Saturday, December 31, 2011

Canada's climate change plan 'farce,' says Stephane Dion

MONTREAL ? The year drew to a close with the United Nations climate-change talks, this time in Durban, again ending in failure to reach an international agreement. Instead, the 192 nations agreed to start work on a new climate-change deal that negotiators hope will be agreed on by 2015 and come into effect from 2020.

Earlier this year, a federal election came and went in Canada with very little discussion of climate change. The environment has not been a key element in any political party's platform here since the Liberals under Stephane Dion in 2008, when he lost to Stephen Harper's Conservatives.

The Conservative government announced in Durban that Canada was pulling out of the Kyoto emissions accord. It has called the Liberal decision to sign the treaty "one of the biggest blunders" made by that government. Meanwhile, every scientific study shows that the world is on a dangerous path toward catastrophic climate change. Scientists say Canada's mean temperature is increasing at a rate that will exceed by 2020 the 2 degrees Celsius rise that they believe is the tipping point.

We asked Dion, who presided over the 2005 climate-change negotiations in Montreal and who was the architect of the Liberals' Project Green and Green Shift programs, how his green plans would have changed the face of the nation had his government remained in power, and what it would take to get climate change back on the political agenda in Canada.

Question: If the Liberals had won the 2006 and 2008 elections and implemented your green policies, what kind of a Canada would we have today?

Stephane Dion: Canada today would have a price on carbon that would be at $30 a tonne, that would rise to $40 a tonne next February for 75 per cent of our emissions, and even higher in British Columbia since they have a carbon tax. We would be perceived as a country that is doing its share. This was not a stand-alone policy. We had a long list of programs that would have been strengthened by a price on carbon and the recovery plan would have been focused on that instead of being focused on nothing as it is with the Conservatives.

Q: You are talking here about your 2005 Project Green and your 2008 Green Shift proposal. But they were criticized as not being ambitious enough to meet our Kyoto commitments and being too much of a burden on our economy, particularly with the United States out of Kyoto.

A: Project Green was assessed by independent bodies saying it was not enough but it was going in the right direction. I agreed with that. We would have had to strengthen it in the coming years. That's normal. This plan was destroyed by the Conservatives and replaced by nothing else, but we still have some copies of the plan. They did not burn all of them. We would have started a cap and trade system. Not as strong as I was dreaming of, but under the circumstances of that time I think it was a good start. I would have had stronger programs for boosting science and technology in all directions. The minister of finance at the time was very committed and invested billions of dollars to make sure that this would happen. . . . Some countries were decreasing emissions and their economies were growing. It's possible to link the growth of the economy and the decrease in emissions. The 2008 plan was better than the 2005 plan.

Q: That plan represented essentially an enormous shift in our fiscal base. Explain that.

A: In 2008, the plan was to make sure that everything we did was green. At the core of all of this was a green fiscal shift that would have created a carbon tax that would be today at $40 a tonne of CO2. And the trade-off was very meaningful tax cuts for Canadians at around 10 per cent and even more for medium- and low-income Canadians. But tax cuts also for industry and green tax credits if they were doing the right thing.

Q: So Canada would have seen a shift away from taxing profits and income to taxing pollution?

A: The key point is the following: If you are a CEO of a company and you want to pay less taxes - and all of them want to pay less taxes - if you are taxed on your investments and your profits, you bring around the table your lawyers and accountants and ask them, "How can I pay less taxes?" And they will figure out in a lawful way how to pay less taxes on your profits and your investments. So it is good for the company, but it's not good for the province where you are and it's not good for Canada. It's doing nothing good. But if the government is taxing you less on your profits and investments and starts to tax your pollution, lawyers and tax accountants aren't much help to you. So you gather around your engineers and you will ask them, "How can I pay less tax?" And then they will say, "Now that you are asking the question, we have a lot of ideas about how to decrease your carbon footprint; we have a lot of contact with the research centres in the province where you are." So it will diversify the economies of (some provinces).

Q: Do you think that these plans would have enabled Canada to meet its commitments under Kyoto?

A: I am quite confident of that. We would have been helped by the world recession when emissions were not growing at the same pace. But I am confident that today Canada would be, if not at its target, at least close to it. When industry has to figure out how to pay less taxes, it's a very powerful and effective incentive to do something.

