Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

George Lucas has had an idea for a fourth Indiana Jones movie for more than a decade now, but Spielberg and Ford wanted nothing to do with it. Eventually he wore them down and the result is Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. It’s easy to see why Spielberg and Ford were hesitant to make it.

Indiana’s survival is now the stuff of utter fantasy. Sure the tight spots he made it out of in previous movies stretched the bounds of believability, but now those bounds have been broken, snapped, and tossed straight out the window. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull does that in the first fifteen minutes, when Indy survives something so ludicrous that it’s right out of a bad, 1950s, sci-fi serial; which of course is what Lucas and Spielberg are using as inspiration.

He may be more grumpy and he may not be much of a dresser, but the glimmer hasn’t entirely gone out of Harrison’s eyes. We’re reacquainted with Indy in the midst of intrigue involving Russians. It’s the 50s, the Nazis have been defeated, and that means Indy must now fight communism. The Reds are led by an army officer named Irina Spalko, played by Cate Blanchett.

From the outset she’s no match for Indiana Jones, and Cate’s take on the character seems to involve a lot of gaping and staring. Spalko is after an American secret and she drags Indy out to a certain spot in the Nevada desert, where our adventure begins, offset by comedic gophers which seem to have wandered over from the set of Caddyshack. From Nevada it’s off to South America, where the gophers are replaced by monkeys, and jungle clue chasing with Indiana and his friends can begin in earnest.

But you’re here for adventure and there’s plenty of that. The movie soars in several character driven action sequences, and sags in others. Indiana has another one of those genius “shoot the sword guy” moments which alone makes Kingdom of the Crystal Skull worth the price of admission. Most of the effects are good, and it’s all well staged. Unfortunately, sometimes perhaps a little too well staged. This Indiana Jones feels less organic than any of the other movies. It feels more choreographed. Of course it’s all choreographed, but some of the action sequences in this one seem more like dance numbers than truly dangerous, rock-em-sock em Indiana Jones action.

Even though old age should mean he’s more fragile, I never truly felt like Indiana was in trouble, and I’m not sure he ever did either. Maybe it’s because some of it goes so far over the top that it crosses that believability line I mentioned earlier. Or, and I hate to keep harping on this, maybe it’s Harrison’s age. There’s no way a guy this grey could pull any of this off, and so when he does, it’s harder than ever to buy into any of it.

The idea of a fourth Indiana Jones movie is better than the reality, and a few years from now I guarantee fans will find themselves more likely to re-watch Temple of Doom than to revisit this entertaining, yet past its prime Indy entry.

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‘Indiana Jones’ debut survives Cannes critics

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Indiana Jones received louder applause going in than he did coming out.

His latest adventure, “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” earned a respectful though far from glowing — reception Sunday at the Cannes Film Festival, avoiding the sort of thrashing the event’s harsh critics gave to “The Da Vinci Code” two years ago.

Yet Indy’s fourth big-screen romp is not likely to go down as one of the most memorable. Some viewers at its first press screening loved it, some called it slick and enjoyable though formulaic, some said it was not worth the 19-year wait since Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Harrison Ford made the last film.

“They should have left well enough alone,” said J. Sperling Reich, who writes for FilmStew.com. “It really looked like they were going through the motions. It really looked like no one had their heart in it.”

Alain Spira of French magazine Paris Match found “Crystal Skull” a perfectly acceptable “Indiana Jones” tale, a sentiment echoed by the solid applause the movie received as the final credits rolled.

“It’s good. It’s a product that is polished, industrial, we’re not getting ripped off in terms of quality,” Spira said. “You know what you’re going to see, you see what you get, and when you leave you’re happy.”

The applause was louder at the outset, though. Fans at the early afternoon showing, which preceded the film’s glitzy formal premiere with cast and crew Sunday night, cheered and clapped wildly at an announcement that the screening was about to start. Some even hummed the Indiana Jones fanfare as the lights went down.

The applause at the end was more subdued.

Cast and crew were unconcerned about how critics might dissect the film.

“I’m not afraid at all. I expect to have the whip turned on me,” Ford told reporters after the screening. “It’s not unusual for something that is popular to be disdained by some people, and I fully expect it.

But, he said: “I work for the people who pay to get in. They are my customers, and my focus is on providing the best experience I can for those people.”

The filmmakers kept the movie shrouded in secrecy, skipping the rounds of press screenings often held for big studio movies and going for a big blowout at Cannes.

Spielberg said he and his collaborators decided “that the fair thing to do and the fun thing to do would be to view it where the entire world is come together every year at this wonderful festival, and we thought that was the best place to introduce Indiana Jones to you again after 19 years.”

The film received none of the derisive laughter or catcalls that mounted near the end of the first press screening for “Da Vinci Code.”

There were a few titters from the “Crystal Skull” crowd early on over co-star Cate Blanchett’s thick, Boris-and-Natasha accent as a Soviet operative racing against Indy to find an artifact of immeasurable power. The rather corny romantic ending also drew a chuckle or two.

In between, the film packed a fair amount of action, though some viewers found the middle portion dull. Conchita Casanovas, of Spain’s RNE radio, said she was “bored to death.”

The new movie hurls archaeologist Jones into the Cold War in 1957. He survives a nuclear blast in the desert in typically creative fashion and is reunited with “Raiders” flame Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen).

As speculated, the film has an alien connection, though far more subdued than the “Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men From Mars” story Lucas once envisioned.

There are melancholy nods to Sean Connery, who played Indy’s dad in 1989’s “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” but declined to return for the new movie, and the late Denholm Elliott, Indy’s college dean in two of the previous movies.

And the film reveals the relationship between Indy and his new sidekick, an angry young motorcycle rebel played by Shia LaBeouf.

As with “Da Vinci Code,” which went on to gross $758 million worldwide, “Crystal Skull” is so hotly anticipated that it will be virtually immune from critics’ opinions. The film is expected to put up blockbuster box-office numbers when it opens globally Thursday.

“The movie was absolutely effective enough to score with audiences everywhere,” said Anne Thompson, deputy editor of Hollywood trade paper Variety. “This played way better than ‘Da Vinci Code.’ No one was gunning for it. They were excited going in, hooting for it in a positive way.”

Dozens of fans prowled outside the Palais, the Cannes headquarters, holding signs saying they needed tickets for “Crystal Skull.”

Amelia Sims, a 19-year-old University of Georgia student studying abroad, held a sign reading “I (heart) Indy.” She managed to get a pass to the press screening and loved the movie.

“I guess I’ve been waiting 19 years for this,” Sims said. “You could say I’ve been waiting my whole life.”

But Christian Monggaard, who is reviewing “Crystal Skull” for Danish newspaper Information, said he grew up with the “Indiana Jones” films and came away from this one disappointed, finding the climax an “overblown special-effects extravaganza.”

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Get ready for truth on the hoof

