Thursday, February 28, 2013

Millions of kids getting into rough-and-tumble MMA

Two Ultimate Fighting Championship competitors square off in an MMA match. (AP)Mixed martial arts, the rough-and-tumble fighting form more commonly known as ?MMA,? has surged in popularity with children. An estimated 3 million children under the age of 13 are now taking MMA classes around the country, according to Orlando, Fla.'s WKMG.

The sport, which has enjoyed massive mainstream popularity through leagues like the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and the 2011 Oscar-nominated film "Warrior," is reportedly now being studied by children as young as 5.

"The trend I've seen with children and mixed martial arts is an explosion," Jonathan Burke, the owner of the VI Levels, a mixed martial arts gym in Ocoee, Fla., told WKMG.

However, Burke says his goal is not to turn the kids into street fighters, but rather to help them get into shape and deal with issues ranging from bullying to mental illness. "We use it to teach these kids self-defense and how to deal with mental issues," he said. "It's not about fighting. It's about getting in great physical shape, improving your mental focus and discipline.

"I can't guarantee they won't be a bully,? Burke added, ?But I can guarantee that the way we present the information, we're going to make bullying look so bad, they're going to be ashamed to be associated with that word.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/mma-enjoying-explosion-popularity-kids-213944200.html

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19 dead in balloon crash near Luxor: How will this affect tourism?

19 are reported dead after a balloon crash in Luxor, Egypt. The dawn hot air balloon ride over the Valley of the Kings is popular with tourists, even after the post-Mubarak tourism slump.

By Marwa Awad,?Reuters / February 26, 2013

In these stills from amateur video obtained by Al Jazeera, smoke pours from a hot air balloon over Luxor, Egypt, top left, before bursting, top right, and plummeting about 1,000 feet to earth, bottom left and right, on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. The balloon crash left 19 people dead.

Al Jazeera / AP

Enlarge

At least 19 people, most of them Asian and European tourists, died on Tuesday when a hot air balloon caught fire and crashed near the ancient Egyptian town of Luxor after a mid-air gas explosion, officials said.

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The balloon came down in farmland a few miles from the Valley of the Kings and pharaonic temples popular with tourists. Rescue workers gathered the dead from the field where the charred remains of the balloon, gas canisters and other pieces of wreckage landed.

One Egyptian was also killed, Health Minister Mohamed Mostafa Hamed told Reuters, listing the other victims as tourists from Japan, China, France, Britain and Hungary. Earlier, officials had said all the dead were foreigners.

The balloon crashed on the west bank of the Nile, where many of the area's major historical sites are located.

Konny Matthews, assistant manager of Luxor's Al Moudira hotel, said she heard an explosion at about 7 a.m. "It was a huge bang. It was a frightening bang, even though it was several kilometres away from the hotel," she said by phone. "Some of my employees said that their homes were shaking."

Ahmed Aboud, head of an association representing Luxor balloon operators, said the fire had begun in the pipe linking the gas canisters to the burner. He said it was an accident.

The deaths were caused by burns and injuries sustained in the fall, said Mohamed Mustafa, a doctor at the hospital where the injured were treated.

The pilot survived by jumping from the basket, Aboud said.

The British government said two British citizens and a British resident of Egypt had been killed. "We can also confirm that one other British national was involved and is in a stable condition," a British foreign ministry statement said.

Two French citizens were killed, according to France's foreign ministry. The Japanese embassy in Cairo said it believed four Japanese had been aboard and had sent staff to Luxor to confirm this.

Transport accidents are frequent in Egypt. Dozens of children were killed in November when the bus they were on collided with a train. Accidents affecting foreign tourists are rarer, but not unusual. Five Germans were killed in December in a bus crash near a Red Sea resort.

A LOUD EXPLOSION

U.S. photographer Christopher Michel, who was on board another balloon, told Britain's Sky News television that the balloon was one of eight flying at the time. "We heard a loud explosion behind us. I looked back and saw lots of smoke. It wasn't immediately clear that it was a balloon," he said.

Hot air ballooning at dawn is popular with tourists, who are a mainstay of the Egyptian economy, although visitor numbers have fallen sharply since a 2011 uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak. Two years of political instability have kept many foreign tourists away.

Tourism accounted for more than a 10th of Egypt's gross domestic product before the revolt. In 2010, about 14.7 million visitors came to Egypt, but this slumped to 9.8 million the next year.

Wael Ibrahim, head of the tour guides' syndicate in Luxor, said he did not expect the accident to make the situation worse for tour operators in the area than it already was. "We've already been affected badly in Egypt," he said.

Some tourists may be more wary of activities like hot air ballooning, he said, but added: "This (type of) accident could happen anywhere in the world."

Last year a balloon plunged to the ground in flames in Slovenia, killing four people and injuring 28.

Egyptian Civil Aviation Minister Wael el-Maadawi said a committee from the ministry was heading to Luxor to investigate the incident. He said hot air balloon flights would be stopped until an investigation into the cause of the accident.

"We cannot say whether this was because of maintenance or human (error) until the investigation committee is completely done with its investigation," he told Al Jazeera TV's Egyptian channel.

(Reporting by Tom Perry, Alexander Dziadosz, Shaimaa Fayed and Asma Alsharif in Cairo, Michael Holden, Estelle Shirbon and Tim Castle in London and Vicky Buffery in Paris; Writing by Tom Perry and Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/mmWuSXtVqDg/19-dead-in-balloon-crash-near-Luxor-How-will-this-affect-tourism

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Stretchable batteries are here! Power to the bendy electronics

The next frontier in electronics are the flexible, stretchable kind. Yes, that means a rubber, bouncy smartphone (eventually), but it also means heart monitors threaded into cardiac tissue. For devices like that to work, they require flexible, stretchable batteries. And such batteries are here, according to researchers who just published their work.

Yonggang Huang, an engineer at Northwestern University, created the battery with materials wizard John Rogers at the University of Illinois, who received the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize in 2011 for his work on flexible electronics designed for integration with the human body.

How much give and take does the invention allow? ?We can stretch the device a great deal ? up to about 300 percent ? and still have a working battery,? Huang noted. (Please don't try that with your smartphone's battery.)

?Such stretchable batteries enable true integration with stretchable electronics in a small package,? Huang told NBC News in an email.

The background of the research team means that medical applications will be primarily targeted, but there are other applications for bendy batteries such as wearable solar cells and electric-eye cameras that make studio-quality photographs.

The flexible lithium-ion battery reported today in the journal Nature Communications completes the flexible electronics package with a cordless power source. When the battery runs out of juice after about eight hours, it is recharged wirelessly.

To make the battery, the researchers start with tiny, individual, rigid battery storage components arranged next to each other. The bendy and stretchy characteristics stem from tightly packed, wavy wires that connect these components.

?When we stretch the battery, the wavy interconnects unravels, much like yarn unspooling, while the storage components almost keep undeformed, because of their much larger rigidity than the interconnects? Huang explained.

The breakthrough was demonstrated with a light emitting diode that continues to work when stretched, folded and twisted on a human elbow. It continued to work well through 20 recharge cycles.

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/stretchable-batteries-are-here-power-bendy-electronics-1C8546821

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Vatican gets ready to say 'Ciao!' to Pope Benedict

The first Pope in nearly 700 years to voluntarily step down, Pope Benedict spoke in front of his final audience Wednesday and will officially resign on Thursday at which point he will be known as pope emeritus. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

A meeting with the red-clad ?princes of the church.? A 10-minute helicopter ride to Castel Gandolfo. A quick wave from the balcony to throngs in a candlelit square.

That?s the script for Pope Benedict XVI?s final hours as spiritual leader of the world?s 1.3 billion Roman Catholics before his resignation becomes official at 8 p.m. Thursday -- ending an often rocky eight-year tenure and launching the church into a potentially contentious search for his replacement.


His farewell address has already happened ? a speech Wednesday morning before a cheering crowd of more than 100,000 in front of St. Peter?s, where he acknowledged moments of great joy and difficulty and asked followers to pray for him in his retirement.

The spotlight will remain on Benedict, however, for at least another day before attention turns to the highly ritualized conclave that will choose his successor.

Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

Cardinal Antonio Rouco Varela (3rd L) reacts while attending the last general audience of Pope Benedict XVI.

At 11 a.m. Thursday, Italian time, he is scheduled to meet the cardinals that have rushed to Rome for the historic event. Each will have the chance to say a few parting words to him, but a major speech is not expected.

The personal goodbyes will continue as he leaves the Apostolic Palace before 5 p.m. and is driven to the helipad, where Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of Cardinals, will see him off.

The 85-year-old pope knows how to fly a helicopter but presumably will rely on a pilot from the 13th Squadron of the Italian Air Force for the jaunt to the hilltop town where he will live in his summer residence for a few months while a monastery in the Vatican Gardens is prepared for him.

Town priests are planning a prayer vigil in Castel Gandolfo to begin a few hours before Benedict?s arrival, and he is likely to bestow a brief greeting on the thousands crammed into the town square, clutching rosaries and candles.

Once he leaves Rome, there will be only a few more hours in his papacy, which officially ends at the stroke of 8 p.m. Thursday. From that moment on, he will be known as pope emeritus, and aides say a life of quiet reflection will commence.

?I think we?ll probably catch some glimpses of him walking in the garden,? Vatican spokesman?Greg Burke told NBC?s TODAY. ?He?s not the kind of guy who is going on a book tour.?

At the Vatican, the Swiss Guards will go off duty ? and the cardinals will be officially called back to work the next day with a formal announcement of what?s called the sede vacante, Latin for "the seat being vacant."

A Vatican spokesman told the Catholic News Service the college will probably not meet over the weekend but could gather the following Monday for informal talks to set a date for the conclave and begin talking about priorities for 266th pope.

Under old church law, the conclave couldn?t start until March 15, but an amendment this week will allow the cardinals to push up the date as along as all 115 electors are in place. There were supposed to be 117, but one is too sick to attend and another recused himself after being accused of inappropriate behavior with priests.

And, of course, the Vatican guesthouse where the cardinals will stay during the conclave must be swept for listening devices before they can move in for the duration.

The length of the conclave ? with its four secret ballots a day, cast in the Sistine Chapel ? is anyone's guess; it took just two days to elect Benedict and three to choose his predecessor, John Paul II.

Vatican watchers say there is no clear front-runner and Benedict's legacy will loom large as they look to the future.

An introverted theologian, he is credited with pushing the "new evangelization" and repairing rifts with Jews but faulted for not taking stronger action as a sex-abuse scandal tarnished the church's reputation and letting the Vatican bureaucracy run amok.

He alluded to the crises during Wednesday's address, saying he had often felt like "St. Peter with the Apostles in the boat on the Sea of ??Galilee."

"The Lord has given us many days of sunshine and gentle breeze, days in which the catch has been abundant," he said. "[But] there have been times when the seas were rough and the wind against us, as in the whole history of the Church it has ever been ? and the Lord seemed to sleep."

Gabriel Bouys / AFP - Getty Images

The pope delivers his final audience in St. Peter's Square as he prepares to stand down.

Related:

Pope Benedict tells cheering crowd: I am not abandoning the church

Papal historian: Cardinals likely to choose an 'extrovert'

'Amateur hour': Vatican conclave drama is one for the history books, experts say

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17118412-vatican-gets-ready-to-say-ciao-to-pope-benedict?lite

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UN removes Osama bin Laden from sanctions list

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? The United Nations has finally removed Osama bin Laden from the list of al-Qaida members subject to U.N. sanctions, nearly two years after he was killed by U.S. commandos in Pakistan.

The U.N. Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against the terrorist group approved the deletion on Feb. 21, according to their website.

The al-Qaida leader was accused of masterminding the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Washington, and on a crashed plane in Pennsylvania, that killed nearly 3,000 people.

"Bin Laden's removal from the list is a purely technical matter, and was conducted under the provisions related to deceased persons," Kurtis Cooper, deputy spokesman for the U.S. Mission to the United Nations, said Tuesday. "This action in no way signals a change in the international or U.S. position on al-Qaida or Osama bin Laden's role in the tragic events of 9/11 and other terrorist acts and support."

The sanctions committee said the asset freeze, travel ban and arms embargo no longer apply to bin Laden.

But it said member states requesting to unfreeze his assets must provide assurances to the committee that the funds will not be transferred to any other individual or group on the U.N. sanctions list.

The list currently includes 233 individuals and 63 organizations, foundations and companies.

Cooper said that the United States successfully pressed the Security Council to include a provision in a resolution last December updating the listing and delisting procedures for sanctions against al-Qaida that will prevent the unfreezing of funds that belonged to bin Laden if the United States or any other council member objects.

The Security Council first imposed sanctions against the Taliban in November 1999 for refusing to send bin Laden to the United States or a third country for trial on terrorism charges in connection with the bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.

The sanctions were later extended to al-Qaida and in July 2005, they were extended again to cover affiliates and splinter groups of al-Qaida and the Taliban.

In June 2011, the Security Council voted unanimously to treat al-Qaida and the Taliban separately when it comes to U.N. sanctions, a move aimed at supporting the Afghan government's reconciliation efforts and more effectively fighting global terrorism.

Bin Laden's designation on the sanctions list gave his name as Usama Muhammed Awad bin Laden with 13 "good quality" aliases and two "low quality" aliases. It gave four specific dates and two years, 1956 and 1957, for his birth date and noted that his Saudi citizenship was withdrawn and that the Taliban gave him Afghan nationality.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-26-UN-UN-Bin-Laden-Sanctions/id-fd5af2e4cf0e48869613c416e2c81587

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Stop Trying To Make WebOS Happen. It?s Not Going To Happen

image001341547197020eudxdwWe need to face facts: WebOS is dead. Barring the unwavering support of the enthusiast community, the former mobile OS will never become a commercial product and, LG investment or no, the possibility of WebOS surviving a sale is nil.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pMmeSlOT3ZA/

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

This new dinosaur had chicken-size young

Junchang Lu

A fossil of the newly found Yulong mini dinosaur, "Yulong looks like chicken with a tail," lead author Junchang Lu said.

