Category: America

  • US Secretary of Defense Panetta arrives in Turkey

    US Secretary of Defense Panetta arrives in Turkey

    Before arriving in Ankara for a two-day official visit, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta had a stopover in Baghdad to join the flag lowering ceremony of the American forces there.

    Panetta firstly met with Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz in Ankara yesterday. Reportedly, Panetta thanked Yilmaz for contributions made by the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) to Afghanistan and discussed with his counterpart the issue of armed predators that Turkey plans to buy from the US. After paying a visit to Ataturk’s Mausoleum, Panetta will be received by President Abdullah Gul today. If his doctors allow him to do so, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will also meet with him.

    Both Turkey and the US attach importance to Panetta’s visit in terms of finding an exact solution to three important issues which has been causing uneasy dialogues between Washington and Ankara throughout 2011, namely, the missile defense system, Turkey’s requests with regard to fighting the terrorist PKK which should be adopted by the US Congress, as well as relations between Turkey and Israel. As part of Panetta’s contacts, regional issues such as the Arab Spring, efforts exerted by Iran regarding the nuclear and developments in Syria will be discussed. Panetta will also inform Ankara on the impression he got from his visits to Afghanistan and Iraq.

    via US Secretary of Defense Panetta arrives in Turkey.

  • MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room

    steven chase

    OTTAWA— From Friday’s Globe and Mail

    For the third time in four months, Peter MacKay found himself facing accusations he’s spending public dollars too freely – an awkward track record for a Harper cabinet minister during an era of belt-tightening in Ottawa.

    A taxpayer watchdog Thursday released bills obtained under access-to-information law showing the Defence Minister’s travel expenses last year include a $1,452-per-night stay at a luxury hotel in Munich and a $770-per-night bill for accommodation in Istanbul.

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    See where Peter MacKay stayed

    Harper defends Peter MacKay’s use of a military helicopter

    Defence Minister Peter MacKay addresses air crew and technicians after inspecting a new Canadian military Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone helicopter at 12 Wing Shearwater in Halifax on Thursday May 26, 2011.

    Peter MacKay under fire for ‘search and rescue’ trip

    Mr. MacKay’s staff managed to find far cheaper accommodation than their boss at the same Istanbul Ceylon Intercontinental, the Canadian Taxpayer Federation found. The aides stayed in $276-per-night rooms at the InterContinental – less than half what the minister was charged.

    The controversial expenses are more political grief for Mr. MacKay, who caught flak earlier this fall for asking a military chopper to airlift him from a fishing vacation and for racking up more flights on government VIP jets than any other minister but Stephen Harper.

    “Peter is becoming this Parliament’s crown prince of pork,” NDP MP Pat Martin said. “This government is broke. We can’t have a globe-trotting Minister of Defence, living in the lap of luxury like some kind of a Gucci-shoes Conservative gadfly from the 1980s.”

    Mr. MacKay defended the Munich bill as the cost of staying close to a major 2010 security conference he was attending in the German city.

    “Canada books rooms at the same hotel where the conference takes place, where the majority of participants stay,” he told the Commons. “Nation-to-nation meetings at conferences such as this advance the interests of Canada and advance the interests of the hardworking men and women who serve our country around the world. I was proud to represent Canada.”

    The same security meeting is taking place at the Hotel Bayerischer Hof in 2012, and rates for a room during the Feb. 3-5 period run as low as $364 a night if booked now.

    As for Istanbul, Mr. MacKay’s staff explained the difference in the cost of the minister’s room and his aides’ rooms by pointing out he needs a bigger space to host official visitors.

    Mr. MacKay has become a favourite target for opposition accusations of excess in an era where the government is trying to squeeze billions of dollars in savings from Ottawa’s deficit-ridden books. Repeated revelations about his spending have spawned speculation that players in the military are trying to undermine him as he prepares to recommend significant reductions in defence spending.

    While the Canadian Taxpayers Federation is avowedly non-partisan, several of its former staff members have become Conservative staffers, candidates or MPs. The group often criticizes the Conservative government from the right, urging it to be more fiscally responsible.