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

I knew nothing about cows. I do know something about education. But cows have grabbed me, and having grabbed they%26#39;re squeezing. I am a tube of toothpaste between cloven hoofs and my top has popped off and although I strongly wish to put the education world to rights, it%26#39;s words about cows that are going to ooze from my head.
So not a squeak from me today about the dishonest shambles that is the NCEA, even though I derided it from the outset and have continued to deride it ever since. Nor will you read any of my honeyed prose on the subject of degrees in golf and tourism and aubergine-sculpting and all the rest of it now offered by the tertiary establishments. Today I shall write about cows.
Cows are smart. Cows make friends. Cows hold grudges. Cows enjoy an intellectual challenge. Or, at least, so say the boffins who have made it their business to know about cows. In one study researchers challenged a herd to open a door that led to food. The cows went to it with a will. And when the cows gave the dial a final twist and held their breath and heard through their stethoscopes the last tumbler click delicately into place and saw the door to the pantry of delight swing open, %26quot;their heartbeats went up%26quot;, reports Donald Broom, professor of animal welfare at Cambridge University, which doesn%26#39;t yet offer degree courses in golf, %26quot;and some even jumped into the air. We called it their Eureka moment.%26quot; And there was a lot more of the same. So much, then, for the traditions of cow husbandry. They%26#39;re doomed. It is no longer acceptable that we exploit these beasts merely for milk and meat. It is no longer acceptable that we ignore their intellectual and emotional propensities.
It is no longer acceptable that we treat cattle as feudal overlords once treated their serfs, as working commodities, as mere objects of exploitation. Things must change.
And they will. What the change will do to the cost of steak and yoghurt is anyone%26#39;s guess, but once an idea like the mental potential of cattle is out of the box there is no way it can be put back in. There will arise a movement akin to the movement that led to the abolition of slavery.
The future beckons.
A bill will be passed compelling dairy farmers to provide mental stimulation for cattle. What form that will take I don%26#39;t know — boxes of Scrabble in every paddock, perhaps %26mdash; but the details are trivial.
What matters here is principle. The principle is that cows can. The consequences will be that cows blossom.
Only a few at first, but it takes just one clever Daisy to start the growing season. People will resent Daisy. They will scoff. But Daisy will be joined by other Daisies and the movement will swell like a wave until even the scoffers are obliged to acknowledge the truth on the hoof.
Soon afterwards free primary education will be established for all cattle.
Mother cows who never enjoyed that privilege will see it as the chance for their offspring to excel, to rise from the muddy paddock of drudgery to the stud farm of success.
They will cherish that privilege.
They will urge their calves to compete in the classroom. The best will float to the top like cream through milk. Cow secondary schools will be built, and cow varsities, offering intellectual rigour to those who can handle it. A bovine meritocracy will be born and all manner of things shall be well.
For a while. Because, as inevitably as a paddock of grass is grazed, what was once seen as a privilege will come to be seen as a right. That right will be taken for granted. And by a transition so gradual that it will be barely perceptible, the right to education will become the right to success in education.
All failure will be resented.
Merit will be ignored.
%26quot;All calves are good calves,%26quot; will be the cry, %26quot;everyone%26#39;s a winner%26quot;.
And even though this notion will apply to no other field of bovine endeavour from milk production to rugby, it will be accepted as a self-evident truth in education.
The hallowed Cow Proficiency Certificate will come to be seen as discriminatory because some people fail it. It will be replaced by the National Cow Equality Award that nobody fails. This NCEA will be an unwieldy and inconsistent hotchpotch of untesting testlets. In an effort to be fair it will be unfair. But because no calf can fail it, each calf will then be able to move on to Cow Varsity where he or she will study cow golf.
Enough. The toothpaste is squeezed. I%26#39;ve done cows.
Next week I promise not to be sidetracked.

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Editorial: Overburdened on health

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

The bill%26#39;s aim is to %26quot;improve, promote, and protect public health and help attain optimal and equitable health outcomes for all population groups in New Zealand%26quot;. Stripped of jargon, it will let health officials tackle the wider range of health issues, such as obesity and diabetes, that now have an impact on the public purse.
When the earlier statutes were enacted, the old Health Department was most worried about tuberculosis and cholera. These days officials fret over, for example, the risk of pandemics such as Sars or, say, fires that release asbestos into the environment, as recently happened in Patea.
So far, so good. Few would disagree that the matrix of health issues confronting the community, along with 21st-century lifestyles, have implications for the public health budget, met from taxes.
At the same time, however, resentment is gently building at the hectoring from those who want to dictate to New Zealand families - led by the Greens%26#39; we-know-best list MP Sue Kedgley - just what and how much of it, they should eat.
Blithely ignoring that annoyance, the bill also gives the director-general of health broad powers to issue codes of practice and guidelines %26quot;to a sector on a particular activity%26quot;, if he or she believes that that sector %26quot;can reduce a risk factor associated with the activity%26quot;.
The bill%26#39;s explanatory note omits its Bill of Rights Act implications. And it has plenty. If the country%26#39;s health chief decides, for example, it is in people%26#39;s %26quot;best interests%26quot; to ban advertising or marketing various types of food or drink, he or she must consult people affected, in this case the makers of disapproved-of comestibles, winemakers and spirits%26#39; manufacturers and those who make the advertisements to sell them. But he or she does not have to heed their concerns.
Fortunately, such codes will have no legislative force. Not at the outset, anyway. But, after the Public Health Act has been in place three years, the director-general is legally bound to tell the health minister if the law should be changed to bind those in the sectors to which codes or guidelines apply. It is coercion by stealth.
National says it is not prepared to countenance such %26quot;unfettered regulatory power%26quot;. Others are also upset that the bill gives public servants the ability to directly affect not only consumer choice but also the profitability of companies producing legal products.
Though Ms Kedgley might abhor Big Macs, it is not Wellington%26#39;s job to tell ordinary folk how to feed their families. Yes, individual choice has community fallout when taxpayers must meet the public healthcare costs incurred by fat people and drunks. But education is better than bureaucratic diktat.
The Government does have another tool. It could ban products it disapproves of - cigarettes, booze and fast food - and forgo the tax. If it lacks the courage to do that, it should think again about the desirability of infringing further the public%26#39;s right to buy what it likes, as long as it is legal.

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ROD ORAM: THE VALUE CHAIN

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

They believe their salvation lies in the very sketchy proposal put to them by their co-op, Alliance Group, in a series of meetings from Invercargill to Richmond.
In theory, it could be. But making it happen will require nothing less than building a completely new industry from consumers abroad back to farmers here. Every link in the new value chain needs fundamental changes in attitudes and practices by every player involved.
Some industry leaders and farmers clearly understand the enormity of the challenges. They know that successful reform would give the industry a market-driven, profitable and sustainable future. And failed reform would doom it to a downward spiral of falling returns and dwindling production.
The trouble is, there are plenty of farmers and powerful players who are still locked into the industry%26#39;s dysfunctional, production-driven mentality. As a result, they are seeking a simplistic solution.
They believe all they need to do is to merge enough of the current processors into a new entity controlling up to 80% of New Zealand lamb production. That, they argue, would then have the clout to knock out excess processing capacity here and deal to supermarkets overseas.
But that won%26#39;t work. The New Zealand lamb industry has dug such a deep hole for itself that brute force alone won%26#39;t pull it out. It needs the help of every player along the value chain. And that requires it to change its culture so it can build those relationships.
One chilling story describes the dysfunction into which the industry has fallen. Tesco and Sainsbury, the two largest UK supermarkets, account for 56% of the New Zealand lamb sold in the UK, by far our major market.
But the retailers have given up trying to deal with our processors. Instead, they work through European processors who help manage the meat category for them by sourcing, preparing and packaging meat. Some of the meat is New Zealand lamb. But the new intermediaries typically take a 35% profit margin in addition to the 35% the supermarkets take. So that leaves only 30% of the profit to share between shipping companies, processors and farmers back here.
So prices in the UK have rarely been better, but returns to farmers here haven%26#39;t been so bad for a long, long time. Yes, the high dollar and inefficiency in processing are factors. But the truth is our lamb industry, bar a few honourable small-scale exceptions, has always been a hopeless marketer.
That%26#39;s what%26#39;s killing the industry. And a large, efficient, production-driven new entity won%26#39;t save it. Instead, the industry here has to learn how deliver what customers want in terms of precise product, sharp price and excellent service across the whole meat category not just lamb.
This is such an alien concept to New Zealand meat processors that they fail when they try. For example, PPCS has just closed its UK plant outside Norwich. It says it will keep trying to be more market-driven. At its AGM on Friday, PPCS launched a splashy strategy around branding and marketing. But this is a death-bed conversion. The company%26#39;s traditional production-driven business model is fatally flawed. The only hope is to roll the assets into a new company embracing most of the industry, one that was designed from the outset as a new market-driven business.
What would it look like? Crucially, its focus would start with the markets. The new entity would have the human and financial resources it needs to become the supermarkets%26#39; category manager in established markets.
There are precedents. For example, Sealord, the flagship of the Maori fishing industry, is the fish category manager for Waitrose, the upmarket food retailer of John Lewis, the UK department store chain. Its UK plant sources, prepares and packages the full range of fish from around the world of which a small part is from New Zealand waters.
Then the new entity needs to develop new markets. Again there are precedents. For example, the New Zealand Lamb Company, a marketing venture of a number of major processors, has a 90% share of lamb imports into Canada and a 50% share of the total market including domestic supply.
But the venture is the exception. All other attempts by our lamb industry to market co-operatively have fallen apart. Instead, they compete against each other at home for lamb supplies from farmers and against each other in overseas markets.
As a result, they%26#39;re so easy to divide and conquer they%26#39;re the laughing stock of retailers. Our farmers have about a 60% share of the global trade in lamb but their processors have destroyed their competitive advantage.
Once the new entity knew what markets wanted, it would have to learn how to deliver. This would require three massive changes in processing. First, in how farmers are paid. Currently most processors pay them based simply on weight with prices from a weekly meat schedule. There are next to no incentives for supplying higher quality meat or animals that meet tight weight and quality specifications required by retailers.
Instead, farmers need detailed information on each carcass so they can breed animals closer to market needs. If processors can supply that information, they can then customise payments for each carcass based on the market yield.
For several decades, the industry has struggled and failed to implement yield grading. This has caused a crucial breakdown in communication between what markets want and what farmers produce. However, progress is being made at last. For example, Alliance has developed and introduced a yield grading system over the past few years. This season it is the first processor to offer yield payment contracts to all its suppliers.
The second change needed is massive reduction in surplus, old and inefficient processing capacity. Industry estimates suggest the bill for plant closures and redundancies could be around $400m. On top of that, the industry must dig deep to invest to bring all its plants up to the state of the art achieved now by a few.
The industry can easily afford to do this. Many farmers have been cash-negative in the past few seasons but they have very lazy balance sheets. Nationwide, equity represents about 85% of the capital of sheep and beef farms. They can afford to borrow to invest in their futures and the banks say they are willing to lend.
Instead the industry has gone cap in hand to the government suggesting it deserves a suspensory loan or some other favourable deal with taxpayers%26#39; money. Rightly the government has told it to get lost. Astonishingly, National, in a throwback to Muldoon-era farming policies, says it will entertain the idea.
Farmers should put their money where their mouth is. After all, Alliance says its proposals will enhance farmers%26#39; revenues by $400m (curiously close to the estimated but officially undisclosed cost of rationalisation) in the short-term.
And the third big change needed is procurement. Farmers now play one processor off against another.
The result is wide swings in prices and volumes that makes rational supply chain management and marketing almost impossible.
Instead, farmers will have to learn loyalty and learn how to farm to specifications and timetables dictated by the market. This will require significant changes in farming practices. For example, they will need to build in financial and feed reserves so they can keep animals alive during droughts rather than sending them off for slaughter, thereby flooding the market.
All these are towering challenges. They can be done. And Alliance is brave and right to lead the effort with its very sketchy proposal for industry restructuring.
But there is no way the industry will be as radical as it has to be if there is any chance its massively bloody politics will thwart change. So, the industry must empower very quickly a powerful, representative committee of insiders and outsiders capable of reinventing the way New Zealand sells, processes and farms lamb.

