2010
News Round-up, Profiles, Quotes: Troubled Times- - Reviews
Of The World
03 January 2011
By Eric Walberg
2010 was a tough one overall. Public discontent with
governments and economic policy brought people out on
the streets to protest. US wars, occupation and threat
of war in the Middle East and Asia were never far from
the headlines. Elections around the world led in most
cases to further tensions. There were few outright
winners and many more losers, with most developments a
mixed bag.
Europe
An unlikely coalition of Britain's Conservatives and
Social Democrats ended 13 years of Labour rule
Britain's first coalition government since WWII, when
the wartime unity government was led by Winston
Churchill with Labour in tow. The Liberal Democrat
leader Nick Clegg is now Conservative Prime Minister
David Cameron's deputy, replacing Gordon Brown and his
New Labour, which would have been a better ideological
fit for the Lib Dems. The 43-year-old Cameron calls
for a "compassionate Conservatism" but his drastic
reductions in social spending have caused students to
riot. The Lib Dems are hoping to survive this deadly
embrace to achieve their Holy Grail, a referendum on
proportional representation after five long years. A
new Labour leader David Miliband hinted that Labour
will move away from Blair's neoliberalism.
The Greeks, Irish and Europe's Muslims suffered
setbacks. The aftershocks of the US financial meltdown
of 2008-09 gave a battering to Euro "pompous pride as
the centre of human rights, giver of moral lessons to
the world" as the northern Europeans turned against
their southern PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece and
Spain), with Ireland the latest casualty (making it
the PIIGS), a chilling throwback to Orwell's Animal
Farm. Greece was portrayed as the Aesopian carefree
life of the cricket to the Germans' ant, who
grudgingly coughed up billions of euros to satisfy the
bankers threatening to bankrupt the Euro-farm and set
off a euro-domino.
But bankers' ledgers show the entire Western world
is in hock to them (what exactly does that mean?), and
each country will soon face its own day of reckoning.
The only European country that survived the bankers'
attack was Iceland, not a member of the EU, and hence
able to devalue its krona and tell the bankers to go
to hell.
A joint IMF-ILO report warns, "The Great Recession
has left gaping wounds. High and long-lasting
unemployment represents a risk to the stability of
existing democracies." The Independent's Sean O'Grady
predicts such actions "promise to be just the start of
the greatest demonstration of public unrest seen on
the continent since the revolutionary fervour of
1968."
Political shifts are happening the German
socialists, Die Linke, vie with the Social Democrats
for second place, as Germans rediscover the truths of
their 19th century oracle Karl Marx. Even in Latvia,
the coalition of socialists (the party of the Russian
Latvians) and social democrats became the second
largest political force in October elections.
Euro-Muslims were humiliated when France and
Belgium outlawed the niqab, and Switzerland passed
laws forbidding the building of minarets and requiring
deportation of any immigrants caught without the
proper documents or otherwise incarcerated.
Eurasia
Presidential elections in January-February in Ukraine
brought an end to the Orange Revolution. Relations
with Russia are on the mend. The two countries are
much closer than, say, the US and Canada a playful
opinion poll showed that a clear majority of
Ukrainians would have elected Russian tossing an
orange revolutionary Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as
president if he had run. Russia was assured use of the
Black Sea naval base at Sevastopol till 2042, in
exchange for a reduction in gas fees.
Russian President Dmitri Medvedev signed economic
deals with Syria and Turkey. Russia will upgrade the
former Soviet naval base in Tartus, which along with
the Ukrainian naval bases will give Russia a much
higher profile in the region. Turkey will get gas and
oil pipelines and a nuclear power station. Ukraine,
Syria, Turkey these rapid developments are a renewal
of Soviet foreign policy, albeit in a very different
form. But there is much discontent simmering below the
surface of United Russian rule, with "A Just Russia"
showing new pluck, and racist demonstrations and
hooliganism making the headlines.
While pundits talk about Taliban successes (less about
US successes), these words ring hollow, as the daily
death count continues to surge in AfPak. No one talks
about Pakistani successes, though the Pakistan
military is raking in billions of dollars worth of
deadly arms and has the benefit of hundreds of US
advisers on how to kill more rebels more efficiently.
