Wednesday, September 30, 2015

U.S. Government Outlines A Path For Native Hawaiian Recognition

Native Hawaiians have not had a formal government since the Kingdom of Hawaii was overthrown in 1893 by a group of American businessmen, with the support of 300 U.S. Marines.

But that may soon change.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of the Interior proposed a framework for the Native Hawaiian community to re-establish a unified government if it wishes, and to decide what relationship it would have with the United States -- if any.

Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell said in an announcement Tuesday that the proposal is a testament to the Obama administration’s strong support for Native peoples’ right to self-determination.

"The United States has a long-standing policy of supporting self-governance for Native peoples," she said. "Yet the benefits of the government-to-government relationship have long been denied to Native Hawaiians, one of our nation’s largest indigenous communities."

Tuesday's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking comes more than a year after the Department of the Interior held a series of public meetings across the state on the topic. For the most part, the meetings were dominated by Native Hawaiians who opposed federal recognition, saying it would do nothing to right the wrongs of history, particularly the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy.

"This is just part of the grand scheme to make us Indians," Walter Ritte, a Native Hawaiian activist, said this week of the new DOI proposal.

But more than 5,000 pieces of written testimony "overwhelmingly favored creating a pathway for re-establishing a formal government-to-government relationship," according to the DOI.

“We’ve listened to the feedback we received during the public meetings and in writing and worked to improve the proposal to reflect those comments,” Jewell said Tuesday. 

The DOI stressed that under the new proposal, the Native Hawaiian community, not the federal government, would decide whether to reorganize a Native Hawaiian government. It would also decide what form that government would take, and whether it would seek a government-to-government relationship with the United States.

The DOI says such a relationship could provide the community with greater flexibility to preserve its distinct culture and traditions, as well as special status under federal law to exercise powers of self-government over many issues that directly affect the community.

For members of Hawaii's congressional delegation, the proposal came as welcome news. 

“Native Hawaiians have the right to reorganize a government that they determine is best for them,” Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) said in a statement Tuesday. “With today’s publication of proposed rules from the Department of the Interior, I urge Native Hawaiians and other interested individuals to stay engaged and to contribute their comments and concerns as the process moves forward.”

“The Native Hawaiian community’s ongoing work toward self-determination takes a significant step forward today, and I applaud the Obama administration for its commitment to this effort," Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) said in a statement Tuesday.

Tuesday's announcement, which kicked off a 90-day public comment period, comes in the midst of a unique election process in which Native Hawaiians will select delegates to represent them at a constitutional convention, where they could possibly come up with a recommended form of government that would then face a vote. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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To Fight the Islamic State, We Need to Get Down to Root Causes

The rise of the Islamic State beyond the borders of Syria and Iraq over the past year has drawn comparison with the spread of communism more than a century ago. It has also pitted proponents of kinetic realpolitik seeking military defeat of the extremist group against supporters of the notion that jihadism poses primarily an ideational threat.

However both schools of the debate focus on the violent nature of the threat and ways to neutralize it rather than on what has sparked the current menace that has been germinating and mushrooming over decades. Root causes figure in the competing visions of how ISIS can best be confronted.

It has become common-place to speak of the need to tackle the root causes that make ISIS one of the most brutal insurgent groups in recent history, attractive to disaffected youth across the globe. Translating that notion into policy, however, is proving difficult, primarily because it is based on a truth that has far-reaching impact on the international community irrespective of how close or far its members are from ISIS's current borders.

It involves changing long-standing, ingrained policies at home that marginalize, exclude and stigmatize significant segments of society; emphasize security at the expense of freedoms and debate; and in more autocratic states that are abetted by the West, reduce citizens to obedient subjects through harsh repression and attenuation of religious belief to suit the interests of rulers.

Ultimately, ISIS has to be defeated not in its Syrian capital of Raqqa but in the dismal banlieues of French cities that furnish it with the largest contingent of European foreign fighters; the populous neighborhoods in Tunisia that account for the single largest group of foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq; in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, whose citizens account for the second largest number of foreign fighters and whose decades-long effort to propagate a puritan, intolerant, interpretation of Islam has been a far more important breeding ground for jihadist thinking than the writings of militant Islamist thinkers like Sayyid Qutb; and in Western capitals led by Washington who view retrograde, repressive regimes like those of Saudi Arabia and Egypt as part of the solution rather than part of the problem.

Focusing on root causes means broadening scholarly and policy debate to concentrate not only on what amounts to applying Band-Aid solutions that fail to heal the festering open wounds, but also to question assumptions made by the various schools of thought on how to solve the problem.

The facts on the ground have already convincingly contradicted the notion that ISIS will be defeated militarily. A year into military efforts, air strikes have failed to put a serious dent in ISIS's appeal or the amount of territory it controls; Iraqi regular and irregular forces have been unable to shift the balance of power on the battlefield; and no other member of the 60-nation coalition assembled by the US has been willing to deploy a ground force that potentially could defeat the jihadist group.

Yet, even such a hypothetical defeat would not solve the problem. Al Qaeda was degraded, to use the language of the Obama administration. Instead of reducing the threat of political violence, it produced ever more virulent forms of it, embodied by IS. It may be hard to imagine anything more brutal than IS, but it is a fair assumption that defeat of the group without tackling root causes would only lead to something that is even more violent and vicious.

There is much to be said for the notion of containment rather than defeat of ISIS; in other words, the belief that over time the extremist group would be forced to adapt its expansionist ambitions and brutal tactics as reality kicks in and the responsibility of government forces it to come to some kind of accommodation with the international community. Containment addresses the immediate problem but ignores factors that fuel radicalization far from the warring state's borders and make jihadism attractive to the disaffected across the globe.

Similarly, the notion that the very existence of ISIS poses a greater threat to regional stability and security in the Middle East and North Africa than conventional or unconventional military power elevates jihadism -- the violent establishment of pan-Islamic rule -- to the status of a root cause rather than a symptom and expression of a greater and more complex problem.

Moreover, the ideological challenge posed by ISIS despite its discriminatory, exclusionary, narrow-minded interpretation of Islam, is primarily its equally problematic readings of the faith. ISIS shares some puritan concepts with Saudi Arabia's Wahhabism but rejects notions of monarchic rule and a clergy that uses puritanism to bolster the power of an autocratic family. ISIS's caliphate contradicts Iran's concept of the welayat-al-faqih, the Guardianship of the Islamic Jurists. Its model of governance opposes the Muslim Brotherhood's precepts and ideas propagated by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates of an Islam that first and foremost prescribes absolute obedience to a ruler.

In other words, the ideological debate waged in the Muslim world is to a large extent dominated by schools of thought that do not advocate more open, liberal and pluralistic interpretations of Islam. That is where the real challenge lies. The international community would give more liberal Muslim voices significant credibility if it put its money where its mouth is. It should offer a pallet of policy options that take a stab at rooting out the problem and its underlying causes rather than confine it to self-serving regimes and their religious supporters.

Some of those who emphasize ISIS's ideational challenge warn that jihadism, like concepts of Arabism and Arab nationalism that were popular in the past, could provoke conflict in and between Arab states. Reality on the ground has put that notion to rest. ISIS, with its territorial base, coupled with multiple other factors, has demonstrated the fragility of existing Arab nation states and likely condemned to dustbins of history notions of Syria and Iraq as the nation states the world has known since the end of colonial rule.

By the same token, reducing the significance of recent attacks on mosques and tourist sites by ISIS's fellow travelers in Tunisia, Kuwait, Egypt and Saudi Arabia‎ to challenges to the political legitimacy and authority of those states, is to fail to recognize that ISIS fundamentally feeds on the failures of those regimes. These include the failure to provide their youth social and economic opportunity, and to adopt policies that are inclusionary not exclusionary, pluralistic not discriminatory, and encourage participation in political debates and processes rather cutting off all avenues for expression of discontent. Therein lie the root causes of the jihadism threatening the international community.

James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg's Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a forthcoming book with the same title.

Fighting Islamic State: Getting Down To Root Causes

The rise of the Islamic State beyond the borders of Syria and Iraq over the past year has drawn comparison with the spread of communism more than a century ago. It has also pitted proponents of kinetic realpolitik seeking military defeat of the extremist group against supporters of the notion that jihadism poses primarily an ideational threat.

However both schools of the debate focus on the violent nature of the threat and ways to neutralize it rather than on what has sparked the current menace that has been germinating and mushrooming over decades. Root causes figure in the competing visions of how ISIS can best be confronted.

It has become common-place to speak of the need to tackle the root causes that make ISIS one of the most brutal insurgent groups in recent history, attractive to disaffected youth across the globe. Translating that notion into policy, however, is proving difficult, primarily because it is based on a truth that has far-reaching impact on the international community irrespective of how close or far its members are from ISIS's current borders.

