Danger Close At Hand

By: Robert Maginnis – Human Events

It is an oppressive, oil-rich, terrorist-supporting, atomic-seeking, missile-acquiring, arms-proliferating and American-hating regime. Hint: Iran is one of this Latin American country’s few allies.

Venezuela, the culprit regime, is 5 times closer to American shores than the Persian menace and potentially far more dangerous. Yet President Barack Obama has no visible Venezuela policy to counter the growing threat.

Last year when Obama met Venezuela’s leftist leader Hugo Chavez, he smiled, shook the man’s hand then later explained that showing “courtesy” wasn’t “a sign of weakness.” But the South American pariah is modeling itself after radical regimes Iran and Cuba while Obama just smiles.

Consider the mounting threat posed by Venezuela, a nation only a couple days’ drive down the Pan American highway from Texas.

Chavez is radicalizing Venezuela with the help of Cuban intelligence agents, who are embedded throughout his government. Like Fidel Castro, his mentor, Chavez incorporated Cuban-style militias in the armed forces and criminalized protests to silence opposition.

This summer Chavez arrested anti-communist activist Alejandro Pena Esclusa, a former Venezuelan presidential candidate who opposes Chavez’s Marxist agenda. Esclusa predicted Chavez would face so much popular discontent in this fall’s elections that he would revert to foreign powers like Iran for protection.

Last year Esclusa also wrote “Chavez is providing the Venezuelan territory to Middle Eastern terrorist groups, not only to help him defend his revolution inside the country, but as a powerful deterrent against his international adversaries [read U.S.].”

As Esclusa predicted Chavez lost his super-majority this fall and then conducted a massive power grab. This month he pushed through the lame duck session of Venezuela’s National Assembly measures that granted him temporary power to decree laws, restrict Internet content and broadcast-media freedoms, to punish legislators who switch parties and allow him to nationalize private firms.

Incoming legislators labeled Chavez’s moves a “coup d’etat,” and one media outlet claims Chavez intends “to implant a communist system in Venezuela through a totalitarian and militarized state.”

Chavez has indeed turned to Iran for protection as Esclusa predicted. Last month the German magazine Die Welt revealed Iranian plans to establish a ballistic missile base in Venezuela, likely in response to American plans to station an anti-ballistic missile system in Europe that targets Tehran’s growing threat. The Iranian plans, which also support Chavez’s aim to deter the United States, were allegedly made during the Venezuelan’s October trip to Tehran.

Further, Die Welt reported Tehran plans to base long-range Shabab 3 missiles in Venezuela that are capable of reaching the United States. The basing agreement gives Chavez permission to use the missiles in case of an “emergency” for “national needs.” The Shabab 3 can carry three types of warheads: conventional, biological and chemical.

This fall we also learned Chavez has nuclear ambitions that might include an atomic bomb. Not surprisingly, Chavez has staunchly defended ally Iran’s nuclear program, which he insists is not making atomic weapons despite U.S. suspicions.

Chavez admitted to the press “We’re taking on the project of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes” but no one should be surprised when Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sells Chavez, whom Ahmadinejad calls “brother,” a uranium enrichment starter kit for a Latin bomb.

Chavez has long expressed an interest in developing a nuclear energy program, but U.S. officials, according to cables released by WikiLeaks, scoffed at Chavez’s nuclear ambitions due to the lack of domestic expertise.  However, the issue resurfaced this fall because of the case of a New Mexico physicist accused by U.S. authorities of offering to help Venezuela develop a nuclear weapon.

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev turned the tables on Venezuela’s nuclear naysayers when he agreed this October to build a reactor for his Latin American partner. “We want our partner Venezuela to have a full range of energy possibilities,” Medvedev said. Not coincidentally, Venezuela and Iran are reportedly developing a reliable source of uranium in that country, and no telling what other joint projects the rogues are cooking up.

Venezuela also supports regional and international terrorist groups like its ally Iran, which sponsors the Lebanese-based Hezbollah, known for the 1984 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut. A 2010 Pentagon report on Iran confirms Tehran provides Hezbollah with weapons and equipment to strike and threaten U.S. interests worldwide. And Reuters news service reported in 2009 that Israeli officials confirmed the Venezuela regime hosts Hezbollah’s major outpost in South America.

In 2003 Gen. James Hill, then-commander of the U.S. Southern Command, confirmed the presence of Arab militant terrorist groups – presumably Hezbollah — in Venezuela and that government’s ties to narco-trafficking terrorist organizations in Colombia. Further, a 2009 U.S. Government Accountability Office report states terrorist-related drug corruption has reached the ministerial level in Venezuela.

Chavez, for example, just promoted loyalist Gen. Henry Rangel Silva to the top military position in the Defense Ministry. In 2008, the U.S. Treasury Department listed Silva as a drug “kingpin” involved in financing the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia a k a FARC, a terrorist organization with drug trafficking ties.

Venezuela’s terrorist and drug trafficking corruption links threaten the United States. Specifically, leaked 2009 Washington diplomatic cables state captured FARC computer files show Venezuela tried to arm the terror group.  Those cables expressed concern that Venezuelan missiles acquired by FARC might end up in the hands of Mexican cartels that “are actively seeking to acquire powerful and highly sophisticated weapons” and operate along the U.S.-Mexican border.

Apparently, Venezuelan arms have already landed in terrorist hands. A 2009 U.S. cable noted Russian ammunition sold to Venezuela was found in FARC hands and in 2008 Colombian officials found Swedish AT-4 anti-tank rockets and Russian SA-24 shoulder-fired, surface-to-air missiles sold to Venezuela were discovered in a FARC cache.

Unfortunately, the missile proliferation problem will likely get worse. The Russians reported to the U.N. Register of Conventional Arms earlier this year Venezuela’s purchase of 1,800 SA-24 missiles. The United States failed to stop that delivery, according to leaked cables, amid concerns Caracas might pass missiles to the FARC or Mexican drug gangs. The SA-24 is effective up to 19,000 feet.

