Sunday, December 21, 2008

Op-Ed Columnist - China to the Rescue? Not! - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - China to the Rescue? Not! - NYTimes.com:

"It’s good advice. China is not going to rescue us or the world economy. We’re going to have to get out of this crisis the old-fashioned way: by digging inside ourselves and getting back to basics — improving U.S. productivity, saving more, studying harder and inventing more stuff to export. The days of phony prosperity — I borrow cheap money from China to build a house and then borrow on that house to buy cheap paintings from China to decorate my walls and everybody is a winner — are over."

Monday, December 08, 2008

The chatteranti

The chatteranti

Op-Ed Contributor - They Hate Us — and India Is Us - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - They Hate Us — and India Is Us - NYTimes.com:

"When these well-planned attacks unfolded, it was clear to anyone with experience of India that they were not homegrown, and almost certainly originated from Pakistan. Yet the reaction of the world’s news media was to rely on the outmoded idea of Pakistan-India hyphenation — as if a thriving and prosperous democracy of over a billion people must be compared only to an imploded state that is having to be bailed out by the I.M.F. Was Pakistan to blame, asked many pundits, or was India at fault because of its treatment of minority groups?

The terrorists themselves offered little explanation, and made no clear demands. Yet even as the siege continued, commentators were making chilling deductions on their behalf: their actions were because of American foreign policy, or Afghanistan, or the harassment of Indian Muslims. Personal moral responsibility was removed from the players in the atrocity. When officials said that the killers came from the Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, it was taken as proof that India’s misdeeds in the Kashmir Valley were the cause."

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Ford to 'Aggressively Restructure,' Seeks $9 Billion in Bridge Financing - WSJ.com

Ford to 'Aggressively Restructure,' Seeks $9 Billion in Bridge Financing - WSJ.com:

"Ford, in the 30-page document submitted to legislators, said it will invest $14 billion in its U.S. operations over the next seven years on advanced technologies as the company retools its 2015 models to be 36% more fuel-efficient than its 2005 models. About 80% of Ford's total investment in 2010 will go toward cars and crossover vehicles, up from 60% in 2007."

Saturday, November 29, 2008

On Religion - Between Israel and India, a Link Based on Culture and, Now, Terrorism - NYTimes.com

On Religion - Between Israel and India, a Link Based on Culture and, Now, Terrorism - NYTimes.com

Hinjew leaders today conceded the merger of Hinduism and Judaism has not worked out as planned, as instead of forming a super-religion to fight off the common Islamic enemy, they have instead created a race of 900 million people who, no matter how many times they are reincarnated, can never please their mothers.”

Monday, November 24, 2008

Azaadi to patriotism, a generational sweep-India-The Times of India

Azaadi to patriotism, a generational sweep-India-The Times of India

Abdul Hai Khateeb, 80, has never ever voted — he believes in "azaadi". He has no intention of changing his stand at this ripe old age and will not vote this time either. He is the resident-grand-old-man with his known "separatist views" in this town where both BJP candidate Daya Krishen Kotwal, as well as Congress nominee and former chief minister Ghulam Nabi Azad, are trying to woo him into casting his vote.

His son will not vote because he is not around. He crossed over 10 years ago — into Pakistan, along with militants. He is apparently still there. The family seems to have given up on his return.

Khateeb's grandson Abu Zarein Khateeb would have been a first-time voter at age 26. An MBA graduate from Bangalore, he runs the family shop in Sadarbazar, set up by his grandfather. Abu declares emphatically: "I am a hundred per cent Hindustani."

Friday, November 21, 2008

Corporate America is playing us, Treasury like chumps

Corporate America is playing us, Treasury like chumps: "During the hearing, Cummings said what I've been feeling for months. In straight-from-the-'hood vernacular, Cummings captured what has been done to American taxpayers.

'Mr. Kashkari, in the neighborhood I grew up in, in the inner city of Baltimore, one of the things that you tried to do was make sure that you were not considered a chump,' Cummings said. 'And what 'chump' meant was that you didn't want people to see you as just somebody they could get over on.'

Without a doubt, corporate America is playing us like chumps. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and the folks he's assembled to try to get us out of the economic tempest are being played like chumps."

Navy action in Gulf of Aden projects Indian power on high seas-India-The Times of India

Navy action in Gulf of Aden projects Indian power on high seas-India-The Times of India

Thursday, November 06, 2008

USAF Pilot Critiques Red Flag Action | AVIATION WEEK

USAF Pilot Critiques Red Flag Action | AVIATION WEEK

He praised the Indians as extremely professional and said they had no training rule violations. However, they "killed a lot of friendlies" because they were tied to a Russian-made data link system that didn't allow them to see the picture of the battlefield available to everyone else. The lack of combat identification of the other aircraft caused confusion.

But the U.S. apparently isn't ignorant of the Su-30MKI's radar either.

The Su-30 electronically scanned radar is not as accurate as the U.S.-built active electronically scanned radar carried by the F-22 and some F-15s. Also, "it paints less, sees less" and is not as discriminating.

He praised the F-22 as the next great dogfighter. But he faulted the fact that it carries too few missiles and contends that the on-board cannon could be a life-saver, particularly against aircraft like the MiG-21 Bison flown by the Indians. It has a small radar cross section, as well as an Israeli-made F-16 radar and jammer. The latter makes them "almost invisible to legacy F-15C and F-16 radars" until the aerial merge or until it fires one of its Archer, active radar missiles, the U.S. pilot says.

Against the much larger RCS Su-30MKI, the F-16s and F-15s won consistently during the first three days of air-to-air combat, he continues. However, that was the result of trying to immediately go into a post-stall, thrust-vectored turn when attacked. The turn then creates massive drag and the aircraft starts sinking and losing altitude. "It starts dropping so fast you don't have to go vertical [first]. The low-speed tail slide allowed the U.S. aircraft to dive from above and "get one chance to come down to shoot," the pilot says. "You go to guns and drill his brains out." The Su-30 is jamming your missiles so...you go to guns and drill his brains out."

U.S. pilots conclude that the Su-30MKI is "not [an F-22] Raptor," he further says. "That was good for us to find out." But when the Indian pilots really learn to fight their new aircraft - "they were too anxious to go to the post-stall maneuver," he says-- the USAF pilot predicts that they would regularly defeat the F-16C Block 50 and the F-15C with conventional radar.

A final weakness in the Su-30MKI was its engine's vulnerability to foreign object damage which required them to space takeoffs a minute apart and slowed mission launches.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Cut your food bills in half - Telegraph

Cut your food bills in half - Telegraph:

"When you're not thinking about the money, you can spend a lot. The hardest part was checking prices between stores. It's something my mum used to do, going from shop to shop, knowing where was cheaper.

'A lot of her generation did this, but it's difficult to do when you're short of time.'"

Monday, October 27, 2008

Where McCain scores over Obama-Swaminomics-S A Aiyar-Columnists-Opinion-The Times of India

Where McCain scores over Obama-Swaminomics-S A Aiyar-Columnists-Opinion-The Times of India:

Boeing strike: High stakes in outsourcing - Los Angeles Times

Boeing strike: High stakes in outsourcing - Los Angeles Times

Yet the company would argue that building next-generation planes like the 787 requires not only an injection of outside development capital, but also outside expertise.

"Take composites: This is a huge, huge change in the way airplanes are built, moving from aluminum as the dominant technology for the skin of the airplane to composites. Boeing doesn't have the same experience with composites. As it turns out, there is a fair amount of experience over in Japan," said Richard L. Nolan, management professor at the University of Washington and a former Boeing employee.

The move to outsourcing, he said, "is not just an issue of low-cost labor. It's tapping into a global workforce, a global market and building strategies that will allow you to effectively compete."

Sunday, October 26, 2008

The fright and the wrong

The fright and the wrong

we are not a small economy. Exports are only 13 per cent of our GDP and while some will suffer due to a global recession, some sectors will benefit hugely from a weaker rupee. There is an enormous domestic demand for goods and services and hundreds of billions worth of infrastructure to build. Yes, capital will be scarce, but why don’t we also factor in the cost reduction because of crashing commodity prices? Because of falling crude prices, the Government could save Rs 100,000 crore this year alone on fuel and fertiliser subsidies; going ahead it could be two and a half times as much. Over the next few weeks, we see Inflation falling drastically, a cut in fuel prices, a drop in interest rates and the release of Pay Commission arrears. Households in India are heading for a much better year compared to the last couple, though of course those invested in stocks would rue the loss of their net worth. You are still looking at an economy on the up, and one that is uniquely positioned to fight back, and take advantage of this global crisis. But, for that, something has to inspire us to hunker down with confident stoicism, and fight back, much like Sundarji’s platoon on that second hill feature.


