THOUGHT FOR THE DAY!

"We are entering a new phase in human history -- one in which fewer and fewer workers will be needed to produce the goods and services for the global population."-- Jeremy Rifkin, economist

 

AFRICA

Dec 24 08:40

Somali Islamists must be part of peace deal-report

Somalia's government and the international community must deal with Islamists to avoid a security crisis when Ethiopian troops withdraw later this month, a think-tank said on Tuesday.

"Despite the reluctance of the international community to engage with the Islamist opposition, there is no other practical course than to reach out to its leaders in an effort to stabilise the security situation with a ceasefire and then move on with a process that addresses the root causes," ICG said.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This is a logical, credible approach, which means that the US is likely to ignore it completely.

What this is all about, at the end of the day from the US perspective, is having a Western-leaning government in place in terms of developing Somalia's vast untapped natural resources.

Dec 23 21:07

Obama, Gen. Ward : Black puppets for Africa

Kip’s Folly: A Black Commander for U.S. Forces in Africa
Africa - US Imperialism in Africa
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
by Mark P. Fancher

"From Clarence Thomas to Colin Powell to Condoleezza Rice - and many more African American mercenaries in between - U.S. rulers have had little problem finding Black front men and women for their intrigues and adventures."

Dec 21 17:52

Mugabe unleashes wave of terror with mass abductions

Fears are mounting in Zimbabwe for the lives of more than 40 opposition officials and human rights activists who have been abducted as part of a renewed crackdown by the regime in Harare. At least two more members of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change have disappeared in the past week, along with a freelance investigative reporter.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

One wonders just how much more the Zimbabwean people will be willing to take until this regime just crumbles from its own weight of neglect and corruption.

Dec 20 07:32

Forget Depp: Somali pirates risk all for riches, women

NAIROBI, Kenya - There's at least one job these days that's recession-proof, if you can handle shark-infested seas, outrun some of the world's most powerful navies, and keep your cool when your hostages get antsy.

A pirate's life in Somalia isn't for everyone. However, nothing comes easily in one of the poorest and most unstable countries on Earth, and when you consider the dearth of career options for Somalis on land, a pirate's life starts to look more than cushy by comparison.

Dec 18 18:09

Zimbabwe cholera toll hits 1,111: UN

This figure, as horrific as it is, may well not be telling the full story.

As reported in

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/world-news/cholera-kills-3000-in-zimbabwe-14080561.html

Dec 18 11:10

Abandoned by the World: UN Declares Open Season on Somalia

And now the Bush Regime -- going out in a Götterdämmerung of blood and fury aimed at the world (and at the American people) -- wants to intensify the chaos in Somalia, laying it bare to more invasions, "precision strikes," death squad operations, renditions and other atrocities, this time coming from not just from Washington and its Terror War proxies but from all directions.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

But this act is "blood and fury" with a very specific purpose: to ultimately install a pliant government in Mogadishu which will look favorably on the development of Somalia's natural resources, once this is all over.

Dec 18 10:09

US says piracy resolution allows for air strikes in Somalia

The US government said Wednesday that it believes a new UN Security Council resolution on Somalia authorizes air strikes against pirates in Somali territory.

The resolution "authorizes states cooperating with the Somali Transitional Federal Government to extend counter-piracy efforts to include potential operations in Somali territorial land and air space, to suppress acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea," the State Department said in a statement.

The final version of resolution 1851 does not explicitly say Somali air space can be used.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Memo to the UN Security Council: are you collectively deaf, dumb, and blind to what you have done by not explicitly stating in this resolution that Somali air space cannot be used?!?

The US government's position has been characterized as believing that this resolution "....authorizes air strikes against pirates in Somali territory."

And just what kind of action may the US think it has license to do, courtesy of this resolution??

Very possibly bombing the crap out of innocent men, women, and kids in order to prop up a completely dysfunctional government, now that the US-backed Ethiopian troops are (theoretically) going to be leaving Somalia shortly.

And why? Because the Muslim insurgency is becoming stronger, or that Somalia "may become a hotbed for terrorists" if they take over the government?