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Bring in Hamas, International Herald Tribune

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

They urged that a way be found to include Hamas - which had overwhelmingly defeated Abbas’s Fatah in the Palestinian parliamentary elections of January 2006 in the negotiations.

The eminent persons group recognized that Hamas presented its own difficulties as a potential peace partner because of its dogmatic refusal to recognize Israel.

That is why Arab countries, intimately familiar with the dynamics of regional politics, including those of Islamic political movements, supported the formation of a Palestinian unity government that would join Abbas’s Fatah with Hamas. Saudi Arabia took the lead in fashioning the Mecca agreement on Feb. 8, 2007, that established a Palestinian unity government.

Although Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and other Arab countries are themselves threatened by internal Islamic movements, they nevertheless advocated such a unity government because that would make it possible for Hamas to negotiate an agreement without making an ideological transformation of which it is not yet capable.

Such a transformation, however desirable, was in fact unnecessary for a peace process to begin since Hamas had committed itself to allowing Abbas, as the elected president of the Palestinian Authority, to conduct the negotiations with Israel. Hamas also committed itself to submit the agreement to a popular referendum and to abide by its outcome.

Instead of embracing this creative approach - one that would also serve to encourage the moderates within Hamas - both Israel and the United States rejected the unity government. They insisted on Hamas’s ideological capitulation - and, should it refuse to do so, on its violent removal by Abbas’s security forces, which were being armed, financed and trained by the United States for this purpose.

To Bush and Rice, not to speak of prime minister Ehud Olmert and his defense minister, Ehud Barak - who tirelessly lecture the Palestinians and the Arab and Muslim world on the subject of democracy - the violent overthrow of a democratically elected government was thus the preferred course of action.

An article in the current Vanity Fair magazine says that Bush assigned to Rice and Deputy National Security Adviser Elliot Abrams the task of provoking a civil war in which Abbas’s Fatah militias in Gaza were to overthrow the Hamas-led government.

According to the article, this decision was made by Bush shortly after the January 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections, while Hamas was still observing its cease-fire.

Bush and Rice now face a dilemma of their own making. Surely after the latest violence in Gaza they can no longer deny what some critics have said from the outset, that there is no prospect of Abbas engaging Israel in successful negotiations so long as Hamas is denied participation in Palestinian governance. You cannot make peace with half of a country’s population and remain at war with the other half.

Furthermore, Olmert’s confirmation that Israel’s assaults on Gaza had Abbas’s blessings have finished Abbas for all practical purposes as an interlocutor in peace talks with Israel, even for West Bank residents, unless he gets the backing of Hamas.

And Abbas’s claim that Hamas invited Al Qaeda’s operatives into Gaza, echoing a lie first made by an Israeli cabinet member, confirmed for many Palestinians that holding on to the reins of power is more important to Abbas than the Palestinian national cause.

Abbas knows that Hamas has consistently rejected Al Qaeda’s efforts to exploit the Palestinian tragedy to advance a Wahabi jihadism.

One must assume that after the latest exchanges of violence in Gaza - and the reaction of the international community to what were seen as disproportionate Israeli retaliations - relying on Israel’s military might to eliminate Hamas is no longer seen by Bush and Rice as a promising alternative.

It is therefore time for them to heed the sober advice of the eminent persons group that urged a more nuanced policy toward Hamas.

It’s time to take advantage of Hamas’s offer of a mutual cease-fire that would not only end the killing in Gaza and the West Bank and the rocket fire on Sderot and Ashkelon, but also prevent a potentially calamitous escalation threatened by Barak.

Such a cease-fire would also offer an opportunity to refashion - with the collaboration of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and other Arab countries - a Palestinian unity government that could resume peace talks on a more realistic foundation, International Herald Tribune said. –IRNA

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Iran: UN Security Council has taken illegal action

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Mohammad Khazaei said, As the report has stressed, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been serious and sincere in its full cooperation with the Agency and has been resolutely cooperating in a proactive manner for the implementation of the Work Plan which was concluded between Iran and the Agency in August 2007.

The report well indicates that such an unprecedented and resolute voluntary cooperation with the IAEA on the part of the Islamic Republic of Iran, beyond its obligation in accordance with the comprehensive safeguards agreement (INFCIRC/214) has led to the implementation of the work plan and closure of all outstanding issues much sooner than expected.

This landmark accomplishment in resolving the outstanding issues which has only been possible through Iran’s robust cooperation with the IAEA far beyond its treaty obligations - as reflected in the said report - attests to the fact that the allegations made by certain countries, under the pretext of the so-called proliferation concerns have been, from the outset, totally baseless.

Indeed by raising, unfounded and false claims against Iran, those few countries have made every effort to deprive the Iranian nation from exercising its inalienable rights to use nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

The report also serves as a solid evidence that Iran is a responsible, transparent, and predictable member of the NPT, and is fully committed to its international obligations with regard to its peaceful nuclear program.

The full implementation of the work plan and thus resolution and closure of the outstanding issues have undoubtedly eliminated the most basic pretexts and allegations on the basis of which Iran’s peaceful nuclear program was referred to the Security Council, and demonstrates that the actions taken against the Islamic Republic of Iran by the Security Council have been unfair, unwarranted and unlawful.

The report also displays the fact that the Iranian nation has been both unwavering in implementation of its legal obligations, and resolute in defending its inalienable rights.

By resolving the outstanding questions with regard to its past activities, on the one hand; and conducting all its present activities, including the enrichment, under the full and continuous monitoring of the IAEA based on the IAEA Statute, the NPT and the comprehensive safeguards agreement, on the other, the Islamic Republic of Iran has removed any so-called concerns or ambiguities with regard to its peaceful nuclear activities in the past and at present.

Therefore, it has become clear that Iran’s peaceful nuclear program should be dealt with solely by the Agency as a regular item on its agenda and thus as envisaged in the Work Plan, the safeguards implementation in Iran has to be in routine manner from now on, it said. –IRNA

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IAEA report attests to civilian nature of Iran program, Khazaei

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Iranian Permanent Representative to United Nations said on Saturday that the report of International Atomic Energy Agency on February 22 is unambiguously attesting to the exclusively peaceful nature of the nuclear program of the Islamic Republic of Iran, both in the past and at present.

