Asia Time Online - Daily News
WRITE for ATol ADVERTISE MEDIA KIT GET ATol BY EMAIL ABOUT ATol CONTACT US
Asia Times Chinese
AT Chinese









 Services



 ATol Shop


 Get ATol by email


 Archive


 Currency Converter




 Information



 Advertise


 Media Kit


 Write for ATol


 About ATol


 Contact


 Privacy


 Legal






    Front Page
    


Militants change tack in Pakistan

After a month-long operation, Pakistan's military is chasing shadows in the South Waziristan tribal area. The militants being sought so desperately by the army - and the United States - are scattered in remote surrounding areas, including in Afghanistan. Previously, the next step would have been to negotiate a ceasefire. Not this time. In a major switch, the militants want a long-term insurgency against the security apparatus across the country. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Nov 17, '09)

'Northern Taliban' threatens Central Asia
Taliban counter-moves against United States coalition efforts to forge a supply route from Central Asia to northern Afghanistan have ended the relative calm in that part of Afghanistan and could drag Central Asian states into the conflict. As more foreign fighters from groups like the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan join the ranks of the emerging "northern Taliban", the issue is rapidly climbing up the coalition's agenda. - Sanobar Shermatova (Nov 17, '09)


Mafias expose China's legal woes
It took a directive from the top echelons of the Chinese Communist Party before officials in China's western Chongqing metropolis would unleash an "anti-triad tornado" on well-connected mafia syndicates, nabbing close to 3,000 big-time criminals. The fiasco has laid bare the full extent of collusion between organized crime and senior officers in the police and judiciary. - Willy Lam (Nov 17, '09)

SPEAKING FREELY
The benefits of a nuclear Iran
The United States should simply give Iran the bomb. A nuclear Iran would restore parity to the balance of power in the Middle East and may end up stabilizing the region far more than the continued tensions over Israeli and American objections to Iran's nuclear ambitions. - Aetius Romulous (Nov 17, '09)

US boosts India's anti-terror efforts
India's decision to increase information-sharing with United States intelligence agencies since last year's Mumbai terrorist attack is paying off, witness the Federal Bureau of Investigation's operation uncovering a plot to attack important sites in India, including the Taj Mahal. - Siddharth Srivastava (Nov 17, '09)

Political impasse takes Nepal to brink
Leaders of Nepal's Maoists are threatening more mass protests and to turn the nation "into another Afghanistan" should their demands for limits to presidential powers not be met. As the political turmoil drags on - not helped by an apparent China-India tussle for influence - some see hope in the formation of a unity government. - Dhruba Adhikary (Nov 17, '09)

Bans, burqinis and bad hijab
When it comes to fashion, many Muslim females are damned if they do, damned if they don’t. In Tajikistan, they're banned from wearing head scarves until adulthood. In Iran, they're in trouble if they don't wear them. Many women just wish they had a choice, while one scoffs at suggestions that flowing veils are a security threat, "I can hide a bomb in my undies." - Kristin Deasy (Nov 17, '09)



THE ROVING EYE
Welcome, comrade Maobama
United States President Barack Obama visits Beijing as China is organizing a new world order based on economic independence and respecting cultural and political differences - a hierarchical change all nations can believe in. Beijing welcomes being classed as the US's "essential partner" and "competitor"; being competitive is second nature when you have been a major economic power for 18 of the past 20 centuries. - Pepe Escobar (Nov 16, '09)

SPENGLER
Europe's tragedy, and
Europe's tragedian

The 250th anniversary of the birth of German poet, philosopher, historian and playwright Friedrich Schiller passed last week with less attention than it deserved. Schiller understood European history not as the shift of power from obscurantist Catholicism to enlightened Protestantism, but rather as the death-tragedy of Catholicism and of Europe itself. (Nov 16, '09)

A Bonapartist in the Indian Ocean
Sri Lankan democracy may never be the same again now that swashbuckling army chief Sarath Fonseka has abruptly discarded his uniform to run for president. Fonseka is entering uncharted waters. But the United States Green Card holder knows that he has the full backing of a Washington seeking a malleable power structure in Colombo. - M K Bhadrakumar (Nov 16, '09)

