PC Bloggs makes fun of those who think that more laws are the answer to crime with devastating British irony.
Category Archives: Politics
Essay of the Week: 8/26/07-9/1/07
One of the biggest errors of modern time is a misplaced faith in laws. It is thought that the right laws can do everything from taming the power of the US to improving the status of woman. But the truth is that laws do not create society, society creates laws. The power of a law nessearly stems from the values that make up a society. As a consequence, laws that are not based on values common to a society will only create widespread lawlessness. In other words, without a society based on common values, laws are useless.
This truth is ignored by many people who think that if they can only get the right laws passed, then society will be so much better. Such people would do well to read this essay from the Belmont Club exploring the consequences of trying to make enforce a common law were there is no common society.
Essay of the Week: 7/15/07-7/21/07
This week’s essay of the week is from The Ape Man and it is called Why moderate Muslims don’t matter. It is a bit of a misleading title since Ape Man’s argument really applies to all religions. Nonetheless, it is a point that we don’t feel is given the proper consideration even in conservative circles.
Imagine having a fight like this in downtown Washington or New York.
This from the blog Pakistan Uncut (although I think the credit should really go to Dawn News service)…..
Islamabad’s densely populated Sector G-6, where Lal Masjid is located, and the areas in its vicinity were jolted by big bangs of grenades, heavy shelling and other heavy arms used in the battle early in the morning.
The entire federal capital was declared a red zone as there was a complete ban on people’s entry and exit from morning to evening.
Life in Islamabad was paralysed and most residents went on rooftops to see clouds of thick black smoke over Lal Masjid.
The fighting was so horrifying that bullets of heavy guns hit many multi-storeyed buildings located four to five kilometres away from Lal Masjid.
Heavy movement of troops continued around Lal Masjid throughout the day with machinegun-fitted armoured personnel carriers and trucks carrying armed troops.
Some of the parents of the children, who did not come out of the mosque or were shifted to other places without informing them, started weeping when they were told that the operation had almost concluded.
I feel sorry for all the poor parents who had little kids trapped in there. Can you imagine seeing a fight like that go on knowing that your kid was trapped in side?
Unfortunately, I think events like this are only going to become more common.
FAS spots a new Chinese Sub using Google Earth
A writer on a Federation of American Scientist Strategic Security Blog thinks he has found a picture of a new Chinese sub on Google Earth. He speculates that it can carry a more advanced sea-launched ballistic missile then previously known Chinese subs.
If it was anyone else, I would probably dismiss the story out of hand. But the Federation of American Scientist usually err on the side of caution. If they say they think they have found a new sub, they probably have.
(h/t Defense Tech: who also have some observations of their own.)
Rant of the Week: 7/8/07-7/14/07
I don’t know what it is about Spengler and Russia. But every time he gets on the subject he lets off a blistering little rant. Even some people who normally hate every word that comes out of Spengler’s mouth liked this one.
Essay of the Week: 7/8/07-7/14/07
Today’s essay comes from a former Muslim radical called Ed Husain. He writes of his experiences in Saudi Arabia in an essay in The Australian called Barely veiled menace. I doubt that what is recounted here will surprise anyone, but it is an interesting essay none the less.
I have one quibble with the essay though. The author repeatedly refers to the Saudi youth as being sex starved and he blames the strict separation of the sexs for many of the problems that he observes. But I think he has the cause and effect mixed up.
There are a lot of non- Islamic cultures in the world who have worse sexual problems than the author describes in Saudi Arabia. Sub-Sahara Africa springs to mind right off the bat. So do some Caribbean countries.
I think that popularity of many of seeming harsh sexual regulations in Islam stems from the fact that many woman fear that things would be even worse for them without those regulations. Certainly a large part of the Taliban’s popularity stemmed from the fact that they gave greater protection to the woman of that country then the Warlords did.
Interesting comments on a Pakistani Blog
This Pakistani blog is interesting in its own right if you like to get the perspective of people who actually live in an area. But I was particularly interested in the comments on this post here.
Their English is not the best so it will take a little parsing. Also one should remember that these are all English speakers and so not a good representative sample of the people of Pakistan. Still, it was quite interesting to read their comments.
Is Musharraf really going to allow NATO strikes in Pakistan?
In an article in the Asia Times Online, Syed Saleem Shahzad claims that Musharraf has given NATO the green light to cross the border into Pakistan. Shahzad’s claims are pretty far reaching. Read this passage….
KARACHI – Since last September, North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces in Afghanistan have been pressing Islamabad for the right to conduct extensive hot-pursuit operations into Pakistan to target Taliban and al-Qaeda bases.
According to Asia Times Online contacts, NATO and its US backers have gotten their wish: coalition forces will start hitting targets wherever they might be.
Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf is expected to make an important announcement on extremism during an address to the nation in the next day or two.
The ATol contacts in Islamabad say that coalition intelligence has pinpointed at least four centers in the tribal areas of North Waziristan and South Waziristan on the border with Afghanistan from which Taliban operations inside Afghanistan are run. These bases include arms caches and the transfer and raising of money and manpower, the latter in the form of foot-soldiers to fight with the Taliban-led insurgency.
