OLDER
                                                      POSTS
SYRIA: Intervention
                                                      postponed?                                   
                                                      Sept 10 2013
 
It is
                                                      indeed boring to hear that Obama stepped back after having decided to strike Syria. 
                                                      Instead facts show that he used every tool he
                                                      had to gain time for a political solution even if currently Russia
                                                      looks
                                                      like the peace broker in the region this time. 
During this
                                                      valuable historic week between the attack which certainly obliged him to
                                                      publicly assure the world that he was going to remain true to his commitment to
                                                      act and the return of Congress from their summer recess on September 9th, he
                                                      had the chance to assess that there was no support for this initiative. He did
                                                      go through the motions of briefing members of the Congress on Aug 30th,
                                                      31st, September 1st and Sept 2nd and announcing
                                                      that he wants to share the responsibility with Congress – as he is entitled by
                                                      the constitution to act alone if he so chooses, he is equally entitled not to
                                                      use this right if he decides not to - and then he met with Putin – all that
                                                      before the 9th. 
Britain’s Milliband
                                                      told journalist Christian Amanpur that
                                                      it was the decisiveness of the US
                                                      government that persuaded Putin that they were serious about the attack and led
                                                      him to make this offer – which was immediately taken up by Syria
                                                      – the country has already promised to join
                                                      the chemical weapons’ convention with Russia
                                                      assuming the responsibility to monitor Syria’s
                                                      promise.
 
Whether one
                                                      decides to believe this or not is not that important at this point. The
                                                      important thing is that even if it takes a very long time to have the Syrian
                                                      chemical weapons destroyed, now Assad’s alliances are in a different place. –
                                                      for the present.
 
In his
                                                      second presidency Obama has acquired the experience that intensification in war
                                                      does not necessarily guarantee success. In order to avoid an unsupported
                                                      intervention in a country which balances extremism with legitimate rebellion,
                                                      sometimes leadership may have to be flexible. 
 
Isn’t it
                                                      reasonable to think that Assad would save face accepting a suggestion to submit
                                                      his chemical arsenal to the west that came from his ally Russia instead
                                                      from the USA? 
Isn’t it
                                                      reasonable to think that the UN Security Council can now come to a resolution
                                                      without any veto distractions if asked to impose on Syria
                                                      to turn over its chemical weapons
                                                      to the west in complete declaration while warning of heavy sanctions in case of
                                                      disobedience? (France
                                                      is already drafting the question as Obama was speaking.)  A question to invade Syria would
                                                      never get a positive answer and this international organization would seem -
                                                      and be - incapable to help. 
 
If this
                                                      doesn’t work, Obama will have to reveal the evidence that Assad gassed his
                                                      people – because the American people demand to know - and things may then take
                                                      the course of war. Time meanwhile will tip the situation with the now
                                                      quasi-willing countries one way or another and the US Congress will then share
                                                      the responsibility for the final decision.
 
Timing was
                                                      everything again – should one thank the stars that the chemical weapons attack
                                                      happened while Congress was in recess? Maybe. It is not easy to guarantee that
                                                      an intervention will not go down a slippery slope. An intervention in a civil
                                                      war is not a ballet on eggshells where one targets what one should and
                                                      successfully avoids what one shouldn’t: 
                                                      anything can go wrong any time. The military knows that and people who
                                                      have been in war-torn countries know that too.
 
Having said
                                                      that, one cannot ignore the question of the Syrian rebels which remains
                                                      unanswered: “Chemical weapons killed 1500 – conventional ones have killed
                                                      100,000. Why hasn’t the west intervened sooner?” 
 
