship and is “a big signal to Iran that Pakistan will take a very independent line” than neighboring India.

    Energy Heavyweight

    Iran has been able to use its energy wealth to cultivate ties with other governments. With U.S. combat forces having recently left Iraq, attention has been focused on Iranian efforts to broker a deal with rival Shi’ite forces in the country that could produce a government friendly toward Tehran. A potential spin-off could be economic cooperation between Iran and Iraq that would enable the Islamic republic to circumvent international sanctions.

    “Iran participated in the very first pledging conference for Iraq in 2003 and pledged half-a-billion dollars, which would contribute to the reconstruction of the Iraqi electricity system and linking it to Iran,” Dalton says. “And they also wanted to link the Iraqi petroleum infrastructure to the Iranian one, so that oil swaps could be used to facilitate the oil exports of both countries.”

    Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad flashes the V-sign for victory with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, after the Islamic republic inked a nuclear fuel swap deal in Tehran
    Sitting on the world’s second-largest natural gas reserves has enabled Iran to grow closer to Turkey, which now relies on its eastern neighbor for one-third of its supplies. The Turkish government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sided with Iran in its dispute with the West over its uranium-enrichment program. Insisting that Turkey will not observe unilateral sanctions passed by the U.S. or European Union, Erdogan has also pledged to triple trade between Turkey and Iran, which in 2008 was estimated at $10 billion.

    Similarly, the former Soviet republics of the Caucasus and Central Asia have not escaped Iran’s diplomatic and commercial attentions. Iran has proposed extending a natural-gas pipeline that supplies Armenia further north to reach Georgia, which is currently dependent on Russian supplies. It has also arranged to send 15,000 Iranian tourists on chartered flights to Georgia’s Black Sea resorts. Meanwhile, Tehran has wooed Azerbaijan by calling for regional actors to provide solutions to problems such as the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the division of Caspian Sea energy resources, rather than have the issues settled by international arbitration.

    The goal of such activity, some observers believe, is to acquire leverage that could be used to dissuade the Caucasian nations from agreeing to allow the U.S. to open a military base on their soil, close to Iran’s northern border.

    Whether such a ploy works remains to be seen. But when it comes to dispensing its wares, it is clear Iran is not confined to dishing out money in plastic bags. October 26, 2010 By Robert Tait. Afghan ‘Money Bags’ Point To Wider Iranian Out-Reach Strategy Toward Neighbors

    Posted in Current AffairsComments (0)

    Logo used by Wikileaks

    Irrefutable evidence of US War crimes in Iraq

    Logo used by Wikileaks
    Image via Wikipedia

    Revealing another 400,000 classified US military documents, whistle-blower WikiLeaks has indicated ”compelling evidence of war crimes” and a ”systematic sectarian cleansing” that led to the mass killing of civilians in Iraq.

    The Pentagon has denied the charges but the secret files related to America’s war in Iraq leaked Friday provide a new picture of how many Iraqi civilians have been killed, a new window on the role that Iran has played in supporting Iraqi militants and many accounts of abuse by Iraqi’s army and police, according to The New York Times which was provided early access to the papers.

    The vast majority of slain civilians were killed by other Iraqis, the documents said and also detailed Iran’s role in supplying Iraqi militia fighters with weapons, including the most lethal type of roadside bomb.

    Field reports assert that Iraqi militants travelled to Iran for training as snipers and in using explosives, according to the Times. Iran’s Quds Force urged Iraqi extremists it was working with to kill Iraqi officials, the Times reported.

    The Times said that hundreds of reports of beatings, burnings and lashings suggested that “such treatment was not an exception.”Most abuse cases contained in the new batch of leaks appear to have been ultimately ignored, the paper said.

    WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Julian Assange told CNN Friday that the new round of field reports shows “compelling evidence of war crimes” committed by forces of the US-led coalition and the Iraqi government.

    Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell rebutted the charge. “We vetted every single one of the documents, word by word, page by page,” he told CNN, and added that the vetting began in July. “There is nothing in here which would indicate war crimes. If there were, we would have investigated it a long time ago.”

    Assange said the documents contained more than 1,000 reports on the torture or abuse of detainees by Iraqi government forces and that he expects that 40 wrongful death lawsuits will be filed as a result of the new leaks.

