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Saturday, March 31, 2007

The alternative week-end toy

BERJAYAOK, we’re on again. If there are toys, there have to be alternative toys. I am spoilt for choice, which means that there will be many more alternative toy postings. Heh!

Elephants! Now there is a word to strike awe or terror into every toy-lover’s heart. Used in war since antiquity, these animals could be relied on to sow panic while charging the enemy.

They were used for ceremonial purposes, transportation and, as this picture shows, to pull munitions in Sheffield during the First World War. This pachyderm was, according to the caption in the February 9, 1916 edition of Illustrated War News, “unofficially connected with Mr Lloyd George’s Department”. Hmm. Wonder who his father was.

A matter of respect

BERJAYAIt might have taken a little time, but – a week on - at least The Daily Mail has woken up to the full extent of the humiliation which our proud nation has had to suffer.

Thus, as the Iranians through their Moscow ambassador hint that a show trial is being prepared for our kidnapped service personnel – with the truly ghastly prospect of "punishment" if the "charges" against them are proven - the paper proclaims the stark truth in a robust leader: "This humiliation shames Britain".

The parading of the British hostages on Iranian television is not just humiliating for them but for this country, it says. "Those images will be beamed around the world, with the clear message that we are impotent in the face of this blatant aggression and provocation."

This is a theme picked up by Max Hastings in the Mail's Saturday essay. He rightly reminds us of past glories and the power of gunboat diplomacy and notes that "Blair's true legacy" is a bankrupt foreign policy and the tarnishing of our "glorious Armed Forces".

Along the way, Hastings also notes that there is no credible military option available to us in seeking to release the hostages, thus arguing that we must rely on diplomacy. He then remarks on the tardiness of the EU response (so much for all Blair's wasted wooing of the EU, he writes) and the ineffectiveness of the United Nations, under which mandate the British forces were acting.

Hastings, though, does not offer a way out – a solution to the crisis. He believes that there is nothing specific we can do as we are entirely in the hands of the Iranians. So the great man turns to Gordon Brown, the prime minister soon to be, and asks, "what will he do differently, to rescue this country from the international shambles which Blair will soon bequeath to us?"

Standing aside from Hastings for a moment, those who would advocate an invasion of Iran might do well to remember that it is the major supplier of oil to Japan. A disruption in the flow to that country alone would have a knock-on effect which could plunge the world into recession – a scenario we explored last year (here and here) - while the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, cutting off Saudi and Kuwaiti (and Iraqi) oil, would most certainly have that effect.

However, to rule out such an ostensibly satisfying option is not to say that, as Hastings suggests, passive diplomacy is our only option. And this is not the only issue where Mad Max goes off the rails. He writes:

When this business is over, hard questions should be asked in Britain. Who was responsible for exposing the sailors within reach of one of the most reckless nations in the world? This was a kidnapping waiting to happen. It has laid bare the bankruptcy of British foreign policy, shackled to America's Iraq calamity. Blair has forfeited respect in the Muslim world, where a decade ago our influence remained substantial. He has lost not only the battle to turn the British people into Euro-enthusiasts, but also his campaign to make this country a major force in Europe.
Here, we see the glimmerings of understanding, only for them to be submerged in left-wing rhetoric and nascent anti-Americanism – never far from the surface where Hastings is concerned.

For sure, we have lost the respect of the Muslim world – and especially Iran – but is it because of "the bankruptcy of British foreign policy, shackled to America's Iraq calamity"? The "kidnapping waiting to happen" was hardly a function of foreign policy. More likely, it was – certainly in the view of this blog - a result of failures of military intelligence, operational planning and execution.

However, if you think about it, the rot did not start in the northern Gulf. As we have been recording meticulously on this blog (in postings far too numerous to list here), Army policy in response to continued attack on British land bases has been supine to the point of being craven.

For years now, Iranian-backed militias have been taking free pot-shots with mortars and rockets at British bases, and the Army response has been to hunker down and do nothing (or very little).

When it got too much to bear in Camp Naji, al Amarah, the Army simply ran away, abandoning the camp, which was stripped bare by the militias in 24 hours. Similarly, we abandoned the British Consulate in the Basra Palace complex, despite a £13 million refit, because of constant mortaring - and we are now planning to retreat to barracks in Basra Air Station.

It seems obvious, therefore, that the Iranians must have taken home the message that you can attack British forces with impunity - they will do nothing about it, other than run away. From there, it is hardly any great feat to link the Iranian aggression against Royal Navy boarding parties and the attitude of the Army.

Should that be anything like a correct analysis – or even partially correct – then the answer is equally obvious. What we need is a variation on the theme adopted by the Metropolitan Police of yore, when one of their own was murdered. Without knowing who was responsible, officers would "turn over" villains, making their lives intolerable and ordinary theivery impossible. Sooner or later – or so the theory went – the criminal fraternity would sue for peace, and deliver up the murderer to justice.

In like manner, we know that there is strong Iranian influence (and presence) in southern Iraq. In that region, therefore, Iranians are accessible – and vulnerable.

There, a robust, aggressive response by the Army, with the help and support of our allies and the Iraqi Army – which is proving to be a force to be reckoned with – all directed against Iranian interests, could soon have Tehran suing for peace. And even if that did not work directly, such action would go a very long way to restoring that precious commodity which we have lost – respect. More than anything else, we must imbue our enemies and friends alike with the knowledge that the British are not to be trifled with.

COMMENT THREAD

The Saturday "toy"

BERJAYA
Just feeling vindictive. An Air France Airbus A320 at Charles de Gaulle airport. Filched off the seriously good Airliners.net (if they complain, I'll have to take it down), the pic was taken in 2002 and, seems to me, to typify the classic European pose – on your knees (click on the pic to enlarge and enjoy the full glory).

Note the sensitivities were such that the Air France bosses had the logos covered up.

COMMENT THREAD

"Appropriate measures"

BERJAYAIf taken at face value, the European Union has issued a robust statement. It came by way of a communiqué from the informal Foreign Affairs Council, meeting in the Park Hotel in Bremen, Germany. The full text is as follows:

The European Union deplores the continued arrest of 15 British citizens by Iran on 23rd of March and underlines the European Union’s unconditional support for the government of the United Kingdom.

All evidence clearly indicates that at the time of the seizure, the British Naval personnel were on a routine patrolling mission in Iraqi waters in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 1723. The seizure by Iranian Forces therefore constitutes a clear breach of international law.

The European Union repeats its call for the immediate and unconditional release of the British Royal Naval personnel. The European Union furthermore calls on Iran to immediately inform the government of the United Kingdom about the whereabouts of the British Naval personnel and grant consular access. The fundamental rights of all prisoners in Iran must be scrupulously respected.

The EU Foreign Ministers requested the High Representative to present the EU position to the Iranian government. Should the UK citizens not be released in the near future, the EU will decide on appropriate measures
.
This was agreed between Germany's foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, holding the EU presidency, and Britain's foreign secretary Margaret Beckett (pictured), and endorsed by all the other 25 member states.

The response from Iran was not long in coming. It told the EU not to interfere in the "dispute". I guess we will now find out what the EU means by "appropriate measures".

Meanwhile, Rense.com is carrying a prediction from the "well-known Russian journalist Andrei Uglanov", first published in the Moscow weekly Argumenty Nedeli.

Uglanov tells us that the long awaited US military attack on Iran is now on track for the first week of April, specifically for 4am on 6 April - the Good Friday opening of Easter weekend. Code-named Operation Bite, about 20 targets are marked for bombing, with the list including uranium enrichment facilities, research centres, and laboratories. The attack will last twelve hours, from 4am until 4pm local time.

The EU had better get its skates on. It has seven days for "soft power" to save the world.

COMMENT THREAD

Friday, March 30, 2007

Something of an irony

BERJAYA
It is something of an irony that a few days before the Iranian Revolutionary Guard kidnapped 15 of our marines and sailors, Iran's Civil Aviation Organisation took delivery of its first new western-made aircraft since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

But the biggest irony of all is that the aircraft - which will be jointly operated between PAAviation and Iran's CAO for skydiving training – is a British-made 10-seater Britten Norman Islander. However, the interior can be re-configured to transport VIPs and it can also operate as an air ambulance or be used for coastal patrols.

The sale, worth $2 million, has been specifically agreed by Washington as part of efforts to encourage Tehran to halt its nuclear program, and a $2 million package of spare parts has also been agreed, to bring 10 other Islanders (bought before the revolution) to airworthy condition. It was thought that Britten Norman might send technicians to Tehran to help supervise the rebuild.

The agency which negotiated the sale says that this link gives an idea of specification of the aircraft. Needless to say, the Iranians are delighted with the deal so far and, we are told, have expressed interest in a further three aircraft. It will be interesting to see if our government now allows such a sale to go ahead – but then, the Iranians did recently increase their negotiating power somewhat.

COMMENT THREAD

"One of the most democratically representative in the world"

BERJAYAThat is how Mustafa Barghouti, the Palestinian Information Minister and not a member of either Hamas or Fatah, describes the recently formed "unity" government of Palestine in an interview with Der Spiegel.

The reason is quite simple: it represents 96 per cent of the Palestinian people. Without going too deeply into the arithmetic, I should like to point out that Stalin usually managed to get 99.5 per cent of the popular vote, so the Palestinian government has some way to go.

Furthermore, the last election Saddam Hussein held in Iraq actually gave him 100 per cent of the popular vote plus one. The reason, I was told by an Iraqi who lives in the United States is that Ben Bella, former Communist-leaning dictator of Algeria and a Hero of the Soviet Union, was visiting the country at the time and was asked to cast a vote for Saddam as well.

The problem is that the "unity" government was dragged together in Riyadh a couple of weeks ago after a good deal of fighting between Hamas and Fatah. Nor has that completely died down. So, in actual fact, there is some difficulty in getting people to accept that they are being represented.

Furthermore, there is the problem of an opposition. There isn't one and that is a bit of a handicap where democracy is concerned. If everybody is inside the tent, because that is the only way you can keep them from killing each other (mostly) and because that is the only way they will be able to give some dosh to their followers, then there is nobody to oppose the policies (when they finally make their way to the surface, if they ever do) peacefully.

The reason for the interview is that Chancellor Merkel is off on her travels again tomorrow. Even Blair has been known to stay in Britain for a while. What's with the lady?

This time she is going to the Middle East, to represent the EU in another attempt to sort out the mess, presumably by putting pressure on Israel to accept the somewhat unsatisfactory Saudi solution, which is, at the moment, the Arab consensus, imposed on the warring factions by the Sauds.

Mr Barghouti is hoping for good things from the visit, from the European Union and from Germany in particular as it has been "a supporter of the Palestinian people" for a long time. Sadly, it has not been able to ensure that the Palestinian people acquire some reasonable politicians. Nobody can do that.

Mr Barghouti has a point when he insists that other countries cannot pick and choose which ministers they negotiate with but, of course, that is not the real grievance. It is the absence (well, not exactly absence, but some diminishing) of aid money that the Palestinian ministers keep complaining about. While one acknowledges that the government was the choice of the Palestinian people, there is no particular reason why we should subsidize it or the various militias that are roaming the place.

The interviewer, to be fair, asks Mr Barghouti several times whether his government is prepared to recognize Israel's right to existence, getting no straight response, merely a good deal of complaining about putting the Palestinians under too much pressure.

Chancellor Merkel can save herself a trip, surely a good thing to do from the global warming perspective. Nothing much will come of it. Germany should not start putting pressure on the one truly democratic country in the Middle East.

COMMENT THREAD

Demonstration

BERJAYAWe received this e-mail from 910 Group Forum (www.vigilantfreedom.org):

Assuming the Marines are still captive, we are organizing a protest for Saturday, March 31 at 3pm outside the Iranian Embassy. It will be in Kensington Rd (S side) 200 yards east of the junction with Prince's Gate - that's as near the Embassy as you are allowed to go to protest. Nearest tube is South Kensington - it's about 10 minutes walk from there. It is on several bus routes though. Please come and please bring placards.
We suggest you avoid inflammatory placards - suggestions that Tehran should be nuked might be misinterpreted. More dangerously, they might not be.

News from Greece

BERJAYAWhat with one thing and another, we do not seem to report news from Greece as often as we should. Let me, therefore, make amends.

First off there is the news that the Greek government has banned all team game matches for 15 days. Trouble broke out yesterday before the projected women’s volleyball match between Olympiakos and Panathinaikos the country’s two largest teams. The police, it appears, had not been aware of the massing of fans in Peania.

One fan was stabbed and run over by a car, at least six people were injured, one of whom was in critical condition, and police made 13 arrests following the 20-minute battle.

Among those injured were bystanders as well as several minor soccer league players on their way to training. Their team logo and colors resembled those of Panathinaikos.
According to the report there had been problems between the two sports clubs before:
Clashes among supporters of the two teams date back decades. The most recent death of a spectator in Greece, in 1995, was after clashes between Olympiakos and Panathinaikos fans during a basketball match.
One can’t help feeling that the Greeks take sport perhaps just a tiny bit too seriously.

In the meantime,
The European Commission on Friday formally endorsed Greece's plan for how it will spend EU aid, opening the door for Athens to receive EU payments of €20 billion (US$26.6 billion) over the next seven years.
Greece is the second country, after Malta, to have its National Strategic Reference Framework for 2007 to 2013 accepted by the European Commission. We can forget that nonsense in the article about it being accepted by the 27-member Union. Nobody but the relevant Commissioners, Danuta Hübner, Commissar for Regional Policy and Vladimir Špidla, in charge of Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities, and their staff even know that €20 billion of our money has been earmarked for the Greek economy.

The Greek strategy, we are told, “shows a strong commitment to promote the quality and the intensity of investments in human resources”. The priorities, outlined in the NSRF will be translated into 13 operational programmes, five of them regional and eight thematic, with an additional programme on technical assistance.

In the last quarter of 2006, unemployment in Greece dropped to 8.8 per cent as compared to 9.7 per cent in the same period of 2005. This is still substantially higher than unemployment across the EU and in the Eurozone. At 25.5 per cent Greece still has the highest (together with Poland) unemployment rate among the under 25s. (I wonder why we see no Greek plumbers or builders or waiters in this country.)

The Heritage Foundation Index for Freedom 2007 lists Greece very low among European countries. Its regional ranking is 36, just below Poland and above Croatia, with world ranking 94. It scores low on most signifiers, but particularly on financial freedom, freedom from corruption and labour freedom, all essential matters if a country wants to develop economically, not simply hold its hand out for more aid from other taxpayers in the European Union.

COMMENT THREAD

They call it installation realignment

BERJAYAIt looks a little as if the adolescents may find themselves without parental aid and support sooner than they thought. Not that the Americans are withdrawing from the European commitments they faithfully kept to throughout the Cold War. Deary me, no. They are merely realigning their installations.

According to the Department of Defense press release

With the U.S. European Command’s force structure realignment and transformation, it was determined that RAF West Ruislip and RAF Daws Hill are no longer required.
These will now be returned to the host nation though what it will do with them is anybody’s guess. Perhaps turn them into global warming theme parks.

One would guess that there will be quite a lot of force structure realignment and transformation in Europe in the next few years up to and including a complete disappearance of the force, which will no longer be with us.

It is true that in the teeth of smug opposition, Prime Minister Blair wants Britain to be part of the new Missile Defence System and several of the East European countries have also expressed strong interest, despite the inevitable and rather synthetic Russian anger. But Angela Merkel has been rather busy in her latest round of travels (she still finds it rather hard to stay at home for more than a week or so) trying to get European countries to oppose it.

No Missile Defence System and lots of force structure realignment. Well, it won’t hurt the European countries to realize that choices have to be made. It’s called growing up.

COMMENT THREAD

Holding to account

BERJAYAI had not intended to return so quickly to the Iran hostage situation, but two contrasting news pieces demand attention, one in The Daily Mail (no link) and one in the The Daily Telegraph.

The Mail headlines: "'Complacent' Navy faces inquiry", while the Telegraph - Thomas Harding again – has it that, "Vulnerable Royal Navy boats 'like sitting ducks'".

BERJAYAInterestingly, in the Harding story, we are told that "questions over why two lightly armed Royal Navy tenders were allowed so close to Iranian waters largely unprotected will be raised if and when the crisis is resolved," while the Mail tells us that an inquiry is already under way. "Senior commanders" say this paper, "want to know how they (the sailors and marines) could be captured so close to the frigate Cornwall…".

Very much echoing the theme of this blog, the Mail then goes on to say that, "Military sources last night claimed the incident had exposed 'lax procedures'". One "insider" is cited, saying: "We've been doing these boarding operations for months and it looks as though that has bred complacency".

Inevitably, we get a ritual denial from the MoD but, intriguingly, we also get an admission that "the Iranians had played games of cat and mouse with the Navy in the Gulf for months without any serious incident".

So much for the Mail but then we get the specialist correspondent Harding. He tells us that which we already knew, that the Lynx helicopter which escorted the Cornwall's boats in the boarding phase then returned to the frigate. Incredibly though, the reason given was that "...the situation was not deemed dangerous".

We are also told that the Cornwall was stationed between four and eight miles from a suspicious Indian merchant vessel, "because the water was too shallow".

BERJAYABut now Harding the apologist, looking after his chums, kicks in. "Radar operators on board," he writes, "would have been able to spot the green dots of the Iranian boats but they would have remained meaningless among the dozens of dhows in the area until they reached 25 knots," adding:

But with just three minutes travel to the boarding party, the radar would have picked them up too late. It was also too late for the Lynx to get back on station. Launching a helicopter off the back of a warship is not straightforward as the pilot has to judge the precise moment for lift-off.
He then informs us that the ship's 4.5-inch gun would also have been ineffective against the Iranian boats, which can travel up to 40 knots (even though the Cornwall's 4.5, with its highly sophisticated fire control, would have blown the Iranian launches out of the water) and that:

The servicemen were also caught unawares as they were disembarking with some already in the boats, some on the rails and others on the Indian vessel. The Iranians also appeared friendly at first.
Once again, therefore – we get no hint of criticism – an interesting reflection on a newspaper which is quite happy to give politicians, businesses and the rest a hard time. How curious it is that it then gives the armed forces such an easy ride, no matter how lamentably they perform.

And the more one looks at this, the more lamentable the performance of the Royal Navy does seem to have been. In the first instance, local commanders seem to have lacked any notion that the operation on which they were sending their personnel was highly dangerous, in a zone where Iranian action was always a possibility.

BERJAYAThen, as to the Cornwall standing off "four to eight miles" because the water was "too shallow", this beggars belief. Try this one for size: "…we are sending you chaps into action but the road is too narrow for our tank so we're parking it eight miles down the road to back you up".

As we have remarked on the forum, the Royal Navy does have two minesweepers in theatre, HMS Ramsey and HMS Blythe. These are shallow draught, so they could get in close. Furthermore, they are armed with 30mm Bofors Oerlikon guns (circled), which are more than adequate for taking on Iranian speedboats. If the frigate could not do the job, therefore, a more suitable craft should have been deployed - such as one of these minesweepers. The first rule has to be: chose the right tool for the job.

As for the Lynx helicopter, we have remarked on the forum, its best function would have been to provide an overwatch, warning of the approach of the Iranian vessels – although such helicopters are routinely fitted with door-mounted machine guns.

BERJAYA
However, as we also pointed out, monitoring the movements of sea vessels is not something that has to be confined to rotary wing aircraft. In fact, the task could be carried out far more economically (and just as effectively) by fixed wing aircraft, in a task exactly analogous with fisheries protection. And, as these pictures illustrate (above), there are any number of small twins which can be used, the illustrations respectively showing Scottish, Irish, Australian and Canadian surveillance aircraft.

BERJAYAFinally, turning to the actual conduct of the boarding, we do not seem to have any footage of the actual capture but film shown by Iranian television does show the team on a dhow (possibly taken earlier by Cornwall personnel) – "grab" illustrated.

What is apparent is the lack of any tactical discipline. The boat crews are focused on picking up the team from the ship, there is no one obviously on lookout, or with weapons at the ready, facing any potential threat. In all, it has the air more of a school outing than a military operation in disputed waters, where there is a risk of capture and death.

In the past months, we have heard a great deal about the "covenant" between the nation and the military, and the obligation of the politicians to ensure that our service personnel are properly equipped and have the resources they need. But this also works the other way. We have a right to expect professional conduct from our armed forces and, on the face of it, there are indications that this was not delivered.

This does not only affect the conduct of operations. On issues such as equipment, it is up to the senior officers to specify what they need – which does not always seem to have been the case – and even with the contentious matter of the Rules of Engagement, field commanders and their superiors must ensure that our armed forces are not put in danger by overly restrictive rules.

BERJAYAWe complain that our politicians have no military experience but the corollary of that is that they take advice from their military commanders, and will rarely contradict it. To that extent, our military actually have had a freer hand than they may have had in the past, but it puts a special responsibility on them to get their advice right. One seriously wonders whether that has been the case.

What must happen, therefore, is that the media must get over its infatuation with the military and take a more critical view of its actions and conduct. It could start by looking at the performance of the force commander, Commodore Nick Lambert (above). There seems enough now to be asking whether this man should be court martialled, and whether his superiors also should be held to account.

COMMENT THREAD

Still behaving like adolescents

BERJAYAWe have noted in the past that the European (and that includes British, in this case) anti-American posturing reminds us of nothing so much as adolescents displaying defiance of and contempt for their parents in the certain knowledge that in the case of any real trouble, those contemptible parents will be there to give aid and support.

The real enemy, on the other hand, have no such intention, so it is best not to annoy them. Curiously enough, this ridiculous attitude is now so prevalent that those who display it do not even recognize their own stupidity. They will, undoubtedly, be the first to scream for help if the Americans do, finally, turn their backs on Europe (with the exception of the odd East European country) and Britain.

We can all cite myriads of examples both on a personal and public level. I recall talking to a highly educated lawyer friend soon after 9/11 who was wistfully hoping that President Bush was looking at the rather beautiful moon, as we were (unlikely, given the time difference, but let that pass) and was imbibing peaceful ideas, which he badly needed, being a well-known warmonger. I pointed out that flying aeroplanes full of people into buildings on another country’s territory and killing several thousand in the process was, by any definition, an act of war. Oh yes, she moaned, but I still think … She trailed off.

At the time it was still not done (except on the BBC’s “Any Questions” – remember the treatment meted out to the American ambassador just days after 9/11?) to blame the United States directly for all the ills in the world. That came soon afterwards.

We have now reached a stage when a very large proportion of the population, egged on by the media and the political classes in Britain and on the Continent, do actually believe that the United States is a greater menace to peace than any other country; that it is more oppressive than any other country; and that its democratically elected leader is a bloodthirsty tyrant unlike say the peace loving and fairly elected leaders of Iran, Syria, North Korea or Cuba.

One of the commenters on Biased BBC refers to an extraordinary exchange about the British sailors and marines in Iranian hands during a PM programme. The gist of it seems to be that an interviewee happily gets away with saying that we have to be so very careful of what we do because of the way the Americans are behaving at the moment.

This is rather vague as a description, with the writer relying on memory but sounds remarkably accurate.

Still, things are worse in Germany. Through Captain’s Quarters I found an interesting article in Der Spiegel about German anti-Americanism. The author, Claus Christian Malzahn starts his analysis with the not-so-very-surprising information that, according to recent polls, 48 per cent of Germans think that the United States is more dangerous than Iran, rising to 57 per cent among 18 to 29 year olds, with only 31 per cent across the whole population believing the opposite.

Presumably, much of that argument is based on that curious assumption that Iran has never actually attacked anyone. Well, give or take a few terrorist groups that they fund, arm and train, I suppose they merely threaten Israel with annihilation and, of course, seriously oppress their own people. Oh yes, there is that rather curious presence in Iraq and, well, they do seem to have kidnapped 15 British sailors and marines. But hey, who is counting?

Mr Malzahn blames the German political establishment, who will, in his opinion, shed crocodile tears at this unfriendly attitude towards the country’s great ally.

The German political establishment, which will no doubt loudly lament the result of the poll, is largely responsible for this wave of anti-Americanism. For years the country's foreign ministers fed the Germans the fairy tale of what they called a "critical dialogue" between Europe and Iran. It went something like this: If we are nice to the ayatollahs, cuddle up to them a bit and occasionally wag our fingers at them when they've been naughty, they'll stop condemning their women to death for "unchaste behavior" and they'll stop building the atom bomb.

That plan failed at some point -- an outcome, incidentally, that Washington had long anticipated. Iran continues to work away unhindered on its nuclear program, and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reacts to UN demands with an ostentatious show of ignorance. The UN gets upset and drafts a resolution.

Another item on the Iranian president's wish list is the annihilation of Israel. But that will take a bit longer. In the meantime, just to make sure it doesn't get out of practice, the regime had 15 British soldiers kidnapped a few days ago. But it's still all the Americans' fault -- that much is obvious.
He then goes through the various “reasons” why Germans dislike Americans, knowing them so well through all those holidays they spend there. Much of it, of course, applies to other Europeans and the British as well. How many people know exactly what Americans are like (too materialistic and too religious, too obese and too obsessed with keeping fit, too aggressive and too apologetic all at the same time) after a visit or two to Florida or California?

Germany, in Mr Malzahn’s opinion, has special reasons for hating the Americans:
Worst of all, the Americans won the war in 1945. (Well, with German help, of course -- from Einstein and his ilk.) There are some Germans who will never forgive the Americans for VE Day, when they defeated Hitler. After all, Nazism was just an accident, whereas Americans are inherently evil. Just look at President Bush, the man who, as some of SPIEGEL ONLINE's readers steadfastly believe, "is worse than Hitler." Now that gives us a chance to kill two birds with one stone. If Bush is the new Hitler, then we Germans have finally unloaded the Führer on to someone else.
The Germans are not alone in this belief. How often do we hear about the incipient fascism and tyranny of the United States? Yet, it is a country that has never come even near to having either a fascist or a communist dictatorship. How many self-righteous Europeans can say the same thing about their own homeland?

The point is, of course, that there will be no consequences of these constant attacks on America and Americans, whereas the situation with Iran and other countries of that ilk is very different. You might find yourself under serious threats, some of which may be carried out.

Your “parents”, on the other hand, are never really going to let you down. Or are they? Will they finally get tired of this adolescent tantrum throwing?

This is what Ed Morrissey of Captain’s Quarters suggests, having made it clear that he does not think America never makes mistakes in its foreign policy. It makes plenty, as do all countries.
Perhaps the Germans would get a better appreciation for security issues if they shouldered more of the burden for them. It's time to close down the relics of the Cold War in Germany, and locate our military forces in nations more amenable to America. Poland would probably have some interest in hosting American bases, and they would have more strategic location in this era than Germany. Let the Germans have their space from the warmongering Americans and pay for their own national security. We do not need to stay where we are not wanted or appreciated.
He is not alone in voicing these opinions. There is, indeed, little logic to keeping American or, for that matter, British troops in Germany. But if the west Europeans are so anxious to be rid of those incredibly dangerous Americans, their wish may well be fulfilled. The unthinkable might happen and the adolescents may well find that their threats to leave home are suddenly taken seriously.

COMMENT THREAD

Thanks for nothing

BERJAYALeft in the humiliating position of having nothing in the locker with which to take on the Iranians after their abduction of our service personnel, our esteemed government has been running, cap in hand, to the United Nations Security Council for a resolution condemning Iran's action.

For all we got for our efforts, though, we need not have bothered. The mighty mouse groaned and heaved and delivered what Reuters called "a watered-down statement" which merely expressed "grave concern" at the detention of the 15 British crew members, calling on Tehran to allow "consular access" to them.

BERJAYABritain had wanted a call for their immediate release but this was apparently blocked by the Russians. Her ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, is reported to have told the Council, during the closed-door consultations, that Moscow would not back Britain's call for UN support.

The original British draft circulated Wednesday would have had the Security Council "deplore the continuing detention by the Government of Iran of 15 UK naval personnel" and back "calls for (their) immediate release". It would note that "the UK personnel were operating in Iraqi waters as part of the Multinational Force-Iraq under a mandate from the Security Council under Resolution 1723 (2006) and at the request of the government of Iraq."

The final UN statement, however, avoided the issue of whether the ambush took place in Iranian or Iraqi waters, leaving the British service personnel hung out to dry.

More and more, this is developing into a "Tipperary situation" - after the old joke in which a tourist in the depths of Ireland asks a local the way to the town, only to be told, "I wouldn't start from here".

BERJAYAAnd, as more details emerge of the snatch, it has emerged that only two boats were initially used by the Iranians. Video footage has been released by Iranian television showing close-ups of one of the vessels, a small speedboat with a crew of three, armed with what appears to be a single 12.7mm machine gun.

This was hardly a formidable force and one which, with the right assets in place and an alert overwatch, could easily have been seen off. Given the enormous repercussions of the kidnapping – to say nothing of the national humiliation – questions as to how the British service personnel were so easily ambushed now become increasingly urgent.

COMMENT THREAD

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Turkish gambit

BERJAYAIt is entirely possible that some readers will show their displeasure at the fact that I have posted a picture of Eugene of Savoy at the start of a piece about Turkey, he being the general who defeated the Ottomans once or twice. This statue celebrates the Battle of Zenta of 1697 and stands above the Danube, in front of Buda castle. As he looks out, Prince Eugene commands a very fine view (though not as fine as the views in Yorkshire).

It was a short piece on American Thinker that led me to think of Prince Eugene. It seems that Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul was irritated by a farewell present to retiring (and not a moment too soon) President Chirac from Chancellor Merkel. It seems the antique beer mug was decorated by illustrations from a French victory over the Ottomans.

Thomas Lifson is rightly disdainful about the Turkish huffing and puffing:

Gull [sic] should understand that we are free to celebrate our victories. Americans celebrate our Revolutionary War from Britain with nary a peep from our Brit cousins. The French celebrate their victory at Austerlitz with a railway station, and Germany doesn't object. I have to wonder if Turkey might not celebrate a victory or two.
Very true, I thought, seething again at the thought of an inscription I read to a picture in the Royal Academy's "Turks" exhibition about the "glorious Szigetvár campaign" in Hungary in the sixteenth century. Glorious? It was a national tragedy, lightened merely by the heroism of the defenders, all but a handful of whom were killed.

And right again about Brits not minding too much about the Revolutionary War, not even when seriously misleading films such as "The Patriot" are produced. Though I cannot help thinking that German equanimity about the Battle of Austerlitz may have something to do with the fact that they were not much involved, it being the "Battle of the Three Emperors": Napoleon, Francis I of Austria (then still the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II) and Alexander I of Russia.

What rather puzzled me was the French victory over the Ottomans. I looked up the history of the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth century and found several Russo-Turkish wars, which went this way and that (mostly that) and several defeats of the Ottomans by the Austrians under Prince Eugene of Savoy (hence the picture). Of course, some of the defeats were reversed and had to be repeated but, on the whole, events went this way.

Which French victory? Right at the bottom of the list, dear reader, is something I ought to have remembered (mea culpa): 1798 Battle of the Pyramids. Quite so, though, as it was swiftly followed by the Battle of Aboukir and the Siege of Acre, it may not be something the French care to dwell on too much, despite Napoleon's stirring words to his soldiers:
Soldiers, from the heights of these pyramids, forty centuries look down on us.
Still, the Germans could have produced a beer mug with l'empereur making that speech or fighting the mameluk army.

Looking up the original story I found, sadly, that it was all a storm in a tea-cup or beer mug.
The German government said Wednesday the commotion had sprung from a misunderstanding: The mug, manufactured around 1710 in Germany, was adorned with flower ornaments, not a pictorial depiction of a historic war victory.
I wonder which translator was responsible for that little effort and whether he or she is in the Bosphorus yet.

Meanwhile, beer mugs aside, something is stirring on the EU-Turkish front. The negotiations have been resumed with the opening of another chapter, number 20, to be precise, on enterprise and industrial policies, "after the German presidency held emergency talks between Spain, France and the European Commission (EC) on Monday". In fact, this is only the second chapter that has been opened in the negotiations with Turkey, so the ten year long timetable remains over-optimistic.

The question of whether Turkey could or should ever become part of the European Union is very wide, indeed, and starts with a very basic query for the EU: exactly how far does it intend to expand and what is the purpose of that expansion.

On other postings I have argued that the EU is a little like an amoeba (though less useful) in that it can exist only if it enlarges itself. If it is not negotiating the entry of new members it has to deal with all the internal contradictions of its structure as it exists. That would be an intolerable burden for the politicians and theoreticians of integration.

Aydın Dumanoğlu, the co-chairman of the Turkey-EU Joint Parliamentary Commission, expressed the view that the EU and Turkey needed each other, as "the EU needs Turkey as a global actor and Turkey needs the EU as a vision".

It is nice to hear somebody describing the EU as a vision after all these years. It is, however, a vision that has been somewhat tarnished, not least in the eyes of the Turkish people who see a great deal of hostility to themselves (and if their foreign minister goes around making dumb comments, they can expect no other) and in the eyes of the Turkish military, a very important participant, who do not seem to like the idea of having to make choices between European defence strategies and the American alliance.

However, there is one very good reason why the EU needs Turkey. With the Turks inside the tent the European army may well become a reality at last.

COMMENT THREAD

A proper inquiry

BERJAYAOne need hold no brief for the Foreign Office to feel that the Daily Mail's criticism is a little bit wide of the mark.

For sure, its policy of appeasement has not improved the credibility of Britain but, as the latest Iranian response indicates, our diplomats have been dealt an almost impossible hand, where they hold very few cards.

Clearly, the Iranians are playing games, now suggesting that the promised release of Faye Turney may be delayed because of the UK's "incorrect attitude", demonstrating quite how difficult it is to deal with a government that simply has no conception of what playing by the rules actually means.

But, while seeking the release of our people is vitally important, not for one moment must the government (and especially the MoD) be allowed to gloss over the circumstances which gave rise to their abduction in the first place.

A classic line was taken by The Daily Telegraph with Thomas Harding cosying up to his chums in the military, noting only of the incident that, "caught unawares," the British personnel "had little choice but to surrender." He does not ask, though, why the personnel were caught with their pants down.

Neither was there any hint of criticism of the military from Tory foreign affairs spokesman William Hague who, in yesterday's Commons debate sought merely to "commend our forces for the difficult and dangerous tasks that they are undertaking", then asking whether the MoD would "look again at its configuration of forces in the area, so that the forces undertaking these tasks are fully protected, or better protected, or better able to deter interference with their activities?"

Ann Winterton, however, took a far more robust line, asking foreign secretary Margaret Beckett:

Will the Foreign Secretary have a word with the Secretary of State for Defence to ensure that in future no British forces operate in Iraqi waters - which are known to be extremely dangerous; past incidents proved that -unsupported and without appropriate protection and back-up? Could there not be other incidents in future - we very much hope not - and might this not be a dangerous precedent given that, possibly bearing in mind the current rules of engagement, there is no meaningful deterrent against the Iranians?
Beckett, of course, sought to divert attention from this issue, stating that "there will be a careful review of the courses of action that the government should pursue in future," but then emphasising that "the focus at present is on action on the diplomatic front to recover our personnel" … exactly the line taken by the bulk of the media.

Winterton, however, backed up her plea with a letter published in today's Telegraph, picking up the sloppy reporting by the paper a few days earlier. She wrote:

The report (March 27) that "questions were asked in the House of Commons yesterday about whether rules of engagement prevented the Cornwall from opening fire " is inaccurate. I did not even mention the Cornwall in my question to the minister of state.

The best information available is that the Cornwall was out of visual contact with the two British boats when they were surrounded by several Iranian fast patrol boats with heavier arms. The question is why that was the case, given the risks in the area and UN action the following day to impose sanctions on Iran over its atomic programme, which was likely to cause some reaction. If the Cornwall had been in visual contact, would the Iranians have risked the abduction?

It seems to me that Britain is expecting its service personnel to take on ambitious and dangerous projects without providing adequate protection and back-up.
For once, even The Business is losing its usually deft touch, remarking, entirely reasonably that, "Spineless Britain faces its greatest humiliation since the Suez crisis," but failing to comment on why we ended up in this mess in the first place.

Beckett's "careful review of the courses of action that the government should pursue in future," is not good enough. The military must be held to account and, if there are failings – at whatever level – these must be identified and action taken to ensure there are no repeat failures. It serves no one's interest – least of all the armed forces – for any failings to go uncorrected. There must, therefore, be a proper, public inquiry on how the events of 23 March came to pass.

COMMENT THREAD

Air cover

BERJAYAAccording to The Times, the decision to offer no resistance to Iran "was down to the commander of the two boats". And there was no air cover at the time because a helicopter had just returned to HMS Cornwall after watching the successful boarding of a merchant vessel.

Of this latter information, we were aware, as this is recorded by the MoD website. But, since that was the case, one has to return to the issue of why the Cornwall was out of visual contact with the boarding team, and why she did not position herself between the boarded ship and the Iranian border, where she could better detect any protential threat.

Alternatively, we have things called Nimrod maritime reconnaissance aircraft. One of these could have provided an overwatch for the whole of the Northern Gulf. But it is precisely these aircraft which we know have been used for land surveillance, backing up our forces in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Thus, it seems as if the overall shortage of assets could be having a knock-on effect right through the system, the end result being that our people are left unprotected.

COMMENT THREAD

This does not compute

BERJAYA
We have now an account of the Iranian abduction of our sailors and marines. According to Vice Admiral Charles Style, Deputy Chief of the Defence Staff, briefing on the MoD website, the events were as follows:

Our boarding started at 0739 local time and was completed at 0910 with the merchant vessel having been cleared to continue with her business. Communications were lost with the boarding team as the boarding was finishing … at 0910. HMS CORNWALL's Lynx helicopter, which had been covering the initial stages of the boarding, immediately returned to the scene to locate the boarding team.

