Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Climate (short)change

Climate (short)change
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 11-25-2013 MON)
 
We can’t tell yet at this time how Super Typhoon “Haiyan” (“Yolanda”) came to be declared as the “biggest storm in history” by both Philippine and international media; but it was the case almost everywhere.  The Philippine Daily Inquirer on Nov. 8 bannered, “Strongest typhoon makes fifth landfall,” while the Philippine Star on the same day claimed, “’Yolanda’ most powerful cyclone in history to make landfall.”  But what are the facts now emerging?
 
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services
Administration or Pagasa, the country’s official weather monitoring agency, published in its news release that “Yolanda (Haiyan), 2013, wind speed 147-171 mph (miles per hour)” is only the seventh strongest typhoon to hit RP, with the top howler still being Typhoon “Sering” (“Joan”), 1970, at 171-193 mph.
 
Typhoon2000.com, meanwhile, lists Typhoon “Reming” (“Durian”) as the strongest at 198.839 mph or 320 kph (kilometers per hour).  Although Yolanda is without doubt one of the strongest typhoons to ever hit the Philippines, it is certainly not even among the top five.  How did the distorted headlines on this start?
 
Based on my review, it has become apparent that even local media took their cue from international reports on “history’s strongest storm” that started around Nov. 8.  It may not be a coincidence that this seeming disinformation started just two days before the 9th annual United Nations Climate Change Conference held in Warsaw, Poland that lasted until Nov. 22.  If such news distortion was indeed by design, it has been quite effective.
 
Many global and local news outfits reporting on Haiyan only started correcting themselves with updated information the first few days after the devastation hit, but it was already too late to correct the impression left in the minds of many that Yolanda or Haiyan was a “historic storm.”
 
As events unfolded, accurate storm data were completely drowned out by stories of human tragedy and unimagined destruction wrought by a typhoon on a woefully unprepared nation.
 
Climate change alarmists thus had their day hyping their agenda on global media with the Philippines’ “crying boy” making headlines all over the world demanding precipitate, thoughtless conformity to the actions desired by climate change merchants of cap-and-trade profiteers.
 
It is safe to believe that the global media audience was shortchanged in the run-up to the super typhoon’s landfall on the Philippines--shortchanged by climate change fear peddlers into believing that Haiyan was the strongest ever due to the climate change phenomenon they are warning about.
 
The term climate change as “the” crisis of the times is by itself a sly or ingenious formulation for the real advocacy of these fear peddlers--Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) or man’s carbon emissions as the cause of adverse weather patterns.  But as “global warming” projections have not been supported by objective weather temperature data the past two decades, their propaganda has shifted to “climate change.”
 
Robert M. Carter, paleontologist, stratigrapher, marine geologist, and environmental scientist at the University of Adelaide, wrote in “Ten facts and ten myths on climate change” that the “climate has always changed, and it always will,” later debunking the myth that “the late 20th Century increase in AGT (average global temperatures) caused an increase in the number of severe storms (cyclones), or in storm intensity” with “Fact 10: Meteorological experts are agreed that no increase in storms has occurred beyond that associated with natural variation of the climate system.”
 
Carter continued with more facts: “weather balloons and satellites’ measurements since the late 50s show NO atmospheric warming since 1958; carbon dioxide is a minor greenhouse gas… (while) water vapour, contributing at least 70 percent of the effect, is by far the most important…”
 
In “Climate Change: The Philippines’ Haiyan Typhoon is Not the Result of Global Warming” (GlobalResearch, Nov. 15, 2013), Michel Chossudovsky writes: “The tragedy in the Philippines has contributed to reinforcing a consensus which indirectly feeds the pockets of corporations lobbying for a new deal on carbon trade.  Cap-and-trade is a multibillion dollar bonanza which is supported by the global warming consensus … In 2008, Simon Linnett, Executive Vice-Chairman of Rothschild’s acknowledged the nature of this multibillion dollar business: ‘As a banker, I also welcome the fact that the ‘cap-and-trade’ system is becoming the dominant methodology for CO2 control.  Unlike taxation or plain regulation, cap-and-trade offers the greatest scope for private sector involvement and innovation’ (Telegraph, Jan. 31, 2008).”
 
Chossudovsky adds: “In the Philippines, the social impacts of natural disasters are invariably exacerbated by a macro-economic policy framework imposed by Manila’s external creditors … The government of Benigno Aquino has embarked upon a renewed wave of austerity measures which involves sweeping privatization and the curtailment of social programs.  In turn, a large chunk of the State budget has been redirected to the Military which is collaborating with the Pentagon under Obama’s ‘Asia Pivot’.”
 
The climate change lobby is actually a climate shortchange of the developing world, including the Philippines, while the US “pivot” is shortchanging the country into its next major conflict-for-profit project.
 
(Catch Herman Tiu Laurel’s weekly show at GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Skycable Channel 213, and www.gnntv-asia.com, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m.; tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 0923-4095739)

1st people, 'system' 2nd

1st people, ‘system’ 2nd
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 11-20-2013 WED)
 
In the wake of the greatest Philippine disaster of the decade, the people responsible for the tragedy of 5,000 lives lost (as of last count) cry out, “The ‘system’ failed.”  Just like in the pork barrel disaster, they blame the “system”--that is, if we are to believe them.
 
BS Aquino, their whiner-in-chief, got into the headlines again for proclaiming this gigantic lame excuse: No “one,” no human being, no person (or persons) in responsible authority is there to be blamed.  It’s the impersonal, non-personal, non-sentient thing called the ‘system,’ like a robot that runs by itself or a car or ship or vehicle that drives itself.”
 
“THE SYSTEM FAILED, WHAT ELSE COULD I’VE DONE?” uttered PeNoy in a news report.  He further said, “government’s disaster response systems failed when emergency staff became victims of Super Typhoon ‘Yolanda’ and were unable to work.”
 
How come, then, did one small town on a tiny island off Cebu, which was completely demolished by the storm surge from Yolanda, manage to have all of its 1,000 residents saved?
 
Mayor Alfredo Arquillano of the island of Tulang Diyot, town of San Francisco, evacuated his entire population to safer ground (by boat, bus, or whatever means).
 
