David Isenberg: Private Military Corporations – The Worst of All Evils

07 Other Atrocities, Commerce, Corruption, Government, Knowledge
David Isenberg

PMSC Not Ready for U.N. Prime Time

Huffington Post, 11 July 2012

For many years now, private military and security contractor (PMSC) advocates have argued that utilization of PMSC in United Nations peace operations offers an alternative to doing nothing or trying to organize a frequently dysfunctional U.N.-sponsored, often ill-equipped and organized intervention.

Indeed, about ten years ago, Doug Brooks, head of the International Stability Operations Association (ISOA), a PMSC advocacy group, wrote in a paper that:

PMCs offer the only military forces both willing and capable to provide rapid and effective military services in most Third World conflicts. PMC operations in the past have saved tens of thousands of lives, but their potential is even greater. Working as “force multipliers” PMCs can provide the competent military backbone to ensure the success of UN or regional multinational peacekeeping or peace enforcement operations.

As sweeping generalizations go that, to use my childhood Yiddish, takes a lot of chutzpah.

Don't get me wrong. While I'm the first to agree that U.N. operations often leave a lot to be desired, a U.N. blue helmet peace operation can only be as successful as members of the Security Council want it to be. Given the often radically differing agendas and interests of Council members that doesn't happen very often.

And to be objective about it, the United Nation already employs large number of private contractors for all sorts of humanitarian purposes and has greatly increased its use of these companies in recent years. But does the record to date with regard to PMSC use by the U.N. encourage even greater use of and dependence on PMSC?

There is reason to doubt that, according to a just released report by the Global Policy Forum and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.

Continue reading “David Isenberg: Private Military Corporations – The Worst of All Evils”

Winslow Wheeler: GAO’s June 14 F-35 Report Understates Its Own Findings; Uses Misdirecting DOD Criteria

Commerce, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Economics/True Cost, Government
Winslow Wheeler

Phi Beta Iota:  Until governments commit to true-cost economics (and of course to telling the truth and being fully transparent) they will not achieve full legitmacy and efficacy in serving the public interest.  The work of one man, Winslow Wheeler, should shame all governments by example, but especially the US Government, where no fraud, waste, or abuse is neglected as long as Members of Congress get their 5% kick-back.

How the F-35 Nearly Doubled In Price (And Why You Didn’t Know)

On June 14 — Flag Day, of all days — the Government Accountability Office released a new oversight report on the F-35: Joint Strike Fighter: DOD Actions Needed to Further Enhance Restructuring and Address Affordability Risks. As usual, it contained some important information on growing costs and other problems. Also as usual, the press covered the new report, albeit a bit sparsely.

Fresh bad news on the F-35 has apparently become so routine that the fundamental problems in the program are plowed right over. One gets the impression, especially from GAO’s own title to its report, that we should expect the bad news, make some minor adjustments, and then move on. But a deeper dive into the report offers more profound, and disturbing, bottom line.

Continue reading “Winslow Wheeler: GAO's June 14 F-35 Report Understates Its Own Findings; Uses Misdirecting DOD Criteria”

Chuck Spinney: Morocco A Bomb? And Qatar?

08 Wild Cards, Corruption, Government
Chuck Spinney

In this very informative essay, Nicolas Pelham describes how King Mohammad of Morocco and his apparat finessed the Arab Spring, even though Morocco’s poverty is far worse than Tunisia’s and the oppression of its poor by his apparat is nearly as bad as President Ben Ali’s in Tunisia.

Whether or not Mohammad dodged the revolutionary bullet or merely bought a little time remains unclear.  Unfortunately, Pelham leaves this question hanging, but he does explain how the King and his henchmen are squandering the window of opportunity they created by failing to redress appalling popular grievances.  In fact, Pelham suggests the contrary is happening, even though he seems to imply the popularly elected moderate Islamist government wants to work with the King.

Note how US Secretary of State Clinton appears hypocritical, as usual. While championing so-called democratic regime change in Libya and Syria, she reinforced the the King’s finessing operation during her visit by meeting with the King’s foreign policy advisor before meeting with her Moroccan equivalent, the foreign minister of the democratically elected government.

Chuck Spinney
Le Grazie, Italy

How Morocco Dodged the Arab Spring

Nicolas Pelham, The New York Review of Books, 2012-07-05 2:50 PM

Phi Beta Iota:  And then there is Qatar.  Governments that lack intelligence as well as integrity — including those that welcome relations with dictators and are hypocritical of their alleged support for democracy and human rights — do their publics a great disservice.