The helicopter reported that the two seaboats were being escorted by Iranian Islamic Republican Guard Navy vessels towards the Shatt 'Al Arab Waterway and were now inside Iranian territorial waters. Debriefing of the helicopter crew and a conversation with the master of the merchant ship both indicate that the boarding team were ambushed while disembarking from the merchant vessel.
Now, with reference to the chart provided (above), using the measurements supplied by the MoD, the mother ship, HMS Cornwall is about 8.5 nautical miles from the boarding party - to the south east. Why wasn't she between the boarding party and the Iranian border?

Then, her top (flank) speed is 30 knots, but she takes a little time to work up to that so, on that basis, it will take her up to 20 minutes to get to the scene.

BERJAYABut, it would appear, the Cornwall does not immediately set out. All we are told is that, when communications are lost, the helicopter is "immediately" despatched and reports the British boats under escort, already in Iranian waters.

Now, it can only take the Lynx a couple of minutes to get to the scene. And the British boats are already over the border. They have travelled around two nautical miles to get there – faster than the Lynx can get to the scene, even though it left "immediately"?

Then we see the Iranian film. One scene is missing from the BBC rendition , a very short sequence with a "grab" shown above right. This shows a close up of HMS Cornwall. But it is Iranian film.

Let me get this straight ... one presumes the Cornwall is still in Iraqi waters. So, the Iranians, having kidnapped two boat crews from the Cornwall now hang around in Iraqi waters to get a video shot of the frigate? Otherwise, how come the Cornwall got that close to the Iranian boats? And if Iranian boats are in Iraqi waters, how come no protest is made?

Between what we are seeing and what we are being told, there seems to be a few gaps. And what we see simply does not compute.

COMMENT THREAD

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Where in the world?

BERJAYATemporarily away from my desk and my own computer. In fact, I have wandered into strange territory, known as West Yorkshire. So guess whose computer I am using? A clue is provided by the green helmet that is sitting atop the machinery. (Actually, it was delivered by me today. I got some very funny looks on the train.)

Three charged

BERJAYAAccording to AFP, three Italian nationals have been charged and are being held in custody in Brussels as part of the corruption probe we reported yesterday. The three include an official working for the EU commission, an assistant to a member of the EU parliament and a businessman.

The three men, who live in Belgium and whose names were not given, were charged with forgery and using forged documents, corruption, fraud and forming a criminal organisation. Said spokesperson Jos Colpin for the Belgian prosecuting office, "There were bribes of millions of euros for more than 10 years." The bribes were paid in relation to public tenders for buildings housing "European Commission delegations outside of EU territory", he said.

The official is 46 and works for the commission services responsible for managing delegations' infrastructure. The second person charged is aged 60 and is the personal assistant of an Italian member of the EU parliament. The third person, 39, runs a real estate consortium.

COMMENT THREAD

A nation of wimps led by wimps

BERJAYAFor all their supposed savvy, there is something touchingly naïve in The Independent today, claiming as it does an "exclusive" interview with the female sailor Faye Turney, recorded only hours before she was abducted by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

In a world where much of the media spreads its wares over the internet, does not the paper realise that we can read the same interview (or extracts from it) on the BBC website, in The Telegraph, in The Scotsman, The Daily Mail, and sundry others? Or does it think that people who read The Independent do not even look at anything else?

That the words and wisdom (and pictures) of Mrs Turney should grace the pages of so many newspapers, however, somehow typifies the state of our nation. As the captivity of the forlorn fifteen stretches into its sixth day, the attention devoted to the one female member of the former boarding party seems to mark yet another stage in the feminisation of our society – as a precursor to its headlong dash into infantilisation.

That Mrs Turney also has a three-year-old daughter, currently looked after at home by her husband also seems to convey a message. This is a society which appears content to send wives and mothers out to war while the men stay at home to look after the children.

Nor indeed do we get much comfort from the father of a naval officer serving in HMS Cornwall in the Gulf. In a letter to The Telegraph he finds it "very interesting to read the comments of those who seem to think that Cornwall should have somehow intervened to prevent the capture of her sailors and Marines by the Iranians." Asks Mr P R Woad of Chichester, West Sussex, "What should she have done? Blow the Iranians out of the water?" Er…. yes. What, in the final analysis, are warships for?

It is rather fitting, therefore, that the most robust comments on this debacle actually come from a woman, the redoubtable Melanie Phillips, writing in The Daily Mail. In its response to these events, she writes, "Britain seems to be in some kind of dreamworld. There is no sense of urgency or crisis, no outpouring of anger. There seems to be virtually no grasp of what is at stake." She then adds:

Some commentators have languidly observed that in another age this would have been regarded as an act of war. What on earth are they talking about? It is an act of war. There can hardly be a more blatant act of aggression than the kidnapping of another country's military personnel.
Melanie is absolutely right. All we are getting of Blair and his sad crew are reports that he has "piled the pressure on Iran" and is now demanding "the immediate release" of our personnel.

Or what, Tony?

It takes Victor Davis Hansen of the National Review to remind us that EU is Iran's largest trading partner and "a cessation of commerce would do more than anything to weaken the theocracy."

Why, therefore, are we not seeing demands for action on this front? Why, in fact, are we not seeing demands for action on any front? Why is it that we are led by wimps and have to suffer a media that seems more interested in girlies than action? Is this the same nation that spawned Nelson and of Churchill, or have we too become a nation of wimps?

COMMENT THREAD

Feeding the crocodile

BERJAYAGiven very little coverage by the MSM, yesterday a small demonstration was mounted by the National Council of Resistance of Iran outside the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London. The demonstrators were calling on Britain to obey a ruling of the European Court of Justice to remove People's Mujahdeen Organisation of Iran from the official EU terror list.

Before this had been framed against the growing crisis of the service personnel abducted by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, the background had been set out by Christopher Booker just over a week ago when he described the eagerness of our government to flout EU law in order to appease the dictatorial regime in Iran.

In March 2001 Jack Straw, then Home Secretary, placed on the list of terrorist organisations, under the Anti-Terrorism Act, the leading Iranian dissident organisation, the People's Muhajedeen of Iran (PMOI), even though the PMOI claims to be opposed to terrorism in any way and wishes only to carry on its campaign for freedom and democracy in Iran in a peaceful fashion. Mr Straw last year admitted to the BBC that he had done this at the behest of the Teheran regime.

Later that year, after 9/11, the EU drew up its own list of proscribed organisations and individuals linked to terrorism, and in May 2002, at the UK's behest, the PMOI was added to the list. With its assets thus frozen and its activities drastically circumscribed, the PMOI petitioned the European Court of Justice that the EU Council of Ministers had acted improperly, on a whole range of grounds.

In February 2003 the UK Government became the only EU state to join the case as a third party. Last December, the ECJ found in the PMOI's favour, ruling that it had never been given a fair hearing and that its name should never have been put on the list of terrorist organisations. Nevertheless, in January, again on the UK Government's insistence, the Council of Ministers told the PMOI that, regardless of the court’s ruling, its name would remain on the list.

The deadline for any appeal against the judgement has now passed. In its zeal to appease one of the most ruthless and dangerous regimes in the world, Booker wrote, the British government has thus persuaded its "partner" simply to put up two very large fingers to EU law.

The story has been told in more detail here, with author Joseph Omidvar accusing the EU of being "hell-bent on pursuing the threadbare policy of appeasing Tehran". He then observed that "the mullahs are always ready to exploit all these signs of craven weakness."

BERJAYADespite Jack Straw's attempts as foreign secretary to cosy up to the monster, no more does this apply than to the government and the current situation.

From a strong piece in Hot Air it appears that a British boarding party was involved in a tense stand off against the Iranian Revolutionary Guard navy in December 2004, when they were surrounded by Guards in armed patrol boats. The impasse was only resolved when the British sailors were lifted by helicopter off the merchant ship they had boarded, where they had taken refuge.

MPs are now asking the government whether there were any other such incidents, as it begins to look like the 15 sailors and marines abducted last week were specifically targeted by the Iranians because of previously weak responses by the British and the evident vulnerability of their patrols.

You would have thought that the British government, more than most, would have understood the perils of appeasement but, it seems, the lessons of Munich, all those years ago, have been forgotten. It was Winston Churchill who observed in this context that, "An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last." But, after years of appeasing the mullahs, it is 15 British servicemen who have ended up feeding the crocodile.

COMMENT THREAD

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Police raid EU offices

UPDATED

BERJAYAPolice raids have been carried out on offices in the EU commission in Brussels, and the EU parliament, as part of a wide-ranging corruption investigation. More than 150 federal police searched the Berlaymont building and an office of an aide to the Parliament. It is understood that three people were detained and an investigating judge is to decide whether they will be arrested.

Other premises, banks, company offices and homes, in Belgium, France, Luxembourg and Italy have also visted by police in a series of coordinated dawn raids, making about 30 raids in all, targeting EU officials who are accused of taking bribes, and possible accomplices.

BERJAYAAt the centre of the investigation are tenders for buildings used for housing EU commission delegations abroad and the installation of security equipment in those buildings.

According to IHT the Belgian prosecutors office said the raids, in which investigators seized dozens of documents, had taken place at dawn to ensure the element of surprise.

Prosecutors said the raids were part of a three-year-old investigation into contracts for commission housing and security equipment aimed at housing commission delegations abroad. They said investigators were examining whether EU civil servants had links to organized crime, had violated professional secrets or had breached public procurement laws.

"The investigation involves suspected bribery of European civil servants, forming a criminal organization, violating professional secrecy, breaches of public tenders laws and forgery," the Brussels Prosecutors office said in a statement.

A French police spokesman has told Bloomberg News that the case involved two Italian members of the European Parliament and an alleged connection to organized crime.

The EU commission has declined to comment specifically on the allegations. "It would be inappropriate for the commission to comment on any aspects of the investigation," said Johannes Laitenberger, a European Commission spokesman. "Until the end of the inquiry and facts are established, presumption of innocence must prevail."

Hans Peter Martin, an independent Austrian member of the European Parliament, who sits on the budgetary control committee and has been involved in investigating allegations of fraud at the European Parliament, said it was too early to tell whether the investigation was limited or could have a larger political impact.

"It is hard to say whether this is a case of the Belgian police trying to show off or if this is more than just action based on a qualified rumour," he said in a telephone interview. "It still has not risen to the political level in terms of its effect."

COMMENT THREAD

Should we be impressed by this?

BERJAYAFirst, the good news. Well, I think it is good news, though we have not heard the average Darfurian’s opinion on this. The People’s Daily reports that:

UN Under Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes stressed here Monday that humanitarian efforts in western Sudanese region of Darfur would continue despite difficulties.

During a press conference following his conclusion of one-week visit to Sudan, he told the reporters that "humanitarian efforts undertaken over the past three years are to be considered an extraordinary success giving the scale of the Darfur problem."
The trouble with all these statements is that there is no verification. Given the scale of the Darfur problem and given that all we hear about is the various horrors, what exactly is “an extraordinary success”? The simple existence of aid workers in the area? Surely that is anything but a success, as they are actually consumers of resources.

What is it the UN humanitarian efforts have achieved? Apparently, as in Iraq, they have become targets of attacks by various groups and militias, as well as encountering “practical difficulties relating to travel permits, visas, labor law and so on”. In fact, it sounds as if most of the efforts the UN expands in Sudan has to do with the aid workers themselves.

While we are on the subject of the UN, we have an update on the preposterous UN Human Rights Council, which as Reuters says with a straight face, was “launched last year to replace the discredited Human Rights Commission”.

Its 47 members has accepted a recommendation from a five-country working group, one of whose members is that shining beacon of human rights, Zimbabwe, that Iran and Uzbekistan should “be removed from the so-called 1503 procedure under which accusations of violations are discussed in closed-door, confidential sessions”.

Apparently, this is in line with the view of the majority of states on the Council that individual states should not be singled out for critical attention. Then who should? What exactly is the Human Rights Commission going to do if not raise the subject of human rights in various countries? Silly me, it is going to criticize the United States and Israel, just as its predecessor used to do.

None of this would matter if we did not have to pay rather a large amount of money for this malarkey.

Perhaps it would matter less if the UN and its Human Rights Council actually managed to look a little more seriously at its complete failure to do anything but criticize the United States and Israel, ignoring many millions of victims all over the world.

However, as this posting by Charles Johnson on Little Green Footballs shows, when UN Watch Director Hillel Neuer dares to tell the truth, he is abused and threatened by the Council president, Luis Alfonso de Alba, who informs us all that any similar comments will, in future, be struck from the record.

Watch the recording if you can.

COMMENT THREAD

He's probably right

BERJAYAFrom a piece by Yaron London in Ynet News:

In the mythology of the global Left, the Spanish Civil War in 1936-1939 was considered a shining example of assisting the oppressed. The good were on its side, it was written about the volunteers of the International Brigade. Had such a war erupted in our times, the global Left would have demonstrated in favor of the fascists.
Nice one.

COMMENT THREAD

Sloppy reporting

BERJAYAWe are all human and, heaven knows, we make more than a few mistakes on this blog. However, mistakes are one thing – sheer sloppiness is another.

And that is the line the front page story in The Daily Telegraph crosses today when Whitehall editor Christopher Hope claims that: "Questions were asked in the House of Commons yesterday about whether Britain's rules of engagement in Iraq prevented the Cornwall from opening fire on the Iranians."

Although, as we reported yesterday, rules of engagement were raised by Ann Winterton, she did not mention HMS Cornwall. Mr Hope seems to be labouring under the impression that the Cornwall was in visual contact with the abducted boarding party - which is not something that can be assumed – and thus injected a reference which was entirely absent in the original proceedings.

From the very earliest, it emerged that the ship was in electronic communication only, via the Lynx, and heard of the abduction only from the helicopter.

This seems largely to be confirmed by The Daily Mail today, which, in a question and answer session, asks: "How could Iranians seize well-armed personnel?", offering this answer:

By surprise and force of numbers. The two British boats, armed with light weapons, were surrounded by a dozen or more Iranian fast patrol boats with heavier weapons. Despite the known risks in the area, the Britons were out of visual range of the heavily-armed Cornwall and a helicopter from the warship.
What the Telegraph offers, therefore, does indeed seem to be sloppy reporting, but it also demonstrates that the paper has missed the plot. As the Mail indicates, there were known risks – not least with Royal Marines having been previously abducted, in 2004. Whatever happens, therefore, there must be an inquiry as to why the boarding party was exposed to such risks.

One clue might come from an earlier piece published on the BBC website, recording an interview with the former First Sea Lord, Sir Alan West. Asked what training the (abducted) personnel have been given to help them in the event of capture, West responds: "These particular people would not be trained in counter-interrogation techniques because they are not expected to be captured."

That betrays an enormous degree of complacency which, if it is an accurate reflection of the view of the top brass, seems to verge on criminal negligence. But this seems to have passed the Telegraph by. As is all too often the case these days, when it comes to asking the hard questions, the MSM does not even look like it's in the game.

COMMENT THREAD

Pyjamas Media

BERJAYA
We're joining the network. More details soon.

COMMENT THREAD

Monday, March 26, 2007

Can't help sympathizing

BERJAYAWell, I suppose this is really not quite the done thing but one cannot help sympathizing with the woman in question.

As Expatica reports, the widow of one of the victims of the Madrid bombs attended the trial wearing a white t-shirt with the Mohammed cartoon on the front.

She sat among the audience for a while, then walked up to the glass enclosure where the accused were and stood in front of them for a while, subsequently leaving the court.

There was some confusion for a while as the presiding judge was not sure whether she was a relative of one of the accused and whether there was a message on the shirt for anybody. Well, of course, there was but it was not a message the accused wanted to see.

Filming of the trial was stopped briefly and the judge sent to find out the woman's identity. Having satisfied himself that she was not in cahoots with the accused, he announced that she was free to wear what she liked and the trial continued.

COMMENT THREAD

Rules of engagement

BERJAYAOur sailors and marines - why did they not defend themselves? They were not allowed to ... their rules of engagement did not permit it.

This was raised in Defence Questions today by Ann Winterton MP. She put to the defence minister that "the current rules of engagement that allow no conflict in Iraqi waters with Iranian forces" and thus suggested that "this led directly to 15 of our service personnel being abducted by the Iranians".

Defence minister Adam Ingram was evasive, telling MPs not to speculate. "Let us stand back and understand the sensitivity of the situation," he pleaded. "There is too much speculation about what happened and what did not happen."

Then, in classic fashion, he went on not to answer the question, offering only obscurity: "Those carrying out that mission clearly have to respond to the level of threat that is posed to them ... We will have to investigate that when they are safely returned to these shores and we get their version of events rather than the speculation that is being paraded around in the media and elsewhere."

But Winterton was not speculating. Directly from extremely angry servicemen recently back from Iraq, she had received information that boarding parties were under rigid instructions that left no room for discretion. Even though faced with Iranian Revolutionary Guards, every one of the Party knew that to fire a weapon (even a warning shot) would have ensured their personal Court Martial.

This still does not explain, however, why the boarding party was caught by surprise by six Iranian vessels (and no one has disputed that figure). The team was equipped with fast, highly manoeuvrable boats and, given an alert overwatch, the members should have got enough warning to enable them to break for the shore or call up reinforcements.

Interestingly, no further light has been shone on this murky episode in the unofficial Army forum, where such matters are often discussed at length. A moderator moved in quickly to delete threads and shut down further comment, on the grounds that, "there now exists a real danger that speculation and reported remarks influenced by genuine anger will be to the detriment of the safety of our people and OPSEC (operational security)".

That the incident is being widely discussed on media forums and comment threads seems to have escaped the board moderators, demonstrating an acute sensitivity on the subject.

As it stands, therefore, it looks like the boarding party members were set up like rats in a trap, unable to defend themselves, leaving the Iranians only to say thank you very much indeed for the free hostages. And instead of facing their own military courts, our people are now at risk of being paraded through the Iranian courts, to the utter humiliation of a nation which cannot even safeguard its own troops.

Meanwhile read this from Hot Air.

COMMENT THREAD

Oh dear!

BERJAYAThere they are, the "colleagues" lining up in Berlin for the "family photograph", with Mr Blair well in the back row, and what do we see on the wall behind them?

There is no identification as to the donor – who paid for the banner - but it is somehow rather sad that there are still people in the United States who are deluded enough to wish the European Union well (nothwithstanding that it only came into being in 1990).

Still, since one of the main sponsors of European integration back in the 1950s and 60s was the United States – without which it is unlikely that the Treaties of Rome would ever have happened – it was inevitable that American well-wishers should want to applaud their own handiwork.

COMMENT THREAD

The pretence blown apart

BERJAYASmall European nations, such as the three Baltic states, cannot easily sustain the cost of maintaining a dual defence arrangement with Nato and the European Union.

So said Estonian President Toomas Ilves (pictured), at a press conference in Helsinki with Finnish President Tarja Halonen, both leaders agreeing that the best solution for nations like Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania is for the EU to increase collaboration with Nato and establish a joint approach to European defence systems.

This is according to Defense News which has Ilves complaining that, while large European countries might be able to afford a dual system, the smaller ones cannot. Estonia, for instance, is both a Nato member and a nation within the EU. "In defence terms," he says, "this demands we dedicate time and resources to our Nato role and EU defence systems. This is costly for small nations. The vital dimension is that the EU and NATO must collaborate more closely."

This blows apart any claim that the EU defence identity is complementary to Nato, simply providing an alternative political framework for deploying the same military forces in areas where there is no Nato interest.

Hence does the Estonian president complain that it makes no sense for Europe to have two powerful parallel organisations that have "little contact with each other." He believes it would be much better "if small European nations could co-ordinate their defence arrangements with a single European defence organisation, rather than having to budget for two parallel organisations."

"National defence costs are rising at a time when European nations are being called upon to support Nato's international crisis missions and contribute to the EU's rapid response forces," added the Finnish president. "The issue of dual defence arrangements is one that needs to be examined."

This is, of course, precisely the issue to which we have been drawing attention for some time, so it is helpful to get formal acknowledgement that Nato EU members are having to finance what amounts to two separate defence polities.

This has been evident in the British struggle to support the war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, while also building up the incompatible equipment and structures needed to meet the specifications for the European Rapid Reaction Force.

One area where Ilves is wrong, though, is in believing that large European countries can necessarily afford a dual system. The UK cannot afford huge white elephants like the Eurofighter, and it cannot afford two carrier groups and the Army's FRES programme, and support two wards, all on the current defence budget.

Our government has to admit that this, and – if it is going to maintain its commitments to Iraq and Afghanistan – cut back its support for building a European defence identity. Otherwise, it must put much more money into the defence budget and come clean with the British public, identifying the additional expenditures as part of the price of further European integration.

COMMENT THREAD

Different attitudes

BERJAYAToday's Wall Street Journal carries an editorial entitled "Tehran's hostages" with the subtitle "Iran's Act of War against our British Allies". It recalls various other Iranian acts that go against any international agreements and makes it clear that Britain and the United States must react quickly and efficiently. Just imagine, it adds, what would the situation have been like if Iran were a nuclear power - a prospect that may not be all that far away.

What I found interesting was the immediate reaction across a good deal of the American media and the blogosphere (or the parts of it that are genuinely interested in other countries, that is, curiously enough, on the right). Uniformly, there was outrage and support.

Britain, America's close ally, was under attack, they all said. The UK and the US must do something. There was no question of gloating or "told you so" attitudes, though, given the smug superiority some of the British military and politicians speak, they would have been justified.

How different, I could not help thinking, from the sort of posturing we might see in the British media, among the British political commentators and, even, a great stretch of the public, if it had been the other way round.

There would have been an outpouring of gloating mock-sorrow and a plethora of useless advice. Blogs like this one, that take an interest in the world outside (hint: not that many of the so-called political blogs in Britain do) would mostly line up on the side of the United States but we would still get plenty of pompous and (there is no other word for it) gloating comments.

COMMENT THREAD

A foundation of lies

BERJAYATo the very last, the European Union has maintained its reputation for being built on a foundation of lies, this time from the mouth of Angela Merkel, delivering her speech in Berlin yesterday, prior to her signing the so-called Berlin Declaration.

Her opportunity came when she made clear the rejection by French and Dutch voters of the planned constitution would not stop the EU project. "It is true that anyone who hoped that 50 years after the Treaties of Rome we would have a Constitutional Treaty will be disappointed," she said. But a newly-agreed "Berlin Declaration" would get the project back on track - because the political shape of Europe had to be constantly renewed.

Continue reading here.

COMMENT THREAD

Sunday, March 25, 2007

You can rely on the Pope

BERJAYAYou can rely on Pope Benedict XVI to introduce a cautionary, in some ways alternative, point of view whenever there is a little too much celebration and self-congratulation going on.

On Saturday, while the politicians assembled in Berlin for their taxpayer-funded celebrations, the Pope addressed European bishops and expressed his frustration with the EU and its Berlin Declaration. God and Christianity had not been mentioned.

The question of whether references to Christianity should be included in the European Constitution had come up before with the countries dividing mostly but not exclusively along Catholic/Protestant lines, though ultimately the suggestion was blocked by President Chirac for political rather than religious reasons. Much of post-1789 French history has been taken up with battles between the Church and the State with the latter now in firm ascendance.

As it happens, BBC 24 Hours News decided they wanted a brief discussion on the subject, somewhere between England’s pathetic performance in Tel Aviv and the Pakistani cricket captain being questioned about his coach’s murder in Jamaica.

Unwisely, from their point of view, they asked me to come into the studio and comment. Even more unfortunately from their point of view they could find no-one else. So there we were, the interviewer and I, with five minutes to fill.

My immediate point was one that rather surprised the interviewer as it had flummoxed the “researcher” and that is the EU’s intention being the creation of a European state. That being so, I continued, the Pope is wrong as in western political and Christian tradition, separation of church and state is fully accepted. I am not sure the BBC's employees were quite au fait with this.

On the other hand, I continued, the Pope is absolutely right in pointing out that the EU and its grandees have no definition of European identity. Indeed, I said, there is no such thing and that is the problem with all these celebrations – the EU is not based on anything. That is why they can come up with rubbish like “Europe” being a centuries old ideal of peace and harmony. The most cursory look at European history will prove that one wrong.

Ah yes, said the interviewer triumphantly, but there has been peace since we have had the EU and that is what the celebration is about. To be fair to the man, he was just saying it because that is what he was told. I do not think he believed it. Still, it gave me a very pleasant feeling to know that the enemy has just delivered himself into my hands.

Most of the members, I explained patiently, have not been that for fifty years, so the celebration is nonsensical. And, in any case, these fifty years have covered such peaceful events as the suppression of the Hungarian uprising, of the Prague Spring, of the Polish trade unions and a ten year long war in the Balkans. Business as usual, in other words.

In the end, we left the subject of European identity unresolved because news was coming through from Jamaica.

The Pope has clearly retained his knack for upsetting self-righteous politicians. There they are celebrating a completely non-existent European identity as expressed through the EU, an ever less popular entity and there he is, saying that Europe has lost its way, has turned its back on its own history, has committed a form of apostasy to itself and its true traditions.

The problem is that European history has many aspects and the EU for reasons of its own chosen to emphasise a rather simplified and anti-religious form of enlightenment. (Sadly, I do not think Voltaire or Diderot, never mind John Locke, would have approved of the Berlin shenanigans this week-end.)

Judaeo-Christianity is as important to European history as that much vaunted humanism, in fact more so, but it is difficult to express something as complicated in the ultra-simplified narrative of the European Union, just as it is impossible to reconcile traditions of Roman Law, Anglo-Saxon Common Law and Germanic Customary Law.

At the heart of the European project lies an ideological contradiction. On the one hand the European Union is an expression of European values, consisting as they do, according to these people, of humanism, love of freedom, enlightenment and democracy (and motherhood and apple-pie, though some prefer apple-strudel).

On the other hand, we need the European Union because the Europeans are really not worthy of the noble European ideals, and keep forming themselves into groups that fight each other. Some of these groups are called nations and quite a lot of them are more enlightened, freedom-loving etc etc than the organization that has been created to replace them in the name of those ill-defined European values.

No wonder the Pope finds all this piffle despicable.

COMMENT THREAD

What's it to be?

BERJAYAWith Google currently running over 2,200 stories on the abduction of the British marines and sailors from Iraqi waters by Iranian forces, compared with only just over 500 on the EU's weekend anniversary bash, the figures tell their own story.

Equally significant is the fact that the only public statement to come from our prime minister while attending the bash was a comment on the detention of the sailors and marines, Blair declaring that it was "unjustified and wrong".

Once again this is a salutary demonstration of how Britain’s standing in the world so often seems far more affected by events and actions which are totally unrelated to the EU and, in this case, not for the better. While we are spending a King's ransom on our subscription to the EU – devoted in part to increasing our global influence – we might therefore be better advised to spend our money where it really matters.

Whether there were any deficiencies in our Iraqi operation remain to be seen but there must surely be an inquiry, once our servicemen are safely recovered, to determine whether indeed there were failures.

Not least, there needs to be an examination of the truth behind the story in The Sunday Telegraph, which alleges that British Intelligence chiefs were warned in January to expect reprisal attacks from Iran after America detained five suspected Iranian intelligence officers in Iraq. According to this newspaper, although the CIA alert led to the United States raising its official security threat level throughout the Middle East and elsewhere, Britain did not follow suit.

BERJAYAWhat has been exercising us, however – and we are far from being alone in this – is how a reported six Iranian vessels had managed to sneak up on the British craft, and why HMS Cornwall did not intervene.

Such a response was triggered by the classic boarding scenario, where the warship stands off but a short distance from the intercepted vessel – illustrated here with HMCS Vancouver (photo Canadian DND). A small boat is then detached, and the warship stays close, throughout the boarding, protecting the away team.

BERJAYAClearly, this was not the case in this instance. HMS Cornwall may have been many miles away, acting more as a depot/command post than a guard ship, running several patrols from its location. Similarly, while its Lynx helicopter was available, it too seems not to have been covering the abducted boarding party. Yet, we see other pictures of the "classic scenario", this one (left) showing US personnel aboard a tanker with an Aegis class destroyer in the background, standing guard.

With only one frigate (and two minesweepers) in theatre, however, the Royal Navy must be hard pressed to back up all its small boat patrols, or this may simply be a case of (false) economy, the ship saving on fuel by not sailing. On the other hand, it could be carelessness, complacency or even incompetence – the latter hardly being a stranger to the military.

Either way, as Private Eye often puts it, I think we should be told.

Update here.

COMMENT THREAD

Definitely not "us"

BERJAYA"Europe is not 'them', it is 'us'," says Barroso this morning in Berlin. The problem is, paleface, any "us" which includes the likes of the commission president is definitely "them".

And it was "them", German chancellor Angela Merkel, representing the council, Portuguese former prime minister Barroso for the commission and the president of the EU parliament, German MEP Hans-Gert Poettering, who signed the Berlin Declaration - ostensibly in the name of the peoples of the European Union member states.

How do these people have the nerve to present themselves as speaking for us, any of us? How can this woman, a leader of a different country, possibly speak for me?

In the meantime, a car was set on fire in the Kreuzberg-Friedrichshain district of Berlin in what police said appeared to be a politically motivated protest against the EU. In the city centre, while what were described as "vandals" set fire to an information booth on "Europe".

It is not much, but it's a start.

COMMENT THREAD

A sense of déjà vu?

BERJAYA
So, as the leaders of the European Union member states prepared to consume their lavish "Organic-Teutonic" banquet of braised ox, followed by baked apples at the German president's Bellevue Palace in Berlin, black-uniformed figures marched outside in a torchlight parade.

Interestingly, during the Nazi era, Hitler used this palace for his Museum of German Ethnology. And it is but a stone's-throw from Bebelplatz, the square located near Humbolt University where the Nazis held their first "book burning" on 10 May 1933.

BERJAYAOne can read too much into the symbolism, of course. But there is something vaguely distasteful about the extravagance of these celebrations for a political construct, that is risking opening up some very raw wounds.

What with talks of a European army and Barroso telling us that, "We need to inspire Europe's citizens with a vision for the next fifty years," it all begins to look unpleasantly familiar.

COMMENT THREAD

Saturday, March 24, 2007

The sucess of the EU

BERJAYA
Last year, I introduced the world to a major new discovery, the "dual international quasi-legislation/comitology mechanism".

Despite my considerable bravery in venturing so far up the hitherto unexplored reaches of bureaucracy, to bring back news of this species, my discovery was not exactly lauded and I have yet to be awarded life membership of the Royal Society. Yet, in this creature, which is far more common than most would even begin to imagine, lies the real reason for the success of the European Union – and yes, I do mean success.

Read the full piece here.

COMMENT THREAD

Fifty years of surrender

Booker is in full flow in The Daily Mail today, with a long piece commenting on the "very special party" to be held in Berlin tonight.

It is safe to predict, he writes, that, apart from those German teenagers enjoying their "rave", very few other folk across Europe this weekend will be doing much by way of celebrating. Predictably, though, the one exception will be the scores of politicians and thousands of officials who will also today be converging on Berlin, to pay tribute to this historic moment in their own, rather different way … the most ambitious political project the modern world has seen since Lenin set up the Soviet Union in the Twenties.

Read it here.

COMMENT THREAD

The Berlin Declaration

BERJAYA
Variously from The Times (which claims an exclusive), the Telegraph and others, we have the unofficial text of the Berlin Declaration – as published by the Austrian Press Agency:

Europe for centuries was an idea, a hope of peace and understanding. That hope has been fulfilled. European unity has made it possible to live in peace and prosperity. It has created a sense of community and overcome differences. Every Member State has helped unite Europe and strengthen democracy and the rule of law. We have the love of freedom of the people of central and eastern Europe to thank that the unnatural divisions of Europe are finally overcome. European unity shows we have learned the lessons from our bloody conflicts and painful history. We live today together in a way that was never before possible. We citizens of the European Union are united in good fortune.

Section 1

In the European Union, we are developing our common ideals: for us the individual is central. His dignity is inviolable. His rights are inalienable. Women and men have equal rights. We strive for peace and freedom, for democracy and the rule of law, for mutual respect and responsibility, for prosperity and security, for tolerance and participation, justice and solidarity. We live and function together in the European Union in a unique manner. This expresses itself in the democratic co-operation of member states and European institutions. The European Union is based on equal rights and solidarity. That is why it is possible to balance interests fairly between Member States. We uphold in the European Union the individuality and the diverse traditions of its members. The open frontiers and the vibrant diversity of languages, cultures and regions enrich us. Many goals cannot be achieved independently but only through common action. The European Union, the Member States and their regions and local communities share these tasks.

Section 2

We face great challenges which cannot be contained within national borders. The European Union is our response to them. Only together can we preserve our European social model in the future for the benefit of all citizens in the European Union. This European model combines economic success and social responsibility. The common market and the euro make us strong.

That is how we can shape the increasing world-wide interdependency of the economy and ever expanding competition on international markets according to our values. Europe’s wealth lies in the knowledge and abilities of its people; this is the key to growth, employment and social cohesion. We will jointly fight terrorism and organised crime. We will also defend our freedom and civil rights against their enemies. Racism and xenophobia must never again be given their chance. We will act to ensure that conflicts in the world are solved peacefully and that people do not become victims of war, terrorism or violence.

The European Union will promote freedom and development in the world. We want to push back poverty, hunger and disease. In doing so, we will continue to play a leading role. In energy policy and protection of the climate we want to go forward together and make our contribution to heading off the global threat of climate change.

Section 3

The European Union will continue to live in the future on the basis of its openness and the will of its members to strengthen together the inner development of the European Union. The European Union will continue to promote democracy, stability and prosperity beyond its frontiers. European unity has made reality out of a dream nurtured by earlier generations. Our history warns us that we have to protect this good fortune for future generations. We must continue to renew and update the political shape of Europe. That is why, 50 years after the signing of the Treaties of Rome, we are today agreed on the goal of achieving a renewed common foundation for the European Union before the 2009 elections to the European Parliament.

For we know that Europe is our common future.
While posting this, I heard on the BBC radio news, from a gentleman whose name I did not catch, that we British Eurosceptics had a "smug, grubby way of looking at things". If this declaration is the best the "colleagues" can do, then we are at least justified in being smug.

COMMENT THREAD

Friday, March 23, 2007

We already had one of those

BERJAYAWith the finesse of a six-legged elephant wearing gardening gloves, German chancellor Angela Merkel has made a call for a common EU army. This, on the eve of the 50th anniversary celebrations, comes in an interview in today's edition of the mass-circulation German tabloid Bild Zeitung, where the chancellor is cited as saying: "We must come closer to forming a common European army."

This was not, you understand, a call for the expedition of the European Rapid Reaction Force, with its own separate national cadres, but a full-blown, badged army, ring-of-stars banners and all.

Those with long memories and/or a good grasp of history, will recall that this has been tried before, and that the last impetus in that direction also came from Berlin. Merkel, perhaps, has lost touch with her roots.

However, for all the sinister overtones, this is probably less worrisome that it sounds. In an earlier piece, we remarked how Germany, post-war, tended to look for a European framework for her foreign policy and military ambitions, in order to reassure her neighbours (and especially France) of her benign intentions. On that basis, the time really to start worrying is when Germany abandons the European route and strikes out alone.

BERJAYA
What we may be seeing here, though, is a half-way house. Traditionally, the calls for a European military come from France, with Germany falling in with the Gallic partner. Merkel may get away with it this time on the grounds that she hold the EU presidency but later repeats may not be treated with equanimity. One can see France, at the very least, with its nose seriously out of joint - and Poland not far behind.

For the moment though, while the German media has picked this up, and the India media has also mentioned it, citing the Chinese news agency, our own media is still fast asleep. The British public need not be troubled.

UPDATE: The Times has picked up the story.

COMMENT THREAD

Pervasive it is…

BERJAYA
We are going to see a flood of this, over the next few days – retrospectives of the last 50 years, to "celebrate" the fiftieth anniversary of Treaty of Rome.

Latest off the stocks is the IHT with a piece produced by our old friends, Associated Press. It is headed: "Key EU accomplishments over the past 50 years," and, in pride of place, what do we see but this:

SECURING FOOD SUPPLIES (TO EXCESS): The war was barely over for a dozen years when the forebear of the EU was created. Hunger was not a distant memory. With chilling efficiency, the Brussels bureaucracy created a farm system so effective that containing excess surpluses of wheat, butter and wine lakes became one of the bloc's biggest challenge within a few decades. It remains so to this day…
What utter, utter garbage this is, and what a sad reflection it is on the pervasive power of the myth that so many people buy into it. The proper place for EU propaganda is here.

COMMENT THREAD

German judge does not come through

BERJAYAChristina Datz-Winter, a German divorce judge has roused anger in the country by her strange ruling that a man may go on beating his wife if she tries to lead a Western style life, if the couple originate from Morocco.

The reason, according to Ms Datz-Winter is that the Koran sanctions such physical abuse. So much for German law being above Sharia law, for individual freedom, equality before the law and women’s rights. When it comes to Muslim women, the Koran, according to Ms Datz-Winter, must be obeyed.

To be fair, there has been a serious upsurge of anger in Germany, led, in the first place by Barbara Becker-Rojczyk, the woman’s defence lawyer. When in January the judge pronounced that there were no grounds for a speedy divorce, despite evidence of violence and threats of murder on the part of the husband, the outraged lawyer and her client demanded that the judge cease to make decisions on such matters as there was a clear clash of interests:

They felt that, because of the point of view presented by the judge, she was unable to reach an objective verdict. In the reply sent to Becker-Rojczyk, the judge expressly referred to a Koran verse -- or sura -- which indicates that a man's honor is injured when his wife behaves in an unchaste manner. "Apparently the judge deems it unchaste when my client adapts a Western lifestyle," Becker-Rojczyk said.
As the judge was still on the bench on Tuesday, Ms Becker-Rojczyk has decided to go public on the case. On Wednesday, the court in Frankfurt abruptly removed Ms Datz-Winter.

