Dust flux, Vostok ice core

Dust flux, Vostok ice core
Two dimensional phase space reconstruction of dust flux from the Vostok core over the period 186-4 ka using the time derivative method. Dust flux on the x-axis, rate of change is on the y-axis. From Gipp (2001).
Showing posts with label Libya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libya. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Harper looks serious

. . . in the photo on his Facebook page.

Very serious, very leader-like, as he condemns ISIS for beheading 21 Coptic Christians.

Does he consider his own role in the debacle? Perhaps if he hadn't been so gung-ho to murder in favour of progressivist "R2P" bullshit, he wouldn't have broken Libya, and there'd be a whole lot less killing going on.

But of course, in his mind, there is no connection between his past actions and the present consequences, which shall go on and on.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

US looks to Syria

There is an opinion published in today's Washington Post by Richard Cohen arguing on similarities between the unfolding Syrian situation (sign-up may be required) and the run-up to the Bosnian conflict.
We are coming up on a melancholy anniversary. On April 5, 1992, Suada
Dilberovic and Olga Sucic were shot and killed. They were attending a
peace rally in Sarajevo when Serbian snipers opened fire. The two
women were the first of more than 100,000 people killed over the next
few years. The Bosnian war had begun.

This is also an instructive anniversary. Much of what characterized
the Bosnian war, including hideous barbarity, is now occurring in
Syria. Once again, we are seeing sectarian butchery. Once again, we
are confronted with a travelogue of peoples, religions, sects, tribes
and clans. Once again, we are being warned of the daunting challenges
of topography — the Syrian desert, the Syrian mountains, the Syrian
cities. Once again we are being told that arming the opposition would
exacerbate the killing.
It already appears that arming the opposition has exacerbated the killing, as was the case in Libya. America is psyching itself up for another intervention. Cohen's conclusion:
It is a mess. But it is always a mess. It is up to the United States
to help establish a leadership. There is an art to these things, and
the State Department knows how to do it. There is also an inevitable
progression to such wars, and Bosnia shows the way. The Syrian war
will worsen. Many more people will be killed and, finally, the United
States will have to show Turkey and Saudi Arabia how these things are
done.
Why exactly is it up to the United States to help establish leadership? Why is anything up the United States?

As happened in Libya, and Bosnia, and countries going back to Viet Nam, Korea, and France--in the western way of warfare, mass civilian deaths are not a bug, they are a feature. They are a feature of a form of war-fighting that is based on air power and minimizing the risk to boots on the ground. The newest feature of western war-fighting appears to be an increasing role for local proxies to do the heavy lifting, while the west drops bombs on "targets".

Update: US has already been intervening in Syria for some time.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Has NATO scored an "own goal" in Mali?

France and other European countries have decried the ongoing coup in Mali.

But is there a connection between the coup and last year's NATO attack on Libya?

The soldiers involved in the coup have stated that their grievances with the sitting government are primarily related to low-level conflict between government forces and an insurgency amongst the Tuareg. The soldiers have complained of being inadequately armed.

The Tuareg are scattered across several countries, the boundaries of which were determined arbitrarily by colonial powers. In this sense, they are like the Kurds--a people rebelling against several countries, hoping to create a nation out of their ancestral lands. The Tuareg do not recognize the artificial boundaries that bind them. They have been a despised and mistreated minority in the different countries of the Sahara. Although a low-level rebellion has been brewing for many years, it was largely mitigated by Algeria and Libya.

The Tuareg had been grateful to Colonel Gaddafi, who had saved thousands of them during a famine in 1973. Many Tuareg took shelter in Libya after conflicts in Mali and Niger, and many served in Gaddafi's forces.

After Gaddafi's fall, heavily armed Tuareg returned to Mali, and the insurgency in northern Mali flared up. Which brings us to today.

Despite the geographical proximity, the only impact I can see the coup having on Ghana is that Ghana may have to send troops as part of an ECOWAS peacekeeping mission.

Monday, August 29, 2011

NATO wrapping things up in Libya

As predicted, the NATO campaign in Libya is winding up with the massacre of civilians--albeit civilians who, in the words of this author, are "unworthy victims"--that is to say, unworthy of any of our concern. The list of unworthy victims includes the majority of civilian deaths, and foreign (mainly African) workers, who were demonized at the beginning of the conflict by the western media's insistence on calling them "African mercenaries".