It involves changing long-standing, ingrained policies at home that marginalize, exclude and stigmatize significant segments of society; emphasize security at the expense of freedoms and debate; and in more autocratic states that are abetted by the West, reduce citizens to obedient subjects through harsh repression and attenuation of religious belief to suit the interests of rulers.

Ultimately, ISIS has to be defeated not in its Syrian capital of Raqqa but in the dismal banlieues of French cities that furnish it with the largest contingent of European foreign fighters; the populous neighborhoods in Tunisia that account for the single largest group of foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq; in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, whose citizens account for the second largest number of foreign fighters and whose decades-long effort to propagate a puritan, intolerant, interpretation of Islam has been a far more important breeding ground for jihadist thinking than the writings of militant Islamist thinkers like Sayyid Qutb; and in Western capitals led by Washington who view retrograde, repressive regimes like those of Saudi Arabia and Egypt as part of the solution rather than part of the problem.

Focusing on root causes means broadening scholarly and policy debate to concentrate not only on what amounts to applying Band-Aid solutions that fail to heal the festering open wounds, but also to question assumptions made by the various schools of thought on how to solve the problem.

The facts on the ground have already convincingly contradicted the notion that ISIS will be defeated militarily. A year into military efforts, air strikes have failed to put a serious dent in ISIS's appeal or the amount of territory it controls; Iraqi regular and irregular forces have been unable to shift the balance of power on the battlefield; and no other member of the 60-nation coalition assembled by the US has been willing to deploy a ground force that potentially could defeat the jihadist group.

Yet, even such a hypothetical defeat would not solve the problem. Al Qaeda was degraded, to use the language of the Obama administration. Instead of reducing the threat of political violence, it produced ever more virulent forms of it, embodied by IS. It may be hard to imagine anything more brutal than IS, but it is a fair assumption that defeat of the group without tackling root causes would only lead to something that is even more violent and vicious.

There is much to be said for the notion of containment rather than defeat of ISIS; in other words, the belief that over time the extremist group would be forced to adapt its expansionist ambitions and brutal tactics as reality kicks in and the responsibility of government forces it to come to some kind of accommodation with the international community. Containment addresses the immediate problem but ignores factors that fuel radicalization far from the warring state's borders and make jihadism attractive to the disaffected across the globe.

Similarly, the notion that the very existence of ISIS poses a greater threat to regional stability and security in the Middle East and North Africa than conventional or unconventional military power elevates jihadism -- the violent establishment of pan-Islamic rule -- to the status of a root cause rather than a symptom and expression of a greater and more complex problem.

Moreover, the ideological challenge posed by ISIS despite its discriminatory, exclusionary, narrow-minded interpretation of Islam, is primarily its equally problematic readings of the faith. ISIS shares some puritan concepts with Saudi Arabia's Wahhabism but rejects notions of monarchic rule and a clergy that uses puritanism to bolster the power of an autocratic family. ISIS's caliphate contradicts Iran's concept of the welayat-al-faqih, the Guardianship of the Islamic Jurists. Its model of governance opposes the Muslim Brotherhood's precepts and ideas propagated by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates of an Islam that first and foremost prescribes absolute obedience to a ruler.

In other words, the ideological debate waged in the Muslim world is to a large extent dominated by schools of thought that do not advocate more open, liberal and pluralistic interpretations of Islam. That is where the real challenge lies. The international community would give more liberal Muslim voices significant credibility if it put its money where its mouth is. It should offer a pallet of policy options that take a stab at rooting out the problem and its underlying causes rather than confine it to self-serving regimes and their religious supporters.

Some of those who emphasize ISIS's ideational challenge warn that jihadism, like concepts of Arabism and Arab nationalism that were popular in the past, could provoke conflict in and between Arab states. Reality on the ground has put that notion to rest. ISIS, with its territorial base, coupled with multiple other factors, has demonstrated the fragility of existing Arab nation states and likely condemned to dustbins of history notions of Syria and Iraq as the nation states the world has known since the end of colonial rule.

By the same token, reducing the significance of recent attacks on mosques and tourist sites by ISIS's fellow travelers in Tunisia, Kuwait, Egypt and Saudi Arabia‎ to challenges to the political legitimacy and authority of those states, is to fail to recognize that ISIS fundamentally feeds on the failures of those regimes. These include the failure to provide their youth social and economic opportunity, and to adopt policies that are inclusionary not exclusionary, pluralistic not discriminatory, and encourage participation in political debates and processes rather cutting off all avenues for expression of discontent. Therein lie the root causes of the jihadism threatening the international community.

James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg's Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a forthcoming book with the same title.

Russia-Linked Hackers Tried To Access Clinton's Private Server, New Emails Show

WASHINGTON (AP) â€" Russia-linked hackers tried at least five times to pry into Hillary Rodham Clinton's private email account while she was secretary of state, emails released Wednesday show. It is unclear if she clicked on any attachment and exposed her account.

Clinton received the infected emails, disguised as speeding tickets, over four hours early on the morning of Aug. 3, 2011. The emails instructed recipients to print the attached tickets, which would have allowed hackers to take control of their computers.

Security researchers who analyzed the malicious software in September 2011 said that infected computers would transmit information from victims to at least three server computers overseas, including one in Russia. That doesn't necessarily mean Russian intelligence or citizens were responsible.

Clinton has said repeatedly that the unusual homebrew server she used was secure.

But the phishing attempts highlight the risk of Clinton's unsecure email being pried open by foreign intelligence agencies, even if others also received the virus concealed as a speeding ticket from Chatham, New York. The email misspelled the name of the city, came from a supposed New York City government account and contained a "Ticket.zip" file that would have been a red flag.

Most commercial antivirus software at the time would have detected the software, identified it as dangerous and prevented users from infecting themselves. It was unclear if the State Department's network security would have flagged the infected message, or what precautions were in place protecting Clinton's server in the basement of her home in Chappaqua.

The State Department and other government agencies, during Clinton's tenure and after, suffered its own series of hacking attacks. U.S. counterterrorism officials have linked them to China and Russia.

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Making Trade More Inclusive

This week, I will be joining a panel of women in trade at the World Trade Organization's Public Forum in Geneva, Switzerland. Along with Lilianne Ploumen, Trade Minister from the Netherlands; Yuejiao Zhang of China's International Trade and Economic Arbitration Commission; former United States Trade Representative Susan Schwab; and Amina Mohamed, Kenya's Cabinet Secretary for Foreign Affairs; we will be discussing how to make trade work more inclusively. For me, the focus will be how to make trade work more inclusively for the poor living in developing countries.

When we look at the inclusion of developing countries in international trade it is clear that trade has been a powerful engine for reducing poverty and has delivered some remarkable gains for the global economy. There are several country examples that tell this story.

China has tripled its share of world trade since joining the WTO in 2001, helping cut its extreme poverty rate from 36 percent at the end of the 1990s to 6 percent in 2011. In Ethiopia, exports of cut flowers from one firm to the European Union helped open the door to an export industry that now employs 50,000 workers. It has also generated more secure wage employment and a pathway out of poverty for the families of those workers.

Since 2000, the developing country share of world trade increased from 33 to 48 percent. South-South trade between developing countries increased from 8 percent of world trade to around 25 percent today. It is clear that without international trade, we could not have reached the goal of halving global poverty since 1990.

But there is still a long way to go. There are almost one billion people still living in extreme poverty and high trade costs still isolate many developing countries and regions from the international trading system. Low-income countries face trade costs in agriculture and manufacturing that are about three times higher than those faced by advanced economies. This creates a barrier to trade for those countries that is very hard to overcome.

Along with working harder to include developing countries in the trading system, we must also work harder to connect people to the full potential benefits of trade, especially the extreme poor and women.

Women continue to face significant inequality of opportunity, both within and outside the household, which can make it difficult to gain from trade opportunities. For example as much as 85 percent of small-scale traders at border crossings in the Great Lakes region of Africa are women -- but the majority of border officials are men, with corruption and gender-based abuse running rampant.

Other types of gender inequality can affect the gains women experience from trade. Take the role of women in global value chains, for example. In one World Bank report that examined a number of case studies, we found that women in the horticulture sector in Honduras were workers, but seldom owners of land. While women might be employees at call centers in Egypt, they are rarely managers. Women in Kenya's tourism industry might clean hotel rooms but they almost never hold the more lucrative job of safari guide.

Two weeks ago, the World Bank launched a report entitled, Women, Business and the Law which catalogues the legal constraints women face in their ability to engage in economic activity. The report has spurred reforms -- over the past two years 65 countries have made 94 legal reforms to the benefit of women.