Think again: ever wonder why the term "war on terror" only seems to apply to countries sitting over enormous natural resources?

What the US wants is a pliant government in Mogadishu which will be favorable to Western countries in terms of developing Somalia's vast natural resources.

If the US thinks it has "carte blanche" to do this at least for the year this resolution runs, look to the US to initate a massive bombing campaign over sovereign Somali territory to decimate the insurgents.

Dec 18 09:01

U.S. Proposes International Gang Rape of Somalia

"The Bush regime now seeks to turn Somalia into a ‘free fire zone' in which any country in the world can shoot and bomb and kill at will."

Dec 17 22:36

US Commandos to attack in Somali

From The Times
December 18, 2008
American commandos get UN go-ahead to hunt down Somali pirates
Michael Evans, Defence Editor

Pirates operating from safe havens along the Somali coast could become the target of hot-pursuit missions by American commandos for the first time, after approval was given by the United Nations Security Council to launch land and air attacks on pirate bases.

Dec 17 09:50

Somalia's fractured government slides into chaos

Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf named a new prime minister on Tuesday, snubbing a vote by parliament to reinstate sacked premier Nur Hassan Hussein and further deepening rifts in the fractured government.

The split at the top of the Western-backed government is blamed for stalling a U.N.-hosted peace process and threatens to tear the weak administration apart at a time Islamist insurgents are camped on the outskirts of the capital Mogadishu.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Somalia's current government is about to fall apart at the seams, and US intervention (through backing an Ethiopian occupation of Somalia) is very deeply at the heart of its current chaos.

This was never about "protecting" the Somali people; it was, and continues to be, about installing a government favorable to Western countries developing the vast, yet untapped, wealth of this country.

Dec 17 08:20

UN gives OK to land, air attacks on Somali pirates

The resolution sets up the possibility of increased American military action in Somalia, a chaotic country where a U.S. peacekeeping mission in 1992-93 ended with a humiliating withdrawal of troops after a deadly clash in Mogadishu, as portrayed in the movie "Black Hawk Down."

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This actually has nothing, really, to do with piracy, or "protecting" the Somalian people.

And if what the US-backed Ethiopian troops have been doing for the last two years can be characterized as "protection", I'll eat my hat.

It's about the US having the justification to go into Somalia to insure that its government is inclined to have western companies exploit its vast natural resources.

I have to shake my head in disbelief, because passing of this resolution gives yet another UN mandate to the US to act rashly and foolishly.

One would think that the UN would have learned by now, after what the US did in its interpretation of the Resolution on Iraq.

Apparently, that was not the case.

Dec 16 09:52

US to Propose UN Authorize Ground Raids into Somalia

A Bush administration proposal to allow foreign forces to go ashore into Somalia to hunt the country's notorious pirates is getting a cool reception from U.S. military leaders, regional analysts and some Somali officials.

The proposal — which Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to put forward Tuesday at the United Nations Security Council — is the boldest yet aimed at stopping the pirates, who've hijacked 55 ships this year, secured tens of millions of dollars in ransoms and kneecapped maritime trade between Europe and Asia.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Considering just how brilliantly the UN mandate in Iraq went, the UN would be collectively mad to approve of such a proposal.

Let us hope the "cool reception" extends to a permanent deep-freeze on this kind of cowboy, knee-jerk proposal on the part of the US government.

This is not about the piracy, or "protecting" the Somalis from an impending Islamic government (which hasn't gone very well for the US-backed Ethiopian occupation, or the Somali people, thank you very much).

This is about getting a Somali government in place which is sympathetic to western development of the country's vast untapped resources.

Dec 14 09:19

U.S. Will Push U.N. for Somalia Mission

Meanwhile, the commander of the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, Vice Adm. Bill Gortney, cast doubt on the wisdom of a separate U.S. plan to seek U.N. approval for commando raids against pirates on Somali soil, saying the possibility of inflicting civilian casualties "cannot be overestimated," according to the Associated Press.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

In the next flipping administration, can we PLEASE HAVE SOME ADULTS IN THE ROOM REGARDING US FOREIGN POLICY?!?!?!?