By Jennifer Viegas
Discovery

A newly discovered dinosaur, Yulong mini, was appropriately named, as the remains of its chicken-sized offspring are now among the smallest dinosaurs ever found, according to a new study.

The tiny baby dinosaurs, described in the journal Naturwissenschaften, were oviraptorids, a.k.a. "egg thieves." These non-flying dinosaurs resembled modern birds, except adults of some species could grow to over 26 feet long.

"Yulong looks like chicken with a tail," lead author Junchang L? told Discovery News. "Its behavior was similar to living birds too. Based on the primitive oviraptors such as Caudipteryx, Yulong should be feathered, although we could not find feathers due to the poor preservation condition."

L?, of the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, and his colleagues analyzed the dinosaur remains, which were unearthed at Henan Province in central China. In addition to L?, the team included researchers from the Henan Geological Museum as well as Philip Currie from the University of Alberta.

While adult dinosaurs were found in the general region of the excavation, they were not directly with the babies, suggesting that members of this species did not require parental care when young.

It has been widely accepted that oviraptors were carnivores. One earlier specimen, for example, was found with the preserved remains of a lizard in its stomach. The new study, however, challenges that theory.

In terms of the new oviraptor fossils, "based on their hind limb proportions, the pattern is more commonly seen in herbivores than in carnivores, thus indicating that they were herbivores," L? said.

He did, however, add that the jaw structure of this dinosaur could have handled a few meaty edibles.

"It provided strong bite force when (the dinosaur) ate hard foods such as nuts, mollusks and even eggs," he explained.

Currie, though, described Yulong mini as having a "sedentary lifestyle that did not involve the pursuit of similar-sized prey."

The dinosaur might then have rather passively poked around for food, similar to how some birds today forage.

Yulong mini itself was good eats.

Just as many humans today love chicken, it seems that other dinosaurs enjoyed chowing down on Yulong. Remains of several large carnivorous dinosaurs, including T. rex, were found in the area and likely preyed on the more sedentary dinosaurs, the researchers believe.

While Yulong mini and other oviraptorid dinosaurs resembled chickens and other modern birds and appear to have behaved somewhat like them, they were definitely non-avian dinosaurs and not birds.

"They could not have been the ancestors to modern birds," L? explained. "They (exemplify) convergent evolution and went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous."

That was around 65 million years ago, when the world's non-avian dinosaurs all went extinct.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17089181-this-new-dinosaur-had-chicken-size-young?lite

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Airpush and Apsalar announce new partnership, will bring deeper in-app analytics for developers

Airpush

Developers will be thrilled to hear that Airpush and Apsalar have announced a partnership at MWC that will bring better in-app analytics to Android. Airpush is a mobile ad network and Apsalar is a leader in Mobile Engagement Management solutions.

Airpush will continue to work to get developers paid while Apsalar will provide the ability to measure:

  • User behavior
  • Retention
  • Engagement
  • Monetization

More data is better and the better developers can use the data to monetize apps on Android, the better for us all. Full press release after the break.

Source: Business Wire

 

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/bB95JGsxXeU/story01.htm

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Republican Senator McCain says Hagel "not qualified" as defense secretary (reuters)

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Samsung Video Discovery hands-on

Image

Samsung's really playing up its media chops here at Mobile World Congress. In addition to demoing the new HomeSync Android box, the Korean company is showing off its recently announced service for finding and watching TV content. The product was originally called TV Discovery, but just five days later it's resurfaced under the moniker Video Discovery. This new name is more accurate, as the service does deliver content recommendations for both live programming and movies and TV shows on demand.

We saw Video Discovery demoed with a Galaxy Note 8.0 and a Samsung Smart TV. You'll need a device with an IR blaster to adjust the TV channel or volume, with the app serving as a touchscreen remote. There are several modes for browsing content, including a timeline view that looks almost identical to the standard TV guide menu. You can also browse by genre or view current programming across all channels. When we skimmed through live TV listings, we simply had to tap the large "Watch Now" button next to a listing for the show to turn up on screen a few seconds later.

Perhaps the most useful feature, at least for those of you who know what you want: type in a search, and you'll see results from several content providers, including Blockbuster and Netflix (in the US) in addition to cable channels. Samsung reps said Discovery will also deliver personalized recommendations based on viewing preference and history, but the trade show employees on hand didn't seem entirely confident on some of the features, so we'll have to play with the service a bit more after it launches in April to confirm final functionality. But why not take a look for yourself now? Hit up the hands-on video after the break.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/AIRSyod_mqI/

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The Weekly Roundup for 02.18.2013

The Weekly Roundup for 12032012

You might say the week is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workweek, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Weekly Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 7 days -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/the-weekly-roundup-for-02-18-2013/

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Institute at CMU aims to advance energy industry


By Rick Wills

Published: Saturday, February 23, 2013, 1:50?p.m.
Updated 3 hours ago

Carnegie Mellon University has hundreds of experts exploring new ways to produce energy and to make existing types of energy more efficient.

?But the people working on these projects often don't know enough about what other people at the school are doing,? said Granger Morgan, a professor who heads the school's Department of Engineering and Public Policy.

Morgan will lead the Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation, a research and education initiative aimed at designing efficient systems for the use and storage of energy and the developing clean, affordable and sustainable energy sources.

University officials announced plans for the institute in June. Carnegie Mellon is constructing a building to house it within two years, near Hammerschlag Hall.

The institute will organize teams of Carnegie Mellon engineers, scientists, economists, architects, policy specialists and others to examine energy issues.

University researchers developed technology to reduce carbon emissions and technology to transmit wind- and solar-generated power through the electricity grid to a broad range of customers. They have developed materials such as solar panels that produce and store energy, increase efficiency and reduce waste.

?Half or more of the energy produced by big power plants is wasted. If you had smaller, combined heat-and-power systems, you could almost double the efficiency,? said Andrew Gellman, head of the Department of Chemical Engineering and the institute's assistant director.

Morgan's research on carbon capture and sequestration, a process that pumps carbon dioxide into the ground instead of the air, helped California provide electricity without greenhouse gas emissions.

Next year, Carnegie Mellon spinoff Aquion Energy Inc. will start selling its nontoxic sodium ion batteries that boost capacity for energy storage. Aquion is scheduled to start production in the former Sony plant in Westmoreland County this year.

About 1.6 billion people live with no power, and hundreds of millions of others get makeshift power from dirty diesel generators. In many places, electricity is available only sporadically.

?You see that somewhere like India, where power goes out all the time. When it does, store owners turn on generators, which spew out fumes and make noise. It's horrible,? Gellman said.

The institute was made possible by a lead gift from Carnegie Mellon alum Sherman Scott, president and founder of Delmar Systems, and his wife, Joyce Bowie Scott, a graduate and trustee of the university. The institute is named for Sherman Scott's father.

Rick Wills is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. He can be reached at 412-320-7944 or at rwills@tribweb.com.