Lies, War, and Empire: NATO’s “Humanitarian Imperialism” in Libya
By: Andrew Gavin Marshall
In this report I seek to examine the war against Libya in a more critical and comprehensive manner than that of the story we have been told. We hear a grand fairy tale about powerful Western nations working together to save innocent civilians in a far-off country who simply want the freedoms and rights we already have. Here we are, our nations and governments – whose officials we elect (generally) – are bombing and killing people on the other side of the world. Is it not our responsibility, as citizens of these very Western nations, to examine and critique the claims of our governments? They are, after all, killing people around the world in our name. Should we not seek to discover if they are lying?
It has been said, “In war, truth is the first casualty.” Libya is no exception. From the lies that started the war, to the rebels linked to al-Qaeda, ethnically cleansing black Libyans, killing civilians, propaganda, PR firms, intelligence agents, and possible occupation; Libya is a more complex story than the fairy tale we have been sold. Reality always is.
What Were the ‘Reasons’ for ‘Intervention’?
We were sold the case for war in Libya as a “humanitarian intervention.” We were told, of course, that we “needed” to intervene in Libya because Muammar Gaddafi was killing his own people in large numbers; those people, on the same token, were presented as peaceful protesters resisting the 40-plus year reign of a brutal dictator.
In early March of 2011, news headlines in Western nations reported that Gaddafi would kill half a million people.[1] On March 18, as the UN agreed to launch air strikes on Libya, it was reported that Gaddafi had begun an assault against the rebel-held town of Benghazi. The Daily Mail reported that Gaddafi had threatened to send in his African mercenaries to crush the rebellion.[2] Reports of Libyan government tanks sitting outside Benghazi poised for an invasion were propagated in the Western media.[3] In the lead-up to the United Nations imposing a no-fly zone, reports spread rapidly through the media of Libyan government jets bombing the rebels.[4] Even in February, the New York Times – the sacred temple for the ‘stenographers of power’ we call “journalists” – reported that Gaddafi was amassing “thousands of mercenaries” to defend Tripoli and crush the rebels.[5] Italy’s Foreign Minister declared that over 1,000 people were killed in the fighting in February, citing the number as “credible.”[6] Even a top official with Human Rights Watch declared the rebels to be “peaceful protesters” who “are nice, sincere people who want a better future for Libya.”[7] The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights declared that “thousands” of people were likely killed by Gaddafi, “and called for international intervention to protect civilians.”[8] In April, reports spread near and far at lightning speed of Gaddafi’s forces using rape as a weapon of war, with the first sentence in a Daily Mail article declaring, “Children as young as eight are being raped in front of their families by Gaddafi’s forces in Libya,” with Gaddafi handing out Viagra to his troops in a planned and organized effort to promote rape.[9]
As it turned out, these claims – as posterity notes – turned out to be largely false and contrived. Doctors Without Borders and Amnesty International both investigated the claims of rape, and “have found no first-hand evidence in Libya that rapes are systematic and being used as part of war strategy,” and their investigations in Eastern Libya “have not turned up significant hard evidence supporting allegations of rapes by Qaddafi’s forces.” Yet, just as these reports came out, Hillary Clinton declared that the U.S. is “deeply concerned by reports of wide-scale rape” in Libya.[10] Even U.S. military and intelligence officials had to admit that, “there is no evidence that Libyan military forces are being given Viagra and engaging in systematic rape against women in rebel areas”; at the same time Susan Rice, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, “told a closed-door meeting of officials at the UN that the Libyan military is using rape as a weapon in the war with the rebels and some had been issued the anti-impotency drug. She reportedly offered no evidence to backup the claim.”[11]
An investigation by Amnesty International, released in June, attempted to assess the on-the-ground (as opposed to ‘in-the-newspapers’) reality of the claims made which led to Western “intervention” in Libya. Among the stories of mass rapes were the use, by Gaddafi, of “foreign mercenaries” and using helicopters and jets to attack rebel forces and protesters. As the Independent reported in June:
An investigation by Amnesty International has failed to find evidence for these human rights violations and in many cases has discredited or cast doubt on them. It also found indications that on several occasions the rebels in Benghazi appeared to have knowingly made false claims or manufactured evidence.[12]
Article continues here 

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Feces-throwing primates rule the world!

As humans have a primate origin, sometimes we can gain valuable insight into human behaviour by studying primates. For instance, primates are known for throwing shit at things when we are angry.

It is true we don't literally do this anymore. Well, not often. But it is still embedded within our psychology. In our language--we might say, "my boss just shit all over me after presentation," or perhaps, "I'm tired of all your crap", or even, "let's go over there and beat the shit out of them!". 

I find it terribly amusing and a little frightening to consider that psychologically we do not much differ from those little monkeys up in the trees throwing shit at each other.

Only we have rockets and nuclear weapons.

In fact we can view the history of warfare as the development of better and better means of throwing shit. The relentless march of technological progress in warfare has been driven by the need to improve three parameters--1) range; 2) accuracy; 3) explosive yield.

Over the years we have progressed from the invention of the catapult to the ultimate dream of primate-kind--brave American technicians sitting in bunkers in Nevada hurling shit at unsuspecting Afghan villagers by remote control. Intercontinental shit-throwing!