    He dismissed concerns that the publication of the documents could endanger US troops and Iraqi civilians, asserting that the Pentagon “cannot find a single person that has been harmed” due to WikiLeaks’ previous release of 76,000 pages of documents related to the US-led war in Afghanistan.

    The reports make it clear that most civilians, by far, were killed by other Iraqis. It cited two incidents as the worst days of the war — Aug 31, 2005, when a stampede on a bridge in Baghdad killed more than 950 people after several earlier attacks panicked a huge crowd, and Aug 14, 2007, when truck bombs killed more than 500 people in a rural area near the border with Syria.

    But it was systematic sectarian cleansing that drove the killing to its most frenzied point, making December 2006 the worst month of the war, with about 3,800 civilians killed, the reports said. About 1,300 police officers, insurgents and coalition soldiers were also killed in that month.

    The documents also reveal many instances in which US troops killed civilians – at checkpoints, from helicopters, in operations.

    In at least three other instances reported in the archive, Iraqis surrendered to helicopter crews without being shot. Iraq Body Count, which did a preliminary analysis of the archive, estimated that it listed 15,000 deaths that had not been previously disclosed. Compelling evidence of war crimes in Iraq: Wikileaks
    Washington, Oct 23 (IANS) :

    Posted in Current Affairs, US Int Rel., US PoliComments (0)

    CROPPED VERSION FROM File:Zalmay_Khalizad_-_Wo...

    US Cannot go back to failed polices of Zalmay Khalilzad

    CROPPED VERSION FROM File:Zalmay_Khalizad_-_Wo...

    Image via Wikipedia

    The US invasion of Afghanistan tried to change the dynamics inside Afghanistan and create a new reality. Old discarded and failed Ambassadors, policy makers, politicians and their acolytes are now raising their ugly heads with reams of advice for the Obama Administration. Paid authors like Zalmay Khalilzad and Ehsan Azari Stanizai are on a binge regurgitating all sorts of garbage against Islamabad. The Nation seems to have become a blowhorn for Pakistanphobic elements who periodically spew venom against Pakistan. Islamabad is being made an scapegoat for US failed policies developed by Zalmay Kahlilzad and the likes of Mr. Blackwill. Mr. Khalilzad’s current diatribe is a repeat of the his rhetoric a decade ago. Folks like Khalilzad never learn. They have been pushing for perpetual war in Afghanistan. They want more of the same. Their tried the ethnic card in Afghanistan which led to a colossal catastrophe. They brought in Bharat and other players to help them out. Nothing worked.

    The keep doing the same thing over an over again, and obviously they get the same results. If one doesn’t learn from ones mistakes and continues to repeat them on an ongoing basis–it is a sign of insanity. Zalmay Khalilzad writes some sens in his current article in the New York Times, but his analysis and conclusions are as flawed as they were a decade ago:

    “What’s more, Pakistani military leaders believe that our current surge will be the last push before we begin a face-saving troop drawdown next July. They are confident that if they continue to frustrate our military and political strategy — even actively impede reconciliation between Kabul and Taliban groups willing to make peace — pro-Pakistani forces will have the upper hand in Afghanistan after the United States departs.

    When dealing with Pakistan, the Obama administration, like the George W. Bush administration, has pursued two lines of action. First, it has tried building up Afghan security forces, providing military assistance and supporting the Afghan economy and state institutions, all in hopes of hardening the country against Pakistan-backed insurgents.

    Second, the U.S. has tried to soften Pakistan’s support of extremist militants through enhanced engagement as well as humanitarian, economic and military assistance; indeed, Congress last year approved a five-year, $7.5 billion package of nonmilitary aid, and among the options being discussed by American and Pakistani officials this week is a security pact that would mean billions of dollars more. But such efforts have led to only the most incremental shifts in Pakistan’s policy.”

    Ehsan Stanzai has some kernels of truth but his thesis is based on a tragedy of errors. His misguided article published in the Nation says the following:

    Coalition strategy ignores ethnic power balances and so strengthens the Taliban.

    EVERY textbook about war suggests that a road to peace runs through the ravages of conflict. The war in Afghanistan offers the latest testimony, where a US parallel strategy of war and peace has begun to unfold. The key issue – that the escalation of war would bring the Taliban to the negotiating table – remains a dilemma.

    For the moment, military commanders on the ground and political leaders in Washington seem optimistic about the approach. The commander of the Western forces in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, signals some progress. And reports are emerging from Pakistan that in response to mounting US pressure, Pakistan would take on the Taliban in North Waziristan.