Mohammad Khazaei said that it brings a very substantial development, namely the resolution of all outstanding issues, to the attention of the international community and proves that the allegations made against Iran’s peaceful nuclear program by a few countries have been totally flawed and baseless and, accordingly, the actions taken by the Security Council in this regard lack any shred of logic and legality.

As the report has stressed, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been serious and sincere in its full cooperation with the Agency and has been resolutely cooperating in a proactive manner for the implementation of the Work Plan which was concluded between Iran and the Agency in August 2007.

The report well indicates that such an unprecedented and resolute voluntary cooperation with the IAEA on the part of the Islamic Republic of Iran, beyond its obligation in accordance with the comprehensive safeguards agreement (INFCIRC/214) has led to the implementation of the work plan and closure of all outstanding issues much sooner than expected.

This landmark accomplishment in resolving the outstanding issues which has only been possible through Iran’s robust cooperation with the IAEA far beyond its treaty obligations - as reflected in the said report - attests to the fact that the allegations made by certain countries, under the pretext of the so-called proliferation concerns have been, from the outset, totally baseless.

Indeed by raising, unfounded and false claims against Iran, those few countries have made every effort to deprive the Iranian nation from exercising its inalienable rights to use nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

The report also serves as a solid evidence that Iran is a responsible, transparent, and predictable member of the NPT, and is fully committed to its international obligations with regard to its peaceful nuclear program.

The full implementation of the work plan and thus resolution and closure of the outstanding issues have undoubtedly eliminated the most basic pretexts and allegations on the basis of which Iran’s peaceful nuclear program was referred to the Security Council, and demonstrates that the actions taken against the Islamic Republic of Iran by the Security Council have been unfair, unwarranted and unlawful.

The report also displays the fact that the Iranian nation has been both unwavering in implementation of its legal obligations, and resolute in defending its inalienable rights.

By resolving the outstanding questions with regard to its past activities, on the one hand; and conducting all its present activities, including the enrichment, under the full and continuous monitoring of the IAEA based on the IAEA Statute, the NPT and the comprehensive safeguards agreement, on the other, the Islamic Republic of Iran has removed any so-called concerns or ambiguities with regard to its peaceful nuclear activities in the past and at present.

Therefore, it has become clear that Iran’s peaceful nuclear program should be dealt with solely by the Agency as a regular item on its agenda and thus as envisaged in the Work Plan, the safeguards implementation in Iran has to be in routine manner from now on, it said. –IRNA

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The Absurdity of ”Independent” Kosovo

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

By George Szamuely

(Counter Punch)

With their unfailing passion for the inconsequential and their knack for doing the wrong thing at the wrong time, NATO leaders appear determined to carve the province of Kosovo out of Serbia and grant it independence. That they lack the physical, legal and moral power to bestow independent statehood to a part of a state that is neither a member of the E.U. nor NATO appears only to have emboldened them to use this issue to demonstrate Western resolve. Just as in the 1990s, and just as erroneously, a self-righteous West has seized on the Balkans as an opportunity to parade before the world in the unfamiliar guise of champion of democracy and national self-determination, and protector of Muslims.

Much as it did before the invasion of Iraq, the United States has said it will do whatever it wants to do — namely, recognize independent Kosovo — with or without U.N. sanction. Unlike Iraq, this time the Europeans intend to take an active part in the Easter egg hunt and are as determined to ignore the United Nations as the Americans. Confident that the new state of Kosovo will prove to be a reliable NATO/E.U. satellite, key European countries, and especially the ever-compliant British, promise to recognize Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence on the very day it happens.

The line from Brussels and Washington is that the status quo in Kosovo is unsustainable and that the status of Kosovo needs to be settled once and for all. Final status means independence and only independence. The Serbs have been told to forget about Kosovo and all the talk of historic patrimony and to focus instead on Europe (the grand name the European Union has arrogated to itself). Curiously, the Kosovo Albanians are not told forget about their national aspirations and focus on Europe. Yet their claim to statehood is particularly dubious since an Albanian state already exists in Europe. There doesn’t seem to be any reason to have two Albanian states.

Kosovo’s status is governed by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, which envisages only self-government for Kosovo, and acknowledges the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Kosovo’s status can’t be changed without a new resolution.

To be sure, the status quo is unsustainable. But this status quo is one entirely of NATO’s making. Eager to demonstrate that it had relevance even though the Cold War had long ended, NATO pulverized Yugoslavia with cluster bombs, depleted uranium and cruise missiles for 11 weeks, in the name of its newly proclaimed mission of humanitarian intervention. As the adoring media told and, in subsequent years, retold the story, the United States and its supposedly supine European allies were knights in shining armor, selflessly killing and destroying in order to rescue the oppressed Kosovo Albanians from the bloodthirsty Serbs. NATO forces marched into Kosovo, stood by passively as more than 250,000 Serbs fled or were driven out of the province and then cowered in the safety of their barracks in March 2004 as the Kosovo Albanians went on a bloody anti-Serb rampage.

Meanwhile, making use of the engineering skills of Halliburton subsidiary, Brown %26amp; Root Services Corp., the United States built a giant military base, Camp Bondsteel, covering some 955 acres or 360,000 square meters. The camp also includes a prison. According to Alvaro Gil Robles, Human Rights Commissioner for the Council of Europe, who visited the prison in 2005,

What I saw there, the prisoners’ situation, was one which you would absolutely recognize from the photographs of Guantanamo. The prisoners were housed in little wooden huts, some alone, others in pairs or threes. Each hut was surrounded with barbed wire, and guards were patrolling between them. Around all of this was a high wall with watchtowers. Because these people had been arrested directly by the army, they had not had any recourse to the judicial system. They had no lawyers. There was no appeals process. There weren’t even exact orders about how long they were to be kept prisoner.

Shamelessly, but not at all surprisingly, the U.S. political establishment, particularly its Clintonian wing (the bunch that did so much to destroy Yugoslavia), seized on the March 2004 anti-Serb pogrom as evidence that the Kosovo Albanians deserved independent statehood immediately. On March 28, 2004, columnist Georgie Anne Geyer quoted Richard Holbrooke as saying ‘The recognition of an independent Kosovo and eventual membership in the European Union would be the best way to bring permanent peace and stability to the Balkans.’ The leadership in Belgrade ’should finally come to terms with the new reality and choose either Kosovo or the E.U.but if Serbia chooses Kosovo over the E.U., it will end up with neither.

Holbrooke, permanent secretary of state in waiting, notoriously negotiated an agreement with President Slobodan Milosevic in October 1998. In return for the United States agreeing to put off the bombing of Yugoslavia for a few months, Milosevic agreed to withdraw Serbian security forces from Kosovo and permitted the arrival of an OSCE mission-the so-called Kosovo Verification Mission. The agreement wasn’t binding on the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), whose members armed themselves and committed terrorist attacks, the purpose of which was to provoke the Serbian forces to retaliate and thereby to provide a pretext for the bombing the Clinton administration was itching to launch. Milosevic, well aware of the trap that was being laid for him, went out of his way to avoid being provoked. The Kosovo Verification Mission did not remain passive in all of this. Led by William Walker, U.S. ambassador to El Salvador during the 1980s, the KVM actively colluded with the KLA, going so far as to fake the Racak incident in January 1999 that served to trigger the NATO onslaught. It isn’t surprising, therefore, that Holbrooke, who played such a crucial role in that earlier charade, should play an equally crucial role in today’s Kosovo charade.

Another establishment ticket-puncher, this time a member of its Republican branch, also weighed in early demanding independence for Kosovo. Frank Carlucci, a former secretary of defense and national security adviser in the Reagan administration and a former chairman of the Carlyle Group, global private equity firm for ex-government officials, wrote in the New York Times on Feb. 22, 2005,

The only solution that makes long-term sense is full independence for Kosovo, and the only question that remains is how to get there. The best approach would be for Washington and its five partners in the so-called Contact Group-Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia-to initiate a process for a final settlement, or Kosovo Accord. First the powers would have to establish a timeline and some ground rules. The goal would have to be independence for the entire province, and all other options — partition, or union with Albania or slivers of other neighboring states where ethnic Albanians live — would be off the table from the outset. Given the events of last March, the Kosovo Albanians would be informed that that the pace of their progress toward independence will be set by their treatment of Serbs and other minorities.

