V_Raman wrote:if india is the young wife, then theif and young wife are reaching an agreement? if that is case, the old man's goose is cooked.
India is not the young-wife. it is the anti-India that is young wife.
V_Raman wrote:if india is the young wife, then theif and young wife are reaching an agreement? if that is case, the old man's goose is cooked.
By Martin Beckford, Home Affairs Editor
6:41PM BST 24 Aug 2012
The uniformed Met officer was pictured holding a clipboard detailing possible ways the WikiLeaks founder could try to escape from the building he has been holed up in for the past two months.
His target, who is trying to avoid extradition to Sweden for questioning over alleged rape and sexual assault, is currently safe on diplomatic territory. He has been given political asylum by the Latin American country, on the grounds that he faces persecution in the USA over his whistle-blowing website, but faces arrest the second he steps outside because he has breached his bail conditions.
The policeman’s handwritten tactical brief, captured by a Press Association photographer as he stood outside the Knightsbridge embassy on Friday afternoon, discloses the “summary of current position re Assange”.
It stated: “Action required – Assange to be arrested under all circumstances.”
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The notes said should the maverick Australian should be taken even if he emerges in a vehicle, under diplomatic immunity or in a diplomatic bag, which may involve “risk to life”. There had been speculation that he could be smuggled out of the building in a parcel or given a post in the United Nations by Ecuador in an attempt to evade arrest.
The operational guidance, marked “restricted”, also warned of the “possibility of distraction”, suggesting that the Yard fears Mr Assange’s supporters could try to create a commotion outside the embassy, providing cover under which he could flee.
Further details of the notes, which were obscured by the officer holding them, appeared to relate to the “everyday business” of the embassy and the possible need for “additional support” from an unknown agency known as SS10. Scotland Yard said it did not know what this referred to.
The last few sentences referred to SO20, the counter-terrorism command, and included the words "welfare" and "standards".
A separate page carried by the uniformed officer, who was chatting to a colleague, showed an “event diary” including codes and phone numbers.
The blunder by the policeman, captured by a Press Association photographer on Friday afternoon, has echoes of the downfall of Britain’s senior counter-terrorism officer in 2009.
Bob Quick resigned after he was photographed carrying documents marked “secret” and detailing joint plans by police and MI5 as he arrived in Downing Street for a meeting, forcing an anti-terror operation to be rushed forward.
It is the latest embarrassment for the British authorities in the diplomatic stand-off over Mr Assange.
After the failure of his two-year appeal against extradition to Sweden, where he was accused of sexually assaulting two women, he was allowed to walk into Ecuador’s embassy and claim asylum in June.
He has remained there ever since and the Foreign Office was denounced by Ecuador for supposedly threatening to withdraw the building’s diplomatic protection and “storm” inside to arrest Mr Assange.
Last Sunday he was allowed to give an address from a balcony, to cheering crowds and ranks of police officers, in which he claimed police had been “swarming up inside” the embassy only to be held back because “the world is watching”.
Meanwhile Britain has re-started “formal communication” with diplomats from Ecuador but the country’s officials insist Mr Assange can stay in their embassy for “centuries” if necessary.
Ambassadors from several South American countries met in London on Friday to oppose Britain’s “threats against the integrity and sovereignty” of the Ecuadorian embassy.
The Metropolitan Police declined to comment on the accidentally revealed tactics on Mr Assange nor on the possibility of disciplinary action for the officer responsible for the slip.
An e-mail response to me....Point of order. On multiple occasions this month US news outlets have described Turkey as a one-time ally of Syria that has now turned against it. The Turks have not been allies of Arabs in more than a thousand years. Somebody needs to tell Fox News and others that their research staffers need to actually read some history.
The second point is about the US statements of concern about Syrian use of chemical weapons. The US warning to Syria ignored the infinitely more serious and palpable threat that Salafist or al Qaida fighting groups might overrun and capture a CW depot and redistribute its weapons to other terrorist groups or fire them at Israel.