2010 heard lots of words about negotiations with the
resurgent Taliban, but the most hoped for breakthrough
with a Taliban negotiator turned into a farce when the
individual identified as Taliban No 2 Mullah Akhtar
Mohamed Mansour was exposed as a simple shopkeeper
from Quetta, Pakistan.
Warlord Matiullah
The NATO forces numbering 150,000 proceeded with
their offensives in Marja and Kandahar. NATO deaths
topped 700 and Afghan army deaths 800. The latest
innovation is the hiring of local private armies run
by warlords such as Matiullah Khan, an illiterate
former highway patrol commander, now the head of a
private army that guards NATO supply convoys.
Matiullahs are sprouting up "like grass", fertilised
by huge cash payments from the Americans, loose
cannons undermining the local governments which NATO
is supposedly trying to strengthen, spreading violence
and chaos when thwarted. These mercenaries kill people
who refuse to use their "security services", bribe the
Taliban to allow safe passage, enlist them to do their
dirty work, and, like the president's brother Ahmed
Karzai, are involved in the opium trade. "We're
funding both sides of the war," a NATO official said
glumly.
China also had a checkered year, with its economy
continuing to outperform the rest of the world, but
now held hostage to the US financially, with the US
demanding that China revalue its yuan to cut off, say
$0.5 trillion from its $2 trillion IOU. To press the
point, the US held multiple military exercises with
China's neighbours in the Yellow and South China seas,
insisting that no place in off-bounds for the US
military, ratcheting up the level of tensions as it
surrounds China geopolitically and financially. A
newly belligerent South Korea came close to war with
its northern cousins with its provocative military
"exercises" in disputed waters off the northern coast.
The US responded with more military exercises.
Obama claims he is the first US president with an
"Asia-Pacific orientation". Watch out when Washington
"orients" itself towards you. US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton said in Hawaii early this year that
the future of America is closely linked to the Asian
Pacific. Watch out when you are "linked" to America.
South America
Brazil's new President-elect Dilma Rousseff and US
bete noire Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
Raphael Correa
confirmed their path of some kind of socialism in
elections, and Ecuador's socialist President Rafael
Correa survived a coup attempt which had all the old
marks of US-backed security forces discontent (this
time by the police, with loyal army troops coming to
Correa's rescue). Ecuador, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay
and Bolivia recognised Palestine as a sovereign state
with the pre-1967 borders, with Paraguay soon to
follow suit.
United States
In the US mid-term elections, Republicans gained a
237-198 majority in the House, and six seats in the
Senate, giving them 47 to the Democrats' 53 in the
Senate. This was a clear repudiation of Obama's Bush-lite
presidency. By failing to find a way to undo Bush's
policies, and introducing a healthcare policy that
mostly benefits corporate insurance providers, the
enthusiasm Obama gave rise to, gave way to an extreme
rightwing Tea Party movement reaction which has
elected more Bush-like politicians than ever. Two Tea
Partiers that stand out from their nutty colleagues
are the new Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky and his
father long-time Congressman Ron Paul of Texas,
Libertarians who want a quick exit of US troops from
their various occupations. Paul senior is chair of the
Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary
Policy and Technology and will keep up his campaign to
"End the Fed!"
But the real problem is more Congress 73 per cent
disapproved of Congress and only 49 per cent of the
job Obama is doing as president. Obama has nothing to
lose now by sticking to his principles. He can still
rally Americans by pushing ahead with arms control
(which he did as the year came to a close, nursing
START through a reluctant Senate) and climate change
measures, carrying through on his vow to end the war
in Afghanistan next year, pressuring Israel to abide
by international norms, thereby showing the Washington
beltway cabal for what it is.
World
The big story downplayed in mainstream media is
the new journalism. WikiLeaks captivated the world of
journalism by exposing 3/4 of a million government
secrets during the year, starting with Iraq and
Afghanistan in the summer and ending with 250,000 US
diplomatic notes (1966-2009) in November, revealing a
US diplomatic world increasingly acting as a branch of
the CIA, and the cynicism of both Western and Arab
regimes anxious to destroy Iran.
The leaks have been hailed as a blow to US criminal
activity by people around the world, including
Congressman Ron Paul and Russian Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin, who called for Assange to be awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize. Hillary Clinton called them "an
attack on America's foreign-policy interests" and "the
international community". Cyber guerrillas
hacktivists launched Operation Avenge Assange
targeting credit card firms and servers companies
which joined the US campaign against Assange, jamming
sites by bombarding them with data requests.