The article in International Herald Tribune has comments from various people.
"A judge in Germany has to refer to the constitutional law, which says that human rights are not to be violated," said Günter Meyer, director of the Center for Research on the Arab World at the University of Mainz. "It's not her task to interpret the Koran. It was an attempt at multicultural understanding, but in completely the wrong context."
True enough but is it not extraordinary that “multicultural understanding” seems not to involve an understanding how a woman subjected to violence might feel?
"When the Koran is put above the German Constitution, I can only say, 'Good night, Germany,'" Ronald Pofalla, general secretary of the Christian Democratic Union, said to the mass- market newspaper Bild.

Dieter Wiefelspütz, a Social Democratic member of Parliament, said in an interview that he could not recall a court ruling in years that had aroused so much indignation.
Could this case precipitate that much-needed understanding that a German national identity, one that includes an understanding of the country’s laws, constitution and numerous enlightened traditions [oh yes, there are, for those members of the forum who have never heard of, say, Goethe].

Apparently German Muslim leaders are not happy either. Statements have been made to the effect that Muslims in Germany must obey German law and to the effect that the Koran was being misunderstood. It seems, according to the article that “mainstream Muslims have long rejected wife- beating as a relic of the medieval age”.

Let us hope that is true. Who knows what else they might reject as being relics of the medieval age.

COMMENT THREAD

Ourselves alone

BERJAYAYes, yes, I know what the equivalent is in that phoney Gaelic the IRA adopted some time ago but it is a good slogan, particularly when it describes the situation quite accurately.

We have on various occasions pointed out on this forum that our so-called allies are more of a problem than our enemies. I can deal with the Commission but I find the various eurosceptic organizations hard going.

Last week I wrote about the launching of Global Vision and tried hard to be as objective as possible. I am beginning to find that a bit of a chore, having received a copy of their press release this morning [it does not seem to be on the website as I write this].

The release is about the 50th anniversary of the European Union and we shall have many more of these. This is how Global Vision starts its comments:

Global Vision, the new business backed campaign group, said today that the EU is right to feel a real sense of achievement for the role it had played over the last 50 years in helping bring an unprecedented period of peace and prosperity to post war Europe.
Tell me this is a bad dream. What achievement, for goodness sake? Unprecedented period of peace and prosperity in post war Europe? That would be the period, which saw the Berlin uprising, the building of the Berlin Wall, the suppression of the Hungarian Revolution, the suppression of the Prague Spring, the suppression of the Solidarity movement in Poland and, above all, ten years of ferocious fighting in the Balkans.

All right, I accept that Western Europe has had 50 years of peace and, indeed, prosperity. Ahem, NATO and the nuclear umbrella played no part in it?

Presumably, Global Vision sees the EU and its predecessors as the organization that prevented another Franco-German war. It was not on the cards in 1957. Whatever the ins and outs of the Treaty of Rome, it was the fact that the two countries had no desire to go on destroying themselves and each other that made the agreement possible, not the other way round.

Besides, who was the real enemy in 1957? The idea that a Franco-German war was the greatest danger had become outdated by about 1949.

I guess Denmark did not invade the Netherlands or Luxembourg in this period (or any other but let that pass).

As for the prosperity, much of that was achieved before the formation of the Common Market and, in so far as it has continued, happened despite the formation of the European Union.

The rest of the press release talks of those solutions being outdated for the global 21st century and the need to renegotiate everything in order to turn the European Union into a loose alliance, “based on free trade and co-operation”.

Director Ruth Lea says that
Britain should lead the way by negotiating a freer relationship so others may follow.
Chairman Lord Blackwell adds that
The UK should use the discussions over the Constitutional Treaty to put our new vision on the table, opting out of political and economic integration if the others are determined to push ahead with the current outdated model.
As there are no formal discussions over the Constitutional Treaty that might lead to a new treaty, this does not seem to be a particularly useful advice, unless Lord Blackwell means that Britain should push for a new IGC. When asked at the launch whether that was what he had in mind, he slid away from a response.

The European Foundation has also issued a press release [not on their web either]. It is marginally better and never did I think I would say that. Possibly the fact that Ms Sara Rainwater, quondam editor of the European Journal is now the Manager of Global Vision is the Foundation’s gain. If she wrote that press release, she needs some lessons in grammar and sentence structure.

While the European Foundation seems to attach far too much importance to a Declaration that will have no legal validity and is likely to consist of motherhood and apple-pie statements, while it is a little muddled on the 1947 – 1957 period in West European history (Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union do not exist for them either), the press release does say:
Only by calling for organized referendum, democracy and accountability can nations begin to offer a positive alternative to continued integration. This was proved in the French and Dutch referendums of 2005, when electorates voted against a European constitution. The alternatives to the federalist project would be based on an association of nation-states premised upon a free trade arrangement.
Of course, this, too, is an exercise in self-delusion. You can call for anything you like (how many referendums do they have in mind, by the way?) but one recalls Harry Hotspur’s response to Owen Glendower’s boast that he can “call spirits from the vasty deep”:
Why, so can I, or so can any man;
But will they come when you do call for them?
Let us not be too uncharitable. The European Foundation does
argue that now is the time to call for the renegotiation of our existing European Treaties in order to ensure that the European Union is beneficial to all countries and peoples involved.
Amid all the verbiage and pointless calls for the moon there is a glimmering of understanding that the existing treaties are a problem. Of course, when one thinks about it all carefully, that is not all that different from Global Vision’s call to use the “existing” negotiations to create a new structure or Open Europe’s call for a reform of the European Union, echoed by both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition.

It looks like we shall fight alone for a while.

COMMENT THREAD

Outrageous

BERJAYANews is coming in of an abduction by Iranian revolutionary guards of two Royal Navy boarding parties – 15 men in all - from the frigate HMS Cornwall.

According to the MoD website, the incident took place at approximately 1030 Iraqi time.

The British personnel were engaged in routine boarding operations of merchant shipping in Iraqi territorial waters in support of UNSCR 1723 and the government of Iraq. The UK boarding party had completed a successful inspection of a merchant ship when they and their two boats were surrounded and escorted by Iranian vessels into Iranian territorial waters.
BERJAYAThe MoD says it is "urgently pursuing" the matter with the Iranian authorities at the highest level and on the instructions of the Foreign Secretary, the Iranian ambassador has been summoned to the Foreign Office. "The British Government is demanding the immediate and safe return of our people and equipment."

In 2004, Iran detained eight British servicemen for three days after they allegedly strayed over the maritime border. The UK claimed the men were "forcibly escorted" into Iranian territorial waters. And, although the men were returned, the equipment was not.

COMMENT THREAD

Getting it wrong

BERJAYA"The EU was invented 50 years ago this week," writes Daniel Hannan in The Daily Telegraph, "for two specific purposes: to prevent France and Germany from fighting each other; and to make Europe self-sufficient in food."

For sure, peace between Germany and France was very high up on the list of priorities of the founding fathers, but it also has to be said that food production was nowhere. In the original discussions, agriculture was barely considered, than then only in terms of vague aspirations.

Yet it remains a widespread myth about post-war European agriculture that it was the Common Agricultural Policy which boosted production and made farming prosperous. For instance, a fact sheet on the European Parliament website (The Treaty of Rome and Green Europe) claimed that…

the CAP produced spectacular results: the Community was soon able to overcome the food shortages of the 1950s, achieving self-sufficiency and then generating cyclical and structural surpluses.
But while we would expect this canard to find its way into the litany of benefits of the Common Market – although even The Independent did not try that one on – we would not expect our own "side" to repeat the myth.

The interesting thing about the myth though is that - as so often myths are - it is a complete inversion of the truth.

Far from there being any shortage of food at the time the Common Market came into being, the countries of western Europe, and particularly France, were awash with surpluses. They had overcome the immediate post-war difficulties and benefited from the explosion in agricultural productivity that took place in the late forties and early fifties.

In France, this productivity had been fuelled by massive state subsidies which, in insulating farmers from the realities of the market, meant that by 1961 – just before the CAP was to start coming into force – the farming population still accounted for 25 percent of all her employment, against only four percent in the United Kingdom.

As the surpluses grew, they had led to persistent downward pressures on prices, which in turn threatened the economic viability of the mass of French farms, many of them small, inefficient peasant holdings. And herein lies the true genesis of the CAP.

For France's politicians, this presented a nightmare: the thought of millions of small farmers being displaced from the land and gravitating to towns and cities which could offer them neither jobs nor housing.

The fear was that they would lose their naturally conservative political allegiances and become a fertile breeding ground for discontent. In a country where the Communist Party was the largest single political grouping, the spectre of the Communists sweeping to power on the votes of dispossessed agrarian workers was of very great concern. Even armed revolution could not be ruled out. In France's highly unstable political structure, it was vital to the very survival of the state that the farmers and their families should be kept on the land.

To that effect, the then Fourth Republic had no option but to spend ever-increasing sums on farm subsidies, to the point where this expenditure threatened to bankrupt the state.

Yet the subsidies themselves only exacerbated the problem. They drew into production marginal land, while increased income encouraged investment in machinery. In 1950, the number of tractors in the Six as a whole had stood at only 370,000. By 1962 the number had grown to 2,300,000. Wheat production in the mid-1950s increased eight-fold. Sugar and wine production rose by over 300 percent. This necessitated ever-larger government-funded stockpiles and export subsidies.

By the early 1960s production was still increasing at a rate of 20 percent per annum. Eleven million of the 24 million dairy cows in the Six were French, each producing less than a quarter of the milk yield of Dutch animals. Dairy subsidies alone were costing the French taxpayer 1.35 billion francs (equivalent to £3 billion a year at 2003 prices), of which 70 million were used to dump powdered milk on the Indian and Mexican markets. Huge further sums were spent on storage and processing, while the surplus "butter mountain" stood at 200,000 tons. French farm policy was clearly unsustainable. Politically, however, it was essential.

BERJAYASo it was that, when de Gaulle took power in 1958, France's farm surpluses had already reached crisis point. Attempts to reform the subsidy system had met with stiff opposition, which presented a dangerous threat to his electoral base. De Gaulle was being forced to continue payments on a scale the French government could simply no longer afford.

At a crisis Cabinet meeting in August 1962, with the Algerian crisis now largely over, he was to call the "stabilisation" of agriculture the "most important problem" facing France. If the problems are not resolved, de Gaulle declared, "we will have another Algeria on our own soil".

De Gaulle and his advisers realised there were only two possible remedies: to find new export markets, or an additional source of finance for the subsidies. The answer to both might lie in the EEC.

What had become vital, they concluded, was to use it to set up an agricultural policy which could give French farmers access both to external markets and also to additional funding, primarily from Germany.

But it was vital that such a policy should be framed above all to meet the needs of France. Thus, despite his overt dislike of supranational institutions, de Gaulle came to regard the EEC as the most essential instrument in furthering France's national interest, the main aim being to put in place the Common Agricultural Policy.

As we can see, the CAP became not an instrument to promote the production of food or solve food shortages. It was first and foremost a mechanism to finance the surpluses and to manage the retreat from the land, brought about by the huge gains in agricultural productivity. More fundamentally, it ended up as being a means by which first German and then UK taxpayers paid for the transformation of French agriculture.

Of course, all this – and more - is in The Great Deception by Booker and myself. If Hannan wasn't so important, he might have time to read it, and could even learn something. He might then avoid getting it wrong so often.

COMMENT THREAD

That didn't take long

BERJAYAIt was only yesterday morning that BBC correspondent Paul Wood, embedded with the Second Rifles in Basra, was confidently chirping over the airwaves that, "the British Army believes it is winning here".

This was in the same week that the Army had pulled out of its base in the Old State Building in central Basra, an event barely recorded by the BBC and almost entirely ignored by the MSM.

Yet, a mere two days later, fighting had erupted in the centre of the city, again given little attention by the BBC but recorded in depth by Sam Dagher of the Christian Science Monitor, his piece headed: "British leave, battle erupts over Basra".

The fighting, it appears, broke out between rival Shiite groups - those loyal to Moqtada al-Sadr and the Fadeela faction - and spilled out onto the streets. The CSM report (based in part on Reuters copy) records eyewitness claiming that masked gunmen had swept through the centre of the city carrying AK-47s and rocket launchers.

In scenes that appear to be redolent of the hand-over at al Amarah where the British Abu Naji camp was stripped bare by the militias, some of the fighting was reported to be over control of the vacated Old State Building.

A source from the Fadeela Party in Basra also said the party headquarters had been completely burned down in the clashes, and the fighting had then moved to the house of Basra's governor, Mohammad Musbih al-Waeli, a leader from Fadeela, which came under siege as gunmen tried to storm his residence.

Dagher argues that the turmoil signals the beginning of the kind of battles that could erupt in Iraq as outside forces depart, citing Martin Navias, an analyst at the Centre for Defence Studies at London's King's College. "There will be a power vacuum in Basra," he says. "As the British begin to extricate themselves from Basra, there will be fighting among these groups." Dagher' piece continues:

Fadeela officials said that "neighboring" countries, in a veiled reference to Iran, were backing certain factions in Basra including an individual they named who has known links to Mr. Sadr. "Iranian influence in southern Iraq is very strong and there are loads of Iranian personnel running around Basra, but which faction they are coming down for is unclear," says Mr. Navias.

"The British adopted a policy of live and let live. They never confronted the Shiite militias unless they were pushed in certain situations .... This allowed the different factions to assume power in the governing council, police and other institutions."
Reuters reports that hospital sources said seven people had been wounded in the clashes which seemed to have died down shortly after midday yesterday, when the intense gunfire dwindled to sporadic shooting.

A curfew was imposed for several hours as Iraqi police, soldiers, and British troops deployed in the area. However, British military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Kevin Stratford-Wright could only say that by the time British troops got into the city, "there wasn't much to see."

Curiously, few other media outlets have given the events much coverage either, one exception (at the time of writing) being The Times, which relies on correspondent James Hider, filing from Baghdad.

Hider cites Abdul-Qader Mohammed Jassim, the Iraqi defence minister, who just happened to be in London, saying that his troops were capable of tackling outbursts of violence and that he had brought forward the deployment of an extra 5,000 Iraqi soldiers to the city. For the time being, therefore, the line is holding.

Nevertheless, in a separate report, Reuters claims that the Mehdi Army is breaking into splinter groups, with up to 3000 gunmen now financed directly by Iran and no longer loyal to the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. This, says the agency, is seen potentially as adding an even more deadly element to Iraq's violent mix.

Whether we saw some of that yesterday is a moot point, but it seems entirely compatible with the developments Reuters is reporting. One thing must be certain though: while the media spend most of its time and effort on watching the US activities in Baghdad and elsewhere – this being the main focus of BBC reports yesterday – the situation in Basra is far from settled. We could possibly be looking at a sharp deterioration in the security situation over the next few weeks and months.

COMMENT THREAD

Thursday, March 22, 2007

A lost cause

BERJAYAIt was last June that we remarked that the country's largest small business organisation, the Federation of Small Businesses, had gone over to the enemy.

For some years, the organisation had been actively subverted from within by a clique of Europhile luvvies, gradually turning it from a staunch opponent of the EU to one of its cheerleaders. And now, to complete the transition, one of those Europhile luvvies has been elected as national chairman at the FSB AGM in Belfast this afternoon.

This is John Wright, a former member of the National Executive of NALGO, a long time public servant (employee at Cleveland County Council) and more recently a director of companies and organisations established by regional government agencies.

So easy has it been to subvert from within that Wright was elected with just under 4000 votes, out of a membership of 205,000 – nearly double the vote of his nearest rival.

And just to show how far gone the organisation is, one motion up for consideration at the conference calls "upon Her Majesty's Government to have all businesses registered on a central database whether they are incorporated or non-incorporated and irrespective of size or type".

More here.

COMMENT THREAD

French judge comes through

BERJAYAAll right, I agree, it is a crummy idea to have legislation whereby aggrieved groups can sue publications because of showing disrespect to them or inciting hatred or whatever. We have laws like that, too, so need not look down on the French.

Still, the judge in the Charlie Hebdo case came through. He decided that the satirical magazine, whose circulation has, undoubtedly, rocketed since it had been taken to court, had every right to reprint those Danish cartoons.

The argument is a little odd but it will do:

The court said the cartoons published by the weekly Charlie Hebdo were covered by freedom of expression laws and did not constitute an attack on Islam in general but fundamentalists.
It would appear that both Nicolas Sarkozy and François Bayrou (the third man) have spoken out in defence of the weekly. In true politician’s style, Ségolène Royal left it to her partner and leader of the Socialists, François Hollande to do the same. That way, presumably, she could have disowned him, had the judgement gone the other way.

Philippe Val, the editor of the weekly, said, somewhat pompously but not inaccurately that this was a victory for secular Muslims as well.

BERJAYAAFP reports that applause broke out in the packed courtroom when the decision was announced.

Let me remind our readers that such a case is unlikely to happen in Britain for one very simple reason: no publication or mainstream media source has yet had the courage to reproduce the original cartoons, let alone add to them as Charlie Hebdo has done.

COMMENT THREAD

Here we go again

BERJAYARemember the story of Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena, captured by an Iraqi terrorist group and released after the Italian government paid out the demanded ransom? The Americans had, quite rightly, demanded that no ransom be handed over to terrorist group. The Italians were so anxious not to let the Americans know what was going on that the car in which she was taken to Baghdad airport was not clearly identified. As a result an Italian secret service officer, Nicola Calipari was killed.

Or this story of the two Italian aid workers (what on earth has happened to them?) whose release may well have been brought about by the Italian Red Cross transporting wanted terrorists through American check-points.

Last May it was estimated that Italy had already paid over the equivalent of $11 million in ransom (and that is not counting, presumably, the use of those Red Cross ambulances).

This week we have news of an Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo, 52, of the leftist newspaper La Repubblica, who does seem to have had a very bad time, indeed, in the hands of his Taliban captors, being released after the Italian authorities in Afghanistan released five Taliban prisoners, one of whom immediately announced his intention to hunt down infidels.

This is, if anything, more worrying than the stories of ransom being paid over, though, not perhaps more than the misuse of Red Cross immunity. The Italian opposition has protested and at least one member of the National Alliance party is talking of a very dangerous precedent.

Romano Prodi’s spokesman, Silvio Sircana, who happens to be a friend of Mastrogiacomo’s, is unfussed. As far as he is concerned, Italy did the right thing morally and from a humanitarian point of view:

We think that the life of a person is very precious. So if there is a chance to save a life we must do all we can do. And this was our very simple line and not anything more.
Well, well. What of the lives that will be taken as a result of those Taliban prisoners being released? Or the lives of future hostages, gleefully kidnapped by the Taliban in the hopes of future agreements of this kind? Or are they not all that precious if they are not left-wing Italian journalists with good contacts among the top political brass?

COMMENT THREAD

Some you lose and some you lose

BERJAYAMy colleague has already written about the risible list of 50 reasons why ignorant Independent journalists think the rest of us should love the EU. Let me concentrate on just one.

Reason number 18 says that one of the glories of the EU is a Europe-wide travel ban on tyrants such as Robert Mugabe. As it happens, it is perfectly possible to have a travel ban on tyrants across any kind of territory, should the countries in question wish to enact it. One does not need the European Union with all its paraphernalia for that.

The problem with that item is that it is not even true. The ban on Mugabe has been in place for some years. For all of that, President Chirac saw nothing wrong with inviting him to an African summit in 2003. The summit was yet another attempt on the part of the outgoing French president to prove that France was a significant international player. If that meant wining and dining some of the worst tyrants in the world and breaking EU sanctions on Robert Mugabe, well, tant pis.

There were attempts by human rights groups to arrest Mugabe while he was in Paris. These failed because of intervention by the French police.

Two years before that Peter Tachell had attempted to arrest Robert Mugabe in Brussels on charges torture under the 1984 UN Convention Against Torture. Under the benign gaze of the Belgian police and secret service agents Mugabe’s thugs attacked Tatchell and beat him unconscious.

For the record, though the British police have not behaved anything as badly, their zeal in arresting peaceful protesters outside Zimbabwe House yesterday does not fill one with great joy.

Now we come to the present. There is a meeting of the EU, Caribbean, African and Pacific MPs in Brussels going on, and it is best not to comment on the quality of the various political systems that are included.

BERJAYASuffice it to say that Zanu-PF delegates are attending the meeting though Glenys Kinnock is making the usual tut-tutting noises and regretting their presence. As one who is chairing the meeting she, presumably, had some say as to who was and who was not invited. No use regretting things now.

All of which is happening a week or so after the badly beaten members of the opposition, arrested during a peaceful rally and march, appeared in court. The picture on the right tells its story, though for some reason AP captions it as

Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, center, appeared in a Harare court two days after a mass arrest. He and others were injured in custody.
Injured? How did they happen to get injured? Did they slip while playing cricket or go into a particularly rough scrum during a rugby match?

BERJAYAAs our readers will recall, Nelson Chamisa, a member of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, was badly beaten at Harare airport when he tried to board an aeroplane to go to Brussels. So he is not there and neither are any of the other MDC members who can barely move after attention by Mugabe’s thugs last week.

But one person who is in Brussels is Edward Chindori-Chininga, a former government minister, who is on the list of 100 Zimbabweans banned from entering the European Union.

It seems that he applied for a visa in Johannesburg (Thado Mbeki has still not made the slightest effort to control his colleague Mugabe) under the shortened name of Edward Chininga. No-one thought of checking and the visa was issued.

As AFP reports, it was all a bit of a mistake. The foreign ministry spokesman, who has been muttering about that mistake, has said that Belgium has taken steps to ensure that Mr Chindori-Chininga does not enter Belgian territory. So, where is the man? In the European Union or not? Nobody seems to know.

What of that reason number 18 for loving the EU?

COMMENT THREAD

A very worrying development

BERJAYAIt is difficult to believe that one could ever have warmed to the current (or any) EU commission president, but the Telegraph's Bruno Waterfield – their latest EU correspondent – has come up trumps, painting a sympathetic picture of José Manuel Barroso.

The occasion is an interview in which, under the heading, "Political correctness is killing our freedoms", Barroso tells us that "Europe's citizens" must be on their guard "against political correctness and moralising politicians". He is concerned that freedom can be the loser in European culture wars over climate change, cheap air travel, Islam and free speech.

"We should be aware," he says, "of people who, sometimes for good reasons, try to establish what I call private moral codes, for this or that, be it climate change, religious behaviour or any kind of social behaviour."

But the absolute corker is his comments on the UK's climate change agenda, which he condemns as a "turn-off". This, he warns, risks intruding into people's lives, threatens individual freedom and could turn voters off the fight against global warming.

He also hails cheap air travel as "a great thing for our civilisation" and expresses grave concerns over fashionable plans, floated by Mr Miliband, for personal carbon rationing and suspects that proposals to restrict CO2 emissions from an individual's activities will lead to intrusive surveillance into private lives.

"I do not see any need to establish these intrusive approaches that may reduce the freedom of our societies," he says. "We have to find the right balance and I believe the right balance is not found if we start giving these kind of personal good or bad behaviour certificates to people."

Barroso's views on tackling global warming, writes Waterfield, also clash with Cameron's plans to introduce green taxes and individual allowances on air travel. "Cheap air travel is great for our civilisation. When we think now that people have the freedom to circulate instead of being confined to a small territory, it is great progress," he says.

This is very worrying indeed, when an EU apparatchik actually seems to be talking more sense than our own politicians. I think I will have to go and lie down.

COMMENT THREAD

After Airbus, Galileo

One did not exactly have to be a rocket scientist to predict, as I did last night, that the (British) MSM would ignore the latest developments in the Galileo saga. One should also note, I suppose, that The Independent did not include the EU's satellite navigation system in its list of 50 "benefits" of the EU.

But, if the British media are in ostrich mode, not so today's edition of Le Monde which has run both a news piece and a leader.

A taste of the where the newspaper is coming from can be discerned from the news headline, which proclaims: "Europeans try to avoid the Galileo 'shipwreck'", with the leader not offering much comfort either, noting, "After Airbus, Galileo."

The symbolic nature of the Galileo programme is not missed. It was to embody the ambitions of l'Europe puissance (the Europe of power) but now, the paper says, it is going through an unprecedented crisis. It was to become one of the industrial emblems of Europe but, if nothing is done, it is likely to become an additional illustration of the European breakdown – just at the time when the Union is on the point of celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the Treaty of Rome.

Despite the predictability of the British media, seeing how much is riding on the Galileo project, it is still perplexing that the issue is so comprehensively ignored. There seems to be more here than the general amateurism and parochialism of your average British journalist, although the precise reason for the hang-up is difficult to work out. Perhaps it is that rooted objection the media has to keeping the public informed.

COMMENT THREAD

The mystery deepens

BERJAYAAttacks on the Basra Palace base are intensifying, says the Radio 4 BBC Today programme, which this morning ran a short piece on how the Army is coping. Soldiers, we are told, are routinely getting only three or four hours sleep a night, as they are exposed to incessant mortaring.

Despite this, a young Army officer interviewed claimed that the Army is "getting the upper hand" and "has the ability to track and defeat this enemy".

The piece follows this officer and his troops, who form the "Quick Reaction Force", chasing down the attackers … in Warrior mechanised infantry combat vehicles. Predictably, by the time they arrive at the co-ordinates from which an attack had been mounted, there was no sign of the enemy, although the piece recorded that, on this occasion, the patrol was ambushed and a gunfight erupted.

As is so often the case, the report was superficial. The previous night, a patrol had captured a car in which rockets and bombs had been found, but we were not told how this came about. But no insurgents were captured or killed.

Once again, therefore, we seem to be in the same situation that frustrated the ground patrols at the Abu Naji base in al Amarah, before it was abandoned because of the incessant attacks (the picture above shows the effects of one). By the time they arrived, the insurgents had long gone, hence the need for a helicopter response – which we know was occasionally provided by the United States.

Why this resource is not available remains one of those modern-day mysteries, compounded in this event by another. The patrol described by the Today programme, arriving at the scene, did not appear to know the whereabouts of the mortar crew which had mounted the attacked. Yet, as we discussed in our earlier piece, the technology exists to pinpoint and follow attackers, using advanced electro-optical equipment fitted to fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters.

Here the mystery deepens. Despite my comments about the lack of equipment and the failure to learn from Northern Ireland, it seems the Army was well able to learn the lessons.

BERJAYA
As the picture and narrative above shows, in December 2003, three Britten Norman Defender aircraft were ordered for use in Basra - each equipped with the formidable electro-optical equipment which has been so successful in tracking insurgents - the first aircraft entering service with the Army on 1 October 2004 - just 9½ months later.

It also appears that these aircraft were available in al Amarah. We also know that the base there was equipped with Mamba counter-battery radar, which means that some of the key elements needed to deal with the mortar threat were in place.

What appears to have been missing were the helicopters to convey troops rapidly to the scene, and an effective patrol strategy.

BERJAYAThis notwithstanding, currently, there are no indications that the Defenders are still in use. There is no reference to them on the Army Air Corps website, they do not appear on the main MoD site and no official photographs seem to have been published. And, even if they were still in use, three aircraft are not enough to mount 24/7 standing patrols covering all the British bases. This might explain why we are resorting to using the Iraqi Sama aircraft (the model here seen over Basra air base).

Operational security is one thing but, on the face of it, it would appear that the lack of information on our capabilities is aimed more at concealing inadequacies than protecting our troops. And, despite having its reporter on the ground, the BBC did not even seem to notice.

COMMENT THREAD

Back from the brink… sort of

BERJAYAAccording to Heise online, the EU's Galileo navigation system has been clawed back from the precipice and will live to see another day.

As we left it, the companies forming the development consortium for the system were refusing to incorporate a company which could take the project forward.

This left the EU commission without a formal partner and no entity which could order the satellites needed to set up the system, leaving the commission to consider handing responsibility for the system to a public body – thereby virtually ensuring its demise.

If they are good at nothing else, however, the "colleagues" need take lessons from no one in brinkmanship. Thus, yesterday, the consortium capitulated and the separate companies signed the articles of incorporation of a registered company.

However, this is but one small step, and the problems affecting Galileo are by no means resolved. Forbes cites Michele Cercone, spokesman for EU transport commissioner Jacques "Wheel" Barrot, saying that the consortium's move is a "commitment, not a result".

The transport council is due to meet in Brussels today to discuss the next step, and they will find that the underlying flaws in the commercial model have not gone away. In fact, they may be intensifying.

BERJAYAReliable information is difficult to get but there are rumours circulating that the German road charging system – the only one in Europe so far that uses satellite positioning data to provide charging information – is running into serious problems. Unofficial reports suggest that the system is having difficulty in processing all the information and that as many as 60 percent of vehicles are escaping charges.

Income from road charging systems using Galileo is a vital component of the cost recovery plan and if they cannot deliver, then the project is in even more difficulty than its critics would have it.

That might explain the outgoing French president's parting shot, recorded here.

Despite the opposition of key EU member states, including Germany, Chirac – out of the blue - is demanding an immediate end to the boycott of arms sales to China. Sales of weapons relying on satellite guidance, some of which would be manufactured by consortium partner EADS, would help to underwrite the costs of commissioning Galileo. With China also favouring its own system, it might help pull it back into the project, also easing the financial crisis.

That much, of course, will not be discussed openly by the commission tomorrow, and it is unlikely that anything of the current traumas will be found in the mainstream media, which has largely ignored the project. But the time is fast approaching when serious financial decisions have to be made, at which point the taxpayers of the EU member states could find themselves having to meet a rather large and unexpected bill.

Brinkmanship may then not be enough.

COMMENT THREAD

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Competing to recognize terrorists

BERJAYAIt is, of course, almost a given in European diplomatic and political circles that foreign policy in Europe is more nuanced and more subtle than it is in the United States of America (with Australia being thrown in ever more frequently as the closest ally).

In practice, that means support for some of the worst tyrannies and terrorists of all description at the expense of potential democratic allies. Once again, we are witnessing European politicians lining up to be nice to the Hamas-led "unity" government, regardless of its refusal even to pretend to abide by the international conditions.

Lining up to do what, incidentally? Well, to hand over large chunks of taxpayers' money without bothering to find out what it is being used for. A long piece on the subject here.

COMMENT THREAD

The power of lists

BERJAYAAs the EU celebrates its anniversary, The Independent newspaper looks at what it believes to be 50 benefits the Union has brought, and asks: "What has Europe done for us?", all under the general title: "50 reasons to love the European Union".

Such is the power of lists that a number of bloggers, such as here, could not resist taking on the challenge of debunking this one – and good luck to them.

What is interesting about the exercise, however is that The Independent in common with the Europhile tendency, does not even try to make a coherent, robust case for the object of its affections. It merely trots out the same old mantras, half-truths, distortions and outright lies that the "Europeans" always have done and always will do.

But, if these made the difference between us staying in the Union and leaving, we would have been out years ago – because the arguments simply do not stand up. That we remain in the EU, therefore, stems from something more than the perceived benefits or otherwise.

Brutally, one might observe that we are still in because not enough people care either way. The EU does not impinge on them personally in such a way, or with such force, that they believe withdrawal to be an important issue.

In that context, fifty years of European integration also marks fifty years of failure of the forces opposing it and, in particular – a theme we have raised a few time before – the failure of the Eurosceptic movement to offer a credible alternative to the EU.

Therein lies the weakness of The Independent list – and the attempts at rebutting it: the points raised are largely irrelevant. The fact is that, given the complexity of international relations and the need to inter-relate with our neighbours – we need mechanisms and organisations to manage these issues. In effect, if the EU did not exist, there would almost certainly be pressure to invent it.

Until or unless we can come up with credible alternative, therefore, the EU will continue to be seen by the many as a necessary evil, with some uses that justify the inevitable disadvantages. Even that may not be enough, however. The ultimate determinant will be the balance between perceived advantages and disadvantages, and it is the latter – I suspect - which will eventually force change.

This is almost certainly why the EU is always attempting to re-invent itself, currently framing itself the protector of the environment. But it is a high risk strategy, as the green "bubble" is bound to burst, sooner or later. And when it does, the Eurosceptics need to be ready to exploit the disarray that will inevitably follow.

For the time being, The Independent can have its list, the last item proclaiming: "Lists like this drive Eurosceptics mad". Actually no – they leave us with the sense of how pathetic and inadequate the Europhile case is, reinforcing our view that, with so little to offer, it must surely fail.

COMMENT THREAD

Cheap and cheerful

BERJAYAEarlier this month we picked up the fact that the British Army was relying on air support from the Iraqi Air Force, flying cut-price, militarised versions of a Canadian-designed light aircraft – the Sama CH2000 - flying out of Basra Air Station.

Through a Parliamentary Question tabled by Ann Winterton , we now learn that the support provided is no occasional outing. In the last two months some 70 sorties have been flown, backing up our Army.

In many ways, this is exceedingly good news. In the first instance, it can do no harm to the morale of Iraqi personnel to have provided such a valuable service to the British Army. Secondly, one is reassured that the Army is getting cover from these invaluable aircraft. Fitted with the MX-15 optical surveillance turret and data links, they are as capable as the Nimrod MR2 and the Merlin helicopters used for land surveillance, which are fitted with exactly the same equipment.

But most of all, with the Sama costing a mere £360,000, this proves the point that a land surveillance capability need not cost the earth – or the £14.2 million that the MoD is planning to spend (average) on each of the Future Lynx helicopters which will give the British Army the same capability as the Samas (but not until 2014).

BERJAYAInterestingly, since 1989, the Army has been operating the "cheap and cheerful" Britten Norman AL1 Islander on surveillance duties, mainly in Northern Ireland – where so much experience has been gained on counter-terrorist operations. The same equipment, especially if fitted with the MX-15 turret, would be ideal for operations in southern Iraq, and would cost far less than the RAF Nimrods and the Merlins which, at the moment, are the only British aircraft providing this capability.

One wonders why the Army needs to relearn the lesson it gained in Northern Ireland, or perhaps it takes the view that, as long as the RAF is providing the service "free of charge" it need not invest in its own future. Certainly, any organisation that would prefer to spend £14 million on a capability that it could have for a fraction of the price cannot be said to be short of funds.

COMMENT THREAD

The winds of change

BERJAYADespite the best efforts of the BBC, which is desperately trying to stoke up some enthusiasm, the 50th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, to be celebrated by the "colleagues" in Berlin on Sunday, is looking to be the non-event of the half-century.

But it is not only the lack-lustre performance of the EU in the celebrations department which seem to suggest a certain lack of confidence in the project. There are other clues, slender perhaps but which could suggest that the tectonic plates are moving.

One such is a piece in the IHT about the Airbus A400M military airlifter. Once touted as a key link in its strategy to create a unified military force independent of NATO and the United States, the paper says, the project has become more a symbol of an evolving trans-Atlantic security relationship than of an emboldened EU trying to emerge from the American security umbrella.

If that is the case, then it represents a major shift in the ambitions of the European Union. The A400M was to be at the heart of an EU joint airlift command, with Germany and France already committed to becoming its founder members, so we may be seeing a recognition that the process of European defence integration has stalled.

It could be that too many of the EU members (and particularly the UK) are lined up alongside the United States in prosecuting the "war on terror". Those members are too busy to be enthusiastic about putting any energy into developing a European Rapid Reaction Force that is focussed on a mythical enemy and unspecified threats.

Hinted at in my earlier piece, we did not expect to get such early confirmation, with defence secretary Des Browne committing to send more helicopters to Afghanistan. "I do believe that we need more helicopters. I want the option to provide more to operations to increase the flexibility commanders have," he is cited by The Daily Telegraph as saying, adding: "I have no doubt that if I can get them more they will find good ways of using them. I will probably have more to say about this in the not-too-distant future."

The implications of this are far more profound than the media has even begun to realise. Despite the attempts to paint a picture of doom and glom in Iraq, which my co-editor has noted, the situation is far from unpromising. Even the Telegraph in yesterday's leader was forced to concede that there were "signs of hope".

At a European level, this does suggest that the EU, under the tutelage of Chirac and with the support of Schröder, backed the wrong horse. By failing to support the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, it has lost more influence that it has gained.

That this is reflected in a loss of self-confidence might be indicated by another issue, the unexpected turn-around in the long-standing dispute with the United States over Airbus subsidies.

There was a time when the EU would have relished the fight with the US, just for the sake of it, but the Gulf Daily News is now telling us that it is suing for peace, seeking to bring the dispute to a rapid end. Not least of the reasons it the fear that while the two aviation giants of Airbus and Boeing battle it out, China sneaks in, having approved a plan to build large passenger aircraft, and takes the market from them both. For once, the trans-Atlantic squabble is being overshadowed by a greater threat.

China probably features somewhere it the EU’s latest move on its other great project, the Galileo satellite navigation system. As of yesterday, the EU commission announced that it would consider handing responsibility for the system to a public body if the consortium of companies charged with building it falls.

Since that is more than an outside possibility, and a public body would almost certainly fail to attract the financing that would enable the system to be commissioned, we are perhaps looking at the failure of the EU’s largest and most ambitious project to date, an outcome which, according to England Expects the commission itself seems to be predicting. Already shaky, one could then see the Union's self-confidence plummet.

Putting all this together, with some of our previous ruminations, and then drawing the conclusions we have may be a case of adding two and two to make five. But there is another straw in the wind, again courtesy of England Expects, who predicts that there will be no "road map" for the EU constitution in the Berlin declaration on Sunday. Effectively, that will mark the last rights for a project that has had more resurrections than a Wembley stadium full of Lazaruses.

It will we believe, also mark the end of the European Union's ambitions to become a political rather than an economic union. Fifty years on, it has lost its way. There will not be another fifty years. The winds of change are blowing too strongly.

COMMENT THREAD

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The (Tory) retreat continues

BERJAYAIt came to pass that today, as we forecast last November, British forces handed over control of their base in central Basra to the Iraqi security forces.