Saturday, October 25, 2008

Greenspan's blind spot - Los Angeles Times

Greenspan's blind spot - Los Angeles Times

What Greenspan and the rest of the aiders-and-abettors of Wall Street's greed spree don't want to admit is that there's something wrong in the economy and financial system that new regulations on trading and disclosure won't correct. Long before the financial system melted down, American business' share of the social compact melted completely away. The corrosion didn't begin at the top but at the bottom -- with the renunciation of any corporate loyalty toward working men and women. For nearly as long as Greenspan has hovered in the financial stratosphere, U.S. companies have been encouraged to treat their workers like any other "expense." Wall Street has rewarded -- indeed, lionized -- companies "tough enough" to treat workers like the electric bill. Presto! Layoffs became "cost management."

No one begrudges a company about to go out of business the right to cut payroll, but now nobody blinks when a CEO throws people out of work for an uptick in the stock price or to ease the service of ill-considered debt. It's been a long time since anyone who analyzes the economy has been willing to say that it's immoral for a profitable firm to deprive families of their income and health insurance, to strip hardworking men and women of labor's dignity.Perhaps only an economic education prepares a man to draw as his conclusion from catastrophe the gnomic declaration that fallible human beings are not infallible. Some things, however, are true 100% of the time: Societies in which the few are allowed to fatten themselves without limit on the labor of many are not just; they aren't even particularly productive for very long. Countries -- like companies -- that cling to notions that allow some to pursue their own interests by behaving indecently toward others come to bad ends.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Aus outplayed, out-verballed in Mohali: Oz media

Aus outplayed, out-verballed in Mohali: Oz media

Australia has been seriously outplayed and out-verballed in the match. A colossus which strode the world virtually unchallenged for more than a decade, Australia is now finding that India is treating it in the same way that Australia confronted the West Indies to claim the world crown in 1995.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Shortcuts - When Job Hunting, Be Your Own Salesman - NYTimes.com

Shortcuts - When Job Hunting, Be Your Own Salesman - NYTimes.com

In that case, he is one step ahead of a lot of people. William Wright-Swadel, executive director of career services at Duke University, said job hunters had to acknowledge first that “networking is not an easy thing. People think there’s a magic wand that will make it simple.”

The trouble is, networking brings up many of the same emotions as dating — fear of rejection, fear of looking like an idiot, fear of overstepping boundaries, fear of failing.

Rather, think specifically about what your aims are and what information you’re trying to transmit. Learn how to tell your story — what you’ve done, what your strengths are, w

hat you’re looking for — clearly and concisely. Or in the parlance of networking, practice your “elevator speech”: how you can sell yourself in as short a time as an elevator ride.

“Don’t just say, ‘I have very good communications skills,’ ” Mr. Wright-Swadel said. “What does that mean? Say, ‘I listen well, I can create trust relations with a wide variety

“What does that mean? Say, ‘I listen well, I can create trust relations with a wide variety

It is important, especially if you’ve been at it awhile, to step back and see how you are perceived. You don’t want to project a “you wouldn’t want to hire me,” attitude. Or thinly veiled desperation.

Finally, listen to the messages you are getting. It may be painful to acknowledge, but perhaps you need to reconsider your job expectations, at least in these economic times.

“If someone tells you that you’re overshooting the mark, that’s great information,” Mr. Wright-Swadel said. It does not mean you have to give up your aspirations, but take such comments into consideration. And perhaps revise your networking strategy.

My last piece of advice is trite but true. Be nice, or at least civil to everyone, if possible. Because the one person whose phone calls you ignored in the past may be the very person you are now asking to hire you. And if there is one thing harder than getting a job, it’s explaining to a potential boss why you acted like a jerk.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

BBC NEWS | Europe | Russia fleet 'may leave Ukraine'

BBC NEWS | Europe | Russia fleet 'may leave Ukraine'

Nearly 20 years since the end of the Cold War, Russians feel let down by the West. Gone is the early euphoria. Instead most Russians now feel encircled by the West as a result of Nato's enlargement and are convinced the West wants Russia to be weak.

They also feel misunderstood by the West and argue that we are the true Cold War warriors, not them.

Yes Russia is in many ways its own worst enemy," said Vladimir Pozner, a Soviet propagandist during Communist times who is now one of Russia's sharpest commentators.

"But there are far too many things the West does not get about Russia. Most of all it does not want to understand that if you are a country which has never had democracy in its entire history then you cannot expect it in the space of 15 or 20 years to go 'Bingo - we're now democratic'. It's going to take generations. This country is still run by people who grew up in Soviet times."

Give this country a break. Let the Russians evolve and don't put that much pressure on them because if you do you'll bring out the worst. You'll bring out the super patriots who will say: 'You see, we told you can't trust the West'."

It is a warning echoed less diplomatically by one of Mr Putin's greatest admirers - Nikita Mikhailkov, the most powerful figure in Russia's film industry who is a personal friend of the prime minister.

"You don't like me, Englishman," he told Panorama. "You haven't liked me for centuries, but I respect you. I want to engage with you, but on equal terms. I want you to respect me as I respect you."

"Russia must be respected, not least because it's strong and can answer back. It can say no, you want to talk let's talk. You want to fight, let's fight. But then don't complain."

Friday, October 17, 2008

Op-Ed Contributor - Buy American. I Am. - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - Buy American. I Am. - NYTimes.com

A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation’s many sound companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be setting new profit records 5, 10 and 20 years from now.

Let me be clear on one point: I can’t predict the short-term movements of the stock market. I haven’t the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up. So if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.

A little history here: During the Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932. Economic conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already advanced 30 percent. Or think back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States in Europe and the Pacific. The market hit bottom in April 1942, well before Allied fortunes turned. Again, in the early 1980s, the time to buy stocks was when inflation raged and the economy was in the tank. In short, bad news is an investor’s best friend. It lets you buy a slice of America’s future at a marked-down price.

Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

RIA Novosti - Opinion & analysis - Greece to buy new Russian infantry fighting vehicles

RIA Novosti - Opinion & analysis - Greece to buy new Russian infantry fighting vehicles

Greece subsequently bought the S-300 delivery contract from Russia, while deciding not to purchase Patriot missiles. So, the entire Greek air-defense system, which is part of joint NATO air defenses, now comprises Russian-made weaponry.

The S-300 example shows that Brussels' reluctance to implement military-technical cooperation projects with Moscow under the pretext that Russian weapons are incompatible with NATO standards is absolutely unjustified.

Russia's Strategy: 'What's Looming in Ukraine Is more Threatening than Georgia' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Russia's Strategy: 'What's Looming in Ukraine Is more Threatening than Georgia' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Nikonov: Yes, Ukraine is an existential issue for us. Our military analysts say if Ukraine joins NATO our last defense against a military emergency would be gone.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Bash-Bushonomics

Bash-Bushonomics

Read Krugman and you get the sense that he will sacrifice almost anything, logic included, to have another go at the George Bush administration. Many, many examples can be given. Let’s take the latest one: the column he wrote a day before he got the Nobel. Krugman praised the British government’s bank bailout strategy — buy equity and therefore infuse funds — and said the Bush administration was hamstrung by its ideology and is only now being forced into taking the same route.Let’s examine this a little closely. The Paulson-Bernanke plan on buying up toxic financial assets was greeted by howls of protest from the right and the left in America. The right protested because it didn’t want any Government support for failed firms. The left protested because it thought government support was a parachute for crooked, greedy bankers. Would a plan that from the beginning spoke of injecting government equity on a mass scale into all big US financial firms have found political acceptance at that time? Plus, it is not as if the Paulson-Bernanke team (Krugman blames Paulson more) was ideologically inflexible on emergency government takeover. What happened to AIG? What happened to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac? And as for the apparently unwavering brilliance of Britain’s Labour government, it let Northern Rock go under when clearly it should have saved that financial institution.

The sensible thing to observe here is that in this crisis everyone is stumbling and learning, the Bush administration included. The Germans first said Europe could not have a financial crisis like America, then a week later rescued one of their biggest financial firms, then said a Europe-wide plan to buy equity into banks was a bad idea, and now has come up with a big chunk of money to do precisely that. Does that make the German government a schizophrenic incompetent or just another government trying to understand on the fly how to deal with a biggest financial crisis in 75 years? So why only pick on the Bush administration?