Q: What do you think is the single most significant reason for the failure of climate-change negotiations?

A: It's a fact that it is difficult to form public policy around climate change. You have the free-rider effect. That is, the gain you get from taking action is not something that you can see. You close the six or so coal-fired power plants they have in Ontario, it would take a month and a half for China to nullify this effect because they are building so many coal-fired power plants. The oilsands of Alberta, it's only 0.1 per cent of the emissions of the world. So if Albertans were fixing their problems with GHG emissions, it would not stop the glaciers of the Rocky Mountains from disappearing and putting at risk the water supply in Alberta. . . . The oilpatch lobby is by far the biggest lobby in North America and they are focusing on climate much more than any other issues. Mr. Harper himself is closely linked to them. There is no doubt in my mind that many members of the caucus in the Conservative Party do not believe that climate change is man-made. So for these reasons, it's very difficult to mobilize collective action internationally to fight climate change.

Q: What would you do to break the logjam?

A: What I think we need is a world price on carbon emissions instead of a hard cap (on emissions). I think it would be less difficult for China or India to accept a world price on GHG emissions instead of a hard cap. . . . It would not cap their emissions but it certainly would create a strong incentive to boost the non-polluting sources of energy. It's time to shift the debate from asking each country to accept an emission-reduction target toward another model where we ask all the countries to accept the same greenhouse-gas-emissions price.

Q: Would you shift the emphasis completely from emission-reduction targets to a price on carbon?

A: No, because the aim remains the same: to decrease our emissions as much as possible. This is the goal. What should be done is to bring the scientists and economists together to tell the politicians what should be the price to keep the warming below the 2 degrees Celsius threshold. According to the United Nations, the price is something like $45 a tonne. And once they have accepted that, it is up to the politicians to put it into the World Trade Organization rules. So a country that will not respect this threshold through a cap and trade system, this country would be exposed to retaliations at the borders of the other countries. I'm not telling you that it will be easier. But maybe it's simpler to have these types of negotiations at the G20 than to wait until 2015 to see if, by a miracle, some countries will change their stand (at the UN negotiations).

Q: So far the carbon markets have not been effective in reducing greenhouse gases. Why do you think it would be any different if the world agreed to a global price?

A: You are right. For example the biggest carbon market we have today is the European scheme and the price is so low that it does not make a difference. We are paying a lot of money to companies that are barely doing anything (to reduce their emissions). Many experts are coming up with completely new schemes where you have a bottom line that is the (carbon) tax and if you want to do more than that it is the market that is involved. So a kind of mixed system. I don't think it would be wise at the outset to say that the only way that you can get your price threshold is the fiscal system. I think we should keep it open (to carbon markets).

Q: Does Canada's reluctance to reduce its greenhouse-gas emissions have any significant effect on these negotiations?

A: Yes. In 2005, Canada was considered a leader. We were chairing the climate-change conference. We made it a success. We had a credible plan to reduce our greenhouse-gas emissions. It was Project Green. Project Green wasn't perfect, but it certainly would have slowed down the growth of our emissions and started the reductions. In order to meet our commitments under Kyoto, we would have had to improve it and I think Parliament would have done that year after year, and today we would be in a good position. Instead of that, the Conservative government burned Project Green and replaced it with nothing. The plan we have now is a farce. It is mostly subsidies for ethanol with dubious consequences for the planet. It is subsidies for capture and storage of emissions coming from coal and the oilsands. There are a bit of subsidies for renewable energy and technologies but it is very weak if you compare it with other countries including the United States. It has regulations on transportation and coal emissions that are so weak they are barely more than the status quo. So Canada has no credibility internationally and is perceived as a country that wants to do as little as possible, and doesn't want to be pushed by a strong international agreement.

Q: And how does this affect countries such as China, India and Brazil which refuse to cut back because they say it's their turn to build their economies?

A: I don't know. I just know that the odds of a compromise would be much higher if Europe had not been alone. We may have also been able to have a positive effect on Australia, on Japan, and put the pressure on the Chinese to do more. What I can say is that now these countries are unlikely to set hard targets in the coming future. The International Energy Agency is saying that each dollar that we do not invest in this decade will cost more than $4 to have the same effect after 2020. So I think we are very late in the game.