Syria has been as responsible as any great power in controlling its chemical weapons. It has assured the international community on multiple occasions that it would not use CW against its own citizens.
On the other hand, theWestern and Arab backers of the Syrian opposition do not even know the identity, nationality, composition and theology of the opposition fighting groups that might take possession of Syrian weapons of mass destruction and their delivery systems. The danger that these could be turned against Israel is reinforced by the statement of the captured fighter in Aleppo that he understood he was fighting against Israel.
If Syrian opposition militants fire Syrian CW at Israel, war crimes accusations against Western and Sunni Arab policy makers could follow at some point.![]()
Below are a few thoughts originating from Edward Luttwak's book & connections mind is forming :
A quote from 23 Aug Nightwatch Brief :
The Turks have not been allies of Arabs in more than a thousand years. Somebody needs to tell Fox News and others that their research staffers need to actually read some history
Byzantine Empire too had long standing hostility with Arabs . Ottomans in a way were byzantine 2.0 ( bad or worse but carried same traits ) . Simply put Turks couldn't swim against the tide of historical trend even if we include religion as a counter .
Again the Sassanian Empire too was at odds with Arabs . In present day it has manifested itself into Shia-Sunni or Persia- Arabian rivalry .
Germanic tribes if am not wrong bought their peace with Byzantine Empire but never with Rome ( no wonder Turks made Germany their second home & deeper into northern europe , all byzantine time allies of byzantine empire) .Odd one is Franks ( present day France ) an ally of Byzantine Empire but now French don't have that sort of rapport with Turks maybe its short term thing or something to do with Crusade ?
What i am trying to understand is look beyond religion as the main mover in geo-politics , yes it played a role but only within limits of historical trends . It couldn't against it .
Another thing that comes up in mind was so long Byzantine Empire existed , Arabs had their eyes set on it & India remained relatively safer . Things went against India completely once Byzatine Empire was weakend & finished off . Tribes from CARs were always drawn towards Byzantine Empire but once it was finished off by Arabs & Crusades , India was the obvious choice other than China i guess .
Does this mean rise of Turkey good for us in medium term ( time to gain strength ) .
But sthAna-balam is modulated by relative civilizational spans and the depth of the number of iterations of different civilizational contexts. Generally, yes, a westward looking Persia keeping "Rome" busy is good for India and buys us time to build our strength and gain traction. But the time horizon, as well as what kind of strengths need to be gained, depends on the context.ramana wrote:Continuing the big themes of history
Nigthwatch, 23 Aug 2012...
http://www.kforcegov.com/Services/IS/Ni ... 00163.aspx
Does this mean rise of Turkey good for us in medium term ( time to gain strength ).
Yes the better word for geopolitics is "sthana bala" or power of the place.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu pulls out of event with Tony Blair because of Iraq War
Retired Anglican bishop and South African peace campaigner Desmond Tutu has pulled out of an event because he cannot share a platform with Tony Blair because of the Iraq War.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu pulls out of event with Tony Blair because of Iraq War
Archbishop Tutu’s office said in a statement: 'Ultimately, the Archbishop is of the view that Tony Blair's decision to support the United States' military invasion of Iraq, on the basis of unproven allegations of the existence in Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, was morally indefensible' Photo: Startraks Photo /Rex/Eddie Mulholland
Christopher Hope
By Christopher Hope, Senior Political Correspondent
28 Aug 2012
The Nobel Peace Prize winner who was the first black archbishop of Cape Town made the protest because of the former Prime Minister's “morally indefensible” decision to lead British forces into Iraq in 2003.
However Mr Blair hit back in a statement, insisting that such "decisions are never easy morally or politically”.
Mr Blair and Archbishop Tutu, who received the Nobel Prize in 1984 for campaigning against apartheid, were due to appear at a leadership summit in Johannesburg later this week.
A local Muslim party has already announced that it would attempt to arrest Blair when he arrives in Johannesburg for “crimes against humanity”.