So progress toward independence should depend on how the Albanians treat Kosovo’s minorities. Holbrooke had no time for this. He ridiculed the notion that independence should in any way be connected to the Albanians’ treatment of the Serbs. Standards before status, he sneered in the Washington Post on April 20, was merely a delaying policy that disguised bureaucratic inaction inside diplomatic mumbo-jumbo. As a result, there have been no serious discussions on the future of Kosovo.

Standards before status or status before standards, it really didn’t matter too much. The United States pushed U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to launch a fraudulent process that would — so it was it believed — result in an independent Kosovo. In June 2005, Annan appointed Norway’s ambassador to NATO, Kai Aide, to determine if Kosovo has made sufficient progress in meeting accepted standards on democracy and minority rights to merit a decision on its final status. In October 2005, Aide duly reported to Annan that, yes, Kosovo had made splendid progress and that any further delay on resolving its final status would lead to catastrophe. Actually, the report said that the Kosovo Serbs fear that they will become a decoration to any central-level political institution with little ability to yield tangible results. The Kosovo Albanians have done little to dispel it. The report concluded that with regard to the foundation for a multi-ethnic society, the situation is grim. Nonetheless, there wasn’t a moment to be lost. What’s important, Annan said, is that talks begin soon.

Talks did indeed begin. Annan appointed former Finnish President Marti Ahtisaari as his special envoy to lead the negotiations on Kosovo’s final status. Talk about rewarding terrorism! The Kosovo Albanians rioted for several days in March 2004, and here they were, some 18 months later, about to be made a gift of independence. Ahtisaari was as likely to act the honest broker as Holbrooke. One of the posts he holds is chairman emeritus of the International Crisis Group (ICG), one of those George Soros-funded organizations staffed by out-of-office international worthies who invariably advocate for NATO expansion/intervention and unhindered U.S.-E.U. foreign investment. The ICG has for a long time been a fervent propagandist for an independent Kosovo. On its board sit such veteran bomb-the-Serbs alumni as Wesley Clark, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Joschka Fischer, Morton Abramowitz and Samantha Power.

The negotiations under Ahtisaari’s aegis inevitably went nowhere, as they were meant to. Given that key NATO/E.U. officials had already declared that independence was inevitable, the Kosovo Albanians knew they only had to sit tight, reject any option other than independence and prepare to collect their reward within a few months.

In March 2007, Ahtisaari reported to the new U.N. secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, that the negotiations’ potential to produce any mutually agreeable outcome on Kosovo’s status is exhausted. No amount of additional talks, whatever the format, will overcome this impasse. Therefore, he announced,

I have come to the conclusion that the only viable option for Kosovo is independence, to be supervised for an initial period by the international community. My Comprehensive Proposal for the Kosovo Status Settlement, which sets forth these international supervisory structures, provides the foundations for a future independent Kosovo that is viable, sustainable and stable, and in which all communities and their members can live a peaceful and dignified existence.

Washington, London, Brussels and other capitals immediately embraced Ahtisaari’s proposal and his noble, but entirely vacuous, sentiments. Since a massive NATO military presence had not sufficed to ensure that Kosovo’s communities and their members lived an even minimally peaceful and dignified existence (as even Kofi Annan’s envoy Kai Aide had admitted), the idea that in an independent Kosovo the province’s minorities would be flourishing was laughable. Kosovo’s Serbs — the few that remain — live behind barbed wire and need armed escort whenever they step outside their enclaves. According to a recent European Commission report, only 1 per cent of judges belong to a minority group and less than 0.5 per cent belong to the Serbian minority. Only six of the 88 prosecutors belong to minority groups. Overall, the report concluded, little progress has been made in the promotion and enforcement of human rights.

None of this really matters. The United States, the European Union and Ahtisaari himself are as serious about protecting Kosovo’s minorities as they are about creating an independent state there. In fact, the last thing one would call the state that Ahtisaari envisages is independent.

To be sure, land would be taken away from Serbia, and the Kosovo’s Serbs, Turks, Roma and other minorities would be booted out, even as NATO/EU officials will doubtless go on avowing their commitment to a multicultural, multiethnic, multi-whatever Kosovo. To be sure, Brussels will probably succeed in bribing a few Serbs to come back to — or even make a home in — Kosovo. These returnees will then be touted as evidence that Kosovo is embracing European values.

However, there is no plan to permit Kosovo’s Albanians to run their own affairs. First of all, as in Bosnia, ultimate power will reside with an internationally-appointed bureaucrat. This position of colonial viceroy known as the International Civilian Representative (ICR), will be held by one of the West’s innumerable, interchangeable has-been politicians moving from one sinecure to another. The ICR will, for example, have the authority to [t]ake corrective measures to remedy, as necessary, any actions taken by the Kosovo authorities that the ICR deems to be a breach of this Settlement. Such corrective measures would include annulment of laws or decisions adopted by Kosovo authorities, sanction or remov[al] from office [of] any public official or take other measures, as necessary, to ensure full respect for this Settlement and its implementation, final say over the appointment of the Director-General of the Customs Service, the Director of Tax Administration, the Director of the Treasury, and the Managing Director of the Central Banking Authority of Kosovo. There’s democracy for you.

In addition, the European Union is to establish a European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) Mission. This mission shall assist Kosovo authorities in their progress towards sustainability and accountability and in further developing and strengthening an independent judiciary, police and customs service, ensuring that these institutions are free from political interferenceand shall provide mentoring, monitoring and advice in the area of the rule of law generally, while retaining certain powers, in particular, with respect to the judiciary, police, customs and correctional services.

The ESDP mission will have [a]uthority to ensure that cases of war crimes, terrorism, organised crime, corruption, inter-ethnic crimes, financial/economic crimes, and other serious crimes are properly investigated according to the law, including, where appropriate, by international investigators acting with Kosovo authorities or independently. The mission will have the authority to ensure crimes are properly prosecuted including, where appropriate, by international prosecutors acting jointly with Kosovo prosecutors or independently. Case selection for international prosecutors shall be based upon objective criteria and procedural safeguards, as determined by the Head of the ESDP Mission. The mission will have the authority to reverse or annul operational decisions taken by the competent Kosovo authorities, as necessary, to ensure the maintenance and promotion of the rule of law, public order and security. The mission will have [a]uthority to monitor, mentor and advise on all areas related to the rule of law. The Kosovo authorities shall facilitate such efforts and grant immediate and complete access to any site, person, activity, proceeding, document, or other item or event in Kosovo.

There is also to be an International Military Presence (IMP) established by NATO; it is to operate under the authority, and be subject to the direction and political control of the North Atlantic Council through the NATO chain of command. NATO’s military presence in Kosovo does not preclude a possible future follow-on military mission by another international security organization, subject to a revised mandate. Furthermore, the IMP is to have overall responsibility for the development and training of the Kosovo Security Force, and NATO shall have overall responsibility for the development and establishment of a civilian-led organization of the Government to exercise civilian control over this Force, without prejudice to the responsibilities of the ICR. The IMP will be responsible for: Assisting and advising with respect to the process of integration in Euro-Atlantic structures and advising on the involvement of elements from the security force in internationally mandated missions.

So, Kosovo will have no say on taxation, on foreign and security policy, on customs, on law enforcement. The only thing independent about independent Kosovo is that it will be independent of Serbia. In fact, there is not the slightest pretense that duly elected Kosovo authorities will have any say about anything other than perhaps refuse collection, though, doubtless even here, the authorities will have to follow E.U. guidelines or pay a penalty.

Not that this talk of mentoring, monitoring, training, assisting, advising and investigating should be taken too seriously. After all, the United Nations hasn’t taken it too seriously during the past 8_ years; why should the European Union? Given the E.U.’s contempt for international law, its pride over its member-countries’ participation in the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia, its dismissive attitude toward Serbia’s concerns about the loss of its sovereign territory and its jurisdiction over its nationals, the idea that the E.U. is now ready to draw its sword and to come to the aid of Kosovo’s minorities is laughable. The soaring rhetoric over Kosovo’s supposed extraordinary progress, under U.N. auspices, contrasts starkly with the reality. According to Amnesty International’s recent report on U.N.-style justice in Kosovo,

[H]undreds of cases of war crimes, enforced disappearances and interethnic crimes remain unresolved (often with little or no investigation having been carried out); hundreds of cases have been closed, for the want of evidence which was neither promptly nor effectively gathered. Relatives of missing and ‘disappeared’ persons report that they have been interviewed too many times by international police and prosecutors new to their case, yet no progress is ever made.In terms of recruitment, it appears that at no stage were serious efforts made to identify and recruit the most highly qualified, experienced and appropriate candidates in the world for the job.A significant concern regarding the fairness of the trials conducted by international judges and prosecutors is the lack of attention that has been given to the rights of the defense.Many of the trial proceedingsare conducted in a language not understood by the accused or their counsel. They are not simultaneously translated in full, but simply summarized. In some cases, translated transcripts of trial proceedings are not available until long after the time for an appeal has passed.It is disturbing that of the war crimes cases conducted only onehas involved a non-Albanian victim. In that case one of the 26 victims was Serb.

