Russian President ready for new Cold War

August 27, 2008

Russian President Dimitri Medvedev says Russian is ready to fight a new Cold War after his country approved annexation of two “breakaway” regions of Georgia. He made a very disturbing statement in The Times of London:

President Medvedev set tensions soaring when he recognised the independence of two breakaway republics inside Georgia. We are not afraid of anything, including the prospect of a Cold War, he said. Hours earlier he had ordered his Foreign Ministry to start establishing diplomatic ties with the secessionist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Sphere: Related Content

North Korea to kick out South Koreans

August 3, 2008

Are we truly seeing a North Korea on the reform track? One would have to say “no” as the North Korean government threatens to kick South Korean companies out of the North because of criticisms which arose over the murder of a homemaker from the South while visiting a tourist area in the North.

Sphere: Related Content

The wisdom of “hard power”

July 16, 2008

We regularly stand in awe of the wisdom of Charles Krauthammer.  This analysis of the reasons why Ingrid Betancourt was freed from her six years of captivity is a worthy example of a remarkable sage:

In the Bush years, hard power is terribly out of fashion, seen as a mere obsession of cowboys and neocons.  Both in Europe and America, the sophisticates worship at the altar of “soft power” — the use of diplomatic and moral resources to achieve one’s ends. Europe luxuriates in soft power, nowhere more than in l’affaire Betancourt in which Europe’s repeated gestures of solidarity hovered somewhere between the fatuous and the destructive. . . .

And so the innocent languish [under the heavy hand of oppressors in Zimbabwe, Burma, Sudan], as did Betancourt [under FARC], until some local power, inexplicably under the sway of the Bush notion of hard power, gets it done — often with the support of the American military. “Behind the rescue in a jungle clearing stood years of clandestine American work,” explained The Washington Post. “It included the deployment of elite U.S. Special Forces . . . a vast intelligence-gathering operation . . . and training programs for Colombian troops.”

But no thanks to the United States from the world or Betancourt.

Sphere: Related Content

Israel has a year to destroy Iran’s nuke program

June 29, 2008

From the London Telegraph:

A former head of Mossad has warned that Israel has 12 months in which to destroy Iran’s nuclear programme or risk coming under nuclear attack itself. He also hinted that Israel might have to act sooner if Barack Obama wins the US presidential election.

Sphere: Related Content

ElBaradei to quit IAEA if Israel Strikes Iran

June 21, 2008

‘Ball of fire’ if Iran attacked: IAEA chief

…[He] warned that he would not be able to continue in his role as International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director general should the Islamic republic be attacked. His stark comments came as Iran stressed yet again that it will not negotiate with world powers over its nuclear programme if it is required to suspend its controversial uranium enrichment.

Sphere: Related Content

Kofi Babble

December 12, 2006

The United States definitely needs someone with the moral authority of Kofi Annan to remind us to stay on the straight and narrow.

Sphere: Related Content