This was the Old State Building (OSB), one of the most heavily attacked bases, leading to suggestions that British troops had been "bombed out" – which have been denied by the commander of British forces in southern Iraq, Major-General Jonathan Shaw. He characterised the pullout as a repositioning of his troops and not a withdrawal.

That, however, was exactly the line taken when British troops abandoned Camp Naji in al Amarah to the Iraqis last August, only to have local militias strip the camp bare in a matter of hours, effectively confirming the fact that the British were retreating.

BERJAYAPerhaps mindful of this humiliation, British military officials are no longer talking about transferring control of Basra to Iraqis by the spring. According to Reuters, spokesman Major David Gell is saying: "Spring had been suggested but we have shifted out of any sort of timetable and are saying when conditions are right."

That, in itself does mark a distinct change in the attitude of not only the British forces, but also the government, which seems quietly, without any fanfare at all, set to take a more robust approach to its responsibilities in Iraq. Gone is the naked defeatism of the Dannatt statement and one gets the impression that there is a new determination to see the job through.

But if the Army has stopped retreating – mentally at least – not so the Conservatives. In November last, we published a three-part piece on its retreat from politics (here, here and here), with Part II in particular pointing out the failure of the Party to take defence issues seriously.

BERJAYADespite (or perhaps because of) the earnest attention of this blog, the Party has concentrated mainly on the softer aspects of defence policy. This is all very well but without also setting out a robust policy for dealing with the current campaigns, the Party looks effeminate and weak.

Alas, however, the Conservatives have continued in their girlie vein, a story in today's Times telling us that they are shortly to produce a "military manifesto", the centrepiece of which is to give troops priority on National Health Service waiting lists.

This is intended to exploit high levels of disaffection among service families but it would be a lot more credible if the Tories had come up with some ideas of how to keep troops out of the grip of the NHS in the first place, by providing them with more effective equipment, such as blast resistant armoured vehicles and helicopters that worked in hot weather.

In the absence of such balance, their initiative is merely opportunism. Good politics it is not.

COMMENT THREAD

Overwhelmed to impotency

BERJAYAAs we reach the fourth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, the airwaves are full of wailing and gnashing of teeth as the moonbats debate the merits or – more usually – otherwise, of the military action. Given less attention – and much less than it deserves – however, is another debate, this one on how the military should gear up to fighting and winning the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

For the Americans, that debate has been underway for some time and, yesterday, the AFP agency acknowledge the outcome, with a piece headed: "War remoulds army into boots-on-the-ground counter-insurgency force".

The US military, it says – citing "analysts and military officials" - is strained and stretched by the bloody conflict, but it has been forced to adapt and relearn how it fights its wars.

General David Petraeus (pictured above), the new US commander in Iraq, spent the past year writing the Army's first counter-insurgency manual in two decades, reviving a military art that had been all but lost after the Vietnam War. Troops are training for urban combat at mock Iraqi villages in the Mojave Desert, and counter-insurgency is the subject of the day at military academies and in the pages of journals. A new generation of combat-tested military leaders is in command.

But the agency also reports that "some generals worry it [the US Army] may lose its edge in fighting high-tech conventional wars," a fear very much reflected in British military circles, not least by Air Chief Marshall Sir Michael Graydon (retd), who we recorded saying that "We mustn't fall into the trap of becoming a peace-keeping militia." He declares: "An ability to conduct full-scale military operations is the foundation for successful peace-making and peace-keeping."

What is interesting here is that, while the United States military also confronted this issue in a big way during the Vietnam era, the UK has never engaged in the debate in the same way – or to the same extent. Previously, British counter-insurgency operations have absorbed a relatively small part of defence budgets, so the military were never forced to make a choice between conventional and counter-insurgency operations. But, as forces have contracted and we have taken on commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, gearing up for counter-insurgency operations is having a significant impact, especially on the Army.

Equally interesting is that many of the arguments that emerged during the Vietnam era – especially over the use of airpower – were never really resolved. Yet, if they are being re-addressed by the Americans, so far in the UK the debate has not really taken off - at least, not in public.

One element of that debate is about (or should be about) the costs of technology, which is getting so expensive that even wealthy countries like the US have difficulty in affording it. Another is that the increasing sophistication and performance of military hardware, which is now out of balance with the primitive nature of the enemy that is being fought.

BERJAYAThe classic example of both elements is the Apache attack helicopter (pictured right) which, in British hands, ended up costing £60 million each. A hugely complex machine designed for killing Warsaw Pact tanks on the plains of northern Europe, it is now being used to kill Taliban fighters who are able to field nothing more sophisticated than 4x4 pick-up trucks and ancient Russian machine guns.

What needs to emerge from the debate is the definition of military equipment which embodies sufficient capability to do the job yet which is sufficiently affordable to permit the purchase of enough units to meet operational demands. There is no point having equipment that is capable of meeting all contingencies which ends up being so expensive that not enough is bought, or it is too expensive to use.

To this problem we have alluded in our piece yesterday when we pointed out that hi-tech MX-15 optical surveillance equipment is at the moment carried by a variety of platforms, ranging from the Nimrod MR2 and the Merlin helicopter, to the Iraqi Air Force Sama 2000s. More to the point, this same equipment will be fitted to the Future Lynx, which, at an average of £14.2 million per airframe, will end up being used to carry out exactly the same task as the £360,000 Sama 2000.

BERJAYAIt is in the use of helicopters generally that costs are getting out of hand. Before they became available, many of the functions at present carried out by them were done by fixed wing aircraft, latterly the Auster AOP9 which continued in service until 1965. And while it could not perform all the duties of a helicopter, its short take-off and landing capabilities did allow it to perform air observation, casualty evacuation and utility transport operations. Undoubtedly, something similar could perform many of the duties currently undertaken by helicopters – especially if fitted with the MX-15 optical surveillance equipment – at a fraction of the cost.

Similarly, where helicopters are needed and there is absolutely no alternative, instead of always using Lynx, Chinooks or Merlin helicopters, we could for some of the tasks fly the updated version of the Vietnam era Huey, known as the Bell 412. This costs a fraction of what the other types cost to buy and operate.

BERJAYAMore particularly, the Lynx struggles to operate in the hot conditions of Iraq and, doubly suffers in the hot and high conditions in Afghanistan. There, it has been reported that the extreme heat and thin, rising air of the Helmand desert has limited the Lynx to operations between dusk and dawn, when temperatures fall to acceptable levels.

On the other hand, the "unique abilities" of the Bell 412s include "flying in hot and often humid conditions whilst also being able to carry considerable loads", for which purpose the Army has acquired six military versions which it employs in the predominantly jungle areas of Brunei and Belize – but not in either Iraq or Afghanistan. Unsurprisingly, the Pakistani Air Force, which must operate in conditions very similar to those in Afghanistan, flies Bell 412s.

BERJAYAIt is not only in the use of helicopters, however, where the debate is needed. When it comes to air support, the role of more economic equipment also needs to be discussed. The USAF went through the arguments extensively in the 1960s as sophisticated, high performance aircraft like the Phantom became available. Too fast to allow accurate delivery of close air support, and so large that it presented an inviting target to ground fire, cheaper and more effective alternatives were soon employed. Amongst those was the piston-engined Skyraider and the T-37 basic trainer (pictured), which became a potent warbird.

About the same time, the British equivalent, the Jet Provost, was upgraded to become the Strikemaster, giving good service in the Oman insurgency, alongside Hueys which were able to operate in the desert heat.

BERJAYAFor our air support in Afghanistan, however, we operate Harrier GR9s – upgraded versions of the GR7 – hugely expensive machines with limited payloads. Their one advantage is the ability to make vertical take-offs and landings, but neither of these attributes are used. For the type of support needed in the region, the Tucano used by the RAF as a basic trainer could do the job. And, at £5 million, per aircraft, the cost is less than that paid to convert a GR7 to GR9 standard, allowing us to buy many more.

What does emerge from this is that money is not always the issue, and despite claims to the contrary, the Armed Forces are not actually short of money for equipment – buying better, as can be demonstrated with the Bell 412, can also mean buying cheaper.

Getting in the way though is the determination of the military to buy those increasingly expensive and complex "toys". For the UK to afford to go to war - and win - this process must be reversed.

Thus, in a similar contest, said Ed E. Heinemann, designer of the B-26 Invader, the A-1 SkyRaider and the A-4 SkyHawk: "The obstacles to any simplification may seem insurmountable, and the reasons for more complexity are many and powerful. But if we permit this Frankenstein of complexity to continue to work at its current plodding, insidious rate, it will slowly overwhelm us to impotency."

COMMENT THREAD

Monday, March 19, 2007

Those Iraqi figures

BERJAYAThrough James Taranto's summary of “Best on the Web” we can see what the Iraqi poll actually said and leave aside the doom-laden reporting of the BBC and other media outlets.

Firstly, this is a survey of 5,019 Iraqis over 18, which makes it larger and most probably more representative than those famous BBC surveys across the world that invariably show that most people in most countries (well, the 1,000 that dared to respond in various Middle Eastern and African countries or in China) consider the United States to be the most evil system that ever existed in the world.

Only 27 per cent thought that they were in a state of civil war, despite the fact

About 26 per cent of Iraqis - 15 per cent of Sunnis and 34 per cent of Shi'ites - have suffered the murder of a family member.

Kidnapping also plays a terrifying role: 14 per cent of Iraqis have had a relative, friend or colleague abducted, rising to 33 per cent in Baghdad, since the fall of Saddam.
The figures in general are quite interesting:
But 49 per cent of those questioned preferred life under Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to living under Saddam, while 26 per cent said things were better in Saddam's era, 16 per cent said they were as bad as each other and the rest did not know or refused to answer.

Not surprisingly, the divisions in Iraqi society were reflected in the statistics: Sunnis were more likely to back the previous Ba'ath Party regime (51 per cent) while the Shi'ites (66 per cent) preferred the Maliki Government.
European governments would give their eye-teeth for support of that kind.

COMMENT THREAD

A lukewarm response

BERJAYAThe Finanical Times today published the results of an FT-Harris poll, conducted in the EU’s five biggest countries - Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain - and the US.

The main finding was that only 25 percent of those questioned in EU member states felt life in their country had improved since it joined the EU, while 44 percent thought life had got worse.

However, despite many complaints about the EU, including a widespread view that it was too bureaucratic, only 22 percent of respondents thought their country would be better off if it withdrew, against 40 percent who believed it would be worse off.

BERJAYAFurthermore, the poll, conducted between 28 February and 12 March, found that 35 percent of respondents thought the EU constitution would have a positive impact on their country, compared with 27 percent who thought the opposite.

The most Euro-enthusiastic state was Spain while, rather predictably, the most negative responses came from the UK. Some 48 percent thought we would be better off or remain the same if we left the EU. And, interestingly, respondents in the US showed a high level of ignorance on what the EU was about - some 45 percent failed to associate the EU with any specific policy or attribute.

COMMENT THREAD

Madness or higher dialectics?

BERJAYAOleg Atbashian is a writer and graphic designer from Ukraine, who now lives in New York and writes a blog called ThePeoplesCube.com. I have not come across it before and am therefore, grateful to Pajamas Media (as ever) for calling attention to this long and extremely well-argued essay on the subject of the "higher morality" that encompasses many of my own attitudes towards the Beatles as well as the idiots who join demonstrations because they think this is the real morality.

Mind you, I am not absolutely convinced Paul was all that musical but better than John, clearly. And, equally clearly, Ringo is the only sensible one.

There is no doubt in my mind, however, that Oleg Atbashian is right when he says:

Such mad morality is exactly what drives people into crowds at anti-war rallies. The fate of Iraq is not their biggest concern. Protesting the war is more of an excuse to take revenge for the daily torture of maddening hypocrisy and compromises with the “system.” Believers in the Gospel of John and Yoko use these rallies to claim high moral ground, work out anxieties, seek reassurance - and some of the die-hards may even still harbor hope that a collective hallucination will somehow change the objective reality - just as the prophecy predicted.

As for the Iraqis - to hell with them! Let them all kill each other. “Progressives” have more pressing issues, struggling to maintain and expand their high moral ground. They have never cared about the lives of the people they claimed to protect. They didn’t care about the Soviets, Cubans, Vietnamese, Cambodians, or Palestinians. It was always about them and their maddening inner struggles.
Read the whole piece. Well worth it.

News from Sweden

BERJAYAAnd yes, it does involve the Fragrant Commissar, of whom we have not written much in recent months, largely because the wretched woman and her blog are so utterly boring.

It seems, however, that the ineffable Margot is thinking of a spot of moonlighting as a Swedish politician. As a Commissar sorry, European Commissioner she is supposed to serve the European Union and leave matters of national politics behind. Indeed, each and every member of the Commission promises to act entirely in the European Union’s interests, notwithstanding previous political and present national allegiances.

BERJAYABut what’s this? According to “The Local”, Sweden’s news in English, the new leader of the Social Democrats, Mona Sahlin, speaking for a whole hour on Sunday morning has announced, among other matters,

that she would create a working group to develop the party's foreign and EU policies before the European election in 2009 and the next Swedish election in 2010. EU commissioner Margot Wallström and former foreign minister Jan Eliasson would be on the committee.
She then welcomed Margot Wallstöm back into Swedish politics. Unfortunately, the Fragrant Commissar is not back in Swedish politics. She is still a Commissar and, as such, should not be getting involved in national party politics.

When asked about this, the Fragrant Commissar replied [translation provided by one of our readers and we are very grateful]:
Yes, it is [says Wallström]. But I cannot take on a formal position and sit on a board. But everyone in the Commission is politically active and I think that only enriches our work. This is not a full time task, Margot Wallström points out, and in a response to a question she answers that of course she will inform the Commission about her new task.

I will continue to perform my work as Commissioner with full impartiality she ensured the questioner.
Well, well, so everyone in the Commission is politically active? That would be active in national party politics, I take it. This is not what we are told when questions are asked about the clash between the role of the Commissioner and the oath of the Privy Councillor.

Some things will seem very familiar to la Wallström is going. Mona Sahlin spoke of the lost election of 2005.
She went on to promise a renewal of the party's organisation and leadership:

"We will listen. We will find new ways to communicate," she told the audience.
There is one thing that Ms Sahlin might not be too anxious to communicate and that is the Swedish trade unions going over the heads of the elected Swedish government to the European Commission and the ECJ to prevent the implementation of unemployment benefit reform that had been part of the platform on which it was elected.

COMMENT THREAD

The biter bit

It is rather illustrative that certain journalists – no strangers to dishing it out when the mood takes them – are rather sensitive to criticism of their own work.

Another longish article. Read it here

COMMENT THREAD

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Another eurosceptic campaign

BERJAYAMany of our readers know that an off-shoot of the Centre for Policy Studies (CPS) has been launched. This is a new eurosceptic campaign, called Global Vision and it was officially launched last week on March 15.

Its chairman is Lord Blackwell, with Ruth Lea as Director and Ian Milne as Consultant.

I was there at the event and have spent some time discussing the campaign and its ramifications. Here is a long piece on the subject.

COMMENT THREAD

Contempt of Parliament

BERJAYAWe learn today from The Sunday Telegraph that British Commanders in Iraq have ordered artillery to be used against insurgents for the first time since the end of the war.

The move follows a sharp increase in mortar and rocket attacks on military bases in the city. Military officials confirmed that troops at five bases are being shelled daily with mortars or rockets.

It is understood that Maj Gen Jonathan Shaw, the commander of the multinational division in southern Iraq, asked for a battery of six 105 mm guns from 40 Regiment Royal Artillery to return to Iraq to counter long-range attacks by insurgents. This will be the first time that British forces have used artillery in Iraq since 2003, when it was used during the war against Saddam Hussein's forces.

Says The Telegraph, for several months, insurgents have been attacking British bases with 120 mm mortars and rockets that can be fired from several miles away. Both weapons are notoriously inaccurate in untrained hands and many of the rounds fired at British bases land in residential areas, killing and injuring civilians. Commanders hope that the insurgents will be discouraged if they are met with an artillery barrage from the British 105 mm weapons every time they open fire.

Good though this news is that we are taking active counter-measures, I have been hearing from a variety of sources that, unlike the "gung ho" US, the British will not use artillery because of the risk of civilian casualties. Now it seems we too are to join the ranks of the "gung ho", returning fire when attacked.

But the fact that we learn of this from a newspaper can only be a deliberate snub to MPs – and Parliament in general. For some months now, several MPs have been asking the secretary of state for defence for details of measures which the MoD is taking to protect our troops, only for the questions - one as recent as last last Wednesday - to be dead-batted on security grounds.

What MPs cannot be told, however, can be released to a national newspaper and thence into the public domain. That, by any measure, is contempt of Parliament.

COMMENT THREAD

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Lustration in Poland, riots in Hungary

BERJAYATwo of the new member states of the European Union are in the news: Poland because of Chancellor Merkel's visit, which seems to have yielded some reward for her and because of a new piece of lustration legislation; and Hungary because there have been riots in Budapest again on a national holiday.

A long piece that tries to summarize most of what might be happening in those countries is here.

COMMENT THREAD

Serial dishonesty

BERJAYAWith the passage of 24 hours or so and the benefit of reading an listening to dozens of media reports on the A-10 "friendly fire" verdict, reported yesterday, what strikes one is the utter dishonesty and lack of partiality of the coroner, Andrew Walker, matched only by a similar level of dishonesty in the media, which has used the incident to indulge in an orgy of "Yank-bashing".

If one was to single out a particular media source, however, one is forced to pick The Daily Telegraph and the egregious Thomas Harding. It was he, with the apparent authority of being a specialist correspondent, resorted to the tired cliché of "revealing" – something he does far too often - in February that US pilot training was "inadequate".

Then, with the passage of a month, he comes up with a very similar piece, claiming that "Insiders" – i.e., his mates in that he phoned up for a comment – "lay blame on US air force's training and kit".

What Harding writes, of course, is not untrue, but the error (and the prejudice) lies in the selectivity of the quoting.

That it is selective we know from the report of the Army Board of Inquiry, dated 27 May 2004 and republished on the MoD website. In its 27 pages, the report records multiple training and equipment inadequacies, and failures to stick to procedures, affecting both the British and the US forces. Not least of the inadequacies was the British UHF radio equipment, and the lack of such radios altogether, preventing the proper monitoring of frequencies.

What also comes over was that that small British force that was so tragically targeted by the A-10s was at "their limit of exploitation…", meaning that it was at the very edge of the area allocated to it, on a battlefield that "could have been described as porous, or less contiguous, with numerous small groupings of enemy vehicles operating in a 'shoot and scoot' mode of operation." In other words, by some ghastly coincidence, the British formation was exactly where the enemy should have been, presenting exactly the profile that would be expected of the Iraqi forces.

What the Board also reports is that, situational awareness (i.e., details of the force’s position) was maintained "by the use of an 'all informed' VHF net over which vehicles would pass regular reports providing the necessary information."

BERJAYAThat, itself is highly revealing, marking out a strange omission from the Board of Inquiry record, confirming that the unit was not equipped with Blue Force Tracker, equipment which could have kept an on-going record of the positioning of the force and which was issued to British forces by the Americans.

No record of the A-10 incident can really be complete without also referring to a report released a year later. Entitled: "A Network-Centric Operations Case Study: US/UK Coalition Combat Operations during Operation Iraqi Freedom", it records the experience of forces using the Blue Force Tracker, which includes the following, highly revealing passage:

Interviews with personnel from 1 (UK) Armd Div highlighted that planning that had been undertaken prior to crossing the line of departure regarding the use of FBCB2/BFT had not resulted in the system being used as agreed between unit commanders. 7 Armd Bde was due to conduct a relief in place with units from 1 MARDIV (5 and 7 RCT) which was to be coordinated with the use of FBCB2/BFT. It should be noted that for both the Marines and UK forces, this was their first experience with FBCB2/BFT. Apparently, when the US forces were engaged by Iraqi forces south-west of Baghdad, the system was disregarded and the relief in place was conducted through the more familiar use of liaison officers on the ground. An interview with the former Commander of 15 MEU underscored problems related to the FBCB2/BFT (only one unit was made available to 15 MEU) – as well as MDACT/C2PC. As a result, the Marines abandoned use of this equipment during operations.
Putting this in context, one can refer to a long and candid article on the military use of communications technology, pointing out the pitfalls and failings, but also including this passage:

The gear was clearly saving lives. The number of friendly-fire incidents that plagued U.S. troops during the first Gulf War dropped significantly, for example, thanks to the new, networked equipment. In November 2004, 10,000 marines participated in the assault on Fallujah. With drones watching overhead and commanders communicating better, not one marine was killed by friendly fire…
In is not wholly unfair, therefore, to postulate that the events that led to Matty Hull's untimely death arose in part to the failure of the MoD to invest in modern communications technology and to invest enough time and effort in familiarising British troops with US technology which was provided to the operational formations in Iraq.

Either way, the situation was far more complex that the situation pained by either the hyperventilating Andew Walker or our loathsome media, including the rather pertinent snippet of information that the orange identification panels, of which so much play was made, were non-standard "enhancements", the nature of which had not been communicated to the US forces.

BERJAYAFurther, the Board of Inquiry also reported that, "...the US authorities cooperated fully in the provision of all additional material and documentation requested by the Board" and it came to this conclusion:

… all those who were involved in this tragic incident appear to have been working to the best of their abilities, under intense operational pressure, in order to achieve their objectives.
That is probably a fair verdict. It is one that takes account of the realities of the tactical situation and shows up for what it is the thoroughly dishonest verdict from Andrew Walker (pictured) and the serial dishonesty of the media in so glibly and superficially reporting his tawdry work.

Overall, though, the MoD - reflected in its statement - must be mightily relieved that Walker and a wholly inadequate media have once again let it off the hook on the equipment stakes. Not for the first time do we find ourselves asking when the media is going to start doing its job.

COMMENT THREAD

Bureaucrats kill

BERJAYATime constraints prevented me dealing with a piece in The Times yesterday, which really must not escape comment.

Headed: "'Safer' cars are more dangerous for other drivers in accidents" and written by transport correspondent Ben Webster, it records how modern cars are much safer in collisions for their occupants than older models, but their extra weight and height mean that they are more likely to kill people in other cars.

This is a study by the Transport Research Laboratory, which found that drivers hit by a car registered from 2000-03 are 46 per cent more likely to die than if hit by a car registered from 1988-91. It is believed that this phenomenon helps to explain why car occupant deaths had failed to fall significantly in the past eight years.

In 1998, 1,696 car occupants were killed, compared with 1,675 in 2005, a fall of only 1.2 percent. Over the same period, the annual total for all road deaths fell by 6.4 percent.

One reason is that modern cars have much better safety features, such as multiple air bags, side-impact protection and stronger frames. But these have added weight, the study says, so that the average new car is 20 percent heavier than one built a decade ago.

The study concludes: "Improvements have come at a price: a more modern car tends to be more aggressive than an older car when in collision with another car." Thus drivers hit by the largest cars are twice as likely to die as those hit by the smallest.

BERJAYAOffered as new, the only thing surprising about this it that it should be considered surprising. Anyone who had taken time out to read the superb book Risk by John Adams would immediately recognise that this was an entirely predictable outcome.

It was Adams who argued cogently that increased protection does not always end up in increased safety and, to illustrate his point, argued not entirely flippantly that the best way of improving safety would be to fit every car with a sharpened steel spike in the centre of the steering wheel.

However, such sophistication of thinking is entirely beyond the EU bureaucrats who now have sole competence for safety in vehicle construction. Imbued with their simplistic model of safety, they have for decades been piling safety devices into cars, the net effect of which is to kill people.

The worst of it is that it is more often the innocents who die – the drivers of less protected vehicles, as this survey shows, and pedestrians. That is the deal the EU offers, illustrating a thesis that has been apparent to thinking people for a long, long time – that bureaucrats kill.

COMMENT THREAD

Friday, March 16, 2007

Why should universities live off the taxpayer?

Possibly it is the sign of age but I find that I have started too many postings with the words: “allow me to reminisce a little”. Sadly, I am doing it again.

Two memories spring to mind: one is of not so long ago universities in Britain. Actually, in the late sixties and early seventies when lecturers and outside experts who expressed an unpopular view on such subjects as the nuclear deterrent, the Vietnam war or the Soviet Union, were likely to be met by angry student demonstrations, sometimes led by young and ambitious lecturers (as described so superlatively by Malcolm Bradbury in his 1975 novel “The History Man”).

There are many people around who recall the speed with which university authorities caved in to demands that “fascist” or “imperialist” speakers be uninvited.

The other memory goes further back. My mother was a university lecturer in Budapest and, as such, had to participate in entrance examinations and interviews. Among the many questions on the application forms there were several about the applicant’s parents. What were they in 1947 and in 1939? (This was some years ago.) What was their educational standards? And so on.

Certain people’s children had no chance of getting in. I particularly remember a story of a girl, who, in my mother’s opinion, was absolutely brilliant. She was not going to get into that or any other university as her father had been an army officer under Horthy.

And so it has come to pass that both these memories are once again revived. This week we have seen the chancellors of various universities agreeing, nay, promoting the government’s idea that information about parents of university applicants should be sent on to the relevant departments to make it easier to weed out those whose parents come from the educated bourgeois classes. How else is one to interpret this new instruction?

The argument is that the government would like to see more young people from poorer or more disadvantaged backgrounds going to universities. Oddly enough, we used to have a system for ensuring that children whose parents had not had higher education should still acquire it themselves. They were called the grammar schools and a brilliant institution they were, too.

Neither the HMG nor HM Opposition seem very keen on the idea of reintroducing them. They prefer fiddling with social engineering.

The second tale from our academia is far more terrifying. The Daily Telegraph reports that the University of Leeds (sadly, the one at which I studied for my BA) has cancelled a talk to be given by a world-famous political scientist, Matthias Küntzel.

This is how David Pryce-Jones describes him on his blog:

Küntzel is a political scientist from Hamburg University, with an additional research fellowship at an institute in Jerusalem. An eminent authority on Iran, he has published a good deal about the messianic fervour of that country’s leadership. In particular, he has shown how Nazi propaganda and subsidies in the Hitler period laid the groundwork for modern Muslim anti-Semitism. And that was to be his subject at Leeds, under the title, "Hitler’s Legacy: Islamic anti-Semitism in the Middle East."
The university authorities received angry e-mails from various Islamic organizations, who, inevitably, denounced the man and his (well-proven) thesis as “racism”. (Also in today’s Telegraph there is an excellent article on the subject by Jeff Randall.)

They were not directly threatening but the spineless university authorities, just like their predecessors of thirty and forty years ago, pleaded security worries and caved in. Dr Küntzel has lectured on the subject all over the world and this is the first time he has actually been banned … woops … sorry …. I mean asked not to lecture for his own safety.

As he says, very mildly in the circumstances, “this is a worrying trend”. Coming just after the threats against anyone who steps out of line on the great climate change scam, this is more than worrying. It is truly frightening.

And, of course, our universities get their income almost entirely from the taxpayer. Why should we put up with this?

COMMENT THREAD

Are they fools or knaves?

BERJAYAAre our rulers fools or knaves? What about the media or the rest of the political establishment? It is truly hard to tell which they are. Do they really believe what they say, in which case they are seriously stupid and ignorant or do they simply say these things, without caring about the reality behind them, in which case they are definitely knaves?

Let us have a look at the Starred Question asked by Lord Pearson of Rannoch yesterday. As readers of this blog are aware, his lordship has been pursuing the simple matter of Article 308 of the Consolidated Treaties, which gives all sorts of rights to the Council to legislate, provided it relates to the Common Market, but which is used increasingly to introduce other legislation.

In particular, Article 308 has been used to propose the establishment of a Programme “Prevention, Preparedness and Consequence Management of Terrorism” and Lord Pearson asked his question about that:

What is the justification for using Article 308 of the treaty establishing the European Communities as the legal base for the EuropeanUnion’s programme “Prevention, Preparedness and Consequence Management of Terrorism” when that article permits the European Union to act only “in the course of the operation of the common market”.
Explaining the “Legal Basis and Rationale of the Policy Instrument”, Article 4.1 says:
4.1. Legal basis

In the absence of a specific provision, Article 308 of the Treaty establishing the European Community is the appropriate legal basis not only for civil protection, but also for related measures on prevention, preparedness and consequence management.
Actually, as we have already pointed out (and Lord Pearson points out tirelessly), it does nothing of the kind. Allow me to remind our readers what it does say:
If action by the Community should prove necessary to attain, in the course of the operation of the common market, one of the objectives of the Community, and this Treaty has not provided the necessary powers, the Council shall, acting unanimously on a proposal from the Commission and after consulting the European Parliament, take the appropriate measures.
Clear enough, one would have thought, yet apparently not so as far as our own politicians are concerned.

In response to Lord Pearson’s question, Baroness Scotland of Asthall replied on behalf of the government:
My Lords, Article 308 does not require that every proposal using it as its legal base should relate in a narrow and restrictive sense to the operation of the Common Market. There is limited Community competence in relation to civil protection and the protection of critical infrastructure from security-related risks and damage to these interests could have an impact on economic activity and the operation of the Common Market.
That is known as stretching the truth, m’lud. After all, anything can be said to have an impact on economic activity but the common market is only one of the objectives of the Community, the one Article 308 applies to.

It is worth reading the full debate, particularly the speed with which supporters of this completely illegal activity (even by Community standards) resort to idiotic waffle about the benefits (unmeasured) that membership of the European Union allegedly brings to this country and the complete refusal to acknowledge the process whereby the last vestiges of this country’s sovereignty are disappearing.

When asked directly about that by Baroness Knight of Collingtree and Lord Vinson, all Baroness Scotlad could do is bleat:
My Lords, if there were to be an erosion of sovereignty, we would of course take it seriously. However, because the globe has changed, we have had to pool our efforts in order to face up to some global challenges. Europe together has made a much better fist of it that each of us would have done on our own.
So, I return to my question: are they fools or knaves?

The full facts have not come to light

BERJAYAAccording to the BBC website, Andrew Walker, Oxfordshire assistant deputy coroner has ruled that the death of a UK soldier from the A-10 "friendly fire" incident near Basra in March 2003 amounted to a criminal act.

The coroner said the death was "entirely avoidable" and that the US pilots should have flown lower to confirm identities before opening fire. Thus, he opined, "I don't think this was a case of honest mistake… The attack on the convoy amounted to an assault… It was unlawful because there was no lawful reason for it and in that respect it was criminal."

Yeah, right.

BERJAYATwo things: firstly, the pilots were concerned that the vehicles might have been Iraqi anti-aircraft missile carriers. Pilots are supposed to expose themselves to the risk of hostile fire in order to check that their targets are hostile, even after their forward air controllers (FACs) have told them there are no "friendlies" in the area?

Secondly, why wasn't the British detachment fitted with Blue Force Tracker? Then, at least, the FACs would have known exactly where the vehicles were.

On one thing we can agree, therefore, is the coroner's view that "…the full facts have not yet come to light." And nor are they likely to when you have grandstanding coroners who seem more concerned with headlines than the truth.

COMMENT THREAD

The Airbus of space

BERJAYAThe EU's Galileo satellite navigation system is in the news in a small way this week, with even the BBC website reporting that the project is in trouble – although it will only concede that it is in a "decisive phase", facing "big delays and cost overruns".

On Wednesday, however, the Financial Times was distinctly less sanguine, noting that, "Profit doubts halt Galileo development" and that "doubts among private contractors involved in the project over its profitability" were at the root of the troubles.

This, we were told, had led EU transport commissioner Jacques "Wheel" Barrot to write to the eight companies forming the consortium which is building the system "to discover the reason for more than a year's delay in the project".

That, at the very least, is a tad disingenuous as, from July last year it was very clear that the project was in trouble, and progressively more so, through August, October, November, and December - all with minimal coverage by the media. It was in December, therefore, that we wrote of the "bizarre fantasy world of the commission", matched "only by the myopia of the MSM", remarking that we could have another "Airbus" on our hands – a "vastly expensive technological white elephant, draining precious funds from member states, with no hope of repayment."

There was no relief by late January, as it became increasingly evident that the commercial model on which the project was based was fundamentally flawed.

BERJAYAThis in turn has led to a reluctance on the part of the projected operating consortium to pick up its share of the €3.2 billion cost of launching the 30 satellites and building the ground infrastructure. One third of the overall cost is coming from the EU but the rest was to come from the consortium, which would then recoup its investment by selling location-based technology and services.

By the end of 2006, the consortium was to have formed a single Galileo operating company and have appointed an independent chief executive so the project had a "clear decision making structure". However, no company has been formed, and the consortium remains rudderless - and unable to place orders for Galileo's critical satellites. Only four have so far been ordered and unless orders for the remaining 26 are placed shortly, delays will spiral.

The New Scientist reports that the continued delays in ordering the satellites are having an expensive knock-on effect. Last week, Galileo's technology developer, the European Space Agency, was forced to order Giove-A2, a €30 million Galileo signal testing satellite. It had not planned for the satellite – and only ordered it so it could place it in orbit and maintain rights to Galileo's frequency allocations.

When the current orbiting test craft Giove-A stops broadcasting Galileo signals in mid-2008, after its fuel runs out, the International Telecommunications Union can reassign the frequencies to others unless another craft replaces it.

Originally, Galileo's first four operational satellites (which have been ordered) were to have been in orbit by 2006 – but they have been pushed back to 2009 or beyond, not soon enough to maintain the frequencies. Another test craft, Giove-B, has suffered repeated onboard computer problems and is still grounded. If that craft can eventually launch, however, the newly ordered Giove-A2 satellite, which is funded by taxpayers, may remain grounded after all.

Nevertheless, Barrot yesterday chose to pin all the blame on the consortium, which includes Airbus owner, EADS, again writing to the members, complaining of "foot-dragging".

Barrot also wrote to the German presidency and the European Parliament saying the planned 2010 completion of the project was "in jeopardy." Yet again, this is extraordinarily disingenuous as Barrot's spokesman has already conceded that the timetable for putting the system in place had already been delayed until 2011 - from 2008 originally touted when the system was approved in 2004 - and that more slippage was expected. In fact, a German technology analyst, Bitkom, reckons Galileo will not be up and running until 2014 or later.

Just to add insult to injury, the Spanish government has decided to block any progress in talks by pushing for more control centres to be based in Spain. It wants two control centres on top of those planned to be built in Germany and Italy. That demand had prevented the two Spanish firms signing a pact with the others, prompting a complaint from an EU official that, "Member states are pushing more for national interests than for the overall community interests."

BERJAYAAccording to the New Scientist, the EU commission is losing patience and is now warning that it might look for new ways to complete the project, "based on a detailed technical, financial, programme management review." Even then, negotiations on a final agreement on a 20-year services and satellite contract for what ever operator is chosen are unlikely to be completed before the end of 2008.

All of this though ignores the underlying flaw in the project – that the EU is expecting to be able to charge for navigation signals that are at present supplied free of charge by the US Navstar system, with the expectation that signals will also be supplied by the Russians and the Chinese, through its Beidou satnav network, free of charge. Thus does the Financial Times cite an unnamed executive saying, "There is a doubt over the revenues," adding, "Why sell Pepsi-Cola when you can get Coca-Cola free?"

Anyhow, Barrot is going to dump the whole mess in front of the Commission next week and is looking for a mandate to set a 10 May deadline for the consortium to act. Based on their reaction, he expects to recommend to the EU transport council in June whether the project can go ahead in its current configuration and what options, if any, should be considered.

It is thus UKIP's Gerard Batten, who says, "It is looking increasingly like an Airbus in space." He is not alone. Paul Verhoef, Galileo programme manager at the EU commission thinks likewise. "Galileo is now being compared with the Airbus situation," he says. "Unfortunately that analysis is correct."

Batten thinks that taxpayers would be forced to bail out Galileo. That, however, is unlikely, as member states have been extremely reluctant to fund the spiralling costs, leaving the very real prospect that the project may have to be abandoned, jeopardising, as the IHT observes, Europe's aim of being a global technological player – and much more.

COMMENT THREAD

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Funding of parties

BERJAYASome of our readers would already have noted that a preliminary report by Sir Hayden Phillips on the future funding of political parties has appeared today. There has even been a certain amount of agitation in some parts of the media about the problems there might be if the main political parties (others are not asked) will not agree to the various recommendations.

Sir Hayden himself makes it quite clear that this is a first report, that the desired agreements have not been reached, and that Parliament will decide in the long run (though with all three main parties not really disagreeing on some issues, that will not be much use).

I take exception to a good deal of the report, starting with the title: “Strengthening Democracy: Fair and Sustainable Funding of Political Parties”. A mature democracy needs political parties (anyone who does not believe that had better look at what is going on in Russia) but does it need the parties that happen to exist at any particular moment? Why do we need sustainable funding of political parties? If they cannot sustain themselves for whatever reason, they can disappear and leave room for other parties.

That, however, is not Sir Hayden’s approach to the matter. Au contraire.

Over the last ten years each of the major parties has experienced acute financial difficulties. These fluctuate across the course of the political cycle, but it is reasonable to conclude that there is now a long-term structural instability in the financing of political parties in this country. There is no reason to believe this will solve itself. On the contrary, it seems probable that matters will get worse rather than better. Faced with increasing pressure to spend more and a decline in regular supporter income, it is perfectly rational for parties to seek new or additional funding, But in doing so they risk further damaging public confidence in the probity and equity of party financing.

Although our political system is one of the cleanest in the world, if the public suspects that influence over parties may be bought by the rich and powerful, this can only serve to erode further the support for political parties.

Just as the public questions the propriety of large donations or loans, so there is disquiet about the way parties spend their money and the amount that is spent. In submissions to my Review, voters have expressed concern that the outcome of elections is being determined by the depth of a party’s pockets rather than the quality of its offering to the public. The problem which we must solve therefore has two dimensions: income and expenditure.
One could argue that most people have to solve those two dimensions in their lives and Mr Micawber’s wise advice springs to mind.