Test of wills over Iran plan
The fuel-for-fuel plan under which Iran would send the bulk of its low-enriched uranium to Russia and France to be further processed for use in a medical reactor in Tehran is still on the table. It is likely to remain there unless its main backers, including the United States, introduce some compromises. - Kaveh L Afrasiabi (Nov 16, '09)

Missing the nuance in south Thailand
Misconceptions about the insurgent violence in Muslim southern Thailand have grown with the conflict, as reports exaggerate or romanticize separatist sentiments while claiming the Thai state's policy of arming Thai Buddhists is fueling the violence. Overlooked are the connection many southerners feel with Bangkok and local Muslim animosity towards the insurgents. - Jason Johnson (Nov 16, '09)

An anxious wait in Afghanistan
While the United States agonizes over its Afghan policy, even with the re-election of President Hamid Karzai now settled, the country remains in limbo. Warlords and powerbrokers jockey behind fortified walls in the capital, while the United Nations and other organizations keep their heads down. Only the Taliban appear unfazed. - Derek Henry Flood (Nov 16, '09)

Hong Kong plays transgender catch-up
A Hong Kong transsexual is suing the government for the right to marry her male partner, putting traditionalists on the legal defensive. Attitudes toward sexual orientation are changing in Hong Kong, though it's behind some places on the Chinese mainland where such a conjugal union is already legally sanctioned. - Kent Ewing (Nov 16, '09)

CHINA'S REVOLUTION, Part 4
Mao's legacy lives on
Deng Xiaoping's reform policies, which led to China's present vital role in the world economy, would not have succeeded without the revolutionary policies launched by Mao Zedong, whose Thought remains the light source of the historic revival of the four-millennia-old Chinese civilization. (Nov 16, '09)
This is the fourth article in a multi-part series.
Part 1: In the beginning was Tiananmen
Part 2: Revolutionary lessons
Part 3: Lessons of the Soviet experience

Sino-Indian rivalry fuels Nepal's turmoil
As Nepal's Maoists intensify efforts to paralyze the central government, the group's mass protests and provocative acts over a political impasse threaten to plunge the nation back into civil conflict. With the Maoists claiming the support of China, and a pro-India government in place in Kathmandu, a barely concealed proxy contest is developing between Beijing and Delhi for a strategic advantage in the Himalayas. - Peter Lee (Nov 13, '09)

A witches' cauldron brews in Yemen
Saudi Arabia is on the offensive in Iraq and Afghanistan to counter Iranian influence. The Saudis, though, are on the defensive in Yemen, which has become a safe haven for al-Qaeda elements to make incursions into Saudi Arabia. In addition, the Shi'ite Houthi clan has made the Saudi-Yemeni border highly volatile. Tehran, while doing nothing adventurous, is highly pleased. - M K Bhadrakumar (Nov 13, '09)

No country for gold men
People of all nationalities should now look to gold as the ultimate hedge against inflation as well as globally irresponsible monetary policy, as the absence of an exit strategy from central banks combined with an explicit targeting of inflationary increases would create the ideal conditions for wholesale destruction of savings stored through financial instruments. - Chan Akya (Nov 13, '09)

OBAMA ON THE ASIAN HIGHWAY
Japan: A new battle over Okinawa
United States President Barack Obama's visit to Japan comes as rifts deepen between Washington and the new government in Tokyo over US troops in Okinawa. Tokyo still sees the US's strike capabilities as crucial for ensuring Japan's security, but it is gradually shifting its axis of cooperation towards Asian nations. - Kosuke Takahashi (Nov 13, '09)

Korea: Looking
for a fight

After the 5,000 rounds that four South Korean patrol boats fired at an errant North Korean vessel, President Obama's visit to Seoul will seem tame in comparison. But while there won't be any fireworks over Pyongyang's nuclear weapons, the contentious US-Korean free-trade agreement could provide sufficient ammunition for a fight. - Donald Kirk (Nov 13, '09)

BOOK REVIEW
An extraordinary life,
an ordinary man

Don't Call Me a Crook
by Bob Moore
Dissident Books, in rediscovering and editing this overlooked classic first published in 1935, has resurrected a one-time author whose ignorance, rakishness and lack of conscience are indicative of his time. What's extraordinary, however, are his Chinese misadventures, which include tales of murder and kidnappings. - Kent Ewing (Nov 13, '09)