Tackling these challenges requires a comprehensive approach that recognizes that the effects of trade are not gender-neutral. At the World Bank Group, we have just approved the Great Lakes Trade Facilitation project, which will help reduce discrimination at borders, through actions like improved transparency; training and better monitoring of officials; and working with traders associations to improve the conditions for women to advocate for better rights.

We know that, through partnerships and interventions that recognize gender as a constraint, we can work to ensure that trade brings real benefits for women in terms of jobs and empowerment. It's already happening.

In Cambodia, the export-oriented garment sector is one of the main providers of wage employment. Eight-five percent of total garment industry workers are women. Women in the garment sector receive a positive premium on wages compared with other sectors.

In Lao PDR, we are helping to improve working conditions in garment factories where externally verified improvements can help the industry reach premium buyers. We are also providing grants to women entrepreneurs. While this work is in its early stages, we have begun to see signs of success. One of the garment firms we are working with, for example, has improved its productivity and human resources systems and added 600 new jobs.

Supporting women will help us address the huge challenge facing not just international trade but every development sector: the challenge of ending poverty and creating new and better jobs for people living in developing countries. To get there, we must work together with organizations like the WTO, like COMESA, and like our many other partners at the global, regional and country levels to lower trade costs, ease the flow of goods across and within borders, and ensure that developing countries -- and the women and men that live in them -- are able to make the most out of trade opportunities.

Danish Travel Agency Runs Ad Telling People To Go On Vacation, Have Sex And Boost The Country's Birthrate

Take some time off work, go on vacation and have sex with your significant other -- because mom told you to.

On Tuesday, Danish travel agency Spies Rejser used a very real problem -- the country's aging population -- to urge people to book a trip.

The ad is a follow-up to the agency's "Do It For Denmark" spot, in which the travel company encouraged Danes to go abroad and conceive. But this time, instead of just asking Danes to go on holiday and help their country increase its birth rate, Spies Rejser is calling on their broody mothers to help out: "Send your child on an active holiday and get a grandchild within nine months," the ad persuaded.

The campaign features some raunchy, laughable, even slightly NSFW content -- but the worry it targets is sound. 

"The Danish welfare system is under pressure. There are still not enough babies being born, despite a little progress. And this concerns us all," the video says.

Indeed, Denmark faces an aging population, where the number of young people aren't catching up to the number of elderly people. Danish women give birth to an average of 1.7 children, down from 1.9 children in 2010, per 2014 World Bank data.

Denmark is not the only country facing a shortage of babies, or one where citizens are being encouraged on a large scale to procreate.

In March 2014, the Japanese government invested 3 billion yen (about $25 million) in funding matchmaking and dating sites and "konkatsu" parties, where single young people can meet and mingle. It also approved measures in March 2015 to give families with three or more children more social support and increase the number of men taking state-subsidized paternity leave from 2.03 percent to 13 percent of the male workforce by 2020. Japan's already aging population shrank by 268,000 people in 2014, when the number of people who died surpassed that of people born, the Washington Post reported January.

Similarly, in France, where people have tended to marry and have children later in life, the government has long provided tax incentives and collective care facilities as a means to encourage women to procreate earlier in life. And it's worked: 12.38 babies are born to every 1,000 people in France -- higher than the EU average, where 10.2 babies are born to 1,000 people, per CIA statistics.

But Spies Rejner wants to go a step further: The travel agency even provided six exercise videos to invigorate men and women's sex drives.

Real Lessons Of The Hajj Tragedy

The annual pilgrimage called the Hajj means many things: it's a religious duty for every adult muslim to perform at least once in their lifetime if they are able; it's one of the five pillars of Islam; it's a melting pot of every nation united by one religion; it is stunning and exhausting. It is also a barometer of the Muslim Ummah (the global Muslim community); a chance to measure its pulse, its mood, its health.

To judge from last week's tragedy when pilgrims were crushed to death as two waves converged on a narrow road before performing a major rite known as the Jamarat or Stoning of the Devil, the Muslim nation is not in good shape.

The numbers alone of those who perished are now the subject of bitter controversy. Iran's Press TV published reports claiming that over 4,000 pilgrims had been killed. Indian and Pakistani authorities claimed that Saudis told foreign diplomats that over 1000 had been killed, while Saudi Arabia itself put the death toll at 769, although the figure is rising.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei demanded an apology from the Saudi royal family. Its president Hassan Rouhani called for a UN investigation, and its prosecutor general Sayed Ibrahim Raisi said on state television that Iran would seek the trial of the Saudi royal family over its "crimes" in "international courts".

Saudi Arabia, in turn, pointed the finger at the role a group of Iranian pilgrims allegedly played in the disaster. Asharq al-Awsat quoted a Saudi official who liaised with the Iranian Hajj mission. He claimed the 300 Iranian pilgrims did not stop at their designated tents on Thursday morning. Nor did they obey the allotted timetable for each group. He claimed the Iranian pilgrims marched straight to Street 204 in the opposite direction from where the main body of pilgrims was walking, causing the crush. At least 140 Iranians died there.

Clashes between Iran and Saudi Arabia over the annual pilgrimage go back a long way - beginning when Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab began, and King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud, continued the destruction of shrines revered by the Shia. Iranian participation in the Hajj has on several occasions been suspended, not least after an incident in 1987 when over 400 pilgrims died in clashes with Saudi police which were variously described as a riot and a massacre.

Care of the holy places of Islam remains a source of legitimacy for the House of Saud and one that is challenged by its neighbour, Iran. This year's Hajj was the first to be supervised by the newly appointed crown prince, Mohammed bin Nayef, and it was a test of the new regime under King Salman. What happened at the Hajj is politically highly sensitive in the kingdom.

To add to that, sectarian feelings are running high. No more so than in a year in which the two regional powers Saudi Arabia and Iran are pitted against each other in three proxy conflicts in Yemen, Iraq and Syria.

There are, however, simpler more local explanations of what happened outside Mecca last week, which defy the tempting logic of sectarian politics.

The following account is taken from a Sunni British pilgrim who passed through the narrow roads just before the crush and was only aware of what had happened when his mobile was inundated with texts from friends asking if he was all right.

Problems with the movement of the officially declared 1.4 million pilgrims started well before the day of the tragedy. There were long queues at Jeddah airport. Some had to wait nine hours - longer than their flight - just to get through passport control. The only guides present were security guards, either from the National Security Guard or the Army. There were no civilian information centres, and no-one who could speak anything other than Arabic to guide the multilingual throng or answer their questions.

The Hajj is a logistical nightmare, but twice this number has been handled without incident. A guide who has been organising Hajj trips for the last 25 years said: "This is one of the worst I have seen."

The ritual proscribes specific times for pilgrims to be at the various stages in their journey: pilgrims have to be within the boundaries of the correct area for each ritual. During the eighth day of Dhu Al Hijjah (the Arabic calendar), pilgrims have to assemble in Mina five miles outside Mecca; on the morning of the ninth they move another 12 miles to Arafat and stay there till sunset; then they move to Muzdalifah from where they advance on Jamarat between midnight and sunrise by the 10th day, which is the day of Eid.

These are the two most packed days, when the movement of over one million pilgrims depends on buses and a newly constructed light railway, the Sacred Sites Railway Project, which cost $7bn to build. Last Thursday both failed. The British pilgrim said:

"I was one of the luckiest in the first group trying to move from Muzdalefah to Jamarat. I waited on the platform for three and half hours with elderly men and women collapsing around me. We saw empty trains come and go, for no obvious reason. There was no information, only messages that some of the trains were not for our use, but for the staff of the company running the trains."

At 7am on Wednesday, the train service all but stopped completely. Such was the crush at the gates, 204 pilgrims collapsed or needed medical treatment. The buses were even worse. They did not manage to leave Arafat before 4am on Thursday, 10 hours after they should have done.

So many pilgrims just started walking - the round trip back to Mecca took them nine hours in more than 40 degrees of heat.

At the site of the tragedy, two waves of pilgrims, one coming from Mina, and another crossing Mina collided with another group of pilgrims walking the opposite way. The private security guards around the tented encampments of pilgrims at this junction refused initially to open the gates to relieve the pressure on the road. In seconds the bottleneck became a stampede.

The chaos continued long after the crush. Pilgrims walked hours in the heat to get taxis back to their residences in Mina or the outskirts of Mecca. The authorities closed the roads around the Sacred Mosque for six kilometres in certain directions.

The horrors of the train are well known, but in today's Saudi Arabia it is still a crime to tweet about them. Last year a TV preacher Mohammed Arefe, with 12 million followers on Twitter, got 40 days in prison for tweeting that the holy sites train was "one of the worst in the world".