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Vote Republican If You Want Equal Pay - WSJ.com

Vote Republican If You Want Equal Pay - WSJ.com

Democratic candidates Barack Obama and Joseph Biden have proclaimed that they favor equal pay for women, and have alleged that Republicans do not. Sen. Biden has also insisted that Republicans, including vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, represent a step backwards for women. The economic record says exactly the opposite.

One nuclear deal done, more lined up

One nuclear deal done, more lined up:

"Early December is when Russian President Dmitry Medvedev will visit India, and when the Indo-Russian agreement for civil nuclear cooperation will be signed. With intense pressure from the US, Russia and France to effect long-term commercial deals, sources said, India has decided to operationalise all three agreements simultaneously. In fact, France is said to be keen on starting uranium supply immediately and wants India to sign the agreement that would allow Areva to set up European Pressurised Reactors in India.

Looking beyond, India has extended an invitation to Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev to be the chief guest at this year’s Republic Day Parade. Kazakhstan has 15 per cent of the world’s uranium reserves and is an important prospective seller for India. Negotiations are also underway with Niger for uranium, shortage of which is currently hampering the Indian programme.

The government also plans to amend the Atomic Energy Act to strengthen the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board as a precursor to allowing private investment. Discussions are underway whether to go in for a one-time amendment that opens doors for private investment or to move one step at a time by first strengthening the regulatory mechanism"

Op-Ed Contributor - No, Really, the Fundamentals of the Economy Are Strong - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - No, Really, the Fundamentals of the Economy Are Strong - NYTimes.com:

"THE Treasury Department is now thinking about using some of the $700 billion it has been given to rescue Wall Street to buy ownership stakes in American banks. The idea is that banking is so central to the American economy that the government is justified in virtually nationalizing much of the industry in order to save us from a potential depression.

There are two faulty assumptions here. First, saving America’s banks won’t save the economy. And second, the economy doesn’t really need saving. It’s stronger than we think."

Nuke deal is signed, sealed, and delivered-USA-World-The Times of India

Nuke deal is signed, sealed, and delivered-USA-World-The Times of India:

"Having assured itself that US President George Bush asserted his executive stamp over legislative opinion in his statement that accompanied the signing of the nuclear bill into law, New Delhi sent its entire negotiating team led by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee on a 10,000-mile, 12-hour visit to Washington for the 123 Agreement signing ceremony -- a modest affair in the State Department’s glittering Benjamin Franklin room. The team arrived in the afternoon, signed the agreement in the evening, and left for Delhi in the night.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, whose visit to New Delhi last week for the same purpose was rendered fruitless because of India’s anxiety over Bush’s signing statement, politely and pointedly thanked Mukherjee ''who flew all the way here from New Delhi to do this signing,'' before seeing them off without even a meal (the team dined at the their hotel). But for Mukherjee, a diplomatic maestro with nearly three-decades in the business, the objective of asserting India’s stand one last time in Washington was achieved.

''This is an agreement about civil nuclear cooperation and reflects a careful balance of rights and obligations. The agreement has been passed by the U.S. Congress without any amendment. This provision is now legally binding on bot"

Friday, October 10, 2008

India, US sign landmark 123 Agreement-India-The Times of India

India, US sign landmark 123 Agreement-India-The Times of India:

"External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice put the final seal on the agreement at an impressive ceremony held in the Benjamin Franklin Room of the State Department, culminating a crisis-ridden process initiated on July 18, 2005 in Washington during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit for talks with US President George W Bush."

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Bush keeps his word on nuke deal, assures fuel supply and reprocessing rights-USA-World-The Times of India

Bush keeps his word on nuke deal, assures fuel supply and reprocessing rights-USA-World-The Times of India

U.S President will be remembered for Iraq War, but I think he will be remembered for changing the dynamics of Indo-US Relationship and helping India on to the World Stage.
No matter how much people today dislike him, but when history is written, it won't be as bad.
Like a friend told me under this president we haven't had one terrorist attack after 9/11/2001.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Three Superpowers: Why the US, Europe and China Need a 'G-3' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Three Superpowers: Why the US, Europe and China Need a 'G-3' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

US and us

US and us

India got its nuclear deal from America as America was writing its new New Deal. This was a coincidence but a powerfully symbolic one. The substance behind this symbol is this: it’s in India’s interest that America emerges from the financial crisis without significant damage to its geopolitical influence. Wishing this is of course not the same as assuming it. It is necessary to ask what are the chances the crisis will undermine American power. The answers may not be as gloomy as some people around the world would hope them to be. But first let’s take a look at those people. That will explain why staking our future on a world with a weakened America is a worse bet than anything seen on Wall Street.

So we may see a rough repeat of what happened after the oil shock led the West into stagflation in the 1970s: America is affected by the crisis, but other major players are affected probably even more, and their capacity for remedial action seems less than America’s. In relative terms, America emerged stronger geopolitically after the oil shock. The same may happen this time. Certainly, shifting confidence from the dollar to the euro when euro-nations are bickering in the midst of a crisis seems an odd choice.

So chances are that post-crisis America will emerge with its geopolitical pole position intact.

Brazil Rising: Emergence on Global Stage Leaves Brazilians Divided - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Brazil Rising: Emergence on Global Stage Leaves Brazilians Divided - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Ratan Tata announces Nano plant in Gujarat

Ratan Tata announces Nano plant in Gujarat-Business-Broadband - Indiatimes.com

I love it how he says that 'he belongs to the land of Gujarat' in Gujarati.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Op-Ed Columnist - Save the Fat Cats - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - Save the Fat Cats - NYTimes.com:

"Then Japanese politicians, acting with the same sublime ineptitude that our own House of Representatives displayed this week, ignored a growing banking crisis and dithered on a bailout. And so I watched from Tokyo as a mighty economy melted like an iceberg in the Caribbean.

Japan’s failure to respond urgently and decisively to its banking mess caused the country to endure a “lost decade” of economic stagnation. If America wants to avoid Japan’s decline, the House should follow the Senate’s lead and approve the bailout — immediately.

Just as in the U.S. today, most Japanese did not initially appreciate how devastating a banking crisis could be to the real economy. Banks and real estate tycoons in Japan were corrupt, profligate and unsympathetic figures, and no one wanted to help them. On corporate expense accounts, they sipped coffee with gold leaf and patronized “no-panties shabu-shabu” restaurants, which had mirrored floors and miniskirted waitresses."

Editorial - Legal Immigration? Anybody? - NYTimes.com

Editorial - Legal Immigration? Anybody? - NYTimes.com:

"Every year Congress authorizes a certain number of permanent-resident visas, or green cards, for immigrants to come to work in the United States or to rejoin their families. And every year bureaucratic delays prevent a certain portion of those visas from being claimed.

The result? Every year thousands of potential green cards vanish, like unused cellphone minutes. The huge backlogs in legal immigration, which span years or even decades for applicants from some countries, continue to fester. The myth of Ellis Island becomes more mythical.

Teachers, nurses, engineers, researchers and other aspiring immigrants who follow the rules, file their paperwork, pay their fees and wait — and wait — get the chilly message that they are not wanted. Some of them feel great pressure to go illegally around the immigration system, instead of through it, as their wait to rejoin their loved ones becomes intolerable.

A House bill that could recapture an estimated 550,000 lost visas, sponsored by Representative Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat, has been moving slowly through the committee process Congress has already authorized these green cards, and many would go to highly skilled workers who have already lived here for years on temporary visas. The bill is as much about keeping workers as gaining them.

It seems unlikely that a visa-recapture bill would make it through this year. But don’t blame Congress’s focus on the economic mess for that. Recapturing visas is a modest fix that should have been made a long time ago. The country needs to build a smoother path to legal entry and citizenship. The blame for its failure to do that lies squarely with the hard-liners who rage against illegal immigrants, but are strangely uninterested in helping people who “play by the rules” and “wait in line.”"

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Rise of the Rest: The Challenges of the New World Order - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Rise of the Rest: The Challenges of the New World Order - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

A number of new books published in the United States describe these shifts in the political landscape. The new administration that arrives in Washington in 2009 ought to consider taking a close look at "The Post American World" by Fareed Zakaria, "The Second World" by Parag Khanna, "The Great Experiment" by Strobe Talbott, as well as "Rivals" by Bill Emmott and " The War for Wealth" by Gabor Steingart. Each of these authors accepts the premise of a multipolar world, though their analyses and policy prescriptions are vastly different. Bill Emmott, Fareed Zakaria, and Gabor Steingart imagine continued American or transatlantic leadership, while Parag Khanna sees a burgeoning competition between Europe, China, and the United States to win the favor of states like Russia and India, which he assigns to the "second world." Whatever their differences though, each of the authors takes a clear-eyed look at the realities of the present day -- unlike the neoconservatives who have been largely responsible for steering American foreign policy during the last eight years.