Q: Many people ask, "What can I do?" What's your answer?

A: I am not aware of one change that has happened because of individual initiative. Some people will do something but most people will not. So this is why we need the government to be involved in climate change.

Q: How do you think Canada's policies toward climate change affect our ability to forge a clean-energy economy?

A: The Conference Board of Canada recently warned Canada that we may miss an opportunity to be a winner in an area where the investments around the world are simply booming. Now, in Australia they are close to having solar panels that will be cheaper than coal. The investments in solar and wind are now (globally) bigger than for coal and nuclear. There are some Canadian companies that are players. But as a country we are not doing enough. Imagine if we had a price on carbon, what kind of incentive it would be for our companies to be champions of this growing part of the world economy. The money we could raise would be significant, and through that you would have a 10-per-cent tax cut on income. Imagine! And it's what economists are telling us to do. Cut the taxes on productive activities and instead tax what you dislike, like pollution. It's the kind of reform we need to do in the 21st century but the forces of the status quo are so strong that I don't know when it will happen.

Q: Do you think you lost the 2008 election partially because of your climate-change policies? Does this reflect Canada's rejection of any important action on climate change?

A: The answer is yes. It was part of the problem. Mr. Harper and his Conservatives spent millions in attack adds against the Green Shift ("the tax on everything") and its author ("not a leader"). Never has so much money been spent against a policy in Canadian history. The NDP also attacked the Liberal plan in claiming that only big industries should pay a carbon price and that taxpayers should be left exempted. I did not respond well to these criticisms and I did not succeed in convincing Canadians otherwise. I also did not inspire my own troops enough.

Q: How do you get climate change back on the political agenda?

A: Many initiatives should be taken by business people, scientists, activists, ordinary citizens . . . and journalists! But regarding the current state of federal politics, in a nutshell, the opposition should co-operate to at least keep the government accountable toward its own objective: 17-per-cent reduction for 2020. Environment Canada itself said some months ago that only 25 per cent of the target would be reached with the current policies and regulations.

wmarsden@montrealgazette.com

? Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

Source: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/Canada+climate+change+plan+farce+says+Stephane+Dion/5930500/story.html

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Santorum defends his use of pork-barrel spending (AP)

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa ? Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum pushed back Friday against criticism from a rival for his pursuit of funding for home-state projects during his tenure in Congress.

As he campaigned in Iowa, Santorum vowed to push for deep cuts in federal spending should he win the White House, but that pledge drew only renewed scorn from another candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

Perry took a jab at Santorum while promoting himself as a Washington outsider. He labeled Santorum a "serial earmarker," a charge he's made before, and ticked off pork-barrel projects like an indoor rain forest and the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere" in Alaska.

Santorum, who has surged in many polls in Iowa, was asked about the criticism at a town hall meeting in Marshalltown.

"I see a little bit of hypocrisy," said the former congressman and senator from Pennsylvania. "He had a paid lobbyist in Washington looking for earmarks."

Santorum said he's already apologized for the use of earmarks, but he also defended them as a tool to force bureaucrats to follow the will of Congress. The right thing to do, he said, is to listen to constituents about their priorities for spending federal money.

"You can't just trust the bureaucracy to make the right call," he said.

Throughout his campaign day, Santorum focused on stepping up his grassroots efforts, turning his attention to delivering backers to next week's caucuses.

Santorum worked his way through a noisy sports bar in Ames to watch Iowa State play Rutgers in the New Era Pinstripe Bowl.

Followed by a mob of cameras, Santorum said his campaign is working hard on turnout efforts and has in place 1,000 precinct captains to make the case for him Tuesday.

Santorum has sent out a fundraising appeal on the heels of his improvement in polls and said he just had his best fundraising day ever. He gave no details but said he'll go on the air in New Hampshire on Monday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111231/ap_on_el_pr/us_santorum

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Source: http://www.sundayfolk.com/livlog/6fvbqc6/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Jazz musician Sam Rivers dies from pneumonia at 88 (AP)

ORLANDO, Fla. ? Sam Rivers, an internationally-known jazz musician who played with Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie, has died. He was 88.

