Monday, May 15, 2017

What can be done to remedy the longstanding policy failure of the US’s counterproductive war on terrorism?

The War on Terrorism’s Middle East focus, from Bush, to Obama and now onto Trump, is not working. Civil wars and conflicts in Libya, Iraq, Yemen and Syria are but a few instances that illuminate this failure.
Furthermore, terrorist attacks in the U.S., Europe and throughout the world are largely the result of ‘blowback’ to Middle East policy and, since 9/11, to the War on Terror. This is the same blowback that led to the bombings of Algiers’ pied-noir cafés in the early 1960s and, more recently, has evinced in attacks on Parisian nightclubs and in San Bernardino, California.
We have tried the military and regime change response to terrorism for 15-plus years. That reaction has drastically amplified terrorism throughout the world and exponentially multiplied ‘those who hate us.’ Ramping up the War of Terror, as Trump has begun to do, will only further increase blowback. The result is increased global privation in the Middle East, the West and elsewhere throughout the world.
What can be done to remedy this longstanding policy failure?
A good start would be to develop a new, more realist policy towards actors and regimes that are involved in Middle Eastern conflicts. For one, this would mean developing an agnostic stance towards regime survival. It would also entail not allying with states or stateless actors in conflicts, for taking a side in a civil war tends to fuel and prolong conflict. Conflict prolongation is magnified when it is the world’s most powerful actor, the United States, that distributes weapons, money, military advisers and special forces to a conflict participant. The resultant protracting of conflicts not only exacerbates suffering and multiples casualty rates, but fosters stateless vacuums from which terrorists thrive and multiple.
The second step in substituting out the War on Terrorism’s Middle East focus is to work with key stakeholders that are currently on the West’s bad side: Russia and Iran. Together with all principal stakeholders in the Middle East’s conflicts, the West, Iran, Hezbollah, Turkey, the Kurds, Russia and Sunni majority countries, the U.S. can actively pursue policies that support state building and counterterrorism. The primary ­­­stakeholders hold a shared interest in diminishing the threat of violent Sunni extremist groups, which are chiefly from the Islamic State, Al Qaeda, al-Nusra (or, Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, as they now refer to themselves) and Ahrar al-Sham. Through cooperation, common security threats can be reduced and the vacuums through which these threats emerge can be plugged.
Once this necessary rapprochement with Iran and Russia is reached, many of the conflicts in the Middle East can be pushed towards resolution. The focus will then turn towards ensuring conflicts do not recur, which would likely include moving UN troops from neutral countries into post-conflict regions. As the insecurity of conflict regions diminishes, the appeal to join a terrorist group will also subside. Additionally, when Russia and the West come to be seen as the arbiters of peace and stability, as opposed to their opposite (which is now often the case), terrorist recruitment will further wane. While vacuums proceed in their slow and difficult evolution towards functioning states, principal stakeholders can work on targeted actions against the aforementioned terrorist groups.
Certainly, none of these policy changes will come easily, due to the entrenched interests of military-industrial, fossil fuel and AIPAC lobbyists, compounded by a strictly-fixated, media-backed narrative that myopically frames our perception of the world. Nevertheless, ending the U.S.’s Middle East-concentrated part of the War on Terrorism is a necessary course to reduce terrorism, its appeal and the mutual security threats that the world faces. It also will decrease privation across the globe and free the West from our post-9/11 security mindset that, too often, cowers in fear of terrorism and of the other.

Sunday, May 14, 2017

India must be copy of the China Pakistan corridor had geo- political subtext...

Beijing has stepped up with a woman in favour of it built Road initiative in the run up to its Global conference on the transContinental infrastructure programme in mid may.

Chinese official directly short to address Indian concerned about the fact that project of the BRI, the China Pakistan economic corridor cpec are doing it would not affect the territorial status of Pakistan occupied Kashmir after all there is already China gold karakulam kundlu Road going to that region since the 1960.

Beijing news on Kashmir they have claimed has remained unchanged for decades.

The Dr Rai is portrayed as a giant Chinese contribution to global economic integration that would help boost growth and design help keep a check on exorcism and extremism and terror.

Making a representative they have also noted that over 40 countries have signed up for the BRI and it has received endorsement is an at United Nations forums.