Mayor Al said, “The day before, when it was clear how bad the typhoon would be, we decided to evacuate all.”
 
How could a small town mayor have the sense of urgency and foresight while higher authorities--like a President with so many experts around him as well as the city mayor of Tacloban, Alfredo Romualdez, with all the IRA (Internal Revenue Allotment) and access to national government weather offices--failed?
 
The difference between Mayor Al on one hand and BS Aquino and Mayor Romualdez on the other is the sense of care and urgency for their people.  Both Aquino and Romualdez were not seen to be hands-on prior to the disaster.
 
What made the difference between the situation in San Francisco town on the island of Tulang Diyot with resources of a fifth class municipality, and the major city of Tacloban plus the entire country of 7,000 islands with a budget of P2 trillion is this: The leader in the person of Mayor Al Arquillano, who had his mind focused on the welfare of his people, enabling him to note the extraordinary circumstances of the typhoon, versus a president and a city mayor (both of whom are from old political families who inherited their privileged political posts), who wallowed in complacency and misplaced confidence with the usual preparations.
 
As far as the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) is concerned, all necessary public warnings were issued before Super Typhoon Yolanda (“Haiyan”) hit land.  At the bottom of Pagasa’s forecast--in a footnote-like text--the warning against possible seven-meter high storm surges was announced.  Ma. Cecilia Monteverde, assistant weather services chief of Pagasa, however, admitted that more could have been done to explain the magnitude and gravity of storm surges.
 
Mayor Arquillano’s astuteness and discernment, two human qualities that a “system” can never have on its own, thus made the difference.
 
Be that as it may, a question should now be raised about the “system,” which is indeed a fundamental factor in this country’s national crisis or “crises,” given that there is a never ending series of them--from the pork barrel to “jobless growth,” to growing hunger and poverty while the few oligarchs attain exponentially burgeoning and oppressive accumulations, to the total incompetence and incapacity of its public institutions to cope with the effects of natural disasters upon its poor and middle class populations (see repost: Rich typhoon victims prioritized; Great divide--rich poor cope differently). 
 
A system different from that of the Philippines is Cuba, which suffers hurricanes as bad as Yolanda but does better than even the US in saving its people.
 
In Cuba, the state government has all the authority and resources needed in such crises (with no casualties in “Katrina”).
 
In the US, preparation for Hurricane Katrina was late and aid was subcontracted, which led to 1,800 deaths and widespread dissatisfaction.
 
In the Philippines, private companies have more helicopters than government.  Yet, BS Aquino didn’t even attempt to commandeer these private resources to help the dying victims of Yolanda since government was purely reliant on foreign aid.
 
Despite a corrupt electoral system that ensconces incompetent scions such as BS Aquino and Al Romualdez, San Francisco town elected a caring and competent person as mayor.
 
The Philippines has many good people, like citizen-volunteer Taipan Millan whose group sought out Frabelle Fishing Corp. to ferry relief goods to Leyte and Samar.  After verifying with this columnist, Frabelle lent three big fishing vessels (Chrysanthemum, Brilliant Star, and Woodrose) and quietly got relief goods to many towns early on.
 
What this country needs are good people first, then the right ideas and resolve to reform the system next.  No Cha-cha (Charter change) will ever work while these “scions” are in charge.
 
(Catch Herman Tiu Laurel’s weekly show at GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Skycable Channel 213, and www.gnntv-asia.com, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m.; tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 0923-4095739)

Dependency disorder


Dependency disorder
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 11-18-2013 MON)
 
A Philippine Star columnist declared, “Thank God for the United States!”  That really got my blood boiling and my heart gushing with rage.  Here is this US Embassy PR man reinforcing the “dependent personality disorder” (DPD) of Philippine culture again amid the devastating aftermath of super typhoon “Haiyan,” despite the fact that it was the United States that had placed the country into the helpless state it’s in today.
 
For those who may not be acquainted with DPD (formerly known as asthenic personality disorder), it is “an enduring maladaptive pattern of behavior, cognition, and inner experience” that is characterized by “a pervasive psychological dependence on other people.”
 
In the case of this country, it is the dependence on other states and countries for almost everything--including the selection of its president, as in the case of former US envoy Harry Thomas’ favorite in the 2010 polls, BS Aquino.
 
As I said last week, we have no choice today but to swallow pride and accept all aid and assistance, whatever the motives behind them; but this doesn’t mean that we should swallow everything hook, line, and sinker.  Foreign aid pouring in is not without its likely intended or unintended negative consequences, as other countries that had received massive aid in the wake of equally massive calamities have seen.
 
Haiti, demolished by an earthquake in 2010, has found many unsavory consequences from US and United Nations aid, including this one that Stephen Lendman wrote about for the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti: “Two and a half months post-quake, the major media mostly ignore Haiti… out of sight, mind … (such as) USAid (US Agency for International Development) and other aid organizations diverting most of the $700 million plus donated to contractors and profiteering NGOs…”
 
Lendman continues: “thousands of US combat troops obstructing aid, getting none to the most impoverished neighborhoods, and amounts to emergency shelters have been woefully inadequate, making calamitous conditions worse…”
 
The UN aid contingent that remained to supposedly help in the reconstruction phase got embroiled in rape charges and caused a cholera outbreak that killed more than 8,000 (and brought down hundreds of thousands), leading to lawyers filing charges against the UN (BBC, Oct. 9, 2013 “UN sued over Haiti cholera epidemic”).
 
Over and above all these is the history of Haiti destroyed by European colonialists and more recently by repeated US intervention, like in the US-engineered ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004 for his opposition to International Monetary Fund “reforms” that have long impoverished nations.
 
If the Philippines today under BS Aquino has been exposed as totally incompetent and woefully inadequate in dealing with the Yolanda catastrophe, it is because the US, since 1986, has reasserted its hand in the micromanagement of this country under the same reforms that had crippled Haiti and left aid-receiving countries prostrate in the face of calamities--all without governmental, economic, industrial, military, and social infrastructure to deal with any major disaster, natural or otherwise.
 
The last time the Philippines was able to cope well with devastation wrought by major typhoons (such as “Yoling,” “Ruping” and others) was during Marcos’ time when helicopters and amphibious trucks were ample and ready to be fielded.  Ferdinand Marcos was deposed with US help; and ever since, the Philippines has been turned over to serial incompetents.
 