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Andr?s Simonyi: 'Nordic Cool Power in Wasington': What the Nordics Teach About Nation Branding

Last week the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. welcomed "Nordic Cool 2013", a month-long festival showcasing the finest examples of music, dance, literature,fashion, food, lifestyle and the arts, all the product of creativity and a thousand years of tradition from the Nordic countries. The icing on the cake (literally) on opening night was a dinner created by the talented Morten Sohlberg, the Norwegian-born chef who runs, among others, the Smorgas in New York. This was just a sampler, with more to come!

The Nordics are smart to team up to make themselves visible in Washington and beyond, as an entity to be reckoned with. This radiates self confidence in each of the [very diverse] participants: Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Iceland, Greenland, the F?r?er Islands and ?land. The message they are delivering is very simple: creativity is the most precious resource of the 21st century, which thrives on tradition, innovation, respect, tolerance, openness and courage. This one-of-a-kind event illustrates all that through a widespread cultural attraction the Nordic countries increasingly enjoy these days.

But why is it that a small, inhospitable geographically peripheral part of Northern Europe is currently among the hottest places in the world in terms of global attractiveness? What have they got right that others should learn from?

Clearly, what is unique about the Nordics is not just their cultural appeal, but also their successful 'nation branding' efforts underpinned by strong attention to both soft and hard power.

In today's fluid globalized world, 'nation branding' is already emerging as an important concept. As businesses seek to attract customers on an increasingly competitive global market, positive preconceptions of a country can help improve the competitiveness of a nation's exports. Well-known Nordic brands such as Nokia, Volvo, H&M, Ikea, Lego or Novo Nordisk and Angry Bird, have all benefited and profited from the strong attractiveness of their home countries.

Make no mistake: the successful export of Nordic "cool" culture is not accidental nor merely the result of savvy marketing campaigns. On the contrary, these countries have all made a deliberate, concerted effort at promoting their global brands in a strategic way which includes but also goes beyond cultural aspects. In the case of the Nordics, cultural appeal is complemented by a strong and principled international stance and domestic well-being. Moreover, their domestic affairs -- characterized by effective governance, strong liberal values and an egalitarian system, an innovation-driven, tech savvy business climate, and environmentally conscious policies -- is an envy to the rest of the world.

Using a smart mindset on power, the Nordics show that both soft and hard power capacities, part of one power toolbox, are the critical components that comprise a nation's global brand. But successful nation branding is also inevitably a 'whole-of-society' enterprise. As the Nordics show, these assets must be deployed strategically and in a comprehensive manner. Effective collaboration between government, civil society and the private sector is key.

The fact that they hold hands is a victory of reason. None of them alone can wield as much power and influence as in unity. Together they are a formidable little giant to be reckoned with both economically, culturally and militarily.They have put aside historic grievances a long time ago, which today only exist in jokes. A hundred years ago Norway was still a Danish colony and in Finland the Swedish minority was discriminated against. Today they project power together, and the Finnish Secretary General of the Nordic Council, Jan Erik Enestam, is from the Swedish minority.

The Nordics wield the tools in their "spectral power toolbox" smartly.

The challenge posed by the authoritarian models to Western-style democracy is a real one. To offer a real viable response, Western countries must undertake necessary and bold domestic reforms to enhance governance efficiency and economic competitiveness, ensure transparency, beat corruption and keep democratic institutions strong. They must also seek to play a more responsible global role, stepping up to the plate when it comes to contributing to international peace, security and development efforts.

Nordic Cool is a display of the softer tools in the power toolbox. But it is important, to recognize that their power is ultimately based on their belief in universal values of human rights and freedoms. It is this belief that allows to reconcile their national interests with the needs and interests of the international community.

In sum, "Cool Power" complements and transcends both hard and soft power. It is a display of the attractiveness of a group of countries, which in turn is based on both their domestic and international qualities, ones that really matter in the 21st century. Their strength lies in turning their diversity into a joint message. In return they each gain a lot of visibility. Tapping into this and communicating the mindset effectively must become a new imperative for the West.

It naturally comes to mind that others in Europe, in particular Central Europe: the Poles, the Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks and Romanians should learn from the Nordics. They should team up, not just in words and forms of declarations but for real. The menu for opening night at their joint event in Washington will be nothing to worry about.

?

Follow Andr?s Simonyi on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@CTR_SAIS

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andras-simonyi/nordic-cool-power-in-wasi_b_2748954.html

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Renewable energy talk in Somerset this week

Renewable energy talk in Somerset this week

SOMERSET Smallholders Association is hearing a talk from renewable energy company Puragen next Thursday, February 28.

The company supplies off-grid power where mains electricity is not available.

The talk at Ruishton village hall will interest smallholders who want electric fences and lights in barns with no power.

It starts at 7.30pm and non-members pay ?2. Refreshments and home-made cakes will be served.

Source: http://www.somersetcountygazette.co.uk/news/10244659.Renewable_energy_talk_in_Somerset_this_week/?ref=rss

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Apple joins forces with NYPD to catch iPhone and iPad thieves

People who live in the great state of New York know that iPhone and iPad theft is a growing epidemic. In fact, things have gotten so bad that New York City commissioner Ray Kelly blamed Apple for the city?s rise in crime. Today, however, both sides are coming together to not only slow down theft, but to get the stolen iProducts back to their rightful owners.

After the release of the iPhone 5, the NYPD took the first measures implementing some newer much aggressive techniques, including registering serial numbers and contact details of owners. The NYPD also put in place undercover officers to patrol the subways where thefts of Apple gadgets often occur.

Apple?s role in helping is to tell the NYPD of the device?s current location, regardless if it was reregistered with a different wireless provider. Ultimately, the NYPD?s goal is to catch the criminals who are taking and selling the devices.

?We?re looking for ways to find individuals who have stolen Apple products and return the products to their original owners,? said NYPD spokesman Paul Browne. ?It is being done to learn the pattern who is stealing.?

Because the iPhone and iPad is so wildly popular, folks can expect changes like this to become commonplace for big cities across the country. Like?I?ve?said before: iPhone?s are high commodities, as the popular device usually keeps most of its value and sell for a reasonable price. And with gadget thefts elevating the crime rate, state officials have no choice but to be involved.

[via New York Post]

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IntoMobile/~3/eDtqtZMGHKo/

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TDIC hosts Lord Mayor of the City ff London for tour of Saadiyat

The Lord Mayor was greeted by HE Sheikh Sultan Bin Tahnoon Al Nahyan, Chairman of TDIC and Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Authority (TCA Abu Dhabi), alongside TDIC's senior management.

Sheikh Sultan expressed the significance of cultural exchange between the UAE and the world as Saadiyat contributes a major part in this aspect through its world-class museums, such as the Zayed National Museum being developed in collaborations with the expertise of the British Museum.

The Lord Mayor visited Saadiyat Construction Village and expressed his admiration over this high-quality, modern community project designed to international standards, which TDIC opened in 2009, to accommodate construction workers employed on Saadiyat's developments.