There is also the question as to who those voters who came up with that rubbish might be and should they not have the vote taken away from them. One of the comments Sir Hayden makes repeatedly throughout his report is that all parties are losing members, votes, money from subs, and it is this that causes the hyperinflation of donations and spending. But might there not be a different correlation? The more the parties spend needlessly, the less anyone wants to have anything to do with them. In which case, the voters are not being bought. Far from it.

Sir Hayden suggests various caps on donations but recognizes that the Labour Party might find this difficult to introduce immediately because of its historical links with the trade unions. Also, at the moment it is experiencing greater difficulties in raising money than the Conservatives and this might affect the responses of both parties.

The same applies to a proposed cap on spending and, indeed, its control. Once again, it strikes me that if political parties foolishly spend, spend, spend their way into bankruptcy, well, so be it. They will not do it twice.

Sir Haydon proposes various measure to ensure that the new rules would be transparent and enforced by a strengthened Electoral Commission (the one, presumably, that is incapable of dealing with the scandal of postal votes on demand) but the truth of the matter was made clear in the statement made by the Leader of the House of Commons this afternoon.

Talking of previous measures to deal with the problem, Mr Straw said:
In the 1997 – 2001 Parliament, the Government, with all party support, sought to tackle the problem of excessive spending with what became the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act (PPERA), 2000. This reflected key recommendations of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, chaired by Patrick Neill QC. PPERA introduced a national limit on campaign expenditure, created the Electoral Commission and made the funding system more transparent by requiring that all donations above £5,000 nationally and £1,000 locally be made public.

By introducing such transparency we all believed that public confidence in the system could be assured. But the recent revelations about unpublicised loans to parties by individuals – resulting form a loophole in PPERA – have clouded that transparency.

In addition, the line between local and national spending has become blurred by developments such as political campaigning facilitated by the internet and other advances in telecommunications. As a consequence, a modest relaxation of spending controls in 2000 Act at the local level has been exploited way beyond that intended by the legislation.
My guess is that whatever legislation comes out of Sir Hayden Phillips’s report, someone somewhere will find a loophole or two.

Of course, a cap on spending would make life easier for smaller parties but they are not really in anybody’s mind as is clear from the report’s most controversial recommendation (as far as most people, though not politicians and the media, are concerned). That is an extension of state spending on parties, based on their representation in the various parliaments and assemblies and membership.

As it happens, there already is money from the taxpayer going into political parties. In the first place, somebody has to pay for the free postage and broadcasting slots. It is not unreasonable to ask the electorate to help fund the smooth functioning of free and fair elections, which is what these contribution amounts to.

It is quite another matter to make the electorate pay through taxes for the activities of individual political parties. Parties already receive £2 million in Policy Development Grants and, in all fairness, this, too, should be cancelled.

Sir Hayden comes up with a complicated formula of how parties should receive state funding according to the number of votes cast for them in elections, that being the surest way of showing how much support they can garner. As it happens, he is wrong. Support for parties is shown in votes, in membership, in voluntary activity and in the money they can raise. If they cannot get any of that, they had better start thinking of doing something else with their time.

What this report will achieve, if put into legislation, is a freeze on any political change or development, the very opposite of what it intends. A stronger democracy does not need "sustainable" funding of political parties but a true marketplace for them. Let the people decide and not through tax money being parcelled out by the Treasury.

COMMENT THREAD

The price of betrayal

BERJAYAWhat an extraordinary contrast we have in the treatment of British and US troops in Iraq. On the one hand, we have the US government taking force protection seriously, and then we have the British secretary of state for defence, Des Browne.

He announced an order of "around" 100 the vehicles illustrated left, then known as Cougars, but since renamed as Mastiff “protected patrol vehicles”. That was on 25 July 2006, when he also promised that there would be “an effective capability in place” in Iraq by the end of that year.

In fact, the order did not go out until 11 August and then for only 86 vehicles, with an option for four more, the contact worth (including the option) nearly $65 million, including “non standard vehicle parts” priced at $3,532,868.00, users’ manuals at $153,540.00, training at $573,100.00 and field support at $2,710,344.00. This works out at about £360,000 for each vehicle. However, carrying six people, plus two crew – with far superior protection – it is still (with all the extras) nearly £70,000 cheaper than the four-seater Panther.

One example of the Mastiff was being paraded on Salisbury Plain last September but, by January it seemed as if only four were in place – although more were quickly to follow and we saw them in action ten days ago when the Duke of York met members of the 1st Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment in Basra

Now, procurement minister Lord Drayson has turned up in Iraq to give the delivery of the Mastiffs the official seal of approval and to claim credit for their purchase, which is a bit rich considering that he fought tooth and nail to avoid buying them.

BERJAYANevertheless, the vehicles have recently started to be used on patrol and Mastiff Company Commander, Major Dan Bradbury, 1st Yorkshire Regiment, readily declares that "The soldiers love it. It's a real investment in their protection." Driver, Private Ciaran Castles, adds: "All round it's a good bit of kit. It's enjoyable to go out there because you feel more safe and you know if it comes down to it, you've got that extra armour to protect you."

Only now, however, does it appear that the MoD is ordering the full number, with Force Protection (the makers of the Mastiff) announcing yesterday a “contract modification” from the MoD for 22 additional vehicles. The order, it says, will bring the total number of vehicles produced for the British government to 108 at an approximate value of $70.1 million.

By contrast, the US government is to order 6,738 of this type of vehicle, preparatory to replacing every Humvee carrying out a tactical role. This, as we reported earlier (and here), represented a real commitment to winning the war in Iraq.

Now, also, we can see the price the government is prepared to pay. It is proposing cuts to several aviation projects, including reducing the number of F/A-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft it will buy, all to fund $1.2 billion for the Army's MRAP vehicles and the $250 million for Marine Corps

And there is the real contrast between the US and the UK. There is limited scope for cross-service transfers in the UK so that any re-equipment on a scale equivalent to that proposed for US ground forces will have to come out of the Army's equipment budget. There lies the Holy Grail, by the name of FRES, and despite signs to the contrary in February, it like the Army brass might have won the day.

Responding to a question from MP Mike Hancock on the future of Fres, Adam Ingram responded yesterday thus:

The Department reviewed the future rapid effect system (FRES) programme in 2006 to take account of our experience on operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and in the light of recent developments in vehicle technology and protection systems. This review aimed to ensure we deliver the best possible vehicles able to meet the operational needs of the British Army through life.

… This review was completed last year. The procurement strategy has now been announced and we are now making rapid progress on the FRES programme with candidate vehicle designs undergoing proving trials this summer and the winning vehicle(s) selected by November 2007 to proceed to the next stage. It is essential to carry out this detailed assessment of the candidate vehicle designs and to drive out programme risk before the major investment decision is taken.
So we have £14 billion to buy toys for the Generals, while the troops in the field get $70.1 million for the kit needed to save their lives.

Meanwhile, the man who did so much to ensure that FRES survived, General Sir Mike Jackson is reported to have been paid close to £900,000 for his memoirs, due to be published in September. It looks like betrayal is a little better rewarded these days.

COMMENT THREAD

As I left it…

BERJAYAThe tussle we had with The Daily Telegraph we had sometime ago about the use of photographs has left its mark, leaving me determined to reduce our dependence on the MSM for illustrations.

It was something of a landmark, therefore, that we were able to illustrate what we believe to be an important news story on the "energy-saving" light bulbs entirely from our own resources, although we did later add one photograph from Ron Elliott's web site, but entirely with his permission, for which I thank him.

It was also with a little pride that we were able to publish our own photographic "scoop" of the demonstration in Parliament Square yesterday morning, entirely independent of the MSM.

As I left it, however, late last evening, the demonstration over the Trident replacement was still in full flight and the snap above shows two Metropolitan Police "serials" rushing to the scene in Parliament Square, blue lights blazing, to reinforce their beleaguered colleagues.

BERJAYALoathe the police as I do for their general inefficiency, one has to express a certain sympathy for them as, with the utmost of good humour and tolerance, they dealt with the yoghurt knitters as they made their pointless protests while the MPs in the pointy building marched in to cast their votes, the outcome of which was virtually pre-ordained.

You can bet that a similar demonstration across the Channel would have been met with tear gas and water cannon… I've seen it with my own eyes, as the brave Belgian police took on a demonstration of school kids outside the EU parliament with armoured vehicles sporting those famed water cannon.

And neither is this an abrogation of democracy. MPs, who have a keen eye on public sentiment, are able to judge the temperature on specific topics by reference to their voluminous postbags. And, for the vast majority, the Trident replacement, as judged by voter concern, is simply a non-issue (as indeed is global warming).

Anyhow, as I am wont to observe, soundings on the wider issues amongst a certain section of our beloved elected representatives seems to suggest that the Boy has blown it with his obsession with global warming, engendering not a little resentment though placing a "three line whip", demanding the attendance of the whole Conservative front bench at the al-Gore love fest this morning. It is only a determination to play a longer tactical game that prevented a number of shadow ministers tendering their resignations here and now.

BERJAYAWith that, the "tube" to Kings Cross and thence by GNER back home left me plenty of time to reflect that we live in strange times. A few years back, the EU dominated our thinking but now, as my co-editor observed, over a meal in our favourite London restaurant, it seems a distant irrelevance. It is merely a noxious irritant, filed under "unfinished business" that sooner or later must be sorted out, when our politicians finally realise that it offers nothing and costs us a fortune.

Certainly, for all its pretensions, the EU featured not in Parliament Square today, nor in the votes in the real Parliament. In a vain attempt to prove its relevance, the "colleagues" are driven to arrange facile celebrations in Berlin in a hopelessly inadequate attempt to cultivate popular support.

BERJAYAYou can almost taste the desperation in the statement of an unnamed German government official who tells us that, "We want to create a party atmosphere and awaken curiosity in Europe," adding, "It's a public celebration and we want to remind people of the big idea."

But, when all the German presidency has to offer, by way of celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, is an all-night clubbing extravaganza, in which ravers can hop between 35 Berlin nightclubs for an EU-subsidised 12 euros (£8), complete with "free bratwurst and beer" and museums open all night, you just know the "colleagues" have lost the plot.

No amount of rhetoric or freebies is going to restore the drive afforded by the vision of its original founders. This is an organisation that has nowhere to go but down.

COMMENT THREAD

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Well, of course, it is Bush's fault

BERJAYAFor those of us who have been paying attention to what is going on in Darfur for some years, there is a good deal of grim amusement to be got out of the sight of the Left, including the Green Party in Germany and assorted Hollywood luvvies deciding that this is the latest political bandwagon to jump on. Not Zimbabwe, not Tibet, not North Korea. Perish the thought.

Naturally, they are calling for action. What sort of action? Ah, there lies the difficulty, as discussed in this longish piece.

Trident

BERJAYA Jolly japes in Parliament Square this morning as the yoghurt knitters express their disapproval of the Trident replacement programme, the subject of a vote in the Commons today.

For a very brief period, they managed to close the square to traffic, as protestors shackled themselves to long cylinders representing the missiles, with supporters standing by with the obligatory banners.

BERJAYAThe vote is expected this evening and, by all accounts, will be a close run thing as upwards of 60 Labour MPs rebel.

The government, therefore, expects to be bailed our by Cameron's Tories, the Conservative Party having traditionally supported the nuclear deterrent. For this at least we can be grateful - that some of the Tory values have actually survived.

BERJAYANevertheless, this has not prevented demonstrations being staged all over the country, and especially in Faslane, Scotland, where the missile submarines will continue to be based. For the majority of people though, there is simply no argument. Who, after all, wants to live in a world where North Korea and possibly Iran have nuclear weapons, where India and Pakistan are nuclear powers, and we are not?

BERJAYAThe ultimate joke, however, is that our independent nuclear deterrent is very far from being independent. Although we have design authority of our own warheards, with the sell-off of the Royal Ordnance explosives factory in Bridgewater, Somerset, the conventional explosives required will now be made in France. Our future, therefore, lies as much in the hands of M. Sarkozy or Madame Royal as it does our own Parliament.

COMMENT THREAD

Controlling the debate

Only slightly more weighty than that penned by la Sieghart for yesterday, The Times today offers a lengthy contribution from its science editor, Mark Henderson, applauding the acceptance by politicians of the need for action on climate change.

This is the metropolitan clever-dick tendency at work, the perceived wisdom "in the loop", where Henderson – a man who admits he is not a scientist, having taken his degree at Oxford in modern history - exudes approval at the "extent to which all the parties are now agreed on the need for a more robust legislative approach to global warming."

Thus, while the debate rages on the blogs and the forums, the Lord High Representative of the MSM trills that the argument "is no longer about the rationale for cutting greenhouse gas output". To Henderson and his sanctimonious men, it is about how this should be achieved. "It is now recognised that the details are where votes are to be won."

Politics has caught up with science, albeit a decade or so late, he writes, telling us that, "notwithstanding the enduring objections of a small band of scientific sceptics," such as those who contributed to the Channel 4 programme The Great Global Warming Swindle, "the evidence that the world is getting hotter and that humans are responsible has become overwhelming."

Thus are our choices (and liberties) circumscribed. "As in politics, there is still room for debate over the intricacies of what is happening and what should be done about it," intones the man from the MSM, "but the wider issue is largely settled." Human-induced global warming is more than a hypothesis.

To give him some little credit – very little – the hired hack then does make some attempt at justifying this stance, but the thrust of his arguments are no more profound than those produced by la Seighart. Basically, it amounts to a leap of faith that it is improbable that "so many clever men and women could be wrong" with the added value proposition that the strength the experts’ arguments lie in the multidisciplinary approach.

Thus declares Henderson with an aura of finality that brooks no dissent: "The most compelling reason for believing global warming to be a genuine problem is that the theory is consistent with evidence emerging from a multitude of different fields." Thousands of scientists may be mistaken - but across so many diverse fields?

Wearily do I observe, we have been here before. The global warming hype indisputably bears the hallmarks of a scare. As a veteran of the egg, listeria and then BSE scares, I saw the same scientific certainty, the same intolerance of dissent and the same conviction that ruinously expensive and disruptive measures must be taken. Yet, of BSE in particular, where are the half-million deaths a year that were so confidently predicted, for a disease that the chief scientist in the field declared could be "worse than AIDS"?

As for consensus, through all those scares, we saw the scientific communities dive for cover and stay cowering in their bunkers, fearful for grants, for reputations or just opting for the easy life. As in commerce where, as the old saw went, "no one ever got fired for buying an IBM," no one ever got fired for going with the flow. But offer a dissenting voice and just watch the grants dry up and the invites to conferences in far-way exotic places disappear.

Most of all though, one remembers the media, cheer leaders all for every passing scare. Never once do I remember any individual MSM outlet standing aside at the height of a scare, its correspondents asserting that the science was wrong, that the fears were overblown and that the controls demanded by scientists and rent-seekers, and then adopted by the politicians, were unnecessary.

Instead, what I have seen consistently is the media closing down the debate. Once the metropolitan clever-dick circle decides its line, contrary voices struggle for a hearing and then are used mainly as foils to confirm the rectitude of the "line".

Thus Mr Henderson is simply treading a well-worn path. He and his little circle of mates and fellow travellers are doing what the MSM always does – they are attempting to close down the debate. The funny thing is that, despite their apparent sophistication and claims to modernity, they are curiously old-fashioned. They have failed to recognise the power of the internet and, having insulated themselves from it, are unaware that the debate rages on, or that it is going on without them.

In their isolation, the hacks are matched only by the politicians – the two groups still feeding off each other as if they were the only players. This time, though, it ain't going to work. An increasing constituency has decided that they no longer have the power or authority to control the debate. We will not be silenced.

COMMENT THREAD

The propaganda machines

BERJAYAOne of the central tenets of Parliamentary democracy is that no Parliament can bind another. But so powerful has the political obsession with global warming become that, in the supposed interests of "saving the planet", even that seems to go by the board.

Thus we get the environment secretary David Miliband introducing his draft Climate Change Bill yesterday with the blithe declaration that it would "tie the hands of future governments" by requiring them to cut carbon emissions by at least 26 per cent by 2020 and 60 per cent by 2050.

By the same measure, environmental groups will be able to take future governments to court if they fail to live up to this one's promise to cut Britain's carbon emissions.

This is only to be expected from a Labour government which seems to regard the constitution as an optional extra and has been known for the breadth and depth of its constitutional vandalism. But it is also moonshine. It would apply only if the proposed Act was still in force, but any subsequent Parliament could repeal the Act, rendering its provisions null and void.

BERJAYASadly, though, this is not the first time young Miliband has gone off the rails. It was in February that he announced that the British government was to send a copy of Al Gore's film about global warming, An Inconvenient Truth, to every secondary school in the country.

Furthermore, this sort of crass stupidity is catching, with Welsh environmental minister Carwyn Jones taking credit for delivery to schools in the principality, declaring, "I doubt that anyone could now deny the reality of climate change, so it is important that we all have access to accurate, reliable information to help us understand the issue fully."

BERJAYABut the disease is spreading, from top to bottom of the body politic. At the top of the tree, the Conservative leader Mr David Cameron says, "We need to make carbon reduction as important as the Budget." At the bottom, we have the Local Government Association announcing the formation of an Independent Climate Change Commission "to investigate the important part local councils play in tackling climate change as well as the ways they adapt to it."

Meanwhile, local councils are spreading the word to their grateful tax payers, delivering full colour "newssheets" which record how diligently they are dealing with climate change, with such delights as "Climate Change workshops", children's theatre productions and educational workshops.

And for those who can get this far north without suffering nosebleeds, the National Media Museum in Bradford is showing Gore's extravaganza from 26-29 March. Joy! Joy!

COMMENT THREAD

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Sentence upheld!

BERJAYA
The Free Kareem Coalition has issued a press release in response to the Egyptian Appeal Court upholding the four year sentence passed on the blogger. The coalitions has called on President Hosni Mubarak to pardon him as soon as possible, but, we suspect that unless that call is issued by the US government, accompanied by threats to withhold some of the aid that Egypt exists on, little will be done.

Fascinatingly enough, Egypt has offered to host the UN Internet Governance Forum in 2009. Will the United Nations accept the offer?

Another suprise (not!)

BERJAYAAccording to the Sunday Telegraph the EU alone sent £59.5 million to the Hamas-led (if that is the right expression) Palestinian government in aid, despite the fact that Hamas has not fulfilled any of the conditions, supposedly imposed on it by the international authority.

On top of that, an unknown and “a far greater sum directly to hospitals, power generation projects and to families in need”. No proper auditing or accounting of these sums have been done but then there is nothing new in that. There has never been any proper auditing or accounting of moneys given to the Palestinian Authority or the Palestinians in general.

An estimated £362.5 million has flowed into Palestinian government coffers from abroad since the election that brought Hamas to power and ushered in a period of internal conflict that came close to all-out civil war.
That, of course, excludes the amounts going through NGOs to “hospitals, power generation projects, families in need” and whatever else Jimmy Carter may have thought of as a suitable recipient of funds.

Where is all this money? Alas, as before, there is no accounting for it.

Salam Fayyad, a former World Bank Official, former IMF representative in the Palestine and former Finance Minister under the late unlamented Chairman Yasser Arafat, says that nobody knows what happened to the money.

Mr Fayyad, a member of the Legislative Council, from the Third Way Party (they have two members, the other one being Hanan Ashrawi) is about to become the Finance Minister again. He had been touted as a possible Prime Minister but one of his conditions for accepting the post was that Hamas should recognize Israel’s right to exist. Unlike the international community, he seems to have kept his word and not accepted the job without his main condition being fulfilled.

According to the Telegraph

Now, Palestinian Authority spending is out of control, salaries are being paid to workers who never turn up, and nobody can track where the money is going, according to Mr Fayyad.

There was no way to be certain that aid was being used as intended, he admitted. "Please write this: no one can give donors that assurance. Why? Because the system is in a state of total disrepair."
What the Telegraph journalist does not ask is why precisely Mr Fayyad should be so surprised. He was, after all, Finance Minister five years ago, when the situation was not much better. Millions of pounds, dollars and euros that had been sent in aid to the Palestinian Authority disappeared, some to surface as payment to such delightful organizations as the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade and to families of unsuccessful suicide/homicide bombers, some not to surface at all.

Mr Fayyad, having apparently set up some sort of a budgeting system five years ago, having seen it disintegrate and having realized the magnitude of the problem now has various plans:
He said his first objective would be to make the finance ministry the sole conduit for incoming aid, and to reinstate proper audits. That meant no more financial back channels or border smuggling, he said. "It's not my intention to manage the Palestinian budget system through the brown bag." The Palestinian Authority's unchecked proliferation of government jobs - growing by 11 per cent a year - is another threat to its existence, the World Bank said. Mr Fayyad acknowledged that the problem of thousands of absentee employees was "serious", but said it would take up to five years to bring wages into line with income.
Some of us might point out that unbridled aid is not “income”. Would this experienced financial manager be able to come up with a budget that was slightly different? After all, we have our own budget (several of them) already and one sees no reason why there should be a Palestinian one as well that dissipates our tax money.

COMMENT THREAD

Well, goody for them

Today's Daily Telegraph has a very special story about boot camps for young Chinese, who are "addicted" to the internet, as well as a solemn editorial. Fascinating.

Pity the story is so old (in media terms). This blog ran it on February 24, less than a month after we ran a story about Chinese internet growing despite government attempts to control it. But then, we are just saddos with computers who could not possibly compete with the high level of information and understanding provided by our media.

More on that Global Warming story

BERJAYAAs politicians fall over themselves to present their "green" credentials with ever fewer ideas on the environment or, for that matter, any other subject among the whole lot of them, the people are beginning to revolt.

The BBC has, rather unwisely perhaps, opened its website to anyone who wishes to comment on the subject of the government's climate change proposals, which seem to consist of more taxation, more regulation and a move back to the Dark Ages and the Conservatives' policies, which seem to consist of more taxation, more regulation and a move back to the Dark Ages. None of which, one assumes, will apply to the politicians themselves, who simply have to produce all that hot air.

It seems that the BBC audience, with very few exceptions, is not impressed. It is, indeed, very unimpressed. The BBC did say Cameron's policy was risky. It appears to be frankly suicidal.

Meanwhile, Thomas Lifson on American Thinker has found an interesting new story on the subject of Al Gore, CO2 emissions and the whole global warming ... ahem ... scam.

Would you be able to see Gore and his carbon trading company as a natural successor to Enron? Well, this is not entirely far-fetched:

About 20 years ago Enron was owner and operator of an interstate network of natural gas pipelines, and had transformed itself into a billion-dollar-a-day commodity trader, buying and selling contracts and their derivatives to deliver natural gas, electricity, internet bandwidth, whatever. The 1990 Clean Air Act amendments authorized the Environmental Protection Agency to put a cap on how much pollutant the operator of a fossil-fueled plant was allowed to emit. In the early 1990s Enron had helped establish the market for, and became the major trader in, EPA's $20 billion-per-year sulphur dioxide cap-and-trade program, the forerunner of today's proposed carbon credit trade. This commodity exchange of emission allowances caused Enron's stock to rapidly rise.
Naturally, one could not put CO2 emission under the Environmental Protection Agency, as it is not a pollutant.

Then came Al Gore who "led a U.S. initiative to review new projects around the world and issue ‘credits' of so many tons of annual CO2 emission reduction". And whose company trades carbon credits? Just asking.

COMMENT THREAD

How true...

Voltaire said it best:

It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong.

But then he also said: "The best government is a benevolent tyranny tempered by an occasional assassination."

Out of this world

BERJAYAAs the government publishes its draft Climate Change Bill – which includes goals for reducing emissions which must be achieved by 2020 and 2050 - Mary Ann Sieghart in The Times today writes: "There's no choice: wrap up and grit your teeth".

Contrasting with the diffidence expressed by Janet Daley, la Sieghart has decided that it "no longer seems tenable either to dismiss the existence of global warming or to deny the contribution that humans have made to it." There comes a point, she declares, "at which you have to admit that 95 percent of the world's scientists can't be wrong. Or at least, it is becoming vanishingly unlikely that they are."

Can it be, one wonders, that this dismally stupid woman has never heard of Galileo, or is totally unaware of the battles of Louis Pasteur against the medical establishment, which fought to the last against any notion that disease was caused by microbes?

BERJAYAHowsoever, as one struggles to come to grips with the growing politician-induced hysteria on climate change, one can only revel in the news that global warming has extended its grip to the planet Mars.

This is based on 2005 data from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor and Odyssey missions, which have revealed that the carbon dioxide "ice caps" near Mars's south pole had been diminishing for three summers in a row.

But what is more entertaining is that none other than Habibullo Abdussamatov, head of space research at St. Petersburg's Pulkovo Astronomical Observatory in Russia, is saying the Mars data is evidence that the current global warming on Earth is being caused by changes in the sun.

"Man-made greenhouse warming has made a small contribution to the warming seen on Earth in recent years, but it cannot compete with the increase in solar irradiance," Abdussamatov says, a view he has come to after studying fluctuations in the warmth of the sun. He believes he can see a pattern that fits with the ups and downs in climate we see on Earth and Mars.

Needless to say, the orthodoxy has been swift to counter such heresy, with an attempted rebuttal by Colin Wilson, a planetary physicist at Oxford University. In la Seighart mode, he declares that Abdussamatov’s views "are completely at odds with the mainstream scientific opinion." And, as we now know, "95 percent of the world’s scientists can't be wrong."

According to Wilson, the conventional theory is that climate changes on Mars can be explained primarily by small alterations in the planet's orbit and tilt, not by changes in the sun. "Wobbles in the orbit of Mars are the main cause of its climate change in the current era," he explains. All planets experience a few wobbles as they make their journey around the sun. Earth's wobbles are known as Milankovitch cycles and occur on time scales of between 20,000 and 100,000 years.

BERJAYAIf the global warming on Mars is due to a "wobble" though, one wonders what is made of the views of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology explaining why there is also global warming on Neptune's largest moon, Triton, causing part of its surface of frozen nitrogen to turn into gas.

MIT astronomer James L. Elliot and his colleagues from MIT, Lowell Observatory and Williams College believe that Triton's warming trend could be driven by seasonal changes in the absorption of solar energy by its polar ice caps.

Whatever the cause, the warming is certainly significant. There has been a five percent increase on the absolute temperature scale from about minus-392 degrees Fahrenheit to about minus-389 degrees Fahrenheit. This is like Earth experiencing a jump of about 22 degrees Fahrenheit.

And, says Elliot, Triton is a simpler subject than Earth for studying the causes and effects of global warming. "It's generally true around the solar system that when we try to understand a problem as complex as global warming - one in which we can't control the variables - the more extreme cases we have to study, the more we can become sure of certain factors," Elliot said. "With Triton, we can clearly see the changes because of its simple, thin atmosphere."

BERJAYAThen there is the minor matter of Jupiter, where it is reported that a huge storm brewing on the surface of the planet, revealed by a new red spot, suggests that the planet is in the midst of a global change that can modify temperatures by as much as 10 degrees Fahrenheit on different parts of the globe.

So, we have the Earth, Mars, one of Neptune's moons and Jupiter, all undergoing some form of global warming.

Oh, and then there is Pluto. In 2002, another team of astronomers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Williams College, the University of Hawaii, Lowell Observatory and Cornell University, also led by James Elliot, reported a three-fold increase in the planet's atmospheric pressure during the previous 14 years, indicative of prolonged global warming.

BERJAYAHowever, Jay Pasachoff, an astronomy professor at Williams College, said that Pluto's global warming was "likely not connected with that of the Earth. The major way they could be connected is if the warming was caused by a large increase in sunlight. But the solar constant - the amount of sunlight received each second - is carefully monitored by spacecraft, and we know the sun's output is much too steady to be changing the temperature of Pluto."

So, we have Earth, Mars, one of Neptune's moons, Jupiter and Pluto all undergoing some form of global warming. All of this has got nothing to do with the sun, and uniquely, the global warming on Earth is due to the activities of man.

Right.

COMMENT THREAD

Light bulbs and Eco-Fascism

BERJAYAToday's Daily Mail carries a long op-ed from Booker setting out the case against the ban on incandescent light bulbs which was requested by the leaders of the 27 member states at the European Council last week.

To put it in context, Booker writes of us now being deluged with news of the latest proposals from our politicians about how to save the planet from global warming, citing Gordon Brown and his "new world order" to combat climate change, coming on top of Mr David Cameron's proposals for strict "green" limits on air travel.

Thus we have the EU declaring that a fifth of all our energy must be "green" by 2020, even though there is no chance of such an absurd target being met. We must have "green" homes, "green" cars, "green" fuel, even microchips in our rubbish bins to enforce "green" waste disposal... and now "green" lights.

Echoing this blog, Booker wonders whether these politicians any longer got the faintest idea what they are talking about. "Do they actually look at the hard, practical facts before they rush to compete with each other in this mad musical-chairs of gesture politics?" he asks.

And, in response to his own question he then points up "just one instance" of the hysteria now sweeping our political class off its feet, an instance which was bannered across the Daily Mail's front page on Saturday in the headline "EU to switch off our old light bulbs".

BERJAYAThis was the news that, as part of its latest package of planet-saving measures, the EU plans, within two years, to ban the sale of those traditional incandescent light bulbs we all take for granted in our homes, forcing us to buy the so-called high energy efficent lights.

Aside from anything else, this is an incredible speed given that one of the main lobbyists for change, Philips Electronics, was calling only for a ten-year transition.

No doubt Tony Blair and the other heads of government who took this decision (following the lead of Fidel Castro's dictatorship in Cuba) purred with self-congratulation at striking such a daring blow against global warming. After all these "compact fluorescent bulbs" (or CFLs), to which they want us all to switch, use supposedly only a fifth of the energy needed by the familiar tungsten-filament bulbs now to be made illegal.

Booker notes that among the first to congratulate the EU's leaders was Green MEP Caroline Lucas, who claimed that "banning old-fashioned light bulbs across the EU would cut carbon emissions by around 20 million tonnes per year and save between €5-8 million per year in domestic fuel bills".

BERJAYAPut that way, of course, who could argue? Certainly not European light bulb manufacturers who are struggling to compete against cheap imports of incandescent lights, or the retailers who stand to benefit from the much higher margins on CFLs.

Yet some of the people who are arguing - and are far from impressed by the EU's decision - are not a few electrical engineers who have been clutching their heads in disbelief. Did those politicians, they wondered, actually take any expert advice before indulging in this latest planet-saving gesture?

In fact the virtues of these "low energy" bulbs are nothing like so wonderful as naïve (self-serving) enthusiasts like Ms Lucas imagine them to be. Indeed in many ways, the experts warn, by banning incandescent bulbs altogether the EU may have committed itself to an appallingly costly blunder.

It is a decision which will have a far greater impact on all our lives than most people are yet aware, presenting the UK alone with a bill which, on our government's own figures, could be £3 billion or more.

The result will provide a quality of lighting which in many ways will be markedly less efficient. Even Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor who put forward the proposal, admitted that, because the energy-saving bulbs she uses in her flat take some time to warm up, she often has "a bit of a problem" when she is looking for something she has "dropped on the carpet".

But even more significantly, because they must be kept on so much longer to run efficiently, the actual amount of energy saved by these bulbs has been vastly exaggerated.

So what are the disadvantages of CFLs over the traditional bulbs we will no longer be allowed to buy? Quite apart from the fact that the CFLs are larger, much heavier and mostly much uglier than familiar bulbs - and up to 20 times more expensive - the vast majority of them give off a harsher, less pleasant light.

Because they do not produce light in a steady stream, like an incandescent bulb, but flicker 50 times a second, some who use them for reading eventually find their eyes beginning to swim – and they can make fast-moving machine parts look stationary, posing a serious safety problem – the so-called "strobe effect".

CFLs cannot be used with dimmer switches or electronically-triggered security lights (see package label, illustrated below), so these will become a thing of the past. They cannot be used in microwaves, ovens or freezers, because these are either too hot or too cold for them to function (at any temperature above 50C or lower than –18C they don't work),

BERJAYAMore seriously, because CFLs need much more ventilation than a standard bulb, they cannot be used in any enclosed light fitting which is not open at both bottom and top (such as the type illustrated) - the implications of which for homeowners are horrendous.

Astonishingly, according to a report on "energy scenarios in the domestic lighting sector", carried out last year for Defra by its Market Transformation Programme, "less than 50 percent of the fittings installed in UK homes can currently take CFLs".

In other words, on the government's own figures, the owners of Britain's 24 million homes will have to replace hundreds of millions of light fittings, at a cost upwards of £3 billion. Not only is this an unwelcome cost, but the time scale of two years to replace as many as 60 million light fittings is wholly unrealistic.

BERJAYAIn addition to this, low-energy bulbs are much more complex to make than standard bulbs, requiring up to ten times as much energy to manufacture. Unlike standard bulbs, they use toxic materials, including mercury vapour, which the EU itself last year banned from landfill sites – which means that recycling the bulbs will itself create an enormously expensive problem.

Perhaps most significantly of all, however, to run CFLs economically they must be kept on more or less continuously. The more they are turned on and off, the shorter becomes their life, creating a fundamental paradox, as is explained by an Australian electrical expert Rod Elliott (whose Elliott Sound Products website provides as good a technical analysis of the disadvantages of CFLs as any on the internet).

BERJAYAIf people continue switching their lights on and off when needed, as Mr Elliott puts it, they will find that their "green" bulbs have a much shorter life than promised, thus triggering a consumer backlash from those who think they have been fooled.

But if they keep their lights on all the time to maximise their life, CFLs can end up using almost as much electricity from power stations (creating CO2 emissions) as incandescent bulbs – thus cancelling out their one supposed advantage.

In other words, in every possible way this looks like a classic example of kneejerk politics, imposed on us not by our elected Parliament after full consultation and debate, but simply on the whim of 27 politicians sitting round that table in Brussels, not one of whom could have made an informed speech about the pluses and minuses of what they were proposing.

There was not a hint of democracy in this crackpot decision, which will have a major impact on all our lives, costing many of us thousands of pounds and our economy billions – all to achieve little useful purpose, while making our homes considerably less pleasant to live in.

Such is the price we are now beginning to pay for the "eco-madness" which is sweeping through our political class like a psychic epidemic, The great "Euro-bulb blunder" is arguably the starkest symbol to date of the crazy new world into which this is leading us.

Photo of light bulb showing components, courtesy of Rod Elliott.

COMMENT THREAD

Monday, March 12, 2007

Reporting from the West Bank

BERJAYANo matter what one's views are on the Middle Eastern problems (and there are many, not just one) one cannot help feeling sorry for the Palestinian people. Whichever way one looks, they are the victims – victims of other Arab states, who encourage them to fight Israel and refuse to help them or allow them to settle anywhere; victims of their leaders, who have stolen all the money that have been donated to the Palestine either to feather their own nests or to create more terrorist militias; victims, often, of their own poor ability to make choices.

And yes, they are often victims of Israeli violence, though this could be solved relatively easily: an acceptance of that country’s right to exist, an end to terrorist activity, meaningful peace negotiations would do it.

There is another body of people that victimizes the Palestinians: the journalists of the MSM, who refuses to write the truth about the situation, thus making it impossible for the people there to face up to it. We witnessed this in the extraordinary infantilization of the Palestinians after the election that brought Hamas to power. Many in the media cried out against the notion that western aid should cease until Hamas agrees to the three conditions that can lead to peace in the area.

Here is a longer piece about the MSM and its curious view of what is going on in the West Bank.

COMMENT THREAD

Politicians trailing

BERJAYAYet another wannabe is aspiring not just to a political position, albeit only that of Mayor of London, but to being a divinity. Ms Sian Berry, the Green Party's female principal speaker (they have no leaders, a mercy for us all) has been chosen as the party's mayoral candidate.

Alas, what can a Green candidate say that has not been said by Hizonner the Mayor of LondON?

Well, there is her battle with global warming climate change; she wants more affordable housing; she wants to make London a more diverse, greener, more socially just city. Yadda-yadda-yadda. Hizonner will make mince-meat of her, although, as One London Blogger points out, she is considerably prettier than he is.

Looks apart, she is a politician from central casting and her worries about the problems "ordinary people in London" face are akin to those famous crocodile tears, as all her so-called policies would increase those worries by producing higher taxes and more regulations.

Is there some reason why no politicians is capable of at least catching up with the people, never mind leading them?

COMMENT THREAD

Worthy only of contempt

BERJAYAAs a contribution to the debate on global warming – or "climate change" if you prefer - it would be hard to improve on the op-ed written by Janet Daley in today’s Daily Telegraph. In particular, this offering really strikes a chord:

I am not a scientist. I do not have the expertise or the qualifications to adjudicate on the conflicting arguments on offer in this issue. But one thing that is quite clear to me is that there are different authoritative views on the data, and on the extrapolations that are being made from the data, on global warming - particularly on the question of whether such warming as has been identified is caused by human activity.

Before I became a journalist, I was an academic and one of the things most rigorously impressed upon me during my years in academia was that intellectual progress can only come through argument and self-criticism. It is quite antithetical to scholarly endeavour, not to say the spirit of Western enlightenment, for researchers to seek to close down opposition to a theory or a thesis. But greenery is no longer scholarship: it is politics. The discussion has been taken over by politically driven forces with little interest in the value of free intellectual enquiry.
And that is, in our view, the core of the issue. Far from being "settled science" as the advocates of the doom-laden scenarios would have it, the causes of climate change are wide open, with nothing at all resolved. For instance, if you take just one aspect, the role of water vapour in the process, we get an enormous disparity in views.

BERJAYAOne school will argue that water vapour is responsible for 95 percent of the Earth's greenhouse effect, whereas anthopogenic CO2 contributions are responsible for only 0.117 percent of the effect, once water vapour has been factored in. In all, the human contribution to the greenhouse effect is around 0.28 percent.