The moral of this story?

Whatever else it represents, the Hajj has an important social message. In the dress pilgrims wear, the numbers that it draws, the Hajj is one of life's great levellers. Rich and poor, Sunni or Shia, from east or west, Asia or Africa, millions of pilgrims arrive at the same point in time, in the same garb, to share the same ritual. When the Prophet performed the Hajj, he did so as an individual without security guards. This message is anathema to the modern Arab or Iranian state, where the state exists to serve its ruling elite and security is for the wealthy.

But there is a deeper lesson. One of the questions raised by this tragedy is the extent to which Muslim rulers value ordinary human life.

Nowhere is this being violated so consistently and so brutally than in Muslim lands - by the barrel bombs Bashar Assad drops on Syrian cities and villages (with the active support of Iran); by the Egyptian army massacres of unarmed protesters on the streets of Cairo (with the funding of Saudi Arabia) or by the thousands of refugees taking to dinghies in the Mediterranean and drowning.

The Hajj is just another, in a long, long list of tragedies. Saudi Arabia and Iran have many differences, but both claim to derive their legitimacy from Islam itself. Each clings to a different narrative but both agree on the centrality and strict following of the Prophet of Islam, Muhammad. And both ignore his central teaching.

He taught his followers 14 centuries ago that the sanctity of a single human life is for God much greater than the demolition of the Kaaba itself. The teaching that human life is sacred is as much an Islamic principle as it is a universal one.

Neither Saudi Arabia nor Iran, whose governments war with each other, are mature enough to tap the potential of their people and this comes through loud and clear in their treatment of pilgrims, whose act of worship they claim to protect. The guardianship of the Two Mosques is a source of legitimacy, not a duty nor a pledge of responsibility.

Only when this legitimacy is earned in free elections, when citizens have rights, and guests have even more, when ministerial portfolios are awarded on merit, rather than handed down as the goods and chattel from prince to princeling will the problems of the Hajj be addressed.

We Need to Feed Syrian Refugees Today, But What About Tomorrow?

Khadija arrived in Jordan two years ago at 29 years old with her infant son. She came to meet her husband who had defected from the Syrian government early in the war. Colleagues at work warned her that she was in danger from the authorities, so she packed up and left overnight.

Now living in Zarqa, a poor Jordanian city teeming with factories and crumbling apartment blocks, she is looking for work. She says, "UNHCR has cancelled our assistance, we relied on the government clinic for my son's asthma, now we have to pay ourselves and the medicine is very expensive... if we can't work, we will die."

2015-09-30-1443621464-1272873-ZarqaJordanPicbyAliceSu.jpg
Poor neighborhood in Zarqa, Jordan hosting large number of refugees. Photo: Alice Su.

World leaders are in New York City this week for the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA). One item on the agenda is the Syria refugee crisis. While the United States President Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin traded criticisms on the war in Syria, little progress has been made on what to do about the refugee crisis.

World leaders must accept that millions of Syrian refugees will remain in limbo in Syria's neighboring countries, unable to return home or resettle in wealthier nations. Unless refugees are able to earn a living, they will remain dependent on dwindling humanitarian aid.

More than four million Syrians have fled their country. Nearly half have sought shelter in Turkey, 1.2 million are in Lebanon, and over 630,000 are registered in Jordan.

The flow of Syrians seeking refuge has no end in sight. The UN estimates an increase of almost 1 million Syrians into neighboring countries by the end of the year.

Deteriorating conditions in Lebanon and Jordan, particularly cuts in food aid and healthcare, have become intolerable for many, pushing close to 250,000 Syrians by mid-September to risk their lives in search of safety in Europe. Last week, the World Food Program (WFP) cut food rations to 1.6 million Syrian refugees, leaving refugees to survive on 50 cents a day in Lebanon and Jordan.

Hanin Issa and her family - husband and two children - survive on WFP food rations. They fled bomb raids in Aleppo in 2013. Now they live in Shantila camp in southern Beirut, originally set-up for Palestinian refugees in 1949. The camp swells with an additional 12,000 Syrian refugees. To save money on rent, Hanin's family has moved into a cramped two-bedroom apartment with 15 other people. She explains that the money once used for rent now goes towards food.

In Jordan, two-thirds of Syrian refugees live below the national poverty line, and one in six live in extreme poverty, surviving on $1.30 a day. UNHCR provides critical cash assistance to refugees in Jordan -- but even this can be as little as $71 a month. Refugees need to supplement the aid they receive; yet they cannot legally find work. Because children can slip under the radar, they end up supporting families through low-paying, informal jobs. Close to 50% of Syrian children work.

To help address the Syria refugee crisis spilling over into Europe, Germany and the United States have called for increased aid to United Nations refugee camps in the countries neighboring Syria. The United States pledged $419 million in additional assistance to those affected by war in Syria. Part of the new funding will respond to the 2015 appeals of $1.67 billion from the United Nations for Syrian aid in the region. Even with this contribution, the UN appeals for humanitarian aid are only 41% funded, resulting in the cutbacks to food.

Humanitarian aid has historically focused on immediate needs - food, water, shelter and healthcare. It is given with the expectation that resettlement or return will occur in the near future. However, today, nearly two-thirds of refugees in the world - over 14 million people - are uprooted for an average of 20 years. In addition to humanitarian aid, assistance to refugees needs to emphasize skills, training and economic opportunities so people can rebuild their lives.

There is reason to believe that refugees can contribute to local economies. A World Bank evaluation on the impact of Syrian refugees on the Turkish labor market found that an influx of Syrian refugees into Turkey led Turkish workers to switch to more skilled and formal sector jobs and away from jobs that were mostly manual labor on farms.

In Jordan, Syrians have boosted consumption, increased foreign assistance, and improved GDP growth from 2.2 percent to 3 percent. They bring skills with them. Some start new businesses with Jordanian partners, creating jobs for others. Others take on informal jobs in agriculture, construction and manufacturing that are hard to fill. A Chatham House research paper estimates that unemployment in regions in Jordan most impacted by refugees decreased in 2014. The Government of Jordan is now considering policies that may open up specific labor markets to Syrian refugees. Other countries should follow suit.

Supporting Syrians' livelihoods is not a step towards full local integration, but part of an interim strategy to benefit economies and lives of the millions of people trying to escape Syria's civil war. The international community must continue to advocate for refugees' self-reliance. We must ensure that in addition to immediate aid, refugees have access to skill-building, financial resources, and economic opportunities, so they have the chance to build their own futures.

The Geopolitics of Respect: U.S., China, Iran and Russia

When the Chinese Communist party took power in 1949, Mao Zedong declared to a party conference, "The Chinese people, comprising one quarter of humanity, have now stood up. The Chinese have always been a great, courageous and industrious nation; it is only in modern times that they have fallen behind. That was due entirely to oppression and exploitation by foreign imperialism."

Mao's regime thereafter turned China into a totalitarian society for decades, but the nationalist mantra -- China had 'stood up' -- became an enduring aspect of the Communist party's legitimacy.

Subsequent Communist revolutions made the same claim to be simultaneously Communist and nationalist. (Not understanding this undermined American efforts in the Vietnam War.) Anti-colonialist national independence movements of the 1950s-1970s that were not Communist did likewise -- the Castro overthrow of Battista (not originally Communist); the Algerian National Liberation Front's defeat of France; and various African revolutions against British, French and Portuguese colonial powers. Even allies -- France's Charles de Gaulle was one -- may resent the power of the very country that protects it. De Gaulle's obsession with national independence was not anti-American, it was pro-French and pro-European.

Any people that has the means of its own defense and doesn't make the effort shows a lack of self-respect. (Thus France had to have its own nuclear deterrent.) Moreover, resistance ending in defeat can also demonstrate self-respect. "Nobody wants a foreign master," said the ancient Melians to the Athenians before being crushed by them. Alexis Tsipras was just re-elected because Greeks felt he fought the good fight before accepting what he couldn't prevent. "(In) Europe today," his victory speech asserted, "Greece and the Greek people are synonymous with resistance and dignity."

THE WORLD'S LEADERS COME TO NEW YORK

As world leaders gather for the annual opening of the UN General Assembly, a geopolitics of respect is a hidden agenda. The self-confidence of strong geopolitical power is always on display (as is the bravado of certain weaker powers). But respect of cultures, histories and past grievances concern even the big powers. The U.S., the world's only Superpower, is almost always the target of recriminations.