Archbishop Tutu’s office said in a statement: “Ultimately, the Archbishop is of the view that Mr Blair's decision to support the United States' military invasion of Iraq, on the basis of unproven allegations of the existence in Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, was morally indefensible.
“The Discovery Invest Leadership Summit has leadership as its theme. Morality and leadership are indivisible. In this context, it would be inappropriate and untenable for the Archbishop to share a platform with Mr Blair.
A spokesman told the New Statesman’s website that Archbishop Tutu was “a very prayerful man” who will have “spent hours on his knees considering this decision”.
He said: “He thinks and prays and then acts. That's how he's always done things, including during the struggles.”
Mr Blair’s office said in a statement the former Prime Minister was “sorry that the Archbishop has decided to pull out now from an event that has been fixed for months and where he and the Archbishop were never actually sharing a platform.
“As far as Iraq is concerned they have always disagreed about removing Saddam by force - such disagreement is part of a healthy democracy.
“As for the morality of that decision we have recently had both the memorial of the Halabja massacre where thousands of people were murdered in one day by Saddam's use of chemical weapons; and that of the Iran-Iraq war where casualties numbered up to a million including many killed by chemical weapons.
“So these decisions are never easy morally or politically”.
MMS and his coterie wants to replicate the rise of the West in India.Niall Ferguson, "The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West"
Publisher: Penguin Press HC | ISBN: 1594201005 | edition 2006 | 880 pages |
Niall Fergusson's most important book to date-a revolutionary reinterpretation of the modern era that resolves its central paradox: why unprecedented progress coincided with unprecedented violence and why the seeming triumph of the West bore the seeds of its undoing.
From the conflicts that presaged the First World War to the aftershocks of the cold war, the twentieth century was by far the bloodiest in all of human history. How can we explain the astonishing scale and intensity of its violence when, thanks to the advances of science and economics, most people were better off than ever before-eating better, growing taller, and living longer? Wherever one looked, the world in 1900 offered the happy prospect of ever-greater interconnection. Why, then, did global progress descend into internecine war and genocide? Drawing on a pioneering combination of history, economics, and evolutionary theory, Niall Ferguson-one of Time magazine's "100 Most Influential People"-masterfully examines what he calls the age of hatred and sets out to explain what went wrong with modernity.
On a quest that takes him from the Siberian steppe to the plains of Poland, from the streets of Sarajevo to the beaches of Okinawa, Ferguson reveals an age turned upside down by economic volatility, multicultural communities torn apart by the irregularities of boom and bust, an era poisoned by the idea of irreconcilable racial differences, and a struggle between decaying old empires and predatory new states. Who won the war of the world? We tend to assume it was the West. Some even talk of the American century. But for Ferguson, the biggest upshot of twentieth-century upheaval was the decline of Western dominance over Asia.
The Catalan people always had the thirst for autonomy, the existence of Andorra as a nation is living proof of that. Historically its largely been Leon and Galicia who've been the body and tail for the Kingdom of Castille.ramana wrote:sudarshan wrote:The title speaks for itself, methinks. Alba & Cymru might take hints, hopefully.
Catalan Autonomy Demand in Spain.
Aragon a big part of Spain got subsumed in the new Spain after the Reconquista. Catehrine of Aragon and Fredinand of Castille were married and they sponsored Columbus' voyages. Castille made a clause that the revenues from new world wont be shared with Aragon. Eventually they died off due to lack of money and ended up merged with Spain.
So lets see if they start making noises.
On this note, is there material relating to Olaf Caroe's projection of Turkey and its geopolitical weight-class, with respect to Eurasia and the wider world?Carl wrote: If India does not do this, then Turkey will. Already Turkey uses its "Western" iteration to set itself up as a model for the Sunni Islamist "progressive" world. In fact, even many Iranians want to be more like Turkey. So NO, the rise of Turkey is NOT a good thing for India in the medium term, because at a very fundamental level they are our competitors. It is at a level that modifies the net effect of "sthana-balam".
