Wednesday, 13 July 2011

It's Raining Trillions
Why The US Won't Leave Afghanistan

By Pepe Escobar

The notion that the US government would spend $10 billion a month just to chase a few "al-Qaeda types" in the Hindu Kush is nonsense. Continue

Obama's Secret Wars
How Our Shady Counter-Terrorism Policies Are More Dangerous Than Terrorism

By Fred Branfman

Obama should be held accountable for vastly expanding the military establishment's worldwide license to kill. Continue

Foreign Policy, Africa and Hypocrisy

By Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey

The BBC is asking the British public to make donations for the Horn of Africa, where ten million people are starving to death, exactly when their Prime Minister, Cameron, is spending millions of pounds every single day on his bombing campaign in Libya. Continue

Rights Group Exposes Libyan Rebel Abuses

By Our Foreign Desk

Western-backed insurgents in Libya have looted shops, homes and medical facilities in towns that they have seized in the oil-rich country's western mountains, a US-based rights group warned today. Continue

Why Did Democracy Fail in Bahrain?

By Saeed Rahnema

Between sectarian tensions and the U.S.'s imperial interests, Bahraini democracy never stood a chance. Continue

Putin Slams US

By Pak Alert

Putin branded the United States current monetary policy as “hooliganism” Continue

They Only Way To Financially Survive
The Current Economic Crisis


By Dale Pivarunas

What has been elaborated here is drastically different from what President Obama and his economic advisors have been saying. Continue

Rupert Murdoch: Anthony Blair’s Bagman
Britain’s politicians find courage?

By Christopher King

Will the unravelling of Rupert Murdoch’s power in the UK will serve as a wake up call to British politicians whom for years he has targeted on behalf of the US and Israel. Continue

Murdoch Shaped British Politics for 40 Years

By The Real News

Leo Panitch: Murdoch used sex scandal journalism to attack left-wing of the Labor Party and later helped create Tony Blair. Continue

This Media is Corrupt
The Danger Corporate Power Presents to Democracy

By George Monbiot

Our job is to hold power to account. Instead, most of the profession simply ventriloquises the concerns of the elite. Continue

Tell Big Biz To Stop Undermining Our Democracy

By Center for Media and Democracy

Why are Fortune 500 companies like Wal-Mart, Bayer, Coca-Cola, Kraft, Johnson & Johnson, State Farm and AT&T cozying up behind closed doors with Koch Industries and Big Tobacco to rewrite state laws throughout the country? Continue