Demands for respect by the U.S. are the core aspect of what might be called the world geopolitics of emotion, which is no less real than military capabilities. Resentment of greater power and historical memories of defeat and outside interference often produce a desire for revenge. The opposite of being respected is a sense of humiliation, not the least important and sometimes irrational motives of international policy.

Three countries among the biggest powers -- China, Russia, Iran -- arrive at the UN with the issue of respect a hidden agenda behind conflicts of interests and policies. To different degrees all three are oppressive regimes, each in its own way with its particular ideological justification, whether the Communist Party's alleged superior wisdom and management skills, Russia's legitimate sphere of interests as a Great Power or Islam's right to a national theocracy. Significantly, each considers itself a civilization as well as a country. China vaunts a 5000 year history. Iranians are the avatar of ancient Persia, whose empire began with Cyrus the Great's conquest of the Medes in the 6th century B.C. Russia's governments from Peter the Great to Vladimir Putin represent a thousand-year power that began in 9th century Kievan Rus. If Beijing, Moscow and Tehran are America's principal geopolitical rivals, their sense of the dignity of their own histories and cultures creates a natural resentment of American claims to a unique place in world politics and political culture.

PUTIN'S RUSSIA

Vladimir Putin is endlessly quoted as saying that the collapse of the Soviet Union was the greatest political catastrophe of the 20th century. What he meant was not that Russia should return to Soviet politics and economics. He was lamenting the collapse of a powerful Russian state as such, Russia as a Great Power. During the cold war the U.S.S.R. was the second Superpower, the only country in the world that, because of its nuclear arsenal and international Communist empire, dealt with America as an equal. Putin wants a Russia that counts, whose voice in international relations must be reckoned with in major international issues. Russia's history implies a geopolitical calling in which the Soviet Union, because of weak leadership, is an unlamented failure. Russia's post-Communist governments, Mikhail Gorbachev's as well as Boris Yeltsin's, were humiliated by the West. Gorbachev lost the Soviet state and the international Communist movement, obliged to accept NATO and the EU eastern expansion. Yeltsin oversaw Russia's economic collapse and NATO's expansion to Russia's own borders.

Putin's aim to reverse Russian geopolitical decline is self-evident. Taking Crimea, intervening in Ukraine's eastern territory, now allying with Iran in Syria, are geopolitical gains in themselves. That they have occurred despite American and Western opposition is an additional source of satisfaction, both emotional, and in the realism of global chess board strategy, intellectual. Putin clearly enjoys playing the game. He's showing that Russia may be only a regional power but in its region it can intervene abroad if not with impunity then with success. Russia has new possibilities of alliance if not friendships. Putin arrives at the UN with more impact and self-satisfaction that seemed likely a short time ago. This includes scheduled private meetings with President Obama and Pope Francis.

IRAN

Negotiating its nuclear program with the P5 + 1 big powers over the past few years put Iran at the center of the broad evolution of Middle Eastern geopolitics. Islamist jihad movements -- Islamic State but also the remnants of Al Qaeda and smaller networks -- may have had their day, especially as Russia and Iran commit to combat them with ground forces. What Tehran intends in the region is a matter of great importance.

According to media reports, the region's Sunni Muslim governments -- Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, perhaps Turkey as well -- are not as concerned about a possible Iranian nuclear weapons program, which the nuclear agreement delays for many years, as with the expansion of Iran's regional influence. In spite of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's criticism of the nuclear agreement, this may be Israel's major concern, as well. Tehran, he says, weighs very heavy in five Middle Eastern capitals. But a nuclear arms race in the Middle East is less likely than it once seemed to be.

Iran's increasing geopolitical influence is unquestionable. What Tehran wants from the world's powers, especially the U.S., is some guarantee that regime change is not Western policy and some accommodation of increased Iranian influence, which, as is the case with Russia, is justified by Iran's size and geopolitical importance.

Also as in the case of Russia, there is the issue of respect of Iran as the inheritor of a civilization and a religious achievement. The nuclear negotiations had a symbolic quality as well as strategic significance. The government of President Rouhani and the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei can assert that Iran stood up to the world's biggest powers, six to one, as an equal. Iranians may or may not be convinced. Another reading is that Iran's negotiating team looked more like a misbehaved schoolboy facing a disciplinary committee.

The fact is that Iran was not publicly humiliated, whether because it was supremely crafty or the P5 + 1 took great care, which is not surprising since Russia and China were involved. Its statements of intent were not accepted at face value; neither were they rejected. Everyone, including Tehran, understood that the agreement's success or failure lies in verification of Iran's compliance. Even the concern that Tehran might cheat is a paradoxical statement of Iran's autonomy in the sense that Tehran cannot be completely controlled from outside. Khamenei and Rouhani, whatever their differences, are both preoccupied with self-respect and international respect. Khamenei emphasizes that Tehran will 'verify Western compliance' as well. His ritual denunciations of American "arrogance" and "brazen" behavior ("The U.S. is the ultimate embodiment of arrogance," its brazen policies are attempts to 'penetrate Iranian society') are ineradicable in his worldview. Rouhani and foreign minister Javad Zarif sometimes take a less hostile line, along with warnings and criticism about American and Israeli actions. Recent examples, symbolic but perhaps signs of distance from Khamenei's authority, are Rouhani and foreign minister Javad Zarif wishing "Jews around the world, especially Iranian Jews" (about 10,000 of them) a "blessed" Jewish New Year. Iran, Rouhani says, won't forget past U.S. intervention (the U.S.-sponsored overthrow of the Mossadegh government in 1953 and Washington's urging of Saddam Hussein to attack Iran in 1980 after the Khomeini revolution in 1979). But the main thing, he says, is to look ahead rather than let policy be decided by the past.

CHINA

China's President Xi Jinping has just arrived in the U.S. for a state visit and the ritual speech at the UN General Assembly. He landed first in Seattle (to emphasize the importance of high tech and business in the China-U.S. relationship), where he made an important speech detailing China's self-definition and its subdued economic ambitions at home ("a modestly prosperous society" by 2020; a fully prosperous society by 2050. The goal of a "communist society" is, in other words, a dead letter.) Most important was what he said about Sino-American relations. The key phrases were 'to construct a new major power relationship,' to "read each other's strategic intentions correctly," and that, whatever conflicts of interest or perception, "the most important thing is to respect each other." Xi appeared self-confident, even garrulous, reciting a list of Western books he's read, including, his favorite, Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea".

President Xi represents a country whose business, economic and financial interests are more than ever engaged in the international order. China's evolved world outlook is an example of how durable success blunts the impulse to invoke past grievances--the "century of Chinese humiliation"--in a country's diplomacy. Russia and Iran are far from having reached this point. Downplaying the effects of current economic difficulties and stock market volatility, Xi could have, but didn't, compare them to the 2007-12 U.S. and Western financial crisis.

China, in spite of its expanding claims in the China Sea, is the least urgent of Washington's three major geopolitical worries. But in the long term it is America's most substantial global partner and competitor. How far Beijing will attempt to become a global power and to what extent it will keep its promise not to try to overthrow the international order but revise it in favor in favor of developing countries, is uncertain. What is certain is that Beijing knows it will be impossible to supplant the U.S. as the world's pre-eminent power and that in strategic terms it would be a waste of resources to try.

Xi Jinping's more open, self-confident attitude in dealing with the West could over time affect Communist party political culture down through the ranks of its 87 million members where true believers are more numerous. At the top, large numbers of China's top political and business leaders earned advanced degrees in the U.S. and have long-standing ties with American government and academic elites. But Xi, to reassert control, has tightened "party discipline", the old Communist party internal "democratic centralism" designed among other things to protect the party from contamination by outside influences. Media reports suggest his top advisors have all but shut down easy-going conversation. China's opening to the West is, in other words, a zig-zag that may continue for a while. Xi's crackdown, which belies a congenial personality, is similar to Khamenei's warning against "penetration" by Western influences.

America and the geopolitics of respect

President Obama will speak at the UN with the question of respect also at issue. Big power attitudes toward U.S. foreign policy are unique, however, because it is the world's sole Superpower. It has the largest economy, the strongest military and the strongest power of attraction as a society. For other governments, the U.S. is the country whose respect is most important and lack of it most resented. The Obama administration has from the beginning had to deal with foreign allegations of condescending attitudes and attempts to impose American values on other country. Obama intuited the importance of respect. From the beginning of his administration he emphasized that he was attuned to it, not always successfully.