Hi Klaus, just saw your post.Klaus wrote:On this note, is there material relating to Olaf Caroe's projection of Turkey and its geopolitical weight-class, with respect to Eurasia and the wider world?
The reason I brought him up was that he was a strong advocate of a strong Persia + protecting Greater China and sub-continental Islamic nationalism as the way forward for British interests in the sub-continent, above quoted post was very similar in its prescription.
Yes, a section of Iranians have caved in to very aggressive psy-ops that has been going on since the Qajari Shah Nasiruddin's time -- an aggressive "West is best" and "Iranians can (almost) be white" invitation. In fact, it was a major theme of ideologues like Al-e-Ahmad and Ali Shariati who is being discussed on the "Iran's Identity Faultlines" thread, a term called gharbzadeh (Westoxified). In connection with this tendency, I was suggesting in my post above that each civilizational "suitor" of Iran must make full use of all its iterations and context-depth - "The fact that we ourselves do have a context depth that includes a well-established Westernization iteration means that we can satisfy any such inclinations Iranians may have for that aspect also."Klaus wrote:BTW Iranians who wish to be more like Turkey could be a result of psy-ops, point to remember is that Iran is the target of an intensive fake modernism drive, just like Bharat is.
So AlQ has come back under Western control!!!Lilo wrote:West Attempts to Trigger Clash of Civilizations - Tony Cartalucci
FWIW, An opinion near to my instincts.
The hints are about Tuesday/Wednesday, or a day after to neutralize antcipatory preparations.Carl wrote:^^^ B ji, need to keep a closer ear out for the chatter.
[...] Coming back to Caroe, it is interesting to see how the Brits want to use the different ethnic strains to embroil the Pamir Knot and areas surrounding.
The overrunning of the U.S. consulate in Benghazi and the murder of the American ambassador to Libya are disastrous for U.S. intelligence-gathering capabilities in the Middle East. The resultant siege mentality in Washington creates an imperative to pull American spies and diplomats back into fortresses, heavily defended U.S. sanctuaries from which it’s almost impossible to collect good human intelligence.
Ambassador Christopher Stevens lost his life on Sept. 11 while doing his job representing the President. But never forget that ambassadors are also intelligence collectors. By wading in among the Libyans, from going to dinners at the homes of Libyan leaders to talking with ordinary people in the streets, he was gathering both important opinions and intelligence minutiae. It’s that daily immersion into the dynamics of a society that has always made the U.S. ambassador’s personal take on a situation as important as the judgment of any intelligence agency.
After Benghazi, however, we can all but assume that the White House and State Department will have near zero tolerance for exposing U.S. officials to the risks attached to mingling in the Middle East. In countries even lightly touched with the downsides of the Arab Spring, American diplomats and spies will be confined to heavily guarded facilities and allowed out only in highly conspicuous entourages of visibly armed guards, traveling in heavily armored vehicles.
None of this is new, of course. American diplomats and spies are already confined to bases in Iraq and Afghanistan, where they meet locals only when accompanied by small armies of security personnel — or when those locals are willing to enter U.S. facilities, passing through metal detectors and armed guards.
People unfamiliar with espionage may wonder, given the risk, what the downside is of making locals go to Americans. The problem is a basic one: any local with dangerous information worth having won’t risk passing through a security cordon. Even if the would-be informant were willing to risk being seen by hostile lookouts while approaching a U.S. facility, that person simply could not be sure that the American guards aren’t working for the enemy.
The damage caused by Benghazi isn’t limited to making it harder for the local mole or informant to hand over a packet of documents or a nugget of information to his American handler. Any good spy has to immerse himself in the local milieu — just as a great diplomat like Ambassador Stevens was doing. Night and day, the capable spy is out meeting with locals, having schooled himself in their language and customs. As soon as he gets off the plane at his new destination, he’ll start learning his way around the streets. It means endless driving, getting lost and finding your way back. And it’s always done alone, with no safe way to reach out to a local for help.