Finally, Venezuela is arming itself for an unknown threat. In 2010, Russia gave Venezuela a $4 billion credit to buy more weapons such as tanks, fighter jets and air defense systems. This weapons credit deal comes two years after Russia delivered 472 missiles with launchers, 44 attack helicopters and 24 combat aircraft, according to U.N. records.

Caracas’ new arms buying spree threatens hemispheric security because Venezuela will continue its proliferation practices. The 2010 Russian sale of a Kalashnikov rifle factory to Venezuela is problematic given Chavez’s Marxist revolutionary ambitions and ties to leftist Latin groups. Potentially worse is Venezuela’s interest and Russia’s willingness to sell Chavez sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft missiles batteries, which could be used at home or transferred to Iran in violation of U.N. sanctions to protect Tehran’s nuclear sites from possible Israeli or American air strikes.

Chavez transformed Venezuela into a totalitarian and militarized state that threatens hemispheric security. Despite the inevitable cries of “Yankee Imperialism,” President Obama urgently needs a substantive policy that includes possible military action to get rid of this threat to the Americas.

Please note: These stories are located outside of Prophecy Today’s website. Prophecy Today is not responsible for their content and does not necessarily agree with the views expressed therein. These articles are provided for your information.

01/06/10

* Is Mossad Systematically Killing Iranian Nuclear Scientists? Iran’s state-run Fars News Agency (FNA) is accusing Israel’s international intelligence agency of killing the country’s nuclear scientists.

* China stealth plane still ‘years away’, says Pentagon The US is downplaying pictures which appear to show a working prototype of a Chinese stealth aircraft, invisible to radar.

* US to send 1,400 additional marines to Afghanistan The US is to send an additional 1,400 marines to southern Afghanistan in an effort to counter a Taliban offensive, a Pentagon official has said.

* Ashton meets Abbas, Fayyad; urges return to talks EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad separately.

* Egypt on alert as Copts gather for Christmas Eve Coptic Christians are preparing to celebrate Christmas Eve amid tight security after a bomb attack on a church in Egypt in which 23 died.

* Arab states work to finalize anti-settlement draft A group of Arab states launched negotiations on a resolution against Israeli building in West Bank settlements.

* Mindsets and geography: China changes the map half a world away In 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, after agreeing to dismember Czechoslovakia to appease Hitler, described it as “a quarrel in a far-away country between people of whom we know nothing.”

* Netanyahu to tell Mubarak: We won’t let Hamas and Hezbollah disturb the quiet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Sharm el-Sheikh on Thursday as part of an effort to revive stalled Middle East peace talks.

* Hamas, Winner of PA Elections, Teaches: Destroy Israel A Hamas member of the PA parliament visited and emphasized his organization’s commitment to liberate all of Palestine.

* Ivory Coast: Deadly ethnic clashes in Duekoue At least 14 people have died in ethnic clashes in Ivory Coast between groups that support opposing sides in the crisis over the disputed election.

01/05/10

* Blair: Serious trouble if no talks soon The Quartet Special Envoy to the Middle East Tony Blair said Tuesday on CNN that Israel and the Palestinians will be in serious trouble if they don’t begin talks in the near future.

* PM, Blair meet as peace process returns to int’l agenda The EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, meanwhile, is expected to arrive on Wednesday for meetings in Jerusalem with Israeli leaders.

* ‘Feminism’ in Gaza: Women Train as Suicide Bombers “Terrorist feminists” in Hamas-controlled Gaza are training to be suicide bombers and to shoot machine guns to kill Israelis.

* Hearings on the ‘radicalization of the American Muslim community’? Not ‘blather’ but ‘sensible’ As a result of the November elections, in which Republicans won control of the House of Representatives, Congressman Peter King is the new Chairman of the Homeland Security Committee.

* Muslim School in Jerusalem Teaches Children to Seek Death The Palestinian Media Watch organization, which monitors PA media, often finds cases of incitement to terrorism and hatred of Israel, including incitement targeting young children.

* EU pushes Mideast talks, says ‘no alternative’ to negotiated deal Progress in Middle East peace talks is urgently needed because there is “no alternative” to a negotiated deal.

* World Bank issues its 1st yuan bonds in Hong Kong The World Bank is issuing its first bonds denominated in China’s yuan in Hong Kong.

* Anti-US cleric Muqtada al-Sadr returns to Iraq Iraqi officials say anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has returned to Iraq after a nearly three-year absence.

* UN Nixes Lebanese Attempt to Stop Israeli Offshore Drilling The United Nations has rejected an attempt by Lebanon to stop Israel from drilling for oil and natural gas in the Mediterranean.

* Egypt Church Bombing Fuels Sectarian Rift It was a tragic year for Egypt’s minority Coptic Christian community that began with a drive-by shooting at a church in southern Egypt, and ended in deadly clashes near Cairo after authorities halted construction of a church.

A Triage to Save the Ruins of Babylon

By: Steven Lee Myers – The New York Times

The damage done to the ruins of ancient Babylon is visible from a small hilltop near the Tower of Babel, whose biblical importance is hard to envision from what is left of it today.

Across the horizon are guard towers, concertina wire and dirt-filled barriers among the palm trees; encroaching farms and concrete houses from this village and others; and the enormous palace that Saddam Hussein built in the 1980s atop the city where Nebuchadnezzar II ruled.

Something else is visible, too: earthen mounds concealing all that has yet to be discovered in a city that the prophet Jeremiah called “a gold cup in the Lord’s hands, a cup that made the whole earth drunk.”

On the hillside during one of his many visits to the ruins, Jeff Allen, a conservationist working with the World Monuments Fund, said: “All this is unexcavated. There is great potential at this site. You could excavate the street plan of the entire city.”

That is certainly years away given the realities of today’s Iraq. But for the first time since the American invasion in 2003, after years of neglect and violence, archaeologists and preservationists have once again begun working to protect and even restore parts of Babylon and other ancient ruins of Mesopotamia. And there are new sites being excavated for the first time, mostly in secret to avoid attracting the attention of looters, who remain a scourge here.

The World Monuments Fund, working with Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, has drafted a conservation plan to combat any further deterioration of Babylon’s mud-brick ruins and reverse some of the effects of time and Mr. Hussein’s propagandistic and archaeologically specious re-creations.

In November, the State Department announced a new $2 million grant to begin work to preserve the site’s most impressive surviving ruins. They include the foundation of the Ishtar Gate, built in the sixth century B.C. by Nebuchadnezzar’s father, Nabopolassar, and adorned with brick reliefs of the Babylonian gods Marduk and Adad. (The famous blue-glazed gate that Nebuchadnezzar commissioned was excavated in the early 20th century and rebuilt in the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.)

The objective is to prepare the site and other ruins — from Ur in the south to Nimrud in the north — for what officials hope will someday be a flood of scientists, scholars and tourists that could contribute to Iraq’s economic revival almost as much as oil.

The Babylon project is Iraq’s biggest and most ambitious by far, a reflection of the ancient city’s fame and its resonance in Iraq’s modern political and cultural heritage.

“This is one of the great projects we have, and it is the first,” Qais Hussein Rashid, the director of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, said in an interview in Baghdad. “We want to have it as a model for all the other sites.”

The task at hand is daunting, though, and the threats to the site abundant. In the case of some of the Hussein-era reconstructions, they are irreversible. The American invasion and the carnage that followed brought archaeological and preservation work to a halt across the country, leaving ruins to wither or, in the case of looting, much worse.

The American military turned Babylon into a base. It was later occupied by Polish troops and, though it was returned to the control of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage in 2004, the detritus of a military presence still scars the site.

The World Monuments Fund has been carrying out what amounts to archaeological triage since it began its conservation plan in 2009. It has created computer scans to provide precise records of the damage to the ruins and identified the most pernicious threats, starting with erosion caused by salty groundwater. “What we’ve got to do is create a stable environment,” Mr. Allen said at the site in November. “Right now it’s on the fast road to falling apart.”

The wicking of groundwater into mud bricks, compounded by a modern concrete walkway and the excavations conducted by the German archaeologist Robert Koldewey more than a century ago, have already eaten away some of the 2,500-year-old brick reliefs at the Ishtar Gate’s base.

“They took care of Ishtar Gate only from the inside, because you had visiting leaders and dignitaries who would come,” said Mahmoud Bendakir, an architect who is working with the fund, referring to the site’s caretakers during the Hussein era. “The outside is a disaster.”

The grant from the United States will pay for repairs to channel the water away from the gate’s foundation, which stands several yards beneath the surrounding area. Similar repairs are planned for two of Babylon’s temples, Ninmakh and Nabu-sha-Khare, the most complete sets of ruins, though they too suffer from erosion and harmful restorations with modern bricks.

“It’s difficult to say which is doing more,” Mr. Allen said, “but the two together are nearly toxic for the preservation of monuments.”

The American reconstruction team has refurbished a modern museum on the site, as well as a model of the Ishtar Gate that for decades served as a visitors’ entrance. Inside the museum is one of the site’s most valuable relics: a glazed brick relief of a lion, one of 120 that once lined the processional way into the city.

The museum, with three galleries, is scheduled to open this month, receiving its first visitors since 2003. And with new security installed, talks are under way to return ancient Babylonian artifacts from the National Museum in Baghdad.

The fate of Babylon is already being disputed by Iraqi leaders, with antiquities officials clashing with local authorities over when to open it to visitors and how to exploit the site for tourism that, for the most part, remains a goal more than a reality. Even now they are clashing over whether the admission fee should go to the antiquities board or the provincial government.

Another of the more dire threats to the site has been unchecked development inside the boundaries of the old city walls, enclosing nearly three square miles. The fund’s project has plotted the old walls on a map, causing trepidation among Iraqis who live along them now.

They fear the preservation of Babylon’s ruins will force them from their homes and farmlands, as when Mr. Hussein expelled residents of a local village to build his palace. “They took them from their lands,” said Minshed al-Mamuri, who runs a civic organization for widows and orphans here. “It’s psychological for them.”

Mr. Allen, who oversees the fund’s work, said the preservation of Babylon would require collaboration among competing constituencies that is extremely rare amid Iraq’s political instability.

“We’re looking at not just archaeology,” he said of the project. “We’re looking at the economic opportunities and viability for local people. They need to see something out of this site. That’s possible, and possible at the same time to preserve the integrity of the site.”

Please note: These stories are located outside of Prophecy Today’s website. Prophecy Today is not responsible for their content and does not necessarily agree with the views expressed therein. These articles are provided for your information.

01/04/11

* Tower of Babel’s Ruins Waiting for Archaeologists Archaeologists are hoping to save the ruins of the Biblical era Tower of Babel, located in Iraq.

* A Triage to Save the Ruins of Babylon The damage done to the ruins of ancient Babylon is visible from a small hilltop near the Tower of Babel.

* Iran invites foreign diplomats to nuclear sites Iran has invited foreign diplomats to tour its nuclear facilities, ahead of fresh talks with key world powers over its controversial nuclear program.

* China’s strategic game plan in the Persian Gulf Realpolitik is now a more important guide to Chinese political thinking than revolutionary ardor.

* Al Qaida tied to bombing of church in Egypt Al Qaida is believed to have conducted a mass-casualty strike in Egypt.

* UK: Number of Muslim converts doubled in 10 years The number of Britons choosing to become Muslims has nearly doubled in the past decade.

* Egypt’s pope: State must address Copts woes In rare criticism, the head of Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox Church has called on the government to address Christian grievances about discrimination.