Some of the problems Amnesty mentioned: Trials are conducted in absentia; there’s use of anonymous witnesses; reconstructions of the crime take place without the accused and defense counsel being present; poor translation and interpretation and use of summaries by interpreters instead of verbatim interpretation; poorly reasoned, unclear and ‘incomprehensible’ decisions; judgments based on eyewitness testimony contradicted by forensic evidence or the prior testimony of the witnesses; discrepancies between the evidence and the verdict or insufficient evidence to support the verdict; and significant differences between the oral judgment and the written judgment. Otherwise, the judiciary is in great shape, and likely to get even better under E.U. guidance.

No report about Kosovo’s dismal human rights record or its economic and political failure as a ward of international busybodies, no invocation by Serbia and Russia of international law, the Helsinki Final Act or U.N. Resolution 1244 makes any difference: Washington says it will do what it before the invasion of Iraq — ignore the United Nations and recognize independent Kosovo. Brussels says it will do likewise. Unlike 2003, however, the Russians this time have a card up their sleeves. If Kosovo is to be permitted to secede, the Russians have argued, then why not other nationalities or ethnic groups living as minorities within someone else’s state? As examples, President Vladimir Putin pointed to South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria. But he could have mentioned innumerable others: the Hungarians in Slovakia and Rumania, the Basques and Catalans in Spain, Corsicans in France, the Flemish in Belgium, Russians in Estonia and Latvia, the Turkish Cypriots.

The West responded with fury to the Russians’ argument. Russia’s position is cynical. It has no power to regain Kosovo for Serbia and the Kremlin plays its own secessionist games in Georgia and Moldova. President Vladimir Putin has simply been using Kosovo as a handy stick to beat the West and to remind the world that Russia still wields a Security Council veto, the New York Times thundered in an editorial on Dec. 6, 2007. Holbrooke accused Putin of seeking to reassert Russia’s role as a regional hegemon. The suggestion that Kosovo has any bearing on any other territorial dispute was spurious, he declared. Kosovo is a unique case and sets no precedent for separatist movements elsewhere. Why? [B]ecause in 1999, with Russian support, the United Nations was given authority to decide the future of Kosovo. This is a typically shameless Holbrooke lie. The U.N. was authorized to set up an interim administration under which the people of Kosovo can enjoy substantial autonomy within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Moreover, given the utter failure of the U.N. administration to fulfill most of the provisions of 1244, invoking this resolution as authorizing the U.N. to do something is particularly egregious. According to 1244, among the responsibilities of the interim administration was Demilitarizing the Kosovo Liberation Army, Establishing a secure environment in which refugees and displaced persons can return home in safety and ensuring that an agreed number of Yugoslav and Serbian personnel will be permitted to return to perform the following functions: Liaison with the international civil mission and the international security presence.Maintaining a presence at Serb patrimonial sites; Maintaining a presence at key border crossings. Needless to say, none of this ever took place. In any case, even if the U.N. was given the authority to decide Kosovo’s future, then that’s precisely what Russia, as permanent veto-wielding member of the Security Council, is insisting on by rejecting unilateral secession.

That Kosovo was unique has been the Western officials’ mantra for months. On Dec. 19, Zalmay Khalilzad, permanent U.S. representative to the U.N., told the U.N. Security Council that Kosovo is a unique situation — it is a land that used to be part of a country that no longer exists and that has been administered for eight years by the United Nations with the ultimate objective of definitely resolving Kosovo’s status.The policies of ethnic cleansing that the Milosevic government pursued against the Kosovar people forever ensured that Kosovo would never again return to rule by Belgrade. This is an unavoidable fact and the direct consequence of those barbaric policies.

On Dec. 21, Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried said Kosovo is obviously a unique case because there’s no other place in the world where the UN has been administering a territory pursuant to a Security Council resolution. So there’s nothing else like it, so it clearly isn’t a precedent. It is our view that Kosovo is not a precedent, not for any place. Not for south Ossetia, not for Abkhazia, not for Transnistria, not for Corsica, not for Texas. For nothing. Nothing. On Nov. 28, Under Secretary for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns declared It’s a unique situation. Milosevic tried to annihilate over one million Kosovar Albanian Muslims. He was denied that by NATO. We fought a war over it. And the United Nations and NATO and the EU have kept the peace there for eight-and-a-half years. And now, fully 94 or 95 per cent of the people that live there are Kosovar Albanian Muslims.

The sheer absurdity of Burns’ hysterical statement illustrates the lengths to which Western officials will go to justify what obviously can’t be justified. Milosevic tried to annihilate over one million Kosovar Albanian Muslims? The Foundation for Humanitarian Law led by Nata_a Kandi_, much beloved and much bankrolled by Western governments and non-governmental organizations, runs a project seeking to establish the number of dead and missing in Kosovo. According to an article in the Croatian magazine, Globus, The project has documented 9,702 people dead or missing during the war in Kosovo from 1998 to 2000. Of this number, as things stand now, 4,903 killed and missing are Albanians and 2,322 are Serbs, with the rest either belonging to other nationalities or their ethnic identity remaining uncertain. One should add also that these numbers say nothing about how people were killed, whether in combat or otherwise, and by whom. And there’s no clarification as to how many were killed by NATO bombs. What these numbers do reveal is that it was the Serbs, not the Albanians, who suffered disproportionately in Kosovo. If Burns is right and fully 94 or 95 per cent of the people that live there are Kosovar Albanian Muslims, that means that there are 19 times as many Albanians as there are Serbs in Kosovo. Yet, according to these numbers, the Albanians’ casualty numbers are only slightly more than twice the size of the Serb casualty numbers.

The war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh resulted in far worse casualty numbers. The U.S. State Department itself admits, More than 30,000 people were killed in the fighting from 1992 to 1994.According to the CIA, over 800,000 mostly ethnic Azerbaijanis were driven from the occupied lands and Armenia; about 230,000 ethnic Armenians were driven from their homes in Azerbaijan into Armenia.

In any case, if bad treatment of the local population were to disqualify a state from exercising sovereignty over part of its territory, then an awful lot of countries would be eligible for enforced amputation: Turkey would have to be stripped of Turkish Kurdistan; Israel would long ago have been given the boot from the West Bank and other occupied territories; Indonesia would be denied Aceh and Papua; Pakistan would lose Waziristan.

Kosovo’s claim to independent statehood is based on one fact only: The Albanians are the overwhelming majority in Kosovo. They are Muslims in a Christian state to which they don’t want to belong. Yet this argument is convincing only to the willfully ignorant. First, the majority of Kosovo may be Muslim; but the Kosovo Albanians are only a small minority within Serbia as a whole. Kosovo would vote overwhelmingly for independence; Serbia would vote overwhelmingly against. Serbia is a legal entity; Kosovo is not. A Serbian vote trumps a Kosovo one. Second, there is nothing unusual about an overwhelmingly-Muslim inhabited province existing within a state that is overwhelmingly non-Muslim. There are the Muslim Moros who inhabit Mindanao in the Philippines. There is the Xinjiang province in China. There is Kashmir, overwhelmingly Muslim, many of whom live under Indian rule. Russia is replete with provinces in which the population is overwhelmingly Muslim — Tatarstan, Bashkiristan, Dagestan, Chechnya. Northern Cyprus is overwhelmingly Muslim — yet, except for Turkey, no country in the world recognizes it as an independent state. Muslim Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala provinces in Thailand are waging an insurgency to free themselves from Bangkok’s Buddhist rule. And of course, there is the West Bank, yet another Muslim population, subjected to the rule of non-Muslims. In all of these cases, there has been an Islamic insurgency, a war seeking to liberate Muslims from the rule of non-Muslims, and considerable government repression. Yet, Western leaders do not splutter about unsustainable status quos, they do not demand immediate U.N. Security Council action, they do not insist that independence must be granted immediately and they do not threaten to ignore the United Nations and embrace a seceding state.