The Lord Mayor met with construction workers as he toured the various state-of-the-art social, recreational and educational facilities. With a capacity to accommodate up to 20,000 workers, Saadiyat Construction Village has become an exemplifying model in the region especially for its broad range of conveniences, such as multilingual libraries, computer and Internet access, gymnasiums, and floodlit sporting area with four cricket pitches, basketball court and tennis court.

During the visit the Lord Mayor of London, said, "I was extremely impressed by the facilities at Saadiyat Construction Village. It's now a model of best practice in supporting workers who are doing a fantastic job in helping Saadiyat Island to become a centre for tourism, culture and leisure facilities."

The Lord Mayor also toured Manarat Al Saadiyat's exhibition, 'The Saadiyat Story', which depicts the development of island as it emerges as an unparalleled international destination of cultural, tourism and residential offerings.

During the tour he received an update on the Saadiyat Cultural District which will also be home to other cultural projects, including Guggenheim Abu Dhabi museum, a performance arts centre, and Louvre Abu Dhabi museum, where construction work is well underway following the recent appointment of a contractor in January 2013.

The visit by the Lord Mayor of London helped to further enhance the links between the City of London and the Emirate of Abu Dhabi - with a particular focus on how the City can support projects such as those being developed by TDIC.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/tdic-hosts-lord-mayor-city-ff-330761

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No. 10 Louisville downs Seton Hall 79-61

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) ? Gorgui Dieng scored a career-high 23 points to help No. 10 Louisville pull away from Seton Hall for a 79-61 victory on Saturday.

Dieng, a 6-foot-10 center, showed confidence in his jumper and the result was 10 of 11 shooting from the field. The junior also grabbed eight rebounds and blocked two shots.

Russ Smith added 19 points and Luke Hancock made three 3-pointers and finished with 13 points as the Cardinals (22-5, 10-4) won their third in a row to draw within a half game of Big East Conference leaders Syracuse, Georgetown and Marquette, all of whom played later Saturday.

Against Seton Hall, Louisville wanted to firm up its game ahead of an important stretch run including next week's showdown at No. 8 Syracuse. The Cardinals succeeded on just about every count, forcing 21 turnovers including 12 steals and shooting 26 of 57 (45.6 percent).

Aaron Cosby scored 14 second-half points for 17 to lead Seton Hall (13-15, 2-13), which dropped its ninth straight.

Eugene Teague added 16 points, Brian Oliver 12 and Fuquan Edwin 11 for the Pirates, who shot 23 of 52 (44 percent).

Louisville was playing six days after one of its best defensive efforts, a 59-41 win at South Florida in which the Cardinals held the Bulls to 13-of-53 shooting (24.5 percent) and allowed just three more points than the previous meeting.

That effort followed coach Rick Pitino's recent practice shift toward players working on their respective strengths, which also included offense. Dieng, for example, has focused on shooting jumpers, which has been effective for him when used.

The individualized effort clearly benefited Dieng, who sank two jumpers from the foul line along with a tip-in to give Louisville an 8-2 lead. Oliver, Cosby, Edwin and Karlis Haralds combined for four jumpers including three from beyond the arc, keying Seton Hall's 17-9 spurt to put them up by two.

Seton Hall's zone defense also stifled Louisville during that run, no doubt due to coach Kevin Willard's familiarity with Pitino's system as a former Cardinals assistant.

Louisville snapped out of it and took over from there, closing the half with a 23-7 run over the final 9:40 of the half for a 40-26 lead at the break. Four 3-pointers helped ? notable for a team hitting just 32 percent from beyond the arc coming in ? while Dieng added a couple more soft jumpers en route to a 10-point half.

The Cardinals made five of seven from long range and 13 of 28 overall from the field (46 percent), while their signature defense made seven steals and forced 11 turnovers leading to 10 points. Seton Hall hit just 10 of 26 field goal attempts.

Injuries have plagued the Pirates, with Brandon Mobley's season-ending shoulder surgery being the most recent. And that lack of depth became a factor as they fell behind by 19 several times in the second half.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-10-louisville-downs-seton-hall-79-61-192157311--spt.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Isaiah 53 as Israel: the contention

His most recent reply is this:

Below is an analysis of Isaiah which I hope will open your understanding that it is not about Jesus and will answer your post completely without going through each point.

Here is the context of Isaiah and who the servant is.

1. ?But you, Israel, are my servant, Jacob whom I have chosen.? (Isaiah 41:8-9)

2. ?Yet hear now, O Jacob My servant and Israel whom I have chosen.? (Isaiah 44:1)

3. ?Remember these, O Jacob, And Israel, for you are My servant, I have formed you, you are My servant.? (Isaiah 44:21)

4. ??for Jacob My servant?s sake, and Israel My elect.? (Isaiah 45:4)

5. ?The Lord has redeemed His servant Jacob.? (Isaiah 48:20)

6. ?You are My servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified.? (Isaiah 49:3

The context is set all thru Isaiah as you can see the servant that Isaiah speaks of is Israel.

ISAIAH 52: ?Behold, My [God?s] servant [Israel] will succeed; he [Israel] will be exalted and become high and exceedingly lofty. Just as multitudes were astonished over you [Israel] ?so will the many nations [exclaim about him [Israel] and [Gentile] kings will shut their mouths [in amazement] for they [Gentiles] will see that which had never been told to them [Gentiles], and will perceive things they (Gentiles] had never heard.? (Isaiah 52:15)

ISAIAH 53:3: ?He [Israel] was despised and isolated from men, a man of pains and accustomed to illness [not grief]. As one from whom we would hide our faces; he was despised, and we had no regard for him.?

ANALYSIS: ?He? [the Jewish People] was subjected to 2000 years of antiSemitism, ?despised,? and forced to live in walled ghettos in Europe ?isolated from men? and ?we ? [Gentiles] had no regard for ?him? [the Jewish People].

ISAIAH 53:4: ?But in truth, it was our ills that he bore, and our pains that he carried-but we had regarded him diseased, [not sorrows] stricken by God, and afflicted!?

ANALYSIS: The Gentiles admit that it was ?our? [the Gentiles] ?ills and pains? that ?he? [the Jews] bore. The Gentiles regarded the Jews cursed by God and ?diseased, stricken, and afflicted.? Clearly, Jesus was not ?accustomed to illness, diseased, stricken or afflicted.?

ISAIAH 53:5: ?He was pained because of our rebellious sins and oppressed through our iniquities; the chastisement upon him was for our benefit, and through his wounds, we were healed.?

ANALYSIS: ?He? [the Jewish People] ?was pained? [suffered] because of ?our? [the Gentiles] rebellious sins and ?he? [the Jewish People] was ?oppressed? by ?our? [the Gentiles] ?iniquities? [sins]. The Gentiles believed that the suffering of the Jewish People was deserved because the Jews rejected and killed Jesus but his death redeemed their sins. ?We? [the Gentiles] believed that they were ?healed? [justified] ?through his [the Jewish People?s] wounds? that the Gentiles inflicted

Source: http://www.puritanboard.com/f24/isaiah-53-israel-contention-78006/

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Samsung's WiFi-only Galaxy Camera passes governmental inspection, bids farewell to SIM cards

Samsung's WiFionly Galaxy passes governmental inspection, bids farewell to SIM cards

Two days is a long time in tech. One day, a company's announcing a new iteration of its hybrid Android camera, next thing you know, it's already passing the FCC's tests. You probably know the drill by now and with even less radios than the original Galaxy Camera, there's less paperwork to browse this round. But if exposure reports are your sort of thing, then you should probably visit the source -- there's reading to be done. Two things not mentioned, however, is that darn release date and price tag.

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Source: FCC

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/S_oF3D54DjQ/

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Video: Groupon's Daily Deal: Upgrade

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50893427/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Saudi Arabia, Qatar press for more help to Syrian rebels

RIYADH/DOHA (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia and Qatar share the West's alarm at the rise of al Qaeda-aligned groups in Syria, but say the answer is for outsiders like them to be more involved in backing rebels there.

The two Gulf Arab states rooting for President Bashar al-Assad's overthrow appear to be chafing at Western pressure to keep out of the fight, arguing that building ties through aid and advice to favored opposition groups is the only way to ensure other, hardline Islamist factions are sidelined.

The United States and Europe want to avoid arming rebel militias for fear that weaponry will find its way to ultra-orthodox Sunni Muslim groups close to jihadis like al Qaeda.

Assad cites such militants, often seen as the most effective fighters on Syria's battlefields, to justify using relentless force in a two-year-old war that has cost some 70,000 lives.

Attacks carried out by such groups against the Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam that dominates Syria's power and security structures, have aggravated sectarian rifts in many Arab states including some in the oil-rich Gulf.

The United States in December listed the al Qaeda-endorsed al-Nusra Front in Syria as a terrorist group.

But Saudi Arabia and Qatar are signaling that the longer the war drags on, the stronger such hardliners will get, while other groups will likely struggle if denied meaningful aid, according to a Gulf Arab official, analysts and diplomats.

Gulf Arab policymakers argue that hastening Assad's fall will curb the militants' influence, and, a related bonus, reduce the regional clout of the Syrian leader's ally Iran.

"ARMS FOR SELF-DEFENCE"

Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal bluntly told a news conference in Riyadh on February 12: "My country believes that the brutality of the Syrian regime against its own people requires empowering the people to defend itself."

On Tuesday Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr al-Thani said: "As there is no clear international opinion to end the crisis in Syria...we are supporting the opposition with whatever it needs, even if it takes up arms for self-defense."

A Gulf Arab official, who asked not to be named, said it was vital to build ties to non-Qaeda rebel groups to strengthen them now and in any future fight for power in a post-Assad Syria.

Mustafa Alani, a Gulf-based security analyst, said arms were now more available in Syria and what such groups needed most was non-lethal aid such as food and medical aid for their families.

"The Gulf is waiting for a green light - they want the West to lift this veto on supplies," he said.

Gulf Arabs are not bound by U.S. and EU arms embargoes on Syria, and some analysts say they supplied weapons to Syria last year, probably through tribal and smuggling connections in Iraq.

But Saudi Arabia and Qatar have signaled any support would be much more effective if Western powers lent political backing, coordination, equipment and advice.

WEST HAUNTED BY LIBYA EXAMPLE

Western nations, mindful of how weapons spread from Libya after its Western-backed revolt in 2011 to unstable nations such as Mali, say arming rebels is risky because it is hard to tell militants from moderates in a disorganized array.

Gulf Arabs say they know Islamist armed groups better and blame disorganization on a lack of outside support and training.

Riyadh-based political scientist Asaad Shamlan said rising militancy among Syria's opposition was a result of not engaging with rebels more openly, and suggested Gulf Arabs must act.

"What is the strategic objective? It's to enable the opposition to overthrow the Assad regime? Then a certain amount of risk has to be taken," he said.

In January a former Saudi intelligence chief, Prince Turki al-Faisal, publicly called for Syrian rebels to be given anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to "level the playing field".

Last month he said it would be possible to "make the weapons reach the right people". Sophisticated weapons that relied on electronics could be deactivated remotely using wireless signals if they ended up in untrustworthy hands, he said.

Not all Gulf Arab states are eager to arm Syrian rebels, but all fear possible "blowback" if their own nationals go to fight in Syria and one day come home and launch a jihad for a purist Islamic state. The al-Nusra Front has ideological overlaps with al Qaeda, which has sworn to topple the Saudi ruling family.

In the 1980s Saudi rulers supported U.S.-backed Islamists fighting Soviet forces in Afghanistan, a factor in the creation of al Qaeda, and in the last decade they turned a blind eye to clerics who urged Saudis to join an anti-U.S. jihad in Iraq.

In 2003 Saudis who had fought in both conflicts launched attacks at home, drawing a tough security response from Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia's Grand Mufti, Sheikh Abdul-Aziz bin Abdullah Al al-Sheikh, cautioned Saudi youth against going to Syria for jihad, and advised prayer, and sending material support by "regular channels", al-Jazirah daily reported on Jan 7.

(Additional reporting by Amena Bakr and Sylvia Westall; Writing by William Maclean; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-arabia-qatar-press-more-help-syrian-rebels-133848428.html

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The Latin American Exception: How a Washington Global Torture Gulag Was Turned Into the Only Gulag-Free Zone on Earth

February 21st, 2013 11:26 AM

Crossposted from Tomdispatch

The map tells the story.? To illustrate a damning new report, ?Globalizing Torture: CIA Secret Detentions and Extraordinary Rendition,? recently published by the Open Society Institute, the Washington Post put together an equally damning graphic: it?s soaked in red, as if with blood, showing that in the years after 9/11, the CIA turned just about the whole world into a gulag archipelago.

Back in the early twentieth century, a similar red-hued map was used to indicate the global reach of the British Empire, on which, it was said, the sun never set.? It seems that, between 9/11 and the day George W. Bush left the White House, CIA-brokered torture never saw a sunset either.

All told, of the 190-odd countries on this planet, a staggering 54 participated in various ways in this American torture system, hosting CIA ?black site? prisons, allowing their airspace and airports to be used for secret flights, providing intelligence, kidnapping foreign nationals or their own citizens and handing them over to U.S. agents to be ?rendered? to third-party countries like Egypt and Syria.? The hallmark of this network, Open Society writes, has been torture.? Its report documents the names of 136 individuals swept up in what it says is an ongoing operation, though its authors make clear that the total number, implicitly far higher, ?will remain unknown? because of the ?extraordinary level of government secrecy associated with secret detention and extraordinary rendition.?

No region escapes the stain. ?Not North America, home to the global gulag?s command center.? Not Europe, the Middle East, Africa, or Asia.? Not even social-democratic Scandinavia.? Sweden turned over at least two people to the CIA, who were then rendered to Egypt, where they were subject to electric shocks, among other abuses.? No region, that is, except Latin America.

What?s most striking about the Post?s map is that no part of its wine-dark horror touches Latin America; that is, not one country in what used to be called Washington?s ?backyard? participated in rendition or Washington-directed or supported torture and abuse of ?terror suspects.?? Not even Colombia, which throughout the last two decades was as close to a U.S.-client state as existed in the area. ?It?s true that a fleck of red should show up on Cuba, but that would only underscore the point: Teddy Roosevelt took Guant?namo Bay Naval Base for the U.S. in 1903 ?in perpetuity.?