Remember 3 weeks week ago when Somali pirates attacked that tanker, and US warships refused to intervene?!? Was that because the US needed the pirates to justify an invasion of Somalia??

I cannot begin to tell you what a refreshing change that would be from the last 8 years, although the jury is still very much out as to whether this will be the case.

But for the US government, at this late date, with a lame duck administration, to have the gall, the hubris, of trying to get a UN mandate about the US conducting "....commando raids against pirates on Somali soil....", it is very clear what is going on here.

The US backed Ethiopian forces have absolutely made a complete, abysmal mess of their attempt to occupy Somalia.

As reported in the Telegraph:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/ethiopia/...

""The testimony we received strongly suggests that war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity have been committed by all parties and no one is being held accountable," said Michelle Kagari, Amnesty's deputy director for Africa."

These same troops are supposed to be exiting the country, and the Islamists are resurgent.

But this US request has nothing to do with the fact that Somalia is close to becoming an Islamist state, and that the US is concerned that it will be an "incubator for terror"; it has everything to do with having a governmental structure in place which will favor the West when it comes to divvying up the largely unexploited resources of this country.

I would far rather see this country invest in the vision, technical savvy, and drive of American entrepreneurs to come up with workable, affordable energy alternatives than invest in wars of conquest.

We are the first country which, with will, determination and imagination, put men on the moon. One would think that in the 21st century, we'd have better answers to getting resources than wars of conquest.

Dec 13 10:05

Parties earn vast sums from illegal trade in minerals

Proceeds from the control of lucrative natural resources, from gold and coltan to charcoal and cows, remain a key driver of the insecurity in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

The report by the UN Group of Experts on Congo states that the main parties to the recent fighting - Hutu and Tutsi-aligned rebel groups as well as government forces - continue to earn vast sums from artisanal mines and captured farmland.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Africa, with its vast and untapped resources, is rapidly becoming the next "Middle East" in terms of foreign countries' battles for its resources at the cost of its people.

Dec 13 09:14

Floundering Somali Govt Nears Collapse

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi declared “mission accomplished” in their two-year military effort to prop up the self-appointed transitional national government of Somalia, and told parliament that Ethiopian forces would withdraw from the nation within weeks. Zenawi claimed the mission was meant to “defuse the plan orchestrated by Eritrea,” but conceded that it was not possible to bring lasting peace to Somalia.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

How "Bushian" of Ethiopian Prime Minister to declare "mission accomplished", with about just the same kind of catastrophes waiting for Somalia those which were about to come to Iraq after Bush uttered those words so many years ago.

Dec 12 10:15

Zimbabwe neighbors should seal borders-US official

Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe could be forced to step down if South Africa and other neighbors take the bold step of sealing their borders with the landlocked country, a senior U.S. official said Thursday.

"It takes something as simple as closing the borders. Zimbabwe is a landlocked country. The closure of the border, literally in a week would bring this country to its knees," he said.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

A memo to the unsourced moron who made this comment.

Shutting the borders would mean that desperate Zimbabweans suffering from malnutrition and cholera would have no way of getting out, and getting at least some help, which South Africa and Mozambique have been generously providing in terns of re -hydration drips, even though their own health resources are very stretched.

Mugabe will not be brought to his knees by a border lockdown: he's seen to it that he has provisions, troops, and money in place to keep that from happening.

It's the people dying of cholera who will drop to their knees - and die.

Dec 11 19:31

Allies seek power to pursue Somali pirates on land and sea

The United States is seeking international authorisation allowing foreign navies to pursue Somali pirates on land as well as at sea in an effort to curb the growing threat to international shipping lines.

A draft proposal granting nations that are combating piracy permission to “take all necessary measures ashore in Somalia” is being circulated among UN Security Council members before a key meeting on the crisis next week.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Are you kidding me?!?!