However, failure to cope with natural disasters is not just a consequence of poverty or underdevelopment.  In hurricane after hurricane, Cuba experienced far less casualties than its giant northern neighbor, the US.  With Hurricane Katrina, Cuba suffered only two casualties while the US had more than 1,800 dead.
 
Wikipedia reports that “According to the UN, it’s not because Cubans are lucky but because they’re prepared… (Aid organization Oxfam further stated that) from 1996 to 2002, only 16 people were killed by the six hurricanes that struck Cuba… (leading them to attribute this to the fact that) around 72 hours before a storm’s predicted landfall, national (Cuban) media issue alerts while civil protection committees check evacuation plans and shelters (plus) hurricane awareness is taught in schools and there are practice drills…”
 
On a similar front, every weather calamity these days has become an opportunity for proponents of the fraudulent “man-made global warming” campaign to pound their occupational advocacy, funded to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars by global finance and big business.
 
The Climate Action Network that announced its solidarity with the announced fast of the Philippine delegate to the Warsaw climate change conference had a net income in 2010 of $2.5 million.
 
Greenpeace, too, had $27.5 million in income, which funded energy campaigner Red Constantino’s crusade against Philippine industrialization.  You can read the over half a billion dollars in funding enjoyed by climate change non-governmental organizations in James F. Tracy’s “CO2 and the Ideology of Climate Change: The Forces behind ‘Carbon-Centric Environmentalism.’”
 
Tracy concludes: “In light of these ongoing catastrophes and the powerful financial interests behind carbon-centric environmental advocacy … Posturing over anthropogenic climate change and environmentalists’ well-funded overtures may be seen for what they actually are—the visible components of a complex social engineering program far advanced in convincing the public that its return to a pre-feudal-like existence will not only be agreeable, but absolutely imperative for the greater good.”
 
(Tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; catch GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Skycable Channel 213, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m., also on www.gnntv-asia.com; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 0923-4095739)

American Hegemony is Over

The Cape of Good Hope  -

American Hegemony is Over

By Israel Shamir

October 27, 2013 "Information Clearing House - First, the good news. American hegemony is over. The bully has been subdued. We cleared the Cape of Good Hope, symbolically speaking, in September 2013. With the Syrian crisis, the world has passed a key forking of modern history. It was touch and go, just as risky as the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The chances for total war were high, as the steely wills of America and Eurasia had crossed in the Eastern Mediterranean. It will take some time until the realisation of what we’ve gone through seeps in: it is normal for events of such magnitude. The turmoil in the US, from the mad car chase in the DC to the shutdown of federal government and possible debt default, are the direct consequences of this event.

Remember the Berlin Wall? When it went down, I was in Moscow, writing for Haaretz. I went to a press-conference with Politburo members in the President Hotel, and asked them whether they concurred that the end of the USSR and world socialist system was nigh. I was laughed at; it was an embarrassing occasion. Oh no, they said. Socialism will blossom, as the result of the Wall’s fall. The USSR went down two years later. Now our memory has compacted those years into a brief sequence, but in reality, it took some time.

 

The most dramatic event of September 2013 was the high-noon stand-off near the Levantine shore, with five US destroyers pointing their Tomahawks towards Damascus and facing them - the Russian flotilla of eleven ships led by the carrier-killer Missile CruiserMoskva and supported by Chinese warships. Apparently, two missiles were launched towards the Syrian coast, and both failed to reach their destination.

 

It was claimed by a Lebanese newspaper quoting diplomatic sources that the missiles were launched from a NATO air base in Spain and they were shot down by the Russian ship-based sea-to-air defence system. Another explanation proposed by the Asia Times says the Russians employed their cheap and powerful GPS jammers to render the expensive Tomahawks helpless, by disorienting them and causing them to fail. Yet another version attributed the launch to the Israelis, whether they were trying to jump-start the shoot-out or just observed the clouds, as they claim.

 

Whatever the reason, after this strange incident, the pending shoot-out did not commence, as President Obama stood down and holstered his guns. This was preceded by an unexpected vote in the British Parliament. This venerable body declined the honour of joining the attack proposed by the US. This was the first time in two hundred years that the British parliament voted down a sensible proposition to start a war; usually the Brits can’t resist the temptation.

 

After that, President Obama decided to pass the hot potato to the Congress. He was unwilling to unleash Armageddon on his own. Thus the name of action was lost. Congress did not want to go to war with unpredictable consequences. Obama tried to browbeat Putin at the 20G meeting in St Petersburg, and failed. The Russian proposal to remove Syrian chemical weaponry allowed President Obama to save face. This misadventure put paid to American hegemony , supremacy and exceptionalism. Manifest Destiny was over. We all learned that from Hollywood flics: the hero never stands down; he draws and shoots! If he holsters his guns, he is not a hero: he’s chickened out.

 

Afterwards, things began to unravel fast. The US President had a chat with the new president of Iran, to the chagrin of Tel Aviv. The Free Syrian Army rebels decided to talk to Assad after two years of fighting him, and their delegation arrived in Damascus, leaving the Islamic extremists high and dry. Their supporter Qatar is collapsing overextended. The shutdown of their government and possible debt default gave the Americans something real to worry about. With the end of US hegemony, the days of the dollar as the world reserve currency are numbered.

 

World War III almost occurred as the banksters wished it. They have too many debts, including the unsustainable foreign debt of the US. If those Tomahawks had flown, the banksters could have claimed Force Majeure and disavow the debt. Millions of people would die, but billions of dollars would be safe in the vaults of JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs. In September, the world crossed this bifurcation point safely, as President Obama refused to take the fall for the banksters. Perhaps he deserved his Nobel peace prize, after all.

 

The near future is full of troubles but none are fatal. The US will lose its emission rights as a source of income. The US dollar will cease to serve as the world reserve currency though it will remain the North American currency. Other parts of the world will resort to their euro, yuan, rouble, bolivar, or dinar. The US military expenditure will have to be slashed to normal, and this elimination of overseas bases and weaponry will allow the US population to make the transition rather painlessly. Nobody wants to go after America; the world just got tired of them riding shotgun all over the place. The US will have to find new employment for so many bankers, jailers, soldiers, even politicians.