Moreover, Kosovo has hardly made an even remotely plausible case for its having earned independence. First, for all the talk of Kosovars and Kosovans, the residents of Kosovo identify themselves as either Serb or as Albanian; the languages they speak is either Serbian or Albanian. Creating a second Albanian state in Europe makes no sense whatsoever. It doesn’t govern itself. It is a ward of various international bodies. Economically, it is a basket case, and lives off vast handouts. Kosovo is an example of an ethnic minority grabbing a piece of territory, permitting unrestricted immigration by its co-nationals from a neighboring state, ethnically cleansing the territory of all other groups and thereby creating an artificial overwhelming ethnic majority, and then demanding that these actions be rewarded by the bestowal of independent statehood.

By comparison, the provinces whose demand for recognition the West rejects have been self-governing entities for years. A newly-independent Kosovo would have poor relations with Serbia and would be subjected to an economic blockade. Its electric grid is integrated within Serbia’s electric grid. Its debt has been taken care of by Serbia.

Compare Kosovo with Transnistria. Transnistria declared itself independent of Moldova in 1990. Transnistria functions as a presidential republic, with its own government and parliament. Its authorities have adopted a constitution, flag, a national anthem and a coat of arms. It has its own currency and its own military and police force. Yet the U.S.-E.U. position is that Transnistria has no right to independence, and that Moldova’s territorial integirty must be respected. In 2003, the U.S. and E.U. announced a visa boycott against the 17 members of the leadership of Transnistria, accusing them of continued obstructionism. In 2006, Ukraine introduced new customs regulations on its border with Transnistria, declaring it would only import goods from Transnistria with documents processed by Moldovan customs offices. The U.S., E.U. and OSCE applauded Ukraine’s action, even though it was effectively imposing a blockade. In 2006, Transnistria held a referendum in which 97.2 percent of voters voted for independence. The OSCE refused to send observers, and the E.U. immediately announced that it wouldn’t recognize the referendum results. This is the same OSCE, E.U. and U.S. that, a few months earlier, had leapt to recognize the results of Montenegro’s independence referendum, despite the fact that the vote in favor of independence was a bare majority, rather than the two-thirds normally required for a constitutional change, and that Montenegrins living in Serbia were denied the right to vote in the referendum.

Compare Kosovo with South Ossetia. Ossetians have their own language. South Ossetia had been an autonomous oblast within the Soviet Socialist Republic of Georgia. In 1990, the Georgian Supreme Soviet revoked its autonomy. The OSCE declared its firm commitment to support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia. In November 2006, 99 percent of South Ossetians voted for independence from Georgia. The usual gaggle of international bodies howled with indignation. The European Union, OSCE, NATO and the USA condemned the referendum. The Council of Europe called the referendum unnecessary, unhelpful and unfair.[T]he vote did nothing to bring forward the search for a peaceful political solution. The OSCE declared South Ossetia’s intention to hold a referendum counterproductive. It will not be recognized by the international community and it will not be recognized by the OSCE and it will impede the peace process. NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said On behalf of NATO, I join other international leaders in rejecting the so-called ‘referendum’.Such actions serve no purpose other than to exacerbate tensions in the South Caucasus region.

Nagorno-Karabakh can also make a vastly stronger case than Kosovo for independence. Since 1923, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast had been part of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, even though about 94 percent of its population was Armenian. In November 1991, the parliament of the Azerbaijan SSR abolished the autonomous status of the oblast. In response, in December 1991, Nagorno-Karabakh held a referendum, which overwhelmingly approved the creation of an independent state. Yet the E.U., the OSCE and the United States took the line that Nagorno-Karabakh must remain a part of Azerbaijan, irrespective of the fact that almost 100 per cent of the populace wants out. Interestingly, in declaring itself independent in 1991, Azerbaijan claimed to be the successor state to the Azerbaijan republic that existed from 1918 to 1920. The League of Nations, however, did not recognize Azerbaijan’s inclusion of Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan’s claimed territory. This makes Nagorno-Karabakh’s inclusion within Azerbaijan even more questionable. If the states that seceded from the Soviet Union are to be regarded as independent states, it’s hard to see on what basis parts of those states are to be denied the right to independence.

In 2002, Nagorno-Karabakh held a presidential election; in response, the European Union presidency declared The European Union confirms its support for the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, and recalls that it does not recognise the independence of Nagorno Karabakh.The European Union cannot consider legitimate the ‘presidential elections.’…The European Union does not believe that these elections should have an impact on the peace process.

In December 2006, Nagorno-Karabakh held another referendum on independence: Something like 98 per cent favored independence. The European Union immediately announced it wouldn’t recognize the results of the referendum and said that only a negotiated settlement between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenians who control the region can bring a lasting solution.The E.U. recalls that it does not recognize the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh. It recognizes neither the ‘referendum’ nor its outcome. The E.U. added that holding the referendum pre-empts the outcome of negotiations and that it did not contribute to constructive efforts at peaceful conflict resolution. The E.U.’s attitude here is strikingly different from its attitude on Kosovo. On Kosovo, the E.U. holds Serbia’s refusal to relinquish its sovereign territory as the reason for the failure of negotiations, which supposedly is the justification for Kosovo’s declaration of independence.

The West’s entire approach to Kosovo has been marked by sordid dishonesty and bad faith, supporting national self-determination and the right to secession in one place and territorial integrity in another, cheering on ethnic cleansing by one ethnic group and demanding war crimes trials for another, trumpeting the virtues of majority rule when it’s convenient to do so and threatening to impose sanctions and penalties on majorities when that’s convenient. For the Americans, Kosovo is nothing more than the hinterland of a giant military base, a key presence in the eastern Mediterranean should Greece or Turkey prove unreliable. As for the duly grateful Albanians, they are expected to repay their benefactors by agreeing to be cannon fodder in future imperial wars. For the Europeans, Kosovo is an opportunity to show the world that Europe counts for something and to conduct various pointless social experiments in multiculturalism and multiconfessionalism — particularly pointless since Kosovo will be one of the most ethnically homogeneous places in Europe.

–George Szamuely lives in New York and can be reached at:

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Al Qadhafi meets with Legislative Legal and Human Rights Committee

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

The leader of the Libyan Revolution met, yesterday afternoon in Tripoli, with the Legislative, Legal and Human Rights Committee of the Arab Transitional Parliament, which began its meeting yesterday in Tripoli . The meeting is devoted to set the statute of the permanent Arab Parliament.

During this meeting, an intellectual political dialogue was conducted between the Leader and the head and members of the committee in the presence of the Speaker of Arab Transitional Parliament, its Secretary General, Assistant Secretary, its Rapporteur and the Assistant Secretary of the General People’s Congress, about the Arab state of affairs in this era that surpassed the national state and where the world map has become consisting of huge spaces and entities.

At the outset of the dialogue, the Leader of the Libyan Revolution said Establishment of the parliament is a good move, but there is readiness to call for regional unities, tripartite unity or bilateral. The rulers lagged in this respect, especially the Arabs; the world has changed rapidly; the world’s map changed and became in a better form and on new bases; our past information and currency are no longer effective in the current market of globalization.

Unfortunately, when it is too late, they are still running behind development.

I frankly tell you, without any compliments; I neither cheat the Arab national, nor others; I tell the truth always; the past stage was the stage of the national unities; the states, before, were formed on the national basis.

When you say Persians, it means the Iranian state, that means the Persian nationalism forms the state of Iran; and when you say, for instance, Turkish, then this means the Turkish state; when you say China; what is China? China is a great nation, and so is when you say Saxon. Britons are one state; Italians are one State; Germans are one State; the American are one State; and any one enters America and attains its nationality, becomes an American, consequently the American state was formed.

The Unitarian Arabs struggled during that time in order to realize the unity of their nation, similar to those nations, but nothing was achieved, because there had been internal and external factors that played key role to frustrate the Unitarian project, no matter whether the project led by Jamal Abdul nasser or the project that was led by the Great Al-Fateh revolution or any other previous attempts led by revolutionary parties or national batish and Arab parties.

All of them tried and called for the national unity, serious attempts have been conducted; revolutions and coups took place, some people sacrificed; others sent to jail; some people lost their lives for this goal.

