Wednesday, January 3, 2007

The things you find when searching Asia

Since I start my Asian Studies class at the end of the month, I was skipping around the news sites this morning (that's this morning MY time which is 8 hours ahead of EST) on the subject of Asia and came across this article on American Economic Alert written by William R. Hawkins. It's his opinion on the U.S. China Economic and Security Review Commission's recent report. I plan on sitting down and reading the report tomorrow instead of just the quick skim I did tonight. It's getting late and I like to get up early. I would really like to look further into the forged auto parts, GM's hand in the Chinese auto market, and the fact that the USCC says the American Military buys parts for its vehicles from China.
Now, on the flip side of things, I did find this article on China's White Paper on National Defense at the English Sina site, and this one at the China Daily, and the "actual"(?) report here. Or something resembling an actual report. Sina also did mention the opening of a Best Buy in China. Pretty groovy stuffs. I'll try very hard to have a report to post later this week.
EDIT:
Yea, I take it this is a mistake lots of new bloggers make. The USCC report is very long, about 277 pages long. The China White Paper is considerably shorter and neither one can tell you anything you can't already figure out. They are both still chock full of interesting info. You cannot compare one to the other. They are completely different. Live and learn I will, live and learn.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Tick, tock, tick, tock

Quite a bit of confusion on when Saddam's last day will actually be.

"Iraq's Saddam-era penal code bars executions on religious holidays. Eid al-Adha holiday, which follows the annual haj pilgrimage to Mecca, runs until January 7 in Iraq."

I'm not sure, but I belive Eid al-Adha starts directly after the 1st of January. If that is the case, they may rush him to the noose before then.

(EDIT) They wasted no time. Eid al-Adha started today for the Sunni and the Kurds. In Iraq, they cannot execute on a religious holiday. Now I understand why Eid al-Adha starts tomorrow for the Shia. (or so the way it looks...)

Still too Early to Celebrate

Ethiopa is now in possession of Mogadishu after 10 days of fighting. The Somali PM, Gedi, is declaring 3 months of martial law and states the country is "far from stable". Ken Menkhaus, a Horn of Africa specialist teaching in NC states this could be the beginning of...

"an asymetrical war involving a combination of hit and run guerrilla attacks, car bombings, assassinations and possibly even selected acts of terrorism on other parts of East Africa."

Yea, that sounds about right.

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

You thought KFD (Korean fan death) was bad?!

Have you ever heard of Koro? Today was the first time I heard of it. I am glad I now know the signs and symptoms. Unfortunatly I have no reason to blame Koro for my own shortcomings

I wonder how much longer untill the Chinese govt. gives up

Chinese internet users surf in disguise

It's just a matter of time.

Now here's a thought

Here’s something that should have been done 3 years ago in Iraq. Jobs. It could have been that easy. I do not think we should go into a country with contractors that hire foreign help to rebuild Iraqi neighborhoods and infrastructure. People naturally do not have the pride that would be associated with being a bigger part of the rebuilding process. If you put your blood and sweat into a project, you would make damn sure no-one blows it up. If more Iraqi people were put to work sooner I do not think you would have the animosity that exists today. You also wouldn’t have as many angry, unemployed young men running around feeling they need to pick up a gun to make a difference or blow themselves up so their family gets fed.

Africa's WWII?

Earlier today I hit up Coming Anarchy and found an interesting post on Ethiopia and Somalia. A bit later I found this interview by Ken Menkhaus. He is a former special advisor to the U.N. operation in Somalia.

When asked if the Council of Islamic Courts is controlled by al Qaeda, he states:

“No. Absolutely not.”

That’s not to say the two aren’t in a partnership.

Mr. Menkhaus’s sees this crisis different from Dafur’s.

“Darfur is a manmade crisis, and it’s an ongoing one that is incredibly difficult to access. In Somalia, for the moment, the biggest crisis is a natural disaster, the flooding.”



Here's what the leader of the CIC had to say about the Somali retreat.
"Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, leader of the Council of Islamic Courts' executive body, said the group had told its troops to withdraw from some areas.

"The war is entering a new phase," he said. "We will fight Ethiopia for a long, long time and we expect the war to go everyplace."

Ahmed declined to explain his comments in greater detail, but some Islamic leaders had threatened a guerrilla war to include suicide bombings in Ethiopia's capital."

Could it be a bluff or the start of something much bigger? I’m thinking the latter. They know they can’t fight conventionally and win, as does everybody else.