    The Afghan experience during the past years shows that an escalation of American and NATO fighting in Afghanistan, and promises from Pakistan to do more, have done little to bring a change on the battleground.

    There are two reasons for this. First, the Taliban are predominantly a Pashtun movement. The Pashtuns, who have traditionally ruled Afghanistan, make up half the population.

    The power balance in the country was destroyed by the US-led invasion in 2001. Since then, there has been a growing sense among the Pashtuns that the foreign military presence is aimed solely at alienating and marginalising them. The Taliban manipulation of the situation, plus Western backing of the Karzai regime, has convinced them that their future is with the Taliban, regardless of whether they agree with the Taliban’s mediaeval ideology.

    It is undeniably true that Western forces continue to back a coalition of warlords that sprang from Afghan ethnic minorities known as the Northern Alliance. The warlords use the Western presence to undermine the Pashtuns’ traditional status, politically and socially. That’s why such tenacious antagonism on the part of tens of millions of Pashtuns towards the West remains an unending source of recruitment for the Taliban.

    In the most recent example, President Hamid Karzai formed a High Council for Peace and made former president Burhanuddin Rabbani its chairman. Rabbani and many members of the council were on one side of the civil war in post-Soviet Afghanistan that left, according to the UN, about 80,000 civilians dead. His Northern Alliance was militarily defeated and ousted from Kabul by the Taliban in 1994. It is most likely that Rabbani would move the Taliban even further away from any negotiating table.

    The Russians never isolated the Pashtuns during their occupation in the 1980s and, despite their tilt towards the Afghan ethnic minorities, they followed a policy of Pashtun fighting Pashtun. Even though most of Karzai’s cabinet members are now Pashtuns, it is largely symbolic for they have no power.

    It should come as no surprise that the West is finding it increasingly difficult to manage the explosive issue of the Afghan internal power balance. We should not consider the Taliban to be merely an extremist religious entity such as Hamas or Hezbollah. Their religious conservatism is deeply interwoven with Pashtun nationalism. The Nation. Ehsan Azari Stanizai

    The inane logic that Pakistan is a safe haven holds no water. The Afghan National Resistance control more than 90% of Afghanistan where  NATO and ISAF have little control. The resistance needs no sanctuary. They have their own sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Millions of Afghans were born in Pakistan. Millions still live in Pakistan as refugees and some even as resident or citizens. Because of their family links in Pakistan and Iran they have support, but that does not mean that Tehran or Islamabad is supporting them. Mr. Stanizai belong to a small non-descript tribe of Afghanistan. He has no clue about the reality there.

    An estimated 50 million Pashtuns straddling both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan border sympathise with the Taliban.

    In the months to come, we may see Western military successes, but we should not forget that the winter is a time of respite for the Taliban, and they bounce back in spring.

    The two narratives at work now in Afghanistan are unlikely to produce a favourable outcome for the Western coalition forces. The military pursuit to bring the Taliban to heel has failed in the past. Clearing Afghanistan of the Taliban, while their regeneration powerhouse is thriving, seems to be a lost cause. The road to peace in Afghanistan is blocked by Western ignorance Ehsan Azari Stanizai, October 21, 2010. Dr Ehsan Azari Stanizai, an adjunct fellow with the University of Western Sydney, is an Afghan of Pashtun descent.

    Zalmay Khalilzad however makes some good point in the article published in the New York Times.

    “the United States should provide long-term assistance to Pakistan focused on developing not only its security apparatus, but also its civil society, economy and democratic institutions.

    Finally, the United States should facilitate a major diplomatic effort focused on stabilizing South Asia. This must involve efforts to improve relations between India and Pakistan. Based on my recent discussions with Pakistani officials, including President Asif Ali Zardari, I believe the civilian leadership would welcome such a move.” Zalmay Khalilzad, a counselor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the president of a consulting firm, was the ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq and the United Nations during the George W. Bush administration.

    It is pedagogical to note that Zalmay Khalilzad was part of the Bush Administration flawed policies in  Iraq and Afghanistan. He was not a solution. He himself was the problem. His advice will surely fall on deaf ears in the Obama Administration.

    The Bush Administration tried to bypass Pakistan and run Afghanistan using brute force. It didn’t work. Any attempt to keep Pakistan out will fail again. Mr. Zalmay Khalilzad didn’t get it then, and he doesn’t get it now. All roads to Kabul run through Islamabad.

    Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CA, Politics, US CAComments (0)

    Bankrupt NYT Facing irrelevancy wants to charge website readers

    The New York Times used to be a world class newspaper–then came the Neocon agenda to wage war on Iraq. The NYT led the charge–even though supporting the Neocons was anathema to the left leaning newspaper and its liberal audience. The NYT apologized, and then continued doing what it was doing before the Iraq war–spread malicious propoganda to continue the wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    The Editors think that by charging their online readers they can generate funds. It will not happen. The NYT tried that with  NYT Select where they wanted to charge for reading their opinion columnists. They abandoned it. Now facing imminent bankruptcy and possibly closure the NYT is going to start charging their online readers.

    The problem is not the traffic, the problem is the abandonment of ideals and ideas.

    The New York Times is nearing a decision to charge its core online readers, a person familiar with the matter said, as the paper wraps up its assessment of the benefits and risks of restricting access to news on the Web.

    Months ago, the publisher largely narrowed its focus to two pay options that involve keeping nytimes.com mostly open to readers who visit its site infrequently and don’t drill down very deep.

    One approach is to use a meter that is triggered after a certain number of visits and prompts the reader to pay for additional access. The Times has said it is also considering an approach, used by The Wall Street Journal, that makes certain articles available only to people who pay for a subscription.

    The decision, expected by the end of the month, will end a year of analysis and internal deliberation that reflect a pair of competing concerns: the need to both tap new revenue streams in a dire print-advertising environment, and to preserve revenue from the ads displayed on nytimes.com.

    A spokeswoman for New York Times Co. (NYT) said, “We’ll announce a decision when we believe that we have crafted the best possible business approach,” and declined to elaborate further.

    It was unclear how such a move would affect current New York Times print subscribers. Some newspapers that charge for online content make that material available free to their print subscribers or charge a cut rate.

    Although Times Co. executives have been weighing the merits of a pay model for years, their latest efforts began in earnest early last year, as the company struggled through a first quarter in which it posted a $75 million loss. Around that time, Times Co. executives analyzed more than 30 businesses that charged for at least some of their Web material, including ESPN, Weight Watchers and Consumer Reports.

    They concluded that the Times made more money on advertising on its mostly free Web site than most of the outlets it studied made from readers and advertisers combined. The company doesn’t break out its online revenue in detail, but people familiar with the matter say nytimes.com brings in more than $100 million annually from Web display ads.

    Because display-ad revenue is fueled by page views, contracting the Web audience could be self-defeating. Over the summer, the Times sought to gauge its readers’ willingness to pay, One survey floated a $5 monthly fee and another involved membership tiers in which the top payers would have opportunities to meet with Times staff.

    “If we don’t get it right, a lot of money drops out of the system,” Martin Nisenholtz, Times Co.’s senior vice president of digital operations, said at an investor conference last month.WSJ. JANUARY 18, 2010, 6:49 P.M. ET.WSJ: New York Times May Charge Core Readers Of Its Website. By Russell Adams Of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

    Posted in Current Affairs, Politics, US CA, US Int Rel.Comments Off

    Fouad Ajami

    Ajami's Conscienceless, Crooked & insidious, review About Islam

    Fouad Ajami

    Fouad Ajami

    Fouad Ajami is one of those individuals who has made a huge profit off the backs of the most vulnerable part of American and European society–the post 911 American and European Muslims. Ajami’s Dishonest Review About Islam should not surprise anyone, we have all lived through Mr. Ajami’s rhetoric and his Islamphobic diatribes. Mr. Patel has done a wonderful job in pointing out the errors and the biases in his writings. It would take more than a thousand words to refute Mr. Ajami. Mr. Ajmai has made a profession out of the hatred for Muslims and Islam.

    The Barbary pirates were the remnants of the Muslims who had been tortured, killed, and deported during the Spanish Inquisition. They were looting ships while Britain, Sweden, Denkark, Netherland, France, and Portugal were stealing the wealth of entire continents. The contemporaries of the Barbary pirates were exterminating the populations of America, Australia and Africa

    Whoever selects and assigns the books on Islam for the Sunday New York Times Book Review needs to widen his reading and add some new names to his rolodex.

    Last week there was a rave review of Bruce Bawer’s alarmist book Surrender (the subtitle says it all: Appeasing Islam, Sacrificing Freedom).