 

As I stayed in Moscow during the crisis, I observed these developments as they were seen by Russians. Putin and Russia have been relentlessly hard-pressed for quite a while.

 

* The US supported and subsidised Russia’s liberal and nationalist opposition; the national elections in Russia were presented as one big fraud. The Russian government was delegitimised to some extent.

 

* The Magnitsky Act of the US Congress authorised the US authorities to arrest and seize the assets of any Russian they deem is up to no good, without a recourse to a court.

 

* Some Russian state assets were seized in Cyprus where the banks were in trouble.

 

* The US encouraged Pussy Riot, gay parades etc. in Moscow, in order to promote an image of Putin the dictator, enemy of freedom and gay-hater in the Western and Russian oligarch-owned media.

* Russian support for Syria was criticised, ridiculed and presented as a brutal act devoid of humanity. At the same time, Western media pundits expressed certainty that Russia would give up on Syria.

 

As I wrote previously, Russia had no intention to surrender Syria, for a number of good reasons: it was an ally; the Syrian Orthodox Christians trusted Russia; geopolitically the war was getting too close to Russian borders. But the main reason was Russia’s annoyance with American high-handedness. The Russians felt that such important decisions should be taken by the international community, meaning the UN Security Council. They did not appreciate the US assuming the role of world arbiter.

 

In the 1990s, Russia was very weak, and could not effectively object, but  they felt bitter when Yugoslavia was bombed and NATO troops moved eastwards breaking the US promise to Gorbachev. The Libyan tragedy was another crucial point. That unhappy country was bombed by NATO, and eventually disintegrated. From the most prosperous African state it was converted into most miserable. Russian presence in Libya was rather limited, but still, Russia lost some investment there. Russia abstained in the vote on Libya as this was the position of the then Russian president Dmitry Medvedev who believed in playing ball with the West. In no way was Putin ready to abandon Syria to the same fate.

 

The Russian rebellion against the US hegemony began in June, when the Aeroflot flight from Beijing carrying Ed Snowden landed in Moscow. Americans pushed every button they could think of to get him back. They activated the full spectre of their agents in Russia. Only a few voices, including that of your truly, called on Russia to provide Snowden with safe refuge, but our voices prevailed. Despite the US pressure, Snowden was granted asylum.

 

The next step was the Syrian escalation. I do not want to go into the details of the alleged chemical attack. In the Russian view, there was not and could not be any reason for the US to act unilaterally in Syria or anywhere else. In a way, the Russians have restored the Law of Nations to its old revered place. The world has become a better and safer place.

 

None of this could’ve been achieved without the support of China. The Asian giant considers Russia its “elder sister” and relies upon her ability to deal with the round-eyes. The Chinese, in their quiet and unassuming way, played along with Putin. They passed Snowden to Moscow. They vetoed anti-Syrian drafts in the UNSC, and sent their warships to the Med. That is why Putin stood the ground not only for Russia, but for the whole mass of Eurasia.

 

The Church was supportive of Putin’s efforts; not only the Russian Church, but both Catholics and Orthodox were united in their opposition to the pending US campaign for the US-supported rebels massacred Christians. The Pope appealed to Putin as to defender of the Church; so did the churches of Jerusalem and Antioch. The Pope almost threatened to excommunicate Hollande, and the veiled threat impressed the French president. So Putin enjoyed support and blessing of the Orthodox Patriarchs and of the Pope: such double blessing is an extremely rare occassion.

 

There were many exciting and thrilling moments in the Syrian saga, enough to fill volumes. An early attempt to subdue Putin at G8 meeting in Ireland was one of them. Putin was about to meet with the united front of the West, but he managed to turn some of them to his side, and he sowed the seeds of doubt in others’ hearts by reminding them of the Syrian rebel manflesh-eating chieftains.   

 

The proposal to eliminate Syrian chemical weapons was deftly introduced; the UNSC resolution blocked the possibility of attacking Syria under cover of Chapter Seven. Miraculously, the Russians won in this mighty tug-of-war. The alternative was dire: Syria would be destroyed as Libya was; a subsequent Israeli-American attack on Iran was unavoidable; Oriental Christianity would lose its cradle; Europe would be flooded by millions of refugees; Russia would be proven irrelevant, all talk and no action, as important as Bolivia, whose President’s plane can be grounded and searched at will. Unable to defend its allies, unable to stand its ground, Russia would’ve been left with a ‘moral victory’, a euphemism for defeat. Everything Putin has worked for in 13 years at the helm would’ve been lost; Russia would be back to where it was in 1999, when Clinton bombed Belgrade.

 

The acme of this confrontation was reached in the Obama-Putin exchange on exceptionalism. The two men were not buddies to start with. Putin was annoyed by what he perceived as Obama’s insincerity and hypocrisy. A man who climbed from the gutter to the very top, Putin cherishes his ability to talk frankly with people of all walks of life. His frank talk can be shockingly brutal. When he was heckled by a French journalist regarding treatment of Chechen separatists, he replied:

 

“the Muslim extremists (takfiris) are enemies of Christians, of atheists, and even of Muslims because they believe that traditional Islam is hostile to the goals that they set themselves. And if you want to become an Islamic radical and are ready to be circumcised, I invite you to Moscow. We are a multi-faith country and we have experts who can do it. And I would advise them to carry out that operation in such a way that nothing would grow in that place again”.

 

Another example of his shockingly candid talk was given at Valdai as he replied to BBC’s Bridget Kendall. She asked: did the threat of US military strikes actually play a rather useful role in Syria’s agreeing to have its weapons placed under control?

Putin replied: Syria got itself chemical weapons as an alternative to Israel’s nuclear arsenal. He called for the disarmament of Israel and invoked the name of Mordecai Vanunu as an example of an Israeli scientist who opposes nuclear weapons. (My interview with Vanunu had been recently published in the largest Russian daily paper, and it gained some notice).

 

Putin tried to talk frankly to Obama. We know of their exchange from a leaked record of the Putin-Netanyahu confidential conversation. Putin called the American and asked him: what’s your point in Syria? Obama replied: I am worried that Assad’s regime does not observe human rights. Putin almost puked from the sheer hypocrisy of this answer. He understood it as Obama’s refusal to talk with him “on eye level”.

