President Obama “has thus far failed to make the case for bold action on climate change,” Al Gore complains in a massive op-ed for Rolling Stone . In the piece, Gore bemoans a political environment in which “what is true and what is false is being attacked relentlessly” and a media…
Continue reading …The name Jose Antonio Vargas may not be familiar, but there’s a decent chance you’ve read his work as a journalist if you’re a fan of the Washington Post (where he shared a Pulitzer for coverage of the Virginia Tech shootings), the Huffington Post, or the New Yorker (where he…
Continue reading …China has released Ai Weiwei on bail, its state-run media announced today, saying that the artist had shown a “good attitude in confessing his crimes” and agreed to repay the taxes he was accused of evading. Beijing police also said Ai’s “chronic disease” had played into the decision—he suffers…
Continue reading …Straight out of a stoner comedy—a man’s effort to ditch some drugs from a moving car in western New York didn’t exactly go as planned. Sean Schmidt, 20, was standing with his upper body sticking out the sunroof of a vehicle traveling on I-190 in Buffalo late Monday night,…
Continue reading …If you thought airline fees for checking bags were unfair, imagine paying $5 just to get your boarding pass printed by an agent at check-in—because starting Nov. 1, Spirit Airlines will do just that. The fond-of-fees carrier said fliers could avoid the charge by checking-in online and printing boarding…
Continue reading …George W. Bush: Former president of the USA and Guinness World Record holder? Sort of. Bush was among the throng of baseball fans who donned sunglasses in the dark at last night’s Texas Rangers game. The previous record for people wearing shades at night was 423, so officials only confirmed…
Continue reading …Apple plans to introduce a suped-up iPhone this September, one outfitted with the faster A5 processor found in iPad 2s, sources tell Bloomberg . The phone will also come with an 8-megapixel camera instead of the 5-megapixel model found in the iPhone 4. Cosmetically, however, the device will closely resemble the…
Continue reading …You had to see this coming as soon as Pippa Middleton reportedly broke up with her boyfriend: UK tabloids are reporting that Her Royal Hotness is now thisclose to hooking up with Prince Harry. “They speak on the phone all the time and have met up at least five times…
Continue reading …Syria calls measures the equivalent to ‘war’ while promising to turn country into model democracy Syria has lashed out at international “meddling” in its internal affairs and lambasted new EU sanctions that also target the commander of the al-Quds force of Iran’s revolutionary guards, accused by the west of helping crush the unprecedented unrest. Walid al-Moallem, Syria’s foreign minister, called the sanctions the equivalent to “war”, while promising to turn the country into a model democracy. He accused EU states of trying to “plant strife and chaos” after they agreed to extend punitive measures against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in response to the repression of protests that has cost 1,400 lives in three months. The Guardian has learned that the sanctions target General Qassem Soleimani, commander of the elite al-Quds, who is already subject to US sanctions. Moallem denied that Tehran or Syria’s Lebanese protege Hezbollah had been involved. He singled out France for harbouring ambitions derived from its history as Syria’s colonial ruler and urged Turkey to “reconsider” its increasinglyown hostile stance. Moallem blamed al-Qaida for killings of security personnel. Around 300 soldiers and other members of the security forces have been killed, alongside civilian casualties, in this bloody chapter of the Arab spring. The minister’s comments showed the Syrian regime flexing its muscles amid the overwhelmingly negative reaction to reform proposals Assad made in his speech on Monday. The US called for “action, not words” in response to that address – only Assad’s third since the crisis began. “We will forget that Europe is on the map and we will look east, south and towards every hand that is extended to us,” Moallem said in a televised speech. Russia and China are continuing to block western attempts to pass a UN security council resolution condemning Syria. British officials dismissed his remarks. A Foreign Office spokesman said: “It is the regime’s own brutal repression of peaceful protest that is harming the Syrian people and the Syrian economy. We will continue to increase the pressure on President Assad and those around him until they recognise that the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people must be met with reform not repression.” The new EU sanctions target individuals and companies in Syria’s business community to increase economic pressure on the regime, as well as on Soleimani and two other Iranians accused of “providing military equipment and support”. Syria is no stranger to international isolation. During the 2003 Iraq war many in Washington regarded it as an easy target for criticism. Tensions were heightened in 2005 when Lebanon’s ex-prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri was assassinated – though Damascus always denied responsibility. “Most Syrians would be horrified at the thought of reliving the isolation endured by Syria in the 80s and part of the 90s,” said Rime Allaf, a Syrian analyst at the Chatham House thinktank in London. “While the idea of foreign intervention is overwhelmingly rejected by regime fans and critics alike, diplomatic pressure is to be expected from Europe.” But analysts believe the regime still thinks it can contain this crisis through a mixture of repression and reform. Moallem promised reforms that would allow Syria to “give lessons for others in democracy”. A draft law to regulate new political parties, potentially ending Ba’athist dominance, has been published. After Assad’s speech, state media announced a presidential decree granting amnesty to prisoners, excluding political detainees. But domestic opposition, which appears to be slowly growing, rejected the pledges as insincere