These countries are neither enemies of one another, nor are they friends; they are "frenemies," competitors for the world’s scarce resources. These countries assure their people that they can shape the coming global order and provide for their future welfare, but their respective visions of the future can differ greatly. A potential "clash of futures" looms on the horizon of the multipolar world.

Not all "frenemies" are democracies in the Western sense. The successes of Singapore and China, as well as of the Gulf states, prove that states need not be democratic to guarantee their people a high standard of living. But, that need not be cause for pessimism. Within the new nondemocratic world powers, productive elites are replacing parasitic elites. Where the former get the upper hand, they produce a system more free and just than the one they inherited. Their goal is to develop the economy and correct social inequalities. They know that where there are slums there will be "failing cities" and "failing states."

In the league of extraordinary PMs-India-The Times of India

In the league of extraordinary PMs-India-The Times of India:

"Manmohan Singh understood well the changes in the international trends and the opportunities the post-cold-war world order presented to India. He enabled Indian entrepreneurship to take full advantage of the favourable international trends.

The result was the unprecedented 8% growth rate. His handicap was the political alliance with the Left, still steeped in Stalinist and cold war orthodoxy. This resulted in his reform programme being slowed down.

In the first four years he appears to have opted to keep the government going. However, in the fifth year he faced a choice between sacrificing the opportunity to achieve for India the liberation from technology apartheid and recognition as a legitimate sixth nuclear power, or, a few more months in office without risking a confidence vote. He decided to stake the life of the coalition government.

He succeeded in winning the vote of confidence for his government and timed it well. That timing generated pressures on international community to get India the IAEA safeguards, the NSG waiver and completion of the Indo-US nuclear deal in quick succession.

Manmohan Singh has been reviled by his opponents — that is nothing new in Indian politics. Shastri was called a ‘‘prisoner of indecision’’. Indira Gandhi was called a ‘‘Goongi"

Nuclear deal to be a win-win for India, US-Intl Business-Business-The Times of India

Nuclear deal to be a win-win for India, US-Intl Business-Business-The Times of India

One of the first reactions to the landmark deal came from the little-known Thorium Power Ltd, a McLean, Virginia-based company which recognizes India’s leadership in the use of thorium in the nuclear fuel cycle and which claims to have engaged various entities in India's private and governmental sectors for many years.

"India is in the forefront of the world in recognizing the distinct advantages of using thorium in the nuclear fuel cycle while Thorium Power is the world leader in developing non-proliferative, low waste thorium nuclear fuels. There is much we can learn from each other and much we can do together," the company said in a statement following the passage of the nuclear legislation. "This agreement allows us to hold advanced discussions with some of the leading entities and we anticipate that these business opportunities will move forward."

Thorium Power Ltd president and CEO Seth Crae reckons that India will become a "significant player" on the international nuclear market "given the nations great number of highly skilled nuclear engineers and scientists, and successful and far reaching multinational corporations." The 123 Agreement, he says, "affords a unique opportunity to combine India's great strengths with innovative American technology to significantly advance the world-wide nuclear renaissance."

Friday, September 26, 2008

Singh song: Love in the time of crisis-USA-World-The Times of India

Singh song: Love in the time of crisis-USA-World-The Times of India:

"Love? Affection? For George Bush??? Hardened journalists looked at each other quizzically, never having heard such words in bilateral exchanges between leaders, let alone relating to Bush. But Indian officials defended the sentiments expressed, insisting that for all the world's cynicism, polls showed that Bush and the United States had high rating in India for the ''fair manner'' in which they treated India and its aspirations."

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Crisis schmisis - there's money to be made - Telegraph

Crisis schmisis - there's money to be made - Telegraph:

"They don't tend to stay on the floor too long after they've had a kicking. It's a gritty, ruthlessly pragmatic, sometimes - like the man in the Lehman T-shirt - purely self-interested resilience that is rooted in the country's can-do psyche and centuries-old belief in self-help. And rooted, too, in America's belief in itself. Those philosophical ideas of American exceptionalism and the United States's Manifest Destiny - as the Puritans were first to outline it, that God created America as a 'city on the hill' to provide an example to others - smack of chauvinism. But they certainly don't hurt when a country needs to pull through a gloomy patch."

Monday, September 15, 2008

Did Saakashvili Lie?: The West Begins to Doubt Georgian Leader - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International

Did Saakashvili Lie?: The West Begins to Doubt Georgian Leader - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International:

"Did we embolden the Georgians in any way' to use military force? she asks the members of the committee. Did the Bush administration really warn Moscow and Georgia sufficiently about the consequences of a war? And how could it be that the United States was so taken by surprise by this outbreak of hostilities? These questions, says Clinton, should be examined by a US commission, which should 'in the first place determine the actual facts.'"

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Clinton questions US freeze on Russian nuclear pact

Clinton questions US freeze on Russian nuclear pact:
"'I think we ought to be able to hold competing thoughts in our mind at the same time -- Is Russia more aggressive, are they more intent upon pursuing their own interests as they define them territorially, economically politically?

'Of course they are. I don't know why anybody is surprised by that,' she said, replying to her own question."

Clinton also called for a commission to be established to determine, among other things, the circumstances under which the Russian-Georgian conflict occurred and to complement an international commission being called for by Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.

"I believe that the administration will be served to create this US commission, which then could cooperate with the international commission ... to in the first place determine the actual facts because there is a dispute about the facts, which may or may not be real."

Outside View: Russia-NATO split -- Part Two

Outside View: Russia-NATO split -- Part Two:

"Incidentally, shortly before that Washington vetoed Russia's request to hold an extraordinary meeting of the NATO-Russia Council at which Russia's envoy to the bloc, Dmitry Rogozin, was to tell his partners the truth about what really happened in South Ossetia. He would have given facts undistorted by Western propaganda, which, unfortunately, was what Western media did."

Saturday, September 06, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: India won’t, can’t give up

IndianExpress.com :: India won’t, can’t give up:

1. India is not going to give up Kashmir. If you have been hearing that several so-called intellectuals have advocated this, then please do not over-estimate their influence. They can be concerned about abstractions like the arithmetic or the algebra of justice. That is irrelevant and inconsequential. The Republic of India is not going to confer Azadi on part or all of Kashmir. Nor are we going to let you join Pakistan. Please do not be misled by anyone who tells you anything to the contrary.

2. If the current unrest continues in the state, many people, mostly young people will be affected by violence. That is avoidable. Because there is not a hope in hell that all of this violence will persuade any government in India to let you secede.


The plain and simple fact is that

India is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious, multi-lingual country. We are not a nation-state based on one race, language or church. In this we resemble the empires of old. Consider the Austro-Hungarian Empire where Czechs from Bohemia, Jews from Vienna, Magyars from Hungary and German-speaking Catholics from the Tyrol all lived together peacefully and, more importantly, talented individuals from all of these groups were able to blossom, thrive and prosper. That is theIndian model with the added accoutrements of a democratic republic. We know what happens when great empires break up. For decades after that, the ensuing violence and anarchy turn the lives of millions of ordinary individuals and families into a living hell. In recent times as the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia have broken up we have again witnessed this tragic phenomenon

Let me close by appealing to each of you as individuals. My appeal is particularly directed to young people. Instead of spending time in agitations, demonstrations, attacking the police, etc I suggest that you learn skills such as computer programming, financial analysis and so on. Seek meaningful jobs anywhere in the vast integrated and fast-growing Indian marketplace. Get ahead in life as individuals. Fulfil your individual dreams. If you are stuck to a small state and do not see a large country and indeed the world as your canvas you as an individual will be the loser. The collective identity of being Kashmiri or Moslem or a Hindoo or a Buddhist is a seductive trap. You are individuals and you deserve a better life than screaming unrealistic and impossible slogans.