 

In the aftermath of the Syrian stand-off, Obama appealed to the people of the world in the name of American exceptionalism. The United States’ policy is “what makes America different. It’s what makes us exceptional”, he said. Putin responded: “It is extremely dangerous to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional. We are all different, but when we ask for the Lord’s blessings, we must not forget that God created us equal.” This was not only an ideological, but theological contradistinction.

 

As I expounded at length elsewhere, the US is built on the Judaic theology of exceptionalism, of being Chosen. It is the country of Old Testament. This is the deeper reason for the US and Israel’s special relationship. Europe is going through a stage of apostasy and rejection of Christ, while Russia remains deeply Christian. Its churches are full, they bless one other with Christmas and Easter blessings, instead of neutral “seasons”. Russia is a New Testament country. And rejection of exceptionalism, of chosenness is the underlying tenet of Christianity.

 

For this reason, while organised US Jewry supported the war, condemned Assad and called for US intervention, the Jewish community of Russia, quite numerous, wealthy and influential one, did not support the Syrian rebels but rather stood by Putin’s effort to preserve peace in Syria. Ditto Iran, where the wealthy Jewish community supported the legitimate government in Syria. It appears that countries guided by a strong established church are immune from disruptive influence of lobbies; while countries without such a church – the US and/or France – give in to such influences and adopt illegal interventionism as a norm.

 

As US hegemony declines, we look to an uncertain future. The behemoth might of the US military can still wreck havoc; a wounded beast is the most dangerous one. Americans may listen to Senator Ron Paul who called to give up overseas bases and cut military expenditure. Norms of international law and sovereignty of all states should be observed. People of the world will like America again when it will cease snooping and bullying. It isn’t easy, but we’ve already negotiated the Cape and gained Good Hope.

 

 Presentation at the Rhodes Forum, October 5, 2013 - http://new.livestream.com/World-Public-Forum/Rhodes-Forum/archives(Language edited by Ken Freeland) - Israel Shamir can be reached at adam@israelshamir.net  

3 frauds and a drip


3 frauds and a drip
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 10-28-2013 MON)
 
One fraud poses as a top defender of the territory of the Philippine Republic.  A second poses as an anti-corruption crusader vs the opportunistic pork barrel system.  Another is a global bank that local economists and business newspapers tout as a paragon of business virtue, with its endorsements of local finance officials cited as proof of their merit.
 
We have long and frequently denounced these frauds for what they are but it is not easy to expose them given the control of Philippine mainstream media by bigger fraudsters.  Real events in the real world, however, would sooner or later unmask them.
 
The first fraud sits atop the highest defense post of the land.  Last September, this fraud staged a scene announcing that Philippine reconnaissance had spotted 75 concrete blocks laid by the People’s Republic of China’s (PRoC) in an alleged prelude to the construction of a new base in Bajo de Masinloc.  This information was dished out repeatedly by another fraud, a retired Philippine naval officer and Annapolis graduate who went around talk shows to lambast the PRoC.  The Inquirer carried the story for weeks.  But last October 25, Malaya’s Ellen Tordesillas burst the fraudsters’ story in her report, “AFP probers say US, not China, put concrete blocks in Bajo de Masinloc.”
 
Tordesillas wrote, “A military investigation found that the concrete slabs were covered by algae, an indication that they had been in the area for many years.  The probe also found that the blocks had been used by the US Navy as ‘sinkers’ to preserve the wreckage of old ships they used for target practice.”
 
Was the error just incompetence or a deliberate lie to please some higher master (in the US) while pushing military purchases?
 
The Philippine defense establishment has become the laughing stock of the Asian and global military community again; yet embarrassment is the least of the cost of this blatant faux pas.  The loss for this country of billions worth of good will and investment from China is simply incalculable.
 
The next fraud is this “crusader” against political “pork” who has just latched onto the “People’s Initiative to end Pork” of former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, by including it in his “Epirma” signature campaign against pork, political dynasties, while pushing the Freedom of Information (FoI) bill.  This fraudster is obviously trying to package all motherhood statements under his umbrella and we discovered the reason.  Our sources are persons whom this fraudster had tried to recruit; and they’ve told this writer that the “Epirma” initiator even boasted of getting contributions from the top honchos of two major conglomerates.  I have no doubt about these firms’ participation as the “crusade” has been a perfect distraction from the oligarchy’s shenanigans.
 
The third fraud you may help identify: Last week one business newspaper headlined, “BSP earns HSBC praise for ‘astute management’.”  But I have been aware of the many penalties US and European financial authorities have imposed on Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corp. (HSBC), which the following headlines show: “HSBC Faces $2.46 Billion Judgment in Securities Fraud Case...” (www.nytimes.com) and “HSBC to pay $1.9 billion US fine in money-laundering case” (Reuters).  With so many crimes to its name, is HSBC a reputable endorser?  What does this make of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) officials, i.e. Tetangco and Guinigundo, or of the business paper that uses HSBC as an authority on “management”?
 
But the biggest fraud of them all is a drip.  The drip exposed more of his ineffectuality and weakness of character in a recent attempt to turnaround his deteriorating credibility and political stock.  Faced with a crashing public image from the DAP (Disbursement Acceleration Program) “pork” exposé, despite the yeoman’s efforts of controlled popular survey outfits to boost the perception of trust and popularity, this drip accused a “conspiracy” behind the attacks on his DAP pork.  But wasn’t it the drip’s henchman in the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) who cooked up DAP and Cory Aquino and Yellow stalwart, former Sen. Joker Arroyo, who first charged the DAP as an illegal animal?
 
Will Fraud Number One, the defense official, atone for his sin and resign after the gargantuan faux pas on the “concrete blocks” he wrongly accused China of placing at Bajo de Masinloc?  We don’t believe he is capable of such a dignified act since he seems to be fully inured to shame, not by a hide as thick as pachyderms or crocodiles, but because of a pineapple face that any shame would approach with trepidation.  Will Fraud Number Two get his funds for his “crusades”?  He certainly will, with the useful distraction it will provide for the money masters.  As for Fraudster Number Three, is it HSBC, BSP, the newspaper, or all of the above?
 