Monique Rivers Williams says her father died Monday night from pneumonia.

The Oklahoma native was a saxophonist, flutist and composer.

He started his career in Boston, where he performed with Herb Pomeroy's big band in an ensemble that included future music producer Quincy Jones. In 1964, he moved to New York and was hired by Davis. He played with a diverse group of musicians there that included Gillespie, T-Bone Walker and John Lee Hooker.

He moved to Orlando in the early 1990s and regularly played with a group of jazz musicians whose day jobs were at Walt Disney World.

Plans are being made for a public memorial concert.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_en_mu/us_music_obit_sam_rivers

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Drug kingpin's bodyguard nabbed in Mexico

By Agence France-Presse, Updated: 12/27/2011

Mexican authorities on Monday said they had nabbed an alleged lieutenant and bodyguard of Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman, the billionaire boss of the Sinaloa drug cartel.

Drug kingpin's bodyguard nabbed in Mexico

Drug kingpin's bodyguard nabbed in Mexico

Authorities said the arrest of Felipe Cabrera, a man with a reputation for violence who is known by the nicknames "College Grad" and "Lord of the Mountain Range," should deal a serious blow to the cartel.

Cabrera -- who was arrested in Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state -- was presented to local media in Mexico City on Monday.

Army spokesman Ricardo Trevilla described Cabrera as a Guzman lieutenant in Durango state and part of Chihuahua state, both in northern Mexico, who "was in charge of personal security for ... Guzman" in that area.

Cabrera is believed to be behind secret burials of murder victims, kidnapping, extortion and arson attacks on businesses and homes, authorities say.

More than 45,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico since December 2006, when the government of President Felipe Calderon launched a military-led crackdown on the cartels.

Guzman -- the most wanted drug boss in Mexico and the United States -- was named earlier this year by Forbes magazine as one of the world's most powerful people after 10 years on the run.

Born to peasants in Mexico's legendary northwest drug trafficking state of Sinaloa, Guzman made the Forbes list of the world's billionaires in 2010, with a fortune of more than $1 billion.

Elsewhere, Mexican troops made a grisly Christmas discovery when they found 13 bodies in a truck in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas, authorities said in a statement.

Investigators say the murders are linked to Friday's discovery of 10 bodies in the town of Tampico Alto, in neighboring Veracruz state, and attacks by gunmen last week on three buses that left 16 people dead.

Two months ago, the government sent police and army reinforcements into Veracruz after an escalation in killings attributed to the bloody feud between the Sinaloa cartel and the rival Zetas.

Source: http://news.ph.msn.com/top-stories/article.aspx?cp-documentid=5695753

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

[OOC] The Academy Magic and Fighting

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Joseph E. Cordell: Divorce May Be A 'Discretionary Purchase'

Divorce may make the most sense when you think you can least afford it.

A dissolution isn't cheap, but there are certain times it can be financially advantageous such as now given our country's current economic predicament.

I am not encouraging divorce, but you should not let a poor economy prevent an inevitable break up. In the stock market, you buy low and sell high. Why would you divorce high and not low?

The current economy significantly affects the outcome of a divorce but not the fundamental decision to file. In general, a couple's economic situation is a contributing factor, but I have yet to see a client choose to file for divorce simply because he is unhappy with the marital income, assets, debts, or liabilities.

There are usually deeper issues and problems that dominate the action. Divorce is something you don't want to choose unless you must. To those of you who must, I want you to keep in mind the timing of a divorce.

As money becomes tighter, a lot of people are increasingly concerned with the costs of divorce, including attorney fees, the additional expenses of a physical separation, and the effects of the divorce on the marital estate.

They see their finances, they see the mortgage is upside down, and they know the likelihood of future child support and spousal maintenance payments will make it difficult to financially manage a divorce, so they go about planning for the future and preparing to file for a divorce later on when they have better financial footing.

But is that the best move?

Hard economic times are potentially favorable to the party that generates more income and has more assets, particularly temporarily depressed assets. It may be less financially painful to divide the assets, such as your home or your retirement account, when the values are much smaller.

With the national unemployment rate hovering around 9% and many more people underemployed or facing cutbacks in hours, judges are more sympathetic when the non-custodial parent's salary or bonus has been cut.

The loss in income and earning capacity could lead to lower child support payments, especially as courts have become more reluctant to impute income to a party given the present economy and lack of available jobs.

Whenever a court looks at alimony and child support it will look at your income. Different courts use different formulas, but in virtually all courts the ability to pay is a critical factor.

How many other things in life work like that where the cost of the product or the process is determined by your ability to pay?

If you are considering filing for divorce, you need to complete a strategic analysis and look at where your assets might logically end up at the end of the divorce, whether they are divided via trial or settlement. Then, assess what those values are today compared to a date in the future. Do the same thing with respect to alimony, child support and debts.

Again, I want to stress that Cordell & Cordell does not advocate for divorce. Do not allow the timing and financial analysis to drive the threshold decision of deciding whether or not getting a divorce is right for you. Your decision to divorce should not be based on a cold financial analysis by you, a lawyer, or a CPA.

But if you've already concluded that you are going to get a divorce or you suspect your spouse may be waiting for favorable circumstances before filing, then you need to sit down with a divorce lawyer to explore the best timing options in your case to minimize your financial exposure.

Joseph Cordell is the Principal Partner of Cordell & Cordell, a nationwide domestic litigation firm focused on men's family law matters. Cordell & Cordell also provides a website dedicated to informing men on the divorce process and the challenges they face. Visit http://www.dadsdivorce.com for more information.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-e-cordell/divorce-may-be-a-discreti_b_1159299.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

More Schooling Might Raise IQ (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Dec. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Children who have more schooling may see their IQ improve, Norwegian researchers have found.

Although time spent in school has been linked with IQ, earlier studies did not rule out the possibility that people with higher IQs might simply be likelier to get more education than others, the researchers noted.

Now, however, "there is good evidence to support the notion that schooling does make you 'smarter' in some general relevant way as measured by IQ tests," said study author Taryn Galloway, a researcher at Statistics Norway in Oslo.

Findings from the large-scale study appear in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

IQ, or intelligence quotient, is a widely accepted measure of intelligence. The IQ score comes from several combined, standardized tests.

In 1955, Norway began extending compulsory middle school education by two years. Galloway and her colleague Christian Brinch, from the department of economics at the University of Oslo, analyzed how this additional schooling might affect IQ.

Using data on men born between 1950 and 1958, the researchers looked at the level of schooling by age 30. They also looked at IQ scores of the men when they were 19.

"The size of the effect was quite large," she said. Comparing IQ scores before and after the education reform, the average increased by 0.6 points, which correlated with an increase in IQ of 3.7 points for an addition year of schooling, Galloway said.

"We are only able to study men, because we use data on IQ from the Norwegian military's draft assessment, which basically all men undergo around the age of 19. Women are not included in the draft," she explained.

Education has lasting effects on cognitive skills, such as those broadly measured by IQ tests, Galloway said.

"Cognitive skills are, in turn, related to a large range of social and economic outcomes. A large part of the relevance of the study derives from the fact that there has been some controversy related to the question of whether education has an independent effect on IQ or whether people with higher IQs simply choose, or are better able, to attain higher levels of education," Galloway said.

By looking at a reform which increased mandatory schooling and prevented people from dropping out of school after the 7th grade, it is fairly certain that the effects seen are an effect of schooling on IQ, not vice versa, she explained.

"One subtle point of our findings is that we use IQ measures at roughly age 19, which is three to four years after the additional education generally was received. Thus, we are not simply picking up a short-lived effect that peters out shortly after people leave school," Galloway said.

The findings suggest that education as late as the middle teenage years may have a sizeable effect on IQ, but do not challenge the well-documented importance of early childhood experiences on cognitive development, according to the authors.

Robert Sternberg, a professor of psychology and provost at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, said that "these results -- that schooling has a substantial effect on IQ -- replicate those of other, perhaps not quite as well-controlled, studies."

"I am aware of no serious studies that show the opposite result," he added.

He said the results are also consistent with the huge literature on the so-called Flynn effect showing that IQs are modifiable across as well as within generations and have been rising since the beginning of the 20th century.

"The results of this study are problematical for the chorus of psychologists and educators still locked in century-old thinking that IQ is genetic, stable and non-modifiable," Sternberg said. "As, for these individuals, the belief in the stability of IQ is more a matter of religious faith than of scientific inference, I doubt they will be persuaded."