New Delhi is right to remain wary.

China Jackson on the ground indicate a far less beginning ambition..

In Sri Lanka China has not only build a number of economical unavailable port and Road it has old school NIFT Colombo with $8 million in Chinese department at the rate of interest..

So we could propagate exorcism about the tourism against Pakistan and China would be asleep and conflict about the safety and security of Indian people....

Andhra must and ensure children in drought hit areas do not fall prey to traffickers

A draught is not just water is  scarcity. It has several other simplification migration trafficking , malnutrition, livestock death agriculture losses.

Start Trying Times are also a location for the estate safety net to keep in and help people tide over the crisis.

But and that is not happening in Andhra Pradesh which is the same one of the worst drought in recent years.

According to the new website in fact finding team with visited 7 villages in the Anantapur district for the shortage of water for irrigation as well as conjunction by human and livestock the lack of PDS outlet and the ration card migration in banking and debt.

But the most horror model described in the report or about the children in the villages.

Many of them have been left alone or with the sibling in the village to fend for themselves and their parents have moved to the cities in search of work.

At the best home remedies had left behind the elderly to to look after the children.

The fact finding time comprises deactivate found another disrupting said something then could not get lessons from the public distribution system because I was the soft or located at the friend of the family is did not have ration cards.

Sardar issues on reported that biometric verification as well especially in case of the persons in whose name the ration card was had migrated the machine would not accept the fingerprint of the existing beneficiary.

So sometime that England woodworks kilometres only to be turned away at the PDS outlet.

So the government should verify all the district level supervisors and ground level people who did not take that total sabotage and help of the government.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks at the launch of the supreme court integrated case management system

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has set up to enable task force under vice chairman of Niti Aayog, how to generate timely and reliable data on the employment in India.

Jab data in India is mostly out that it was incomplete and written information is available on the informal sectors which employees 90% of the workforce.

That means there is more effective a way to God the impact of government policies on job creation.

It is often said if you cannot measure it you can not improve it.

In that regard this is a welcome step.
New data can help design effective policies to spouse job creation and fight against unemployment.

But employment statistics all one aspect of the Large systematic problems.

That needs to change manpower shortage for data collection is 1 regions with India from taking up in your survey and increasing the sample size to improve quality.

Sentences is National Sample Survey office official sources of vacancy economic indicators including estimation software design has around 24% positions back and foreground landscape.

We should integrate all this level..

Poem about life written on 14th may 2017 at LBSNAA..




STRENGTHEN  MIND



Tribute yourself in the path of Truth,

Surrender in the foot of unselfishness,

Render to the honest ,gentle,polite,soft,

Render to the righteous,right minded.

Activate mind and physical body ,

by meditation and exercise,faith,honesty.

Strengthen your mind by helping 

old,poor,indigent,needy,deprived,challenged,

Impecunious,and women ,child.

Respect to the women,older,and senior,Love to the 

child,distress,poor,render to family mankind.

Identify the good and Bad by etiquette,

Remember past pain ,delusion,mistakes,

remind insult of past and comments ,

of enemies, bad people remarks,

Improve mind and body influentially,

Teach from the past,present in future,

Utilize precious moments in present,

Donot waste a single second of time,

Prominence of a single moment,implicate.

reflect in mind to upgrade,mind and strengthen power of soul.



Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Congress will need to reach out to friends and foes to make a contest of the presidential poll