    The group’s national director, Gregory Thomas, said the organization requested the travel bills after news of Mr. MacKay’s fishing-vacation airlift broke in September, to “see what else he’s been up to.”

    Mr. Thomas suggested the minister’s colleagues “have to be a little choked” to read stories this fall about Mr. MacKay being nearly the top user of the government’s VIP jets, given that the Tories have tried to restrict overall use of the planes.

    via MacKay accused again of high-spending, including $1,452 hotel room – The Globe and Mail.

  • Iran Threatens To Send ‘OIL’ To $200 A Barrel

    Iran Threatens To Send ‘OIL’ To $200 A Barrel

    War in the Economic Jugular Vein of the World

    Iran Oil HurmuzBy Steve Christ

    Are you ready for ‘OIL’ to skyrocket to $200 a barrel?

    Iran is!

    And, they’re prepared to play their trump card to send it there.

    Faced with a rash of mysterious explosions, military drones caught flying overhead, and renewed promises to end their nuclear ambitions, the Iranians are threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz — otherwise known as “the economic jugular vein of the world” — again.

    As Iranian lawmaker Parviz Sarvari said yesterday, “Soon we will hold a military maneuver on how to close the Strait of Hormuz. If the world wants to make the region insecure, we will make the world insecure.

    The announcement came just weeks after Iran’s energy minister told Al Jazeera television that Tehran was prepared to use oil as a political tool in any “conflict over its nuclear program.”

    Given Iran’s dominance over this bottleneck for oil exports from the Persian Gulf, this is a promise they can likely keep…

    Today’s price of $100 a barrel doesn’t even come close to pricing in the geopolitical calamity closing the Persian Gulf would present.

    Just 34 miles wide, thirteen tankers carrying 15.5 million barrels of crude oil pass through the Strait each day, making it one of the world’s most important waterways.

    In all, 33% of the oil shipped via tankers passes through the Strait of Hormuz.

    The Strait is so vital to the world economy, its closure would be considered an act of war that only the U.S. Navy has the power to fix…

    www.wealthdaily.com, December 13th, 2011

  • Newt’s iffy claim: Iran hides nukes under mosques

    Newt’s iffy claim: Iran hides nukes under mosques

    Explosive charge appears to be pure speculation

    BY JUSTIN ELLIOTT

    gingrich mosque

    Is Iran hiding nuclear weapons facilities under mosques?

    Newt Gingrich says yes – but experts say there is no evidence to back up the assertion.

    Gingrich made the claim at a debate with Jon Huntsman in New Hampshire on Monday.  Here, via Michael Crowley, is the key moment:

    “They have huge underground facilities. Some of the underground facilities are under mosques,” Gingrich said. “Some of them are in cities. The idea that you’re going to wage a bombing campaign that accurately takes out all the Iranian nuclear program I think is a fantasy.”

    That’s an extremely significant charge, one made by a man who now has a real shot at being the next president of the United States.

    An extensive search of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reports on Iran found no mentions of the terms “mosque” or “holy site.” We do know that some of Iran’s nuclear facilities are underground; but I found no media mentions of them being under mosques.

    (Also worth noting: it’s not a given that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons, rather than nuclear power. The question of Iran’s intentions is complex and remains unresolved.)

    “There’s no evidence [for that],” said David Albright, an expert on Iran’s nuclear program and president of the Institute for Science and International Security, when asked about the mosques issue. “I don’t know where Gingrich gets this, but it sounds like he is just repeating rumors.”

    I also asked Ken Pollack, a Mideast specialist at the Brookings Institution, if he has heard of anything like Gingrich’s mosques claim.

    “Nope,” Pollack said in an email. “Never heard that they have underground facilities beneath mosques.  They do have extensive tunnels at some sites, and I guess some of those tunnels may run under mosques, but I have never heard that they purposely built them under mosques as this seems to suggest.”

    Gingrich’s spokesman did not immediately respond to an inquiry about his source for the claim.

    It’s also at least a bit ironic that Gingrich made the iffy mosques assertion after specifically questioning the ability of the CIA to determine what the Iranians are doing.

