Friday, September 26, 2008

War Economy - Owned By China

It makes me sad (and angry) that despite the amazing job the US military is doing in Iraq and Afghanistan, the greedy bunglers in the White House make one disastrous decision after another.



A significant reason for the current $9.6 trillion federal debt has been the Iraq war, which the U.S. largely financed through borrowing. The main problem is that "the U.S. had to borrow money from foreign nations at an alarming rate, after it dug itself into debt paying for the Iraq War while cutting taxes."

Thus, the United States had to turn to investment from abroad for financing. This, as well as lax regulation and oversight of Wall Street contributed to the credit troubles. Currently, 45 percent of Treasury securities are owned by foreign nations, with the most owned by China and Japan. Other nations owned less than 20 percent of these securities as recently as 1994.

Bush left out of his assessment the fact that much of the foreign investment went to finance a war and his tax cuts.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Princess of Wales Regiment show their mettle ...

The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (PWRR) just emerged from a conflict where they were attacked day and night for nine days with everything the Taliban had in their arsenal.



Around 400 insurgents battered the compound at Roshan Tower with rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and kalashnikovs yet the troops, nicknamed The Tigers, still managed to kill a quarter of the enemy and suffered only one casualty.

In scenes likened to the famous Rorke’s Drift attack in 1879 when 139 British soldiers defeated over 4,000 Zulu warriors, a platoon of 30 soldiers from 2 PWRR serving with its A Company made a heroic stand against some the 400 Taliban insurgents last week.

Former SAS trooper, Andy McNab, famous for his harrowing ordeal in the first Iraq war said: “The bravery of these few men knows no bounds. The siege of Roshan Tower should go down in history as perhaps the most savage of the Afghan conflict.” Commenting on the heroic soldiers. Major General Paul Newton CBE, Colonel of the Regiment said: “Naturally, I was pleased but not surprised to read about the courage, determination and professionalism of our PWRR soldiers in combat in Afghanistan."

Say what you like about the Brits - they are showing themselves staunch allies.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Lessons From 9/11

The attacks of September 11, 2001, forever changed the way that Americans think about their national security. It made clear that the need to confront transnational terrorism is a reality of the new age of globalization that is drawing the world closer together. In the wake of those attacks, there was an international outpouring of sympathy for the United States, symbolized by the French newspaper Le Monde's headline, "We Are All Americans." Even in Iran, "vast crowds turned out on the streets and held candlelit vigils, [and] sixty-thousand spectators respected a minute's silence at Tehran's football stadium." But rather than take advantage of the unprecedented international solidarity to bring about better international cooperation against terrorism, President Bush retreated into the familiar "us vs. them" dichotomy that has characterized conservative foreign policy since the mid-20th century. Making his cause clear in a speech to Congress on Sept. 20, Bush declared a "war on terror," promising "a lengthy campaign, unlike any other we have ever seen." America's new global posture was summarized in one sentence: "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists."



Seven years later, President Bush has squandered the goodwill of the world. Global opinion of the United States is lower than at almost any time in history. Our country remains deeply involved in wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which continue to drive extremist anti-American ideologies. Tragically, even though it has used the rhetoric of freedom and democracy to defend its policies, the Bush administration remains wedded to a national security strategy that prioritizes the use of military force and denies the full range of American economic, political, and cultural power. Recently, senior U.S. intelligence analyst Thomas Fingar presented the findings of a new report, "Global Trends 2025," that "assesses how international events could affect the United States in the next 15 to 17 years." Fingar said that "the U.S. will remain the preeminent power," but he saw U.S. leadership eroding "at an accelerating pace" in "political, economic and arguably, cultural arenas." The Washington Post reported that, according to Fingar, "the one key area of continued U.S. superiority -- military power -- will 'be the least significant' asset in the increasingly competitive world of the future."

Despite the changing world dynamic, military power continues to be the asset which the Bush administration has most often used in the misnamed and misconceived Global War on Terror. After routing al Qaeda and its Taliban hosts from their base in Afghanistan in late 2001 and 2002, Bush turned his attention to Iraq, where the U.S. military continues its occupation to this day at a cost of over $12 billion a month. More than one in five Iraqis has been displaced since the 2003 invasion, both inside and outside the country. The 2007 troop surge, while helping to reduce violence, has also frozen in place "a fragmented and increasingly fractured country," with no sign that Iraq's leaders are prepared to make the tough power-sharing compromises necessary for a stable future Iraq. As a result of the unfinished war in Afghanistan, the Taliban, and al Qaeda eventually regrouped in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border areas, and have carried out an increasingly destructive insurgency. According to the Foreign Policy/Center for American Progress 2008 Terrorism Index, which surveyed 117 national security experts from across the political spectrum, "eighty percent of the experts say that the United States has focused too much on the war in Iraq and not enough on the war in Afghanistan." Yesterday, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Michael Mullen warned Congress that the United States. is "running out of time" to succeed in Afghanistan and that sending in more troops will not necessarily guarantee victory.

Mullen's other comments offer a clue to the way forward. In discussing the Afghanistan front, Mullen noted the "poor and struggling Afghan economy" and "significant political uncertainty in Pakistan" as major barriers to real security and progress in the region. As Center for American Progress Senior fellow Brian Katulis and co-author Nancy Soderbergh argue in their new book, "The Prosperity Agenda," American leadership "has been absent from the scene of many other important global issues -- oil dependency, food shortages, climate change, global poverty, and stopping the spread of nuclear weapons." Americans must expand their conception of national security to encompass more than military solutions for what are in many cases environmental, economic and political problems. With the continuing rise of economic competitors such as China and Russia, the United States must acclimate its security policies to an evolving multi-polar reality in order to work more effectively to deal with problems like Iran's nuclear program. And with the persistence of non-state actors such as Al Qaeda, the United States must look to a more comprehensive approach to national security, one that addresses the conditions which give rise to terrorism, and rethink its reflexive dependence on military power as the first option against potential threats.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Mission Accomplished! (Again?)

Yesterday, President Bush gave "another chest-thumping victory speech" in front of a group of military officers, heralding a "moment of success in the war on terror."



He also announced the withdrawal of roughly 8,000 troops from Iraq of the 146,000 U.S. forces there by next February, a slight reduction that will keep troop levels "several thousand above what they were in January 2007 when he announced the 'surge.'" Brian Katulis, a Center for American Progress Senior Fellow, writes in the Guardian today that political reconciliation, despite Bush's rosy claims,s has completely stalled. "When it comes to true power-sharing -- who has control of the guns, money and other key state resources like -- Iraq has not moved forward substantially," Katulis writes. Though Iraq "is a less violent place," Katulis argues, "it remains a fragmented country." "By overstating the gains to date on Iraq's political transition, Bush continues to overstate the considerable challenges that lie ahead," he adds. Today, the Iraqi parliament reconvenes after a one-month recess to work on an election law; elections were supposed to take place this fall but, the date has been steadily pushed back to, at best, "early next year."

Monday, September 8, 2008

Former SAS Soldier Warns of PTSD Timebomb

Former SAS soldier and author Andy McNab has warned the UK government there is a mental health disaster waiting to happen among military personnel.



The author of the bestselling Bravo Two Zero, he told the London Telegraph: "What we have at the moment is a time-bomb of post traumatic stress disorder that will go off in the next ten to 15 years."Mr McNab told that paper that more soldiers committed suicide after the Falklands War than the number who died in the conflict.He said that in the last 15 years "the situation for ex-service personnel simply hasn't improved" and he condemned the "lack of continued welfare support".The comments come after Welsh MP Elfyn Llwyd uncovered figures under the Freedom of Information Act which show one in ten prisoners in the UK was a member of the armed forces.McNab's latest book, Seven Troop, is an account of his time in the SAS.