Fraudsters are the plague of this country; they are in all sectors and come in all forms.  We’ve discussed only three of these frauds here but they’re all over.  Then, of course, there’s this one drip that the fraudsters of this land, using the fraud of Philippine elections, installed to preside over the fraud of Philippine democracy and economy.  When will it all ever end?
 
(Tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; watch GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Skycable Channel 213, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m., also on www.gnntv-asia.com; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 0923-4095739)

Wall Street's Secret "Economic Endgame": Making the World Safe for Banksters, Syria in the Cross-hairs


Wall Street’s Secret “Economic Endgame”: Making the World Safe for Banksters, Syria in the Cross-hairs
Global Research, September 04, 2013
Iraq and Libya have been taken out, and Iran has been heavily boycotted. Syria is now in the cross-hairs. Why? Here is one overlooked scenario . . . 
In an August 2013 article titled “Larry Summers and the Secret ‘End-game’ Memo,” Greg Palast posted evidence of a secret late-1990s plan devised by Wall Street and U.S. Treasury officials to open banking to the lucrative derivatives business. To pull this off required the relaxation of banking regulations not just in the US but globally. The vehicle to be used was the Financial Services Agreement of the World Trade Organization.
The “end-game” would require not just coercing support among WTO members but taking down those countries refusing to join. Some key countries remained holdouts from the WTO, including Iraq, Libya, Iran and Syria. In these Islamic countries, banks are largely state-owned; and “usury” – charging rent for the “use” of money – is viewed as a sin, if not a crime.That puts them at odds with the Western model of rent extraction by private middlemen. Publicly-owned banks are also a threat to the mushrooming derivatives business, since governments with their own banks don’t need interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, or investment-grade ratings by private rating agencies in order to finance their operations.
Bank deregulation proceeded according to plan, and the government-sanctioned and -nurtured derivatives business mushroomed into a $700-plus trillion pyramid scheme. Highly leveraged,  completely unregulated, and dangerously unsustainable, it collapsed in 2008 when investment bank Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, taking a large segment of the global economy with it. The countries that managed to escape were those sustained by public banking models outside the international banking net.
These countries were not all Islamic. Forty percent of banks globally are publicly-owned. They are largely in the BRIC countries—Brazil, Russia, India and China—which house forty percent of the global population. They also escaped the 2008 credit crisis, but they at least made a show of conforming to Western banking rules. This was not true of the “rogue” Islamic nations, where usury was forbidden by Islamic teaching. To make the world safe for usury, these rogue states had to be silenced by other means. Having failed to succumb to economic coercion, they wound up in the crosshairs of the powerful US military.
Here is some data in support of that thesis.
The End-game Memo
In his August 22nd article, Greg Palast posted a screenshot of a 1997 memo from Timothy Geithner, then Assistant Secretary of International Affairs under Robert Rubin, to Larry Summers, then Deputy Secretary of the Treasury. Geithner referred in the memo to the “end-game of WTO financial services negotiations” and urged Summers to touch base with the CEOs of Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Bank of America, Citibank, and Chase Manhattan Bank, for whom private phone numbers were provided.
The game then in play was the deregulation of banks so that they could gamble in the lucrative new field of derivatives. To pull this off required, first, the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the 1933 Act that imposed a firewall between investment banking and depository banking in order to protect depositors’ funds from bank gambling. But the plan required more than just deregulating US banks. Banking controls had to be eliminated globally so that money would not flee to nations with safer banking laws. The “endgame” was to achieve this global deregulation through an obscure addendum to the international trade agreements policed by the World Trade Organization, called the Financial Services Agreement. Palast wrote:
Until the bankers began their play, the WTO agreements dealt simply with trade in goods–that is, my cars for your bananas.  The new rules ginned-up by Summers and the banks would force all nations to accept trade in “bads” – toxic assets like financial derivatives.
Until the bankers’ re-draft of the FSA, each nation controlled and chartered the banks within their own borders.  The new rules of the game would force every nation to open their markets to Citibank, JP Morgan and their derivatives “products.”
And all 156 nations in the WTO would have to smash down their own Glass-Steagall divisions between commercial savings banks and the investment banks that gamble with derivatives.
The job of turning the FSA into the bankers’ battering ram was given to Geithner, who was named Ambassador to the World Trade Organization.
WTO members were induced to sign the agreement by threatening their access to global markets if they refused; and they all did sign, except Brazil. Brazil was then threatened with an embargo; but its resistance paid off, since it alone among Western nations survived and thrived during the 2007-2009 crisis. As for the others:
The new FSA pulled the lid off the Pandora’s box of worldwide derivatives trade.  Among the notorious transactions legalized: Goldman Sachs (where Treasury Secretary Rubin had been Co-Chairman) worked a secret euro-derivatives swap with Greece which, ultimately, destroyed that nation.  Ecuador, its own banking sector de-regulated and demolished, exploded into riots.  Argentina had to sell off its oil companies (to the Spanish) and water systems (to Enron) while its teachers hunted for food in garbage cans.  Then, Bankers Gone Wild in the Eurozone dove head-first into derivatives pools without knowing how to swim–and the continent is now being sold off in tiny, cheap pieces to Germany.
The Holdouts
That was the fate of countries in the WTO, but Palast did not discuss those that were not in that organization at all, including Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran. These seven countries were named by U.S. General Wesley Clark (Ret.) in a 2007 “Democracy Now” interview as the new “rogue states” being targeted for take down after September 11, 2001. He said that about 10 days after 9-11, he was told by a general that the decision had been made to go to war with Iraq. Later, the same general said they planned to take out seven countries in five years: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran.
What did these countries have in common? Besides being Islamic, they were not members either of the WTO or of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). That left them outside the long regulatory arm of the central bankers’ central bank in Switzerland. Other countries later identified as “rogue states” that were also not members of the BIS included North Korea, Cuba, and Afghanistan.
The body regulating banks today is called the Financial Stability Board (FSB), and it is housed in the BIS in Switzerland. In 2009, the heads of the G20 nations agreed to be bound by rules imposed by the FSB, ostensibly to prevent another global banking crisis. Its regulations are not merely advisory but are binding, and they can make or break not just banks but whole nations. This was first demonstrated in 1989, when the Basel I Accord raised capital requirements a mere 2%, from 6% to 8%. The result was to force a drastic reduction in lending by major Japanese banks, which were then the world’s largest and most powerful creditors. They were undercapitalized, however, relative to other banks. The Japanese economy sank along with its banks and has yet to fully recover.
Among other game-changing regulations in play under the FSB are Basel III and the new bail-in rules. Basel III is slated to impose crippling capital requirements on public, cooperative and community banks, coercing their sale to large multinational banks.
The “bail-in” template was first tested in Cyprus and follows regulations imposed by the FSB in 2011. Too-big-to-fail banks are required to draft “living wills” setting forth how they will avoid insolvency in the absence of government bailouts. The FSB solution is to “bail in” creditors – including depositors – turning deposits into bank stock, effectively confiscating them.
The Public Bank Alternative
Countries laboring under the yoke of an extractive private banking system are being forced into “structural adjustment” and austerity by their unrepayable debt. But some countries have managed to escape. In the Middle East, these are the targeted “rogue nations.” Their state-owned banks can issue the credit of the state on behalf of the state, leveraging public funds for public use without paying a massive tribute to private middlemen. Generous state funding allows them to provide generously for their people.
Like Libya and Iraq before they were embroiled in war, Syria provides free education at all levels and free medical care. It also provides subsidized housing for everyone (although some of this has been compromised by adoption of an IMF structural adjustment program in 2006 and the presence of about 2 million Iraqi and Palestinian refugees). Iran too provides nearly free higher educationand primary health care.
Like Libya and Iraq before takedown, Syria and Iran have state-owned central banks that issue the national currency and are under government control. Whether these countries will succeed in maintaining their financial sovereignty in the face of enormous economic, political and military pressure remains to be seen.
As for Larry Summers, after proceeding through the revolving door to head Citigroup, he became State Senator Barack Obama’s key campaign benefactor. He played a key role in the banking deregulation that brought on the current crisis, causing millions of US citizens to lose their jobs and their homes. Yet Summers is President Obama’s first choice to replace Ben Bernanke as Federal Reserve Chairman. Why? He has proven he can manipulate the system to make the world safe for Wall Street; and in an upside-down world in which bankers rule, that seems to be the name of the game.
Ellen Brown is an attorney, president of the Public Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the best-selling Web of Debt. In The Public Bank Solution, her latest book, she explores successful public banking models historically and globally. Her websites are http://WebofDebt.comhttp://PublicBankSolution.com, and http://PublicBankingInstitute.org.
Copyright © 2013 Global Research

Wayward aim

Wayward aim
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 08-14-2013 WED)
 
The so-called BangsaMoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) has reportedly sent 20 youthful bombers to terrorize Manila.  Bus stations, Metro Rail Transit and Light Rail Transit rides, malls, and any place where masses of people congregate are a probable target.  This follows the multiple bombings in Mindanao that have already claimed almost two dozen lives.
 
The BIFF is just one of a myriad of Muslim separatist groups believed to be doing such acts.  Of course, these are just the most recent flare-ups in the decades-long war and terror from Islamic separatists, most of which are linked to international terror groups that are, in turn, directly or indirectly inspired, organized, armed, and funded by the US and its Gulf allies such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar et al., like what has been happening to Libya and now Syria.
 
During the time of President Joseph Estrada, he aimed for the final resolution of the Muslim separatist problem by vanquishing the main force of the movement.  He succeeded in taking over all major Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) camps and forced its top leader to flee to Malaysia.  That was the first step to final stabilization of the political-military situation in the region.  It was, however, a victory that irked the US, an imperial power that wants to ensure its pre-eminence in the country by keeping destabilizing forces alive and active, thus, leading it to help depose Estrada.
 
But even as the US started to coddle the MILF more directly through the so-called peace process, where it had its puppet Philippine presidents give way to the MILF in terms of territories and control, dozens of our soldiers had been ambushed and beheaded over the decade.
 
The past two weeks, newspaper front pages were filled with reports of initiatives from BS Aquino’s government--led by green card holder and Foreign Affairs secretary Albert del Rosario and Defense chief Voltaire Gazmin--inviting “rotating” US forces into Philippine military and naval bases, even moving the Manila-based military facilities to what had for two decades been the commercial hub of Subic, with the “threat” from China as the justification for these moves.
 
On the civilian side, former US Naval Academy cadet Roilo Golez has been the point man of the anti-China West Philippine Sea Coalition, after taking his cue from Filipino-American Loida Nicolas-Lewis and her Fil-Am gofer Rodel Rodis.  To this end, all of them champion the purchase of arms hardware from the West.
 
To BS Aquino and this group, the chief and implacable enemy of the Philippines today is China, so much so that they will even violate the Constitution to invite foreign US military forces in.  These people really think so lowly of the public’s level of intelligence that they expect Filipinos to believe their thesis that the Philippines should devote hundreds of millions, if not billions, to prepare for war against China.  Well, as Golez said in an interview with Harry Tambuatco on GNN, the Philippines need not worry for it will have “allies” in this war (of course, referring to the US and Japan).
 
We will gladly leave Golez to his wishful thinking; but while his group saber-rattles against China, the fact is Muslim separatist terror bombings are already bombarding Mindanao--threatening the same in Manila.
 
Without a doubt, the inanity, if not insanity, of these anti-China warmongers knows no bounds.  They expect Filipinos to accept their crappy logic that China is the main enemy and that there can be no bilateral dialog with it.  Yet, they, along with BS Aquino, are not at all adverse to having such talks, even finalize agreements, with the MILF, which has killed hundreds of Filipinos, beheaded dozens of Filipino soldiers, and would not even meet the Philippine government halfway in negotiations by demanding a 75-percent share of the resources of the territories it claims?
 
To wit, even if there have been diplomatic impasses and tensions, the Chinese government has neither fired one shot nor harmed the hair of one Filipino.  Still, Del Rosario will not engage in any dialog with it while and Gazmin, Golez et al. want to prepare for war?
 