IndianExpress.com :: How the deal on NSG waiver was struck in Vienna

IndianExpress.com :: How the deal on NSG waiver was struck in Vienna: "The NSG waiver for India involved three days of hectic and tough negotiations with both the proponent and skeptic countries sticking to their positions but finally reaching a common ground on Saturday morning after US prodding and deft diplomacy by New Delhi. The major turning point came with the issuance of the statement by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee in which he talked about India's a External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee in which he talked about India's abiding commitment to strengthening the nonproliferation system and unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing"

Thumbs up, nails frayed: Delhi sent demarche to Beijing, Bush called Hu

Thumbs up, nails frayed: Delhi sent demarche to Beijing, Bush called Hu:

"Last night, China had delivered a surprise by threatening to leave, objecting to the manner in which US was “forcing” a consensus. Clearly, Beijing decided to make its dissent open and, very quickly, countermeasures were put in place. Closely coordinating with the US, New Delhi issued a strong demarche to China in Beijing late last night. The same was conveyed to the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi this morning, which was gearing up for Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi’s visit starting tomorrow. Sources said South Block worked through the night passing on the tough message to Beijing that its position was contrary to assurances it had given at the political level that it wouldn’t come in the way of an NSG consensus for India.

Washington simultaneously stepped up gears and US President George W. Bush contacted his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao asking him not to block the waiver. Sources said “everyone in the US government below the President” leaned on someone in the Chinese government in a closely coordinated effort. In short, the US “pulled out all stops,” including reminding the Chinese of the evidence Washington had of its past proliferation activities, particularly in Pakistan"

Isn’t just about n-trade, it’s about a rising India

indianexpress.com:


"Only a decade ago, in the wake of the nuclear tests by India and Pakistan in May 1998, the United Nations Security Council, in a unanimous resolution No 1172 in June 1998, demanded that the two nations sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and end their nuclear and missile programmes. The history of international relations tells us that great powers agree to change the existing security norms only when they have to accommodate a rising power. The NSG decision to turn the solid international consensus in 1998 against New Delhi’s strategic programmes on its head is a bow to India’s rise."

Max Americana: US shows the way at NSG-USA-World-The Times of India

Max Americana: US shows the way at NSG-USA-World-The Times of India

"The decline of US power and the fading days of President Bush have been subject of drawing room chatter in strategic circles for months now, but on Saturday, both Washington and the American president showed that when push comes to shove, they can still pack plenty of punch."

Thursday, September 04, 2008

China tested nukes for Pakistan, gave design-USA-World-The Times of India

China tested nukes for Pakistan, gave design-USA-World-The Times of India

What's The Big Deal?-Editorial-Opinion-The Times of India

What's The Big Deal?-Editorial-Opinion-The Times of India:

"The July 18, 2005 understanding included an Indian commitment to maintaining its testing moratorium. If we now change policy, the other party cannot be reasonably expected to maintain its half of the bargain. At the end of the day, the US cannot take any position other than to assert that it has the right to terminate cooperation in such an eventuality. On India’s part, we have been equally vigorous in maintaining our right to test in compelling circumstances. This argument would be decided by sovereign decisions and national interests, not by legalistic wording.

In any case, an outcome in India’s favour at the NSG renders this debate meaningless. It is improbable that India will build a strategic reserve sourced from a country that imposes onerous obligations. Once the NSG passes the deal, other major suppliers, who follow different practices, will not jeopardise their prospects in India. The few countries which want to emphasise their non-proliferation credentials can choose to have their versions of the Hyde Act if they do not want to do business with India. What India now needs is a positive outcome in Vienna, not opportunistic politics at home."

Nuclear deal: NSG stuck on the 'testing' clause-India-The Times of India

Nuclear deal: NSG stuck on the 'testing' clause-India-The Times of India:

"A number of countries in the 'holdout pen' are asking for similar language from the NSG that the US is asking for bilaterally. The debate continues. A diplomat said, 'We're stuck on the testing clause''.

The transfers of ENR are not even mentioned in the waiver. This happened under severe Indian pressure, which said that since ENR was not in the NSG guidelines, it should not show up for India.

The concession by India is on the 'review' demand. The new draft asks NSG members to tell each other about their N-dealings with India. The NSG chair will also have to 'confer and consult' with India under the rubric of 'greater partnership' and discuss any changes in the guidelines with India before execution - this gives India a handle on the future."

Monday, September 01, 2008

Is Stealing Cows Good? :

Is Stealing Cows Good? : outlookindia.com:

"If he steals my cow, that is bad. If I steal his cow, that is good'. It's hard not to be reminded of this when the Western countries cry out against Russia's recognition of the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the two provinces which seceded from Georgia."

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Outside View: Playing nice with Russia

Outside View: Playing nice with Russia

The United States and the European Union have given Russia nearly a free ride on the Western economic system. Russian exports enjoy fairly open access to Western markets, while Moscow maintains higher tariffs and non-tariff barriers on imports. Generally, Russian enterprises invest freely in the West, while Western investors are increasingly excluded, and their property is far from safe.

Emboldened, the bear has shown its teeth in Georgia, and other adventures cannot be ruled out. European dependence on Russian gas and the absence of consensus within NATO make this a broad menace to regional security.

It is high time the United States and the European Union re-evaluate open commerce and dependence on Russian resources. Russian exports and investment should be welcome only to the extent that U.S. and European investments are welcome in Russia. Europeans need to find alternatives to Russian natural gas.

A new realism should guide U.S. and European policy.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

News Analysis - U.S. Sees Much to Fear in a Hostile Russia - News Analysis - NYTimes.com

News Analysis - U.S. Sees Much to Fear in a Hostile Russia - News Analysis - NYTimes.com

The Cold War, reheated - Los Angeles Times

The Cold War, reheated - Los Angeles Times

Time travel is easy! If you lay the groundwork, that is -- and believe me, we did.

First, after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, we graciously provided a little economic "shock therapy" designed to turn our "defeated" former enemy into a prospering capitalist democracy. Regrettably, we instead helped plunge Russia into an economic catastrophe. This annoyed the Russians. But we continued to help by treating Russian officials as washed-up has-beens and by expanding NATO to include most of Russia's former satellites.

In a transparent bid for attention, Russia flattened most of Chechnya. We ignored this. When authoritarian crackdowns and rising oil prices turned Russia into a repressive economic powerhouse, we still paid little attention. We pushed to include Georgia and Ukraine in NATO and proposed placing missile defense systems in Poland and the Czech Republic. When the Russians told us they saw this as a hostile act, we continued to ignore them.

Finally, the stars were in alignment. So when tiny Georgia rashly tried to seize control of separatist South Ossetia and the Russians responded with a massive military intervention, we understood that at last we had an opportunity to travel back in time -- to the Cold War.

Friction With Russia May Spell Trouble for U.S. - NYTimes.com

Friction With Russia May Spell Trouble for U.S. - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Atlantic Eye: Lost lessons of the Cold War

Atlantic Eye: Lost lessons of the Cold War:
"Several strategic blunders in the past year have led to Russia's incursion into Georgia. A missile-defense shield, which even U.S. experts doubt works, has been sold to Poland and the Czech Republic as though it were Moses speaking down from the mountain. The West rushed to recognize Kosovo, caring nothing about Russia's sensitivities or those of the Abkhazians or South Ossetians or the implications of other folks seeking self-determination.

The biggest strategic blunder was not joining Russia in placing the missile-defense system in Azerbaijan. The Russians understood rightly -- keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer. But even a cynic knows the Russian plan bore an honest effort to build bridges.

Russia's response to Georgia is, in fact, a response to this series of perceived insults. Kosovo was the last drop -- but it all began to unravel with Azerbaijan. The U.S. rejection of the offer (see my column 'Putin's Bush-whack') convinced the Russians that the United States was being disingenuous about the intentions of the missile shield. It convinced Russia that it was not for Iran and the Middle East, but a Trojan horse against Russia. Many security experts in the United States -- and out -- agree with this assessment.

Had the United States -- and the European Union countries -- been on the ball, they would have used thethey would have used the European Union, not NATO -- at least initially -- to engender the expansion of stability. The Russians would not object to Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey being part of the EU. I have been told this up and down the chain of command in Moscow.

Russia wants to be a regional player and a global energy superpower. It wants to have influence over near markets. It wants to have global influence in oil, gas and energy security. Said a foreign minister to me, "Like the Monroe Doctrine, Russia wants to keep an eye on her backyard. The United States is mistaken to underestimate her will to do this." I echoed this in several of my last columns."

Op-Ed Columnist - What Did We Expect? - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - What Did We Expect? - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com:


"Let’s start with us. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, I was among the group — led by George Kennan, the father of “containment” theory, Senator Sam Nunn and the foreign policy expert Michael Mandelbaum — that argued against expanding NATO, at that time.

It seemed to us that since we had finally brought down Soviet communism and seen the birth of democracy in Russia the most important thing to do was to help Russian democracy take root and integrate Russia into Europe. Wasn’t that why we fought the cold war — to give young Russians the same chance at freedom and integration with the West as young Czechs, Georgians and Poles? Wasn’t consolidating a democratic Russia more important than bringing the Czech Navy into NATO?

