Pakistan, US raise militant tempo

February 29, 2008

Thursday's missile attack by a US Predator drone in the Pakistan tribal areas has a significance far beyond the dozen or so militants killed. The pilotless craft was launched from a Pakistani airbase - a first - and the targets were hit in an Islamic seminary. In the border regions, these madrassas are widely used by militants to transfer weapons and for meetings - and until now they have fallen under the intelligence radar. - Syed Saleem Shahzad (Feb 29, '08)

Medvedev ready for his Russian moment

February 29, 2008

Judging by his record, the presumptive next president of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev, can be expected to pursue a concerted liberalization of politics as the next logical stage in the country's evolution. He aims to make business in Russia the most profitable in the world. And in foreign policy, the likely leitmotif is that security will be enhanced when countries share risk - that is, the West and Russia should cooperate. - Nicolai N Petro (Feb 29, '08)

BOOK REVIEW : From local fight to global struggle - Russia’s Islamic Threat by Gordon M Hahn

February 29, 2008

Although the Chechen war started as a nationalistic exploit, with the desire to liberate Chechens from Russia and build an independent state, it has transformed itself into a jihadi movement with global appeal. - Dmitry Shlapentokh (Feb 29, '08)

A whole new game for Thailand’s Thaksin

February 29, 2008

Thaksin Shinawatra's return to Thailand on Thursday marks the first time an elected prime minister who has been deposed from power has come back with politically active support and with the party in power backing him. All the same, Thaksin says it's sport he'll be playing, not politics. And fighting law suits. (Feb 29, '08)

Taliban can’t stop Korean missionary zeal

February 29, 2008

The Taliban's abduction last year of 23 South Korean Christian volunteers shocked their country and prompted the leader of the missionaries' church to say there would be no more work in Afghanistan. Now, he's singing a different hymn and plans to send more people to the same area once his government lifts a travel ban. - Sunny Lee (Feb 29, '08)

SEX IN DEPTH : Cell swingers in Cambodia

February 29, 2008

From university sweethearts married in Paris to kingpins in the brutal Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, 82-year-old Ieng Sary and his wife Khieu Thirith, 75, now bide their time in detention awaiting trial for crimes against humanity. They're in separate cells, and Sary has requested conjugal visits. While the two await an answer, they could reflect on one of the Khmer Rouge's practices - separation of man and wife. (Feb 29, '08)

Mouth-to-mouth will fail economies

February 29, 2008

The US government might yet pull the economy out of the jaws of recession through the short-term fix of raising spending on the military or the related disaster capitalism complex. But one way or another, the forces making for long-term global stagnation are now too heavy to be shaken off by the equivalent of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. - Walden Bello

MARKET RAP : Beware the wings of the butterfly

February 29, 2008

The fear that an American downturn will significantly hurt Asian corporate earnings seems to have been at least temporarily overcome. Yet the future of structured investment vehicles remains a threatening shadow that can engender yet another crisis with incalculable effects far from the US. R M Cutler runs his eye over the ups and downs in the week's markets.

THE MOGAMBO GURU : Heads I win, tails I break even

February 29, 2008

It's bad enough that fewer than a third of workers aged 36 to 43 have any pension plan coverage. Now folk who have coverage are bankrupting their retirements to keep up payments on a house that they couldn't afford in the first place, that they can't afford now, and is worth less than they owe! And it's going to get worse!

IT WORLD : Pakistan site swipe exposes web fragility

February 29, 2008

Pakistan's efforts to prevent its citizens from viewing a YouTube video affected the Internet far beyond its borders. No less worrying, the country's censors indicate they have no inclination to prevent a repeat of the global blackout. Martin J Young surveys the week's developments in computing, gaming and gizmos.

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