    This week, the cover of the Book Review has a picture of a group of fully covered Muslim women set against a crowd of ‘normal-looking’ mostly-white Europeans with the headline “Strangers in the Land”.

    The review betrays more about the opinions of the reviewer – the noted and controversial academic Fouad Ajami – than the book under consideration, Christopher Caldwell’s Reflections on the Revolution in Europe.

    Ajami opens his piece by juxtaposing two disparate pieces of history: the departure of Spain’s last Muslim ruler in 1492, and the terrorist attacks on Madrid in 2004. “A circle was closed,” Ajami writes, “and Islam was, once again, a matter of Western Europe.”

    Martin Alonso Pinzon--A Syrian was the captian of one of the ships of Christopher Columbus. His brother was the captain of the other

    Martin Alonso Pinzon--A Syrian was the captian of one of the ships of Christopher Columbus. His brother was the captain of the other

    The Muslim presence in medieval Spain is widely regarded as a time of tolerance, good government and support for the arts and education. In fact, Ajami himself wrote a positive review of one of the many books on that era, Maria Rosa Menocal’s The Ornament of the World. Placing Al-Andalus, as it was known, in the same breath as a ghastly terrorist attack – as if to say ‘Here’s what happens when Muslims are around’ – is beyond questionable. A dead fish wouldn’t want to be wrapped in a newspaper article with that level of intellectual dishonesty.

     

    I am with Ajami when he goes after the “militants, freeloaders and opportunists” discussed in Caldwell’s book – the imams who criticize Western culture while living off the European welfare state, the Muslim men who refuse to educate their daughters and practically lock their wives in the kitchen, the Muslim youth who threaten the societies they should be seeking to contribute to. But, having lived there for three years, I know this is far from a full description of Muslims in Europe. In fact, Ajami’s obsession with such characters (undoubtedly real, but how representative?) again reveals something about himself.

    He refers to Europe’s Muslims as “guests” (quotation marks his), and says that they have overstayed their welcome. And then, in a peculiar turn, he tells the story of his own immigration to America. Why is he not a guest who has overstayed his welcome? Ahhh, because as he says, “I, and others like me, accepted the rupture in our lives … I accepted the ‘differentness’ of the new country … I needed no tales of the old country.”

    Muslims in America

    Muslims in America

    Is this America he is talking about? This country that was build on immigrants coming and bringing the best of their heritage – arts, cuisine, work ethic, commitment to education, and yes, religious tradition. I mean, where would we be without Catholic universities or Jewish philanthropy? Does Ajami really think nations are build by immigrants leaving their heritage at home?

     

    Ajami, of all people, should know better. It’s not like he became an engineer or a doctor. He is an immigrant from an Arab country who has made his career as an expert on the Middle East. Of course he brought parts of it with him.

    As I came to the end of the review, I found myself wondering whether Ajami was simply in a foul mood when he wrote this. An academic of his stature certainly understands that the 21st Century is going to be in large part about how relatively homogenous ‘host societies’ integrate immigrant communities. As Michael Walzer once wrote: the challenge of the diverse society is to embrace its differences and maintain a common life.

    That suggests responsibilities on the part of the indigenous population (who, after all, needs the labor of the newcomers) and the immigrant community. Both need to embrace and maintain. Both the common life and the differences are important. The hope is that the differences contribute to the common life – strengthening and expanding it.

    Islam has much to contribute to the West. Some loud and boorish Muslims in Europe claim Islam can only dominate. And, yes, a few of them are dangerous to Europe . Some Westerners are responding by viewing Muslims as perpetual guests – migrant, temporary, throwaway labor – not neighbors and citizens. It’s a framing that helps neither the old Europeans nor the new ones.

    Fouad Ajami should know better. And so should the editors of the New York Times Book Review. (Barring major news events I feel compelled to comment on, this is my last blog until Labor Day. Enjoy the last month of summer, and for my Muslim readers, may God give you strength during the blessed and challenging first days of Ramadan.) By Eboo Patel | August 3, 2009; 9:05 AM ET

    Posted in Current Affairs, US CA, US Int Rel.Comments (0)

    NYTs changing definition of "torture" destroying its credability

    When the CIA does it, its enhanced terrogation techniques, when the Chinese do it, its torture, when the Israelis do it, its persuation, when the Iranains do it, its torture. The New York Times has no credability. No wonder it is bankrupt. The Washington Post is no better. It has lost so much money that is now pimping its connections to the highest bidder–something a bit out of the ordinary for journalists to do–selling contact names.