Two, Three, Many CIAs?

How did Latin America come to be territorio libre in this new dystopian world of black sites and midnight flights, the Zion of this militarist matrix (as fans of the Wachowskis' movies might put it)?? After all, it was in Latin America that an earlier generation of U.S. and U.S.-backed counterinsurgents put into place a prototype of Washington?s twenty-first century Global War on Terror.

Even before the 1959 Cuban Revolution, before Che Guevara urged revolutionaries to create ?two, three, many Vietnams,? Washington had already set about establishing two, three, many centralized intelligence agencies in Latin America.? As Michael McClintock shows in his indispensable book Instruments of Statecraft, in late 1954, a few months after the CIA?s infamous coup in Guatemala that overthrew a democratically elected government, the National Security Council first recommended strengthening ?the internal security forces of friendly foreign countries."

In the region, this meant three things.? First, CIA agents and other U.S. officials set to work ?professionalizing? the security forces of individual countries like Guatemala, Colombia, and Uruguay; that is, turning brutal but often clumsy and corrupt local intelligence apparatuses into efficient, ?centralized,? still brutal agencies, capable of gathering information, analyzing it, and storing it.? Most importantly, they were to coordinate different branches of each country?s security forces -- the police, military, and paramilitary squads -- to act on that information, often lethally and always ruthlessly.

Second, the U.S. greatly expanded the writ of these far more efficient and effective agencies, making it clear that their portfolio included not just national defense but international offense.? They were to be the vanguard of a global war for ?freedom? and of an anticommunist reign of terror in the hemisphere.? Third, our men in Montevideo, Santiago, Buenos Aires, Asunci?n, La Paz, Lima, Quito, San Salvador, Guatemala City, and Managua were to help synchronize the workings of individual national security forces.

The result was state terror on a nearly continent-wide scale.? In the 1970s and 1980s, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet?s Operation Condor, which linked together the intelligence services of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile, was the most infamous of Latin America?s transnational terror consortiums, reaching out to commit mayhem as far away as Washington D.C., Paris, and Rome.? The U.S. had earlier helped put in place similar operations elsewhere in the Southern hemisphere, especially in Central America in the 1960s.

By the time the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans had been tortured, killed, disappeared, or imprisoned without trial, thanks in significant part to U.S. organizational skills and support. ?Latin America was, by then, Washington?s backyard gulag.? Three of the region?s current presidents -- Uruguay?s Jos? Mujica, Brazil?s Dilma Rousseff, and Nicaragua?s Daniel Ortega -- were victims of this reign of terror.

When the Cold War ended, human rights groups began the herculean task of dismantling the deeply embedded, continent-wide network of intelligence operatives, secret prisons, and torture techniques -- and of pushing militaries throughout the region out of governments and back into their barracks. ?In the 1990s, Washington not only didn?t stand in the way of this process, but actually lent a hand in depoliticizing Latin America?s armed forces.? Many believed that, with the Soviet Union dispatched, Washington could now project its power in its own ?backyard? through softer means like international trade agreements and other forms of economic leverage.? Then 9/11 happened.

?Oh My Goodness?

In late November 2002, just as the basic outlines of the CIA?s secret detention and extraordinary rendition programs were coming into shape elsewhere in the world, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld flew 5,000 miles to Santiago, Chile, to attend a hemispheric meeting of defense ministers.? "Needless to say,? Rumsfeld nonetheless said, ?I would not be going all this distance if I did not think this was extremely important." Indeed.

This was after the invasion of Afghanistan but before the invasion of Iraq and Rumsfeld was riding high, as well as dropping the phrase ?September 11th? every chance he got.? Maybe he didn?t know of the special significance that date had in Latin America, but 29 years earlier on the first 9/11, a CIA-backed coup by General Pinochet and his military led to the death of Chile?s democratically elected president Salvador Allende.? Or did he, in fact, know just what it meant and was that the point?? After all, a new global fight for freedom, a proclaimed Global War on Terror, was underway and Rumsfeld had arrived to round up recruits.

There, in Santiago, the city out of which Pinochet had run Operation Condor, Rumsfeld and other Pentagon officials tried to sell what they were now terming the ?integration? of ?various specialized capabilities into larger regional capabilities? -- an insipid way of describing the kidnapping, torturing, and death-dealing already underway elsewhere. ?Events around the world before and after September 11th suggest the advantages,? Rumsfeld said, of nations working together to confront the terror threat.

?Oh my goodness,? Rumsfeld told a Chilean reporter, ?the kinds of threats we face are global.?? Latin America was at peace, he admitted, but he had a warning for its leaders: they shouldn?t lull themselves into believing that the continent was safe from the clouds gathering elsewhere.? Dangers exist, ?old threats, such as drugs, organized crime, illegal arms trafficking, hostage taking, piracy, and money laundering; new threats, such as cyber-crime; and unknown threats, which can emerge without warning.?

?These new threats,? he added ominously, ?must be countered with new capabilities.? Thanks to the Open Society report, we can see exactly what Rumsfeld meant by those ?new capabilities.?

A few weeks prior to Rumsfeld?s arrival in Santiago, for example, the U.S., acting on false information supplied by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, detained Maher Arar, who holds dual Syrian and Canadian citizenship, at New York?s John F. Kennedy airport and then handed him over to a ?Special Removal Unit.? He was flown first to Jordan, where he was beaten, and then to Syria, a country in a time zone five hours ahead of Chile, where he was turned over to local torturers.? On November 18th, when Rumsfeld was giving his noon speech in Santiago, it was five in the afternoon in Arar?s ?grave-like? cell in a Syrian prison, where he would spend the next year being abused.?

Ghairat Baheer was captured in Pakistan about three weeks before Rumsfeld?s Chile trip, and thrown into a CIA-run prison in Afghanistan called the Salt Pit.? As the secretary of defense praised Latin America?s return to the rule of law after the dark days of the Cold War, Baheer may well have been in the middle of one of his torture sessions, ?hung naked for hours on end.?

Taken a month before Rumsfeld?s visit to Santiago, the Saudi national Abd al Rahim al Nashiri was transported to the Salt Pit, after which he was transferred ?to another black site in Bangkok, Thailand, where he was waterboarded.? After that, he was passed on to Poland, Morocco, Guant?namo, Romania, and back to Guant?namo, where he remains.? Along the way, he was subjected to a ?mock execution with a power drill as he stood naked and hooded,? had U.S. interrogators rack a ?semi-automatic handgun close to his head as he sat shackled before them.?? His interrogators also ?threatened to bring in his mother and sexually abuse her in front of him.?

Likewise a month before the Santiago meeting, the Yemini Bashi Nasir Ali Al Marwalah was flown to Camp X-Ray in Cuba, where he remains to this day.???