We've even managed to hurl some of our shit right out of the solar system!

The war policy of the western powers ever since WWII has been predicated around throwing large volumes of shit from aircraft. Victory through air power!

Viewing some of our modern political problems through the prism of our primate past may provide an interesting perspective.

There is currently considerable consternation over the Iranian regime developing the ability to hurl shit 2,000 km. Why a country that can hurl shit right out of the solar system feels this is a problem is unclear.

There is a lot of noise coming from Israel, which is close enough to be struck by the Iranian shit-flinging devices. But they have tremendous retaliatory capacity--enough to completely bury Iran. Nevertheless they endlessly lobby the US to ensure that American shit will be added to Israeli shit in an attack on Iran.

Meanwhile, the shit-throwing continues in Libya.


"As of March 20, Royal Canadian Armed Forces have been ordered to begin 
flinging poo at forces loyal to Colonel Qadaffi."

Monday, May 16, 2011

Gadaffi to face ICC

As related here, Gadaffi and some of his assistants are being charged with crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

How long before we see similar charges against Ouattara? Or does having liberal, democratic values make genocide okay?

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Massacres in West Africa: where are the airstrikes?

The situation in Cote d'Ivoire is deteriorating rapidly. A major massacre is reported at Duekoue, in the western part of the country. I don't know what news you are receiving, but what is being reported here (in Ghana) as the slaughter of Gbagbo supporters (who by all accounts lost the election) by Outtara supporters.

In Libya, Gaddhafi had only promised to massacre civilians. Here, actual massacres are already taking place.

Will there be any action on the part of the UN or other interested parties, or do they only protect civilians on the right side?

I am expecting to travel to Nzemaland, near the border between Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire early next week and will try to look in on the refugee situation.

Monday, March 28, 2011

NATO: The new Orgainians

The NATO chief was on TV again today explaining the NATO's sole role in Libya is the protection of civilians. The rapid advance of rebel forces in the wake of NATO's airborne attacks against tanks and hard points is merely coincidental. I couldn't help but notice the rebel army has convoys of truck-mounted rocket launchers (a la Katyusha), which is not exactly a precision weapon, particularly if used against an army in an urban setting.

It is interesting to speculate how NATO will react if rebel forces lay siege to Tripoli. Will NATO start bombing the rebels in this case? Or do they count as civilians?

NATO could become just like the Orgainians, only murderous.


"Captain Kirk, violence is painful to us. But unless you 
learn to peacefully resolve your differences with the 
Klingons, we will massacre you all."




Sunday, March 20, 2011

In order to save civilians, we have to slaughter them

So the UN has authorized the use of force against some Libyans in order to save others.

The coalition partners in this operation include France, the UK, the US, and possibly some Arab states. Canada is tagging along too. The Harper Government has asked rhetorically whether we believe in freedom or merely say we do.  Their reply is to join the UN in violating Article 2 of the UN charter in which the sovereignty of each of its members is assured. The UN is only intended to intervene in conflicts between or among states, but internal affairs of a state are specifically off limits.


Article 2 finishes thusly: "Nothing in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state..." 


So the UN doesn't like the Libya's form of government? They are not permitted to intervene.


The Harper Government's (no longer the Canadian government) response is problematic. As a democracy, Canadians are accustomed to the idea that if those that form Canadian policy make a mess of things, the voters have the opportunity to vote them out of power. But now Canada is bound to join a war chosen by foreign bureaucrats. How are we to express our disapproval? 


Now I'm no fan of Gaddafi, but it seems to me that there are many places around the world where civilians either are or were being slaughtered by their governments (whether fairly elected or not), and the UN has not seen fit to act.


Perhaps I could be convinced if our particular method of lending assistance to civilians were not so devastating. But unfortunately, since the beginning of WWII, the preferred method of military intervention by the Anglo-American powers has been the mass bombing attack--the one method which has been field-tested and which is conclusively proven to have the highest ratio of civilian deaths to military targets destroyed.


And much of this field testing took place in an era when military targets were obvious targets--you had airbases, certain types of manufacturing, certain types of radars, armored formations and troop concentrations--but the military scenarios in the middle east involve small groups of fighters hidden among civilian populations. Attempting to destroy such targets by air strikes leads to the common Afghan problem--large numbers of civilians killed for each demonstrated insurgent.


The UN plan to save civilians will involve the murder of many others. It seems a little imperious to be deciding which Libyan civilians should live and which should die.


The air strikes have already attracted buyer's remorse from some Arab States (who had earlier called for a no-fly zone). 


"What has happened in Libya differs from the goal of imposing a no-fly zone and what we want is the protection of civilians and not bombing other civilians," Arab League secretary general Amr Mussa told reporters.


Even the Taliban, it appears, understand the UN Charter better than the UN.