This is not about pirates.

from:

indexmundi.com/somalia/natural_resources.html

"Natural resources: uranium and largely unexploited reserves of iron ore, tin, gypsum, bauxite, copper, salt, natural gas, likely oil reserves"

This is, ultimately, about who controls the disposition of the vast resource wealth of Somalia, and which foreign powers will get first dibs on carving that wealth up.

Dec 11 10:10

Cholera victims turned away

Under normal circumstances the water-borne disease is relatively easy to treat. In Zimbabwe it is spreading uncontrolled amid the country's economic collapse and political turmoil as the 28-year-old regime of the President, Robert Mugabe, clings to power after disputed elections.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

And as this continues, and the world watches, Mugabe states, with an absolutely straight face, that there is no cholera in Zimbabwe?!?!?

Dec 11 09:03

Sharif back in Mogadishu as death toll hits 16,210

Somalia's moderate Islamist leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed returned to Mogadishu for the first time in two years on Wednesday and a local rights group said fighting had killed 16,210 civilians since then.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This is yet another of the Bush administration's covert military misadventures, gone awry.

But of course, it was Bush's foreign policy which supported the Ethiopian troops in their takeover of the country, through an interim government.

The outcome was as predictable as the other "successes" of this administration's foreign policy.

The real question is, who gets dibs on the vast wealth of natural resources this country possesses, if Sharif Ahmed does come back to govern?

Dec 11 07:48

Mugabe: 'There is no cholera in Zimbabwe

“I am happy to say our doctors have been assisted by others and WHO (the World Health Organization)... so now that there is no cholera,” said Mr Mugabe, in a speech screened on national television.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

There will be a point in Zimbabwe where, no matter how many henchmen Mugabe has surrounding him, the people will be unable to take any more of what he has done to them, and this country.

Were I a betting person, I would almost be willing to be that this point is not too terribly far away for the Zimbabwean people.

Dec 10 07:19

Witnesses: Ethiopians troops pouring into Somalia

Ethiopian troops are pouring into neighboring Somalia to fight radical Islamists who have taken over much of the country, raising fears of more violence in a country fighting a deadly insurgency and piracy, witnesses and the Somali government said Tuesday.

The Ethiopians' advance comes just weeks before they are scheduled to withdraw after an unpopular, two-year presence here. The Ethiopians are integral to protecting the Western-backed government, and their planned withdrawal at the end of the month will likely herald the administration's collapse.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

An Ethiopian troop "surge" and a "scheduled withdrawal" are mutually exclusive.

Right now, with new Ethiopian forces pouring over the Somalian border, I wouldn't place any bets at all on this "scheduled withdrawal" happening anytime soon.

Dec 07 14:21

Hyperinflation forces Zimbabwe to print $200 million notes

Dec 07 09:37

Situation in Somalia Seems About to Get Worse

The United States failed disastrously in its peacekeeping mission in the early 1990s. (Remember “Black Hawk Down”?) In 2005 and 2006, the C.I.A. paid some of Somalia’s most reviled warlords to fight the Islamists. That backfired. In the winter of 2006, the United States took a third approach, encouraging Ethiopia to invade and backing them with American airstrikes and intelligence.

“The Bush administration made a major miscalculation,” said Dan Connell, who teaches African politics at Simmons College in Boston.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Hey, it wouldn't be Bush foreign policy without a "major miscalculation".

Every foreign policy decision made by this administration has featured one - or more - "major miscalculation", ultimately exploding in its face like a really bad trick cigar.

Dec 07 09:25

Intervention call as cholera spreads

WESTERN calls for radical intervention in Zimbabwe rose dramatically over the weekend as the United Nations warned that the number of cholera cases in the region could reach 60,000 and the death toll rise to 3000.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

OK, the West is calling for "...radical intervention".

Uh, just which countries' armies are going to be dispatched by their governments to provide that "intervention"?

Any takers?

Thought not.

Dec 07 08:57

Invisible Children

In the spring of 2003, three young Americans traveled to Africa in search of such as story. What they found was a tragedy that disgusted and...all » In the spring of 2003, three young Americans traveled to Africa in search of such as story. What they found was a tragedy that disgusted and inspired them. A story where children are weapons and children are the victims. The "Invisible Children: rough cut" film exposes the effects of a 20 year-long war on the children of Northern Uganda.