See Also:

Breaking the Real Axis of Evil: How to Oust the World's Last Dictators by 2025

Journal: Coup in Qatar? Middle East Convergences…

Review: Postmodern Imperialism – Geopolitics and the Great Games

Mati Nissani: Strategic Lessons from the Rand Paul Fiasco

Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government

Strategic Lessons from the Rand Paul Fiasco

“Without revolutionary theory, there can be no revolutionary movement.”—Lenin

 …by  Moti Nissani, Ph.D. Prof. Emeritus, Wayne State University

Rand Paul

Summary: For many years, the liberty movement’s aspirations and actions have been focused on the presidential candidacy of Congressman Ron Paul.

In Early June, this strategy backfired, following Rand Paul’s (Ron’s son) endorsement of Mitt Romney, a most dedicated servant of the Banking-Militarist Complex.

This essay argues that revolutionaries can draw two valuable lessons from Rand Paul’s about-face.

First, they must realize once and for all that electoral politics in the USA cannot possibly bring meaningful change, and hence, that more radical strategies are required.

Second, to survive, to retain its relevance, to deserve the gratitude of future generations, the liberty, environmental, social justice, and peace movements must merge into a single revolutionary movement.

Continue reading “Mati Nissani: Strategic Lessons from the Rand Paul Fiasco”

Michel Bauwens: The Emerging Fourth Sector

Collective Intelligence, Commercial Intelligence, Communities of Practice, Cultural Intelligence, Culture, Earth Intelligence, Economics/True Cost, P2P / Panarchy
Michel Bauwens

Richly deserving of careful attention.

The Emerging Fourth Sector

The Three Traditional Sectors

Businesses create and distribute goods and services that enhance our quality of life, promote growth, and generate prosperity. They spur innovation, reward entrepreneurial effort, provide a return on investment and constantly improve their performance responding to market feedbacks. They draw on the skills, effort and ingenuity of individual workers, and share with them the economic value created by the enterprise.

Non-profit organizations give us ways to celebrate, build and protect the many human values that give rise to healthy, thriving communities. They have worked to ensure that all people have adequate necessities of life, including clean air, water, food and shelter; an equitable share of wealth and resources; and opportunity to develop their full physical, mental and spiritual potential. They create spaces to celebrate the joy of culture and artistic expression, and reveal opportunities for generosity. They have helped protect the environment, working to ensure that human capacities, technologies and organizations sustain and support, not systemically alter, degrade or destroy, the Earth, its diversity of life or the ecological systems that support life. They remind us that many species share this planet and depend on each other, and that humanity must not only care for itself, but must steward an entire world.

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John Steiner: 9 July Deadline US Navy to deafen 15,900 whales and dolphins and kill 1,800 more

IO Deeds of War, Military
John Steiner

Navy to deafen 15,900 whales and dolphins and kill 1,800 more

Phi Beta Iota:  This is most important as a documented form of “true cost” that is now emergent in the public understanding.  From depleted uranium to HAARP to forced population reduction to high-frequency sound in the ocean, “true costs” make the US military vastly more toxic and more expensive than their current 50% “tax” on the US entire economy and their hidden taxes and depredation on the rest of the world.  Petition signature recommended.

From: “MoveOn.org Political Action” <moveon-help@list.moveon.org>

Hi MoveOn member,

Shocking fact: The U.S. Navy estimates that it will kill 1,800 whales and deafen 15,900 more over the next five years through the use of
high-frequency underwater sound for testing.

Amazing story: When I found out that Navy was accepting public comments on this program through July 10, I started a petition on SignOn.org right away. And in just a few days, over 200,000 people signed.

What's next? You can sign the petition too, before the July 10 deadline, to keep our impact growing. The petition says:

Stop the killing of 1,800 whales and dolphins and the deafening of 15,900 more by ceasing the operation of the Navy's underwater sound system in the Hawaiian Islands, the California and Atlantic Coasts, and the Gulf of Mexico.

Click here to add your name to the petition, and then pass it along to your
friends:

http://www.moveon.org/r?r=276609&id=45439-1255454-Q40kQEx&t=1

Thanks for adding your voice.

­Lyndia

P.S. My original email with more details is below:

Continue reading “John Steiner: 9 July Deadline US Navy to deafen 15,900 whales and dolphins and kill 1,800 more”

noble gold