A combination of resentment, fear and perhaps hatred, but also respect, alliance and friendship, is the natural condition of great geopolitical power. The U.S. is no exception. What is in question is not respect for America as such or the attractiveness of American society but the depth of Washington's foreign policy engagement in world troubles and the credibility of its commitments. The Obama administration, inheriting two wars, wound down military engagement in the war of necessity in Afghanistan and above all the war of choice in Iraq. America today is fighting no ground wars. He is criticized for pulling American forces out of Iraq precipitously and for insufficient engagement in the Syrian wars, including the fight against ISIS/Islamic State. In any case, as opposed to the situation only a few months ago, Islamic State is now little heard from. Whether it's headed for destruction has become a reasonable question.

Russian intervention into Syrian territory and its burgeoning alliance there with Iran, are simultaneously a worry for the U.S. and its allies in the region. Yet they might produce, with U.S. participation, stabilization in Syria and a guarantee of Iraq's integrity. This reduces America's influence in the Middle East but Obama's calculation is that overall reduction of U.S. attempts to control evolution of the Middle East will benefit America's interests so long the U.S. protects its allies (Israel first of all) and underwrites their common interest in pushing back against Iran and Russia. Obama's calculation in the Ukraine conflict has the same intent.

The issue is whether Obama has, despite certain failures and mistakes, balanced American national interests, capacities and commitments to our most important allies. American foreign policy should not have a single rule for interventions abroad. Individual cases should be evaluated and the ambition to be the decisive force everywhere in the world should be modulated. It makes no sense to attempt to control every situation when new rising powers make this a futile enterprise. Respecting others' geopolitical power is simple prudence, and not foreclosing the thought that dictatorships may improve is only reasonable. At the least, Obama's awareness of the geopolitical importance of respect, rightly given, shows that American diplomacy is capable of a more cosmopolitanism mentality than in the recent past.

It hardly needs emphasizing that respect for other cultures and histories is not moral endorsement of authoritarian governments. Americans will debate for some time whether Obama's attentiveness to the issue of respect is a successful aspect of foreign policy realism or a self-deception arising from geopolitical naiveté.

Why Pakistan's Nuclear Arsenal Has Proven to Be Counterproductive

One of the most drummed up things in the national media about Pakistan is its nuclear arsenal. A state which by all accounts has failed to deliver even the basic necessities is being widely projected as one of the most important states by the right-wing intelligentsia. However it goes beyond this. The nuclear arsenal has become our sole "credible" claim to glory and consequently the justification for all the conspiracy theories according to which the entire world is wary of us.

This conspiracy theory culture which is outwardly looking, shifts the blame to foreign powers, who are allegedly jealous of Pakistan's nuclear might, and are always trying to purge the country of its "crowning" jewel. Several right wing TV anchors have constructed entire careers on perpetuating this culture of suspicion which is fueled by mythology built around glorification of Islamic fortress, Pakistan.

One of the biggest ironies of the nuclear arsenal, from what I keep hearing, is that it is protecting Pakistan from a US or Indian take over and yet the actual evidence suggests that we are protecting the arsenal. The fact that we have ended up protecting a device which was supposed to protect us is such an irony and yet completely incomprehensible to many Pakistanis who continue to gloat over it.

But why have we come to this stage? Why are we seeking a strange delusional solace in a device which is supposed to kill millions? Why is our entire intellectual thrust on perpetuating a strange culture of suspicion where every barbaric act, even if conducted and fully claimed, by our home grown Frankenstein monster, is construed to be planned by the foreign powers solely to take hold of nuclear arsenal.

The answer lies in the thoroughly bruised identity, particularly the way it has evolved after the debacle of East Pakistan in 1971 and defeat from India. East Pakistan debacle among many other things shattered the myth of superiority of Pakistani army's quality.

Before 1971, even within army circles, a martial race myth had gradually been constructed. According to this myth a Muslim soldier is far superior in quality due to extraordinary valor originating out of faith. The glorification of army was not merely restricted to army as a fighting unit but stretched to include the state of Pakistan as Ayub (Pakistan's first military ruler) era was a military rule. Military rule practically defined state. Ayub's ruke was a far cry from the earlier "chaos" and it also saw active nation building done and supervised by the military. While in power and at the helm of the affairs, the army's image also became the national image.

The debacle of East Pakistan shattered the army's repute as an invincible fighting force and had lasting impact on the collective psyche of Pakistani nation . West Pakistani populace, particularly the middle class felt humiliated and could not believe that their cherished army had been routed. It was a moment of national humiliation. Moreover since at that time no one came to "rescue" Pakistan, and India had actively collaborated with the Bengali nationalists, it gave rise to conspiracy mode of thinking. For majority of the middle class, it was not that East Pakistan has been given unfair treatment, but rather an Indian and global conspiracy to break up Pakistan. To this date, majority of Pakistanis see the problems of Pakistan particularly relating to security through this conspiracy paradigm.

Pakistan's first democratically elected Prime Minister, Zulifiqar Ali Bhutto (ZAB) after taking power immediately started taking steps to curtail army's political role. Among these steps was forcible removal of the existing army chief, promotion of apparently "weak' officers like general Zia and creation of Federal Security Force (FSF), which was a parallel security force.

However, the 1974 nuclear test by India once again reopened the wounds of the 1971 humiliation and warranted some kind of response to settle 'scores' with India. It was under these circumstances that ZAB decided to embark upon the nuclear program. Being extremely intelligent ZAB understood that renewed threat from India would once again restore the army's position and importance. Hence the best bet was to actually match India and become a nuclear power. In this way, the army in its conventional role would not be required to that extent and consequently in the long run its political power would diminish as well. Thus the reason for becoming the nuclear power was in some ways an extension of the desire to curtail army's political ambitions. Plus the nuclear arsenal would soothe the bruised identity.

However, the reality unfortunately has not conformed to the wishes of the initiator of the nuclear program. Although the nuclear arsenal has proven to be apparently successful in soothing the bruised identity of Pakistani middle class, but the cost has been tremendous.

Nuclear arsenal has successfully soothed the bruised identity as it has apparently "settled" scores with India and given some importance to Pakistan in the international arena which it desperately needed. With the passage of time, as the failed state label becomes more justified the nuclear arsenal keeps on getting elevated in terms of our "success". Unfortunately the more Pakistan lags behind in economic and social indicators, more obsessive we become about nuclear arsenal and try to seek compensatory comfort in it.

Whether we admit it or not, Pakistan ranks low in important social indicators pertaining to transparency, literacy, economy and healthcare even when compared to developing economies of similar characteristics. In Human Development Index, Pakistan stands at 146th and below even countries will lesser per capita income such as Bhutan, Nepal and Namibia . According to Gender Gap report, Pakistan ranks 141 out of 142 "beating" only Yemen. In Freedom of Press Index, Pakistan ranks 158 out of 180 , in Religious Restriction Index Pakistan is ranked as the worst and in Fragile State Index Pakistan ranks 13th in the category of "High Alert" countries which includes Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria.

Nuclear arsenal thus becomes the only "achievement" and therefore talked to death in our right wing circles. At times it becomes actually embarrassing that we are not able to provide basic things like education and electricity and yet assume ourselves to be the center of the world due to our nuclear status. Even when given the chance to have more aid and reduction of foreign debt in exchange for not conducting the tests in 1998, we unanimously opted for going nuclear. The irony was that within one month's time, we as a nation proved how hollow we were, when instead of showing mettle and inner strength to face sanctions, we were busy betting on the devaluation of rupee!

In addition this "achievement" has made us deeply paranoid about the rest of the world and with terrifying consequences. As Pakistan falls deeply into insecurity and terrorism, instead of correctly identifying the causes, the nuclear obsession leads us to believe that everything is a grand conspiracy to take hold of the nuclear arsenal.

Moreover, the nuclear status has not provided protection to Pakistan and rather it has exposed it to needless international scrutiny. Pakistan's security problems are no longer emanating from India but are rather homegrown and ironically are in some ways an outcome of the nuclear status itself. The nuclear status actually enabled the deep state to train militant elements without fearing a full scale war.

In addition, contrary to ZAB's original aim of weakening the army, the nuclear arsenal has actually strengthened it. Once army took over, the nuclear program actually became its shield to undertake covert activities in the neighboring countries. In fact, army and nuclear "image' have intertwined and army has successfully positioned itself as the guardian of the nuclear program.

Right now the ultranationalist section of the population has to redirect its concerns and energies to real issues rather than on this nuclear paranoia. Frankly the nuclear arsenal has proven to be one of our greatest drawbacks and has ended up creating more problems for us.

Let's Discuss the Impeachment of Dilma Rousseff Responsibly

The applause that Dilma Rousseff received at the opening of the 70th UN General Assembly on Monday, September 28, may have had a soothing effect on her; it might have even been a brief respite from the crisis she has faced since the beginning of her second term.

She might catch a break overseas, but the president knows that it would take much more than a moving speech on refugees or a pledge to protect the environment, to change the -- audible -- attitudes of Brazilians on the street.