Less than two weeks after Rumsfeld swore that the U.S. and Latin America shared ?common values,? Mullah Habibullah, an Afghan national, died ?after severe mistreatment? in CIA custody at something called the ?Bagram Collection Point.? A U.S. military investigation ?concluded that the use of stress positions and sleep deprivation combined with other mistreatment... caused, or were direct contributing factors in, his death.?

Two days after the secretary?s Santiago speech, a CIA case officer in the Salt Pit had Gul Rahma stripped naked and chained to a concrete floor without blankets.? Rahma froze to death.? ???

And so the Open Society report goes... on and on and on.

Territorio Libre?

Rumsfeld left Santiago without firm commitments. ?Some of the region?s militaries were tempted by the supposed opportunities offered by the secretary?s vision of fusing crime fighting into an ideological campaign against radical Islam, a unified war in which all was to be subordinated to U.S. command.? As political scientist Brian Loveman has noted, around the time of Rumsfeld?s Santiago visit, the head of the Argentine army picked up Washington?s latest set of themes, insisting that ?defense must be treated as an integral matter,? without a false divide separating internal and external security.

But history was not on Rumsfeld?s side.? His trip to Santiago coincided with Argentina?s epic financial meltdown, among the worst in recorded history.? It signaled a broader collapse of the economic model -- think of it as Reaganism on steroids -- that Washington had been promoting in Latin America since the late Cold War years.? Soon, a new generation of leftists would be in power across much of the continent, committed to the idea of national sovereignty and limiting Washington?s influence in the region in a way that their predecessors hadn?t been.?

Hugo Ch?vez was already president of Venezuela.? Just a month before Rumsfeld?s Santiago trip, Luiz In?cio Lula da Silva won the presidency of Brazil. A few months later, in early 2003, Argentines elected N?stor Kirchner, who shortly thereafter ended his country?s joint military exercises with the U.S. ?In the years that followed, the U.S. experienced one setback after another.? In 2008, for instance, Ecuador evicted the U.S. military from Manta Air Base.??

In that same period, the Bush administration?s rush to invade Iraq, an act most Latin American countries opposed, helped squander whatever was left of the post-9/11 goodwill the U.S. had in the region.? Iraq seemed to confirm the worst suspicions of the continent?s new leaders: that what Rumsfeld was trying to peddle as an international ?peacekeeping? force would be little more than a bid to use Latin American soldiers as Gurkhas in a revived unilateral imperial war.?

Brazil?s ?Smokescreen?

Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks show the degree to which Brazil rebuffed efforts to paint the region red on Washington?s new global gulag map.

A May 2005 U.S. State Department cable, for instance, reveals that Lula?s government refused ?multiple requests? by Washington to take in released Guant?namo prisoners, particularly a group of about 15 Uighurs the U.S. had been holding since 2002, who could not be sent back to China.

?[Brazil?s] position regarding this issue has not changed since 2003 and will likely not change in the foreseeable future,? the cable said.? It went on to report that Lula?s government considered the whole system Washington had set up at Guant?namo (and around the world) to be a mockery of international law.? ?All attempts to discuss this issue? with Brazilian officials, the cable concluded, ?were flatly refused or accepted begrudgingly.?

In addition, Brazil refused to cooperate with the Bush administration?s efforts to create a Western Hemisphere-wide version of the Patriot Act.? It stonewalled, for example, about agreeing to revise its legal code in a way that would lower the standard of evidence needed to prove conspiracy, while widening the definition of what criminal conspiracy entailed.

Lula stalled for years on the initiative, but it seems that the State Department didn?t realize he was doing so until April 2008, when one of its diplomats wrote a memo calling Brazil?s supposed interest in reforming its legal code to suit Washington a ?smokescreen.?? The Brazilian government, another Wikileaked cable complained, was afraid that a more expansive definition of terrorism would be used to target ?members of what they consider to be legitimate social movements fighting for a more just society.? Apparently, there was no way to ?write an anti-terrorism legislation that excludes the actions? of Lula?s left-wing social base.

One U.S. diplomat complained that this ?mindset? -- that is, a mindset that actually valued civil liberties ?-- ?presents serious challenges to our efforts to enhance counterterrorism cooperation or promote passage of anti-terrorism legislation.? ?In addition, the Brazilian government worried that the legislation would be used to go after Arab-Brazilians, of which there are many.? One can imagine that if Brazil and the rest of Latin America had signed up to participate in Washington?s rendition program, Open Society would have a lot more Middle Eastern-sounding names to add to its list.?

Finally, cable after Wikileaked cable revealed that Brazil repeatedly brushed off efforts by Washington to isolate Venezuela?s Hugo Ch?vez, which would have been a necessary step if the U.S. was going to marshal South America into its counterterrorism posse.?

In February 2008, for example, U.S. ambassador to Brazil Clifford Sobell met with Lula?s Minister of Defense Nelson Jobin to complain about Ch?vez.? Jobim told Sobell that Brazil shared his ?concern about the possibility of Venezuela exporting instability.?? But instead of ?isolating Venezuela,? which might only ?lead to further posturing,? Jobim instead indicated that his government ?supports [the] creation of a ?South American Defense Council? to bring Chavez into the mainstream.?

There was only one catch here: that South American Defense Council was Ch?vez?s idea in the first place!? It was part of his effort, in partnership with Lula, to create independent institutions parallel to those controlled by Washington. ?The memo concluded with the U.S. ambassador noting how curious it was that Brazil would use Chavez?s ?idea for defense cooperation? as part of a ?supposed containment strategy? of Ch?vez.?

Monkey-Wrenching the Perfect Machine of Perpetual War

Unable to put in place its post-9/11 counterterrorism framework in all of Latin America, the Bush administration retrenched.? It attempted instead to build a ?perfect machine of perpetual war? in a corridor running from Colombia through Central America to Mexico. ?The process of militarizing that more limited region, often under the guise of fighting ?the drug wars,? has, if anything, escalated in the Obama years.? Central America has, in fact, become the only place Southcom -- the Pentagon command that covers Central and South America -- can operate more or less at will.? A look at this other map, put together by the Fellowship of Reconciliation, makes the region look like one big landing strip for U.S. drones and drug-interdiction flights.?

Washington does continue to push and probe further south, trying yet again to establish a firmer military foothold in the region and rope it into what is now a less ideological and more technocratic crusade, but one still global in its aspirations.? U.S. military strategists, for instance, would very much like to have an airstrip in French Guyana or the part of Brazil that bulges out into the Atlantic.? The Pentagon would use it as a stepping stone to its increasing presence in Africa, coordinating the work of Southcom with the newest global command, Africom.? ?

But for now, South America has thrown a monkey wrench into the machine.? Returning to that Washington Post map, it?s worth memorializing the simple fact that, in one part of the world, in this century at least, the sun never rose on US-choreographed torture.?

Greg Grandin is a TomDispatch regular and the author of Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford?s Lost Jungle City, a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize.? Later this year, his new book, Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World, will be published by Metropolitan Books.

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Copyright 2013 Greg Grandin

Source: http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/mike-friends-blog/latin-american-exception-how-washington-global-torture-gulag-was-turned-only-gulag-free-zone-earth

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