* Guard kills governor of Pakistan’s Punjab province The governor of Pakistan’s central Punjab province, a senior member of the ruling party, was shot dead by one of his bodyguards in Islamabad on Tuesday.

* Islamists ‘build their scapegoat’ for church bombing The New Year’s Eve suicide bombing at an Egyptian Coptic church that killed 21 people is stoking fears of a new onslaught against Christians by radical Islamists.

* Indirect Talks with Syria to Trade ‘Apples for Water’ Israel and Syria are involved in indirect talks for a novel proposal to export Israeli apples in return for Syrian water.

01/03/11

* WikiLeaks quotes IDF chief: Iran could hit Israel within 12 minutes Gabi Ashkenazi told US officials in 2009 that Israel was preparing for war against Hamas, Hezbollah and that rocket threat against Israel is “more serious than ever”.

* Sabretooth cats threatened most ancient human ancestor Humankind’s oldest known ancestor probably lived in fear of several large sabretooth cats that roamed the same ancient lakeside habitat in Africa.

* Alexandria church bomb: Egypt police on high alert Hundreds of Egyptian riot police are deployed outside the church in Alexandria where 21 Christians were killed in a New Year’s Day bomb attack.

* Turkish IHH Continues to Lead Incitement Drive The Turkish IHH, which directed the ‘Free Gaza’ flotilla led by the Mavi Marmara, continues at the forefront of an anti-Israeli hate and incitement campaign.

* Opposition groups urge Jordanian government to severe ties with Israel Statement comes in the wake of reports that national security chief Uzi Arad met secretly with Jordanian FM in Amman last week.

* Ex-Lebanon president: Extremists waging genocide against Christians in Middle East Following New Year’s suicide bombing at a church in Egypt, Amin Gemayel urges Middle East leaders to give Christian communities a larger political role.

* Obama Tries to Reassert His Christian Bona Fides, With Words and Deeds Barack Obama went to church on the Sunday after Christmas in his native Hawaii, worshiping at a multidenominational service at a chapel at Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

* Iran says Bushehr plant nearly ready to join power grid Salehi tells Iranian television that progress being made at power plant, says fuel has been pumped into core for several months.

* Russian president’s visit to Israel cancelled due to Foreign Ministry strike Foreign Ministry workers threatened to cause problems upon Dmitry Medvedev’s arrival, so the planned visit was cancelled to avoid an embarrassing diplomatic incident.

* China in nuclear power advance China has developed its own technologies that will enable it to reprocess spent nuclear fuel, state television has reported.

01/01/11

* Egypt bomb kills 21 at Alexandria Coptic church President Hosni Mubarak has urged Egypt’s Muslims and Christians to stand united against terrorism after a bombing outside a church in Alexandria.

* Pope Benedict XVI to hold religious peace summit Pope Benedict XVI has said he will organise a summit in Assisi with religious heads to discuss how they can promote world peace.

* Washington Post calls Russian regime untrustworthy after endorsing New START A Washington Post editorial on Nov. 19 endorsed Senate passage of the New START treaty with Russia.

* Estonian cashpoints begin pumping out euro-notes Cashpoints in Estonia began issuing euro banknotes at around 20 minutes past midnight local time on Saturday (1 January) in a development marking the fourth phase of expansion for the troubled single currency.

* Please, not again Without boldness from Barack Obama there is a real risk of war in the Middle East.

* ‘US secretly talking to Damascus about Israel-Syria peace’ Kuwaiti paper ‘Al-Rai’ reports Syrian officials told Dennis Ross they are prepared to distance themselves from Iran, Hizbullah and Hamas.

* Top Israeli news story of 2010: The Gaza flotilla raid Like other military and diplomatic conflagrations in the past, the Gaza flotilla’s aftermath was most felt in its exposure of Israeli weaknesses.

* NKorea warns war would bring ‘nuclear holocaust’ North Korea welcomed the new year Saturday with a call for better ties with rival South Korea, warning that war “will bring nothing but a nuclear holocaust.”

* Website aims to be Facebook for gays in military After nearly two decades of hearing “don’t ask, don’t tell,” gay U.S. military men and women are now hearing, “do ask, do tell,” and even, “find a friend” from a new social network website, Out Military.

* Palestinians vow revenge following protestor’s death Member of Bilin popular committee says ‘Israel’s lethal response to our campaign will not be ignored’ following death of Jawaher Abu Rahma who inhaled large quantities of tear gas in anti-fence protest

Next Year’s Wars


Across the globe today, you’ll find almost three dozen raging conflicts, from the valleys of Afghanistan to the jungles of the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the streets of Kashmir. But what are the next crises that might erupt in 2011? Here are a few worrisome spots that make our list.


Côte d’Ivoire
Côte d’Ivoire is on the brink of what may be a very bad 2011. After a five-year delay, Côte d’Ivoire held presidential elections on Oct. 31. A peaceful first round of voting was commended by the international community, but the runoff between incumbent Laurent Gbagbo and former Prime Minister Alassane Ouattara was marred by clashes and allegations of fraud on both sides.
The international community, including the United Nations, the African Union, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), former colonial power France, and the United States, has recognized Outtara as the victor, but this has not prevented Gbagbo, with the backing of senior military officials and the Constitutional Council, from taking the oath of office. Both politicians have named prime ministers and governments as tension mounts and protests occur in the streets. The United Nations has reported disappearances, rape, and at least two dozen deaths so far.
Worst case scenario: Gbagbo stays in power, armed conflict between the supporters of each side plunges the country into civil war. Best case scenario: Gbagbo succumbs to international appeals and steps down. But it’s not clear how things could get better from here. The international community has already ratcheted up pressure, including financial restrictions and travel bans. And the United Nations renewed the mandate of its peacekeeping operation there, despite Gbagbo calling for its immediate departure.
It’s very possible that Cote d’Ivoire will take a turn for the worse in 2011. Gbagbo and Ouattara both have heavily armed supporters who seem ready to fight for the long haul.


Colombia 
At first glance, Colombia’s prospects for 2011 look bright. The country’s new president, Juan Manuel Santos, has surprised many former critics with his bold reform proposals, many of which are aimed at addressing the root causes of the country’s 46-year civil conflict against leftist rebels. He has mended relations with neighbouring Venezuela and Ecuador, committed to protect human rights advocates, and proposed legislation to help resettle the country’s four million displaced.
The news is not all good, however. Despite a series of strategic losses in recent years — from territory to key leadership — the country’s leftist guerrillas, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), still maintain about 8,000 armed troops and perhaps twice that number of supporters. The rebels killed some 30 police in the weeks after Santos’s inauguration, clearly to make a point. Meanwhile, new illegal armed groups have sprung up to capture the drug trafficking market, their ranks filled with former paramilitary fighters. These gangs are largely responsible for the rising incidence of urban violence; homicide rates have gone up by over 100 percent in Colombia’s second city, Medellín, last year.
If these new armed groups are not contained, Colombia stands to regress in its long fight to finally root out the drug trade — and the militancy it fuels. In such a scenario, FARC could see a comeback, restarting its campaign of terror in the country’s major cities. As has been the case so often in Colombia’s recent history, it would be the civilian population who would suffer most from such a return to conflict.
Yet the opposite scenario is equally likely in the coming months. Santos has worked with his counterparts in Venezuela and Ecuador to increase border surveillance, putting pressure on illegal armed groups holed up there. Under such pressure, FARC may even welcome the chance to start talks with the government about disarmament and reintegration. Much rests in this government’s hands.


Zimbabwe
Keep an eye on Zimbabwe in 2011 as the country’s “unity” government — joining longtime President Robert Mugabe with opposition leader Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai — will warrant its conciliatory name less and less by the day. The flashpoint next year? Elections. Both men want to hold them — but they don’t agree about what Zimbabweans should be voting on.
Mugabe and Tsvangirai were never going to be fast friends. Since the two were brought together in February 2009, following a 2008 election that Tsvangirai won (but his opponent refused to recognize), Mugabe has continued to monopolize the real levers of power. Despite Tsvangirai’s protests, it’s Mugabe who still holds sway over the army, the security forces, and all the state functions that generate revenue.
Earlier this fall, Mugabe declared that he wanted the unity government to end in 2011. He wants full elections mid-next year, and his party, ZANU-PF, is giving every indication that it will employ the same coercive tactics used in elections past to deliver victory to Mugabe. Tsvangirai’s idea of the 2011 ballot is quite different: he wants to pass a new constitution.
The row over elections has pushed the nominal two-year truce between Mugabe and Tsvangirai toward the verge of collapse. Open violence could break out around the elections unless regional and international mediators negotiate a compromise and bring real pressure to bear on Mugabe to play by the rules.


Iraq
Iraq today is in far better shape than it was in 2007, when nearly two dozen Iraqis were dying each day in suicide bombings. But it’s still far from out of the woods. And these days, it’s not militants but the country’s politics that post the biggest threat. The new government, formed in December after nine months of wrangling, is weak and lacks the institutions to rule effectively. Iraq’s bureaucracies are nascent and fragile, and its security forces remain heavily dependent on U.S. training as well as logistics and intelligence support. Meanwhile, grievances abound — from minority groups to repatriated refugees — and it is unlikely that the state will be able to appease these many political demands. Sectarian violence resurfaces in fits and spurts, and is far from quashed entirely; approximately 300 Iraqis died in violence in November.
Iraq’s neighbors could exploit the country’s ongoing political turmoil to gain influence and sway, particularly Iran, which has long supported Shiite militants. Insurgents also await an opportunity to capitalize on political discord. At the same time, U.S. troops will be largely — if not entirely — withdrawn by the end of next year. And lacking that safety net, it would take very little for the country to lapse back into conflict. 
That course is not inevitable, however. More likely, Iraq will continue on its current trajectory, retaining enough stability to keep its citizens relatively safe, even if services remain deficient. But in a muddle-through scenario, it may be the best the country can reasonably hope for as it emerges from an 8-year U.S. occupation.


Venezuela 
Over the next 12 months, watch for Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez to take his brand of 21st-century socialism to the extremes. Having lost his majority in Parliament in September, Chávez has since been working hard to ensure that the new, opposition legislature will be irrelevant by the time it is sworn in in January. The Venezuelan president has consolidated control over the military and police, seized more private companies, and won temporary “decree powers” from the outgoing, pro-government National Assembly.
Chávez’s power grab comes as the country’s economic, social, and security problems are mounting. Violence has spiked dramatically in urban areas; there were some 19,000 homicides in 2009 out of a population of 28 million. In recent years, Venezuela has become a major drug-trafficking corridor, home to foreign and domestic cartels alike. State security forces have also been accused of participating in criminal activity. Meanwhile, Chávez has escalated — rather than soothed — the situation with fiery, partisan rhetoric that seems to egg on a violent suppression of the opposition. That message has an audience; government-allied street gangs in Caracas stand ready to defend his revolution with Kalashnikovs.


Sudan
The fate of Sudan in 2011 will be set early, on January 9, when a referendum on southern self-determination is scheduled to take place, and which will likely result in independence for the south. Two decades of war came to an end in Sudan in 2005 with the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). But as the agreement enters its last stages, however, that delicate peace will be tested. While securing the referendum has been an international priority, the long-term stability of the region relies on the ability of north and south Sudan to forge a positive post-CPA relationship. 
If matters go well, the January referendum will take place smoothly, with its results respected by the government in Khartoum. This would provide the perfect platform for negotiations on post-referendum arrangements to be successfully concluded. But should the vote go poorly, we might witness the reignition of conflict between north and south and an escalation of violence in Darfur, all of which could potentially draw in regional states. At this point, nothing is certain.
Finally, there’s the tricky matter of creating a new, independent Southern Sudan, which many are already dubbing a pre-failed state. The border remains undecided — no small matter since the contested middle ground happens to sit on a large oil field. Meanwhile in Juba, the nascent capital, institutions and services would urgently need to be built from scratch.


Mexico
It has been four years since Mexican President Felipe Calderón declared war on the country’s drug lords. During that time, 30,000 people have fallen victim to the conflict, many of them along the northern border with the United States, largely as a result of in-fighting among rival gangs vying for control of trafficking corridors. Today, Ciudad Juarez, a border city near Texas, competes with Caracas as the most deadly city in the world. Over the last 12 months, the violence has spread to Mexico’s economic and cultural hubs that were once considered immune from drug infiltration. To the north, Mexico’s organized crime routes now reach into nearly every metropolitan area of the United States.
In short, despite a $400 million annual aid package from the United States, and big boosts in funding for the military, it’s far from clear whether the government of Mexico is winning — or can win — this battle.
During the last year in particular, Calderón has been criticized for the conduct of the narco war. Not only is it difficult to pinpoint clear progress, but for many, life has visibly deteriorated since the crackdown began. Twenty times more Mexicans have died during the last four years than Americans have in the entire war in Afghanistan. Two gubernatorial candidates and 11 mayors have been assassinated. The press is under increasing pressure to self-censor. One paper in Ciudad Juárez went as far as asking, in an open letter to the cartels, what it was that they were allowed to publish.
“Winning” would require a hard look at the Mexican military and police, which have been credibly accused of committing flagrant abuses while fighting the drug gangs. The judicial system likewise needs strengthening to bring the guilty to fair trial. And, of course, much depends on Mexico’s northern neighbor: America remains the largest market for drugs in the world, and so long as U.S. users demand product, the cartels will keep the supply flowing.


Guatemala
Mexico’s drug war is also sending shockwaves throughout Latin America. Under pressure from the Mexican state, the most infamous cartels are seeking friendlier ground and finding it in Guatemala, where the state is weak and the institutions are fragile. In the worst case scenario for 2011, Guatemala could be host to a perpetual turf war of attrition between these various cartels, all competing to control drug trafficking routes — and increasingly human-trafficking corridors — to the United States.
So far, Guatemala’s best ally in fighting back has been the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG), a tribunal-like institution set up to root out corrupt and cartel-tainted officials. But its mandate ends in 2011 and its star prosecutor recently resigned, claiming that the political leadership was thwarting his work. Presidential elections are slotted for August, but early polls suggest a polarized nation, with around 20 candidates and no clear front runner. That’s just the sort of uncertainty that cartels are good at exploiting.


Haiti
Nature had it in for Haiti in 2010, but it may be politics that batters the small island country in the coming year. The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere began the year with a devastating January earthquake that killed more than 300,000, a deadly cholera outbreak, and a tortuously slow reconstruction process, which remains way off the pace and beset with difficulties. A November 28 presidential election, which should have led to the election of a new, legitimate government, remains wedged in an impasse over allegations of fraud. The winner won’t be decided until a run-off vote is held in January, but protests have already erupted over what some saw as the unfair exclusion of certain candidates in the second round. At least a dozen lives have been lost in the street clashes so far.
Already, Haiti was on the verge of a social breakdown. Today, more than 1 million Haitians remain homeless in the ruined capital. The government, whose ranks and infrastructure were devastated by the earthquake, has no capacity to deliver services or provide security. And international aid groups and U.N. peacekeepers can only plug those gaps temporarily. Relief work has also been hampered by a lack of funding. Despite big promises from international donors, dollars have been slow to trickle into the country.
This precarious situation will make for an enormous challenge if and when a new government does at last come to power next year. The run-off election will mark a year since the earthquake, with little improvement in the everyday lives of Haitians, whose patience is running out.


Tajikistan
Tajikistan, a land of striking beauty, grinding poverty, and rapacious leaders, could well become the next stomping ground for guerrillas — Central Asians and other Muslims from the former Soviet Union — who have been fighting alongside the Taliban for years and may now be thinking of returning home to settle scores with the region’s brutal and corrupt leaders.
Run since 1992 by Emomali Rahmon, a post-Soviet strongman, Tajikistan has been hollowed out by top-to-bottom corruption. A U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks has an American diplomat noting that “From the President down to the policeman on the street, government is characterized by cronyism and corruption. Rahmon and his family control the country’s major businesses, including the largest bank, and they play hardball to protect their business interests, no matter the cost to the economy writ large.”
Not surprisingly in such an environment, most public services — including the health system — have all but collapsed. The economy survives on remittances from migrant laborers in Russia, and roughly half of the country’s population lives below the poverty line. It is a dangerous brew for instability.
In recent months, the Tajik government has attempted to crack down against Islamist insurgent groups who have crossed the border from northern Afghanistan, but to little effect. There is rising concern in Washington that Tajikistan will become the new theater of operations for Islamic militants, and might offer a convenient route for insurgent penetration of other volatile or vulnerable parts of Central Asia — first off, Tajikistan’s desperately weak neighbor, Kyrgyzstan. 
In the coming year, it’s easy to imagine Tajikistan sliding further and further toward a failed state as the government quietly cedes control of whole sections of the country to militants. Even if the Afghan militants were out of the picture, however, Tajikistan’s democratic prospects would look bleak. As the American cable put it, “The government is not willing to reform its political process.”