All of this was especially true because, we argued, there was no big problem on the world stage that we could effectively address without Russia — particularly Iran or Iraq. Russia wasn’t about to reinvade Europe. And the Eastern Europeans would be integrated into the West via membership in the European Union.

No, said the Clinton foreign policy team, we’re going to cram NATO expansion down the Russians’ throats, because Moscow is weak and, by the way, they’ll ge"

Op-Ed Contributor - Russia Never Wanted a War - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - Russia Never Wanted a War - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com:



"In recent days, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President Bush have been promising to isolate Russia. Some American politicians have threatened to expel it from the Group of 8 industrialized nations, to abolish the NATO-Russia Council and to keep Russia out of the World Trade Organization.

These are empty threats. For some time now, Russians have been wondering: If our opinion counts for nothing in those institutions, do we really need them? Just to sit at the nicely set dinner table and listen to lectures?

Indeed, Russia has long been told to simply accept the facts. Here’s the independence of Kosovo for you. Here’s the abrogation of the Antiballistic Missile Treaty, and the American decision to place missile defenses in neighboring countries. Here’s the unending expansion of NATO. All of these moves have been set against the backdrop of sweet talk about partnership. Why would anyone put up with such a charade?

There is much talk now in the United States about rethinking relations with Russia. One thing that should definitely be rethought: the habit of talking to Russia in a condescending way, without regard for its positions and interests.

Our two countries could develop a serious agenda for genuine, rather than token, cooperation. Many Americans, as well as Russians, understand the need for this. But is the same true of the political leaders?"

Monday, August 18, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Australia revises: will give uranium to India if deal goes through

IndianExpress.com :: Australia revises: will give uranium to India if deal goes through

Darpa Pushes To Transition Technology | AVIATION WEEK

Darpa Pushes To Transition Technology | AVIATION WEEK:

"The key word in Darpa's name is 'projects,' says Welby. 'A project is something with a defined start, defined finish and clearly defined objectives. Something that can be written on a single piece of paper.' The goal is to 'prove the feasibility of a concept and take the specific technology risk off the table.'

Darpa's strength as an organization is in its structure, or lack thereof. The agency owns no facilities and has no infrastructure that needs long-term programs for support. Instead, it pursues high-risk, high-payoff research through short-term projects with aggressive technical goals. Project managers stay for only four years.

'They are all temporary hires,' says Welby, 'They are here to get something done. The clock is ticking, and there is personal pressure to advance the state of the art on very aggressive timelines.' Welby left Darpa at the end of July after an unusually long 11 years at the agency - first as program manager, then later as office director.

'You can change rapidly and move quickly when 25% of your people change out every year,' he says. 'You would never want to run a business this way, but for preventing technological surprise and being the engine of innovation - it's perfect.'"

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Military Analysis - Russians Melded Old-School Blitz With Modern Military Tactics - Military Analysis - NYTimes.com

Military Analysis - Russians Melded Old-School Blitz With Modern Military Tactics - Military Analysis - NYTimes.com:


"This was not the Russian Army from the humiliation of Afghanistan, and it’s not the Russian military that had to flatten Chechnya to save it,” said one Pentagon official knowledgeable of how the fighting unfolded. Another said: “The Russian military is back. They are to be contended with.”"

So along with the old-school onslaught of infantry, armor and artillery, Russia mounted joint air and naval operations, appeared to launch simultaneous cyberattacks on Georgian government Web sites and had its best English speakers at the ready to make Moscow’s case in television appearances.

If the rapidly unfolding events caught much of the world off guard, that kind of coordination of the old and the new did not look accidental to military professionals.

“They seem to have harnessed all their instruments of national power — military, diplomatic, information — in a very disciplined way,” said one Pentagon official, who like others interviewed for this article disclosed details of the operation under ground rules that called for anonymity. “It appears this was well thought out and planned in advance, and suggests a level of coordination in the Russian government between the military and the other civilian agencies and departments that we are striving for today.”

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

In Hanford, Wash., the country's most polluted nuclear reactor site draws tourists - Los Angeles Times

In Hanford, Wash., the country's most polluted nuclear reactor site draws tourists - Los Angeles Times:

"HANFORD REACH NATIONAL MONUMENT, WASH. -- Aplatoon of double-crested cormorants took flight from the eastern shore of the Columbia River, skimming the sun-sparkled surface as two slender white egrets stood in the nearby shallows, hunting small fish hiding in the reeds.

Twenty kayakers, mostly tourists from the Pacific Northwest, paddled along, letting the steady current do most of the work. They coasted past mule deer grazing on the shore, coyotes stalking the sandy beaches and cliff swallows buzzing the nearby white bluffs.

But the main attraction was on the western shore: several bland, industrial-gray structures and towering smokestacks, a collection of buildings that gave birth to America's atomic age.

Welcome to the Hanford Reach, where one of the last free-flowing stretches of the Columbia River encounters America's most contaminated nuclear site. Along this flat, mostly treeless scrubland, the U.S. government built nine reactors between 1943 and 1963, including the historic 'B' plant that produced the world's first weapons-grade plutonium for the nuclear bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, in World War II.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Smaller NSG nations for changes in N-deal?-India-The Times of India

Smaller NSG nations for changes in N-deal?-India-The Times of India:

"The non-pro crowd at the NSG wants to put in amendments that will cover three main subjects — asking India to join the NPT and CTBT, putting the civilian nuclear facilities under permanent safeguards (no matter what happens to the fuel supplies) or a roundabout way of introducing the deleted para 4 of the NSG guidelines which will 'require' comprehensive safeguards. There may even be a brave attempt to put in a so-called 'testing clause'.

The para 4 'condition' will certainly be raised, officials feel. The original inclusion in the US draft was the work of the American government's own non-proliferation officials who thought the NSG could take away what they considered to be the 'free pass' that their own government seemed to be giving to India. Of course, India and US could have 'convinced' many of these conscientious objectors before the actual meeting.

What kind of conditions can India live with? Well, for the past three decades or more, India has successfully fended off calls to join the NPT or, more recently, CTBT from the world. So it will have no problems with such prescriptive 'conditions'. The issues will come from things like permanent safeguards — because the basis of the Indian deal is 'permanent safeguards for permanent fuel"

Obama without his script - Los Angeles Times

Obama without his script - Los Angeles Times:


"The campaign significance for Obama is easier to calculate. He has been playacting at being presidential in order to convince voters that we live in a 'new moment' with 'new challenges' -- and that he is the president we need for this new era.

This moment calls for more than playacting, yet Obama looks lost without a presidential script. Events in the Caucasus -- and, for that matter, in Beijing -- suggest that the times aren't so new after all. Two powerful antidemocratic foes are once again flexing their muscles at a moment when America seems weak and distracted.

That is not a new challenge but a very old one. Perhaps this is not a time for a novice spouting grand rhetoric about a new page in history, but for someone who's actually read the pages of some old, but still relevant, books. Perhaps this is not the time for playacting.

Perhaps it is not the time for body surfing?"

Georgia President Mikheil Saakashvili's 'calculated gamble' - Los Angeles Times

Georgia President Mikheil Saakashvili's 'calculated gamble' - Los Angeles Times

Monday, August 11, 2008

BBC NEWS | Health | Running 'can slow ageing process'

BBC NEWS | Health | Running 'can slow ageing process':


"And there was no evidence that runners were more likely to suffer osteoarthritis or need total knee replacements than non-runners - something scientists have feared."

Friday, August 08, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Nuclear soothsayers’ group

IndianExpress.com :: Nuclear soothsayers’ group:


"It needs to be noted that the NSG only issues guidelines: each participating state will decide, on the basis of its own export control laws, how it should implement the guidelines. To that extent, even if there is a clean waiver, India will have to negotiate with supplier countries on an individual basis, before commercial contracts can be signed for the import of reactors, technology or fuel.

The choice before the NSG should be clear; if the waiver is not acceptable to India, it would be free to go its own way. This would surely not be in the interest of the global non-proliferation regime. On the other hand, a clean waiver would make India a powerful partner in the struggle against proliferation and the efforts towards nuclear disarmament."

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

The Minimalist - A Restaurant in Nice That’s Rich, Luxurious and Vegetarian - NYTimes.com

The Minimalist - A Restaurant in Nice That’s Rich, Luxurious and Vegetarian - NYTimes.com:



"FROM the outside, there is nothing very unusual about La Zucca Magica, a restaurant by the harbor here. At most, you might notice the words on the awning: “restaurant au légumes, oeufs et fromages” (vegetables, eggs and cheeses).

