Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts

Cyber War Between US-China?

Could there be a cyber cold war between the United States and China brewing?

The AP reports that the Chinese government has fired back at a U.S. congressional panel report that alleges the Chinese government of computer espionage attacks against US interests.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang released a statement from Beijing that rejected the panel findings.

From the AP:

The commission "deliberately slanders and attacks China" and always sees it in a bad light, Qin said. "It attempts to mislead public opinion and the general public as well as set obstacles for Sino-U.S. cooperation in extensive fields."

The panel of six Democrats and six Republicans said China's massive military modernization and its "impressive but disturbing" space and computer warfare capabilities "suggest China is intent on expanding its sphere of control even at the expense of its Asian neighbors and the United States."





Penny Pritzker for Commerce Secretary as Obama Makes More Cabinet Picks

Penny Pritzker, Chicago Billionaire set to become President-elect Obama's Secretary of Commerce.
Penny Pritzker, Chicago Billionaire and founder of Hyatt Hotel chains, is expected to be officially chosen as Barack Obama's Commerce Secretary in his new administration.

CNN quoted reliable sources as saying the Obama transition team was set to announce Penny Pritzker, who ran Obamas camping finance committee, to be selected for the plum job of running the American government's Commerce department.

Obama also announced that Tom Daschle would be Health Secretary in the Obama President-elect cabinet is set to see an aggressive push to overhaul the US health care system.

Obama's pick for Secretary of Homeland Security is expected to be Arizona Democratic Governor Janet Napolitano, CNN reported citing multiple Democratic sources close to the transition.






Japan In Recession

Following on from offical reports from the European Union and Hong Kong, Japanese authities and analysts say that Japan's economy has entred a recession after a period of low growth.

Government officials announced Monday that the Worlds second largest economy was indeed in recession, following the rest of the world into slowdown in the aftermath of the Global Financial and Credit Crisis.

Japan's Cabinet Office confirmed that its economy shrank another 0.1 percent in the third quarter, following a 0.9 percent drop in the second quarter. The country's gross domestic product -- second to the United States -- has fallen by 0.4 percent this year, pushing Japan into its first recession since 2001.

Via: Washington Post



Barack Obama-Kim Jong Il Meeting Could Be On Cards

During his Predisential campaign Barack Obama said he would sit down without preconditions during the first year of his administration with leaders of several nations whose governments have been at odds with the United States, including North Korea.

The South Korean President, Lee Myung-bak, said in an interview at the G20 financial crisis Summit in Washington DC that he would welcome such a move by the US President-elect.

"Barack Obama and Joe Biden will not take any options off the table, but they will emphasize first and foremost the power of American diplomacy and make clear the substantial benefits to Iran and North Korea of abandoning their dangerous nuclear programs while simultaneously conveying the enormous costs to them should they fail to do so," according to the Web site.

Via:CNN




Bush Asks Clinton How to Handle Obama

Outgoing President George W. Bush has revealed that he reached out to former President Bill Clinton for advise on how to handle his meeting with incoming US President Barack Obama.

In an interview with CNN, Bush said that he rang Bill Clinton the day before Obama and his wife arrived at the White house for ideas on guidance on handling the new kid on the block.

"'Bill, I'm getting ready to meet with the new president and I remember how gracious you were to me. And I hope I can be as gracious to president-elect Obama as you were to me,"' Bush told CNN today in a description of the call.

"To the extent that he asked my advice and he may want to ask it again, and the best way to make sure he feels comfortable asking it again is for me not to tell you in the first place what I advised him," he said.

Bush also said one of his biggest regrets as President was the infamous "mission accomplished" banner

"I regret saying some thing I shouldn't have said, like dead of alive....I was trying to convey a message and I probably should have conveyed it more artfully"

"I regret that that sign (Mission Accomplished) was there," Bush said.

Czech Republic PM Topolanek Smashes Photographer's Head Into Wall


Threatened with removal from his own party, the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic gets a little narky with a persuing photographer, smasing the photojournalists head into a wall.

From Eastern European media:

With all of those troubles on his mind, during a walk with his newly born son in Prague, Topolanek was irritated by tabloid photographers that wanted to capture a few shots of the premier walking. Topolanek then decided to hit a photographer who became too irritating, report the world media.
Topolanek’s civic democrats are very angry for the party’s poor results at the local elections, and are determined to remove their president from his position.
All of this is occurring only a few months before presiding over the European Union, which has been scheduled for January, after six French months.



Obama Republicans: Obamacons

Reagan Democrats. This was the term given to the normally reliable Democratic Party voters who turned to modern Republicanism' favorite son in the the massive electoral victories in the 1980's.

A generation later, Barack Hussein Obama rides a tsunami of change created in the aftermath of the historically low popularity of the George Walker Bush Presidency and one of the most successful grass roots political campaigns in living history.

The term Obama Republicans, or the Obamacon, may be become an often used meme in the years ahead.

If Obama wins in a landslide next Tuesday as many are beginning to predict, he would have done it with the help of many voters who chose to side with the Republican party in both 2000 and 2004.

In the last few weeks a number of conservatives and Republicans have chosen to vote for or openly endorse Barack Hussein Obama, many will vote Democrat for the first time ever. Here are some of the thoughts of newly found Obama Republicans, the Obamacons.



Former Republcian Senator Larry Pressler from the Conservative state of South Dakota.

"I just got the feeling that Obama will be able to handle this financial crisis better, and I like his financial team of [former Treasury Secretary Robert] Rubin and [former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul] Volcker better," he said. By contrast, John McCain's "handling of the financial crisis made me feel nervous."

Former Reagan Solicitor General, conservative thinker and former McCain supporter, Charles Fried wrote in a letter that the selection of Sarah Palin as Vice Presidential candidate by McCain tipped the scales.

He said that chief among the reasons for his decision "is the choice of Sarah Palin at a time of deep national crisis."

Former Bush Whitehouse Press Secretary Scott McClellan.

"From the very beginning I have said I am going to support the candidate that has the best chance for changing the way Washington works and getting things done and I will be voting for Barack Obama and clapping," McClellan told new CNN Host D.L. Hughley.

Former Republican Governor of Massachusetts William Weld

"It's not often you get a guy with his combination of qualities, chief among which I would say is the deep sense of calm he displays, and I think that's a product of his equally deep intelligence," he said in a phone interview.

Former George w. Bush Secretary of State, George H.W Bush Chairman of Joint Chiefs, Reagan National Security Advisor, General Colin Powell.

"I come to the conclusion that because of his ability to inspire, because of the inclusive nature of his campaign, because he is reaching out all across America, because of who he is and his rhetorical abilities--and we have to take that into account--as well as his substance--he has both style and substance--he has met the standard of being a successful president, being an exceptional president. I think he is a transformational figure. He is a new generation coming into the world--onto the world stage, onto the American stage, and for that reason I'll be voting for Senator Barack Obama."

- Former Republican governor in Minnesota, Arne Carlson

"Regardless of our party, regardless of our partisan inclinations, there is no interest more compelling than the interest in the well-being of the United States," Carlson said at a gathering of Obama supporters at the state Capitol.
Carlson added, "He has laid out for this nation a vision for a national purpose."


Former President Ford, Ronald Reagan official, lifelong Conservative Republican, Ken Adelman

"When the economic crisis broke, I found John McCain bouncing all over the place. In those first few crisis days, he was impetuous, inconsistent, and imprudent; ending up just plain weird. Having worked with Ronald Reagan for seven years, and been with him in his critical three summits with Gorbachev, I’ve concluded that that’s no way a president can act under pressure.
Second is judgment.

That decision showed appalling lack of judgment. Not only is Sarah Palin not close to being acceptable in high office—I would not have hired her for even a mid-level post in the arms-control agency. But that selection contradicted McCain’s main two, and best two, themes for his campaign—Country First, and experience counts. Neither can he credibly claim, post-Palin pick."

Son of the Godfather of modern day Republican conservatism, Christopher Buckley.

"Obama has in him—I think, despite his sometimes airy-fairy “We are the people we have been waiting for” silly rhetoric—the potential to be a good, perhaps even great leader. He is, it seems clear enough, what the historical moment seems to be calling for.
So, I wish him all the best. We are all in this together. Necessity is the mother of bipartisanship. And so, for the first time in my life, I’ll be pulling the Democratic lever in November. As the saying goes, God save the United States of America."




8 Days to Go: Obama Up In Normally Republican Virginia, North Carolina, Surging in Ohio

A Reuters/Zogby poll ( slightly slanted Republican due to an allocation of party affiliation the same as 2004 when George Bush and the Republcan party were far more popular) has Barack Obama looking strong in the normally reliable red states of Virginia and North Carolina. They also show him surging in Ohio, but Flordia is likely going to come down to the wire.