Others argue that the effect of water vapour, in climate change is limited to feedback and has no significant forcing effect, thus simply adding to the effect. Still others suggest that it has an indirect effect and that the main cause is the reduced amount of warming solar radiation reaching the earth's surface.

Whatever the arguments, the role of water vapour is understated in the 2001 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and that this distorts the arguments.

BERJAYAIn an area of huge uncertainty, however, one fact stands out with absolute clarity – that Mr David Cameron has absolutely no qualifications for arbitrating on such a complex issue. Like Janet Daley, he is not a scientist. Unlike Janet Daley, he has no scientific background whatsoever. His A-levels were history, history of art and economics with politics, at Oxford he read philosophy, politics and economics and his subsequent work experience was in public relations.

Anything that Mr Cameron has to say on global warming, therefore, represents a belief unsustained by scientific rigour.

Therein lies our fundamental problem. The job of politicians is to manage the government, not to impose a belief system on their fellow man. In the case of unresolved scientific debates - which may or may not have serious political implications – that task includes the management of uncertainty. It is not the job of a politician to arbitrate on scientific disputes – merely to prepare a response to the undisputed facts as they emerge.

BERJAYAWhat is happening though is that Mr Cameron is hoping that the population can be convinced that global warming is the defining issue of the next general election, so that he can avoid having to deal with other, far more important issues. Thus he is creating a "greener than thou" Conservative Party which he hopes can capture the votes from Labour and the Lib-Dems.

That, in itself, is an abrogation of the responsibility of a politicians, and a distortion of the role of an opposition leader. More to the point, on a personal level, I simply will not take my science or guidance as to the response to it from a man who is wholly unqualified to give it and, for whom environmentalism seems more of a fashion statement than a considered philosophy. His posturing is worthy only of contempt.

COMMENT THREAD

This will hack off the Huns

BERJAYAThe EU's environment commissioner, reports Reuters, has called for a maximum speed limit on German highways to slow down the notoriously swift traffic on the car-loving nation's autobahns.

The information comes from the Bild am Sonntag newspaper which has Stavros Dimas saying, "There are so many areas in which we senselessly waste energy and harm the climate … One simple measure in Germany could be a uniform speed limit on the autobahns."

He adds that, "Speed limits are very sensible for many reasons and completely normal in most EU countries and the United States. Only in Germany is it, oddly enough, a source of controversy."

So far, German transport minister Wolfgang Tiefensee has rejected the idea of a top limit. At least one-third of Germany's highways already have a speed limit while the rest carry a recommended speed of 130 kph (82 mph). In reality, drivers and motorcyclists can, and often do, travel as fast as they like.

BERJAYAFurthermore, high performance car makers such as BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Porsche, as well as mass market producers Volkswagen and General Motors' Opel division, Germany has resisted speed limits, not least because they argue that the demands imposed on their cars have led to them producing vehicles that are amongst the best and safest in the world.

However, the EU commission might push its luck and exercise its powers conferred under the Maastricht Treaty, and propose a law imposing a speed limit.

This really would annoy many Germans, and bring home to them the nature of the European Union. Only good could come of it.

COMMENT THREAD

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Working from home

BERJAYAFor all the focus taxes and other draconian devices aimed at reducing "carbon footprints" through the reduction of emissions from transport, a much more efficient solution is being adopted, quietly and undemonstrably by an increasing number of companies, without any intervention from the Boy King.

We are talking about a phenomenon known variously as telecommuting, e-commuting, e-work, telework, or simply working from home (WFH). And, according to Zoe Thomas in The Sunday Times today, after years of false starts, it has taken off.

New figures show that the proportion of staff working one morning or afternoon a week at home has more than doubled in the past two years, from 14.1 to 31.7 percent. There is also a significant increase in those working from home for up to 1½ days a week.

The figures are for the top 10 companies and the top two Best Big Companies in The Sunday Times "100 Best Companies to Work For" 2007 List, published this week.

One entirely predictable reason why tele-working has taken off is the spread of broadband, but there has also been a significant shift in attitudes.

According to Pete Bradon, head of research at Best Companies, which compiled the report for The Sunday Times, "The old-fashioned thinking was that working from home was just people trying to get time off. But these people tend to be more engaged and more productive. They think, 'The company's done me a favour here, I'll do them a favour back'."

Staff who are allowed to do some work from home also find many aspects of their job more rewarding. The proportion of those who found their work stimulating was almost 80 percent among those who work from home for at least half a day per week, compared with 65 percent for those based entirely at the workplace. When asked whether they were in their dream job, more than half (51.4 percent) of those who work from home for some of the time said they were, dropping to 39.9 percent among those who do no tele-working.

But the real winner is the so-called "green agenda". A worker who normally travels to work by private car and spends one day a week at home is using 20 percent less fuel, creating 20 percent less congestion and is reducing emissions by 20 percent. If enough people took this option, the strain on infrastructures would be very substantially reduced, more so than virtually any other option on the table can achieve.

The findings are very much more bullish than earlier surveys, and even those which seem to be lukewarm attest to the advantages.

Certainly, as one who has worked from home for most of his career, I can attest to the advantages of this style of working. Seconds after waking, if need be, one can be at work, yet the flexibility afforded means that personal demands, from shopping through to doctor’s appointments – or whatever – can easily be integrated into the working day, without affecting performance.

Yet, none of this has the profile and the "big ticket" drama of the sort of initiatives that the Boy seems to favour. But then, as we are beginning to learn, gestures are so much more important than encouraging things that actually work and improve peoples' lives.

COMMENT THREAD

He is really going

BERJAYAYes, ladies and gentlemen, President Jacques Chirac, who has presided over some of the worst years in modern French history (though not as bad as the years when the Algerian and the Vietnam war were being lost) has announced that he will not be seeking that unprecedented third term.

Chirac has even failed in his efforts to prevent Nicolas Sarkozy from standing as the official UMP candidate in the looming elections. M Sarkozy had hoped that President Chirac will endorse his candidacy in his speech and, according to the BBC, is still hoping to receive that endorsement.

Al-Jazeera has published a very useful time table to the complicated procedure that precedes the actual elections.

President Chirac, who rather fancies himself as an international statesman, has been heard talking about "life after politics". Given various past court cases in which his colleagues had been found guilty of financial misdemeanours, he must be hoping that the life will not be behind bars.

COMMENT THREAD

Two minds…

BERJAYABy another coincidence, both Christopher Booker and Simon Jenkins deal with the same issue in their respective columns, two minds with but a single thought. Actually, that is not quite true, and there is also a major difference: Booker gets 300 words against nearly 1500 from Jenkins.

Jenkins's title is quite encouraging: "Soldiers are dying while we blow billions on weapons they don't need". But that is as good as it gets. By way of his substantive thesis, he asserts that one of the perils of being a soldier these days is that "your ministry leaves you underequipped because it is still buying ships to fight the Germans and planes to fight the Russians." Furthermore, if you strip away the polemic, Jenkins actually says very little more than that.

To support his thesis, he characterises "modern wars" as fourth generation warfare, arguing that the one service that fights these is the Army. Yet, he declares, it is the Army that constantly loses out in Whitehall battles over money. Defence ministries spend billions on weapons that have no relevance to the wars that modern soldiers are expected to fight – they are stuck in the cold war, spending billions on "cold war equipment programmes".

Jenkins does have a point, and we applaud him for making it, but he develops it poorly, but then gets his conclusions hopelessly wrong.

For sure, he picks up on an issue we have raised, the new batch of "archaic destroyers" the Type 45, but his eye is on aircraft carriers and the Eurofighter, rather than the detail of defence procurement. Thus, he asserts that "weak Labour defence secretaries" are being browbeaten into buying kit for the Navy and the RAF while the Army goes short.

"Glib pundits," he then concludes, "may state that the nation 'needs' both more army manpower and more expensive ships and planes." But, declares Jenkins, "the truth is this cannot be afforded." As a result, he opines, "What gets sacrificed is the manpower. Because there is no profit in soldiers, the nation gets planes and ships it does not need. The defence ministry fights, or rather buys, the last war and ignores the next."

Without spending too much time on this, one can certainly agree that the Eurofighter is a Cold War project, but we are committed to it and there is little that can be done (other than cancelling Tranche 3). The case against aircraft carriers is weak – as a means of projecting power, they cannot be said to be a Cold War instrument.

But, as to the MoD fighting the last war and ignoring the next, it is our view that the problem is that it is planning for the next and ignoring those which we are currently fighting.

To come to that conclusion, one has to understand the concept of FRES and how it fits into the grand scheme of things – which Jenkins clearly does not. But, if you do factor it into the balance, one sees the RAF getting approximately £20 billion for its Eurofighters, the Royal Navy £14 billion for its carriers and the JSFs to arm it, and the Army gets £14 billion for FRES. Seen that way, the Army is not actually doing that badly.

Thus, it is Booker, with his mere 300 worlds, who pinpoints the problem far better than Jenkins does - in a fifth of the length.

His piece draws from ours on the evidence of Air Chief Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, Chief of the Defence Staff, to the Defence Committee, from our piece about the differences between the standards of base protection in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the astonishing way we are increasingly reliant on our allies for support, and from our account of the better value for money they get when buying their kit.

Headed, "Sir Jock's 'locker' has not much in it but skeletons", Booker thus tells us how the MoD website boasts of how well-protected our personnel on Kandahar air base are from Taliban mortar and rocket attack, thanks to the Americans, to Romanian troops deploying the latest surveillance equipment, and to Danish weapon-locating radar.

He adds that the MoD naturally publishes few details, however, of how woefully unprotected and ill-equipped our troops are in Iraq, who are now having to rely on support from Canadian-designed reconnaissance aircraft, supplied to Iraq by Jordan and stationed on our Basra air base.

Then he notes:

In contrast to our own dire lack of small helicopters, both in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Iraqis themselves will soon have more than 50 of them, including 16 Hueys, refitted in the US with the latest equipment at less than £2 million each. Meanwhile the MoD in London is still focused on its plans to buy a fleet of Super Lynxes, costing £14 million each, which will not be available for at least five years.

Sir Jock Stirrup, the Chief of the Defence Staff, last week admitted to the Commons defence committee that, so far as Iraq and Afghanistan were concerned, we have "not much left in the locker", and that "we are not going to be in the business of engaging in large-scale, high-end fighting operations for some years to come".

In plain English, it seems, the MoD top brass are still so busy dreaming of those "high-end" wars our forces might possibly have to fight one day in the distant future that, unlike our allies, they have "nothing left in the locker" to equip our troops to fight the wars in which they are actually engaged (and dying) now.
Now, if we could get Jenkins to read Booker, or even our web site – especially this - then we might possibly make some progress.

COMMENT THREAD

Plane stupid

BERJAYAWith all the political skills of a herd of lemmings going for a Sunday stroll over a cliff, the Conservative Party is about to unveil a raft of new "environmental" taxes on aviation, aimed specifically at "frequent flyers".

The measures, we are told by Sky News and others, are to be set out by shadow chancellor George Osborne, designed to help secure the party's "green" credentials.

Measures under consideration include levying VAT or fuel duty - or both together - on domestic flights. They also include scrapping air passenger duty and replacing it with a new "per flight" tax based more closely on a flight's carbon emissions.

Such is the greenie obsessions of the not-the-Conservative-Party, however, that little Georgie plans to go ahead even at the risk of alienating voters, who are distinctly cool on the idea of environmental taxes.

This is underlined in an ICM poll for the Sunday Mirror today, which shows that 58 percent of those questioned thought there were already enough extra taxes on the airlines while only 38 percent thought more aviation taxes were a good idea.

The News of the World also published a hostile story today, "revealing" the Tories "sky-high tax grab", under the heading "plane greedy". "Plane stupid", might be a better description.

Meanwhile, according to The Sunday Telegraph, former Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore has been invited to address a meeting of the Conservative shadow cabinet on Thursday.

There can be no better sign that the Boy has ceased to be a Conservative, if he ever was.

COMMENT THREAD

Saturday, March 10, 2007

London calling

Looks like the EU Parliament has discovered a new way of spending another £1.3 million a year of our money.

Dan Hannan has the details.

COMMENT THREAD

An unhealthy lack of information

BERJAYAOur struggle to keep abreast of the progress in the Iraqi and the Afghani campaigns is not done for entertainment or out of idle interest. We take our responsibilities as citizen/subjects in a democracy seriously, and could hardly do otherwise, having so often declared that democracy is not a spectator sport.

Thus it is that we need to know what is going on because, if the campaigns are being badly mismanaged, and the government does not respond adequately or at all, we will be part of that band of people who raise a clamour and demand action. That is what living in a democracy is about.

The trouble is, so many miles removed from the action, we rely on others for information, on the media, on official sources and on the occasional discussions with people who have been there – all assessed through the filter of our own experience, background knowledge and powers of understanding.

That said, the essential problem with Afghanistan is that the flow of information is sparse and very often second-hand. Media reports, for instance, are often datelined Kabul, written by journalists hundreds of miles away from the action in the context where it matters not whether it is hundreds or – like us – thousands. The information is still second hand.

That much which is based on official information can be totally unreliable, representing spin from organisations which are determined to present the best, and thus leave out bad news.

BERJAYA
A classic example is a recent media report of Nato activities at Garmsir. Offering details of a military "success", a month later the troops are still having "successes", but seem no further forward than when they had their earlier successes.

BERJAYAWe saw this especially with the accounts of the Kajaki dam clearance, where we are now being told of a third operation in as many months, having been led to believe that the first two had been successful.

On the other hand, looking at the totality of information available to us, we believe there is a possibility that Nato (and especially British) forces are not doing too well. We could even be at risk of losing.

However, unlike many, we do not take the view that the Afghani war is inherently unwinnable – the white man's graveyard of yore – and took some comfort from a piece earlier last month in the American Spectator by Hal Colebatch.

He argued that the myth of inevitable defeat for British forces is precisely that – a myth. The previous campaigns in Afghanistan, he writes, don't tell us much about the present one, except that it is a very tough country inhabited by very tough people. Any army there had better be well-equipped and supplied, well-motivated and with clear-minded military and political leadership.

Then, today, in The Times, we get soldier turned photographer and war correspondent, Anthony Loyd, who argues that, "for once" an Afghan war is winnable, declaring that "the tide is turning against the Taliban".

However, if as Loyd believes, the Taliban is spent force, his information comes not from direct communication with them, but from Nato sources – the same sources that arranged a truce in Musa Qala, only to have the Taliban move in and take over.

The Australian Herald, however – with a reporter Kandahar – reports that 40 miles to the south of Musa Qala, "Sangin is boiling", the town that straddles the British communication line to the Kajaki dam region.

BERJAYAThe fierce and unexpected activity of the Taliban here tends to confirm the fears of some analysts who, according to the Herald, argue that the insurgency has spent the winter regrouping and is showing signs of more sophisticated communications, tactics and command-and-control structures. And it has Pakistan as a sanctuary from which to operate. And, as we saw recently, they can still reach out in unexpected places, to ambush unsuspecting convoys.

It is as well to remember that only a fraction of the manpower and aid deployed to Iraq is being allocated for Afghanistan yet, while the country and its population are bigger than Iraq, the foreign force is only a fifth of that in Iraq. Even with everything going for it, the Nato force is going to find it much harder to prevail.

But there are worrying sign the Karzai government – never firmly in control – is losing its grip in the southern provinces, while the population is becoming more alienated by foreign troops, and their perceived indiscriminate killing of Afghani civilians.

BERJAYAThis harps back to a perspicacious report published in February 2004 on the dangers of collateral damage, a report which seem to have been largely ignored as Nato forces rely more and more on airpower rather than more precise and controllable land equipment.

All we have to go on, though, is slender scraps of information – and a sense that very little effort is going into reporting what is going on. Instead, we get acres of coverage on the career of Patrick Mercer, a minor Tory politician, unknown to most people before a few days ago, all from a media that is obsessed with trivia.

If the war is winnable, though, we need to make sure we put the necessary resources into winning it but, so far, it is more than a little difficult to find out what is going on. That is not healthy.

COMMENT THREAD

The Saturday "toy"

BERJAYA
This should read "toys" – three for the price of one. The picture depicts US Navy Captains Craig Williams, front, and Richard Butler flying in F/A-18C Hornet aircraft over USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) on 1 March 2007, performing an aerial change of command ceremony while under way in the Pacific Ocean. Williams was relieved by Butler as commander of Carrier Air Wing Fourteen during the ceremony. Now that is style - bu**er the carbon footprint.

This is an official DoD photograph taken by Lt. Cmdr. Tam Pham, US Navy. Click to enlarge, or you can see the high resolution original here.

COMMENT THREAD

The curse of the Eurobulb

BERJAYAIt was exactly two weeks ago when we noted that the UK no longer had the power to require the use of high-efficiency light bulbs. This, under Single Market rules, had become an exclusive EU competence.

Now, as a side deal done at the European Council in Brussels which ended yesterday, we are confronting the other side of the coin – the leaders of the EU member states, it appears, have decided that we will have to use energy-efficient lighting by the end of the decade.

Whether it is a good idea to do this is a moot point – there are disadvantages as well as advantages, but the fact that it has been decided at an EU level further underlines how much power has drained away from Parliament and the people.

Prior to our membership of the EU, such a move would have required the specific consent of Parliament – but now it is not even consulted. When the legislation is finally presented to both Houses, they will have no power to refuse it, or even change it.

This, frankly, is unacceptable – there are many areas in my own home where I do not want these high-efficiency bulbs. And while I would be prepared to accept the writ of my own elected Parliament, should it decide to ban incandescents, the same does not apply to the EU - which lacks any democratic legitimacy.

It looks as if we will have to start stockpiling light bulbs, or looking for black market suppliers, all to avoid the curse of the Eurobulb.

COMMENT THREAD

Friday, March 09, 2007

So, is it coming in by the backdoor?

BERJAYAA contribution from the House of Lords to the ongoing debate as to whether the European Constitution or, at least, some of its aspects are being promoted without the courtesy of the document having been made law.

Lord Pearson of Rannoch, an indefatigable fighter, as most of our readers know, has been asking questions about Article 308 in the Consolidated Treaties, the document, which is, to remind everyone, the law of the land and superior to anything our Parliament might wish.

Article 308 states:

If action by the Community should prove necessary to attain, in the course of the operation of the common market, one of the objectives of the Community and this Treaty has not provided the necessary powers, the Council shall, acting unanimously on a proposal from the Commission and after consulting the European Parliament, take the appropriate measures.
It gives the Council and, necessarily the Commission as well as, to some extent, the European Parliament, the powers to go beyond the treaties to attain various objectives to do with the common market. Note that phrase, the common market.

Lord Pearson has asked a couple of questions about the way Article 308 has been used to promote European legislation. The first one was:
Further to the debate on 19 February (Official Report, col. 880), for which legal instruments Article 308 of the treaty establishing the European Community has been used as the legal base since 1997.
Naturally enough, HMG could not answer this, referring back to our old friend, the disproportionate cost, which must not be incurred in cases when questions are asked in Parliament.

The second question, however, did elicit a reply:
Further to the debate on 19 February (Official Report, col. 881), what are their criteria for accepting the use of Article 308 of the treaty establishing the European Community as the legal base for European Union legal instruments.
On behalf of Her Majesty’s Government, Lord Triesman replied:
In assessing the legal base of proposals brought forward by the Commission, the Government apply criteria laid down by the Court of Justice in case law dating back to the 1980s and consider each proposal as a whole, in particular its aim and content. Article 308 requires that a proposal be necessary for the attainment of a Community objective and that the Council must act unanimously. The Government have given an undertaking that, where the Commission puts forward a legislative proposal citing Article 308 as its legal base, the Commission's justification of its choice of legal base and the Government's assessment of that choice will be provided to the scrutiny committees.
We can dispense with all that gumf about scrutiny committees. They are overwhelmed by documentation and have no time to read all of it, never mind scrutinize. And, even if they do their job, they are not exactly a power in the land.

According to Lord Pearson himself, their wishes have been overridden 180 times in the last 3 years by Her Majesty’s Government with Her Majesty’s Opposition saying precious little about that.

There is another point worth mentioning. According to the Noble Lord Triesman or, to be more precise, according to the officials who write his replies, “Article 308 requires that a proposal be necessary for the attainment of a Community objective and that the Council must act unanimously”.

Ahem, what happened to the words “common market”? Is the Noble Minister telling porkies? Surely not.

Lord Pearson has also pointed out in a document he has sent out far and wide that
Article 308 has been used recently to pass control of "civil contingencies" to Brussels, to launch a €235 million propaganda campaign, to bring in the Charter of Fundamental Rights (a vast EU human rights law), and much else.
Well, there we are. Who needs a European Constitution when we have a Government and an Opposition?

COMMENT THREAD

An excuse not needed

BERJAYAI have tried to avoid commenting on the Patrick Mercer affair, but note that, for all the torrent of comment, one central issue has been completely neglected.

The protocol applying to ministers and shadow ministers alike is that they should not speak publicly outside their own portfolios.

Mercer is a shadow minister but he is not defence. His job is homeland security and therefore he had no business speaking on the issue of racism in the Army to a newspaper. An ex-Army officer, used to the "chain of command", should have appreciated this.

He should have referred the paper to Liam Fox's office and the fact that he did not has brought its deserved reward. There can be no sympathy for him - this was a major breach of protocol, irrespective of the merits (or otherwise) of what he said.

That said, one can afford to express regret that Mercer’s own stupidity has given the media an opportunity to devote massive space (front page and two internal pages in The Times alone) to an issue which, in the grander scheme of things, is relatively minor.

With British troops fighting and dying in Afghanistan, and ISAF mounting a major operation, I cannot believe there is nothing to report, despite the thin diet of information from official sources.

Even at the best of times, the media needs little excuse to avoid reporting real news and it is thus sad that the contribution that Mercer will be remembered for is giving them precisely that.

COMMENT THREAD

As long as they pay for it

BERJAYA Farmers Weekly is getting a little agitated. It seems that at the Paris International Agri-Business Show, "industry leaders" made it quite clear that there will be no end to government subsidy for French agriculture.

Unlike, says the article huffily, the British Government, which is planning to phase out support payments after 2013, the French are prepared to go on financing their farmers.

Emmanuel Lachaize, vice president of the young farmers' movement Jeunes Agricultures is blunt about the need for support. "We have to be realistic, if we stop PAC (CAP) payments we will lose half of the farmers because agriculture is not sustainable without support."

Jean-Paul Papillon, economics chief of French agriculture machinery manufacturers association SYGMA agrees. "Without support payments many thousands of farmers would disappear and with them many more jobs," said Mr Papillon. He estimated the number of French farms at 585,000 which supported up to three times as many jobs in agriculture and the food sector.

Ending government support to farmers would be unthinkable, according to the French farmers' union FRSEA. "France will never agree to end income support to its farmers," said Michel Masson, FRSEA president of the central region.
So much for that supposed reform of the CAP and opening up of trade with Third World countries, whose welfare the EU allegedly worries about constantly.

It is, after all, unclear from all those comments, whether the French famers' leaders envisage "government support" from their own taxpayers or from the taxpayers across the EU's member states. Farmers Weekly may not see this but they are two different sources and are likely to have different effects in France.

COMMENT THREAD

Incredible…

BERJAYAAnd, if the nature of and scale of the problem was not already evident, we see in the Reuters'’ headline on the report of the European Council an encapsulation of the way the media has bought into the climate change agenda as well.

Thus we get, "EU summit adopts bold environment strategy" with a report that reads, in part, as follows:

European Union leaders agreed a full package of binding measures on Friday to build a common energy policy and fight climate change, challenging the world to follow suit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

Merkel, who chaired a two-day summit, said the decisions taken by the 27-nation bloc, including a disputed binding target for renewable energy sources, were "ambitious and credible".

"I personally am very satisfied and happy that it has been possible to open the door into a whole new dimension of European cooperation in the years to come in the area of energy and combating climate change," she told a final news conference. "We can avoid what could well be a human calamity," she said.
This is a very stupid or ill-advised woman, projecting a strategy which is nothing short of an economic and human disaster. Ambitious it might be. Credible it is not. But all we get from the media is cheer-leading, as this insane policy takes shape.

Of course, if we had a credible political opposition, the media might handle it differently, quoting opposing views. But since all the main political parties have bought into this mass hysteria – including the Party led by that fool Cameron – there is nothing to counter the propaganda effect of news reports like this.

As for the Eurosceptics, if they got their act together, the EU's enthusiasm for the "Great Global Warming Swindle" should be a gift, allowing the movement to raise the banner around which the forces of reason coalesce. As usual though, the one political party that could have done this has dropped the pass.

COMMENT THREAD

A cautionary tale

BERJAYA
It came as something as a shock to me to find that respected government scientists can lie, that they can falsify evidence and break all the rules of science – and that government officials will quite deliberately seek to cover-up the misdeeds.

If that is something of a naïve statement, so be it. But my background as a technician rather than a front-line scientist puts me closer in touch with the bulk of ordinary people, and my own personal experience of scientific fraud has important lessons for the current global warming controversy.

Read more here.

COMMENT THREAD

A tale of two worlds

BERJAYAThe big event of the European Council being held in Brussels over yesterday and today was supposed to be an agreement on the so-called Berlin declaration, to form the centrepiece of the 50th anniversary celebrations of the Treaty of Rome.

At the heart of that declaration, inspired by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, was supposed to be a "roadmap" for the ratification of the EU Constitution, albeit in its "lite" form, redrafted so as to exclude all the bits that the "colleagues" have convinced themselves have created the opposition.

However, the session yesterday failed to reach an agreement on the critical last paragraph which would have included a commitment to progressing the Merkel initiative. There is little chance now of agreement being reached today, or later - with a deadline of 25 Match. This seems to leave the latest attempt to expand the scope of the project high and dry.

According to the IHT the Poles were leading the rebellion but our sources tell us that the UK was in the wings quietly doing its best to sabotage the German moves.

That has left the European Council attempting to salvage something from the beanfest, which is now so large that, as former Europe minister Dennis MacShane put it, you need binoculars to see the speakers on the other side of the room. From the illustration of the negotiating chamber, you can see exactly what he means.

Anyhow, that "something" is an agreement on a binding target for renewable energy, all in the name of reducing climate change.

BERJAYAIt is highly appropriate, therefore, that, while the colleagues were dining, back here in the UK, Channel 4 Television was showing a documentary entitled "The Great Global Warming Swindle" which was the most effective popular debunking of the Global Warming Scam I have ever seen.

What came over with crystal clarity from the programme was the fragility of the science supporting the global warming thesis, and the strength of the science supporting the arguments that the primary driver of climate change was the sun.

It can thus come as no surprise that the EU, built on a foundation of deception and fraud, should buy into this scam, seeing in it a means of pursuing its interventionalist agenda at a time when its mantra on "keeping the peace in Europe" has little relevance to the upcoming generation. In an attempt to keep the interest going, the EU has sought to harness the ill-founded concern over climate change, engaging in the "battle to save the planet".

What is especially of interest is that, in choosing this battle, the EU has effectively opted out of the real battle, the global war against terrorism which, from all accounts, has reached new heights of ferocity in Afghanistan. Not only are we seeing a major battle for control of the Kajaki dam region but, some 40 miles away at Sangin, there has been also fighting on a large scale – where four British soldiers have now been killed in the last week.

Quite how intensive it has been is illustrated by the airpower summary for 7 March, which shows the scale of air operations in support of ground forces.

And there we have the tale of two worlds – the one of the fantasy world of battling to save the planet from climate change, and the other, real world battle to counter the global threat from terrorism.

Not only has the EU bought into the former but so has our government and – stupidly – the Boy King. Cameron had that unique opportunity to create clear blue water between the Conservatives and New Labour but, instead, has fallen for the myth.

BERJAYAMeanwhile, back in the real world, we see a report that two Canadian convoys came under attack in Kandahar province yesterday. Initial details, the Victoria Times reports, are sketchy but no Canadians were hurt.

"There were two separate attacks on two separate Canadian convoys," said military spokesman Maj. Dale MacEachern. "One was a suicide vehicle borne improvised explosive device and the second was an improvised explosive device. I can confirm for you that there were no Canadian casualties."

And the picture shows why. While the British MoD still has not got its act together on force protection, the Canadians are saving lives with their RG-31s. If only the Boy could show more enthusiasm for saving British lives and dump his fantasy of saving the planet from global warming, we would have some hope for a better, safer world – and the Conservatives might stand a chance of winning the next election.

As it is, in the great war of the worlds, he is on the wrong side. What an utter fool that man is.

COMMENT THREAD

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Assisted suicide

BERJAYAIf a measure was needed of how dismally the MoD procurement process is letting down our troops, an answer to a question from MP Ann Winterton in today’s Hansard reveals that an armoured vehicle selected in July 2003 is not going to be delivered to the Army until the end of this year – more than four years after it was first ordered - and then, initially, only to "training establishments".

This is the Italian-built Panther Command and Liaison Vehicle. A formal order was placed in November 2003 for 401 vehicles, with an option for up to 400 more, the first batch priced at £166 million, equating to £413,000 each.

As we remarked when we first wrote about the subject, a top-of-the-range Rolls-Royce would come cheaper. Furthermore, it was selected in preference to the larger and better-protected RG-31, built by a South African subsidiary of BAE Land Systems, costing not much more than half the price of the Panther.

BERJAYAWhat makes this so devastating is that the Parliamentary answer coincides with a press release by the US Oshkosh Company, celebrating the award of a contract to produce evaluation versions of the Australian-designed Bushmaster (pictured) - part of the programme to re-equip the US armed forces with Mine Resistant and Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles.

This we reported earlier this month but even then our information was out of date, as we were writing about 4,000 vehicles being ordered. In mid-February, the number was increased, subject to Congress approval, to 6,738, in recognition of how effective the vehicles have been in protecting their occupants.

But the ultimate irony is that, while the US is powering ahead with a major re-equipment programme, our hugely expensive Panthers are effectively useless for service in either Iraq or Afghanistan.

Not only do they provide considerably less protection than any of the MRAP vehicles, the interiors are proving too small even for their intended command functions.

Worse still, since they are designed as command vehicles, and differ from any other vehicles in service, they present an easily identifiable high-value target to insurgents. They would be a liability on an "asymmetric" battlefield, amounting to an exercise in assisted suicide for their occupants.

We end up, therefore with 400 redundant vehicles for a price which would have put 500 or more MRAP-type vehicles in Iraq and Afghanistan where they are needed - all over a timespan longer than it will take the US to re-equip its entire armed forces with such vehicles.

Thus are we served.

COMMENT THREAD

We are owed an explanation

BERJAYAThere can be few readers of this blog who have not, in their own ways, come to the conclusion that governments are intrinsically untrustworthy – which means that the material they produce is also, necessarily, suspect.

It is in this context that one can make clinical judgements of a piece posted yesterday on the MoD website, headed, "Keeping Kandahar Air Base Safe". As an example of the way the propaganda machine works, it is an absolute classic and perhaps should be studied for years to come, typical of the way governments keep the "good news" flowing and suppress the bad.

By way of background, readers will be fully aware of our concern – and to be fair to them, the concern of a number of MPs – about the vulnerability of our bases in Iraq to mortar and rocket fire (see here and here). However, when questioned about the protection afforded to our troops, the secretary of state for defence, Des Browne, refuses to discuss the issue in public, simply offering MPs private briefings.

Now, by contrast, when we get a situation in Kandahar Air Base in Afghanistan where the protection is adequate, the MoD website rushes out information on the systems used at a level of detail that has been entirely denied to us in respect of the badly protected raqi bases.

BERJAYAAnd, although not all the protection strategies have been adopted, we note that – in addition to the perimeter guardposts, manned by Romanian infantry, which have the latest surveillance and CCTV equipment - there is a battery of Danish weapon-locating radars (similar to our Mamba sets) and elements of an American airborne forces unit.

But with the base being regularly targeted by Taliban rocket attacks, launched from over five miles away, the Force Protection unit also put into effect a strategy that sees them not just guarding the perimeter wire, but going outside the base to win over the support of local villagers, amongst which the Taliban were launching their attacks.

BERJAYAThe effort is run by Wing Commander Andy Knowles, Commanding Officer of 3 Force Protection (FP) Wing, a 20 man unit from RAF Marham. But that is supplemented by an extra 700 troops at Kandahar made up of personnel from various countries, including members of the UK's RAF Regiment.

But now we get to the essential difference. The Air Base is run by the US and the force protection effort benefits from American money. The result is that, while in the past it was usual for the base to come under sustained rocket attack two or three times every night, with the additional force protection, the airbase has suffered no casualties and no significant damage since June 2006.

Thus, as Squadron Leader Steve Carter - Second-in-Command of 3 Force Protection Wing at Kandahar – says, "Instead of reacting to constant rocket attacks … troops can now sleep at night."

BERJAYAWhat an appalling contrast this makes with the situation in Iraq where, as we saw from the photographs, the physical protection is a layer of canvas and a mattress, while troops are mortared or rocketed daily.

And what an indictment of the way the government publicity machine works - silent on the problems yet full of glowing self-congratulation when the system works. But I think the secretary of state owes us an explanation as to why troops in Afghanistan can be protected, while those unfortunate enough to be posted to Iraq are offered no equivalent protection.

COMMENT THREAD

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

News from France

BERJAYAUnlike a number of people on this blog’s forum I happen to like France and can truly say that I have always had a good time there, whether working, visiting or holidaying. There are times, however, when even my francophilia begins to crack.

Two items of interest. One, which, as it happens, says a good deal about official mentality beyond France as well, is an interview with Raymond Barre, the former Prime Minister.

M Barre was the politician who, in his reaction to a Palestinian bombing of a Paris synagogue in 1980 made it quite clear that he did not think that Jews were French.

This appalling attack was intended to hit Jews on their way to the synagogue, it has hit innocent French people who happened to be in the Rue Copernic.
In last week’s interview he explained that he did not really think that French Jews were somehow less French:
“Don’t forget that in the same statement I said that the Jewish community cannot be separated from the French community. When you quote, you must quote in full. And the campaign undertaken by the Jewish lobby with the strongest links on the left came from the fact that we were in an electoral climate and this didn’t impress me and they can continue to repeat it.”

“Those who wanted to get their own back on Jews could have blown up the synagogue and Jews. But not at all, they launched a blind bomb attack and there were three French people, not Jews, that’s a fact, not Jews. And that doesn’t mean that Jews are not French,” Barre said.
A fair muddle it all is. The left may have attacked Raymond Barre but it is many a long year since the left has supported Jews in France. Also, if Jews are French then the killing of non-Jews ought not to be a greater outrage because they are French, which the Jews are not, except that they are. Is this the famous Gallic logic? The “rolling English road” might be preferable.

Anyway, M Barre did not stop there. He has also accused the Jewish lobby for hounding Maurice Papon, the recently deceased Vichy official, responsible for the transportation of hundreds of Jews in the Bordeaux area. It was, as it happens, zeal beyond the call of duty.

M Barre’s explanation of why Papon should have been left alone is interesting. It goes somewhere along the lines of “he was merely obeying orders” except that we all know that he went beyond that.

The point is that Maurice Papon was a talented administrator and civil servant, looking at French national interests above all and “opposing the deportation of Jews had not been a matter of major national interest”.

Possibly not, though that does raise some questions of what exactly are major national interests in a country that prides itself on it historic culture and enlightenment.

M Barre then continued and very interesting this is, too:
When you have essential responsibilities in a department, a region or even more at the national level, you don’t resign. You only resign when it is truly a question of major national interest.

Mr Papon became a scapegoat. I am not passing moral judgment on the attitude that one should have had with regard to the deportation of the Jews or not. But I consider that this country is fundamentally hypocritical in seeking out a few scapegoats.

Don’t forget that all the French personnel who went to manage the part of Germany occupied by France [after the end of WWII] consisted in large part of highly professional civil servants who needed maybe to be eliminated on a national level but were able to continue to serve the country at the international level.
Difficult to disentangle but he has a point. Papon was not, by any means, alone (though, as it happens, he was not put on trial for his activity for a long time after the war). Since the liberation of France there has been a regrettable tendency for scapegoating a few individuals and an equally regrettable tendency not to analyze what really happened under the Nazi occupation.

In the immediate post-war years this was justified by the need to bring the nation together and to heal the psychological wounds of the war, the defeat and the occupation. No country that has not experienced enemy occupation has the right to cast stones at the behaviour of those who has.

However, time has gone on. Just as it is time for Russia to examine the history of the Second World War more closely, so it is time for France to do the same. By his outrageous comments M Barre may well do his countrymen a favour in pushing them towards that examination.

Meanwhile, closer to our own time, the French Constitutional Council has approved a new law that is aimed, according to the government and, in particular, the Interior Minister and would-be President Nicolas Sarkozy, at the disgusting practice of “happy-slapping” may well have the effect of disallowing the filming and broadcasting of police or any other brutality on the internet.

The new law makes the filming and broadcasting of acts of violence by anybody except professional journalists (presumably members of a union) a criminal offence. According to Pascal Cohet, a spokesman for French online civil liberties group Odebi, the new law is drafted much too broadly to be accepted as simply a crack-down on “happy-slapping”. It is aimed at controlling citizen journalism and, eventually the internet.
The government has also proposed a certification system for Web sites, blog hosters, mobile-phone operators and Internet service providers, identifying them as government-approved sources of information if they adhere to certain rules. The journalists' organization Reporters Without Borders, which campaigns for a free press, has warned that such a system could lead to excessive self censorship as organizations worried about losing their certification suppress certain stories.
Is there not a French saying: plus ça change, plus ça reste la même? (Yes, indeed, there are other versions of that.)

COMMENT THREAD

Poles apart

BERJAYABack in the late nineties Bill Jamieson and I were almost the only people around who argued that enlargement to take in the former Communist states of Eastern Europe was not a very good idea for the applicant countries. There were plenty of people who whined about the effect enlargement of that kind might have on those who were already members but few agreed with us that the new ones would suffer.