Dec 07 08:49

Open letter to Dr John Sentamu, Archbishop of York

Condoleezza Rice and Gordon Brown are among the main responsible for the slaughter of more than a million innocent children of God in Iraq and dozens of thousands in Afghanistan but in your view that very same God would be acting through their blood-stained hands. What a grotesque (and sexist) idea of God you must have to invoke Her name in this unholy farce. Or do you think those innocent human beings are children of a lesser god?

Dec 04 08:13

MAP OF THE PNAC PLAN (Large graphic; heavy download)

Dec 03 06:32

Zimbabwe on edge of the abyss: Riot police charge protesting doctors as cholera epidemic infects up to 12,500 people

Zimbabwe riot police charged protesting doctors, nurses and union members with batons early today.

At least one hundred doctors and nurses protested outside the health ministry in the capital of Harare as the country faced the worst cholera crisis in its history.

Zimbabwean trade unions have also called a day of protest over a deepening banking and cash shortage crisis.

Dec 03 05:14

Somalia: Another CIA-Backed Coup Blows Up

Up until a month ago, no one in the Bush administration showed the least bit of interest in the incidents of piracy off the coast of Somalia. Now that's all changed and there's talk of sending in the Navy to patrol the waters off the Horn of Africa and clean up the pirates hideouts. Why the sudden about-face? Could it have something to do with the fact that the Ethiopian army is planning to withdrawal all of its troops from Mogadishu by the end of the year, thus, ending the failed two year US-backed occupation of Somalia?

Dec 02 23:47

Police open fire as soldiers turn on Mugabe

POLICE shot at rioting soldiers in Harare on Monday as unpaid troops sided with the country's impoverished people for the first time in protest against Zimbabwe's collapsing economy.

Tensions erupted when about 50 soldiers were denied money from banks after queueing all day.

The soldiers, who were wearing camouflage dress, staged an impromptu protest. They were joined by hundreds of civilians at the corner of Robert Mugabe and Fourth streets, in the heart of the capital. When armed riot police arrived to break up the demonstration, the soldiers from Cranborne Barracks fought back.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Thailand, Iceland, now Zimbabwe...

Dec 02 16:02

Mob runs riot as Zimbabwe runs out of water

The seething anger felt by ordinary Zimbabweans exploded yesterday as hundreds of off-duty soldiers went on the rampage in the centre of Harare. Witnesses said that the violence erupted at a bus depot on the edge of the city centre where soldiers, frustrated at not being able to draw cash from banks, confronted illegal moneychang-ers. The dealers scattered and the soldiers turned on the city, followed by civilians spurring them on.

Nov 30 08:55

Zimbabwe Cholera Toll Rises As Rainy Season Comes

Zimbabwe health authorities say 425 people have died in a cholera outbreak and they are concerned it will worsen with the onset of the rainy season.

More than 11,000 people have been sickened since August, the official Sunday Mail newspaper reported. The number of cases has shot up in the past two weeks.

City authorities in Harare on Friday offered free graves to impoverished families of cholera victims.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

You have to wonder just how long the Zimbabwean people will be willing to put up with a government which has robbed them blind, and robbed them of any hope for the future.

Nov 30 08:43

Hundreds die in fighting after Nigeria election

Hundreds of people were killed in the central Nigerian city of Jos when Christians and Muslims clashed over the result of a local election, witnesses said Saturday.

Local residents said several churches and mosques were razed in the violence, which started with a rumour that the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP) had lost the election to the federal ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP).

The ANPP is perceived locally to be a predominantly Muslim party, and the PDP to be mainly Christian.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Apparently, in the waning days of 2008, we are no further along as a species than killing in the name of God.....on a rumor.

That's pretty damned depressing.

Nov 28 18:11

Hatred in the Time of Cholera

A cholera epidemic is sweeping across Zimbabwe, with over 9,000 cases and 360 deaths, according to the United Nations. Local sources tell me these figures underplay the seriousness of the problem.