China today employs around 10,000 overseas Filipino workers as hotel staff and entertainers, and others as English teachers.  Some are even missionary workers there.  China buys billions worth of agricultural goods, such as bananas and coconut products, from the Philippines.  It has made every effort to pursue dialog, with its Ambassador Ma Keqing even humbly appealing to the Philippines to meet halfway in negotiations.  Yet all that Del Rosario, Gazmin, Golez et al. do is aim their diplomatic, verbal, and other guns at China.
 
Meanwhile, I do not see or hear these characters focusing any attention on the real threats from the BIFF and its ilk, or even from the MILF, which still threatens to secede if its lion’s share of Mindanao’s wealth is not granted.
 
This wayward aim of Del Rosario, Gazmin, Golez et al. leads me to suspect that they are in alliance with the terrorists in destabilizing the Philippines to keep it from real economic and national progress.
 
(Tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; watch GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m., this week on “Hocus PCOS, final verdict” with Ado Paglinawan, former Comelec IT expert Ernie del Rosario, and whistleblower-lawyer Melchor Magdamo; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 09234095739)

A-piece-ment miffs BIFF

A-piece-ment miffs BIFF
(Herman Tiu Laurel / DieHard III / The Daily Tribune / 08-12-2013 MON)
 
The so-called BangsaMoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) are reported to be miffed over the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)’s monopolization of all the pieces of the Mindanao pie from BS Aquino III’s policy of “a-piece-ment,” i.e. for being left out of the loot.  But can we be sure that this is the real reason for the BIFF’S beef with the rest of Philippine society, so much so that this alleged breakaway group has now been rocking innocents to their core with its improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
 
The personalities behind this “rebel terror” group, as well as their real identities and motives, are as a myriad and labyrinthine as the international networks of al-Qaeda, which US intelligence services organized (and continue to utilize) for terror destabilizations and destructions all over the world--from Libya to Syria, and to our very own Mindanao.  Last I heard from a most competent source, the Uighur al-Qaeda branch is already in Central Mindanao.
 
The nerve wracking IED bombings in Mindanao should compel all Filipinos to rethink government’s approach to the Islamic separatist problem--the same used by Fidel Ramos, then adopted by Gloria Arroyo and, now, BS Aquino III--which can be summed up as “a-piece-ment,” that is, to give way to rebel demands and parcel away, piece-by-piece, more and more of Mindanao and its rich resources to these separatist groups.
 
And as this happens, Malaysian and US-British sponsors of these “a-piece-ment” talks wait in the wings to get control of these resources as they always have, as in the case of their tyrant-run client states in the Middle East.
 
This “a-piece-ment” strategy was disrupted briefly by President Joseph Estrada’s “only one flag” policy that led to the bulldozing these separatists’ claimed camps and headquarters.
 
Back then, Estrada already had the MILF on the run, with its leader fleeing to the bosom of Malaysia to ponder the end of his separatist and tribal ambitions--but not before he thought of writing to the great imperialist infidel, George “Dubya” Bush, in meek supplication to lift his defeated force.
 
Thus, on the wings of the great eagle, the MILF was lifted back to life while Estrada was deposed by a conspiracy of US-backed corrupt military putschists and “civil socialites” that paved the way for the decades-long “a-piece-ment” negotiations and, now, the final 75/25 percent slicing of those parts of Mindanao and the Sulu Sea in favor of the MILF.
 
Other groups understandably cried foul--most notably the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) for the treacherous terms over North Borneo (Sabah) and other aspects of the deal.  Thus, the MNLF has threatened a new war over these issues.
 
Security expert Rommel Banlaoi informs us that there are even more groups-- most likely Jemaah Islamiyah (JI)-linked al-Qaeda--that may be considered suspect in the bombings.
 
In my interview with Banlaoi, cut short by the arrival of the station crew from Solar News, I was being shown documents pointing to another group that read like “Indama,” although I could not be sure because of the rush.  For sure, future discussions and analyses with Banlaoi will be reported in this space.
 
What is incontrovertible about the situation in Mindanao is that after President Estrada’s policy of “one country, one flag” was dismembered by the succeeding Edsa II governments of Arroyo and BS Aquino, separatist-terror now seems to proliferate, with Malacañang having no alternative policy to its “a-piece-ment.”
 
Whatever defense policy emanating from Malacañang these days only centers on a build-up of weaponry in relation to the China-Vietnam-Philippine maritime territorial disputes.  US navy cutters are bought with Malampaya funds to defend the seas but are immediately brought to the repair docks, while attack helicopters are on the purchase orders, etc.  But the West Philippines Sea, or South China Sea, or what others now call the Asean Sea, is all acoustic and no war--while a real war with IED terror and savage BIFF-MILF renegades and other paramilitary forces is raging.
 
Is Malacañang going to send the rickety BRP Ramon Alcaraz to Cotabato or Cagayan to Oro to hunt down the terrorists?  Wouldn’t the hundreds of millions for weaponry be better spent for intel to wipe out such separatist terror forces first?
 
The territorial waters issue with other claimants is better resolved through honest interaction and dialogue, as we have seen in the resolution of the imbroglio with Taiwan.  Manila-Taipei relations have normalized with the objective NBI investigators releasing their findings and recommending the appropriate filing of charges against erring Coast Guard members.  The saber-rattling of the past could not have produced any good.  Now, thousands of Filipino OFWs are able to leave purgatory and go on with their productive employment in Taiwan (where the minimum wage is around P28,000 a month).
 
The same beneficial results would definitely arise from a dialogue on RP’s West Philippine Sea claims with China, especially with Ambassador Ma Kequing’s call for both sides to “meet halfway.”  But what’s keeping productive peace with Asian neighbors from being actualized?  It’s clearly Malacañang’s fear of the US and some quarters profiting from RP arms purchases.
 
Lessons must be learned: “A-piece-ment” in Mindanao is a failure; a comprehensive national security strategy is needed to define priorities; and the free reign of separatist terror groups must be eliminated as Estrada did by shifting national focus to that through a quick resolution of disputes with China, Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia, and other claimants by sharing in the disputed territories’ economic benefits while agreeing to disagree peacefully over sovereignty issues.
 
(Tune in to 1098 AM, Tuesday to Friday, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; watch GNN Destiny Cable Channel 8, Saturday, 8:00 p.m. and replay Sunday, 8 a.m., this week on “Mindanao or WPS: Security priority”; visit http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com; and text reactions to 09234095739)