    The NYT Calls Iranian Interrogation Tactics “Torture”

    by Glenn Greenwald

    Today is the ideal day to celebrate America’s specialness, and America’s paper of record inspirationally leads the ritual:

    Clark Hoyt, New York Times Public Editor, April 26, 2009:

    A LINGUISTIC shift took place in this newspaper as it reported the details of how the Central Intelligence Agency was allowed to strip Al Qaeda prisoners naked, bash them against walls, keep them awake for up to 11 straight days, sometimes with their arms chained to the ceiling, confine them in dark boxes and make them feel as if they were drowning.

    Until this month, what the Bush administration called “enhanced” interrogation techniques were “harsh” techniques in the news pages of The Times. Increasingly, they are “brutal”. . . . .

    The word had appeared a few times before in this context, most recently on April 10, when the Central Intelligence Agency said it was closing the network of secret overseas prisons where interrogations took place. Scott Shane, who covers national security, said he and his editor in the Washington bureau, Douglas Jehl, negotiated over the wording of the first paragraph. Shane wrote that methods used in the prisons were “widely denounced as illegal torture.” Jehl changed that to the “harshest interrogation methods” since the Sept. 11 attacks. Shane said he felt that with more information coming to light, including a leaked report by the International Committee of the Red Cross, the words harsh and even harshest no longer sufficed. He proposed brutal, and Jehl agreed. . . .

    And why not, then, go all the way to torture?  Jehl said that when the paper is discussing what is generally regarded as the most extreme interrogation method the C.I.A. used, waterboarding, “we’ve become more explicit in saying in a first reference that it’s a near-drowning technique” that Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder and many other experts “have called torture.” But he said: “I have resisted using torture without qualification or to describe all the techniques. Exactly what constitutes torture continues to be a matter of debate and hasn’t been resolved by a court. This president and this attorney general say waterboarding is torture, but the previous president and attorney general said it is not. On what basis should a newspaper render its own verdict, short of charges being filed or a legal judgment rendered?” Jehl argued for precision and caution. I agree.

    The New York Times today:

    Top Reformers Admitted Plot, Iran Declares

    CAIRO — Iranian leaders say they have obtained confessions from top reformist officials that they plotted to bring down the government with a “velvet” revolution. Such confessions, almost always extracted under duress, are part of an effort to recast the civil unrest set off by Iran’s disputed presidential election as a conspiracy orchestrated by foreign nations, human rights groups say. . . .

    The government has made it a practice to publicize confessions from political prisoners held without charge or legal representation, often subjected to pressure tactics like sleep deprivation, solitary confinement and torture, according to human rights groups and former political prisoners. . . .

    In 2001, Ali Afshari was arrested for his work as a student leader. He said he was held in solitary confinement for 335 days and resisted confessing for the first two months. But after two mock executions and a five-day stretch where his interrogators would not let him sleep, he said he eventually caved in.

    “They tortured me, some beatings, sleep deprivation, insults, psychological torture, standing me for several hours in front of a wall, keeping me in solitary confinement for one year,” Mr. Afshari said in an interview from his home in Washington. “They eventually broke my resistance.”

    Virtually every tactic which the article describes the Iranians as using has been used by the U.S. during the War on Terror, while several tactics authorized by Bush officials (waterboarding, placing detainees in coffin-like boxes, hypothermia) aren’t among those the article claims are used by the Iranians.  Nonetheless, “torture” appears to be a perfectly fine term for The New York Times to use to describe what the Iranians do, but one that is explicitly banned to describe what the U.S. did.  Despite its claimed policy, the NYT has also recently demonstrated its eagerness to use the word “torture” to describe these same tactics . . . when used by the Chinese against an American detainee.

    Notably, the NYT article today seems to take particular offense that the Iranian Government is putting people on trial using confessions they obtained via torture (“the government planned to put on trial several Iranian employees of the British Embassy — after confessions were extracted”).  Just two days ago, The Washington Post reported:

    The American Civil Liberties Union yesterday accused the Obama administration of using statements elicited through torture to justify the confinement of a detainee it represents at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    The ACLU is asking a federal judge to throw out those statements and others made by Mohammed Jawad, an Afghan who may have been as young as 12 when he was captured. His attorney argued that Jawad was abused in U.S. custody, threatened and subjected to intense sleep deprivation.