But once you enter, its unusual character begins to become evident. The restaurant is decorated almost exclusively with gourds and artwork made from them: sculptures, bowls and other containers, masks, puppets and toys. Gourds are featured in paintings, photographs, tapestries and posters, and on mirrors. They hang from the ceiling like salamis at Zabar’s.

This is not a gourd restaurant, but the décor and the name (“zucca” may refer generically to any squash or gourd, though in Italy the word is also used specifically for a small, pumpkin-like squash) are tied to the cuisine. The cooking at La Zucca Magica is vegetarian.

In itself this is not so extraordinary, but there is the matter of its location. (The French can be quite hostile to vegetarianism.)"

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Op-Ed Columnist - Texas to Tel Aviv - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - Texas to Tel Aviv - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Agassi’s plan, backed by Israel’s government, is to create a complete electric car “system” that will work much like a mobile-phone service “system,” only customers sign up for so many monthly miles, instead of minutes. Every subscriber will get a car, a battery and access to a national network of recharging outlets all across Israel — as well as garages that will swap your dead battery for a fresh one whenever needed.

Pickens is motivated by American nationalism. Because of all the money we are shipping abroad to pay for our oil addiction, he says, “we are on the verge of losing our superpower status.” His vision is summed up on his Web site: “We import 70 percent of our oil at a cost of $700 billion a year ... I have been an oil man all my life, but this is one emergency we can’t drill our way out of. If we create a renewable energy network, we can break our addiction to foreign oil.”

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Aye

IndianExpress.com :: Aye:

"This is, indeed, about more than the nuclear deal. Now, it is with democratic sanction that India negotiates its place in the new world order — a negotiation based on its strategic interests, and without the exclusionary costs that it has borne for more than three decades for keeping it nuclear programme. Don’t be blindsided by Tuesday’s disruptions. India’s democracy has scored another victory."

Monday, July 21, 2008

The Americans are coming!-INDIASPORA-Chidanand Rajghatta-Columnists-Opinion-The Times of India

The Americans are coming!-INDIASPORA-Chidanand Rajghatta-Columnists-Opinion-The Times of India

Americans aren't as verbose or eloquent (your call) now. A US general, who was asked to surrender by an Axis commander, is said to have responded with one word — "Nuts." Asked about their India experience, Americans encapsulate Twain's sentiment with a single word — "Wow." Follow up and ask them "Wow good or wow bad?" and they'll say, "Wow good and wow crazy." Welcome to India, folks; may your tribe increase, even if the nuclear deal goes into deep freeze.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Op-Ed Columnist - So Popular and So Spineless - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - So Popular and So Spineless - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com:

". Perfect we are not, but America still has some moral backbone. There are travesties we will not tolerate. The U.N. vote on Zimbabwe demonstrates that this is not true for these “popular” countries — called Russia or China or South Africa — that have no problem siding with a man who is pulverizing his own people.

So, yes, we’re not so popular in Europe and Asia anymore. I guess they would prefer a world in which America was weaker, where leaders with the values of Vladimir Putin and Thabo Mbeki had a greater say, and where the desperate voices for change in Zimbabwe would, well, just shut up."

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Business & Technology | Dreamliner problem solver helps everyone "get it done" | Seattle Times Newspaper

Business & Technology | Dreamliner problem solver helps everyone "get it done" | Seattle Times Newspaper:


"Geiger, now Boeing's director of production systems for commercial-airplane programs, said Shanahan is 'irreverent' toward corporate bureaucracy and dismissive of managers who sit in their offices and 'don't connect with the people doing the work that pays their salaries.'"

Friday, July 11, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Single personality disorder

IndianExpress.com :: Single personality disorder:

"The tendency to personalise all serious issues is like a chronic disease with us. And nobody is immune to this. Nothing, no ideology, scholarship or experience or wisdom protects us from it. It clouds our judgment and forces us to make blunders based on likes or dislikes for individuals or our own prejudices. The obvious trap then is to address that individual first, ignoring the “issue”, and results usually are disastrous."

IndianExpress.com :: Text in context

IndianExpress.com :: Text in context:

"A collateral benefit of the political gamesmanship that has taken place on the Indo-US nuclear deal is the amazing popular literacy on the subject. So, even as political controversy swirled over the manner in which the draft of the India-specific safeguards agreement with the IAEA was made available online, assorted, non-technical voices conceded that it is a very good draft. What occasions this satisfaction? First, the safeguards agreement’s consistency with the 123 agreement and the separation plan makes it a sustainable document. Two, it recognises India’s nuclear weapons programme. Three, and extremely significantly, it addresses India’s apprehensions on disruption of supplies, fears that come from memories of the Tarapur atomic power station. And taken together, the big picture accommodates India’s aspirations and actual role as a partner in the management of the global order."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Close reading the IAEA safeguards

IndianExpress.com :: Close reading the IAEA safeguards:


"The DAE does not want a repetition of the experience of Tarapur Atomic Power Station, built with US assistance in the 1960s, where Washington and later Paris had reneged on its promises to supply fuel for the TAPS. Contrary to the attempts to impute a variety of motives to India, New Delhi’s nuclear behaviour has been absolutely responsible. Despite the denial of international cooperation, India never pulled the TAPS out of the IAEA safeguards.

For nearly sixty years, the principal objective of the DAE has been to mobilise modern science and technology in the service of national development. This has been hampered by a series of international nuclear sanctions against India since 1974. The Indo-US deal of July 2005 outlined a broad basis for India’s re-entry into the global nuclear order. The safeguards agreement with the IAEA was about translating it into a honourable and sustainable framework for India’s nuclear cooperation with the international community. That is precisely what the DAE has negotiated with considerable skill."

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Message is the fight

IndianExpress.com :: Message is the fight

India, with its regional and enhanced global footprint, its strong relations with the developed world, and a growing capacity to play a meaningful role against terrorism, can only expect to be in the cross-hairs of extremist elements. It needs to further strengthen the global campaign against terrorism through its intelligence and security cooperation with all countries. It should also insist on ever stronger action by major powers to demand of Pakistan evidence of concerted action against the Taliban and al-Qaeda presence in its territory. The Kabul attack will remain one more piece of evidence, if it was needed, of the price India has and will continue to pay in its fight against terrorism.

Monday, July 07, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: On Hokkaido time

IndianExpress.com :: On Hokkaido time

The stage, then, is all set for a titanic international contest between India’s nuclear friends and critics. With so little time left, the action is bound to be swift and exhilarating. As Manmohan Singh embarks upon one of India’s most consequential diplomatic campaigns, it is time to fasten our seat-belts.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

The Saturday Profile - Frontier Years Give Might to Ex-Guerrilla’s Words - Biography - NYTimes.com

The Saturday Profile - Frontier Years Give Might to Ex-Guerrilla’s Words - Biography - NYTimes.com:


As fluent a talker as he is a writer, Mr. Rashid, 59, has just published his fourth book, “Descent into Chaos, The United States and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia,” a caustic review of the mistakes by the Bush administration in tackling Islamic militancy.

His central argument is not original: that the money and blood spent on Iraq should have been invested in Afghanistan, rebuilding the country from 2001 to prevent the resurgence of the Taliban. But it is hard to argue with, now that the Taliban are indeed back, and NATO and the United States are enmeshed in a tough fight with them.

The Bush administration, he said, was too gentle with Pakistan’s president, Pervez Musharraf, after he pledged to support the antiterrorism campaign after 9/11. “The Americans never said strongly enough that Pakistan had to stop supporting the Taliban — that was because Musharraf was giving them the Al Qaeda types,” capturing a few top Qaeda operatives and handing them over to the United States. Mr. Bush should have insisted that Musharraf quash the Taliban too, he said.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

IIM-A alumnus sells vegetables in Patna - ExpressIndia.Com

IIM-A alumnus sells vegetables in Patna - ExpressIndia.Com:

"Asked to comment on the job offers he had, the self-effacing IIM graduate said, 'I did not opt for the placement process. So, in that sense, I had none. I saw the farmers of my vegetable-growing village eke out a living by the sweat of their brow and then watch with abject resignation the fruits of their toil rot during the floods. I always dreamt of doing something for them and I am just chasing that dream,' Kaushalendra says."

