middle east

Fighting Identity: Sacred War and World Change. Michael Vlahos’ work highlights a national ethos infused by a sacred narrative of divine mission.

Hence non-state wars with America become a mythic narrative for them. Our engagement actually helps them realize identity – and we become the midwife. This book offers another path to deal with non-state challenges, one that does not further weaken us.

Full video interview at WilsonCenter.org and on CNN

YouTube Preview Image

This deep association leads to a narrow approach to conflict relationships, built around an Us vs. Them distance from the enemy, in which their submission is achieved through “kinetic effects” and their subsequent redemption through our good works (reconstruction). Vlahos contends that America’s difficult engagement in the Muslim world demonstrates urgently that different operational approaches and tactics (like “counterinsurgency”) are not enough.

Why are terrorists and insurgents we fight so formidable? Their strength – and our vulnerability – is in identity. Clausewitz knew that geist (spirit) was always stronger than the material: identity is power in war. But how can non-state actors face up to nation states? The answer is in globalization. This is the West’s 3rd globalization. Two centuries of intense mixing has torn down old ways of life and created a growing demand for new belonging.

There is also a decline in US universalism. America’s vision as history’s anointed prophet and manager is now competing head-to-head with renewed universal visions. Like Late Antiquity and the High Middle Ages our globalization begins to subside. We may be in the later days of American modernity. We can see this worldwide, as emerging local communities within states and meta-movements find their voice – through conflict and war.

Identities struggling for realization are always the most powerful. Add the diffusion of new technology and new practice, and even the poorest and seemingly most primitive group can now make war against those on high. They are successful because of a symbiotic fit between old states and new identities.

Increasingly, old societies no longer find identity-celebration in war – while non-state identities embrace the struggle for realization. Hence non-state wars with America become a mythic narrative for them. Our engagement actually helps them realize identity – and we become the midwife. This book offers another path to deal with non-state challenges, one that does not further weaken us.

YouTube Preview Image

“Egypt’s peace with Israel was being paid for every year,” he said. “If you look at it that way, that helps explain why the US has been locked into this important financial transfer year after year after year, but also Egypt became something of a substitute for the loss of Iran and being one of the anchor of core countries in the Arab world, maybe the core country, this was seen as a great triumph for US foreign policy, so we were almost immediately heavily invested in maintaining what we call ‘stability’.”
“These views are my own and do not reflect the views of the US Government,” Michael Vlahos added.

Source: RT

YouTube Preview Image

YouTube Preview Image
Strategy Conference- Dr. Michael Vlahos, Panel II

More than 150 experts from the military, academia, research labs and think tanks gathered at the Army War College April 7-9 for the 21st Strategy Conference to think and debate about the changing nature of war. The conference, Defining War for the 21st Century was designed to stimulate intellectual discourse, to foster informed policymaking processes, and to develop effective U.S. strategy in the post-September 11 world, in order to clarify the issues, outline the debates, and generate strategic options.

Dr. Michael Vlahos took part in Panel II – How Do We Know That We Are at War?

Russia Today, The Real News vs Fox News

YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image

Those middle class activists who think that Egyptians will now return to work to labour under a military regime – Wael Ghonim, the Google employee incessantly puffed by the Anglophone media as the ‘leader’ of this revolution, ‘trusts’ the army and urges people to go back to work – are about to be disabused and disillusioned. The protesters in Tahrir today are chanting that they want a civil, not a military government. The workers are still on strike. The steel mills, the sugar factoriespublic transport… they are not going to return to work just because the army now says it’s in control. In the last week, the hard cutting edge of this revolution was the working class, and those whose revolutionary agenda did not include the interests of the working class are likely to find themselves left behind by events very soon.

Meanwhile, with celebrations erupting in Gaza, Tunisia, Lebanon, Jordan, all over the Middle East (and, I might add, in London), the struggle in Algeria is continuing today. In Algiers, the train services have been stopped, to prevent protesters from flooding into the capital. Thousands of police have been deployed. Crowds are being attacked with tear gas lobbed by police and rocks thrown by plain clothes thugs. Initially, only a few dozens managed to reach the main square where the protest was due to take place, with other scattered throughout the city. But it seems that the protesters have managed to break police cordons, despite considerable resistance. Algeria is an interesting contrast to both Tunisia and Egypt. The police have recently been awarded staggering 50% pay rises amid an economic crisis that is slashing working class incomes, and they have thus far been able to contain and disperse the rebellions with calculated violence and homicide. The main opposition groups, whether the Left or the Islamists, have been effectively repressed and then coopted over the years, such that they are playing only a small role in what is otherwise plainly a class uprising. The main trade union federation has had regime-friendly apparatchiks planted in its leadership, so it has done nothing to support the revolt. As a consequence, the riots which began to break out first in December 2010, then in force this January, initially had little institutional support. The protesters have now developed an umbrella co-ordinating body comprising opposition parties and factions, but this is only a few weeks old. As such, it’s early days for the Algerian uprising. But the miraculous breakthrough in Egypt will have given it, and every other brewing rebellion in the vicinity, a tremendous shot in the arm.

http://leninology.blogspot.com/

The UN food agency says world hunger can be tackled with better policies and investment practices.

Wealthy nations, however, have found another way to ensure their food supply by buying up millions of hectares of prime farmland in poorer countries.

France is now calling for tighter regulations over the so-called land-grabbing.

Al Jazeera’s Nicole Johnston reports.

Source: Al Jazeera

CC+ 2011 Permaculture TV free video cooperative By Permaculture Cooperative ~ government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the Earth Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha