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17:31 - 02.07.2010
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Tibetans are the fastest-evolving humans, Chinese claim Tibetans have undergone the fastest evolution in human history, according to Chinese scientists, changing their genetic make-up to cope with high altitudes. Read Article
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10:30 - 14.01.2010
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Reid Faces Battles in Washington and at Home Michele Asselin for The New York Times Read Article
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06:13 - 10.04.2010
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Sarah Palin looms large as early 2012 Republican contenders gatherTim Reid, Washington Sarah Palin took centre stage among a troupe of potential White House hopefuls yesterday as they gathered for the Southern Republican Leadership Conference, traditionally seen as the unofficial launch of the party’s presidential nomination battle.Ms Palin, the 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee, wasted no time in doing what has become second nature to her in recent months: excoriating President Obama before a rapturous and adoring conservative crowd.She accused Mr Obama of “coddling enemies and alienating allies”, of sending “gold stars and cookies to the President of Sudan” and of “sending letters to Iran’s mullahs” while failing to support the Iranian reform movement.Although Ms Palin was the star attraction at the New Orleans conference the list of speakers read like a roll call of potential Republican candidates for the 2012 presidential election. They included Bobby Jindal, the Governor of Louisiana, Rick Perry, the Governor of Texas, and Newt Gingrich, the former House Speaker.Two other Republican presidential hopefuls — both potentially strong contenders — chose to stay away, perhaps because they are viewed by the crowd as not conservative enough.Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts Governor and failed 2008 presidential candidate, is having trouble with the Right because he passed healthcare reform in his home state. Healthcare legislation is a radioactive subject among conservatives after the passage of Mr Obama’s Bill last month.Tim Pawlenty, the Governor of Minnesota, has been criticised for accepting federal stimulus funds to help his state.Every speech was thick with attacks on Mr Obama. Mr Gingrich called him the most radical president in history and said that he was running a “secular, socialist machine”. Liz Cheney, daughter of Dick Cheney, the former Vice-President, said that Mr Obama had set America on a path of decline.
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12:13 - 04.02.2010
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Rules Worth Following, for Everyone’s Sake "populations who rely on the so-called Western diet — lots of processed foods, meat, added fat, sugar and refined grains — “invariably suffer from high rates of the so-called Western diseases: obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer.” Indeed, 4 of the top 10 killers of Americans are linked to this diet."Read Article
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09:14 - 30.06.2009
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Time.com: Learning how to deal with Swine Flu from Past Mistakes |
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U.S. advises against Mexico trips |
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U.S. advises against Mexico trips Newspaper vendor Irene Flores wears a surgical mask as she sells newspapers at the US-Mexico border crossing in Tijuana. President Barack Obama declares that spreading swine flu infections were a concern but "not a cause for alarm," while customs agents began checking people coming into the United States by land and air. |
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LondonTimes: Why we are heading into a "perfect storm" of cybercrime |
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Why we are heading into a "perfect storm" of cybercrime There were some very scary statistics being thrown about at the RSA conference for online security in San Francisco this last week. It is the nature of the business of the big internet security companies to try and scare the pants off us consumers to sell their products but nevertheless there has been a worrying spate of events just recently that seems to point to a new tide of malicious software out there.
The biggest headline grabber has been the spread of the conficker virus (even if it has not resulted in webwide armageddon) which is still around in millions of machine and is trying to get people to download dodgy security software. Recent reports have also claimed that foreign cyber criminals had infiltrated the US power grid and security firm Finjan said that almost two million PCs globally, including machines inside UK and US government departments, have been taken over by hackers. Experts traced the botnet of remotely-controlled PCs back to a gang in Ukraine. At the conference Sophos announced that every day more than 20,000 new samples of malware were discovered and big security firm Symantec said it had blocked 245 million attacks per month in 2008. RSA President Art Coviello said the cyer criminals controlled "massive armies of zombie computers" and called for cooperation to combat the ecosystem set up by the baddies. Cooperation and compatibility was the theme of the keynote speech by Dave DeWalt, chairman and CEO of leading security firm McAfee, during which he promoted the McAfee's idea of predictive security to increase the protection available against viruses, trojans, spam and other malicious software He told the conference that we are heading for a "perfect storm" of malware. As the economy has gone into meltdown, cybercrime has risen sharply, with more viruses etc detected in 2008 than in the previous five years combined. Last year, 80 per cent of cybercrimes were aimed at making money, either by phishing for your cash, stealing your personal information or selling you a dodgy product, he added. He said data loss has cost businesses across the world more than one trillion dollars. Perhaps most worryingly, he said cyberterrorism was on the rise with attacks on government infrastructure. "We're starting to see the armament of cyberwarfare," DeWalt said. He wants to embed at all levels of computing, from chipsets to satellites, sensors that will feed information about security breaches to a global threat intelligence system. If that sounds like a big leap, it is but one, he says, that has to happen if we are to step up against the cyber criminals. Cloud computing - using big remote servers to update security protection on your PC without you having to download more software - is the way forward for the big security firms and McAfee's approach is part of that. DeWalt wants companies to act together to identify and quickly react to nullify the effects of each newly released piece of malicious software such as the conficker virus. |
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Swine Flu Pandemic Underway |
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Several airports throughout the world, including Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, are using thermal cameras to monitor the body temperature of passengers arriving from overseas in the fight against the possible spread of the swine flu. (Yonhap/AP) |
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The Media Elite's Secret Dinners |
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The Media Elite's Secret Dinners By Howard Kurtz Washington Post Staff Writer
" Last Tuesday evening, Rahm Emanuel quietly slipped into an eighth-floor office at the Watergate. As white-jacketed waiters poured red and white wine and served a three-course salmon and risotto dinner, the White House chief of staff spent two hours chatting with some of Washington's top journalists -- excusing himself to take a call from President Obama and another from Hillary Clinton." As the journalists hurled questions and argued among themselves, Emanuel said: "This feels a lot like a Jewish family dinner." |
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English Author undone by what War has Become. |
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How the horrors of war nearly destroyed me For 20 years, Peter Beaumont has reported for the Observer from some of the bloodiest war zones in the world. His new book, extracted below, is a disturbing and graphic examination of the psychology of killing, and a moving account of how the experience of witnessing such raw violence for so long finally took a heavy toll on his personal life Peter Beaumont has for 20 years reported from some of the world's most dangerous places. Here he reads from his book The Secret Life Of War, and talks to Tracy McVeigh about his experiences as a foreign correspondent for the Observer Link to this video War's most dreadful secret, banal and terrible at the same time, is not that men kill - that much is obvious - or even that many men enjoy their killing. That, too, has been well documented. It is more insidious than that. There exists a widespread envy of those who kill, and especially those who kill and kill again. There is a bitter resentment among men when others claim their kills, or their kills are denied. That deems some men "luckier" to have the opportunity to kill more than others. Soldiers bitching. Another outpost, infested with rats that crawl across useless ceiling ducts that are connected to nothing in a former police station half-ruined by a bomb. The talk is about the young Texan lieutenant who has just left to lead a Small Kill Team on an overnight ambush, palefaced and tired. Top of his class at school, the soldiers say with pride. From what they say it is evident he likes killing and is motivated by opportunities to kill. His men like and respect him, admire his bravery, but sitting on their cots they resent him grabbing all the opportunities to rack up his kills. An activity so full of paradoxes, its meanings are hard to mine and even more difficult to understand. Killing, as Joanna Bourke explains in her study of combat, An Intimate History of Killing, for very many men is an exciting and pleasurable activity as well as a taboo. Being exciting, it is hidden on return to a civilian life that regards permissive killing, even in the high heat of conflict, as something "to be done", an experience to be endured. But it is different in proximity to the battlefield - among your "buddies" - where all ordinary rules are deliberately suspended. There it becomes obvious that the business of killing is easily assimilated into the story-worlds that define men's lives. It is integrated into all the other stories that I hear when the men are sitting in their hooches, or round their Saturday night barbecue pits with their cigars, drinking non-alcoholic beer or Gatorade with a shot of illicit spirits occasionally mixed in, after smoking a discreet bowl of hash. Then they talk about sex and cars and films; holidays and children. And sometimes combat and killing. I am sitting with two soldiers on a base near Mosul in northern Iraq. "Don't use our real names," says DC, a handsome paratrooper from the New York suburbs, a good enough soldier, it seems, but with a troubled history that has seen him busted down from sergeant and made up again. "I don't fucking care," his friend Andy interrupts, grinning a spacey smile: "I'm so far out of my fucking bubble." I am listening to their theories of life. Mainly they involve emotionless sex and racing cars and motorbikes. They talk about how to tune the engine of a Harley, about drag bikes, crashes and the tactics for midget car racing. They tell me how fat girls are always a dead cert, and best picked up at the ice-cream counter at Wal-Mart at 2am. "Those are the ones you know who really hate themselves," says DC. About the competitions back at their home base in Texas to see who can pick up and fuck the fattest women. "We had a ton, once, in the same room," says DC, grinning. He whistles, trying to see if I am shocked. About queuing to fuck the same woman with your buddies. Rotisserie, they call it. They talk about getting wasted back home, and driving pickup trucks with oversized wheels, and fleeing from the cops. Finally, the conversation turns to Iraq and getting stoned and heading out into the Red Zone behind the sights of a big gun, weaving together the strands of sex and violence until all human life seems as consumable as different cuts of meat. It is the first time that any of the American soldiers I have come across have spoken directly about taking drugs, although I have heard rumours. The random drug tests keep it underground, discreet, unlike Vietnam. But they are off duty and garrulous at the end of a day in which their unit has not been required to go outside the wire, drinking coffee at one of the cafés the army has placed on the bigger bases. Most of the soldiers I talk to want to get out of Iraq as quickly as they can. Not DC. "Why are you in such a fucking hurry to get back home?" he demands of his friend. "What's back there? Nothing. This is it," he says emphatically. "Ain't nothing better in the world. Take a big hit on the bong and then get all dressed up and get behind my gun. And then it's: 'Come on, fuckers, fire at me', so I can shoot up the streets." There is a game with guns I know some of the young soldiers play in Iraq called "Do you trust me?" An unloaded weapon is pointed at the head. The trigger pulled. Not Russian roulette, just a buddy game with guns. The point is that people forget to clear their weapons and accidents happen. That's what the question means. I never see it. It is too private a ritual for outsiders. Knives, however, are ubiquitous and visible. I am aware, all of a sudden, of the same knife everywhere. I see it clipped into jackets and combat pants. One afternoon I stop to watch a group of soldiers trying to throw and stick a couple of the blades into a sheet of plywood that they have laid against one of their CHUs - the containerised housing units that have been dragged into the country, stacked on the back of trucks. They are in shorts and trainers, a bunch of giggling kids, jumping up and squealing to protect their feet when the knives - inevitably - bounce back towards them off the hard, compacted wood. Peter Beaumont at war. On another occasion a smart and studiously polite woman soldier shows me her knife. She says she bought it after she came across graffiti in one of the plastic porta-potties outside the command centre where she works announcing that the writer "would like to fuck" her. She tells me she tried to scrub it out. Three times. Three times it returned, the letters creeping across the plastic. "I know it is someone I work with," she explains. "It feels like I'm being stalked." So she went to the PX military store and bought two knives, sliding one blade inside a desert boot and another into her pocket. After a while I want to handle this knife, and get a sense of its potential. But I am reluctant to ask to look at one, embarrassed. The alternative that I settle on is to buy one from one of the warehouse-sized stores to be found on the larger bases that sell everything from chewing tobacco, DVDs and snacks to bras, cars and televisions. I find the knife in an aisle selling military equipment, buckles, badges and rucksacks. It comes in two sizes and I choose the smaller, not certain it will be legal to take it home to the UK. As it turns out it is a Special Forces tactical knife, designed by Kit Carson, a name that means nothing to me. But when I look it up on the internet later, I see it described as a "classic design", offered for sale alongside other blades whose names I do recognise - fetishised little objects from novels about crime and serial killers that I have read, such as the Spyderco blades beloved of Hannibal Lecter. It feels like an act of transgression buying this object, and I hide my new purchase at the bottom of a basketful of Pringles and Gatorade, expecting to be challenged. I am not sure why, but I fear that I have crossed over into the world of people who own blades designed for injury and death. Fiddling with the knife, back in my CHU, it is the colour that bothers me. The bare, black metal of the blade and handle is unsettling - as if intended to be hidden and secret. Its stark utility - an edge and handle, nothing more - contrasts with the knives I have owned in my adult life which have all been ambiguous in nature, fulfilling multiple roles: Swiss Army knives and Leathermen, or knives with spoons and forks attached that break down into rudimentary dining sets. This is a very different kind of blade. I can see immediately that it is a well-made knife when I take it out of its packaging. I tell myself it will be useful for mountaineering - a sturdy, light and compact tool, good for cutting abseil slings, the sharp blade excellent for camping and picnics. I also know that is not entirely its intent. It talks of a different kind of functionality. Folded into its curving black frame, the knife is 10cm long, the blade 3cm or so in width, tapering at the end to form the chiselled point of a dagger. I run my thumb over a set of deep saw-like serrations so sharp I can feel the points tugging at my skin. The whole effect is shark-like, sleek and full of teeth, so that I wonder whether it was intended in its design. Playing with the knife, I discover that one half of the thumb guard, which I had taken to be part of the handle, in fact forms part of the blade, fashioned so that the knife can be flicked open to the locked position with a quick push of the finger, swivelling on a pivot. It is not a flick knife - there is no spring - but if I flick my wrist in the right way, it will swing smoothly open and snick into its lock. It is an object of a stark simplicity, long and strong enough to punch through muscle and gristle, to find an artery. Sharp enough to cut a throat. But there is a mystery here. No one in Iraq uses a knife to fight. No one wants to get that close when they can blast Iraqis at a convenient and safe distance with weapons that have made killing people simple. Yet the knife exerts a peculiar fixation, far more so than the soldiers' personal weapons which are carried like tools, useful but invisible despite being in plain sight. I see men run with them during PT, take them to the showers and cinema and church, prop them by the table during meals. There are some men - "geardos", the other soldiers call them - who lavish attention on their assault rifles, weighing them down with additional gadgets bought from magazines and the internet - special sights and extra torches. They are the minority. The knife is different. For earlier generations of soldiers the bayonet was the fetishised instrument of violence, more fantasised about than actually employed. But cultures change. Now it is the Special Forces dagger that is the badge of close and personal killing, symbol in the military imagination of the true warrior ethos. In war all life is negotiated around weapons. Societies are reordered into sharply defined new hierarchies: into those who have weapons and those who have not. A man with a gun can walk to the front of the bread or petrol queue. With his militia friends he can take over a petrol station if he likes and reorganise the distribution while skimming money off the top. With a rifle you can order a woman to have sex. Weapons redistribute wealth through "taxes", protection rackets and straight theft. Scores can be settled, under the cover of generalised violence. A gun can be a lever in the political system. An armed group can take over a hospital ward, and later a whole hospital, as happened across Iraq, thus grabbing control of a key social provision for a political party. Having a gun confers small benefits too. In the Baghdad traffic jams (the izdiham) the way through is cleared by those who have weapons. A new topography is imposed upon the city by armed checkpoints and men with guns, which ways are open, which ways closed. Weapons censor, blocking out argument, debate, verbal exchange. Those with guns can speak. They have opinions and deliver orders and instructions. Those without are required to be silent. Early on, in the first few weeks after the fall of Baghdad, a US soldier pulls a rifle on me as I try to reach the Sheraton hotel, the entrance to which he is blocking. I argue that I am staying in the hotel and that the car park, which he is preventing access to, is where I leave my car for safety. But he is new to the detail. Perhaps a little dumb and lacking in confidence, a youth for whom possession of a rifle is a replacement for thinking. I try to get him to turn around to see the other cars parked beyond the wire, but he is not listening. I can see his face through the windscreen, angry and scared because I am not doing what I'm told; because I'm in breach of the unwritten contract between the armed and the unarmed. He presses the weapon almost on to the glass in front of me. He is uncertain, shaky, and shuffles to get a better, wider firing stance, his hip pushed into my car's front bumper. The sights obscure his face, until all that is left is the visible fact of the gun, the worn "o" of the barrel's end that is echoed in a little, desperate, deflating "oh" inside of me when I realise that he might really fire. The mere suggestion of a weapon is sometimes enough to trigger the same unsettling emotions. It is not the sensation of contact, the wild, druggy adrenaline rush under fire. Instead it is fluttering and flat, a sense of abruptly being diminished. Like the moment of hearing tragic news about a friend, as if all possibilities had been at once extinguished. The knives I fear most are out in the mahalas, Iraq's dreary and dusty neighbourhoods that sprawl, massive and uniform, out of its urban centres. They are not the toys the American soldiers play with, dreaming their martial dreams, but the blades used by a tiny minority of Iraqis, the head choppers allied to al-Qaeda in Iraq, who employ butchers' knives made for slaughtering sheep and cattle to decapitate Iraqis and foreign hostages who fall into their hands. They are beheadings that exert a fascination on many Iraqis, unexplainable either by the Qur'anic exhortation to "smite the infidel in the neck", or as political acts designed to inspire terror through the horror of the spectacle. For some who watch them, collect them on their hard drives, it is clear they do have a political and religious meaning. But most who watch them in the internet cafés or who save them on their telephones across Iraq do so because they want to see a killing. I avoid these grotesque performances until one day, to demonstrate a point, an Iraqi guard at a human rights organisation is called in to show me one of the clips saved on his mobile phone. I am supposed to be watching the murder of an Iraqi woman, but as he cups the phone in his hand and presses play to reveal a jumpy and bleached set of images, it is clear that the hostage is a dark, smooth-skinned man with faint, fatty breasts. What I am seeing is the decapitation of a Nepalese hostage in 2004, one of 12 murdered by the same jihadi group. The video moves quickly to the murder. I tell myself at first that I am watching it for journalistic reasons. But I understand the curiosity as well. There is in these images a horribly compelling appeal. Perhaps it is the knowledge that in a few seconds a life will end. I wonder about the quickness of it and the pain. I am curious about the killer too - whether his hands will shake with excitement or with fear and fumble it. A man lies on the floor, shirtless. His hands are bound behind his back with a broad white cloth. The same cloth, bloody on one side, is bound over his eyes. A second man in combats, his face carefully concealed by a cap, bends down over the prisoner. Quickly and methodically he begins to cut his throat. But what stays with me is not the dying hostage's last moments, breathing through a severed and quivering neck, nor the moans not the unreally red arterial blood, not even the theatrical dumping of the head. Instead it is the killer's use of his knife. It is a perfunctory sawing that probes deeply at the victim's throat as the executioner holds his head, looking for tendons and muscles to sever. It is too easy for such a dreadful act: like skinning fish, or a butcher cutting fat off meat. I think: murder should be more emotionally charged, angry and physical, exultant or fearful, not this offhand snipping and slicing. I realise too that I have seen this before, watching the father of a Palestinian family cut just this way through the throat of a startled, hobbled ox held by his sons on a Gaza pavement, slicing and digging, to bleed it for a feast. In the end even those of us who do not carry weapons are forced to address the meaning of their use. Two guns are sitting in an Adidas sports bag on my bedroom floor in the Hamra Hotel. It is later - much later - in the war. As it gets ever more dangerous, I accept that if I wish to work unembedded no option remains but to hire armed local guards to ride with me. It is an uncomfortable decision, not least because I have no illusions about whether two guards will make an ambush any more survivable. What is clear is that when everybody else has guards, not to have them marks me out as the soft option for any would-be kidnapper. I employ Ayman and Thair, and a second driver to follow in a "chase car". At the day's end, the two men tuck their pistols in their waists, shake my hand and prepare to leave. They don't want to carry their rifles, which are illegal without a proper permit, back and forth to work each day. So Ayman, the older of the two, delivers the sports bag containing the two weapons to my room for the night. After a while I begin to feel that the weapons sit in my room with an unspoken permission attached to them: if things go very badly wrong, then use them. Except that I do not want anything to do with the guns. Even having them in my room instils in me a deep sense of uneasiness. I feel embarrassed by their presence, as if they were porn mags beneath my bed. I did not always feel this way. I learned to shoot at school as a cadet. Then, guns seemed exciting and glamorous. To fire them as a 15-year-old boy was to enter a club with a small membership. My school, founded by Henry VIII, had a little range round the back of the bike sheds, stacked with sand, where we could fire .22 Martini rifles of first world war vintage and older - bolt-action rifles with wooden stocks polished from generations of handling. Later we were given Lee-Enfields, and on a trip to an army training camp in Cornwall we were allowed to fire pistols and sub-machine guns and given blank rounds with which to crawl among the steep-faced dunes in a mock attack that ended in the equally mock execution of my history teacher. I feel the AKs in my room, morosely silent visitors. Although I do not like touching guns as an adult, I know how these weapons work and their peculiarities. I have seen them fired and stripped and fought with. I have seen them used as hammers and levers to break locks and doors, used as clubs and barriers. Mostly I have been afraid of them. I have had their bullets shot at me, or travelled in pickup trucks with bored teen agers who do not know how to make the weapons safe. I know that the safety catch is counter-intuitive, going from safe to fully automatic and only then to single fire. I know, too, that they have a reputation for recoiling heavily, so that when fired on fully automatic the weapon tends to climb away from the target after the first three shots. One night I cannot sleep and I feel that it is the guns that are responsible. It is a bad time in Baghdad and the conversation in the Hamra Hotel has come round to what-ifs: how long the few journalists left in the hotel will be able to continue working and what would happen in an evacuation of the hotel; how long the security on the perimeter could hold out before the Quick Reaction Force could mount a rescue mission from the Green Zone. The times talked about seem long. The guns beg a question that I understand must be resolved. It is past 1am. I slip out from underneath the thin, uncomfortable sheets to stand in my bare feet. I pull a chair to the centre of the narrow room and set it facing the door. My bare back glues to the wooden frame as I sit there in the dark, looking at the faint lump that is the bag - until I drag it to me and unzip it. By now, my eyes have acclimatised to a purple darkness illuminated only by the light outside my window. It is enough to see the worn black metal and cracked wood, the grey duct tape wound round the doubled magazines to hold them together for rapid changing of the clips. Gently I take one of the rifles from the bag and lay it on my lap. I can smell the faint tangy odour of oil. I let it sit there for a few seconds - no more. But then I know that it is done. As I return the rifle to its bag I understand for the first time in over a decade of covering conflicts that I would use this weapon if I had to. I know too the implications of that realisation - that my time covering wars is grinding slowly to an end. I have been compromised by fear. Corrupted by what conflict means. About the authorPeter Beaumont is the foreign affairs editor of the Observer. He joined the paper in 1989 and has reported extensively from conflict zones including Africa, the Balkans and the Middle East, and has written widely on human rights issues and the impact of conflict on civilians. He has received several awards, including the One World Media Award, the Amnesty International Media award, and the George Orwell Prize for Journalism. Postscript: April 2009It is not always the big things. Last September, on the eve of an ordinary assignment, I woke up and realised I never wanted to see an airport again. I didn't want the smell or the sight of them. The grey, boring moments spent waiting in departures lounges I felt had eaten up my life. I didn't make it to Heathrow. It was a crisis that had been building for over a year. In my last year reporting from Iraq, something had happened. Rather than seeking the most meaningful stories, I had slipped into chasing the most dangerous ones. And in the process I had become someone I didn't want to be. Not someone who wrote about the consequences of war, but someone who had become part of its logic. When, on the last day of what would be my final trip in 2007, a car bomb exploded in front of the vehicle that I was in, it didn't seem to matter. It was, I rationalised at first, an ordinary event in the country that is in conflict. Except that it did matter, in ways I could not then imagine. I dreamed about explosions. I jumped at slamming doors. I experienced periods of recklessness and of stultifying dissatisfaction. Two months later I found myself explaining why I never wanted to go back to Iraq again. And later still, why I had had enough of travelling. The writing of The Secret Life of War was part of the crisis. In two-and-a-half years of working on it almost every day, I'd come to expect that when it was done, I would have written my last words about the conflict. But there was no sense of catharsis, no sense even of completion. Now at least I am happy with it for what it is, an attempt to deliver a personal, tentative and partial description of aspects of the experience of war. But I am travelling again. This time I made it to Heathrow and Sarajevo. In January I covered the violent aftermath of the conflict in Gaza, and plan to return to finish a long-term project. I am not certain I understand fully what has changed. But I am no longer the person who came back from Iraq. Less confident and more careful, I have, I hope, reconnected with the person I once was - a person who cared about the victims more than the rituals of war. I have realised too that everyone who is engulfed by war - willingly or not - loses something. For me that has been a connection to ordinary life, to my children and friends, and habits that, as I grow older, I have learned can never be repaired. In that knowledge, perhaps, there is a balance to be found. |
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Guardian/UK interviews Natascha McElhone |
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The interview: Natascha McElhone She had it all: a successful career, a blissful relationship, two happy children and a third on the way. Then, a year ago, her husband died suddenly. Actress Natascha McElhone tells Carole Cadwalladr about writing his obituary, dealing with grief - and why she feels so remarkably positive about having known and loved her husband Natascha McElhone at the Cobden Club. Photograph: Suki Dhanda Last May, Natascha McElhone was filming in Los Angeles with her two children and pregnant with her third, when her 43-year-old husband, Martin Kelly, collapsed and died from a heart attack at their home in west London. He was a craniofacial surgeon who, as well as his busy practice in London, had set up a charity Facing the World which takes children with severe facial deformities from places such as Afghanistan and Iraq to London for surgery. It was four days after their 10th wedding anniversary and he was about to fly to LA to join Natascha and the children to celebrate. Then she got the call, from his best friend, Neil Randhawa. Just days later, McElhone wrote a remarkable obituary in the Mail on Sunday. "I can't believe that that magical, beautiful creature is not here any more. He was too good to be true. There was never a day when we didn't say, 'It's ridiculous how lucky we are, look how blessed our life is.' I still feel like the luckiest woman alive, even though he's not here. To have been given such a love, to have had 10 years of utter bliss waking up next to someone who made my heart flutter, I could never in my wildest dreams have wished for more than that." It was a heartbreaking piece of writing, not just for what she said about Kelly ("I just can't believe I won't feel his skin any more"), their marriage ("We never raised our voices to one another") and the loss she felt for their boys or, as he called them, "his pups", but also because, in the midst of her grief and shock, she could be so articulate. "I feel so ill-equipped right now in my sleepless, shocked state to write anything coherent, but I want to get in there and shout aloud his name, make sure no one misunderstands him," she wrote, but she did much more than that. If you look at the Justgiving website where a fund has been established in his name, the piece moved complete strangers to donate money to the cause. "I haven't really read it back. And I don't know if I ever can. I wrote it in such a blind haze. The paper had contacted us saying that they were going to run an obituary written by one of his partner's wives, which was perfectly lovely, but she didn't know him very intimately so it was sort of once removed. "And I said to Martin's best friend, 'Why don't you write it?' We were surrounded by piles of documentation because we were going through death certificates and all the the administrative hell of death. I just remember looking at him over these piles of files and documents. He looked up at me and said, 'Tash?' And I said, 'Yes?' And he said, 'I can't do it, you've got to do it.' And I said, 'I can't do it, I haven't slept. I'm pregnant. I'm hormonal. I'm grief-stricken. Are you insane? I've got my kids to look after.' But he said, 'I feel you have to. I've got this really strong feeling that you have to do it.' "And then he called the editor who said we're going to press in 40 minutes. So I just sat there and wrote it. I can't remember what I wrote. I've got it so I will read it one day. I think I'd be embarrassed to read it now. I said to my dad who's a journalist, 'Will you read through it and check it's not embarrassing.' He just sat down and I heard this ping, that noise from your email if you're on a Mac. I said, 'You can't have read it that quickly.' He said, 'I didn't, I just pressed send.' And I said, 'You're such an arsehole! You're meant to be helping.' He just said, 'If you, in your state, felt compelled to write something, then it must be right.' So that's how all that came about." The journalist father is her stepfather, Roy Greenslade, former editor of the Daily Mirror, and now media commentator of the Guardian, who married her mother, Noreen Taylor, also a journalist, when McElhone was still very young. He said: "I have never known a marriage as close and warm as theirs" and wrote in the Guardian: "Martin was the most rounded human being I have ever known." He played sport competitively, painted, played in a band. "Theirs was an all-consuming love affair; each other's best friend, they dovetailed so well that they never had a single row." The baby she was pregnant with has now been born, Rex, a brother to eight-year-old Theo, and five-year-old Otis, brought into the world in the same hospital where Kelly used to work. When we meet at lunchtime near her home in Fulham, west London, she has the air of somebody who's been up since well before dawn. Rex is teething. Three boys, she admits, is a handful. "It really is. I won't say it's not. It is a struggle but one I hope to rise to or they tell me I do which is very sweet. "The baby is so delicious. It's ridiculous. My oldest son, he's like a little old man sometimes, he was holding him in his arms the other day and said, 'I can't look at him, Mummy, he's too cute.' So he's very loved by everyone." Eleven months on and the TV show that McElhone was filming when she heard the news of Kelly's death is about to be broadcast. It's the second series of Californication in which she stars with David Duchovny as the pined-for ex-girlfriend to his disaffected writer, Hank. After being separated for the duration of the first series, her character and Hank are reunited in this one. A third series has just been commissioned and it's been something of a surprise hit for Showtime, a cable channel in the US, and Channel Five who broadcast it here. "For me, it's a few months of the year, in summer, in LA. It's the kids' school holidays. It's a no-brainer. It's wonderful. It's not like signing your life away." She was an unlikely contender for the part. She'd never done series television before and her audition consisted of a conference call between the producers in LA and her in Hungary, where she was filming. "They just said, 'You've got a 20-minute phone conversation. Make us laugh.'" Evidently she did, because the next morning she was offered the part and accepted it with reservations. "I wanted to know whether the character was going to be 'the wife' or 'the girlfriend', which bores me to tears and is endemic. I think it's incumbent on actresses to bring something else to the part which isn't in the script. They were very up and open to stuff." It is an unusual role, though, given her background. After studying at Lamda, she was spotted aged 24 by a casting agent in a production of Shakespeare at the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre who put her forward for the lead role in the 1996 film Surviving Picasso, opposite Anthony Hopkins. It was her big break and was followed by, among others, Solaris, Steven Soderbergh's Tarkovsky remake in which she appeared as a hallucination of George Clooney's dead wife, The Truman Show in which she played opposite Jim Carrey, The Devil's Own with Brad Pitt and Ronin with Robert De Niro. I tell McElhone that I saw the pilot for Californication during "pilot week" in LA, when networks decide which shows to buy and thought it was funny and witty and loved the David Duchovny character. But what I don't like, I say, is that, since then, "there's almost a porn aesthetic that's been brought into it". "Almost? I think there is. You don't have to be polite." How do you feel about that? "The thing is that I'm not really privy to it. My character isn't involved in that. What's funny is, in LA anyway, it's women who often come up to me and say how much they love the show. It often occurs to me that no one, but no one comes up to me and says God, I find the sexuality in it offensive. Or I find the depiction of women in it offensive. Quite the opposite in fact." When she flew home for Kelly's funeral, the producers of Californication gave her the choice of whether to return to LA to continue filming the rest of the series or not. She went. The relationship between her and David Duchovny and their daughter is far and away the best part of Californication, although it's a variation on a familiar role she's played: the unattainable, idealised woman. Karen is a continuation of Rheya in Solaris and Sylvia in The Truman Show. What strikes me when I meet her is that it isn't actually her beauty that makes her so. She's more bohemian than on screen, scruffier, even. But what's unusual about her is that her looks, while striking, are only part of it. Even in the complexity of her grief, McElhone is amazingly articulate and despite having spent most of the past year dealing with death and the aftermath of death, what she expresses most is the joy of life. She stands by the extraordinary sentence she wrote in Kelly's obituary, of how, despite what happened to him, she still feels lucky. "I don't know where that comes from. Probably from him, from his attitude to life. I feel eternally... I'm not religious so using the word 'blessed' is a bit of a liberty... but I do feel that it couldn't have been better, who I bred with, who I was with for that 10 years, actually 12 years. It doesn't really matter what happens from here on in. Anything's a bonus. Just to get the boys through their stuff." It's not a question of moving on, she says. "You hear that a lot. But for me, there's not such a thing as moving on. I'll take it with me. I'll still have a journey and have different sort of experiences on the way. But he'll always be with me on that. Not in the same way obviously. But I'm never going to move away from him or move on from him. I just feel that because he's not alive any more, I can't talk anything current, because there isn't a current with him, there isn't a present. He's dead. I'm going to do a memorial service for him in six weeks so I'll be revisiting a lot of things then." Are you dreading the anniversary? "No. I'm really going to love it because it's a chance and an evening just to talk about him, to be with all the people who he really loved and loved him... and no, I'm going to relish every minute of it. Because understandably other people's lives do carry on and move away from that person because they don't have him in their lives every day, and they're not bringing up his children. So it might be the last time that everybody can be in the same room together, who was connected, which will be beautiful, I hope." When Steven Soderbergh worked with McElhone on Solaris, he said: "She reminded me of the great European actresses of the 60s and 70s, like Jeanne Moreau and Dominique Sanda. They were smart, sexy, complicated women. Not girls - women." I repeat his other quote about her: "She has all the tools to be one of those actresses that is in a lot of big movies, but I don't think she has the desire to see her personal life altered in any significant way." It's perhaps the only moment in the interview where there's a hint of something troubling beneath the surface. "It's been done for me really, hasn't it? I think I was ambitious. I still am. A lot of the stuff that was coming my way was stuff I just didn't want to do, so it might have seemed like lack of ambition to shy away from that, but if it sticks in your throat... I just wanted to do what I wanted to do and which I thought said something." But now she's the sole breadwinner...? "I have to work. I have to try and work non-stop, actually, to make things work." Financially or emotionally? "Financially. I always keep myself busy. I'm writing. Or I'm creating something. Or I'm doing stuff with the kids. I'm up incredibly early in the morning; I go to bed incredibly late at night. It's not a fear that if I don't work I won't know what I'll do with myself. But to keep the lifestyle we have. Which is not absurd but which is definitely privileged. They're at private schools and I want to keep them there because I don't want Martin going to be synonymous with our life changing... and it may be for the good or for the bad but I want the stability of their lives to remain intact as long as possible. "Somebody said something wonderful to me the other day, Martin's best mate, he said, 'But Tash, you talk about status quo, there is no such thing as status quo, things change all the time, and if this hasn't taught you that...' But they're both at schools they really love; they have really great friendships. "Also I want to give my baby the same opportunities that they have. It's very perverse this because I was going to send Theo to the local primary school, right behind us, but it was 2000 and they changed the catchment area because there were so many babies born, and he didn't get in." Kelly died intestate and the bureaucracy of his death has been "horrific. Horrific. Don't even go there. All I can say is that one really useful thing you could put in your article... can you please just say, to anyone who has a child, write a will. Even if you're 26. Just write one". She's been nothing if not busy. As well as dealing with the legal intricacies of death and giving birth to Rex, she's also been writing a comedy, "set around here". But then, she says, she hardly sleeps and, anyway, she was raised by journalists and loves writing. She tells a good story, lapsing into voices and accents, so maybe that's her next chapter, although first she's playing the abusive mother in the film of the misery memoir, The Kid, who seems to be the very antithesis of her more usual roles. "What I want is for middle-class mothers like me to sit there and go: 'There but for the grace of God I might be capable of that. But I have education, I have support, I have love in my life, I know how to love, I know how to forgive and I want my children; it wasn't something that was done to me.' All these things that I have chosen make my mothering easy for me. I happen to find motherhood a very natural state, but I know a lot of other people don't." She always wanted to be an actress, she says, and she became one, with little struggle, straight after leaving drama school. Shortly after, she met and married the love of her life (although they actually first met when she was still in the sixth form and he was at medical school). In an earlier interview, she said that she believed that everything happens for a reason. That she believes in a "sort of destiny". But then, when everything's going your way, that's not such a stretch. "And now?" I ask. "It's a tough one, isn't it? Extraordinary things have come about since Martin's death. And I don't know if that's to compensate... it's also an attitude, it's how you look at things. It's a choice how you perceive the events of your life. I think the difference between finding happiness, or moments of happiness, is how you choose to interpret things. That's a rather shocking responsibility. That we're responsible for our own happiness. It's not those around us. "But... my kids are still flourishing, it's remarkable to me. And growing and learning more and more. I did think that if perhaps the roots of the tree were gone, the branches would no longer flower, but they are. That's remarkable." It is. But so, in her own way, is Natascha McElhone. Replaying the tape later, it feels like I'm listening to some sort of life-therapy course. It's impossible not to marvel at her positivity. And while I'm sure it's not the full story of her year of grief, it's a profoundly moving one all the same. • The new series of Californication starts on 7 May on Fiver BiographyEarly life Born 14 December 1971 in London. Her parents separated when she was two and she was brought up by her Irish mother, journalist Noreen Taylor (maiden name McElhone), and Guardian columnist Roy Greenslade in Brighton. Studied at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. Career 1996 Plays Françoise Gilot in Merchant-Ivory film Surviving Picasso 1998 Appears in The Truman Show, and co-stars with Robert De Niro in Ronin 2002 Makes five films, including City of Ghosts and space thriller Solaris, in which she dances naked with George Clooney. 2006 Joins Californication as the ex-girlfriend of Hank Moody (David Duchovny). 2009 Stars with Pierce Brosnan in Heaven and Earth Personal life 1998 Marries plastic surgeon Martin Kelly, with whom she has two children. 2008 May: Martin dies of a heart attack. November: birth of their third child, Rex. She says "You don't know who anyone really is in LA." They say "There's an incredible grace to her work... a calmness in her style, a stillness almost that makes her seem, not necessarily older than she is, but from another time." Peter Weir, director Lisa Kjellsson |
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Torture? It probably killed more Americans than 9/11 |
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Torture? It probably killed more Americans than 9/11 A US major reveals the inside story of military interrogation in Iraq. By Patrick Cockburn, winner of the 2009 Orwell Prize for journalism The use of torture by the US has proved so counter-productive that it may have led to the death of as many US soldiers as civilians killed in 9/11, says the leader of a crack US interrogation team in Iraq. "The reason why foreign fighters joined al-Qa'ida in Iraq was overwhelmingly because of abuses at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib and not Islamic ideology," says Major Matthew Alexander, who personally conducted 300 interrogations of prisoners in Iraq. It was the team led by Major Alexander [a named assumed for security reasons] that obtained the information that led to the US military being able to locate Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the head of al-Qa'ida in Iraq. Zarqawi was then killed by bombs dropped by two US aircraft on the farm where he was hiding outside Baghdad on 7 June 2006. Major Alexander said that he learnt where Zarqawi was during a six-hour interrogation of a prisoner with whom he established relations of trust. Major Alexander's attitude to torture by the US is a combination of moral outrage and professional contempt. "It plays into the hands of al-Qa'ida in Iraq because it shows us up as hypocrites when we talk about human rights," he says. An eloquent and highly intelligent man with experience as a criminal investigator within the US military, he says that torture is ineffective, as well as counter-productive. "People will only tell you the minimum to make the pain stop," he says. "They might tell you the location of a house used by insurgents but not that it is booby-trapped." In his compelling book How to Break a Terrorist, Major Alexander explains that prisoners subjected to abuse usually clam up, say nothing, or provide misleading information. In an interview he was particularly dismissive of the "ticking bomb" argument often used in the justification of torture. This supposes that there is a bomb timed to explode on a bus or in the street which will kill many civilians. The authorities hold a prisoner who knows where the bomb is. Should they not torture him to find out in time where the bomb is before it explodes? Major Alexander says he faced the "ticking time bomb" every day in Iraq because "we held people who knew about future suicide bombings". Leaving aside the moral arguments, he says torture simply does not work. "It hardens their resolve. They shut up." He points out that the FBI uses normal methods of interrogation to build up trust even when they are investigating a kidnapping and time is of the essence. He would do the same, he says, "even if my mother was on a bus" with a hypothetical ticking bomb on board. It is quite untrue to imagine that torture is the fastest way of obtaining information, he says. A career officer, Major Alexander spent 14 years in the US air force, beginning by flying helicopters for special operations. He saw combat in Bosnia and Kosovo, was an air force counter-intelligence agent and criminal interrogator, and was stationed in Saudi Arabia, with an anti-terrorist role, during the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Some years later, the US army was short of interrogators. He wanted to help shape developments in Iraq and volunteered. Arriving in Iraq in early 2006 he found that the team he was working with were mostly dedicated, but young, men between 18 and 24. "Many of them had never been out of the States before," he recalls. "When they sat down to interrogate somebody it was often the first time they had met a Muslim." In addition to these inexperienced officers, Major Alexander says there was "an old guard" of interrogators using the methods employed at Guantanamo. He could not say exactly what they had been doing for legal reasons, though in the rest of the interview he left little doubt that prisoners were being tortured and abused. The "old guard's" methods, he says, were based on instilling "fear and control" in a prisoner. He refused to take part in torture and abuse, and forbade the team he commanded to use such methods. Instead, he says, he used normal US police interrogation techniques which are "based on relationship building and a degree of deception". He adds that the deception was often of a simple kind such as saying untruthfully that another prisoner has already told all. Before he started interrogating insurgent prisoners in Iraq, he had been told that they were highly ideological and committed to establishing an Islamic caliphate in Iraq, Major Alexander says. In the course of the hundreds of interrogations carried out by himself, as well as more than 1,000 that he supervised, he found that the motives of both foreign fighters joining al-Qa'ida in Iraq and Iraqi-born members were very different from the official stereotype. In the case of foreign fighters – recruited mostly from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Yemen and North Africa – the reason cited by the great majority for coming to Iraq was what they had heard of the torture in Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. These abuses, not fundamentalist Islam, had provoked so many of the foreign fighters volunteering to become suicide bombers. For Iraqi Sunni Arabs joining al-Qa'ida, the abuses played a role, but more often the reason for their recruitment was political rather than religious. They had taken up arms because the Shia Arabs were taking power; de-Baathification marginalised the Sunni and took away their jobs; they feared an Iranian takeover. Above all, al-Qa'ida was able to provide money and arms to the insurgents. Once, Major Alexander recalls, the top US commander in Iraq, General George Casey, came to visit the prison where he was working. Asking about what motivated the suspected al-Qa'ida prisoners, he was at first given the official story that they were Islamic Jihadi full of religious zeal. Major Alexander intervened to say that this really was not true and there was a much more complicated series of motivations at work. General Casey did not respond. The objective of Major Alexander's team was to find Zarqawi, the Jordanian born leader of al-Qa'ida who built it into a fearsome organisation. Attempts by US military intelligence to locate him had failed despite three years of trying. Major Alexander was finally able to persuade one of Zarqawi's associates to give away his location because the associate had come to reject his methods, such as the mass slaughter of civilians. What the major discovered was that many of the Sunni fighters were members of, or allied to, al-Qa'ida through necessity. They did not share its extreme, puritanical Sunni beliefs or hatred of the Shia majority. He says that General Casey had ignored his findings but he was pleased when General David Petraeus became commander in Iraq and began to take account of the real motives of the Sunni fighters. "He peeled back those Sunnis from al-Qa'ida," he says. In the aftermath of his experience in Iraq, which he left at the end of 2006, Major Alexander came to believe that the battle against the US using torture was more important than the war in Iraq. He sees President Obama's declaration against torture as "a historic victory", though he is concerned about loopholes remaining and the lack of accountability of senior officers. Reflecting on his own interrogations, he says he always monitored his actions by asking himself, "If the enemy was doing this to one of my troops, would I consider it torture?" His overall message is that the American people do not have to make a choice between torture and terror. How to Break a Terrorist: The US interrogators who used brains, not brutality, to take down the deadliest man in Iraq, by Matthew Alexander and John R Bruning (The Free Press) |
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Telegraph/UK: Obama's audacity of hype crumbles |