Male and single?-Man-Woman-Relationships-Lifestyle-The Times of India

Male and single?-Man-Woman-Relationships-Lifestyle-The Times of India:

"The survey involving 1500 heterosexual men showed that men were 10 times more scared of marrying the wrong person than of never getting married at all.

It also found that about eight per cent of the respondents didn’t want to marry, 62 per cent wanted to marry, of which half won't settle for anything less than perfection, and about 30 per cent who are on the fence. Four out of 10 bachelors did not want children, compared to three out of 10 wanting to be a father. The rest were undecided."

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Try thinking big

IndianExpress.com :: Try thinking big:


"The PM has also put in enormous efforts to convince the scientific and security establishment that India’s strategic interests will not be compromised. As a member of the National Security Advisory Board, I can vouch for the fact that these issues have been discussed threadbare and in all their aspects, and there is no danger of losing out. The drive to finalize the nuclear deal can be made into as powerful a political mantra as garibi hatao or even jai jawan jai kisan. It took courage, imagination and a huge measure of self confidence for those two leaders to break through ideological cobwebs and vested interests to mobilize people around those slogans. The time has come for the PM to appeal directly to the people and explain how the nuclear deal will contribute to building a stronger India."

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Abroad - In Italy, More Basta Than Bravo for Cultural Diversity - NYTimes.com

Abroad - In Italy, More Basta Than Bravo for Cultural Diversity - NYTimes.com

The Way I see it , Europe goes back and forth between welcoming immigrants to outright hatred. It gone on for Centuries!

Top Engineers Shun Military; Concern Grows - NYTimes.com

Top Engineers Shun Military; Concern Grows - NYTimes.com

“We’re having awful problems with the execution of defense programs,” said Mr. Kaminski, who was the Pentagon’s top acquisition executive from 1994 to 1997. “It’s absolutely critical to start becoming more efficient, more effective.”

Mr. Kaminski is devoting much of his time as a private citizen to that goal, leading a high-level task force and visiting university campuses and military contractors to proselytize for better engineering management.

As he and other experts explain it, the central problem is a breakdown in the most basic element of any big military project: accurately assessing at the outset whether the technological goals are attainable and affordable, then managing the engineering to ensure that hardware and software are properly designed, tested and integrated.

The technical term for the discipline is systems engineering. Without it, projects can turn into chaotic, costly failures.

Increasingly, that has become the case. What is more, the loss of government expertise has magnified the difficulties associated with another trend: In recent years, the Pentagon has transferred more and more oversight responsibility to its contractors, who themselves often lack sufficient systems-engineering skill and the incentives needed to hold down costs.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Now, space cell to keep an eye on China's plans-India-The Times of India

Now, space cell to keep an eye on China's plans-India-The Times of India

In view of the looming Chinese threat to its communication network and other space assets, India on Tuesday announced the setting up of its Integrated Space Cell (ISC).

The cell is designed to counter the Chinese Military Space Systems that comprises anti-satellite weaponry and a new class of heavy-lift and small boosters acting as catalyst in the next generation satellite warfare system.

The Space Cell will be put under the command of the Integrated Defence Services Headquarters and will act as a single window for integration among the armed forces, the department of space and the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO).

Monday, June 09, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: In poll year, big states go shopping for power while the small smile

IndianExpress.com :: In poll year, big states go shopping for power while the small smile:

"With Lok Sabha polls due next year and more states gearing for Assembly polls, good governance is the buzz. Big states, anxious not to annoy voters, are rushing to buy power from energy-surplus smaller states which, in turn, are raking in huge revenues to feed their infrastructure development schemes."

Saturday, June 07, 2008

In Shift for Japan, Salarymen Blow the Whistle - NYTimes.com

In Shift for Japan, Salarymen Blow the Whistle - NYTimes.com

A decade ago, corporate whistle-blowing was almost unheard-of in Japan. A person’s place of employment was part of his identity, and unflinching company loyalty was the highest of virtues. But the unquestioningly obedient salaryman is becoming a relic, the result of a broader transformation of Japan and the global economy.

Friday, June 06, 2008

BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Recognition at last for Japan's Ainu

BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Recognition at last for Japan's Ainu

Japan's parliament is to adopt a resolution that, for the first time, formally recognises the Ainu as "an indigenous people with a distinct language, religion and culture".

IndianExpress.com :: ‘All the problems have been solved. Now let’s build a statue’

IndianExpress.com :: ‘All the problems have been solved. Now let’s build a statue’

We have very few and far people like this writer in India. I highly recommend reading this article.

This is the editorial that appeared in Loksatta (published by the Indian Express Group) on Wednesday, June 4, on the Maharashtra government’s decision to install a massive statue of Shivaji off the coast of Mumbai. The house of Loksatta editor Kumar Ketkar was attacked on Thursday

Monday, June 02, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: 'What you (Indians) are doing in England is what Jews did 30-40 years ago...Indians are now taking over local councils...you'll l

IndianExpress.com :: 'What you (Indians) are doing in England is what Jews did 30-40 years ago...Indians are now taking over local councils...you'll live to see an Indian PM of England':


"And Britain? Do you see any change there?

Massive. It is going to be taken over by the Indians. And I don't joke. This may be an old joke and you might have heard it in which case. Lord Paul's son told a wonderful story about England. He said, he had seen a van going through the East End of London, and it said, 'Patel & Patel Plumbers'. (And it had the slogan) 'You've given the cowboys a chance, why don't you let in the Indians.' That was brilliant. I though it was summing of the affection the British people have for the Indians.

•You know, as the history of the world tells us, when immigrants become successful . . . when immigrants are new, they are with the liberals, and when they become successful, they become conservatives.

And then they become prime minister. Now what you are doing is what the Jews did 30-40 years ago when they came to England after the War. They took over the local councils and they became mayors. Now they are in Parliament. The Indians are now taking over the local councils. There are mayors all over England who are Indian. You are young enough, I suspect, to live to see an Indian prime minister in England."

Why it's hard to maintain weight loss - Los Angeles Times

Why it's hard to maintain weight loss - Los Angeles Times

Most people can lose weight. But few can maintain their new weight for long. Researchers are now tackling that problem, and what they're learning is disconcerting. The human body, it seems, is designed to sabotage weight loss at every turn -- once a body has been fatter, it wants to get back to the weight that it used to be. Physiology is cruelly changed in two ways: The body needs fewer calories to maintain itself, but its craving for food is more intense.

Becoming overweight, in other words, is like being issued a credit card with an uncomfortably high balance that you'll probably end up paying off forever. Making sure the pounds stay off means pitting one's willpower against a swarm of biological processes involving the brain, hormones, metabolism and fat storage.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Guerrilla gardener movement takes root in L.A. area - Los Angeles Times

Guerrilla gardener movement takes root in L.A. area - Los Angeles Times:

Part beautification, part eco-activism, part social outlet, the activity has been fueled by Internet gardening blogs and sites such as GuerrillaGardening.org, where before-and-after photos of the latest "troop digs" inspire 45,000 visitors a month to make derelict soil bloom.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

IndianExpress.com :: Sonia’s choice

IndianExpress.com :: Sonia’s choice

The president of the Congress, Sonia Gandhi, is facing a lonely decision as she did in the summer of 2004 when she decided to step aside in favour of Manmohan Singh as prime minister. At that stage, she was under tremendous pressure from almost all her partymen to assume the office of the prime minister. She asserted that she was listening to her “inner voice” and therefore not accepting their near-unanimous pleas. Once again, she faces the lonely decision whether to focus on the Indian national interest and Rajiv’s legacy or be influenced by her party veterans who tend to put what they consider, often mistakenly, party interests ahead of other vital considerations.

Rajiv Gandhi presented his action plan for disarmament to the UN General Assembly on June 9, 1988, in which he fervently pleaded for global disarmament. He offered that India would not go nuclear if the world were to accept his phased disarmament plan. He asked them to negotiate a new non-discriminatory NPT. He also issued a veiled warning. He said, “Left to ourselves we would not want to touch nuclear weapons. But when tactical considerations, in the play of great power rivalry, are allowed to take precedence over the imperative of non-proliferation, with what leeway are we left?”

Rajiv Gandhi’s pleas were totally ignored. After another eight or nine months of agonising, he put India’s security and interests ahead of all other considerations and directed the weaponisation of the Indian nuclear programme. It could not have been an easy decision for him. But Indian security came first. Today, senior US statesmen like George Schultz, Henry Kissinger, William Perry and Sam Nunn invoke the words of Rajiv Gandhi to derive support for their campaign for a nuclear-weapon free world, some 19 years after Rajiv Gandhi vainly pleaded for nuclear disarmament.