Maintaining direct contact with locals is the lifeblood of a spy seeking to understand a country. Most of what local sources say is of little or no interest to Washington, but such contact helps orient American intelligence officers and shows them how to find their way to real secrets. After Benghazi, that will be almost impossible to do. And keep in mind, sending out intelligence collectors disguised as students and businesspeople is just as risky and no more palatable to Washington.
The incidents of the past two weeks suggest it may be time to admit that large parts of the Middle East have fallen off the cliff for the U.S., and large parts of it will be beyond the ken of intelligence for the foreseeable future. Something terrible is going on in Syria, but because it’s too risky to put American intelligence officers on the ground there, it’s unclear just how terrible it is and how it could be ended. There’s simply no way for Americans to tell whether the armed rebellion is dominated by militant Islamists or Jeffersonian democrats. Nor can Americans get a picture of how the men leading the fighting forces on which Bashar Assad is most reliant might be turned.
This problem isn’t unique to Syria. A number of countries in the Middle East, from Lebanon to Yemen and from Jordan to Egypt, appear poised to fall into the political abyss. Consider Egypt: since the Muslim Brotherhood came to power, my sources tell me the army there is being purged of officers considered pro-American. I’ve been told that up to 4,000 officers have been let go, although I have no way to confirm that claim. But it would be surprising if the Muslim Brotherhood were not trying to cut Americans off from their traditional influence over the Egyptian military, just as the tragedy in Benghazi will likely cut off Americans’ access to ordinary Libyans.
Ambassador Stevens died a hero. Whether or not he took an unnecessary risk, he knew he couldn’t do his job while isolating himself from Libyans. The same holds true for American spies.
If the contagion in the Middle East continues to spread, the one thing Americans can count on is going blind — and it won’t be the fault of U.S. intelligence or anyone in Washington but just another sign of Americans’ declining position in the region.
Merkel again throws in a monkey wrench into the Perfidious Albion's plans.EADS, BAE call off world's biggest arms merger
PARIS/BERLIN/LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) - EADS and BAE Systems called off the world's largest defence and aviation merger on Wednesday, and pinned the blame on Germany for wrecking the $45 billion deal.
The acrimonious collapse followed weeks of tense negotiations and triggered recriminations between capitals.
Securing such an enormous and complex cross-border deal in a sector where commercial considerations are typically trumped by political, economic and national security concerns was always going to be desperately difficult.
The merger hinged on France and Germany accepting a more limited role in the combined firm than they have wielded in the past at EADS, maker of Airbus aircraft. In the end, it was Berlin, rather than Paris, that proved the problem.
"We had clear red lines that we were not willing to go beyond, relative to engagement and involvement of governments," BAE's CEO Ian King said. "If that was going to impinge on our ability to commercially run this new merged organisation, and support and develop our existing business, then we wouldn't go to that point, and that is where we are today."
Asked if he had encountered more problems with Berlin than Paris, he said: "That would be an accurate representation."
EADS chief executive Tom Enders, himself a German, said: "It is, of course, a pity we didn't succeed, but I'm glad we tried. I'm sure there will be other challenges we'll tackle together in the future."
A source close to the talks said the companies had met all of Berlin's requests and were baffled as to why Chancellor Angela Merkel's government blocked the deal.
"Germany blocked the deal, although all demands from the German side were met," the source said. "Top German negotiator Lars-Hendrik Roeller was the one who formulated all demands and said no in the end." Roeller is Merkel's economic adviser.
But German officials said they were ultimately unconvinced by the commercial logic of combining the Airbus maker with a British firm whose biggest customer is the Pentagon on behalf of the U.S. military.
"We started asking ourselves, 'Does this deal really make sense?'" one senior German official said. "The market went down, investors were against it, the synergies were unclear, as was U.S. market access with the big state shareholdings."
Many EADS shareholders had also opposed the deal, and the firm's share price rose more than 5 percent on Wednesday.
BAE SEEKS CURBS ON STATE INFLUENCE
Europe's two largest aerospace groups have very different ownership structures. BAE is a private British company, and the American armed forces account for nearly half of its revenue. Because Washington is reluctant to give contracts to firms influenced by foreign governments, BAE considers minimising state control as crucial to its business.