But, unfortunately that stage has passed; and the world entered another stage; it is neither a stage of nationalism, religion, language nor culture .. that means the huge demographic spaces, discarding sex, colour, language and religion.

The European Union is now on its way to become one state, with one currency, one army, one visa, and one central bank. North America is made up of 50 countries like us .. they created one space and one state. South America could set up a union or united states. Africa now we transformed it into the African Union from Organisation of African Unity with the ultimate goal of creating the United States of Africa.

The ASEAN group is forming up and will transform into one state at some point, with a unified currency and a common market. The south pacific, Asian nations and the Indian Ocean, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Srilanka despite the current animosity between India and Pakistan will be driven by the tide of globalisation to create one space to serve their common interests. China is a power of its own right, the Commonwealth of Independent States which is made up of former Soviet Union countries will follow suit.

This means that the world map is made up at most of 7 to 10 countries.

He who does not belong to a big space have no leverage, no huge consumer market no huge productivity and indeed no competitive edge in a multi-trillion exports market and hence no chance to survive.

The national state, which we got used to it, is diminishing, because it has lost much of components of its existence that taken by the globalization and other sides.

The Arabs have bad luck, there are now existing on improper geographical area .. some of them are in Asia, some in Africa; they are not in Asia, but they are at the edges of Asia; some of them are closer to the Mediterranean than Asia; some are separated in the Arab peninsula and in the gulf .. separated from Asia and Africa as well; they are alone and they are concerning neither the Mediterranean, Africa nor Asia; they are separated from all.

The Arabs live their lives in this way, wasting time, whereas the world is changing. In this world, there are serious men who are building new situation and new future, like the Europeans who are serious to build the strong Europe; the American, on the other hand, are serious to defend the United States of America despite of various ethnic divisions.

Only the Arabs who are not serious, as if they are not living in the world, now; it is regrettable thing.

Nowadays, nationalism, religion and language are no longer acceptable currency in this area of spaces.

Two third of Arabs are in Africa; Africa is their space; and when you mention another Arab state, or another place, then its has no concern to him and has no relation with it.

Africa is a demographic space; it is people, land and common soil .. common faith .. common future. There will be common market, one unit, one army, one central bank and one Africa identity; it must be like this before Europe, Latin America, North America, China, ASEAN, the independent countries and the Indian Ocean.

Arabs are torn before the globalization between Asia and Africa; we, the two third, are Africans; we are seeking to build Africa .. the African Union or the United States of African if we can in future.

The Arabs who are not with us in Africa do not take part this process .. one can tell you: I am not African, but can not tell you I am not Arab .. imagine, you are an Arab and you are an Arab, but he tells you this is an African and this is not.

Any one from Mozambique or from Ethiopia tells you: I am not an Asian .. I am an African.

Therefore, nationalism does not gather us, but the geographical location and demography do.

Yemeni tells you: I am not an African, although his is close to Africa; he tells that he is an Arab, but not African. Therefore the decision is whether he is an African or not; and it is not whether he is an Arab or not.

How do People from Gulf or Arab Peninsula answer if they asked to what entity they belong?

This the current reality. At last the Arabs start to think of a parliament. I am not sure if the notion came as part of the fashion prevailing in the world. They watched the world, and began to imitate, with no sincerity for there existed other things that take precedence over the parliament.

I mean establishment of such parliament is a good idea which we encourage. But if sincerity and a comprehensive thinking are there, there are a host of characteristics that come with entity. how can be the parliament alone?, is it a legislative or consultative?, if legislative, to whom it makes legislation?, what are the other authorities that are accountable to it?, where is the one judicial and executive authority?

It is good, a word that should be put in a sentence to make a cohesion.

If you put this before the Arab Summit, or elsewhere they will not respond, they will have no sincerity. If you ask them to create one state, one union, they will not respond. Arabs harbour more animosity to their fellow Arabs than to their enemy. For example Israelis are closer to Arabs than Arabs to their fellow Arabs, they embrace each other, while an Arab does not talk to an Arab.. there is animosity between a large number of Arab countries. a total break up, closed borders and threats of wars unfortunately.

What should Iraq say about Arabs who carried US tanks on their shoulders and entered them into the homes of Iraqi women?, what Iraq can say about Arabs in Future?, should he ally itself with the devil against the Arabs? so is the Palestinian who was betrayed by the Arabs.

The Arabs have quarter of the global petroleum reserve .. it is supposed that whole world should be bowing down to Arabs, but now the Arabs are the ones who are bowing down to Americans and Europeans .. they give petroleum and in addition to that they bow down .. it is regrettable, there is no seriousness.

The parliament is good now, but we have neither established another political entity nor political or economical unity.

Relations among Arabs are like the relations with foreign states .. any foreign state and foreign state .. they are Arabs and have one land; they are brothers, as if we are one family; but politically, economically and practically we are foreign states .. each one has its own currency .. the currency is dinar in this country, and the pound in that; each country has its own budget; this country has an army; that country has an army too; this has income; this does not have; this has friends; friends of this are enemy of that; we have borders separating us and passports; we have our own economy, clearance and accounts between us .. as if you are exactly dealing with a foreign state .. that means there is nothing.

It might be said that this is an Arab and an Arab, but from the economical, political and practical points of view, they are foreign states.

When it comes to our neighbours, Tunisia and others, Libyan interrelations with Chad and Niger are better off than that with Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt and Sudan. We have barbed wires and gates between us. This is our Arab situation.

I think that you commit yourselves to go down this road and cling to it. You could have a chance to attract Arabs to do something serious.

The Arab Parliament demands so and so, or it could well decide that there must be a political unity, a military unity a common market and one currency.

Having said this I must say I see a different reality, because it is hard for us in Africa to be with the Arabs in Asia though we are Arabs. Unity will never come because we are backward..if Arab unity involved the Arab north Africa, Syria and the Arab Peninsula, it would be an Arab state like Turkey occupying a part of Europe and other of Asia, and like Latin America where Mexico is Latin, as are central America and the Caribbean. If they are united they would have taken parts of North America and South America.

If Arabs united and had one state covering North Africa, Syria and the peninsula, then Africa was established, it would become Africa beyond the Sahara on its own and we are a state to deal with it on this basis. But this does not happened.

Now there are 5+5 in the western Mediterranean overlooking the sea and then there is the eastern Mediterranean which is seeking to establish a gathering bringing together Turkey, Israelis, Palestinians, Syrians, Lebanese, Jordanians, and Egyptians, it could be an other gathering. The western Mediterranean which is 5+5, and the Gulf Cooperation Council which stands on its own. As for the Arab Maghreb, it turned into 5+5, there is no Arab Maghreb ..there isn’t such story.

I’m the president of the Arab Maghreb, I say the truth ..there is nothing ..there is geography ..there are people, but on the side there is nothing ..there are no relations on the contrary there are animosities..closed borders.

I want to tell you these facts which you certainly know yourselves . I only will say to you after introducing it in this manner that you strive to highlight it and to defend whatever can be defended; if there is a possibility of establishing an Arab entity and Arab unity, you do not suffice by holding parliament meetings but it should be an instigating tribune that incites Arabs to build other establishments in parallel to the parliament if there is a possibility to establish that.

We, in Africa will establish some thing similar to a state, Africa could become one state in the future and no one will ask you, are you an Arab or not an Arab.

Though, we have in Africa different languages, races and religions where there are those who are pagans, there are Christians and Muslims. There are races in Africa such as the Bantu, others Negroes, Arabs etc. They also do not speak one language since each African country has several languages within and speak with each other in English, French, Portuguese and Arabic, which are the prevailing languages; but we will establish one entity and we have decided to establish African Central Bank, African Monetary Fund and African Saving and Investment Bank , there is thinking in one currency in the future and an African Army and African Court and African identity.

We are serious , this is a continent that will unite because it is afraid to remain a backyard or a mine for others. The Africans are worried about themselves and in turn they will unite.

For Arabs , our situation is in the form that we talked about).

Interposition of the Assistant Secretary of the General People’s Congress:

(This committee is legislative and legal; its function, during this meeting, is to organize constitutive act of the permanent parliament; Arab permanents parliament.

Brothers highly appreciate you, your efforts and struggle within the Arab context; you spoke of true things, which they agree on; they need your opinion and directives regarding the basic system of the parliament. They will adhere to the first idea you have presented,