    “The government’s continued reliance on evidence gained by torture and other abuse violates centuries of U.S. law and suggests the current administration is not really serious about breaking with the past,” said ACLU lawyer Jonathan Hafetz, who is representing Jawad in a lawsuit challenging his detention.”The government’s continued reliance on evidence gained by torture and other abuse violates centuries of U.S. law and suggests the current administration is not really serious about breaking with the past,” said ACLU lawyer Jonathan Hafetz, who is representing Jawad in a lawsuit challenging his detention.

    Just read the details of what we did to this adolescent to marvel at what the NYT (and, of course, NPR) refuse to call ”torture” when done by us.  Though the human rights abuses of the Iranian Government are well-documented and severe, there’s also no mention in the NYT article of these interrogation tactics being applied by Iran to teenagers (such as Jawad) or resulting in numerous detainee deaths (as happened during the Bush era).

    During the presidential campaign, Rudy Giuliani was widely ridiculed for arguing that whether these tactics are ”torture” depends, at least in part, on who uses them (it’s torture if They do it, but not when We do it).  But he could take that definitive moral relativism to any leading American newspaper, become an Editor, and fit right in, since that’s exactly the editorial policy of our leading media outlets.  What’s most striking about all this media behavior is that people around the world — outside of the U.S.  — aren’t fooled by these sorts of blatant double standards, whereby the U.S. even claims the power to change the meaning of words based on whether it or another country is doing something.   The target of this government and media behavior is purely domestic.

    It’s not particularly unusual for a government to permit itself to do something that it prohibits others from doing.  The U.S. is hardly the only country that does that.  But when that country’s media collectively abets that government effort by molding its language to reflect that exceptionalism, it elevates the propaganda to a much different level.  When I documented the American media’s obsession with journalists detained by other countries and its virtually complete blackout of much, much longer (and often more oppressive) detentions of foreign journalists by the U.S., that was the central point I tried to emphasize:

    Pointing to other governments and highlighting their oppressive behavior can be cathartic, fun and gratifying in a self-justifying sort of way. Ask Fred Hiatt; it’s virtually all he ever does.  But the first duty of the American media — like the first duty of American citizens — is to oppose oppressive behavior by our own government.  That’s not as fun or as easy, but it is far more important.  Moreover, obsessively complaining about the rights-abridging behavior of other countries while ignoring the same behavior from our own government is worse than a mere failure of duty.  It is propagandistic and deceitful, as it paints a misleading picture that it is other governments — but not our own — which engage in such conduct.

    Since the American Government has acted — and continues to act — overtly to protect and shield those who engaged in this conduct, will it condemn Iran for torturing detainees? As for The New York Times, at this point, they don’t even seem interested in pretending that they make these editorial judgments independently or with a pretense of objectivity.  They’re perfectly happy to have you know that when the U.S. Government does X, it is called one thing, but when foreign governments do X, it is called something else entirely.

    © 2009 Salon.com

    Glenn Greenwald was previously a constitutional law and civil rights litigator in New York. He is the author of the New York Times Bestselling book “How Would a Patriot Act?,” a critique of the Bush administration’s use of executive power, released in May 2006. His second book, “A Tragic Legacy“, examines the Bush legacy.

    Posted in Current Affairs, US CA, US Int Rel., US PoliComments (0)

    Instabilty at NY Times grows. Another Leader forcibly removed. Barbarians at the gates.Survival issues: Will the NYT become irrelevent?

    This story has been brought to you by Pakistan Punch
    Pakistan wants free American primaries and fair US elections

    Another coup at the New York Times? High handed techniques criticized. The New York Times is like a dactatorship. It does not publish all points of views!

    The New York Times is surrounded by enemies. The American Right hates the newspaper. Left leaning New Yorkers used to love the paper, but it has sandbagged them and lost their trust. The New York Times has some blind spots. It was one of the papers that led the battle-cry for the “Charge of the Light Brigade” into Iraq. It would not be an exaggeration, if it is said, that of all the voices propagating war, the NYT was in the front row.

    It has apologized three times in as many years for incorrect and wrong reporting.

    One of its Pulitzer Prize stories turned out to be fake.