EADS has a more complicated share structure that gives big influence to German and French industrial groups and the French state. To keep its influence at the combined firm, Germany would have had to buy out a holding by engineering firm Daimler.
Many Germans see EADS as primarily a civilian planemaker. Making a large investment in a trans-Atlantic arms firm could be politically uncomfortable in Germany, which has a post-World War Two history of pacifism.
"This would have created the biggest defence company in the world," said a second source close to Merkel. "But defence is an especially sensitive subject in Germany."
Ultimately, German officials said the parties were unable to resolve the shareholding issue to everyone's satisfaction. Paris wanted to retain the option of going up to 13.5 percent by buying a stake held by French firm Lagardere at a later date. German officials insisted they be able to follow suit.
The British wanted a cap of 10 percent each, concerned that the Germans and French could approach a blocking minority if they went above that level.
Still, the companies believed they could have bridged the differences if Germany was more willing to negotiate.
"France and the UK agreed that Germany have the same stakeholding as France in the merged group. Separately, vast guarantees were given regarding safeguarding national security interests, sites, jobs. The topic of headquarters was being discussed very emotionally, but not an issue big enough to let the deal fail," a source close to the transaction said.
RIVAL TO BOEING
The companies had until Wednesday afternoon to declare their intentions and either scrap the merger, ask British regulators for more time or finalise their plans. The merger would have created a group employing nearly a quarter of a million people that could better compete with U.S. rival Boeing.
Analysts called the breakdown a severe blow especially for BAE boss King, who had faced a revolt from his company's largest shareholder, Invesco. BAE could now become a takeover target, perhaps from U.S. defence rivals.
Asked whether BAE management felt under pressure as a result of the stormy investor reaction followed by the collapse of the plans, King said: "Certainly not. No more than usual".
French President Francois Hollande said the decision to end merger talks lay with the companies, and his government's intervention was limited to stating its conditions.
Britain backed the deal and has largely supported BAE's case that French and German influence would have to be limited to make the deal work, especially given BAE's vast U.S. business.
The deal's failure is arguably a setback for Prime Minister David Cameron. A source familiar with the negotiations said Cameron spoke to Merkel about the deal on Tuesday but failed to persuade her to lift objections.
"Our view is that for this company as a merged entity to have been successful, it would have needed to be able to operate as a commercial company free of undue control or influence by any single government and that's something that the company evidently has decided it is not able to achieve," British Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said.
A British source familiar with the deal also suggested Berlin, rather than Paris, was the holdout.
"It was absolutely heading in the right direction," the source said of the talks. "There was very significant (British) progress with France. There wasn't the same progress elsewhere."
BAE SHARES DOWN, EADS UP
With global defence spending declining and the civil aviation sector robust, BAE probably needed the deal more than the Airbus maker. Ultimately, investors saw the collapse of the deal as bad news for BAE and good news for EADS. BAE shares closed down 1.38 percent at 320.9 pence in London, while EADS shares were up 5.29 percent at 27.480 euros in Paris.
Barry Norris, founding partner at Argonaut Capital Partners, an EADS shareholder, said: "Today's decision to terminate the merger talks is a triumph for common sense and shareholder value. Having sunk almost 30 billion euros into new Airbus plane projects, which are only now beginning to break even, it made no sense for EADS to now share this with BAE shareholders.
"Continuing merger negotiations would have resulted in a long battle with shareholders and sustained tension over weak corporate governance. That the problems in executing the deal proved too complex should be a source of celebration rather than regret," he added.
It is still conceivable that a deal could be resurrected, although there were no indications that this was being discussed. Brinkmanship is common in European negotiations. EADS - whose full title is the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company - was itself only created after talks about its structure collapsed and were resurrected weeks later.
The merger had faced growing unease from investors in both companies who complained they were lacking information. Many people had bought shares in EADS on the strength of its growing Airbus civil unit, rather than its defence ambitions, while BAE investors were attracted by its dividend yield.