Pakistan
It’s hard to remember a time when Pakistan didn’t seem on the brink of collapse. This coming year will likely be no exception. The country faces a humanitarian crisis in its mid-section where floods displaced 10 million people, a security threat from terrorist groups operating on Pakistani soil, and political instability from a weak administration still trying to wield civilian control over the all-powerful military.
The most immediate priority is assisting the millions of people who are still displaced following floods in Pakistan’s countryside. The cities could also use attention; 2010 saw the biggest spike in urban terrorist attacks since the war next door in Afghanistan started. Insurgent and terrorist groups now have strongholds not just in the northwestern tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, but in urban centers such as Islamabad, Karachi, Quetta, and Lahore. Yet despite the flurry of attacks on its heartland, Pakistan still seems reluctant to confront the insurgents with full force. So far, military operations against terrorist groups have vacillated between the extremes — either heavy-handed and haphazard force or ill-conceived peace deals. Further, the criminal justice system has failed totally to preempt, investigate, and convict militants. Violence may well spike again in 2011.
Meanwhile in Islamabad, the civilian leadership under President Asif Ali Zardari has grown unpopular and weak, plagued by corruption and an inability to maintain control of the military leaders. Civilian control over national security policy, in both the domestic and external domains, could help put the criminal genie back in the bottle. Stronger civilian leadership of the humanitarian agenda would also prevent the millions living in regions devastated by the massive monsoon floods of 2010 — in the conflict-hit zones in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and also in the Pakistani heartland — from becoming a soft target for militants. However, clashes between the judiciary and Zardari, and the military’s propensity to destabilize elected governments, could result in the democratic transition faltering and even failing, with grave consequences for an already fragile state.



Somalia
If Somalia keeps heading south in 2011, the entire country could fall under Islamist insurgent control. Up to now, the country’s U.N.-backed transitional government has withstood attacks from Islamist insurgents only thanks to protection from an African Union peacekeeping force; it remains weak and divided, a national government in name alone. Further, the capital city of Mogadishu is under perpetual siege by militants, a reality that has sent millions fleeing from their homes in this year alone. When the government does make gains on the insurgents, they are counted in mere city blocks, captured one by one.
The largest and most alarming insurgent group is al Shabab, which professes to desire the creation of a strict, conservative Muslim state and portions of whose leadership pledged allegiance to al Qaeda in early 2010. The group already controls most of southern and central Somalia and is currently trying to capture Mogadishu. Meanwhile, Somalia’s neighbors fear that al Shabab will begin to export terrorism, as it did for the first time last summer in a series of bombings in Uganda during the World Cup.
That said, Somaliland in the country’s northwest is an island of stability and democracy, and Puntland in the northeast is relatively peaceful, if troubled by Islamists and pirate gangs.
The best hope for Somalia is for its forces to exploit the divisions among the insurgency to recapture territory, particularly in Mogadishu. International support, already forthcoming, will help. But so would a lot of luck.  


Lebanon
Still smarting from a war with Israel in 2006 that left a precarious balance of power between Christians and Islamic fundamentalists, Lebanon today is arguably more than ever on the brink.
In the coming months, an international tribunal is expected to issue indictments against Hezbollah members for the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, a step that could spark sectarian strife throughout the country. Most alarmingly, the indictments could unravel a fragile inter-Lebanese power-sharing agreement reached in Doha in 2008. In that scenario, Lebanon could see a return to political assassinations, all-out sectarian strife, or attempts by Hezbollah to assert greater political or military control. None of these scenarios are far-fetched in the coming year; indeed, they have all happened in Lebanon’s very recent past. The fact that it is so hard to imagine both how the current status quo may survive and how exactly it will unravel says volumes about the state of uncertainty and shakiness which afflicts the country.
In addition to Lebanon’s internal political unraveling, the country risks sliding back into war with Israel. Nearly five years after the 2006 war, relations between the two countries are both exceptionally quiet and uniquely dangerous — for the same reason: On both sides of Israel’s northern border, the build-up in military forces and threats of an all-out war that would spare neither civilians nor civilian infrastructure, together with the worrisome prospect of its regionalization, have had a deterrent effect on all. Today, none of the parties can soberly contemplate the prospect of a conflict that would come at greater cost to themselves, be more difficult to contain, and be less predictable in outcome than anything they witnessed in the past.
But that is only the better half of the story. Beneath the surface, tensions are mounting with no obvious safety valve. The deterrence regime has helped keep the peace, but the process it perpetuates — mutually reinforcing military preparations, Hezbollah’s growing and more sophisticated arsenal, escalating Israeli threats — pulls in the opposite direction and could trigger the very result it has averted so far.


Nigeria
Nigeria’s 2010 was about as rough as they come: The country’s president disappeared on medical leave — and then died — hundreds were killed in sectarian violence between Muslims and Christians in the country’s middle belt, and a rebel amnesty in the oil-producing Niger Delta region completely unraveled, leading to a string of bombing attacks and kidnappings.
And 2011 also looks rocky for Africa’s most populous country. A presidential election is slated to be held in the spring; the last election in 2007 left international observers awestruck by flagrant intimidation and ballot stuffing. Voting in Nigeria has never been a pretty affair, and despite promises to reform the electoral system, the old habits of intimidation and vote buying die hard. After the polling does takes place, post-election turmoil is also entirely possible, particularly if one region or group is unhappy with the result. Nigeria’s many regions — north, south, west, east, and everything in between — count on office-holders to pass out patronage and favors, so the stakes of losing are high.
Whoever it may be, Nigeria’s new leader will have urgent tasks ahead. The rebellion in the Niger Delta is flaring up again, with militants promising to continue attacking oil facilities and government offices. A once effective anti-corruption commission has lost its momentum. And vast economic inequality is the order of the day, leaving oil wealth in the hands of a few while the majority of the country’s 140 million people languish.