Afghans fear infiltration from Iran
Every day, scores of refugees return to Afghanistan from Iran through a small, poorly supervised border town in Herat province. Most of them have been kicked out by Tehran, which, say helpless border police, is also sending across both Afghan and foreign fighters to join the Taliban-led insurgency. - Zia Ahmadi and Mustafa Saber (Nov 12, '09)

US air supply drop turns deadly
An American air supply drop that went horribly wrong is the latest incident to provoke Afghan anger. Up to 25 United States and Afghan personnel, plus several civilians, were reportedly killed or injured in insurgent-riddled Bala Murghab district, with everything going from bad to worse when two paratroopers went missing in a fast-flowing river. - Mustafa Saber (Nov 12, '09)

Sri Lanka split over war honors
A widening rift between Sri Lanka's armed forces chief General Sarath Fonseka and President Mahinda Rajapaksa over who should take credit for the defeat of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam is adding spice to competition ahead of a presidential election, and increasing concern for the country's democratic future. - Sudha Ramachandran (Nov 12, '09)

Complacency creeps back in Mumbai
Life is buzzing again in Mumbai, almost back to normal nearly a year after Pakistani-trained gunmen rampaged there, killing more than 200. But there are doubts the city has learnt from the violent attacks. Regular government pledges of vigilance and anti-terrorism conferences may help create some sense of urgency, but the sight of under-trained, dozing policemen does not. - Raja Murthy (Nov 12, '09)

The rise of Rimland?
Energy deals across Southwest Asia - such as between Iraqi Kurdistan and Turkey - are redrawing international relations for years to come, bringing full circle the region's post-Ottoman Empire history. On the periphery, and crucially, lie Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan. - Robert M Cutler (Nov 12, '09)

Drones: A slam-dunk weapons system
In Afghanistan and Pakistan, drones seem to be the only things that "work". They are not, however, the first wonder weapons so hailed. The atomic bomb, Vietnam's electronic battlefield, Star Wars, "smart bombs" and "netcentric warfare". All failed, just as drones will. But it made no difference, all "succeeded" at home; yet another mini-sector of the military-industrial complex was born. - Tom Engelhardt (Nov 11, '09)

The 'myth' of a counter-revolution in Iran
The crisis sparked by Iran's allegedly rigged presidential election has more than ever exposed the reformists as confused ideologues who for material, political and ideological reasons are unable to definitively break with the ruling establishment. But it is the street protesters who are killing off the reform movement. - Mahan Abedin (Nov 11, '09)

ASIA HAND
Plots seen in Thaksin's Cambodia gambit
Cambodia's welcome to exiled former Thai prime minister, Thaksin Shinawatra, has added a volatile regional dimension to Thailand's political impasse. Thai military planners now believe Cambodia's leader could be working with Thaksin to bring down the government in Bangkok. However, Thai Prime Minister Abhisit 'Vejjajiva may see no political point in easing tensions, given his surge in domestic opinion polls over the issue. - Shawn W Crispin (Nov 11, '09)

US finally wise to Pyongyang's ways
Through a canny mix of precipitous threats and conciliatory gestures, North Korea had continually succeeded in manipulating the United States into granting it vast amounts of food and energy aid - while giving away little in return. The US now appears to have cottoned onto this, recognizing that Pyongyang hasn't the slightest intention of surrendering its nuclear program. - Andrei Lankov (Nov 11, '09)

SINOGRAPH
A sacrificial lamb
Discussions between India and China on disputed border issues could be hastened by Washington's need to find a political solution for Afghanistan, something that could compromise the cause of the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader who donated "his" Tawang to New Delhi. - Francesco Sisci (Nov 11, '09)

Oil floats high on easy money
Conspiracy theorists need only look at the number of tankers berthed over the horizon from Singapore to find support for the notion that speculators are helping to drive up the cost of oil. Media pundits favor the "China demand fits all" approach. Reality seekers in the United States should delve a bit deeper, and look a bit closer to
home. - Julian Delasantellis (Nov 10, '09)
David P Goldman
(Nov 16, '09)
No-one dares pop the bubble. It's like what Woody Allen said about death ...