More information

For more about IQ, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111227/hl_hsn/moreschoolingmightraiseiq

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US weighing travel request for Yemen's president

An elderly protester chants slogans during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

An elderly protester chants slogans during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Protesters march during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

(AP) ? The Obama administration is considering whether to allow Yemen's outgoing president into the United States for medical treatment, as fresh violence and political tensions flare in the strategically important Middle East nation.

A senior administration official said President Ali Abdullah Saleh's office requested that he be allowed to receive specialized treatment in the U.S. for injuries sustained in a June attack on his compound. The request was being considered, and would only be approved for medical reasons, the official said.

Until now, the White House had not commented on Saleh's assertion Saturday that he would be leaving Yemen and traveling to the U.S. Saleh insisted he was going in order to help calm tensions in his country, not for medical treatment.

The official, who requested anonymity because of a lack of authorization to speak publicly, did not say when the Obama administration would decide on Saleh's request. But the official said Saleh's office indicated that he would leave Yemen soon and spend time elsewhere abroad before he hoped to come to the U.S.

Demonstrators began protesting against Saleh and calling for his ouster in February. The Yemeni government responded with a bloody crackdown, leaving hundreds of protesters dead, and stoking fears of instability in a nation already grappling with burgeoning extremism.

Last month, Saleh agreed to a U.S.- and Saudi-backed deal to hand power over to his vice president and commit to stepping down completely in exchange for immunity. The deal further angered Saleh's opponents, who demanded he be tried for his attacks on protesters.

American officials are deeply concerned that the months of turmoil in Yemen have led to a security breakdown. The dangerous al-Qaida branch in Yemen, known as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, has taken advantage of the vacuum to expend its presence in southern Yemen.

Pressure has been mounting in recent weeks for Saleh to leave Yemen altogether. Opponents say he has continued to wield influence through his loyalists and relatives still in positions of power, hampering the transition ahead of presidential elections set for Feb. 21. Many feared he would find a way to continue his rule.

Activists said troops commanded by Saleh's relatives attacked protesters in the capital of Sanaa Saturday, killing at least nine people. Tens of thousands of people demonstrated the following day, protesting the deaths and demanding the resignation of Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi for failing to bring the killers to justice.

The White House said President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, called Hadi on Sunday and emphasized the need for Yemeni security forces to show "maximum restraint" when dealing with demonstrations. Hadi told Brennan that he had launched an investigation into the recent deaths and injuries and would do his utmost to prevent further bloodshed, the White House said.

The White House said Brennan and Hadi agreed on the importance of continuing with the agreed-upon path of political transition in Yemen in order to ensure that the February elections take place.

Obama was being briefed on developments in Yemen while in Hawaii for his Christmas vacation.

The U.S. has experience with letting unpopular foreign leaders into this country for medical treatment.

More than three decades ago, President Jimmy Carter allowed the exiled shah of Iran into the U.S. for medical treatment in October 1979, eight months after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini led a revolution that ousted the shah and created the Islamic Republic of Iran.

On Nov. 4, 1979, Iranian students occupied the U.S. embassy in Iran. Fifty-two American hostages were held for 444 days in response to Carter's refusal to send the shah back to Iran for trial.

____

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-26-US-Yemen/id-dd3f00a332994ae69c5ed55c6e9cf172

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Monday, December 26, 2011

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In China, a daring few challenge one-child limit (AP)

ZHUJI, China ? Seven months pregnant, Wu Weiping sneaked out early in the morning carrying a shoulder bag with some clothes, her laptop and a knife.

"It's good for me I wasn't caught, but it's lucky for them too," said Wu, 35, who feared that family planning officials were going to drag her to the hospital for a forced abortion. "I was going to fight to the death if they found me."

With her escape, Wu joined an increasingly defiant community of parents in China who have risked their jobs, savings and physical safety to have a forbidden second child.

Though their numbers are small, they represent changing ideas about individual rights. While violators in the past tended to be rural families who skirted the birth limits in relative obscurity, many today are urbanites like Wu who frame their defiance in overtly political terms, arguing that the government has no right to dictate how many children they have.