That opposition parties have begun talks on putting up a common candidate in the presidential election suggests they think they may be able to pressure the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party to settle for a consensus candidate asIndia’s next President. Over the last three years, the Narendra Modi government has shown no inclination to be accommodative of the opposition’s views, either in formulating legislation or in framing policies. A reflection of this is the strategy of bypassing the Rajya Sabha, where the BJP-led coalition is in a minority, by disguising important pieces of legislation as money bills. Thus, rather than wait in the possibly false hope that the BJP may opt for a consensus candidate for President, the Congress has decided to initiate talks with other parties on fielding a common candidate. After the election of A.P.J. Abdul Kalam in 2002, when major parties barring the Left were agreed on the choice, India has not had an apolitical presidential candidate acceptable to both the Congress and the BJP. Mr. Kalam, while accepting the BJP’s nomination, had wanted to be an all-party candidate, and the then Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, had spoken to Congress president Sonia Gandhi on the ruling combine’s choice. Both Pratibha Patil and Pranab Mukherjee were Congress politicians and the BJP fielded candidates against them. In all likelihood, the BJP will have its own candidate without following Mr. Vajpayee’s consensus-building approach. Of course, unlike in 2002, when it had less than 200 MPs in the Lok Sabha and was out of power in a large number of States, the BJP is now in an enviable position. The election is for it to lose.
Although the odds are heavily stacked against an opposition victory, the BJP is slightly short of a majority, leaving a small window of opportunity for the former. Ms. Gandhi has already begun talks with leaders of parties such as the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the CPI, the Samajwadi Party, the Rashtriya Janata Dal, and the Nationalist Congress Party, all of which have fought with the Congress as an ally in past Assembly elections. Parties such as the Biju Janata Dal may not feel compelled to join the opposition bandwagon, but the Congress might have better luck with the Trinamool Congress and the Bahujan Samaj Party, though they too are not allies. In Tamil Nadu, the ruling AIADMK faction is ill-disposed toward the BJP, and the Congress might stand a chance in enlisting its support; the opposition DMK is in any case a staunch ally at this point, and is likely to back its choice. Clearly, the onus is on the Congress to find a candidate who is acceptable to such a wide spectrum of parties. The name of Vice-President Hamid Ansari would have suggested itself, but the Congress will be forced to do what the BJP is unlikely to do: build a consensus with an open mind.


The ordinance enabling the RBI to act on bad loans must be accompanied by wider reform

The Centre has empowered the Reserve Bank of India to get banks to take tougher steps, including insolvency and bankruptcy proceedings against defaulters, to address the growing volume of bad loans on their books. An ordinance to amend the Banking Regulation Act of 1949 has been issued to quell doubts whether the existing provisions allowed the RBI to direct banks to deal with specific stressed assets. The RBI has also been vested with the power to form oversight committees wherever it deems fit. Currently such committees exist only for loans brought into a scheme for sustainable structuring of stressed assets, also known as S4A. Now the RBI can bring in such panels to monitor the alphabet soup of other mechanisms for tackling non-performing assets (NPAs) such as SDR (strategic debt restructuring) through the JLFs, or joint lenders’ forums. The hope is that this will let bankers take decisive calls on loan accounts that have turned bad, as an independent oversight committee’s approval could keep investigative agencies off their backs. Bankers may not always have the sectoral expertise to monetise or leverage assets underlying bad loans in the best possible way. Yet, their paralysis on the NPA front, with its collateral impact being the worst bank credit growth recorded in decades, is driven by the fear that they could get themselves implicated for poor lending and monitoring decisions. The success of this latest salvo against bad loans will depend on the fine print on how the ultimate decision — whether to take a haircut on a loan and restructure it or invoke bankruptcy clauses — is arrived at.
Perhaps of equal significance is the reshuffle of certain public sector bank officials announced on Friday. This is a clear signal that the NDA government is losing its patience with bankers persisting with a status quoist approach. The ordinance is the latest attempt to resolve the twin balance sheet problem (of indebted borrowers and NPA-burdened lenders) plaguing India’s domestic investment cycle. In 2015, the Prime Minister launched a Gyan Sangam conclave with bankers, and an Indradhanush road map to revitalise public sector banks. Last year, a Banks Board Bureau was set up to recommend the appointment of top bosses at banks and help them develop strategies and plan raising of capital. If the government wants to see a spurt in investment and job-creation, it needs to do more than just pin its hopes on new oversight committees. It must amend the anti-corruption law as has been promised for a while now, and accept the need to fix the policy-level stress affecting sectors such as telecom, power and highways. Above all, the government cannot in the same breath argue that the political cost of reforms is dissipating, but that the ‘re-privatisation’ of banks as mooted by the RBI recently is still a holy cow for the Indian polity.

Finding funds: On COP28 and the ‘loss and damage’ fund....

A healthy loss and damage (L&D) fund, a three-decade-old demand, is a fundamental expression of climate justice. The L&D fund is a c...