I Refused To Pledge Allegiance To The Flag
Zeitgeist: Moving Forward

Must Watch - Video

Jacque Fresco - "This Shi*'s Got To Go" Continue

US Kills 58 People In Pakistan: At least eight people were killed in a 3rd U.S. drone strike launched on Tuesday in Pakistan' s northwest tribal area bordering Afghanistan, bringing to 58 the total number of people killed in four strikes launched in the last 24 hours
Pakistan jails man who helped CIA: Pakistani authorities have jailed a doctor who helped the CIA by creating an elaborate plot to get DNA samples of Osama bin Laden's family before the al-Qaida leader was killed in a special forces raid here.
Altaf accuses govt of conspiring against armed forces, ISI: Muttahida Qaumi Movement chief Altaf Hussain has accused the PPP-led government of conspiring against the armed forces, ISI and other security institutions in league with the United States.
Five French occupation force soldiers killed in Afghanistan: Five French soldiers were killed after a suicide attack in Afghanistan on Wednesday, and four others were seriously wounded, French President Nicolas Sarkozy's office said in a statement.
4 Afghan civilians killed by US airstrike: A US airstrike has killed at least four civilians in Kunar province in northeast Afghanistan, where another US-led aerial attack in March left nine young children dead.
22 Afghan soldiers killed in past week: official: According to Azimi, the casualties on army were counted from July 6 to July 12. The spokesman of Defense Ministry also said as many as 55 army personnel were wounded over the same period of time.
Violence surrounds Wali Karzai's funeral: Karzai, kneeling at the graveside, wept and kissed the face of his brother as his body was lowered into the ground.
Attacks show Taliban are not as weak as the US claims: The killing of Ahmed Wali Karzai, the most powerful Afghan in the south of the country, will reinforce the feeling among Afghans that the Taliban can strike anywhere at any time and are not weakening as American military commanders have claimed.
11 Killed As Libyan Forces Breach Misrata Front Line: Libyan forces attacked the city of Misrata, breaching the opposition’s front line to the west and killing 11 rebel fighters, military officials in the rebel-held enclave said.
Libyan forces retake village south of Tripoli: - Libyan forces retook on Wednesday the village of Al-Qawalish, south of the capital, which was captured by rebels a week ago, rebel fighters said.
India: 10 Killed as Mumbai Hit by Terrorist Attack: Reports said explosions set off around 7 p.m. in India, one at the Opera House in South Mumbai, one in a meter box in the jewelry market Zaveri Bazaar, and another near a temple in the Dadar neighborhood.
Car bombing kills 3 Sunni paramilitary members west of Baghdad: A car bomb struck members of the Awakening Council group in west outskirt of Baghdad on Tuesday, killing three group members and wounding six other people, a local police source told Xinhua.
Khalilzad: US Troops Likely To Stay: Zalmay Khalilzad, the former US ambassador to Iraq, believes that US troops will likely stay beyond December 2011 and that the country is unlikely to dissolve into civil war.
3 killed as violence in northeast Nigeria sparks fears: Suspected members of a hardline Muslim sect have killed three people in a van blast near a military checkpoint in northeast Nigeria, an official said.
Somalia: malnutrition brings children to the brink of death: Levels of malnutrition have reached a new peak and are currently the highest in the world, said the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) today
Report: Two killed in clashes in Yemen's southern city of Taiz: - Two people were killed and another injured in clashes between troops loyal to Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh and opponents to his rule in the southern city of Taiz, television broadcaster Al-Jazeera reported Wednesday.
Yemen's Mysterious Militants: Are They Really Al-Qaeda?: Have militants from Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) taken control of territory in southern Yemen?
IMF sees Yemen inflation at up to 30% this year: "The situation is serious. Economic activity has ground to a halt," Hassan al-Atrash, the IMF's head of mission to Yemen, told Reuters
Food Prices Cause Yemeni Families to Take Desperate Measures: Families are trying to cope by liquidating their assets, skipping meals and diverting funds from health care and education.
France slams Russia, China block on UN Syria vote: France on Wednesday slammed as "indecent" Russia and China's "blocking" of a proposed United Nations resolution condemning Syria's deadly crackdown on anti-regime protests
Egyptian protesters call for end to army rule: Demonstrators continue to occupy Cairo's Tahrir Square, calling for military council leader Tantawi to hand over power.
Bahrainis rally to support jailed medics: Protest rallies in support of dozens of doctors and nurses imprisoned for providing medical treatment to the injured anti-government protesters were held in several villages, including Daih and Sanabis, on Wednesday.
Abbas vows to continue UN statehood bid: Palestinian president proceeds with September plan, as Middle East diplomatic Quartet meeting produces no statement.
Palestinians hold US responsible for Israel policy: The Palestinian leadership, in unusually harsh criticism of Washington, on Tuesday held the United States responsible for "racist" Israeli policies it said had sabotaged the peace process
Israeli peace group launches boycott, defying ban: An Israeli peace group launched a boycott of products from Jewish settlements Tuesday - in the wake of a controversial Israeli law banning such actions.
Venezuela's Chavez expects chemo or radiation: Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Wednesday that he expects to undergo chemotherapy or radiation treatment once he recovers from cancer surgery that removed a tumor the size of a baseball.
Fitch ratings agency downgrades Greek sovereign debt : Greece suffered another sovereign downgrade on Wednesday, when the Fitch agency slashed its credit worthiness by three notches further into junk status and only one grade above default.
Advisers to bailed-out Irish bank get millions in fees: Consultancies are the big winners in Ireland's continuing financial crisis, picking up millions in fees to help the bailed-out Bank of Ireland head off the almost inevitable state control
The Beginning of the End of Europe: : This is the start of the eurozone endgame. It is now only a matter of time before the eurozone breaks apart. Therefore, get back in your seats, buckle up, and brace yourselves good—‘cause it’s gonna be a bumpy ride
Republicans offer Obama new debt limit power: Republican proposal allows Obama to raise debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion while demanding even larger spending cuts.
The faces of those Obama is betraying: “Let us be clear, Social Security has not contributed one nickel to our deficit or our national debt … I am especially disturbed that President Obama is considering cuts in Social Security after he campaigned against cuts in 2008.”
ACLU Sues CIA for Documents on Iraq War Critic Juan Cole: Materials Could Reveal Illegal Domestic Spying Activity by CIA and Bush Administration Officials
A real American hero: : Police charge mother in Nashville airport altercation: Woman refused to let officers screen daughter

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