SYRIA ATTACK: 
QUESTIONS
                                                      ASKED AND TO BE ASKED              
Sept 2 2013
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      -Obama delays decision by one week to
                                                      get Congress’s approval
                                                      and authorization although he is constitutionally covered to act independently:
                                                      is it a thoughtful move since the question of intervening in the internal
                                                      affairs of a sovereign state for violation of international agreements and
                                                      humanitarian emergency at all costs (meaning: not considering the consequences
                                                      in the other countries of the region and beyond-see eventual retaliations
                                                      against Western interests or current internal repercussions in France) has been
                                                      answered differently by different schools of thought – or is it a retreat?
                                                      -If resolutions of the UN Security Council can
                                                      be bypassed, should the role of certain international organizations be
                                                      reviewed? Or would reviewing them open Pandora’s Box and the mere process could
                                                      be manipulated to accommodate different interests at different circumstances?
                                                      -Congress authorizes attack: will the US act with the support of
                                                      merely France, Turkey
                                                      and the blessings of Australia
                                                      and the Arab League that so far have only expressed dismay over the chemical
                                                      warfare?
                                                      -Congress does not or it narrowly authorizes attack:
                                                      what will this mean for the dissidents within the two parties, the president
                                                      and the role of USA
                                                      as a global player?
                                                      -Attack happens: what are the targets? Military
                                                      installations may be easily located and will still be there even after one
                                                      week, but what if some targeted buildings are used as shelters for civilians?
                                                      How will the missile tell what to hit if the use of the building has been
                                                      modified? Will the presidential palace be a target too? Artillery though can
                                                      and allegedly is already being moved around and eventually into shelters that
                                                      are too difficult to locate in the Syrian mountains. In this case will the
                                                      one-week delay of strike 
                                                      -Attack happens: it has to be brief unless
                                                      Congress has authorized war. What if despite any Syrian casualties Assad
                                                      celebrates the end of the brief attack as his regime’s victory against the
                                                      American invasion?
                                                      -Attack happens: the message that the US is
                                                      serious against perpetrators of similar chemical warfare has been sent again
                                                      through the Iraq war ( Saddam also used chemicals against his people).Regimes
                                                      do not seem to have been listening. Would they listen now?
                                                      -Attack happens yet rebels’ ranges include
                                                      extremists such as Al Nusra (although this one not that popular any more): how
                                                      can the US continue to fight
                                                      against the Islamists in other countries if in Syria
                                                      it attacks Assad’s regime
                                                      that attacks Islamist groups? 
                                                      -Attack happens or it doesn’t: is there a
                                                      foreign policy plan for the Middle East region or is the US
                                                      blackmailed
                                                      into engaging in undesirable wars through the use of chemical weapons by any
                                                      group that pressures the big international players to take sides?
                                                      -Is this week of delay Obama’s way to postpone
                                                      an immediate “jerky” response while a diplomatic/political solution is being
                                                      considered?
                                                      It is going to be a long, long controversial
                                                      Fall. 
                                                      
                                                      
EGYPT  
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      In the case of Egypt, the question maybe
                                                      shouldn’t be “coup” or “no coup” but “invited “ or not “invited” coup.
                                                      That
                                                      might take care of a lot of technicalities since, after all, the term is not
                                                      included in the U.S. law which bars "any assistance to the government of
                                                      any country whose duly elected head of government is deposed by military coup
                                                      d'etat or decree."
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      As Huntington has insisted, “ the
                                                      most
                                                      important causes of  military intervention are not military but political
                                                      and reflect [….] the political and institutional structure of the society”.
                                                       Or, in other words, wherever there is a void, there is an opportunity/
                                                      chance / excuse for intervention. Yet, not all military regimes are everywhere
                                                      the same: some champion the poor while others have supported wealthy corporate
                                                      and landowning interests. The probability of military involvement depending,
                                                      among others, on class origins, educational levels, ideological orientations
                                                      and internal organization of the officer corps, it is also a fact that, especially
                                                      in the developing countries, the armed forces offer great organizational
                                                      coherence and clarity of purpose: this is their strength but also their failure
                                                      to appreciate the functional aspects of the game of politics. Civilian
                                                      political institutions on the other hand do not regard things in terms of black
                                                      and white: this is one of their virtues and vulnerabilities.
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      In cases of external enemy, civilian
                                                      institutions have been able to exercise control over the military but when the
                                                      military is trained to fight for internal security, it is invariably taught on
                                                      domestic political and economic issues: involvement in domestic politics is
                                                      only a step away: to restore and maintain order and stability, to punish
                                                      corruption, to promote specific policies and economic development – successful
                                                      results not necessarily guaranteed, tensions almost sure. And, in the case of
                                                      Egypt, to become the vehicle for the expression of the majority of the
                                                      population which decided to oust Mursi.
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      If / When a legitimate government emerges
                                                      in
                                                      Egypt and the country is not run by decrees any more, the military may go back
                                                      to the barracks: “mission accomplished”, this was a “caretaker” coup (?),
                                                      foreign aid (especially the  US one) continues to come in therefore the
                                                      military remains financially strong as does its image ( no failed governance
                                                      tests risk due to prolonged stay) : but will the national political culture of
                                                      Egypt develop a strong belief in the unique legitimacy of the procedures for
                                                      the transfer of power (such as elections) and in the capability of sovereign
                                                      individuals and institutions to legitimately hold that power?  And how
                                                      strong can civil society (meaning the associations, unions etc that can act
                                                      independently of the government) become if the Muslim Brotherhood does not develop
                                                      a moderate leadership?  
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Unless the Egyptian civil society heads
                                                      in
                                                      this direction, the state of the economy and the fractioned opposition may
                                                      create the demand for the next leader to step down too – but what if an interim
                                                      ( or not ) situation supported by the military is still there? Just before
                                                      Mursi, the army offered to help govern a country in disarray for three months
                                                      and it stayed on for seventeen. Will agreements with the international
                                                      community ( economic and political)  be legitimate and binding for the
                                                      next government or will this have to wait? If so, what will happen in the
                                                      country in the meantime with people waiting in line due to gas shortage and the
                                                      huge percentage of the population - the young ones-  is un- or
                                                      underemployed? And most of all, how will the clash of secular versus religious
                                                      values be handled? The interim president already talked about a new ‘ethos” –
                                                      implementation details to be seen to while the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood
                                                      is in jail, maybe just for now, and TV stations have been raided.
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      If the young democracy of Egypt is in
                                                      a
                                                      process of “political learning” – and for that matter, the “political Islam” is
                                                      currently learning too: a failure  does not necessarily mean the end
                                                      -,  civilian leaders may  understand how to avoid future military
                                                      interventions. 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Until then,
                                                      countries may have or not have a
                                                      coup, depending on what the domestic and foreign policy of other international
                                                      players decide to call it.
                                                      