Our argument was relatively straightforward. What the newly democratic countries needed and genuinely wanted was security through membership of NATO and economic growth encouraged by free-trade agreements with the rest of Europe.

What they did not need is the imposition of EU rules on fragile economies and political structures. That and having their agricultural goods priced out of the market by heavily subsidized Western ones would not produce economic development but high unemployment. And it has come to pass.

To be fair, the Poles seem to have wrecked their economy without bothering to put all of the acquis communautaire into place. As the International Herald Tribune points out:

Since 2003, Poland's jobless rate has fallen from 20.7 percent to 15 percent, but mainly due to more than one million people leaving to take up jobs in Britain, Ireland and other Western European countries.

Poland, a staunchly Catholic nation of 39 million people, still has miserably low wages across many sectors by European standards — even for doctors and scientists — and dilapidated roads, railways and houses.

Poland's per capita gross domestic product has risen slower than that of any other new EU member state between 2000-2006, according to a report by the Center of European Reform, a London-based think tank.
In other words, Poland needs a good deal of money from the rest of the European Union and does not hesitate to make its need known as we know from the negotiations, which ended in Britain losing part of the rebate.

Unfortunately, that is as far as Poland goes in acknowledging its membership of the European Union – rights but not duties, so to speak.
When the European Union reprimanded Poland over its bloated budget deficit at a meeting of finance ministers last week, Polish Finance Minister Zyta Gilowska was not there to listen to other EU countries chide her.

Her absence raised a few eyebrows but did not really come as a surprise.

Since being reappointed as finance minister last September, Gilowska has not turned up at a single ministerial meeting in Brussels, reflecting the go-it-alone attitude of the current conservative Polish government that threatens to drive Warsaw into isolation on issues ranging from the economy to the environment.
Mind you, as she is the fifth finance minister in 16 months, she may simply not know where she is supposed to be when.

According to the article “Brussels” is beginning to get impatient though whether it will introduce the ultimate sanction – a suspension of various structural funds – remains to be seen.

While, personally, I am delighted to have Polish workers over in Britain, I do appreciate that the country might want them back. As they all have ID cards, it ought not to be difficult to organize that. The only trouble is that a number of labour-intensive parts of the British economy, such as horticulture, vegetable and fruit growing and, of course, construction would not survive without them. So Poland’s future, complete with its historically normal attitude to other countries, remains somewhat uncertain.

COMMENT THREAD

Robbing the present

BERJAYAObligingly confirming our thesis – that our military chiefs have lost the plot - Air Chief Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, Chief of the Defence Staff, was up in front of the increasingly lacklustre House of Commons Defence Committee yesterday to give his views on the state of our forces.

Stirrup's major whinge, as noted by The Times, was that, with thousands of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan there was "not much more left in the locker". But this was not a complaint about having to meet present commitments – oh no! This was about not being able to engage in any new large-scale fighting "for some years to come".

More detail comes from the BBC website where we see our Jock articulating his concern about training for future, as yet unspecified tasks. "If we are able to reduce the operational tempo, as we hope and intend to, over the next 18 months…", he says, "then we should be in a position to reinstate some of this training." But, he adds ominously, "quite clearly we are not going to be in the business of engaging in large-scale, high-end war fighting operations for some years to come."

BERJAYAThere we have the evidence of that mindset that regards the current campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan as aberrations and which is obsessed with "real", i.e., "high-end" warfighting operations. Interestingly, our Jock, earlier in his career, served on loan with the Sultan of Oman's Air Force, operating Strikemasters in the Dhofar War, so he should know better than most what is needed for successful counter-insurgency operations.

However, you get no sense from his evidence that he is at all focused on the tasks at hand and, only if we do not reduce the overall level of commitment does he suggest that we "are going to think about the overall force structure". All the time, his primary concern seems to be the need to "train up a new generation" - no doubt, for this "high end" warfighting.

Putting this in perspective, this is rather like Montgomery complaining that the resources devoted to the invasion of Normandy were interfering with training schedules for the Korean War. That he did not know there was going to be a Korean War is precisely the point. Yet our chiefs, these days, seem to be ignoring the present, in order to deal with the unknown future.

Thus it is that we see a battle group operating in Maysan Province so bereft of air cover that it is relying on light aircraft from the Iraqi Air Force.

BERJAYAAnd while the Nato "Operation Achilles" launched yesterday is being spearheaded by British troops, we now learn (and not from the British media) that the forces are relying for their direct fire support on Canadian Leopard tanks.

This really does seem to be where the disconnect lies. While our troops have acquired the label Flintstones for the antiquity of their equipment in current theatres, our brass is more concerned about equipment (and training) for wars to come. They are, in effect, robbing the present to pay for the future heedless of the fact that, unless we deal with what is, there may not be a future.

COMMENT THREAD

Is there a lesson to be learnt there?

BERJAYAThe New York Times has an interesting story in today's paper. It is not completely unknown to those who follow such matters but neither is it written about particularly often in the media.

Jeffrey Gettleman contrasts Somalia, which has been a bloody mess (I use those words advisedly) for many a long decade and continues to be that with the possibility of African Union troops moving into Mogadishu to make it even worse help keep the current government in place with Somaliland, an area in the north-west of the country that claimed its independence in 1991 whent the most recent cycle of violence began.

Mr Gettleman describes the place as being stable and peaceful with a number of useful reforms introduced by the government of Somaliland. But he is puzzled. How can this be. After all, this area was traditionally one of the poorest in Somalia.

Furthermore, the country has not been recognized and has received next to no aid from the West, let alone the tranzis, who tend to be rather sniffy about break-away parts of African countries.

There are various problems in Somaliland, as the article points out, but compared to its neighbours it is doing very well.

Mr Gettleman is bemused:

In 1991, as Somalia’s government disintegrated and clan fighting in the south spun out of control, Somaliland, traditionally one of the poorest parts of Somalia, claimed its independence. But no country acknowledges it as a separate state and very few even contribute aid — which makes Somaliland’s success all the more intriguing.

Its leaders, with no Western experts at their elbow, have devised a political system that minimizes clan rivalries while carving out a special role for clan elders, the traditional pillars of Somali society. They have demobilized thousands of the young gunmen who still plague Somalia and melded them into a national army. They have even held three rounds of multiparty elections, no small feat in a region, the Horn of Africa, where multiparty democracy is mostly a rumor. Somalia, for one, has not had free elections since the 1960s.
Hmmm, I wonder if there is a lesson to be learnt here.

COMMENT THREAD

It ain't over yet

BERJAYAShould I want to become even more depressed about the state of political play in this country than I am, I merely need to look at the coverage of American affairs both in the MSM and on the blogosphere, consisting as it does of half-heartedly ignorant assumptions and rather superior sneering.

The coverage of the "Scooter" Libby trial was all but non-existent on this side of the Pond and, therefore, the verdict - guilty on four counts out of five - which is rightly seen by anyone who has thought about it as a travesty of justice, has elicited remarkably ignorant comments.

(When I tried to remonstrate on Iain Dale's blog, I received a good deal of personal abuse from someone who clearly suffers from Bush Derangement Syndrome. I was accused of buying into the Bush propaganda and possibly denying the truth of My Lai, Watergate and assorted other matters. I hadn't even realized there was any Bush propaganda about My Lai.)

Then again, there is little point in this blog duplicating what has been so ably by others. I suggest our readers have a look at the editorial in today's Wall Street Journal for a very cogent analysis and, above all, read Clarice Feldman's piece on American Thinker, which is ice-cold rational in its anger.

COMMENT THREAD

What the papers say

BERJAYAWe have already taken two bite-sized chunks out of the Boy King's Brussels extravaganza, an exercise, you will recall, was billed by The Times on Monday as "one of his most important speeches since becoming Tory leader".

On the morning after, though, we thought it a good idea to look at how the media had handled the event, having been slightly encouraged by the way The Sun had flagged it up as, "Cam's EU Turn".

It was too good to last. The paper does return to the event, but with a headline (above left) which must have had Team Cameron purring. In telling the story that the Boy had vowed to wrest control of "employment and welfare" back from the EU, this conveys exactly the message that must have been wanted.

That much, of course, goes to show that The Sun isn't really a newspaper – more of a current affairs comic – as it fails completely even to consider whether the Boy can deliver on his promise.

The Telegraph by contrast, seems to ignore the speech altogether. Presumably, having opening its pages to the glorious "puff" yesterday, the editors must have felt that they had done their duty by the Conservative Party, and moved on to pastures fresh. Analysis is clearly not on the agenda, so the Boy's empty promises stand unchallenged in this quarter.

BERJAYAI am beginning to warm to the newly-designed Times website which, together with the print edition, does offer something of a critical overview of the speech, but only in the context of the Tories being unable to attract any support for their "new approach" to the EU, other than the Czechs, who also happen to disagree with the Boy’s greenie stance.

As an aside, his green mantra may yet prove his biggest mistake of all – all the signs are that the bubble is about to burst, leaving the nation highly receptive to a more rational approach to environmental and related issues. But the Boy has already nailed his colours to the wrong mast.

Anyhow, back to The Times. With more fortitude than we have been able to display, they have done a better job of describing the speech (there is only so much mere mortals can take). So, unlike us, the paper flags up the plan to set up a "commission" to explore how the acquis communautaire can be challenged and "the principle that powers could be returned to members could be enshrined as a central element of the EU's legal architecture."

It is this sort of fundamental dishonesty that one would like to see challenged by the media – but not a bit of it. You do not need a commission to tell you how to go about this task. All you need to do is go through the treaties, making the necessary amendments to allow for this to happen. But the Boy must know that the most sacred precept of the EU is the inviolability of the acquis and the chances of any changes being made here are exactly nil.

Therefore, he offers the illusion of action, through an ersatz "commission", sufficient to grab headlines from a somnambulant media and enough to convince the gullible and uncaring that Dave is doing something about "Europe". Smoke and mirrors does not even begin to capture the essence of what can only be a studied deception.

The Daily Mail which one might have thought would be fairly critical (who am I trying to kid?), actually did the story yesterday, offering a "straight bat" report, which again must have pleased Team Cameron, even if it left one commenter to the website distinctly underwhelmed as he noted, "this must be the weakest speech on record".

There are further references to the speech in today's edition, tied in with a story about the German ambassador and the constitution (sounds like a bad joke). But more interesting is the flood of comments (53 at last count) which seem to indicate that the readers are far ahead of the journos in their analyses, leaving the politicians standing.

One wonders whether the Boy's gifted staff actually read the comments, for they would indicate that the ploy is not really working. Too many people have been there before, and can see through the shallow devices on which the politicians still rely.

We looked at the Guardian yesterday, so we can leave the old media with a sideways glance at The Independent. Strangely, in its short piece, it seems to have understood what is going on. "David Cameron has softened the Conservative Party's Eurosceptic rhetoric…," it writes. "…the Tory leader adopted a different tone to his predecessors but offered little prospect of policy changes." It didn't say it, but the message is clear: style but no substance.

Looking then at the blogs, or the "new media" as some like to call themselves, we see a strange vacuum in Conservative Home, the site having previewed the speech on Monday, but not followed through. Perhaps the vacuity and deception is too much for Team Montgomerie to handle. On the other hand, England Expects has not yet added to its report of yesterday and you will search in vain for any comment on the speech from Iain Dale.

Other Tory sites seem to have played it low key as well, except for the egregious Mr Hannan who, unbelievably, seems to think (if that is the right word for it) that the Boy, "appears to have pulled off that rarest of political feats: he has made a modest proposal sound every bit as reasonable as it really is."

Making it sound "reasonable" was, of course, the intention. But the idea is not actually to discuss the European Union in any sensible or honest way - simply to make a pitch that does not frighten the horses, giving the impression that something is being done, so that he can move on to safer territory.

Reasonable the Boy's proposal was not. Dishonest and self-serving it most certainly was. As for Hannan - he has to live with his own conscience. One presumes he has one.

COMMENT THREAD

May they enjoy it while it lasts

BERJAYAWhen you think of the miles of extruded verbal material produced by the "colleagues", extolling the virtues of their wonderful European "project", every now and again it is so nice to see a report which tells you, in no uncertain terms quite what a load of baloney it really is.

Courtesy of Tobias Buck, the Financial Times reporter in Brussels, we get precisely that, a report from Eurochambres, the pan-European business lobby, which tells us that the EU is still losing ground vis-à-vis its global competitors and that its economic development is only now reaching the level achieved by the US more than two decades ago.

The US, we are told, reached the EU's current level of gross domestic product per capita in 1985, the EU's employment rate and level of investment in research and development were reached by the US in 1978, and its level of productivity (expressed in GDP per employed) was reached by the US in 1989.

Furthermore, compared with the data in the first report published by Eurochambres two years ago, the time differentials have widened. The most drastic example is in R&D; spending, where it has expanded from 23 to 28 years.

Some of this can be explained by EU enlargement in 2004, when ten less developed countries joined the EU, but it also reflects the fact that the US has extended its lead over Europe in many categories, says the Eurochambre report.

BERJAYASo huge is the gap that it concludes that: "Europe would need to register monstrous yearly performances to reach the current US levels by 2010," with an annual growth rate of more than 8 percent per year, just to equalise GDP per capita. Since this is not likely to happen – cannot happen - the study warns that the EU is progressing at an insufficient pace to really compete on the world stage."

The really crazy thing, though is we did not really need the Eurochambre report to tell us this – although it does help. The European experiment has long been failing, and it has been obvious to all those who have charted its progress for some long time.

In virtually every other field of human endeavour, the project also fails, so it is only through a sustained diet of self-deception that anyone associated with it can pretend that it has any merit. Even the Emperor has given up and gone to live in a nudist colony.

But there you go. We live in strange times, when nothing seems to be real any more, and nothing has much meaning. Thus it is, perhaps, we will see another Eurochambre report in a couple of years, and it will mark an even further decline. What it cannot and will not predict, however, is when the bubble will burst and reality will come sweeping in. But surely some time, this must happen.

Until then, self-deception rules OK. May the "colleagues" enjoy it while it lasts.

COMMENT THREAD

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

How will you do that?

BERJAYAFrom the Guardian, in a piece headed, "Cameron prioritises exit from EU social chapter," we learn that the Boy today pledged that a future Conservative government would pull out of the EU social chapter as a "top priority".

But, as we reported a few days ago, UKIP's Nigel Farage has already questioned the EU commission on this, eliciting from José Manuel Barroso the following response:

The Commission assumes that when the Honourable Member refers to the Social Chapter in the Treaties, he is referring to the social provisions contained in the articles 136 to 145 of the EC Treaty. These provisions are part of the whole Treaty and cannot be isolated. All Member States are bound by the Treaties they have signed and ratified and which have entered into force, including the social provisions they contain. Consequently, a withdrawal from these provisions by a Member State would require an amendment of the EC Treaty in accordance with Article 48 of the Treaty on European Union.
Yet, in his speech to the Movement for European Reform, the Boy told his audience that his plan was: "not to posture but to persuade" in Europe.

"I believe that the best way to pursue your national interest, is not to posture - but to persuade," he said. "I will be polite, but solid and consistent. I will work to create a flexible Europe by building alliances with those who share our interests and our ideas."

"Flexibility," he continued,

…is vital in the area of worker protection, where there is such labour market diversity and demographic difference across the EU. That's why I do not believe it is appropriate for social and employment legislation to be dealt with at the European level. It will be a top priority for the next Conservative Government to restore social and employment legislation to national control.
And just how does he plan to "persuade", politely or otherwise, the European Union members to agree to a major amendment to the Treaty? How will you do that, Mr Cameron?

COMMENT THREAD

The scale of the problem

BERJAYAWe woke today to the news that Nato forces had embarked on a major operation, codenamed "Operation Achilles", which will eventually involve over 4,500 Nato troops and close to 1,000 Afghani personnel.

Says the ISAF press release, "this is the largest multi-national combined operation launched to date and it signifies the beginning of a planned offensive to bring security to northern Helmand and set the conditions for meaningful development that will fundamentally improve the quality of life for Afghans in the area."

Reuters immediately put two and two together and made five, speculating that this was the expected offensive to recapture the town of Musa Qala, which was taken by the Taliban a month ago. But this was denied by Nato, which said that Achilles was not specifically aimed at regaining the town. In fact, as ISAF itself declares:

Strategically, our goal is to enable the Afghan Government to begin the Kajaki project. This long term initiative is a huge undertaking and the eventual rehabilitation of the Kajaki multi-purpose dam and power house will improve the water supply for local communities, rehabilitate irrigation systems for farmlands and provide sufficient electrical power for residents, industries and commerce.
BERJAYAHowever, while Nato is talking up the start of an operation, the MoD has been trumpeting its activities in the Kajaki dam area for some months now. In early January, for instance, it was proclaiming: "Marine operation brings hope of electricity to millions in southern Afghanistan", reporting that Royal Marines had began their New Year by clearing villages in the area around Kajaki … enabling work to begin on a major hydroelectric dam.

This was "Operation Clay", started on 1 January, which in February mutated into "Operation Volcano". This gave the MoD, in early February the opportunity to announce that Royal Marines had cleared a Taliban base, consisting of 25 compounds, near the Kajaki hydroelectric dam, "in an effort to help bring stability and power to Afghanistan".

BERJAYAEven then, however, while the media was buying the success story, there were indications that the operation was not going well and that Nato had underestimated the capabilities of the Taliban.

Concern firmed up towards the end of February, when it became evident that individual efforts by Marine formations were being successful, but there were not enough troops on the ground to occupy positions taken. This meant that, after each attack, the Taliban were moving back in.

Now, it seems, what a Company of Marines could not achieve is having to be tackled by a force in excess of 5,000 troops. That says a great deal for the tenacity of our Marines, but it also demonstrates the scale of the problem confronting Nato as it seeks to clear of Taliban a province four times the size of Wales. If this is what it takes to clear but one tiny part, what price the rest?

About this, strangely, both the MoD and the media are, for the moment, silent.

UPDATE: The MoD has confirmed the death of a Royal Marine from 42 Commando, killed when his unit came under fire during while engaged in clearing operations in the Kajaki area. He was not involved in Achilles.

Photos: MoD

COMMENT THREAD

A fabric of lies...

BERJAYAThe Boy and his Czech partner in crime Mirek Topolanek have teamed up to write the most amazingly self-serving piece on the Telegraph website.

Headed, with execrable grammar, "Building an EU that we can all be proud of", all the predictable clichés are there. The duo want to "to pioneer a new agenda for Europe", with "key commitments for a forward-looking EU".

They lay the foundations for the usual, mythical EU that lives on in the dim fantasies of "one nation" Tories. This is the EU that is "clearly and unambiguously committed to open markets", that is "committed to a Europe of nation states" and, of course, is "more flexible". As you might have guessed, it also "should be committed to a strong transatlantic relationship".

This is their recipe for building an "EU fit for the 21st century", but it is the same old, same old 20th Century drivel that the Tories have been churning out for decades.

So familiar and predictable is it that it is an insult to our collective intelligence. As The Sun pointed out yesterday, it is a deliberate snub to the Eurosceptics, a declaration by the Boy that there is no possibility of compromise.

He has accepted nothing and is giving nothing, having abandoned any pretence of adhering to even tepid Euroscepticism. He now speaks only for that Europhile core of a Conservative Party that wants to drive European political integration. He is a leader with ideas of which Macmillan and Heath would heartily approve, and which have nothing in common with Thatcher.

BERJAYALike the EU itself, the Boy is now in his present position by dint of deception – a fabric of lies, sustained by fanatasy. Would he have won the leadership with a slogan, "Building an EU that we can all be proud of", committing himself to that task? I think not.

This is not a man with whom one can do business.

Meanwhile, England Expects has a report from the heart of Europe (pictured above right), where Dave will be wowing the crowds (not).

COMMENT THREAD

Who is to lead?

BERJAYAUnimpressed as we were by Angela Merkel's sudden enthusiasm for the EU constitution, we argued that this was simply a German chancellor protecting national interest.

And now we see Merkel again appearing to be communautaire, pushing for binding targets on renewable energy usage throughout the EU. This is to the consternation of Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary – and four more of the seven new EU member states. For them, coal remains a vital source of power, far cheaper than alternative energy sources.

Unfortunately, Merkel has bought into the anthropomorphic global warming scam and says she believes that "Europe" will not be taken seriously unless it agrees a binding target of 20 percent renewables by 2020 – enforceable in the European court.

She is determined to get agreement to act at the informal European Council - to be held on Thursday and Friday - saying that she wants the Council to demonstrate that "Europe" is willing to provide a global lead in tackling climate change.

But, given the leading role Germany is taking on this issue, one has to wonder whether it really is "Europe" that Merkel wants to be in the lead, or whether this is another way of giving Germany that position.

COMMENT THREAD

Monday, March 05, 2007

Value for money

BERJAYAAccording to a Reuters report, last weekend was a good one for the newly re-emerging Iraqi Air Force, which took delivery of five "Huey" helicopters, the first of a batch of 16 donated by Jordan.

They have been refitted with modern avionics and new engines in the United States at a cost of $3.5 million each, funded by Washington. Fitted with Kevlar armour and missile defence systems, the full upgrade makes them, effectively, new aircraft.

The remainder of the batch is expected to arrive in July and, by the end of the year, the Iraqi Air Force will have 50 to 60 helicopters, including 28 new Russian aircraft. This is very substantially more than the RAF is able to field in the region - and at an extraordinarily economic price. To refit each Huey cost $3.5 million which, says Reuters, compares to $5.9 million for a new Black Hawk configured for the US Army or $5.5 million to $7.5 million for a new Russian MI-17.

Compare those prices with the Future Lynx that the MoD intends to buy, at £14.2 ($28) million each (average price).

BERJAYA
And, if that is capability on the cheap, the Iraqi Air Force does even better with its growing fleet of fixed-wing surveillance and utility aircraft. One type operated is the Australian-designed and Jordanian-built SB7L-360 Seeker reconnaissance aircraft (above), a bargain at £450,000 each, fully equipped. This is a single-engine, two-man, high-visibility aircraft fitted with high-resolution surveillance systems, which are capable of providing live observation feedback to ground forces and additionally carry digital video recording hardware and other reconnaissance technology.

BERJAYA
Then there are the SAMA CH2000 MTSA (Military Tactical Surveillance Aircraft) (above). They are based on the Canadian design of the Zenair Zenith 2000 and are assembled by Jordan Aerospace Industries in Amman. The aircraft are fitted with a forward looking infra-red imager, a daytime TV camera capable of detecting a man-sized target at two miles range from 2,000ft, and a full military communications suite.

At only just over £363,000 each, these offer exceptional value to an emerging air force.

BERJAYAInterestingly, some of these aircraft operate from Basra Air Station. And, while one can immediately imagine any suggestion that we might acquire some would be treated with disdain, it is germane to note that they have been used recently to support British forces operating in Maysan province, carrying British Army observers (pictured).

This points up the increasingly bizarre attitude of British procurement officials who seem so wedded to buying equipment with all the "bells and whistles" that we end up not being able to afford enough kit to support our operations. We thus have to rely on our allies who are able to provide the very support we lack, with equipment that costs a fraction of what we ourselves pay.

Somewhere in the corridors of the MoD, there is someone who needs to be banging a few heads together and starting to demand value for money. Methinks his name is Lord Drayson.

COMMENT THREAD

The bigger picture

BERJAYAThe Duke of York met members of the 1st Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment in Basra on Saturday. The regiment's Colonel-in-Chief, Andrew also saw the Shaibah logistics base. A few hours later mortars and rockets hit the Basra Palace base, used by multi-national forces, in a separate part of the city.

That, amazingly, is what the BBC thinks important – missing, quite literally, the "bigger picture". That is behind his nibs - the first appearance in public of the famed Mastiff mine protected vehicles.

BERJAYAAnd, going from the sublime to the ridiculous, as well as a ride in a nice safe area in an under-armoured "Snatch" Land Rover, he gets to see the Mastiff, which has not only been fitted with extra side armour, it seems to have acquired an all-round cage of slatted armour. No wonder they have taken so long to get into service.

And, considering the RG-31 was thought to be "too big for Basra", not only has the MoD bought a bigger vehicle, it has added to its width and length with the extra armour. I guess size wasn't such a critical factor after all.

Now, if only those blokes in the berets would get out of the way, we could get a better view…

COMMENT THREAD

A self-indulgent posting

BERJAYAAlas, it reports somebody’s death but the man was 93, so may be said to have lived out his allotted span.

Today’s newspapers have long obituaries of Heinz Berggruen, the famous art collector, who, having escaped from Nazi Germany, returned in his old age and sold the bulk of his collection to the city of Berlin in 1996, despite better offers from other cities and art galleries.

Not that those other cities and art galleries have not benefited from Herr Berggruen’s phenomenal collection and outstanding generosity.

The National Gallery in London was fortunate enough to exhibit what is described in the Daily Telegraph as “the cream of his collection” for four years, 1991 to 1995. It still possesses seven Seurats as an outright gift and five Cézannes and two more Seurats on a long-term loan.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York was given some 90 Klees, an astonishing gift even by the generous standards of that establishment’s benefactors.

Two Paris galleries were given works by Giacometti, Cézanne and Klee.

In the end, however, he decided that the largest part should be housed in Berlin, the Berggruen Museum being housed in a neo-classical villa opposite the Charlottenburg Palace. The museum, as the obituary rightly points out, fills a huge gap in the German national art collections, what with the Nazis’ ban on “degenerate” art and the depredations by the Soviet Army after the war.

What caught my interest, apart, of course, from Herr Berggruen’s fascinating biography, was his reaction to the view, put forward by former Israeli President Ezer Weizmann and others that no Jew should return to Germany.

Heinz Berggruen’s view was that Germany had changed or, perhaps, reverted to her previous existence. Fifty years after the collapse of the third Reich

one can no longer turn one’s back on the country of Dürer and Goethe, Beethoven and Brahms, Gottfried Benn and Max Beckmann.
Quite so. As we have pointed out before, Germany has now been a democracy for almost sixty years and has, furthermore, had a long history before the horrors of the Nazi regime. It is necessary to acknowledge this in order to defeat that appalling offspring of World War II, the European Union, whose existence feeds on a constant reiteration of exclusively German guilt.

COMMENT THREAD

I know this is a far-off country but still ....

The result of this weekend's Estonian election is of no real interest with the new government probably consisting of the incumbent coalition. In fact, AP's reports all seem to be full of padding, though whether informing the world endlessly that

the country grapples with some of the EU's worst health statistics, including high rates of alcoholism, HIV infections and traffic-related deaths
without any proof makes Estonians particularly happy is open to question.

A more interesting aspect of the AP report is their phraseology:
Estonia's two major coalition parties were poised to stay in power Sunday after grabbing about half of the votes in the country's first parliamentary election since joining the European Union, according to partial official results.
Grabbing? Is there any evidence of fraud or use of force? And if there is no evidence, on what basis does AP describe the results as votes being grabbed?

COMMENT THREAD

It's The Sun wot's doing it!

BERJAYAAt last, one of the national dailies is waking up to the peril which our troops are facing in their bases in and around Basra, as they are rocketed and mortared daily, with a steadily increasing number of casualties.

That this newspaper is The Sun is probably helpful, as it is the largest-circulation paper, and has a strong impact on politicians, who believe (probably rightly) that it has the power to influence voting intentions.

Certainly, now that the paper has raised the issue, if there is the disaster in one of the bases that we expect and fear – where a bomb strikes a tent full of sleeping soldiers, or a crowded mess – then it will return to the issue with a strident "we told you so", which will be politically highly damaging.

BERJAYAUnfortunately, it does not look as if we are quite there yet as defence editor, Tom Newton Dunn, on a visit to Basra Palace, is obviously very much in the thrall of the British propaganda machine, highlighting the Iranian threat, which was done some time ago, rather than the lack of resources to deal with the threat.

Thus, we have Tom Newton Dunn repeat the Army's defeatist mantra that, "Most of the firing is from gardens or trucks in built-up areas so troops can't fire back." There is no sense that there are other countermeasures available or that the lack of resources represents serial incompetence on the part of successive governments, and their military advisors.

BERJAYAStill, Dunn's piece, highlighting the peril that our troops face, is at least a welcome contrast to the media silence on this issue. Perhaps while he is there, he might develop a better understanding of the lack of protection and political inertia.

That is not to say, however, that the Army is being entirely inert, given its successful action at the end of January and the raid over the weekend, but this is clearly not enough.

And, on that last raid, while the MoD website was quick to announce the success (and rightly so), it has been rather remiss in not announcing that a soldier was seriously injured by an "unknown gunman" who opened fire on him. We should not have to find this out from a press agency, what the MoD is leaving out.

Anyhow, if The Sun can do the mortar story, maybe some of the other media might be shamed into following and our glimmer of hope might blossom into reality.

COMMENT THREAD

What a coincidence

BERJAYAWith the UK Independence Party doing its best to self-destruct, under the weight of its own incompetence and the sustained assault of two Sunday newspapers, it does not seem entirely a coincidence that the Boy "we don't talk about Europe" King should come out of the woodwork with a speech about the European Union.

Billed by The Times as "one of his most important speeches since becoming Tory leader", the carefully crafted leaks tell us that the Boy "will pledge" to work with like-minded politicians to create a new European Union — one that he thinks will work for Britain and the world rather than immerse itself in distractions such as the constitution.

The actual trigger, however, is the first anniversary of the foundation of the Movement for European Reform, founded last year as a sop to those horrible critics who felt that the Boy should have honoured his pledge to withdraw the Conservative MEPs from the EPP. Instead, reneged on his pledge and set up his "movement", hoping to kick the issue into the long grass with a promise that the MEPs would leave the EPP after the 2009 Euro elections and start a new political grouping.

And so The Times tells us that this address will mark the Boy's attempt to get his party to start talking about Europe again but without becoming embroiled with sovereignty. This rather brings to mind the old joke, "Apart from that, Mrs Lincoln, did you enjoy the play"? "Apart from the threat to our sovereignty, Mr Cameron, what do you think of the EU?"

BERJAYANext thing you know, he'll be telling us we're "in Europe but not ruled by Europe".

In an attempt to pass this one by what they hope is a gullible (and disinterested) electorate, an anonymous "aid" is cited as saying: "We have not been able to speak about Europe much because in the past we have always split over it. Now we want to be pointing the way towards where Europe should be going and saying that we will change it."

From this, The Times infers that the speech "will be a clear signal" that the Boy will not take his party out of Europe and also a message to supporters who are considering deserting to UKIP that he will try to change the EU. The Sun, however, is in no doubt as to the meaning of the speech, declaring that the boy "snubs" the sceptics.

BERJAYA
That aside, it's déjà vu all over again, with the same old, same old… Working with Europe to achieve reform, little Dave is going to lead us into the sunlit uplands of a new, all-singing, all-dancing construct, made in his image, and those like him. All it needs now is the French, German, Italian, Spanish, Polish… politicians to fall back in adoration and gratitude to the Boy for sharing with them such a wonderful vision.

On the other hand, they might just ignore him completely, content that yet another British politician has lost the plot and will present no threat whatsoever to their own grandiose plans. Come back UKIP … never more has there been a need for a political party to take on these morons who believe, uniquely, that they can "reform" the EU, when all before them have failed.

COMMENT THREAD

Where have we heard this before?

BERJAYAJacques "Wheel" Barrot, the EU transport commissioner has intervened in the French presidential race, to complain that EU issues are not being given enough attention. He is warning that the candidates risk missing the chance to shake their country out of its "arrogant" and isolated position in Europe, by failing to map out "a positive French future" in the European Union.

Europe, he says (meaning the European Union) is in danger of becoming the "big forgotten issue" in the campaign, at a time when the country needs to get out of its "whingeing, pessimistic and defensive" mindset.

All this comes from the Financial Times which also records our Jacques wanting France to resume its leadership role in Europe, promoting policies that citizens care about such as giving the EU a greater role in police co-operation, immigration, protecting human rights and peacekeeping missions.

Instead, he claims the candidates – especially Sarkozy and Royal – have either played down European issues or used the EU as a scapegoat for France's problems. And, although they have set out some fairly detailed European policies, Barrot says they are not being discussed during the campaign.

This we heard of the Swedish election and know it to be true of the British general elections, where candidates rush to bury any EU issues and keep the campaign focused on domestic issues. Even the EU parliament elections can be "EU-free zones" where, famously in the 1999 elections, the Lib-Dems campaigned exclusively on those domestic issues.

Not, of course, that this is confined to election times. As Booker points out in his column yesterday, "hidden Europe" is alive and well, thriving, in fact, in government circles – to say nothing of the media in general.

And this is the week Blair toddles off to Berlin for the informal European Council at which he is expected to agree the text of the Berlin declaration that will form the centrepiece of the 50th anniversary "celebrations" of the Treaty of Rome.

At least the BBC has agreed to broadcast live coverage of the "celebrations", which is more than it did for the fleet review celebrating the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Tragalgar.

But even despite the BBC's best efforts to become a propaganda outlet for the EU, giving it advice on how to "sex up" the image of the EU parliament elections, the fact is that to the average person, European integration and all that goes with it is about as exciting as watching dried paint get even drier.

The odd thing is that this worries the "colleagues". But considering that their greatest advances have occurred while the populations of the European countries have been looking the other way, surely the fact that people find the EU so tedious is one of the greatest assets of the "project".

COMMENT THREAD

Sunday, March 04, 2007

That's more like it!

BERJAYABritish troops, we are told by the MoD have conducted a reactive strike operation after an indirect fire attack on Basra Palace.

Those involved in the attack, says the MoD, were observed and tracked to a building west of the Al Jameat district of Basra City. How they were observed, and by what means they were tracked, is not stated. But it appears to have worked.

Thus, an operation to secure this location was quickly launched. On their way to carrying out the raid the soldiers, from the 1 Staffords Battlegroup, came under attack from small arms fire and Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG) but the patrol continued to its target.

BERJAYAAt just after midnight local time, UK troops launched the operation on the property, where it was believed illegal weapons and ammunition were being stored. The raid uncovered a significant arsenal of ammunition, weapons and bomb-making equipment, hidden in a vehicle at the property. These included a 107mm rocket, 6 Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPGs), some of which were still in their primary packaging (pictured), a mortar launcher and a number of 60mm mortars.

Says Major David Gell, the UK military spokesman in southern Iraq, "I believe the operation demonstrates the ability of UK forces to deal with the threat of Indirect Fire on its bases robustly and swiftly. These people now know that if they attack us we can strike back quickly and effectively."

All we can say is it is good to know that, finally, the British Army is responding, instead of adopting the "sitting duck" position. What took them so long?

COMMENT THREAD

The Sunday "toy"

BERJAYA
Believe it or not, I stumbled on this pic while doing a routine search for RG-31 pics, picking it up off a Japanese (I think) sex site, of all places. Why this should be displayed amongst the tits and bums defies explanation, and I can no longer even find the link to let readers see it in context.

Anyhow, this is a high-definition pic (reduced here to 800 pixels – if you click to enlarge) of one of the ex-British Mambas, sold to the Estonian Army and now deployed in Afghanistan alongside unarmoured British Land Rovers - yet again underlining the lack of medium armoured vehicles in the British inventory.

BERJAYAAstute readers will notice a subtle difference in this machine – it has side windows to the rear compartment – an apparent modification to the vehicle when it was in British hands (pictured). We explored the relevance of this in another post. What this picture also shows is the relative size of the vehicle, by comparison with the Spartan APC following it. This is no Dinky Toy.

Cheaper than the Pinzgauer Vector, with far more protection, the modern equivalent of this machine, the RG-31, gives much better value than these dangerous machines, illustrating a flaw at the heart of the MoD procurement process.

The only trouble is that, opening it out to more scrutiny and giving – say – the Defence Committee a stronger role does not seem to be an option, given their inability to understand what is going on.

I am not sure I know the answer here, although we are at least aware of the nature of the problem, and beginning to understand it – which is more than can be said of the either the bulk of the politicos or the MSM.

COMMENT THREAD

You can beat a Pinzgauer

BERJAYAThe Sunday Telegraph publishes a letter today from Graeme Rumbol, Managing Director, Pinzgauer Ltd, headed: You can't beat a Pinzgauer. He tells us,

I write in response to Christopher Booker's article published in The Sunday Telegraph on October 29, 2006 questioning the suitability of an armoured variant of the Pinzgauer all-terrain vehicle which my company is supplying to the British Army. I dispute Mr Booker's assertion that Pinzgauer's Protected Patrol Vehicle offers less protection for troops than Snatch Land Rovers currently used by the Ministry of Defence in Afghanistan. Protection is an extremely sensitive area and while our vehicle has new defensive features, we are unable to talk about them publicly for very obvious security reasons.

The article also failed to recognise the renowned off-road capability of the Pinzgauer, which has not been compromised in our new armoured version, and means it can be driven out of potentially dangerous situations by traversing terrain where other vehicles are unable to go.

Mr Booker stated the price of each Pinzgauer PPV is £487,000. This figure is wrong. The purchase price for our vehicle is less than half the figure quoted by Mr Booker. He seems to have failed to take into account in his calculations that our MoD contract also requires us to supply logistical support, spares, training and other essential support services which are all built into the overall costs.

The Pinzgauer has a superb reputation and, as such, I feel it important to clarify this situation.
We're banged to rights on the price. I simply took the posted contract price from Pinzgauer's website and divided it by the number of vehicles ordered. So we cannot say that near-on half a million pounds is the purchase price – simply what each of the vehicles are going to cost the Army. We stand corrected.

BERJAYA
But, while Graeme Rumbol disputes "Mr Booker's assertion that Pinzgauer's Protected Patrol Vehicle offers less protection for troops than Snatch Land Rovers", we note he hides behind a veil of security in order to avoid giving any details. However, despite this reticence, that has not stopped his own company publishing the details in a trade brochure: see above.