Using Internet chat rooms and blogs, a few have begun airing their demands for a more liberal family planning policy and are hoping others will follow their lead. Several have gotten their stories into the tightly controlled media, an indication that their perspectives have resonance with the public.

After finding out his wife was expecting a second child, Liu Lianwen set up an online discussion group called "Free Birth" to swap information about the one-child policy and how to get around it. In less than six months, it has attracted nearly 200 members.

"We are idealists," said the 37-year-old engineer from central China, whose daughter was born Oct. 18. "We want to change the attitudes of people around us by changing ourselves."

Freed of the social controls imposed during the doctrinaire era of communist rule, Chinese today are free to choose where they live and work and whom they marry. But when it comes to having kids, the state says the majority must stop at one. Hefty fines for violators and rising economic pressures have helped compel most to abide by the limit. Many provinces claim near perfect compliance.

It's impossible to know how many children have been born in violation of the one-child policy, but Zhai Zhenwu, director of Renmin University's School of Sociology and Population in Beijing, estimates that less than one percent of the 16 million babies born each year are "out of plan."

Liu thinks his fellow citizens have been brainwashed. "They all feel it's glorious to have a small family," he said. "Thirty years of family planning propaganda have changed the way the majority of Chinese think about having children."

The reluctance to procreate is also an issue of growing concern for demographers, who worry that the policy combined with a rising cost of living has brought the fertility rate down too sharply and too fast. Though still the world's largest nation with 1.3 billion people, China's population growth has slowed considerably.

"The worry for China is not population growth ? it's rapid population aging and young people not wanting to have children," said Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, a joint U.S.-China academic research center in Beijing.

Wang sees a looming disaster as the baby boom generation of the 1960s heads into retirement and old age. China's labor force, sharply reduced by the one-child policy, will struggle to support them.

He argues that the government should allow everyone at least two children. He thinks many Chinese would still stop at one because of concerns about being able to afford to raise more than that.

Penalties for violators are harsh. Those caught must pay a "social compensation fee," which can be four to nine times a family's annual income, depending on the province and the whim of the local family planning bureau. Parents with government jobs can also lose their posts or get demoted, and their "out of plan" children are denied education and health benefits.

Those without government posts have less to worry about. If they can afford the steep fee and don't mind losing benefits, there's little to stop them from having another child. There's popular anger over this favoring of the wealthy but not much that ordinary people can do about it, since the policy is set behind closed doors by the communist leadership in Beijing.

In 2007, officials in coastal Zhejiang province threatened to start naming and shaming well-off families who had extra kids, but the campaign never got off the ground, possibly because it threatened to tarnish the reputations of too many well-connected people.

Hardest hit by the rules are urban middle class parents with Communist Party posts, teaching positions or jobs at state-run industries.

Li Yongan was ordered to pay 240,000 yuan ($37,500) after his son was born in 2007 as he already had a 13-year-old daughter. After refusing to pay the fee, Li was denied a household registration permit for his son, forcing him to pay three times more for kindergarten.

He was also barred from his job teaching physics at a state-run university in Beijing. "I never regret my second child, but I have been living with depression and anger for years," said Li, who struggles to make ends meet as a freelance chess teacher.

Of course, there are surreptitious, though not foolproof, ways to evade punishment: paying a bribe or falsifying documents so that, for instance, a second child is registered as the twin of an older sibling. Or, sometimes second babies are registered to childless relatives or rural families that are allowed to have a second child but haven't done so.

Wu, the woman who made the early morning escape, said she never intended to flout the one-child rule. She had resorted to fertility treatments to conceive her first child ? a daughter nicknamed Le Le, or Happy ? so she was stunned when a doctor told her she was expecting again in August, 2008.

The news triggered a monthlong "cold war" with her husband, Wu said. Silent dinners, cold shoulders. She wanted to keep the baby. He didn't. After a few weeks, he came around, she explained with a satisfied smile.

But family planning officials insisted on an abortion. The principal at her school also pressured her to end the pregnancy.

Desperate, she went online for answers ? and was led astray.

At her home on the outskirts of Zhuji, a textile hub a few hours south of Shanghai, the energetic former high school teacher recounted how she divorced her husband, then married her cousin the next day, all in an attempt to evade the rules.