and too little, too late. “The parties law is not bad,” said one opposition analyst who asked for anonymity. “But no one really believes that the regime will allow true power-sharing because it will ultimately lead to its downfall.” It is equally unclear who will take part in a national dialogue. The Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), a group of grassroots opposition activists, rejected calls for dialogue as a way to “gain more time” for the regime. Veteran opposition figures who had been meeting the government, including Louay Hussein and Michel Kilo, have refused to continue. Meanwhile, the LCC said security forces had raided Damascus University dormitories on Tuesday night and again on Wednesday morning making arrests, smashing computers and leaving one student dead. The raid came after at least people were shot dead by pro-government forces in Homs, Hama and Deir Ezzor on Tuesday amid rising tensions as pro-regime rallies and anti-regime demonstrations poured onto the streets. Nida Hassan is the pseudonym of a journalist working in Damascus Syria European Union Iran US foreign policy Middle East Europe Ian Black Nidaa Hassan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Syria calls measures the equivalent to ‘war’ while promising to turn country into model democracy Syria has lashed out at international “meddling” in its internal affairs and lambasted new EU sanctions that also target the commander of the al-Quds force of Iran’s revolutionary guards, accused by the west of helping crush the unprecedented unrest. Walid al-Moallem, Syria’s foreign minister, called the sanctions the equivalent to “war”, while promising to turn the country into a model democracy. He accused EU states of trying to “plant strife and chaos” after they agreed to extend punitive measures against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in response to the repression of protests that has cost 1,400 lives in three months. The Guardian has learned that the sanctions target General Qassem Soleimani, commander of the elite al-Quds, who is already subject to US sanctions. Moallem denied that Tehran or Syria’s Lebanese protege Hezbollah had been involved. He singled out France for harbouring ambitions derived from its history as Syria’s colonial ruler and urged Turkey to “reconsider” its increasinglyown hostile stance. Moallem blamed al-Qaida for killings of security personnel. Around 300 soldiers and other members of the security forces have been killed, alongside civilian casualties, in this bloody chapter of the Arab spring. The minister’s comments showed the Syrian regime flexing its muscles amid the overwhelmingly negative reaction to reform proposals Assad made in his speech on Monday. The US called for “action, not words” in response to that address – only Assad’s third since the crisis began. “We will forget that Europe is on the map and we will look east, south and towards every hand that is extended to us,” Moallem said in a televised speech. Russia and China are continuing to block western attempts to pass a UN security council resolution condemning Syria. British officials dismissed his remarks. A Foreign Office spokesman said: “It is the regime’s own brutal repression of peaceful protest that is harming the Syrian people and the Syrian economy. We will continue to increase the pressure on President Assad and those around him until they recognise that the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people must be met with reform not repression.” The new EU sanctions target individuals and companies in Syria’s business community to increase economic pressure on the regime, as well as on Soleimani and two other Iranians accused of “providing military equipment and support”. Syria is no stranger to international isolation. During the 2003 Iraq war many in Washington regarded it as an easy target for criticism. Tensions were heightened in 2005 when Lebanon’s ex-prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri was assassinated – though Damascus always denied responsibility. “Most Syrians would be horrified at the thought of reliving the isolation endured by Syria in the 80s and part of the 90s,” said Rime Allaf, a Syrian analyst at the Chatham House thinktank in London. “While the idea of foreign intervention is overwhelmingly rejected by regime fans and critics alike, diplomatic pressure is to be expected from Europe.” But analysts believe the regime still thinks it can contain this crisis through a mixture of repression and reform. Moallem promised reforms that would allow Syria to “give lessons for others in democracy”. A draft law to regulate new political parties, potentially ending Ba’athist dominance, has been published. After Assad’s speech, state media announced a presidential decree granting amnesty to prisoners, excluding political detainees. But domestic opposition, which appears to be slowly growing, rejected the pledges as insincere and too little, too late. “The parties law is not bad,” said one opposition analyst who asked for anonymity. “But no one really believes that the regime will allow true power-sharing because it will ultimately lead to its downfall.” It is equally unclear who will take part in a national dialogue. The Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), a group of grassroots opposition activists, rejected calls for dialogue as a way to “gain more time” for the regime. Veteran opposition figures who had been meeting the government, including Louay Hussein and Michel Kilo, have refused to continue. Meanwhile, the LCC said security forces had raided Damascus University dormitories on Tuesday night and again on Wednesday morning making arrests, smashing computers and leaving one student dead. The raid came after at least people were shot dead by pro-government forces in Homs, Hama and Deir Ezzor on Tuesday amid rising tensions as pro-regime rallies and anti-regime demonstrations poured onto the streets. Nida Hassan is the pseudonym of a journalist working in Damascus Syria European Union Iran US foreign policy Middle East Europe Ian Black Nidaa Hassan guardian.co.uk
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