Pot banging, booing and swearing make up the chorus of disgruntled Brazilians, frustrated with a government that has been acting in discordance with their initial campaign promises.

During the 2014 electoral campaign, Dilma declared her main opponents as proponents of austerity, banks, unemployment, and inflation.

This year, under her management, Brazil has faced an increase in unemployment rates and inflation, in addition to a spike in interest-rates and bank profits.

The fiscal adjustment, conducted by Finance Minister Joaquim Levy, has the bitter taste of tax increases. For everyone.

Over the last nine months, those who voted (or voted for a second time) for Dilma have been increasingly disillusioned with a government that is leaning closer to the right than they had expected. The frustration is reflected in the results of a recent Datafolha poll: 71 percent said they are dissatisfied with this government, and 66 percent said that they support Dilma's impeachment.

But are the lies, together with an ailing economy -- felt in everyone's pockets -- enough to remove a president from power?

No. Her "politics" do not typify a particular crime.

Right after she returns from New York, though, the president will have her eyes and ears on the House of Representatives, where its president -- and her archenemy -- Eduardo Cunha (PMDB-RJ), will start analyzing more than 10 pending impeachment requests.

The main cause to impeach the president would be violating Brazil's fiscal responsibility law.

The Federal Court of Accounts (TCU) will soon announce that it has rejected the accounts of Dilma's administration for the year 2014.

According to the Valor Econômico newspaper, TCU president, Minister Augusto Nardes will condemn accounting maneuvers adopted by the president last year.

Here is what the government did: it "borrowed" money from public banks (Banco do Brasil and Caixa Econômica Federal) to pay for social programs, such as Bolsa Família (Family Grant) and unemployment insurance, among other programs.

The problem, however, is that this type of loan is forbidden by the fiscal responsibility law, because it is (yet another) way to manipulate public accounts. In addition, Dilma has delayed payment to the banks.

The TCU estimates that the government's accounting maneuvers between 2012 and 2014 has amounted to R$ 40 billion.

TCU Public Prosecutor Júlio Marcelo de Oliveira, wrote a scathing review of Dilma's administration in a letter submitted to Brazil's audit court:

"What this perplexed nation has witnessed was a real fiscal irresponsibility policy, characterized by bending the rules to favor the interests of the chief executive in an election year, rather than the collective interests and the balance of public accounts."

If all these violations are confirmed by the TCU, then Dilma will have actually made a mistake. A crass mistake. She will have poorly managed public accounts.

The attorney general, on the other hand, finds no illegality and says that previous governments (Lula and FHC) have also resorted to such maneuvers.

Nevertheless, Nardes's position could be the missing ingredient for Congress to start a destructive combustion process within the Executive branch.

An increasingly weakened governing coalition, with the main ally complaining on television about Brazil's current situation, is shaky ground for the president. Add to that the constantly emerging allegations of "Operation Car Wash" (the anti-corruption task force) showing the involvement of major members of the Workers' Party in the billion-dollar corruption scandal at Petrobras, and the successive attempts by the opposition to defeat Dilma in major bills submitted to Congress.

Moreover, deputies from the major opposition party have been voting against fiscal adjustment and, controversially, are trying to create more expenses in order to permanently undermine the government.

If, at such a critical moment for the 2016 budget, and thus for the future of the country, the opposition behaves irresponsibly, how can one expect that the debate around impeachment is seriously conducted, and not contaminated by party or personal interests, as opposed to national interests?

In such a complex scenario, HuffPost Brazil doesn't have definite answers on the fate of this government. But it intends to promote a healthy debate, presenting diverse voices about the current situation, left and right. It is within this forum of ideas, debate and pluralism that we can think about our issues and mature as citizens.

This post first appeared on HuffPost Brazil and was translated into English.

Putin's Axis of Dictators May Save Assad

What ails our depressed, strife-torn world: not enough dictators. That's what Vladimir Putin (oh, I mean DOCTOR) Putin prescribed to the UN...just take an Assad and a Rouhani and call him in the morning.

This week's UN General Assembly cavalcade of superstar dictators was a depressing juxtaposition coming on the heels of a remarkably inspirational U.S. papal visit.

Just picture the Turtle Bay turnstile...Pope Francis' inspiring address urging world leaders to set aside their differences to heal the world's poverty and oppression. Flash forward to Russia's Putin grasping the UNGA lectern after a decade's absence asserting more dictators will create a new "stable" world order - by bombing Syria and Ukraine. The Amen Choir of UNGA autocrats were on their feet ready to dance the Barynya.

For good measure, Iran's Supreme Leader stand-in Hassan Rouhani could not resist the temptation to pile on the U.S. "we must not forget the roots of today's wars...can be found in the occupation, invasion and military intervention..." by the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the U.S.'s unwarranted support for the inhumane actions of the "Zionist regime" (aka Israel). That's the guy we just signed a nuclear agreement with whose nation is the world's number one state sponsor of terror, and which is Putin's closest Assad ally in Syria.

Putin seized upon the catastrophic rise of ISIS as an alibi to triple down on Russia's support for Syria's Assad regime -- asserting that the road to defeating ISIS lies through Damascus. Typical feint by Putin. It seems that the only person surprised with Putin's air strikes in Syria is President Obama - and that alone says all that needs to be said about this White House's abject naiveté why it's Syria "policy" is an unmitigated disaster on every count.

Putin also would have none of Obama's clarion call to statesmanship. He defiantly asserted that "...we can no longer tolerate the current state of affairs in the world." The real bogeyman of global disorder, Putin asserted, is NATO and the United States. In a vain attempt to curry favor with his new-found bully buddies Putin exclaimed that the United Nations is the only institution that stands in the way of American domination of the world.

What is most diabolical about Putin's orchestrated defense of Assad wrapped in an anti-ISIS appeal is how much his brazen assessment is gaining traction in the least likely of places -- western Europe. Europe's leaders, overrun by a torrent of Syrian refugees with no end in sight, are throwing their lot in with Putin on Assad - bowing to the cruel reality on the ground that Assad won't be leaving anytime soon for fear that the torrent of refugees would turn into a tsunami of boat people. And any rush to force Assad and his family to the exit could make matters worse by enabling ISIS to establish its caliphate capital in Damascus.

Obama had once infamously declared "Assad must go." Now, the U.S. is talking about Assad's "managed transition." That is code for we are in no hurry to get rid of Assad, either. So much for Secretary Kerry's empty admonitions.

That is the sad reality of the ground game in Syria today - coupled with a free-fire zone free-for-all of Russian, American, French, Syrian, Turkish and "coalition" warplanes (add Israeli drones) buzzing overhead without an order of battle bombing targets with abandon in an almost cartoonish display of indiscriminate air might -- all without a strategy.

Let's take a step back.

Despite all the kabuki drama in New York nothing that the U.S. says or does is going to change the Syrian equation -- nada. Obama forfeited having much of a say about Assad's coming or going when he took his red-line ante off the table and failed when confronted at every Syrian policy turn of opportunity in the road thereafter. Too late arming moderate rebels. Too late providing urgent humanitarian relief. Too late comprehending the threat that a disintegrating Syria poses to U.S. homeland security. Too late coordinating a policy with Turkey. Too late recognizing ISIS' threat. Too late demanding Sunni states stop supporting extremist anti-Assad forces. Too late to put any political pressure on Assad. The list of "too lates" is bottomless.

And yet, even today before Congress, Kerry enjoys boasting about HIS 43 nation anti-ISIS coalition - quantity over quality - a paper tiger coalition that has hardly affected hardly anything on the ground because Obama won't permit U.S. special forces target spotters to make that air coalition effective. Kerry is flailing as is his want. He demands a political solution in Syria that would lead to a "transition government" but there is no one to hand power off to.

If Kerry had the presence of thought to stay off his plane for a while and get back to basics perhaps the U.S. could come up with a plan which would: a) refocus Arab and European efforts against ISIS by organizing the boots on the ground needed to carve up ISIS; b) put some time in Baghdad to shore up its internal efforts against ISIS; 3) cajole Syria's other patron states (China and Iran) to create an anti-ISIS coalition that has some teeth to it.

Alternatively, everything that Russia does, will impact Assad. So why is anyone surprised Russia is pouring more arms into its client state...Russia has been doing that for decades and has a convenient naval base at Tartus to unload all that equipment. Neither Iran, China, or Hezbollah (and Israel...yes ISRAEL) want to part with the devil they know, and each in their own way are determined to keep Assad's regime from collapsing. They know ISIS and Al Nusra Front will pillage and murder any Shiite left standing.