                                                      ( July 4
                                                      2013)
                                                      
                                                        
                                                      SNOWDEN:
                                                      
                                                      Venezuela explains why
                                                      they offer sanctuary / humanitarian asylum to Snowden - Nicaragua "would
                                                      consider". Will snowden qualify as a refugee or as an asylum seeker? The
                                                      difference promises an interesting legal battle:'owing to a well-founded fear
                                                      of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a
                                                      particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his
                                                      nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail
                                                      himself of the protection of that country'
                                                      Article 1, 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
                                                      An asylum seeker is someone who has applied for asylum and is waiting for a
                                                      decision as to whether or not they are a refugee
                                                      
                                                      A refugee is a person
                                                      who:
                                                      
                                                      'owing to a well-founded fear of being
                                                      persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a
                                                      particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his
                                                      nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail
                                                      himself of the protection of that country'
                                                      
                                                      Article 1, 1951 Convention Relating to the
                                                         Status of Refugees
                                                      
                                                      An asylum seeker is someone who has applied
                                                      for
                                                      asylum and is waiting for a decision as to whether or not they
                                                      are a refugee. 
                                                      
                                                      And, on a different note:
                                                      
                                                      Snowden
                                                      speaks: “…"No matter how many
                                                      more days my life contains, I remain dedicated …”  Will the provisory
                                                      protection of this trap
                                                      shield him from an accidental accident?  who:
                                                      'owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race,
                                                      religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political
                                                      opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing
                                                      to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country'
                                                      Article 1, 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
                                                      An asylum seeker is someone who has applied for asylum and is waiting for a
                                                      decision as to whether or not they are a refugee.who:
                                                      'owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race,
                                                      religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political
                                                      opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing
                                                      to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country'
                                                      Article 1, 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
                                                      An asylum seeker is someone who has applied for asylum and is waiting for a decision
                                                      as to whether or not they are a refugee.
                                                      
                                                      ERT 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      The after-ERT era: public broadcaster
                                                      closed
                                                      down in cash-strapped Greece.
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      No doubt that the country’s financial
                                                      survival
                                                      is a priority but selecting the sector to restructure can be tricky if the policy
                                                      of selling out is to be avoided: an ideal success of public broadcasting in the
                                                      marketplace by definition equals questioning the media credibility as
                                                      commercial gains can carry the cultural cost of selecting the creation of the
                                                      most profitable product. 
                                                      