BERJAYAHowever, he can dispute all he likes. The Pinzgauer Vector, as we have indicated here and here is a killer of men, the weakenss confirmed by the specification.

The topmost photograph shows an unarmoured Land Rover which has been hit by a mine. The crew survived, with the energy of the explosion absorbed by the wheel and engine housing.

In a Pinzgauer Vector, the driver sits on top of the wheel, with only thin armour between him and any mine explosion. He would most certainly have been killed by the explosion from which the Land Rover crew walked away.

Interestingly, Mr Graeme Rumbol invited us down to Guildford to see his wonderful Pinzgauers. We agreed to come, as long as he could arrange for us to see a demonstration of him driving a Pinzgauer Vector over a 7 Kg anti-tank mine (half the protection afforded by an RG-31). Strangely, we have not heard back.

Thus, it seems, Mr Rumbol is not prepared to expose himself to the risk he is quite content for soldiers in Afghanistan to face in his product, for which he is being so amply rewarded by the MoD. I wonder why that is.

COMMENT THREAD

Riots in Denmark

BERJAYAThis seems to have nothing to do with either immigrants or the Muslim community enraged by some event or another. Rather it is our old friends, anarchist “activists”, as AP describes them, though what sort of activity they engage in is unclear. Many of us might call them lay-about welfare scroungers and whingers but that would be unkind.

It all started with the Danish police evicting squatters two days ago from a house in Copenhagen that had been bought by a Christian organization six years ago. Who the new owners are is actually irrelevant. They are the owners and they would like to use their property.

Since then Copenhagen had two nights of riots and around 400 people have been arrested, 188 of them on Friday night. The Danish anarchists and “activists” have summoned their friends from other European capitals, who either went to Copenhagen to help or organized demonstrations of sympathy in their own countries, Germany, Norway, Sweden and Finland.

Last heard of there were renewed, this time peaceful demonstrations on Saturday afternoon but the police was braced for more violence.

One little lad, aged 22, who gave his name as Jan, eschewing such bourgeois habits as surnames explained:

This is a display of anger and rage after more than seven years of struggle to keep what is ours.
And it is theirs on what grounds? Did little Jan, who had been going to the house in question for years, actually work, aged 15, to earn money to contribute to the ownership and upkeep of the house, which is, in fact, badly wrecked? I think not.

Meanwhile, Charles Johnson at Little Green Footballs points to another interesting story concerning Denmark and the way it is reported by AP.

Shock horror, they announce, under the title "Cartoons still costing Denmark", Danish exports to Islamic countries have fallen 11 per cent since the publication of those cartoons.

The next paragraph tells us that, actually, exports to countries of the Organization of Islamic Conference represent only 2.5 per cent of all Danish exports, which have, in fact risen by 9 per cent in the last year. (So much, incidentally, for how the country was going to suffer if it stayed out of the euro.)

Even Arla Foods, which suffered most in North Africa and the Middle East, say that sales are bounding back in those areas.

Now, if only they can find a way of making all those anarchist "activists" work.

COMMENT THREAD

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Hooray for Hollywood!

BERJAYAMany of our readers will feel well-merited contempt when I acknowledge a weakness for the Oscars razzmatazz. I am quite looking forward to all those comments on the forum that show how superior the commenters are to me.

The reason is that I like films, though I rarely prefer films of the last thirty years to those that had been made before. Still, one likes to know what is going on in the film world (which is why I am addicted to the Libertas site) and, beside, the Hollywood luvvies are always good for a laugh.

A good deal of attention has been given to the preposterous spectacle of Leonardo di Caprio looking with deep reverence at Al Gore while presenting him with the Oscar for best documentary for “An Inconvenient Truth”. Some of those who wrote about it, including this blog, pointed out that it is highly unlikely that either of them had arrived to the presentation in a horse and buggy. It is much more likely that they and all the other luvvies, who applauded Gore to the skies, had come in large, gas-guzzling limousines, some, including Gore, having flown in on polluting Gulf-Stream jets. (Oh wait, I forget, they have all purchased carbon offsets. Or something.)

There were a few interesting aspects, not least the fact that quite a few of the prizes appeared well deserved. And, of course, we know who won the Best Actress award: our own Dame Helen Mirren, one of the best actresses of her generation, who had appeared in a spectacularly attractive dress and clutching a Union Flag. Her acceptance speech included words of admiration for the Queen, whom she had played in the eponymous film.

A successful British film (a rarity in itself these days), favourable words about Her Majesty and that Union Flag. Dear me. No wonder the film was ignored by the Commissar responsible for the Media, Viviane Reding, even though, as EU Business reports, she was quick to claim a bit of the Oscars glamour, saying that Europe’s film makers continue to “fight hard and with confidence for market success also outside Europe”. But not, of course, the British ones who show the Queen in a good light.

Well, what are these film makers and how is it that Commissar Reding can claim credit for their success?

When it comes down to it, there was only one: the winner of the Best Foreign Language Film award, a young German director, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, with his work: “Das Leben der Anderen” (“The Lives of Others”). It was noted that Cate Blanchett seemed utterly stunned when she handed over the prize. This was …. Sshhh …. Whisper who dares …. An anti-Communist film.

The main character is a Stasi officer who begins to understand the wrongness of the system he serves through one of his jobs. Needless to say, Herr von Donnersmarck was asked by the journalists whether it had any relevance to the United States under Bush and replied tactfully. One does wonder about the sheer idiocy of somebody who can ask a question like that.

One also wonders how the Hollywood luvvies took to him thanking “Schwarzenegger for teaching me that the words "I can't" should be stricken from my vocabulary”.

Now, where does Commissar Reding come in? Well, it seems that the film “benefited from the EU's Media programme of support for the European audiovisual industry”. Not, I hasten to add, in its production, which may be why the EU was omitted from the acceptance speech, but some money had been handed over to help with the distribution.

The 500,000 euros (660,000 dollars) of EU funding for the film went not to producing the film, but to help boost its distribution in cinemas and on DVDs outside Germany.
Is that enough to claim kudos for the European Community?

There are two other reasons for the EU claiming that bit of Hollywood glamour. One is that Al Gore’s somewhat hysterical “documentary” drew on some results produced by the EU-funded EPICA environmental project and the other is that “the technical achievement Oscar went to a collaborative project supported by the EU's Marie Curie Research Fellowships”.

Well, the second one is a little more complicated than that.
Dr. Bill Collis, Simon Robinson and Ben Kent from The Foundry, a British visual effects company, together with Dr. Anil Kokaram from Trinity College Dublin and video processing group Sigmedia were honoured with an Oscar for the development and design of editing software known as the Furnace.

The collaboration between the two teams was supported by the EU's Research Framework Programme through its programme of Marie Curie Fellowships.

The Furnace software helps to delete from the screen any actors, wires or other objects which the director would rather not reveal to the viewer.

The software has been used on a range of high profile films including Casino Royale, The Da Vinci Code and The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
What any of this has to do with European film-making or its achievements, is anybody’s guess.

COMMENT THREAD

A certain lack of humility

BERJAYAEven when trying to look at them charitably (not an activity for which this blog is famed), one is drawn to the conclusion that there is something very odd about the Tories and their emerging foreign policy.

That much is evident from shadow foreign secretary William Hague, who today was addressing the Welsh Conservative conference in Cardiff.

Despite having a free choice of subjects within his portfolio, Hague chose to home in on the tendentious issue of an inquiry into the Iraq war, declaring that the Tories will invite Labour MPs to support a Commons motion on one, if one is not launched by the government.

Said Hague, "supporters and opponents of the Iraq war must make sure the lessons of the invasion and its aftermath were learned", which then became criticism of Tony Blair's "sofa style" of foreign policy decision-making. As an alternative, the Tories were examining proposals for a National Security Council.

But what seems to escape Hague is that, as far as the aftermath of the Iraqi war goes, we are, in a sense, facing unknown territory. As such, we are facing a steep learning curve and are not in a position to talk about "lessons learned". Some we are still devising and, for others, we have not even completed the lesson plan.

Thus, while Hague is talking blithely about doing "our utmost to ensure that lessons are learned for the future," we need to be learning lessons now, and applying them now. If we do not, we may well not have a future.

And like it or not, the single nation most engaged in this issue is the United States. Mistakes the Americans most certainly have made but, when it comes to "learning the lessons", nowhere is the debate and the experimentation more vibrant than in the USA and in the US sectors of Iraq and Afghanistan.

It thus seems wholly inappropriate for Hague to be talking about the need for better "management" of the UK's relationship with the US. Even less appropriate is the suggestion that we need to "recover the art of managing the relationship well and making it one of permanent friendship coupled with honest criticism."

Given how far behind the curve we are in our prosecution of the war in our sectors, it seems that we are not really in a position to offer much by the way of criticism, honest or otherwise. Rather, we might be better served if we spent some time in criticising our own performance. We might perhaps benefit from a little more listening and learning, and much more humility, before we rush to the White House to offer our views.

But then, humility does not seem to be Hague, who has rehearsed this thesis before, telling us in January that we should adopt "a more critical relationship" with the United States, while developing stronger ties with increasingly influential nations like China, India, and Japan.

BERJAYAFurthermore, Hague seems to have passed on his disease to the Boy King who is currently in Israel. According to The Times, the Boy wants us to be "America's best friend but not its slave", telling it what it needed to know and not what it wanted to hear.

Once again, one can detect a certain lack of humility as he told the Israeli press that his own ties with Washington would be "solid but not slavish". One wonders whether the old-Etonian toff has stopped to think whether "Washington" will be in the mood for advice from him, and whether he has anything to tell the Americans in which they will be the least interested. Methinks he doth flatter himself.

Anyhow, while he was out doing his tourist thing in the Old City of Jerusalem, it seems a young Palestinian girl passed an opinion on the Boy's policies, rather in the manner of a certain young gentleman earlier in the week. But, if the sentiment seems rather appropriate, it also seems about as contrived as our Dave. Hands up those who think she was put up to it by a press photographer.

COMMENT THREAD

The Saturday "toy"

BERJAYA
The ballet of war? The picture shows US Army Sgt Dane Phelps launching a Raven small unmanned aerial vehicle during a joint US and Iraqi cordon and search operation in the Patika province of Iraq on 16 November 2006.

But, if anyone is under the impression that this "toy" really is a toy, the price tag of $25,000 for each of these UAVs, which weigh in at 5lb, should disabuse you.

BERJAYASo effective is this little machine – producing real-time video of the type illustrated here - that the US Department of Defense is buying another $53 million-worth, adding 2,000 to the 1,300 already in service, with the Marine Corps taking some on charge.

The Ravens are operated in threes, together with ground-control equipment, usually used by an infantry company commander. This means that each infantry battalion will have at least nine such UAVs available.

This is a significant reconnaissance force for infantry units that, a decade ago, were dependent on separate army aviation battalions, or the air force, for air reconnaissance. Now front line infantry commanders have their own air force, under their own control, another of the front line revolutions which is gradually changing the face of warfare.

This is an official DoD photograph taken by Sgt 1st Class Michael Guillory.

COMMENT THREAD

How dare they kick our boots with the seat of their pants?

BERJAYAThis story from the New York Sun is not quite about people being kicked around but the logic remains the same.

When the Israelis withdrew from Gaza to general Western rejoicing in which the EU played a major part, they decided to leave the synagogues intact. Synagogues, let me remind our readers quite unnecessarily, are holy places, as are churches, temples and, yes, mosques.

Not much noted by the liberal MSM that has spent a great deal of agonizing about Israel wishing to do repair work on similar holy places in the West Bank, most of the synagogues were wrecked by the Palestinians immediately.

Ruins of the largest two have been transformed into military bases and are used to fire rockets into Israel.

A spokesman for the local Popular Resistance Committees, Abu Abir said rather boastfully:

We are proud to turn these lands, especially these parts that were for long time the symbol of occupation and injustice, like the synagogue, into a military base and source of fire against the Zionists and the Zionist entity.
So much for the peace process that the Boy-King of the Conservative Party has been investigating.

What made me laugh (and James Taranto of the Wall Street Journal include the piece in his “Best of the Web”) was the following:
Mr. Abir blamed the Jewish state for the desecration of the Gaza synagogues by Palestinian Arabs, claiming the decision to leave the structures intact was part of an Israeli conspiracy.

Israel "left the synagogues behind so the world would see the Palestinians destroying them," Mr. Abir said.
Dead clever, these Jews.

COMMENT THREAD

Apaisement

BERJAYAReaders will recall the destructive French riots of 2005, which were triggered by when two "youths" fled from police, broke into an electrical station to hide, and then were electrocuted when they touched the wrong thing. This triggered three weeks of intense violence, with thousands of cars burned and many people injured.

As one of our readers now observes, it is almost too absurd to believe, but in the suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois, scene of the worst rioting, the French government has turned the electrical station into a monument to these two fleeing thugs who died entirely due to their own actions. "It's naked appeasement at its absolute worst," he writes.

And a few days ago, French presidential candidate Segolene Royal visited the memorial, laid a wreath on it, and commiserated with the parents of the two dead criminals.

COMMENT THREAD

Dog bites man…

BERJAYAEuropean governments have been interfering with commercial decisions in Airbus, shock!

Louis Gallois, chief executive, watching the company go down the pan and unable to make decisions in its best long term-interests, is now complaining about it. Even bigger shock!

That is the thrust of a Financial Times interview with Gallois, and all of a sudden the issue becomes very boring in its predictability.

The chief executive has attacked European governments "for haggling over the spoils at the struggling aircraft maker" without having regard to its long-term fate. He tells the newspaper: "I was very surprised to see that every government, the British, the French, the Germans and the Spanish were all saying we want the best share of the cake, we want composites and high technology and so on."

He then declares, "My job was to save Airbus and give a future to Airbus … I saw a lot of people wanting the best share of the cake and the size of the cake was not important to them. I said it was most important that in 20 years we still have an Airbus."

The way the company is going, he will be very lucky indeed – although Gallois will have moved on much earlier, if he has any sense. Already, the writing is on the wall, with the last remaining customer for the A380 freighter, UPS, calling for its order to be postponed and then, finally, according to Reuters and others, cancelling it completely, joining rival FedEx which cancelled an identical order last year.

What now transpires is that the cancellation was unexpected. UPS did agree to a delay in taking deliveries of its 10 aircraft beyond 2010, but then EADS and Airbus confirmed a news leak that Airbus would temporarily stop work on the cargo version. UPS responded with a statement saying it had lost confidence that Airbus could fill its orders in a timely manner, and decided to walk away.

Nevertheless, Airbus is exuding confidence that it can start delivering the passenger version of the A380 in October, and it will probably make that happen by dint of pouring resources into making it happen – should the unions co-operate, and not go on strike.

Even now, the company is talking about even more outsourcing, contracting and then moving work to low-cost countries, plus the prospect of enforced redundancies, something it has avoided talking about before now.

Despite all this, though, the company is asserting that there will be no delays to deliveries of the A400M military airlifter. But this is from a company that denied that there would be any delays to the A380 – and look where we are now.

The sad thing is that the world actually needs Airbus. Even the most rabid Atlanticist will recognise that handing a near monopoly of civil aircraft building to Boeing is good for no one. Competition on a world scale is very necessary for suppliers of what is a global industry.

It says something, therefore, that the company and the European governments that effectively control Airbus, through their loans to meet start up costs of each model, have made such a mess of what once looked like a successful business.

But then, European governments messing up a joint enterprise… Definitely dog bites man.

UPDATE

Spiegel Online has an interesting commentary. It cites the "left-leaning daily" Berliner Zeitung, saying: "The case of the wobbly company Airbus shows just how widespread economic nationalism is. More than that, though, Airbus says a lot about Europe itself - about how the European Union functions and about where the limits to cooperation are ..."

COMMENT THREAD

Friday, March 02, 2007

The great guru writes…

BERJAYAThis is John Keegan, who offers us an op-ed in The Telegraph today, telling us "why the US surge must defeat two enemies".

Before looking at this thesis in detail, though, we note that much of his elaborate analysis is based on observations of a General John Keane, described as "commander of US reinforcements to Iraq".

And here we have two problems. The first is slight: simply that, although there is a John Keane, he is more generally known as Jack, hence a search for the John reveals very little. But the more substantive point is that Keane most definitely is not the "commander of US reinforcements to Iraq". He is in fact former Vice Chief of Staff of the US Army but he retired in 2003 and is now a defence analyst, working for, amongst others, ABC News.

BERJAYAKeane is also credited with being one of the architects of president Bush’s new Iraq policy, so he seems eminently qualified to pronounce upon it. But, as for Keegan, one wonders whether, if he cannot even get his basic facts right, how much we can rely on what he subsequently writes.

This is no small point. We are talking here about a respected military historian working for a national daily newspaper, with its ranks of fact-checkers, the statures of which convince us that we can rely on what we read. But, clearly, we cannot.

It is thus with more than a jaundiced eye that we approach Keegan's account of events which, even if it is true, may well be distorted by emphasis on one particular aspect of Keane's observations.

Taking Keegan at face value for the moment, though, we are told that Keane was in London on Wednesday to talk about the progress of the counter-insurgency campaign and its prospects.

That you would expect, but it appears from Keegan's account that the former Vice Chief's main concern was that the United States had adopted the wrong strategy to deal with the disorders at the outset. Thus reads the account:

It tried to solve the problem by conventional military methods, using force against force in an attempt to defeat the insurgency by killing those who were waging it, when what was needed was something more like police action, providing Iraqi cities with security, so that citizens could resume their normal lives with a reasonable assurance that they would not be murdered.
That and much more can be read in the original piece but, without troubling with the working out, we can go straight to Keegan's conclusion that, if Iraq is ever to be stabilised, "it remains essential to get on top of the destructive violence". That is the object of the surge, her writes, the reinforcement of the American presence with another 20,000 troops or five brigades of combat units. Keegan then continues with his own analysis, speculating on how best the new troops can be used.

They should certainly not be dissipated in penny packets about the country and, says Keegan, Gen Keane holds strongly to the belief that the pacification of Baghdad is the key to the military problem. It is Keegan who then continues in his own words, venturing that success of the surge will be measured by the extent to which the new troops and their commanders end ethnic cleansing and sectarian killings. On the other hand, he says, full-scale offensives to tackle the militias in their home areas can only cause more civilian death and suffering - thus exacerbating the security situation. From this, he concludes:

The prospects for the US defence establishment are not heartening. While US forces do not face defeat, they are confronted with the unappetising possibility of their general war-fighting capability being eroded by years of anti-terrorist and counter-insurgency involvement at a time when the security situation of the United States world-wide is under increasing threat and the willingness of the American public to support a long drawn out and apparently profitless campaign is weakening.

Iraq is not Vietnam. The casualties are not comparable and US forces have suffered no setback such as the Tet offensive, but the atmosphere is dispiriting. What started so well has become a depressing backstreet quarrel among a people who show no gratitude for being rescued from a brutal dictatorship. The surge may achieve a transformation but no one would bet on it. Let us hope that it does not result in the need for another surge in six months' time.
All this sounds very plausible, but does it actually represent what Keane said, or even believes?

BERJAYALooking at some of his more recent statements on the issue, from instance from April 2005, we see a man who was warning that insurgents may be planning spectacular large-scale attacks to slow the momentum of recent military and political gains – possibly targeting the Iraqi security forces, which would undermine the Iraqi people's confidence in the policies of the government and the coalition.”

At that time, he expressed his main concern in this sentiment: "The worst thing we could do, now that we have truly achieved some success and momentum appears to be on our side, would be to rush to get out of the country at a time when the Iraqi security forces are not ready for that level of responsibility."

Interestingly, he then noted that the length of typical counterinsurgency wars in the 20th century "has been about 12 years. But we’re already beginning to see some success in Iraq after only two years."

By January of this year, Keane is then adding that "Defeat is unacceptable", declaring that he supported the strategy in Iraq until last year when he said he realised "we are failing." The right thing, according to Keane was "the right amount of forces and the right mission." He wanted five brigades to be moved in as quickly as possible.

BERJAYAKeane believed the facts on the ground have to be changed. He says members of the Sunni minority believe they are winning the war and they see the erosion of public support in America for the war. "We have underestimated this enemy. This political culture is not ready for representative government," Keane says.

We then get Keane again in late February, just returned from an 11-day visit to Iraq. He expresses the view that "the situation has gotten considerably more dire," but is confident that the security crackdown can have an effect, long term, on sectarian violence. "There's no doubt in my mind," he says, "we'll bring the violence down, not just a little bit, but significantly," but predicting that, "It'll probably take into the fall to secure Baghdad."

Crucially, we then get in another piece the rationale for the "surge" with Keane describing that, this time, troops would stay in the neighbourhoods to keep them safe. "We've never had enough troops to hold those neighbourhoods," he says. "But this time, the operation and the mission will be to secure the population… We will put a force in 24/7 that stays in the neighbourhoods, does not go back to its bases, and it protects the people."

Sen. Joe Biden, then calls the troop surge plan a recipe for disaster, dismiised by Keane as statements "based on ignorance." "You're telling me that there's a capital city in the world that the foremost military in the world cannot secure the population in a given city?" Keane says. "That's just rubbish."

Readers can, of course, form their own views, but the treatment Keegan affords to the situation in Iraq does not seem to gel fully with what Keane says in his own name. Keegan seems unremittingly negative about the American effort. Keane, by contrast, is frank about past failures but bullish for the future.

What is perhaps most revealing, however, is Keegan's comments about the south. "Despite the British contingent's troubles in the south, Basra is reasonably orderly," he writes. So there you have it – British good, American bad. This is just good old, sneery anti-Americanism of that upper-class establishment kind that dresses it up as analysis and friendly concern.

Would that Keegan could address himself to the failures of our own forces in Basra – if he can stop long enough to get his facts right. Then he might have less cause to be so superior.

COMMENT THREAD

It's a tax!

BERJAYAOn its front page today, The Times runs an "exclusive" on road charging, revealing that Britain "will be divided into a patchwork of road-pricing zones where drivers will be charged varying rates". This, says the newspaper, will allow the government to make motorists pay by the mile without tracking them on every road.

Ministers "believe" that a zonal system would protect drivers' privacy and deter them from rat-running in residential areas to avoid high charges on main roads. All roads in each zone would be charged at the same rate, regardless of how congested they were.

It does seem that the government has taken on board the main concern of users, which "appeared to be that road pricing would allow every driver's movements to be tracked through a satellite positioning device in each car." The idea is that that tracking could be avoided by abandoning the idea of having a complex charging system in which the price varied from street to street.

This is Dr Ladyman, the current roads minister, who does not seem to have thought this through. If the system is still based on charging per mile – as seems to be the case – then how would the system detect the mileage travelled by each vehicle, other than by tracking them?

Further, if the charging basis is levied according to zone, it ceases to be a congestion management tool. All drivers will have experienced, for instance, the flow of vehicles into a city in the morning rush hour, with the roads absolutely choked, while the opposite direction is completely clear. How could the term "congestion charge" be justified when motorists driving in either direction is charged the same?

What comes over therefore, is that this charge is going to be a tax and, if the system is to be based on the EU's Galileo system, it has the makings of an EU tax as well.

Either way, the dead hand of the EU pervades the working out of policy, even if Stephen Ladyman doesn’t always seem to understand it. He has, according to The Times also confirmed that the Government was considering a special charging scheme for foreign lorries to force them to contribute towards the costs of the road network.

Under the scheme, which could be introduced within two years, foreign hauliers would have to buy and display a permit, known as a vignette, costing about £7 a day.

That foreign trucks are a problem is indisputable, not least with reports they are now imposing road wear costs of £195 million per year.

But the minister must know that what he proposes is illegal under EU law – a similar scheme having been abandoned for exactly the same reason. No scheme can be allowed which imposes a different system for foreign trucks, otherwise this is regarded as discrimination on the grounds of nationality, which is outlawed by the Treaties.

This is one of the attractions of a universal road charging scheme, but this is going nowhere until the minister comes clean about the underlying agenda. And despite Ladyman’s determination to win the debate, he is not making a very good job of it. All he is managing to do is confirm our worst suspicions.

COMMENT THREAD

The Tories at work

BERJAYAA scene in the House of Commons this morning, during a debate on the Off-Road Vehicles (Registration) Bill. This is a private members Bill, which the government opposes, so it is unlikely every to see the light of day. However, the issue that brings it to the House is very serious – the rash of illegal off-roaders on mini-motorbike, making people's lives a misery.

That such issues should be discussed is what we pay our MPs for yet, as the "debate" progressed, it was not to get any better.

BERJAYAThe second scene is taken an hour later, when the minister, Dr Stephen Ladyman is speaking. Clearly, participation in debates is not a priority for Tory back-benchers (all of whom will undoubtedly have other, quite valid calls on their time). But one cannot avoid taking the view that, if none at all can be bother to show up for this, are they really interested in what we think about anything else?

COMMENT THREAD

French is the one

BERJAYAAn "elder statesman of French literature" - who fought for the Resistance in World War II - is gearing up to do battle again, this time in Brussels, or so we are told by the IHT. This is Maurice Druon who, at 89 years of age, is campaigning to make French the supreme language of legal documents in the European Union.

He is a member the Académie Française and the author of 60 books – which means most of them must be crap – and has been joined by "an unlikely assortment of Francophiles, politicians, and aristocrats". Among them are Nicole Fontaine, a former president of the European Parliament; Otto von Habsburg, a descendant of the German royal house; Antoinette Spaak, daughter of Paul-Henri Spaak, a founding father of the EU and once a Belgian foreign minister; and Bronislaw Geremek, a Polish historian.

The IHT tells us they support his proposal that French should become the deciding language when there are differences over what a legal document actually means - all the more so in an expanded EU of 27 countries, where French is struggling to retain its historic primacy alongside the EU's 22 other official languages, including Maltese and Gaelic.

"Italian is the language of song, German is the language of philosophy, and English is good for poetry, but French is best for precision," Druon is cited as saying. "French should be the authoritative language for law because it is related to Latin - in which Roman law was written - and it was also the language of the Napoleonic Code."

Right! And the French word for "internet" is?

COMMENT THREAD

Self deception

According to the BBC website (and news bulletins) an "indirect attack" – i.e., mortar or missile fire - caused a large fire at a British military base in Basra.

This was a petrol storage area at the Shatt al-Arab Hotel base and the strike occurred at 1800 local time (1500 GMT) on Thursday. However, there were no casualties and "no impact whatsoever on operations", a spokesman said.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the MoD in London said "Commanders at the base decided, because no-one was at direct risk at the time, that they would let the fire burn out". Some petrol and diesel stores were lost, but there was no structural damage to buildings, he added.

So… "no impact whatsoever on operations". And who are they kidding, apart from themselves?

COMMENT THREAD

Collective realization

BERJAYAIt was in early February that we reported on the US Marine Corps plan to buy over 4,000 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles for US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

At the time we focused on the much admired RG-31, but the USMC actually issued contracts to nine vehicle makers in a major competition for what could eventually be a $6 billion order.

News of the moment is that the USMC has now issued further contracts to five companies on the original list, three being added on Wednesday. The largest of these three went to Protected Vehicles in North Charleston, South Carolina, which won $37.4 million to make 60 trucks. It is offering a vehicle called the Golan (see also here), produced in partnership with the Rafael Armament Development Authority in Haifa, Israel, and Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio (pictured above).

As you would expect, this news has been ignored by the MSM, although it was picked up by the Arab media which reported that Israel was to supply the US Marines in Iraq with specially equipped armoured vehicles.

BERJAYAOther winners, according to Bloomberg, are General Dynamics and Oshkosh Trucks. General Dynamics got an order to produce 20 variants of the RG-31s while Oshkosh, which builds a range of trucks for the US military, is to supply the 13-ton Bushmaster armoured vehicle currently in use by the Australian Defence Force and Dutch Army. The two companies which have already been given add-on contracts are BAE Land systems, for its RG-33L (pictured), and Force Protection, with its Cougar series.

Each of the vehicles have the common features of a raised chassis and V-shaped hull. This, as Defense Industry Daily points out, marks a "collective realization" sinking in that up-armouring flat-bottomed vehicles which are not designed to take that kind of weight, and which have strict limits on the level of protection they can ever provide, is an inadequate response to the need for blast-resistance.

That "collective realization", however, barely extends to the British military, and has completely eluded the British media, whose defence correspondents seem blissfully unaware of a military revolution going on right under their noses. Thus, in the fullness of time, the US military will have replaced every one of its Hummers engaged on tactical duties with a new breed of vehicles, without the media even noticing.

And still, I suspect, the British politico-military establishment - as it continues to send young men to their deaths in wholly inadequate vehicles - will be preening itself on its intellectual superiority over those crass Americans.

COMMENT THREAD

Carbon credits - the new indulgences

BERJAYAAs every schoolchild ought to know, on October 31, 1517 Martin Luther wrote to Albert, Archbishop of Mainz and Magdeburg, protesting against the sale of indulgences in the bishopric. What has caught the imagination of posterity is Luther also nailing the 95 Theses to the great door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg.

Briefly, indulgences were among the most obvious of the many corruptions the Church was suffering from: documents produced by the Papal Curia that, if bought, supposedly allowed people not to suffer for their sins in Purgatory. You could buy them for yourself or others.

So, errm, what has that to do with the modern world. This is not even the anniversary. Well, there are new indulgences around. They are called carbon offsets. Here is a longish piece about the whole phenomenon.

COMMENT THREAD

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Israel's temporary Arab president

BERJAYAHere is the reason why we support Israel: it is a democracy and it is most emphatically not an apartheid state. Anyone who says that (and yes, I do mean former President Carter, possibly the worst twentieth century president the United States had) knows nothing either about Israel or about apartheid.

Arab Kadima Knesset member Majallie Whbee

will serve as ceremonial President until next Tuesday, while acting president Dalia Itzik is in America. Itzik took over the position from Moshe Katsav after he temporarily suspended himself following the Attorney General’s announcement that he may be indicted on multiple charges including rape.
In an interview Majallie Whbee showed himself to be proud of the position he has reached and of his country, Israel, though, sensibly, he pointed out that there were many political problems in the country at the moment.

He served in the parachute division of the IDF and rose to the rank of colonel (not a sissy, then). He has plans for his week as president:
Although he will only hold the position for a week, he said he wanted to use the opportunity to try and make some inroads in the peace process, and had already organised meetings with the Jordanian and Egyptian Ambassadors to Israel.

"I believe I can increase the confidence of the relations between the two sides," said Whbee, who first entered politics in 1995 as an assistant to then Minister of Infrastructure Ariel Sharon. "I can talk to these representatives more openly and put my points on the table."

As a Kadima MK Whbee espouses the views of the government and said he was planning to tell the Jordanian and Egyptian ambassadors that he believed there "will be no hope for the peace process" unless Hamas recognises the State of Israel.
I wonder what the ambassadors will say in response.

COMMENT THREAD

One dead fox

BERJAYAAsked by Nigel Farage – who does have some use, occasionally - whether the Boy King could lead us into the sunlit uplands by taking us out of the Social Chapter, no less than el presidente Barroso responded on behalf of the EU commission, telling the UKIP leader:

The Commission assumes that when the Honourable Member refers to the Social Chapter in the Treaties, he is referring to the social provisions contained in the articles 136 to 145 of the EC Treaty. These provisions are part of the whole Treaty and cannot be isolated. All Member States are bound by the Treaties they have signed and ratified and which have entered into force, including the social provisions they contain. Consequently, a withdrawal from these provisions by a Member State would require an amendment of the EC Treaty in accordance with Article 48 of the Treaty on European Union.
That's rather shot Cameron's fox, methinks.

COMMENT THREAD

A matter for contempt

BERJAYAIt is rather typical of the left-wing press to salivate over the prospect of a Vietnam-style meltdown in Iraq, hence the enthusiasm displayed by The Guardian this morning in elevating to its front page the comments of "an elite team of officers advising the US commander, Gen. Petraeus" that they have six months to win the war in Iraq.

But if that is the case, at least the United States is still looking at a recoverable situation, where it is working for a winning solution. It is prepared to put the resources and, as importantly, the intellectual capital, into beating the enemy. And, amongst the tangible measures the US is planning to take, we learn from The Guardian is that they are preparing for the possible southwards deployment of 6,000 US troops to compensate for Britain's phased withdrawal and any upsurge in unrest.

What an extraordinary contrast this makes with the statements made by the secretary of state for defence, Des Browne, in response to oral questions put to him by Ann Winterton during Defence Questions on Monday. Then, he was asked:

Is not the case that the military have almost lost the ability to fight an insurgency war, and are certainly inadequately equipped to do so? This, coupled with the present rules of engagement, makes it well nigh impossible to make progress in this theatre, and that is not good for the security situation as a whole.
Browne, predictably, did not agree with the "hon. Lady", declaring:

Our troops are simply not ill-equipped. We have introduced a range of new systems over the past few years that have enhanced our troops' capability quite significantly—for example, new body armour, underslung grenade launchers, night vision equipment, light machine guns, ballistic eye protection and a range of other offensive and defensive systems, not to mention the progress that we have made in past months in relation to protected vehicles.

Equally, I do not accept that our military are not capable of undertaking counter-insurgency work. Indeed, the contrary is the case. In my view, the British military are the best in the world at undertaking counter-insurgency.

That is why General Petraeus, who is in charge of the coalition forces in Iraq, has drawn substantially on our counter-insurgency strategic approach to inform the way in which the American military will now operate. The evidence of that is the improvement that our troops have made in the south-east of Iraq, and we should not underestimate the achievement for which they have been responsible. It has allowed us to announce the draw-down that we were able to announce last week.
BERJAYAThis latter statement is either the most extraordinary hubris, or indicative of a dangerous, almost unbelievable layer of corporate self-deception. Only yesterday, for instance, did we hear of the inquest of Privates Joseva Lewaicei and Adam Morris, 19, both killed in a roadside bomb in Basra, last May, two more casualties of "Snatch" Land Rovers.

But what is absolutely chilling is that, according to the AFP report (the only report we have seen), the inquest was told that it had become too dangerous to send officers from the Army's Special Investigation Bureau into Basra to recover evidence of how the attack had been mounted.

That, however, is just another tiny little indicator of how, from early last year at the very latest, the British military authorities lost control of the city. Since then, soldiers venture onto the streets only when necessary and then, as the The Independent recorded this weekend, in armoured convoys. Gone completely is the "soft" approach of troops patrolling on foot without helmets.

BERJAYAThat much we know, but the latest death of a soldier, Rifleman Daniel Lee Coffey – the first to be killed while riding a Bulldog APC, shot while acting as "top cover", tells us something else. In the first instance, the unfortunate Coffey was not killed immediately, but died of his wounds a day later. Only then did the MoD make a public announcement. Had Rifleman Coffey survived, no matter how grievously injured, we would have heard nothing at all of the incident.

As we have remarked before, with the improvements in trauma medicine and the availability of world-class front-line medical care, the death to injury ratio is lower than in comparison with other wars, giving a false impression as to the lethality of this campaign. More to the point, this means that we are not being told anything like all that is going on.

That said, it is evident that the battle for southern Iraq has been lost by the British Army. That leaves our troops forced to skulk in their barracks, while it looks like the Americans are having to move in to bail us out. Their reward is to have our sooooooo superior media mock their efforts, while the secretary of state for defence claims credit for teaching them how to do their work. He then pretends that our Army has somehow scored a great success, as a prelude to its running away from the battle.

It is difficult to decide which is more contemptible.

COMMENT THREAD

Airboom or bust?

BERJAYAAs expected, Airbus Chief Executive Louis Gallois yesterday announced his much delayed "Power8" plans to restructure his ailing company, shedding 10,000 jobs in the process. The jobs comprise 5,000 directly employed staff and 5,000 workers contracted from other firms and redundancies will be phased over the next four years. Additionally, Airbus intends to sell all or part of six factories.

Most of all though, Gallois railed against the "nationalist infighting" that had dogged the company from its inception, a "poison" that threatened to destroy it. "We need to be interested in the future of Airbus and for that we need to be one integrated company," he said

Despite the unions having been fully involved, and a careful spread of the job cuts to ensure equity between plants (to the detriment of the overall restructuring), there were still protests at Airbus factories in France at Meaulte and St. Nazaire. Jean-Francois Knepper, chairman of the European works council warned that there would be strike calls. But, he said, "perhaps a strike is not enough,"

BERJAYABritain is to lose 1500 jobs, but the plant in Filton, near Bristol, is being given extra work, making carbon fibre composites for the wing of the A350. Other deals include setting up the main plant in Toulouse, France, for sole assembly of the A350 while the Hamburg plant will build the smaller A320.

These, however, are only the headline issues. Gallois is also committed to slashing operating costs, targeting reductions of € 2.1 billion from 2010 onwards and additional € 5 billion of cumulative cash flow from 2007 to 2010. Although much of this will come from reducing the headcount, operational efficiencies are also needed.

Therein lie some of the risks, as Airbus is considered by some commentators to be light on engineering and development skills, and is hard pressed to manage the A380 remedial work, the A350 redesign and the ongoing development for the military airlifter, the A400M.

BERJAYASome of the slack will be made up by outsourcing some of the structural development and manufacture to risk-sharing partners, which will roughly double, while "lean manufacturing" is planned in the remaining plants, bringing expected productivity increase of 16 percent by 2010.

Yet, despite Gallois wanting to leave national infighting behind, he has been forced to maintain inflexible national work-share arrangements, which suggests that he has not yet got a complete grip on the company with is dominated by Franco-German politics, so much so that both Merkel and Chirac had to be consulted over the job cuts

The proof of the effectiveness of the changes, however, will be in whether the company can claw back some of the business it is losing to Boeing, and make up time on some of its projects. Little can be expected of the A380 but, in the wings, serious decisions are awaited as to the fate of the A400M, which looks like coming in late, overweight and short on range and payload.

Far from being out of the woods, therefore, Airbus may be heading for even more stormy waters, with its troubles only just starting.

COMMENT THREAD