Today cholera can easily be controlled by maintaining simple sanitary standards — but there is no running water in much of Zimbabwe today, and sanitation systems have collapsed

Webmaster's Commentary: 

One has to wonder how much more the Zimbabwean people are willing to take of Mugabe.

Nov 26 09:10

NOBODY IS WATCHING'; America's hidden war in Somalia

It is a policy time bomb that will be inherited by the incoming Obama administration: a little-known front in the global war on terrorism that Washington appears to be losing, if it hasn't already been lost.

"Somalia is one of the great unrecognized U.S. policy failures since 9/11," said Ken Menkhaus, a leading Somalia scholar at Davidson College in North Carolina. "By any rational metric, what we've ended up with there today is the opposite of what we wanted."

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This is yet another one of Bush's foreign policy "victories" which is about to explode in our faces like the proverbial bad trick cigar.

Nov 25 19:44

3,000 dead from cholera in Zimbabwe

A senior official in the health ministry told The Independent yesterday that more than 3,000 people have died from the water-borne disease in the past two weeks, 10 times the widely-reported death toll of just over 300. "But even this higher figure is still an understatement because very few bother to register the deaths of their relatives these days," said the official, who requested anonymity.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

One has to wonder just how much more of this insanity the people of Zimbabwe are going to take before there is real blow-back to what Mugabe has done to this country

Nov 24 18:22

Zimbabwe on brink of collapse as outbreak of cholera spreads

The situation in Zimbabwe may soon "implode" as a cholera outbreak spreads and basic services collapse, South African leaders and a group of international statesmen warned yesterday.

About 6,000 people have contracted cholera in recent weeks, according to the UN, and almost 300 have died. A chronic shortage of medicine has sent hundreds of people south to seek treatment in South Africa.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

There is going to be a tipping point in this country, and all of Mugabe's militias will not be able to hold back the tidal wave of anger over what Mugabe's government has done to the people of this country.

The question is, when??

Nov 23 09:32

Mugabe tries to hide cholera death toll

The response of President Robert Mugabe’s failing government has been to cover up the scale of the problem and to send in riot police.

Last Friday the World Health Organisation confirmed that 294 had died so far. Deteriorating sewerage systems and declining supplies of clean water have been blamed. The aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières said 1.4m were at risk. Thousands may die.

Nov 22 08:23

Zimbabwe Refuses Entry To Jimmy Carter, Kofi Annan

Zimbabwe has refused to let Kofi Annan and two eminent colleagues visit the impoverished African country for a humanitarian mission, the three said Saturday.

Zimbabweans are suffering from disease and hunger while political crisis over a power-sharing government occupies its politicians. A current cholera outbreak has killed nearly 300 people in Zimbabwe, the United Nations said.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

What Mugabe and his minions have done here is to simply underscore the deterioration of Zimbabwe on their watch.

Zimbabwe was previously known as "the breadbasket of Africa". Now, millions are desperately trying to go anywhere else they may be accepted as refugees, which is putting a strain on neighboring countries.

Nov 21 21:49

US/Rwanda still united in crime

The US Sponsored "Rwanda Genocide" and its Aftermath
Psychological Warfare, Embedded Reporters and the Hunting of Refugees
by Keith Harmon Snow
Global Research, April 12, 2008
Author's website www.allthingspass.com

Nov 21 21:40

Bush Sends US-Rwanda Treaty To Senate

Bush Sends US-Rwanda Treaty To Senate

(RTTNews) - President George Bush sent a treaty signed between the US and the Republic of Rwanda to the Senate Thursday.
[ http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/11/20081120-1.html ]

According to the president, the treaty was the first bilateral investment treaty signed between the US and a sub-Saharan African country since 1998. It would help to promote cross-border investment by providing legal protections for investors of each country for their investments in the other country.

Nov 20 22:33

MOU: Angola, U.S. Navy, offshore OIL

Angola, U.S. to sign MOU in military sector
+ -
20:19, November 18, 2008

Angola and the United States are analyzing the possibility of signing a memorandum of understanding in the military sector, Angola's official news agency ANGOP reported on Tuesday.