'Beyond Petroleum' poisons Gulf of
Mexico
The world environment continues to be besieged by
human activity. The tragic earthquake and floods of
Haiti were compounded by deforestation and
overpopulation, making both the poor and mother nature
the biggest losers of 2010. The much-heralded UN
Climate Change Conference in Cancun was a slight
improvement on the disaster at Copenhagen last year.
All countries, including the US and China, agreed to
voluntary emission limits for the first time, and to
abide by international standards to measure their
carbon footprint. $100 billion per year will go into a
Green Climate Fund starting in 2020 to help poor
countries adapt to climate change
Profiles
Julian Assange is nothing short of a legend after a
year of leaks. The 39-year-old Assange is an
Australian citizen, described by colleagues as
charismatic, driven and highly intelligent, with an
exceptional ability to crack computer codes. He gave
himself up on 7 December to Scotland Yard and will
face trial and extradition to Sweden, accused of rape
in trumped-up cases involving consensual relations,
one an obvious "honey trap" by a CIA plant and the
other a spurned Lewinsky-like groupie. He began
WikiLeaks in 2006 as a "dead-letterbox" for would-be
leakers. His collective developed a Robin Hood
guerrilla lifestyle, moving communications and people
from country to country to make use of laws protecting
freedom of speech. Co-founder Daniel Schmitt describes
Assange as "one of the few people who really care
about positive reform in this world to a level where
you're willing to do something radical".
US prosecutors are building a case of espionage
against Assange, putting him in league with another
exposer of US military secrets, Jonathan Pollard, who
unlike Assange did not black out sensitive names and
expose the secrets to broad daylight. Instead, he sold
the secrets to Israel, a dozen CIA agents lost their
lives in the Soviet Union. In contrast, the legendary
Daniel Ellsberg, leaker of the Pentagon Papers in
1971, like Assange, gave himself up and faced the
music. A sympathetic judge dismissed all charges
against him in 1973. Sadly, opinion polls today show a
majority of Americans captive to the current culture
of official secrecy, disapproving of WikiLeaks. Will
Assange suffer a fate like Pollard or Ellsberg?
Humam Khalil Al-Balawi, a 32-year-old Jordanian
doctor, killed himself, seven CIA agents and a
Jordanian intelligence officer in Khost, Afghanistan
in what has been described as the biggest operation
against the CIA since the 1983 attack on the US
Marines base in Beirut. The attack blew the cover of
Jordan's clandestine cooperation with the CIA in
Afghanistan. Sharif Ali Bin Zaid, a member of the
royal Hashemite's extended family, was the Jordanian
among the dead, and was given a royal funeral by King
Abdullah II as a martyr killed in the line of duty
during his "humanitarian service" in Afghanistan.
George W Bush The ex-US president unveiled his
memoirs Decision Points, a pastiche of Internet quotes
and bits and pieces of others' thoughts, an
embarrassing cut-and-paste job by a ghost writer, with
nothing new, except for a tiny bombshell, when he
insisted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak gave him the
green light to invade Iraq. The real story is the
Egyptians warned him against invading, that if indeed
Saddam Hussein had WMDs, he wouldn't hesitate to use
them on US invaders. One shudders to realise the world
actually survived eight years of the hard-of-hearing,
scatter-brain Bush at the world's helm.
Richard Holbrooke (24 April 1941-13 December 2010),
the empire's fixer in tough spots, surely holds the
Guinness Book of Records for the number of hats he
wore: diplomat (to Germany and the UN), Peace Corps
director (in Morocco), managing director of Lehman
Brothers, assistant secretary of state (twice). He led
the effort to enlarge NATO and "resolved" the Balkans
crisis with the Dayton Peace Accords in 1995 (by lying
to both Slobodan Milosevic and Radovan Karadzic about
their fates and the fate of Serbia). Another
achievement was to get the UN to slash US membership
dues in 2000 despite a booming American economy.
He may actually have done some good at least once in
his long, shadowy career, by using his extensive
contacts to collect corporate donations for the Global
Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, expanding it to
include malaria and tuberculosis in 2006. However, he
will always be linked with Indonesia and the last of
Suharto's many brutal counterinsurgency campaigns in
1977 in which tens of thousands of East Timorese were
killed, even as he was visiting Suharto, praising him
for his human rights record and facilitating the flow
of weapons to Indonesia.
