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As featured on p. 218 of "Bloggers on the Bus," under the name "a MyDD blogger."

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

World Report

Here are a few things that caught my eye.

• Will you look at that, another foreign policy failure for the Bush Administration. They're basically saying that, with the Israeli government in a fair bit of turmoil, there isn't likely to be any movement on a Mideast peace deal. This is what happens when you wait 7 1/2 years to pay any attention to the Arab-Israeli conflict. I know the economic crisis is all-consuming, but Obama would do well to attack this early in his Administration, because it truly is the linchpin to peace throughout the region, and ignoring it for years will only cause more violence and resentment.

• Not that Israel is necessarily going to be inclined to cooperation with Obama. Tzipi Livni, who is the more "dovish" of aspirants for the Prime Minister's post, warned the President-elect that dialogue with Iran would be unwise because it may project "weakness." I don't think Obama will agree - but this gives you an insight into the prevailing mindset in Israel regarding Iran, driven more by paranoia than facts (the consensus of the US intelligence community is that Iran has no nukes, a fact that is conveniently forgotten).

• The E.U. is eager for financial reforms to regulate international banks, but waiting for President Bush to do the right thing is a Godot-like experience. Their plan, to hammer out reforms now and reassess them when Obama takes office with his input, is decent enough, I just think it's wishful thinking.

• Practically the only politician coming out of the financial fallout looking sound is Gordon Brown, who was one of the few to implement a solution that matched the problem. Voters in England appear to be responding by giving his party a boost, as Labour won a key byelection in Scotland. Brown was part of the Blair regime that was as asleep at the switch as every other world government leading up to the crisis, so I'm not sure he deserves all this praise, but I do think he's recovered enough to actually contend for his re-election instead of the sure defeat to the Tories predicted earlier.

• All hell is breaking loose in Zimbabwe, and right on schedule. After negotiating a power-sharing agreement, Robert Mugabe is now going to form his own government and deny cabinet posts to his rival Morgan Tsvangirai. The only surprise is that this didn't happen sooner. I hope Tsvangirai has a food-taster. Mugabe plays for keeps.

• Remember when the Russian "invasion" of Georgia was the greatest international crisis since the end of the Cold War? Turns out that it not only was not a consequential crisis on par with, say, the war in Iraq, but it was not a Russian invasion.

TBILISI, Georgia — Newly available accounts by independent military observers of the beginning of the war between Georgia and Russia this summer call into question the longstanding Georgian assertion that it was acting defensively against separatist and Russian aggression.

Instead, the accounts suggest that Georgia’s inexperienced military attacked the isolated separatist capital of Tskhinvali on Aug. 7 with indiscriminate artillery and rocket fire, exposing civilians, Russian peacekeepers and unarmed monitors to harm.


This is good journalism but you could have considered the source of the scaremongering - neocons with an agenda - back when the whole thing was in the news, and drawn the same conclusion. Neocons are wrong about everything. And the way to break their lock on power is to find everyone who hasn't been wrong about everything, regardless of ideology or political party, and put them in a room together, and unify them against these clowns. There's a lot at stake.

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