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Obama's audacity of hype crumbles As he approaches 100 days in office, the President faces a grim reality check. Paul Mason Last Updated: 4:54PM BST 26 Apr 2009 Buddleia has taken over large parts of downtown Gary, Indiana. The city, once home to 300,000 people, is down to just a third of that. There are mile after mile of deserted, derelict and abandoned homes; sub-zero winds blow in off Lake Michigan. "Gary, Indiana is like an eagle poised to fly," mayor Rudy Clay tells me, "All we need is the air of the fiscal stimulus beneath our wings and we'll soar once again and make America proud." The mayor has applied for $400 million out of Barack Obama's $787 billion fiscal stimulus plan. Top of his wish list are automatic weapons and Kevlar vests for the police, and some more police to tote them: last year, in this, the crime capital of the Midwest, he had to lay off police officers due to shortage of funds. The city symbolises the scale of the economic challenge facing Obama as he approaches 100 days in office. If the president is to deliver something more than the "audacity of hype", homes will have to be built in Gary, health care delivered, and a way found for its inhabitants to live on something more than benefits and debt. But much of America is in revolt against what needs to happen for this to be achieved. And Obama's own momentum on the economic front looks weak. There are three levers the federal government can pull in the face of this crisis: monetary easing, fiscal stimulus and bank recapitalisation. Obama has used all three but so far ineffectively. In each case, he has run into obstacles rooted deep in the US institutional set-up, indeed deep in the country's psyche. On monetary policy, Obama has remained a bystander to the efforts of Ben Bernanke at the Federal Reserve. Having reached close to zero interest rates in December, Bernanke announced the Fed would print money in an attempt to bring down real interest rates. Then he travelled to the London School of Economics to tell the world to reject the classic policy of "quantitative easing": the Fed would buy private-sector debts, not government bonds. Finally, on March 18, after a fractious argument within the Fed, he relented, adopting the classic form of the tactic on a massive scale. During this 90-day gap between thought and decisive action more than 1.5 million Americans lost their jobs. Monetary easing is beginning to work, but it ran into the two obstacles that seem to plague the Obama administration: inertia and free-market dogma. With the bank bail-out, momentum had already been lost because of the presidential transition. Henry Paulson abandoned his original policy of buying up toxic debts on Nov 25. Tim Geithner, his replacement, finally came up with a new plan on March 23. Known as the Public-Private Investment Programme P-PIP), it will buy up the bad debts at a generous 85 cents per dollar, allowing the very banks that are being bailed out to participate in the purchase. It provides a massive hidden subsidy from the taxpayer to the banks, say its critics. And, so far, it has not worked. The P-PIP draws scathing daily commentary on the US news channels. At the IMF's spring meetings the weekend, the fund's boss, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, placed heavy pressure on Obama to get his act together on the toxic debts. As with Paulson's original TARP plan, what stands in the way of credibility is the principle of avoiding nationalisation – even in part – and the determination to resolve the crisis on terms favourable to the banks. If there is a pattern emerging here it is not incompetence but, say Obama's critics, "capture". Both Bernanke and Geithner stood at the heart of the Bush policy elite during the days of dither and denial that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Obama, lacking credible economic heavyweights in his own circle, was obliged to reach into the ranks of Clinton-era Democrats. The irony of Larry Summers' appointment as chief economic adviser was not lost on historians of the credit crunch: Summers had hailed the 1999 law that deregulated Wall Street as "a major step toward the 21st century". Obama is surrounded by decision-makers who had "drunk the Kool Aid" during the subprime bubble and were profoundly committed to the neoliberal ideology of self-regulation that has now fallen apart. Only the fiscal stimulus truly bears Obama's chosen brand values of audacity and untaintedness. But this, too, is proving heavily problematic. In January, two Left-leaning members of Obama's transition team laid out radical objectives for the stimulus plan. It would "create or save" between three and four million jobs by the end of 2010 and boost GDP by 3.7 per cent. It would be delivered not primarily through tax cuts but by public spending. And, though construction and energy would account for a quarter of the job creation, more than a million extra health, education and social care jobs would be created, together with 800,000 public sector jobs saved at state level. The implication was clear: the whole shape of America would begin to change. The stimulus would achieve the administration's social objectives as well as a raw macroeconomic boost. But this has now run up against reality. In the first place, the mechanisms for turning public money into private-sector jobs are as crumbly as the concrete that holds up America's freeways. There are myriad agencies to go through, many of which are having trouble spending the money. I toured the Midwest with a list of the number of jobs to be created, district by district, issued by the federal government. It was based on demographics but seemed to bear no relationship to the job-creation plans of local-level governments. Then there are the politics. For a city such as Gary, redistribution is only possible if the state-level government plays ball. "The only obstacle in the way," says Rudy Clay, "is the mindset of the folks who have the decision to make it happen". This is code for Indiana's Republican governor. Privately, city officials believe they'll be lucky to get half the cash they asked for. Allocating the cash, however, is only half the story. Two hours down the road from Gary, in the town of Elkhart, you get to the root of the problem. At 19 per cent, it suffers the highest unemployment in America, because the "recreational vehicle" industry centred in the town has collapsed. I found a group of unemployed RV workers busy constructing a timber-frame housing complex for homeless families. The fiscal stimulus in action? Well, no – this is a voluntary project run by a local church. And though the men have had their benefits increased and their health care plans subsidised by stimulus money, they are unanimous in their scorn for the policy itself. "We don't want unemployment benefits, we just want to work," they say. Last week, Republican campaigners against the stimulus held "tax tea parties". But opposition to the stimulus goes much wider than this. It is visceral, widespread and real. Elkhart's Republican congressman Mark Souder sums up the objection: "Historically, our model has a bit more of a boom-bust element to it, but every time we've had these busts we came roaring out. If we change to become more like Europe, sure we'll stabilise. But we'll never be the growth engine and the protector of the world again." As Obama's 100th day approaches, the dangers looming on the economic front are clear: neither on monetary, fiscal nor banking policy is there a tangibly successful programme in place. Meanwhile, the economic pain is getting worse, encouraging his opponents to chip away at his credibility. The bank bail-out will transfer large amounts of taxpayers' money to the bankers, while at least some of the fiscal stimulus money will be redistributed to the poor and to the welfare system. Middle America, already mad at both policies at the gut level of economic principles, will get even madder if they don't work. Paul Mason's book 'Meltdown: The End of The Age of Greed' (Verso, £7.99) is published today. His report on the US fiscal stimulus is on 'Newsnight', BBC Two, on Wednesday. |
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