His final months were spent as Obama's special envoy
to AfPak, where his diplomatic and business skills
failed him, ignored and dismissed as an
out-of-the-loop has-been.
David Petraeus was 2010's wunderkind, parachuting in
to command US troops in Afghanistan after the summary
firing of Stanley McChrystal (see "2010 Famous Last
Words"). The myth is that he transformed a chaotic
Iraq into a stable US ally by quelling the Sunni
insurgency against the US-led occupation and ending
civil war in Baghdad and central Iraq between Sunni
and Shia Arabs. But the reality was to buy off Sunnis
for a while and to preside over the ethnic cleansing
of the areas of conflict. Afghans now fear he is going
to reproduce this recipe for civil war in their
country at the head of Obama's surges in Marja,
Kandahar and the north. GOPers see him as the
Republican's rising star as presidential contender in
2012, though it's hard to imagine that he will have
much to his credit by then for all his efforts to win
hearts and minds in Afghanistan.
Russian President Dmitri Medvedev and his US
counterpart Barack Obama made headlines in 2010 as the
bright young things respectively 45 and 49 years old
changing the deteriorating face of Russian-US
relations. Barack's reset button was pressed, Dmitri
opened the door, gave his new friend START, missile
defence, sanctions on Iran and cancellation of its
promised (truly) defensive missiles.
But Obama is being forced by events in Afghanistan,
Iraq, Iran and Israel to come to terms with reality,
returning to what was traditionally known as
realpolitik, in Russian, so to speak, dtente. His new
friend Dmitri is making other realpolitik friends in
Europe, courting Sarkozy and Merkel with plans for
closer integration, a visa-free regime and a new
Euro-Russian security agreement minus the US and
NATO.
Meanwhile, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and
his better half, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, met for
the umpteenth time in November to announce ambitious
trade and development plans linking China's economic
dynamo with Russia's vast spaces and abundant
resources in Siberia, all to be conducted without US
dollars. Eurasianist Putin and Atlantist Medvedev are
putting on their Euro-Sino life jackets as the USS
Titanic sinks in Afghanistan. Just as Napoleon and
Hitler were destroyed by overstretch, so NATO and the
US itself are living on borrowed time (and
increasingly meaningless US dollars). Despite the
inertia of the Bush legacy, the world is rediscovering
traditional balance-of-power international relations.
The Putin/Medvedev policy is to patiently push ahead
with a European project, restructuring the economy
along European lines, all the while maintaining an
independent military force, using groupings like BRIC,
the SCO and CSTO.
Famous Last Words
*If you want to kill the president, here he is.
Kill him, if you want to. Kill him if you are brave
enough. Ecuador President Raphael Correa
*From a historical perspective, the US has
continuously found enemies and waged wars. Without
enemies the US cannot hold the will of the whole
nation. Chinese Air Force Colonel Dai Xu
*US gunboat diplomacy: If you do not obey me, I will
flex my muscles first. Then, if you do not behave
better, I will teach you a lesson with my fists. Luo
Yuan
*This is a message to the enemies of the umma
(nation), to the Jordanian intelligence and the CIA.
Humam Khalil Al-Balawi on video
*This is not Falluja. US commander in Afghanistan
Stanley McChrystal about the campaign in Marja,
shortly before he was fired in disgrace for other such
cracks, such as ...
*Are you asking about Vice President Biden? Who's
that? Did you say: Bite me? quoted in Rolling Stone
magazine
*Afghanistan is the heart of darkness, one British
commander quipped to his troops as they went into
battle in Marja. US Marines clear all regions of
Taliban in their campaigns in Marja and Kandahar,
calling it mowing the grass.
*Cut the head off the snake. Saudi King Abdullah
WikiLeaked a US official, urging the US to attack
Iran.
*We have changed governance, we have certainly changed
many political figures within governments, we have
caused new law reform efforts, we have caused police
investigations into the abuses we expose, UN
investigations, investigations here in the UK,
especially in relation to our revelation of the
circumstances of the deaths of 109,000 people in Iraq.
We are also changing the perception of the West.
Julian Assange
*Websites that are bowing down to government pressure
have become targets. We feel that WikiLeaks has become
more than just about leaking of documents, it has
become a war ground, the people vs the government.
hacktivist Anonymous.