THE BEAR'S LAIR
Waiting for the
train wreck

Central banks have lost the opportunity to change policy, indicated by gold's breakout above US$1,100. The huge weight of global stimulus money ensures that the gold and commodities bubble will now run to its full extent, with the world heading towards another train wreck. - Martin Hutchinson

China's phone firms
help Africa go mobile

Overshadowed by China's big-number infrastructure and commodity projects in Africa, the country's phone companies, such as Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corp, are helping to bring affordable mobile-phone communications to the continent's people. - Peter J Brown

Japan doomsday
fears premature

Prophecies that Japan is heading for a fiscal doomsday are so prolific they could almost be accurate. Yet, the fact that the government finances its debt from savings in its own currency renders irrelevant many comparisons with other countries, while restructuring promised by the new government, not to mention the population's immense creativity, suggest reports on Japan's imminent death are greatly exaggerated. - R Taggart Murphy

FROM THE BLOG
No recovery here
There is a pretty close inverse correlation between the 10-year Treasuries yield and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index. What could account for this? Not economic recovery, in which real interest rates rise. - David Goldman




CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
Just the facts
New data underlie the scale of China's promise and challenges as US President Barack Obama meets Chinese leaders in Beijing: a doubled trade surplus, a stock market up 74% this year, apartment prices at record levels and passenger car sales up 76% in October. Concern over asset bubbles may weigh more heavily than US hectoring to win the argument for the yuan to strengthen. (Nov 16, '09)
Doug Noland looks at the previous week's events each Monday.

MARKET RAP
Not so strong
The overall strength of Asian stocks last week masked a marked divergence, with the Shanghai market in the middle as it was outpaced by gains elsewhere in Greater China while Japan and South Korea showed signs of weariness. (Nov 16, '09)
R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets.





[Re No country for gold men, Nov 13] "...Don't buy gold. Now it is time to invest in real estate in small towns in China. There are many ways to do that. ..." - quark
"Hmmm .. interesting notions here. ... Gold vs Property ... well, the key problem is that someone in Chattanooga, TN, or Geneva, SW, can buy gold. How can they purchase Chinese 'small town' property directly? Do enlighten us ..." - Chan Akya

From Our Mailbox
[Re Welcome comrade Maobama, November 16] Obama has quickly learned that the bold solutions he hatched [before becoming president] don't readily lend themselves to political expediency. History shows us that great men are celebrated not only for their audacity to dream, but also to act, even if at the expense of personal discomfort and temporary national hardship.
John Chen
USA
   Go to Letters to the Editor



1. Welcome, comrade Maobama

2. Europe's tragedy, and Europe's tragedian

3. A Bonapartist in the Indian Ocean

4. No country for gold men

5. Test of wills over Iran plan

6. An anxious wait in Afghanistan

7. Hong Kong plays transgender catch-up

8. Missing the nuance in south Thailand

9. Korean model triumphs over West

10. Mao's legacy lives on

(24 hours to 11:59pm ET, Nov 16, 2009)

Pick of the month Oct 2009
SPENGLER

Obama's permanent depression




ATol Specials


  By Syed Saleem Shahzad
(Jan '09)

  VIDEO
Taliban's new breed of leader
(May '08)

The Gates
Inheritance
By
Roger Morris
 
(June '07)



Syed Saleem Shahzad reports on the Afghan war from the Taliban side
(Dec '06)

How Hezbollah defeated Israel
By
Mark Perry and
Alastair Crooke
(Oct '06)

Mark Perry and
Alastair Crooke
talk to the 'terrorists'
(Mar '06)

China: The
Impossible
Revolution

By
Francesco Sisci 

The Coming
Trade War


By Henry C K Liu

A series
by Henry C K Liu
 

Sinoroving

Pepe Escobar in China

Money, Power
and
Modern Art


A series by Henry C K Liu

Andre Gunder Frank on Uncle Sam and his shrinking dollar


By Pepe Escobar with photographs by Kevin Nortz

   Nir Rosen goes inside the Iraqi resistance

Nir Rosen rides with the US 3rd Armored Cavalry in western Iraq



 
 


All material on this website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written permission.
Copyright 1999 - 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings), Ltd.
Head Office: Unit B, 16/F, Li Dong Building, No. 9 Li Yuen Street East, Central, Hong Kong
Thailand Bureau: 11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110