Visiting Commander of the U.S. Naval Forces for Europe and Africa Adm. Mark Fitzgerald was quoted as saying that a military accord will be reached some time in 2009.

After meeting with Angolan Foreign Minister Assuncao dos Anjos on Monday, the U.S. naval officer said both sides are discussing the date for signing the accord.

Nov 19 18:43

Hungry in Zimbabwe: 'If you rest, you starve'

Officials from Mugabe's party toured the Doma district recently and told the new farm owners that the government could not supply their needs. They were advised to make do with what seed they had left, and with animal manure for fertilizer.

Ordinarily, after harvest the cotton fields are burned to protect the next year's crop from disease. Not this year. People couldn't afford to buy new seeds, and were hoping to get another season out of last year's crop. Instead, the crops came up diseased.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Zimbabwe's natural resources include:

* coal
* chromium ore
* asbestos
* gold
* nickel
* copper
* iron ore
* vanadium
* lithium
* tin
* platinum group metals

And which country has been in the forefront of wanting to develop these resources?

China.

As reported in

http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2008-09/Look-East-Policy-of-Zimba...

on 30 Sept 2008 by Darren Taylor:

"An international human rights organization based in the United States is warning that relations between Zimbabwe and China are in the future likely to be increasingly strained. The Enough Project – an alliance of scores of advocacy organizations from all over the world – says Zimbabwe’s recent power-sharing agreement could result in a realignment of Beijing’s relationship with Harare. China has in recent years given President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF government significant political and economic support. Humanitarian groups say this has exacerbated Zimbabweans’ suffering."

“The fact that China throughout this (political and economic chaos in Zimbabwe) simply stood by and said, ‘this is an internal matter,’ I think sends a pretty clear message to Zimbabweans that the Chinese really don’t care about Zimbabwean’s human rights concerns, about their desire for democracy and about the overwhelming expression that it’s time for Robert Mugabe and ZANU-PF to go.”

One has to wonder just how much more of this the Zimbabwean people will suffer through before they take matters into their own hands, with a blowback that Mugabe and all his henchmen cannot begin to comprehend.

Nov 19 15:34

Indian warship destroys pirate ship

An Indian warship destroyed a pirate "mother vessel" in the Gulf of Aden, the navy said Wednesday, as bandits demanded a ransom for a Saudi super-tanker seized in the most daring sea raid yet.

The Indian frigate INS Tabar, one of dozens of warships from several countries protecting shipping lanes in the area, attacked the Somali pirate ship late Tuesday after coming under fire, navy spokesman Nirad Sinha said.

Nov 19 13:51

Pirates anchor hijacked supertanker off Somalia coast

The Saudi Arabia-owned supertanker hijacked by Somali pirates in a raid several hundred miles out to sea is understood to have anchored off the coast of Somalia.

The Sirius Star, which is fully loaded with crude oil, is understood to be at anchor close to a headland called Raas Cusbad, near Hobyo.

The owner of the ship, Vela International Marine, said the 25 crew members on board were safe.

The company said response teams had been established and were working to ensure the release of the crew and the vessel, which was seized by pirates on Saturday.

Nov 18 18:33

Islamists poised to seize Somalia again in setback to U.S.

The rise of al Shabaab — from the Arabic word for "youth" — in many ways represents the very scenario that the Bush administration sought to avoid two years ago, when it quietly backed an invasion by Somalia's neighbor, Ethiopia, to drive a federation of hard-line Islamic courts out of Mogadishu.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This must be true Bush foreign policy: the US's intervention had the absolutely opposite outcome from what it was supposed to have achieved!

Nov 16 10:09

U.N. envoy says Congo crisis talks going well

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo said on Saturday his efforts to end fighting in Congo were going fairly well and that President Joseph Kabila had not given conditions for talks with the rebels.

The United Nations says weeks of fighting have caused a humanitarian catastrophe. On Friday, aid workers began feeding tens of thousands of refugees in rebel-held areas.