"While BAE's long-term prospects could still be quite excellent, the failed merger will leave the firm much more exposed to uncertain factors beyond its control, such as major declines in the U.S. defence budget and potential losses in an increasingly competitive international defence market," said David Reeths, consultant at defence analyst IHS Jane's.
BAE CEO King and Chairman Dick Olver said after the merger talks ended that the company's dividend policy would continue and that it was not looking for a tie-up with another company. They also said management would be staying in place.
The British government holds a golden share in BAE that allows it to block foreign takeovers.
Germany does not currently have a direct stake in EADS, but is represented by industrial ally Daimler AG, which holds just over 22 percent and aims to reduce its stake. France holds an identical stake, split between the state and French publisher Lagardere.
Adding to the hurdles facing the deal, BAE's largest shareholder, fund manager Invesco Perpetual, with 13.3 percent, had said it was not convinced of the rationale for the deal.
A source with the Spanish government, which holds a 5.5 percent share in EADS, said: "In the short term this guarantees Spain's stake in EADS from being diluted, but of course a big long-term opportunity has been lost."
It began the moment that Khrushchev told Kennedy he would remove the “weapons which you call offensive” from Cuba, nuclear warheads capable of reaching U.S. cities as far as 1,550 miles away. What the Soviet leader neglected to mention was that he had deployed nearly 100 tactical nuclear weapons designed to defend against another Bay of Pigs, the botched U.S.-led invasion just 18 months before. Officials in Washington knew about the Luna missiles but wouldn't learn until 1992 that they carried nuclear warheads.
In sensitive negotiations that would remain secret for decades, Soviet Deputy Prime Minister Mikoyan initially told Castro he could keep the tactical nukes that had escaped U.S. notice.
During a tense four-hour meeting on Nov. 22, 1962, Castro fumed to Mikoyan: "What do you think we are? A zero on the left, a dirty rag. We tried to help the Soviet Union to get out of a difficult situation."
All this -- as well as Castro's orders to shoot at U.S. surveillance planes -- convinced Mikoyan that "the Cuban tail was quite capable of wagging the Soviet dog,” . “What became clear to Mikoyan … is that the Soviets could not really control their Cuban ally.”
Mikoyan decided on his own that Castro could not be trusted and that the missiles must be removed from the island. He told Castro that a Soviet law -- which did not exist -- banned a permanent transfer to the Cubans.
"Ironically, if the Cubans were a little more pliant, and a little less independent, if they were more willing to be Soviet pawns, they would have kept the tactical nuclear weapons on the island," researcher Svetlana Savranskaya wrote in Foreign Policy. "But they showed themselves to be much more than just a parking lot for the Soviet missiles. Cuba was a major independent variable of the Cuban Missile Crisis."
We learn of the ancient struggle between China’s inlands and its outerlands; of India’s claustrophobic geographic dilemma (too many religious passions in too little space);
Read more http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/a ... z2AHMVRF3Y
For that matter, when Afghanistan makes its inevitable appearance—geographic history always ends in Afghanistan, the way baseball history ends in Yankee Stadium—it is hard not to be struck by the news that Indian trade overland across Central Asia is expected to grow by a hundred billion dollars annually, and that all that stands in the way of this growth is an unstable Afghanistan. Pacify the place, and India’s economic empire would explode. Maybe the Great Game for Afghanistan really is worth playing.
Read more http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/a ... z2AHMR526Q
The Party of Regions has more than 36%, and the opposition party of Yulia Tymoshenko, who is in jail, has just over 21%,
Thousands of observers were in Ukraine for the vote, which Mr Yanukovych hopes will boost his democratic credentials.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton cited "worrying trends" in the interim election report from the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe).
These included government resources being used to favour ruling-party candidates, media restrictions, vote-buying and lack of transparency on the electoral commissions.
Since his dramatic political comeback Mr Yanukovych has forged closer relations with Moscow, Ukraine's former master in the Soviet era.