Mind you, Putin is no hero here. While Russia's escalation may keep the Caliph out of Damascus, it will certainly fuel the refugee exodus, produce even more vicious fighting and civilian carnage, and serve as Hollywood blockbuster advertisement for Sunni recruits to join ISIS' forces. Afghanistan redux??

But Obama's Middle East foreign policy team put his leaky ship of state on this course - get out of the Middle East, turn the keys over to the Iranians; pivot to Asia, and exit stage left declaring victory with honor. Anyone warning them of Syria's consequences was shown the door including Robert Ford -- our best mind on Syria who was the courageous envoy there.

Regrettably, the unmitigated stubbornness of his National Security Council team to grasp the strategic essentials of the Middle East is the root cause of this Greek tragedy. Now, it is too late to throw our weight around without a plan that focuses on what really is essential to U.S. interests in Syria. And so far the Administration hasn't a clue what an effective plan may look like. It talks as if it has a plan, but that, too, is fantasy.

So play this out.

1. The U.S. never had a geo-political stake in Syria. Syria has been Russia's #1 client state for 50 years. Syria is Russia's #1 purchaser of arms. China, too, is Assad's major big-power benefactor. Assad's fall would convert Syria into a partitioned Sunni extremist-dominated state pouring Jihadis into Chechnya and Dagestan. Putin has a geo-strategic imperative to prevent that from happening and to expand Russia's influence with the new Middle East world order that Obama and Co. have bequeathed him. The emerging Russian-Iranian Shiite alliance had the vote in the Middle East and has even snared Iraq into it - again much to the surprise of the Obama team. The U.S. must refocus to ensure that Lebanon and Jordan remain able to withstand the consequences of the Syrian extremist and refugee crisis now within their borders. That requires more strategic planning with Israel, Egypt and Turkey...I don't see any of that happening.

2. The U.S. and its European allies have few anti-Assad cards left. The two cards that Obama and his team have failed to play so are 1) robbing ISIS of its territorial bases in Raqqa Syria and Mosul, Iraq; and 2) containing the flow of ISIS fighters to and from those areas. If Putin is going to join in and help - all the better. Cutting the Caliphate down the middle (i.e., severing its lines of communications between Syria and Iraq is essential to robbing ISIS of its attraction to Jihadis and to its own legitimacy. Putin and Iran will never be brow-beaded into changing their conduct in Syria - so Kerry should quit bellyaching about it and focus instead on protecting U.S. interests where they matter, i.e., numbers 1 & 2, above. That means organizing an ARAB expeditionary force to chop up ISIS's territory. I don't see Kerry doing anything of the sort, yet. By the way, the Europeans have yet to be brought into a planning enterprise to get this organized.

3. A bi-partisan Congressional Committee issued a damning report yesterday on the Obama Administration's "two hands tied behind its back" military and intelligence failures against ISIS asserting that the U.S. is losing the battle to stop Americans from traveling abroad to enlist in ISIS. More than 25,000 foreigners have flocked to war-torn Syria and Iraq since 2011 to fight with Islamist terrorist groups including ISIS, according to U.S. government estimates noted in the report. The Obama Administration has a bipartisan "F" grade on the one danger that matters most to Americans in this conflict. We have no military, political, or strategic policy in place to deal with this. All the more reason why we need to refocus our energies and stop our Syrian flailing.

4. I have repeatedly called for the U.S. to unshackle itself by permitting forward spotting teams to support air strikes against ISIS - without which 75% of coalition airstrikes fail to occur or miss their targets. Obama has consistently overruled his military and intelligence advisers -- as if these boots on the ground would short-sheet his pledge not to have boots on the ground in Syria. Penny wise-pound foolish, to say the least.

5. The U.S. and Turkey have been haggling over whether there should be safe-=havens for Syrians defended by U.S. and Turkish forces. The U.S. can do so much more to provide the urgent humanitarian relief Syrians desperately need while leveraging strategic safe-havens to place more military pressure on the Assad regime by training Syrians to defend these safe-havens that would also be no-fly zones against Assad's dreaded barrel bombing.

Syria is so broken it is inevitable that it is going to be partitioned - the only question is when and whether the extremists will hold just a sliver of what is left. Our goal must be principally to expedite the demise of ISIS and its threat to us, and push Sunni Arab states to end their clandestine support for ISIS and Al Nusra in Syria and Iraq. Russia, Iran and China are all in for Assad until someone finally takes him down, which is surely to happen given the hundreds of thousands seeking retribution against him.
What remains of America's Middle East policy is now in the hands of our adversaries. It will take a new, bold, creative foreign policy team to pick up the pieces of this broken china - and that is 15 months away.

Ashraf Ghani's 1st Year As Afghan President

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John Kerry, Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah. Photo: PBS.org

It has almost been a year since Afghan president Ashraf Ghani and Afghan chief executive Abdullah Abdullah have been in power. Contrary to the rosy pictures painted at the time, progress on many fronts has been dismal at best. To understand the root cause of the government of "national disunity," it is helpful to recap what transpired at its formation in 2014.

Mr. Ghani is an ethnic Pashtun, the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan. He had to ally himself with Rasheed Dostom, a notorious Uzbek warlord from the north, to compensate for a shortfall of Pashtun votes. If Afghanistan is divided along ethnic and tribal fault lines and if the Pashtuns are the largest group, why did Ashraf Ghani need Dostom's support? The reason is that many Pashtuns believe that they have been marginalized and that the international community's intervention in Afghanistan conspired with the Northern Alliance against them. The Taliban are mostly Pashtuns. The Northern Alliance is mostly Tajik, but at times is in an uneasy coalition with Uzbeks and Hazaras as well. As a result Pashtuns do not participate in the electoral process, which is also grossly flawed. The presidential election of 2014 was mired by accusations of fraud, with both Ghani and Abdullah pointing fingers at each other. Abdullah went so far as to threaten the stability of the government. To prevent a potentially serious situation the US Secretary of State John Kerry repeatedly intervened to bring the warring parties together. The result was the formation of the so called Government of Unity which recognized Mr. Ghani as the president and appointing Mr. Abdullah as the chief executive, a position which does not exist in the country's constitution.

Although the uneasy coexistence between the two men and their allies is still alive, the accomplishments remain dismal. One of Mr. Ghani's first acts was to fire most high ranking government officials. As bad as those officials may have been, filling the posts from a fractured, incompetent and politically connected shallow pool proved very difficult. He had no choice but to have the fired personnel stay on as caretakers. A good example is the appointment of the Masoom Stanekzai to the very important post of Minister of Defense. The Afghan parliament did not approve his appointment and Mr. Stanekzai continues to head the ministry as the caretaker.

Despite the continued support of NATO in the form of mission Resolute Support to strengthen the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), there is little sign of the ANSF being capable of fighting the Taliban insurgency and other groups affiliated with ISIS. The shameful, criminal, overt and rampant sexual abuse of children by certain elements of ANSF was once again recently publicized. Mr. Ghani became very irate and vowed that he would crack down. I don't doubt his sincerity, but like many other promises this one will go unfulfilled because he does not have a robust mechanism to do it. ANSF members who perpetrate these unspeakable acts against children are mostly members of the militias of the former warlords. These people are responsible for the creation and continuation of the culture of impunity. This is one of the reasons that the powerless rank and file Afghan turns to Taliban when his child is abused as there is no recourse for him but the Taliban.

There is no wonder why a corrupt and morally bankrupt ANSF cannot successfully face the insurgency despite the efforts of the US and the international community with billions of dollars and shedding of blood not to mention the great sacrifice of the poor Afghan people. The ANSF has suffered increased and repeated humiliations this year in Helmand and other areas. But the most important setback to date came on Monday September 28, 2015 when the Taliban insurgency, in a surprise attack, captured Kunduz, which is one the most important cities in the north. The loss of Kunduz, Afghanistan's fifth largest city and agriculturally one of the richest, is a very significant blow to Afghanistan and its national government of "disunity." Kunduz is also located on an artery connecting the capital Kabul to the rest of the Northern provinces. Additionally it shares a border with Tajikistan. With the Taliban in control, one of the important trading routes of landlocked Afghanistan to the outside world is no more. Whether the Afghan government will be able to reverse this loss remains to be seen.

Another reason the fall of Kunduz is significant is that although there are Pashtun pockets in Kunduz, the majority are Tajiks. It shows that the Taliban are not only strong in their traditional backyard of South and East, but they can take over a large city elsewhere in the country.

The disaccord between Messrs. Ghani and Abdullah is not limited to the failure to fill the vacant government positions. It must spill to other social, political and governance aspects of the country to the detriment of Afghans, the US and others who have been trying to bring stability and an eventual peace to the war torn country.