Operations inside Pakistan might be carried out independently by the United States, probably with air power, by Pakistani forces acting alone or as joint offensives. In all cases, though, the US will pull the strings, for instance by providing the Pakistanis with information on targets to hit.
Musharraf has apparently already told his military commanders, the National Security Council and decision-makers in government of the development.
If Shahzad is not just blowing smoke and Musharraf has really agreed to this one wonders what pushed Musharraf over the edge? Is it the problems with the Red Mosque? Did Cheney threaten to stop the flow of money if Musharraf’s did not do more to help?
I doubt Musharraf will be able to hang onto power if NATO starts crossing the border. But then, I doubt that Musharraf will be able to hang onto power for long no matter what he does. So maybe Musharraf is willing to take the gamble. Or maybe Shahzad is lying through his teeth.
Is Myanmar selling Iran Uranium?
I don’t know what to make of this essay. You should never judge people by how they come across in print. Especially when the print in question was written about them by somebody else.
But as I read this essay profiling Aaron Cohen I was inclined to dislike him. He just struck me as the kind of guy who might make stuff up.
In fairness to Cohen though, his personality also reminds me an awful lot of a man called John Fairfield who rescued a lot of slaves in the mid 1800s. Fairfield was always showing off his bullet wounds and talking up all his close calls and he was definitely for real. So maybe Cohen is too.
Why worry about this question? Well, how much credibility you are willing to give to Cohen makes a big difference on what you think of this passage from the essay that I linked to above….
Later that day, Cohen was taken to see the area’s uranium mines — where the Shans told him soil samples had been extracted by the Russians as well as A.Q. Khan, the well-known Pakistani nuclear-weapons-scientist-turned-dealer: “These mounds are everywhere, where samples were being unearthed by other partners as well, including the Iranians and the North Koreans… I am the only Westerner [to see this],” Cohen wrote.
The intelligence minister then handed Cohen documentation of Khan’s entries into Myanmar and told him that the SPDC was selling Shan uranium to the Iranians, who were processing it into material for nuclear weapons. The route from Myanmar, the minister showed him, led straight through China to Natanz, Iran. “I’m no expert on weapons-grade uranium,” Cohen admits. “But they wanted me to leave with samples of what I saw.” Restating his human-rights mission, Cohen refused to discuss transport of the nuclear material. (“It’s a death wish to have that kind of stuff on you,” he says.) But he agreed to put a stack of evidence, including photographs of the Burmese and Iranian facilities, in the right hands when he returned to Thailand and the U.S.
A.Q. Khan, the founder of Pakistan’s nuclear-weapons program, confessed in 2004 to having been the mastermind behind a clandestine network of nuclear-arms proliferation that stretched from Pakistan through Europe, the Middle East and Asia. His network sold blueprints for centrifuges to enrich uranium as well as illicit uranium centrifuges and uranium hexafluoride — the gas that can be transformed into enriched uranium for nuclear bombs.
Khan is already known to have provided complete centrifuge systems to Libya, Iran and North Korea. He was pardoned by Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and sentenced to house arrest after declaring on television that Musharraf’s government had not played a role in his schemes. Western governments have been denied access to Khan, but the British think tank International Institute for Strategic Studies recently published a report indicating that Khan’s network is very much alive, even without its decapitated head.
Eerily, the Pakistan-Myanmar link is backed up by a 2002 Wall Street Journal article detailing Myanmar’s nuclear ambitions: “The program drew scrutiny recently after two Pakistani nuclear scientists, with long experience at two of their country’s most secret nuclear installations, showed up in Myanmar after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the U.S. Asian and European intelligence officials say Suleiman Asad and Muhammed Ali Mukhtar left Pakistan for Myanmar when the U.S grew interested in interrogating them about their alleged links to suspected terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden, who Washington believes wants to develop a nuclear weapon.”
Burmese exile magazines, blogs and Web sites are rife with alleged wicked SPDC plots. But one question pops up over and over: Is there a link between Myanmar, which mines and refines uranium ore, and Iran, which requires uranium for its own nuclear projects? And, specifically, is Burmese yellowcake finding its way to uranium centrifuges in Natanz, Iran?
Cohen’s testimony suggests that the answer may be yes. From the mining sites, he was taken to meet several Shan men who said they worked as drivers for the SPDC at clandestine nuclear processing facilities near Taungdwingyi, Chauk and Lanwya. These men swore to Cohen that the SPDC was overseeing the production of yellowcake there and in several other locations, then transporting it on North Korean and Iranian ships as well as over land through China and Afghanistan, via a courier network, to the (then secret) underground Iranian plant in Natanz. They handed Cohen the coordinates for the facilities, saying that as ethnic Shans they could no longer do this work for a regime that was systematically attempting to wipe out their people. They had thrown their support behind the Shan State Army, they said, and wished him luck.
A few weeks later, Cohen hand-delivered that information to a source at the Pentagon. The following day (April 19), the International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that Iran was running more than 1,300 centrifuges at its underground plant in Natanz (latest estimates put it closer to 3,000). Iran’s plan to install 50,000 centrifuges there to enrich uranium made headlines, with the BBC running satellite photographs of the facility. But no major media outlet noted the Myanmar connection, and the story was soon buried in the subsequent frenzy over the Virginia Tech massacre.
There is more in the essay, but you get the picture. The question is, how much of it should we believe?