                                                      On the other hand the long history of
                                                      public
                                                      broadcasting has often been accused of becoming the “porte-parole” of
                                                      governments financing ( partially or entirely) its maintenance. Let’s see if
                                                      the new format suggested by the Greek government can guarantee not only lower
                                                      cost but also enough diversity (“enough” to be defined), creative risk-taking
                                                      and less reliance on established, profit-guaranteeing formats - and still stay
                                                      faithful to the philosophy of public media: that is, to address their audiences
                                                      first as members of moral and political communities as opposed to private media
                                                      where viewer equals consumption unit. For both the challenge should be how to
                                                      balance impartial information with profit versus chameleon-like politics and
                                                      profiteering - and for both, profit based on the culture of impartial
                                                      information dissemination is possible especially in these “globalized” times
                                                      when people question more – almost everything. 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      In this sense, it is fortunate that the
                                                      affordability of accessing the social media makes it the third important
                                                      information provider and opinion-exchange / collective-debate ground. Actually,
                                                      it may have already become the first provider as long as the user can tell one
                                                      reliable individual source from another. 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Thank you
                                                      Greek government for restarting the
                                                      debate.
                                                      
                                                      CYPRUS:
                                                      AFFORDABLE AND
                                                      NON-AFFORDABLE  LOSSES IN SUCCESSFUL
                                                      BAILOUTS. 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Cyprus chain effect still
                                                      feared in other
                                                      countries and it is not Tuesday yet when the banks in Greece will open. The cut
                                                      may correspond just to a two-year interest and be lower than the austerity
                                                      measures requested from Greece but the psychological impact on the people is
                                                      stronger. It is about choosing to impose discipline instead of inspiring it. It
                                                      is not only about money, it is about the loss of trust in institutions, one of
                                                      the cornerstones of a regime’s legitimacy. 
                                                      The measure to take may be practical and indeed the only one in this case: it
                                                      just doesn’t seem…..smart.
                                                      
                                                      CHAVEZ 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      They called
                                                      him defiant and a populist.
                                                      
                                                      He had enough petrodollars available to
                                                      practice oil diplomacy abroad seeking independence for Venezuela and other
                                                      Latin America countries and he helped launch Banco del Sur, a development bank
                                                      funded and run by Latin American countries as an affordable, a source of aid
                                                      alternative to the unpopular measures required by the IMF and the World Bank to
                                                      become fully operational by April 2013 (1)
                                                      
                                                      He was called
                                                      defiant. 
                                                      
                                                      He had enough petrodollars to fund health-care
                                                      for millions of slum dwellers, education for the thousands of illiterate people
                                                      of the rural and urban population and job training programs in his oil-wealthy
                                                      country where 61% of the people survived on a few dollars a day, many without
                                                      running water. His “missions” acted as a parallel government and were
                                                      controlled by him. They provided hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans with
                                                      monthly stipends to learn everything from reading and writing where to setting
                                                      up cooperative farms. (He also started a program to sell cheaper heating oil to
                                                      low-income households in Boston, Mas. USA in 2005 – yes, as in Boston, Mas, USA
                                                      (2)
                                                      
                                                      He was called a
                                                      populist.
                                                      
                                                      He borrowed the term ‘endogenization”
                                                      from
                                                      economics: a process from within the economy with products from within for the
                                                      people within and applied it in his own version as opposed to changes brought
                                                      by globalization that was for the investors, not by globalization for the
                                                      people. And he discouraged consumerism of foreign products in favor of local
                                                      food (3) - in a very difficult effort to beat the powerful hegemonies in the
                                                      market.
                                                      
                                                      Were the programs costly? Yes. Were millions
                                                      of people given an opportunity to live better for the first time? Yes. Did he
                                                      manage to capture the trust not only of the poor but of the middle class as
                                                      well? Yes again. The last election percentages were 55% for Chavez, 48% for the
                                                      opposition.
                                                      
                                                      It would require a more extended article
                                                      to
                                                      refer to the evaluations of the economic ups and downs of applied “Chavism” and
                                                      the degree of democracy Chavez governed at. But democracy versions are way more
                                                      than one as are the versions of political culture and socio-economic
                                                      circumstances.
                                                      
                                                      Because he didn’t stay in –
                                                      and return to -
                                                      power by accident, Chavez’s legacy will indeed be there even if his opponent
                                                      Capriles who favors Brazil’s centrist mix of free-market economics with strong
                                                      welfare policies were to become his heir instead of Maduro, named successor by
                                                      him. 
                                                      
                                                      In the meantime – and even beyond-
                                                      the
                                                      question however could be: when is the populist a patriot, when is independence
                                                      a synonym for defiance?
                                                      
                                                      You may not like the “Chavez”
                                                      doctrine or you
                                                      may simply hate it for very good reasons – yet Greeks used to say: “Αλλ’απ’εχθρόν δητα πολλά μανθάνουσιν οι σοφοί» (Aristophanes) “The wise learn many things
                                                      from their enemies”. 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Now that could be a helpful
                                                      statement. 
                                                      
                                                      Italian
                                                      elections
                                                      impasse 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      
                                                       - In bicameral Italy, where there
                                                           is no way to govern when the constitution of the two Chambers provide a
                                                           different majority, scenarios  have been considered even before the
                                                           electoral process began, yet the results have surprised many –except for
                                                           those who were listening to the unofficial voice circulating for some
                                                           time: it could be that the polls were way wrong because many people 
                                                           eventually did not want to say it out loud that they would be voting for
                                                           Berlusconi, mainly because of the scandals, yet, they might see him as an
                                                           alternative to instability – figures will show whether  the high
                                                           percentage of the  really undecided boosted Grillo. Stability is not
                                                           happening and the immediate scenarios are logically either a return to the
                                                           polls or an attempt a form of “governissimo” that would include Bersani,
                                                           Berlusconi and Grillo ( or his representative since he can’t participate
                                                           in person due to a previous legal problem – he won’t anyway as he 
                                                           already said). Reactions of the party and coalition leaders show that none
                                                           of them seems to like any of these scenarios: elections again would
                                                           paralyze the country starting now, a “governissmo” would lead to the same
                                                           a little later due to lack of capacity to make policy decisions and the
                                                           fact that the constitutional powers of the president of the republic 
                                                           just leave enough room for consultation  as an effort for the
                                                           resolution of crises.
 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      So, in search
                                                      of a third scenario  in
                                                      Italy already while the Vatican is  entering its own challenging 
                                                      historic phase. 
                                                      
                                                      No wonder
                                                      Aetna  has started smoking
                                                      again.
                                                      
                                                      (26 February 2013)
                                                      
                                                      Pope
                                                      
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      In the search for the new
                                                      pope which has
                                                      already begun, one thing  of socio-political and theological importance
                                                      would be interesting to watch:  among candidates with equal qualifications
                                                      would there ever a cardinal from Africa be elected? It's not the race issue;
                                                      it's the contraception issue, huge in the overpopulated continent. The Catholic
                                                      Church has shown some tendency to update its ways of communicating with the
                                                      people through changes in the official “Osservatore Romano” even during the
                                                      conservative period of Pope Benedict. Would that be a significant trend or a
                                                      painless superficial adjustment to the new times? Is this the time and
                                                      opportunity to review the theology on God’s opinion on how to stop creating
                                                      human lives that are bound to perish in an environment of extreme poverty,
                                                      lives which didn’t have to be created in the first place? And again, it’s about
                                                      contraception, not abortion. One wonders which one is the biggest taboo. 
                                                      
                                                      (February 11 2013)
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      Obama's
                                                      inaugural
                                                      speech 
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                      In Obama’s  inaugural
                                                      speech, those who
                                                      expected  to hear  a few and specific directions in the presidential
                                                      agenda were in for a surprise: the variety of items included ranged from
                                                      economy, gun control to the environment to social issues in a spirit that did
                                                      not leave much room for invitation to compromise as the olive branch  of
                                                      his first presidency was  rarely accepted. True, he would most probably
                                                      get support from the Republicans on immigration reform as they realize that the
                                                      Latino vote has shifted way away. Other than that, impression is that this
                                                      seems to be the new, ( the real?) combative Obama: asking for  radical
                                                      changes, not holding back and making  his last presidency a matter for all
                                                      his constituents to promote outside Congress while he will fight his battle
                                                      inside. 
                                                      
                                                      ( January 21 2013)
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
                                                       PALESTINE
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      A development that will upset again the recent reversal of power within
                                                      Palestine: Hamas gained popularity after the Gaza-Israel mini-war as Abbas
                                                      seemed to be too moderate, too weak for pursuing peaceful solutions. Will that
                                                      hold? Or will the need for a more dynamic representation of the Palestinian
                                                      people prevail? Very interesting, very fragile balance. The West is now
                                                      supportive but what will this development mean for the US-Israel relations
                                                      vis-à-vis the challenges in the region? Very interesting, very fragile balance.
                                                      
                                                      . Will that hold? Or, will the need for a more dynamic profile
                                                      in the
                                                      representation of the Palestinian people prevail? Very interesting, very
                                                      fragile balance. The West is supportive but what does this say about the USA -
                                                      Israeli relations and all the ramifications of the present challenges in the
                                                      region? Very interesting, very fragile balance.