Guinea
Guinea enters 2011 on a hopeful path. In December, the West African country inaugurated its first-ever elected leader, Alpha Condé. After decades of strongman rule, followed by a 2009 coup, this new leadership seems nothing less than miraculous.
Yet the back-story offers some sense of just how deep tensions run. After the country’s president died in December 2008, a small group of military leaders took over, declaring themselves the new leaders of Guinea. So corrupt and ineffectual had the former president been that many welcomed the junta’s rule. But it soon became apparent that the military president, Moussa Dadis Camara, was equally inept. The pinnacle of that failure came in September 2009, when his troops massacred over 150 peaceful protestors in a local stadium.
International condemnation flooded the country, putting pressure on the junta to hold elections. Meanwhile, Camara was shot by a fellow junta member and sent to Morocco for treatment. His successor, Gen. Sekouba Konate, appointed a civilian interim leader and organized the recent election.
But throughout the junta’s brief reign, the military took the opportunity to enrich and entrench its role in the economy, a fact that remains today despite the nominal civilian leadership. Guinea’s military now has a strong stake in controlling mineral wealth — the country is the world’s largest producer of bauxite — and other major industries. In the past, it has used strong-arm tactics to get its way, economically and otherwise, and this old habit will surely die hard. Having tasted the fruits of power under the junta, the military may not so easily return to its barracks.

 


Democratic Republic of the Congo
Years after the official end of the Second Congo War, which raged from 1998 to 2003 and was responsible for up to 4.5 million deaths, whole swathes of the enormous Central African country remain in upheaval. In the eastern Kivu provinces, an undisciplined national army battles with rebel groups for territorial control. Amid the frenzy of violence and rape that follows in their path, the world’s largest U.N. peacekeeping force is at a loss to protect even those civilians that live close to its bases.
Lurking behind the conflict is Congo’s vast natural wealth, the very embodiment of the so-called resource curse. Government, militants, private corporations, and local citizens all angle to tap the gold, cobalt, copper, coltan and host of other minerals under the country’s soil — which are focused in the east and south of the country. Meanwhile, the central government lies nearly 1,000 miles to the west, separated from its eastern provinces by impenetrable jungle, a different language, and ethnicity. Rebel groups still roam the eastern border regions, exercising their authority with impunity and cruelty. Neither the government nor rebel groups have the strength to win, but both have the resources to keep fighting indefinitely.
Adding to the misery are appalling humanitarian conditions. Only a third of Congolese in rural areas have access to clean water, an estimated 16,000 children die each year before ever reaching the age of five, and life expectancy has actually fallen by five years since 1990.
Unless the Congolese and regional governments try different tactics, there is no end in sight to Congo’s troubles. In an ideal world, military campaigns in North and South Kivu provinces would be suspended until better-trained troops can be deployed — troops than can carry out targeted operations while protecting civilians. Meanwhile, governments in Africa’s Great Lakes region should convene a summit and negotiate agreements on economic, land, and population-movement issues. A worst-case scenario would see more of the same: a mosaic of armed groups in eastern Congo continue to fight indefinitely, with civilians paying a terrible price.

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12/31/10

* Wikileaks: Egypt still sees Israel as its main adversary US diplomatic memos released by WikiLeaks this month show previously unknown friction with Egypt over military assistance and strategy.

* ‘Mossad, US, UK cooperating to sabotage Iran nukes’ US and UK intelligence services are cooperating with the Mossad to sabotage Teheran’s nuclear program.

* Celebrations as the world starts marking the new year In Australia, crowds gathered in Sydney to watch what is hailed as the biggest New Year’s Eve fireworks display.

* Palestinian draft condemning Israeli settlements designed to win U.S. support Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said his new attempt to get the United Nations to condemn Israeli settlements in the West Bank was specifically designed to win U.S. support.

* Next Year’s Wars The 16 brewing conflicts to watch for in 2011.

* Peace Hovers in Sudan, but Most Soldiers Stay Armed Nearly six years ago, northern and southern Sudan signed a peace agreement after decades of civil war.

* Abbas lays Brazil embassy cornerstone Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas laid the first stone Friday of what will become a Palestinian embassy in Brazil.

* Nigeria: Pastor killed in front of his church, other churches targeted in arson rampage Still more jihadist violence to report against Nigerian churches on Christmas Eve.

* Christians consider their future after more attacks in Iraq Some Christians in Iraq’s capital were considering leaving, following a wave of bombings targeting members of their religion that left two dead and 16 others wounded.

* Estonia joins euro club riven by crisis, others wary Estonia could be the last new entrant for some years when it becomes the 17th euro zone member on January 1.

12/30/10

* Top Middle East story of 2010: The Stuxnet virus As 2010 comes to an end, the mystery has yet to be revealed: Did Stuxnet set back Iran’s nuclear program? Or was it just a small glitch?

* China preparing for armed conflict ‘in every direction’ China is preparing for conflict ‘in every direction’, the defence minister said.

* Israel – Iran nuclear bomb ‘still three years away’ Iran’s nuclear program has been hit by technical problems, and it could be still three years away from making a bomb.

* Obama bypasses Senate, appoints envoy to Syria US President Barack Obama has bypassed the US Senate and directly appointed four new ambassadors.

* Israel ex-President Moshe Katsav found guilty of rape Israel’s former President Moshe Katsav has been convicted of rape by a court in Tel Aviv and could go to jail.

* Rise of radical Islam threatens Mideast Christians with extinction As Americans celebrate Christmas in peace in our nation, many Christians across the Middle East are in peril: Muslim fanatics seek to exterminate them.

* Killing of Iraq police chief highlights security struggles as US draws down A senior police commander and three other cops in Iraq’s northern city of Mosul – the most violent of Iraq’s major cities – were murdered by suicide bombers shortly after dawn today.

* Ivory Coast on brink of “genocide”: envoy to U.N. Political unrest following Ivory Coast’s disputed presidential election has brought the West African country to the “brink of genocide.”

* Iran: ‘Harry Potter a Zionist Plot to Promote Devil Worship’ If you thought the Harry Potter series was an innocent children’s fantasy story, you’re wrong, an Iranian movie producer says.

* Largest natural gas reserve discovered in Israel worth approximately $95 billion The largest reserve of natural gas, over 16 trillion cubic feet, has been discovered off the coast of Israel.