After seizing swathes of territory in battles last month, Nkunda threatened to take his rebellion all the way to the distant capital Kinshasa unless Kabila negotiated with him.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

For former Nigerian President Obasanjo to characterise these talks as "...going fairly well", given the realities on the ground here, you have to wonder how he would describe these talks as "going rather poorly"!

Nov 16 10:06

Congo's Poor Lose Last Possessions

As panicked thousands have abandoned villages across eastern Congo in recent months, the scale of looting that has followed has been massive, a crime reflecting the predatory culture pervading Congo since the Belgian colonizers perfected it decades ago.

Nov 13 08:06

Officials flee as rebels seize port

"They are regrouping," Richard Barno, an analyst at the Institute for Security Studies in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, said of the militants. "Is this part of a bigger plan to take over Mogadishu? I think so. They are preparing themselves."

The Bush Administration has backed the presence of Ethiopian troops to shore up the Somali Government, fearing that the rebels could seize control of the Horn of Africa nation and provide a refuge for Islamic militants from other nations.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

It looks as though yet another of this administration's covert military misadventures is about to backfire yet again.

One has to wonder if the criteria for joining Bush's administration included an absolute absence of any understanding of history or culture, coupled with a strong penchant for magical thinking.

Nothing else can quite seem to explain the never-ending string of international and domestic disasters which have marked these last eight years.

Nov 09 11:36

My Photos of empty shops In Johannesburg's shopping malls...

My Photos of empty shops In Johannesburg's shopping malls...

Nov 03 07:56

Russia, Libya sign civil nuclear deal as Kadhafi visits: Tripoli

Libya and Russia signed a civil nuclear cooperation deal Saturday, Tripoli's foreign minister said, as Moamer Kadhafi visited Moscow for talks he said could help restore "geopolitical equilibrium".

Nov 01 09:36

Congolese rebels torch refugee camps

More than 150,000 people could be hiding in the Congolese jungle without food, water or shelter after rebels destroyed camps for refugees near the town of Rutshuru. The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said camps holding more than 50,000 people had been forcibly emptied, before being torn down and burnt. Sources in Rutshuru said more than 150,000 people from the town and the camps had fled north into the jungle.

Oct 31 09:32

Diplomatic scramble to avert Congo disaster

Oct 29 10:35

Regional war fear as 50,000 homeless in Congo in two days

Congolese government forces are fleeing the eastern capital of Goma as Rwandan-backed rebels press towards the town, threatening a lethal confrontation with United Nations peacekeepers and the prospect of all out regional war.

Western aid workers in Goma, with a population of 600,000, described scenes of mayhem in the streets as columns of government tanks and military vehicles streamed out of the city and panicking civilians fled for cover, fearing an imminent rebel onslaught.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

This is about to get very ugly very quickly.

Oct 29 08:35

Deaths reported after explosion hits UN compound in northern Somalia

The United Nations has confirmed that the UN Development Programme (UNDP) compound in northern Somalia was attacked this morning, resulting in a number of deaths and injuries.

“At approximately at 10 o’clock this morning the UNDP compound in Hargeysa, Somaliland, was hit by an explosion, caused by a vehicle which forced entry into the compound,” according to a statement issued by the Office of the UN Resident & Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, which is based in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

Oct 18 07:53

Bleak scenes as Ethiopia puts war before famine

The restrictive Ethiopian security regime hiding the worsening crisis in the country's southern Somali region has infuriated important donors. Western officials privately warn that a damaging stand-off with the country is unfolding.

Addis Ababa this week conceded that 6.4 million people were on the brink of death and agreed to open up the worst hit parts of the country to shipments of outside assistance.

Oct 16 08:58

Ethiopian Troops Leave Somalia

Why is a Scot newspaper the only one to report this from Somalia?

"Troop pull-out leaves government on brink - Ethiopian withdrawal marks end of disastrous intervention that sparked new violence and suffering."

Webmaster's Commentary: 

The "why" there has been almost no mention in the US press about this is it is simply that this campaign has been yet another US-b