    The New York Times plays a double game. It is Liberal yet Islamphobic. It is supposedly a Liberal newspapers, and its stance on Muslim issues is anomalous. On Muslim issues it espouses a very strident and conservative point of view. We at Rupee News have been unable to get to the bottom of this enigma. 

    In recent editorials it has propounded the Neocon theory of attacking Pakistan. It has also espoused attacking Iran.

    The New York Times employs some prolific yet vitriolic Islamphobes. The stance of the newspaper on Pakistan is always been on the hard right and very anti-Pakistan. Thomas Friedman leads the charge on Islam, Muslims and Pakistan.

    It has now recently fired another editor, this one for resisting employee reduction measures. The series of staff cuts tell us that the downward spiral of the newspaper continues. Hard hit by bloggers, most Americans now get their news from a plethora of internet sources.

    Pakistanis should purchase New York Times stocks and then show up at the boardroom to demand changes. The newspaper should be broken up into pieces and then sold to the highest bidder!

    By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
    The Los Angeles Times named a new top editor on Thursday, Russ Stanton, three weeks after the previous editor, James E. O’Shea, was forced out for resisting another in a series of staff cuts.

    Mr. Stanton, who has been running the paper’s Web site, will take charge of an deeply unsettled newsroom that in less than three years has lost three chief editors, all of whom publicly protested the shrinking of the news staff. Many editors and reporters resented the treatment of Mr. O’Shea – not to mention his predecessors – and for years the newsroom has been at odds with the paper’s publisher, David Hiller, and its corporate owner, The Tribune Company.

    Mr. Hiller also named Jack Klunder, who has been in charge of the newspaper’s circulation department, to the newly named post of president of the newspaper, overseeing all the business operations. And he announced that David Murphy, who has headed the newspaper’s lagging advertising sales department, will be leaving.

    Both moves were welcomed by people throughout the paper, who see Mr. Klunder as the most capable of its business executives, and Mr. Murphy as a divisive figure.

    Even before Mr. O’Shea’s departure became public, Mr. Hiller had made it clear that Mr. Stanton, who has been in charge of The Times’ Web site, was the leading candidate for the job, according to executives and journalists at the paper, who were granted anonymity because they feared retaliation for discussing its inner workings.

    But in the last few weeks, Mr. Hiller has talked to other possible editors, and some of Mr. Stanton’s colleagues have taken the extraordinary step going to Mr. Hiller to ask him not to choose Mr. Stanton, these people said. They said the concerns raised about Mr. Stanton were not about his ability, but about whether he had the stature and breadth of experience to run one of the nation’s most important newspapers.

    Much of Mr. Stanton’s experience as a reporter and editor has been in business news, and he has not worked overseas or in Washington, for example. But he is well-liked, and as the innovations editor of The Times for the last year, he has been credited with significantly improving its Web site.

    Colleagues describe Mr. Stanton, 49, as smart, low-key and little quirky; he keeps an extensive collection of Los Angeles Dodgers bobble-head dolls in his office. He has been at The Times since 1997.

    But like Mr. O’Shea before him, he faces an uphill fight to persuade the newsroom that he is not a puppet of Mr. Hiller.

    The other in-house candidates for the job were John Arthur, the managing editor for news, and Jim Newton, the editor of the editorial pages. Mr. Hiller is also said to have talked with outsiders, including N. Christian Anderson, a former editor and publisher of The Orange County Register.

    A new regime, led by the real estate developer Sam Zell, took control of The Tribune Company in December, and gave more autonomy to each newspaper publisher and television station general manager in a company that had been very top-down. But the new leadership has also made it clear to each property that it must improve its bottom line if Tribune is to meet the heavy debt obligations from the takeover.

    Tribune Company bought The Times’ parent company, Times Mirror, in 2000 and installed a widely respected editor, John S. Carroll. At about that time, the paper had a news staff of about 1,200 people.

    But after being forced to shrink the newsroom, Mr. Carroll quit rather than carry out another round of reductions. A new publisher, Jeff Johnson, was sent out from the company headquarters in Chicago, and a new editor, Dean P. Baquet, took Mr. Carroll’s place. They made deep cuts in the newsroom but were fired in 2006 for refusing to cut still more.

    Once again, the company sent Tribune veterans from Chicago to ride herd on The Times: Mr. Hiller and Mr. O’Shea.

    Posted in Current Affairs, NYT rebut, US CAComments (0)

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