Reuters/Zogby telephone surveys of eight battleground states show Democrat Barack Obama ahead in six. While his lead over Republican John McCain is less than three points in Florida, Missouri and North Carolina, these results still point out the daunting task McCain faces to reach the 270 Electoral College votes needed for election

With Barack Obama only needing to hold onto the states John Kerry won in 2004, plus the now strongly blue stats of New Mexico and Iowa (states that only went to Bush in '04 by a few thousand), a win in either Colorado, Virginia, Florida or Ohio would see Obama become next President.

Ohio
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 50, McCain 45
Obama +5

Florida
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 47, McCain 47
Tie

North Carolina
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 50, McCain 46
Obama +4

Virginia
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 52, McCain 45
Obama +7

Missouri
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 48, McCain 46
Obama +2

Nevada
Reuters/Zogby
Obama 48, McCain 44
Obama +4
Indiana

Reuters/Zogby
McCain 50, Obama 44
McCain +6

West Virginia
Reuters/Zogby
McCain 50, Obama 40
McCain +10

Virginia
ABC News/Wash Post
Obama 52, McCain 44
Obama +8

Bush's John McCain October Suprise? US Attacks Targets Inside Syria

Could this be George Bush's gift to John McCain just one week before Americans go to the polls in one of the most important elections in the history of the world?

From Reuters:

Syria accused the United States on Monday of committing a "terrible crime" in killing eight civilians during a helicopter attack on a Syrian farm near the border with Iraq.

Syria has said four U.S. helicopters attacked the al-Sukkari farm in the Albou Kamal area in eastern Syria on Sunday and that U.S. soldiers stormed a building in the area.


The United States, which accuses Syria of failing to stem the flow of al Qaeda fighters and other insurgents into Iraq to attack U.S. forces, has neither confirmed nor denied the incident.

"This is an outrageous raid which is against international law. It is a terrible crime. I don't know the political meaning of it. We are expecting clarifications from the Americans," Syrian Ambassador to London Sami al-Khiyami told Reuters.

The US has complained for many years that the Damascus Government had not done enough to prevent foreign fighters who heavily traffic the border are between Iraq and Syria.

But why would the Pentagon act now? No doubt the operation involving US helicopters and American special forces soldiers, would have been given the go ahead by President Bush, given the sensitive nature of crossing into a sovereign nation proper.

Why send shock waves across the middle east and around the world with an operation that clearly violates Syrian territory to go after what appears to be a small band of either traffickers of foreigners into Iraq, or as some Arab media says was civilian targets?

Why did something like this not happen much earlier, when it was clear that fighters have been using this area to pour into Iraq for many, many years?

Either way this smells fishy. Given that many people consider Republican Presidential candidate John McCain the more capable candidate on issues of national security and foreign policy, the operation in Syria, though low key would no doubt shore up doubts in voters minds over the ability of the relatively less experienced Barack Obama to deal with such a crisis.

The McCain camp has even released a plethora of TV ads in an attempt to throw up these doubts in voters minds as they head for the ballot box November 4.



Piroska Nagy Affair: IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn

Former IMF economist Piroska Nagy seen at a meeting in 2002.

The Chief of the International Monetary Fund, one of the most important financial organizations in the world, has been cleared of any wrong doing by the executive board of the organization after a scandal involving his extramarital relationship with a subordinate, economist Piroska Nagy.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn was investigated for favouritism and abuse of authority, but the IMF board released a statement early Sunday indicating that DSK was clear to continue his job. The IMF is currently at the centre of a number of international rescue plans for ailing world economies such as the Ukraine, Iceland and Pakistan.

The scandal threatened to distract the IMF and world leaders from the difficult task of negotiating a solution to the current Global Financial meltdown seen across the world.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who admitted to having an affair with subordinate Piroska Nagy, was cleared of any wrongdoing in connection with his relationship with a female employee while faulting him for a ``serious error of judgment.''

From Bloomberg:

An investigation by the fund's board ``concluded that there was no harassment, favoritism, or any other abuse of authority,'' a statement by the Washington-based agency said yesterday. ``Nevertheless, the Executive Board noted that the incident was regrettable and reflected a serious error of judgment on the part of the managing director.''


The report said Strauss-Kahn made ``initial contact'' with a female staff member, who wasn't identified, concerning ``legitimate IMF business.'' There followed ``a two-week-long exchange of consensual and very personal messages.'' In early January the two engaged in a ``consensual physical relationship of short duration.''


The scandal came about a year after a similar situation developed at the other major Bretton Woods born Washington DC organization, involving former Bush White house official Paul Wolfowitz, at the World Bank.







Recent Posts

About