    “This idea that somehow we have magically accurate intelligence … is baloney,” he said.

    Justin Elliott is a Salon reporter. Reach him by email at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustinMore Justin Elliott

    www.salon.com, 14 Decmeber 20011

  • Young chess champ is always on the move

    Young chess champ is always on the move

    By ARLENE MANNLEIN – H&R Staff Writer

    Aydin Turgut takes a moment to think before making his next move. (Herald & Review/Lisa Morrison)
    Aydin Turgut takes a moment to think before making his next move. (Herald & Review/Lisa Morrison)

    DECATUR – As he’ll quickly say, Aydin Turgut is 6½ years old, and he does not like to lose.

    He especially does not like to lose when it comes to chess, whether he’s playing his father, Tansel Turgut, a world-ranked correspondence chess player, or whether he’s competing against any one else, such as those he faced when he became state champion in the Illinois State Scholastic K-8 Chess Championship tournament in March. Aydin brought home a seven games/seven wins record in his age division, competing with 88 players in time-controlled 30-minute matches.

    Aydin, a McGaughey School first grader, also came in first in his age group in the blitz – five-minute chess match – tournament, this time competing with 90 players. He shared third place in the kindergarten-to-eighth-grade level overall.

    “One of the games I won, and I had nine seconds left,” said Aydin, recalling the 30-minute games. He’s proud that among those other first graders he defeated is the son of a chess grand master who lives in Chicago.

    “He doesn’t play video games,” said his father. “He plays chess. He does a little bit of piano. He does a little bit of tennis,” and there is some soccer in the mix, as well. But Aydin’s routine, and down time in the classroom, relies heavily on chess. School mornings involve a half hour of chess and chess problem-solving before catching the school bus.

    In problem solving, said his mother, Ava Turgut, chess pieces are positioned, and then the player has to come up with the best way to solve the problem. She said sending along chess to occupy Aydin’s nonclasswork time is a good way of avoiding any problems with boredom.

    “(Aydin) loves competition,” she said, adding she quit playing against him about a year ago and he has now passed on his red and blue chess set to his younger brother, Kaya, 3, who moves pieces around with their sister, Ella, 1½.

    Now, Aydin goes on in May to the National Elementary (K-6) Championship in Dallas, Texas. In last year’s nationals, his father said, there were 300 competitors in Aydin’s age group.

    Asked if he has a chess hero, Aydin grinned, then pointed at his father, though he also named a couple of others he admires.

    Tansel Turgut is the highest ranking correspondence chess player in the United States, and he’s continuing competition in a tournament which began a couple of years ago and will probably last another year.

    In a recent match against his father, Aydin and Tansel Turgut played to a draw. It soon became apparent Aydin doesn’t like draws, either.

    [email protected]|421-6976

    via Young chess champ is always on the move.

  • Beyond the flotilla: Turkey’s anti-Israel turn

    Beyond the flotilla: Turkey’s anti-Israel turn

    Beyond the flotilla: Turkey’s anti-Israel turn

    David Ignatius trivialized the seriousness of Turkey’s distancing itself from Israel by suggesting that the action is simply a product of Turkey’s unhappiness over Israel’s level of apology for the flotilla tragedy [“Obama’s Turkish alliance,” op-ed, Dec. 8].

    Turkey apparently made a strategic decision long before the flotilla episode to diminish the warm and strategic relations that existed between the two countries. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s treatment of Israeli President Shimon Peres at Davos in 2009 was one of numerous examples of this. Indeed, the flotilla event would not have taken place in the first place if the old Turkish-Israeli relationship were intact.

    It is not only Israel but the United States that is concerned about Turkey’s growing enmity toward Israel. If Turkey is going to be the positive model for the Arab Spring, it needs to include in its outlook a return to the historic friendship of the Jewish and Turkish states.

    Kenneth Jacobson, New York

    The writer is deputy national director of the Anti-Defamation League.

    via Beyond the flotilla: Turkey’s anti-Israel turn – The Washington Post.