The soap-opera-like subterfuge was meant to take advantage of a loophole that allows divorced parents to have a second child if their new spouse is a first-time parent.

Wu had helped raise her cousin, who is 25 and 10 years younger than her, and when she asked if he would marry her to help save the baby, he agreed.

The divorce, on Sept. 27, 2008 involved signing a document and posing for a photo. It was over in just a few minutes. The next day's marriage was similarly swift.

"I remember I was very happy that day," Wu said holding the marriage certificate with a glued-on snapshot of the cousins. "Because I thought I'd figured out a way to save my baby."

But her problem wasn't over. When the newlyweds applied for a birth permit, officials informed them conception had to take place after marriage. They were told to abort the baby, then try again. Wu was back to square one.

A popular option that was out of reach for Wu economically is to have the baby elsewhere, where the limits don't apply. Some better-off Chinese go to Hong Kong, where private agencies charge mainland mothers hundreds of thousands of yuan (tens of thousands of dollars) for transport, lodging, and medical costs.

The number giving birth in Hong Kong reached 40,000 last year, prompting the territory to cap the number of beds in public hospitals they are allowed from 2012. However, parents of kids born abroad face the bureaucratic hurdles of foreigners, having to pay premiums for school and other services.

In the end, Wu also fled, but not as far as Hong Kong. Three months from her due date, she kissed her baby daughter goodbye, telling her she was going on vacation, and hopped an early morning train to nearby Hangzhou. There she switched to another train bound for Shanghai, hoping the roundabout route would throw off anyone trying to tail her.

In Shanghai, Wu used a friend's ID to rent a one-room apartment with shared bathroom and kitchen. It was tiny and not cheap for her, 700 yuan a month (US$107), but it was across from a hospital that allowed her to register without a government-issued birth permission slip and it had an Internet connection.

Wu had never used email, so her husband ? the real one ? set up a password-protected online journal that he titled "yixiaobb," or 'one tiny baby.' She posted to the journal up to nine times a day, describing where she was living without ever revealing her exact location. She prefaced every entry with a capital M for mother, and added a number to mark how many messages she wrote in a day. Using the same journal, her husband wrote to her, coding his messages with an F.

It felt like an invisible tether linking Wu to her husband. He didn't know where she was, but knew she was OK. Shortly before her due date, she asked him to come to Shanghai, and he was present for the birth of their son.

More than two years later, she and her former husband, the father to both her children, have yet to remarry ? hoping it will legally shield him from any future punishment.

The marriage with her cousin was easily dissolved after they discovered it was never valid, because marriages between first cousins is illegal in China.

Wu was fired from her job as a public school teacher because of the baby and her ex-husband, who is also a teacher, was demoted to a freelance position at his school. Though told she has been assessed a 120,740 yuan ($18,575) social compensation fee, Wu has refused to pay.

Enforcers of the family planning limits showed up at their house in July, and again in November, threatening legal action. Wu is afraid their property might be confiscated or that she or husband might end up in detention, but she doesn't want to pay the fine because she doesn't believe she's done anything wrong.

"I don't think I've committed any crime," she said. "A crime is something that hurts other people or society or that infringes on other people's rights. I don't think having a baby is any kind of crime."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_as/as_china_two_kids

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

How to Make Milk That'll Get You Hammered [Happy Hour]

When I was a kid, there used to be a mason jar in my house that was always kept just out of my reach. It looked like it was filled yogurt, but grosser. Runny, chunky, with a sickly yellow color. I didn't find out until years later that it was actually the most delicious milk liqueur I've ever tasted. More »


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Pigeons Can Follow Abstract Number-Counting Rules

60-Second Science60-Second Science | More Science

Trained pigeons demonstrate an ability to use abstract number-counting rules on par with primates, and to recognize which groups of items contain more of those items. Sophie Bushwick reports

More 60-Second Science

Several vertebrate species can distinguish between, say, two and five bananas?but with the exception of primates, they can?t grasp the numerical rules that would let them arrange their piles of fruit from least to most. Now, new research suggests that pigeons, like primates, can follow these abstract numerical rules. The study is in the journal Science. [Damian Scarf, Harlene Hayne and Michael Colombo, "Pigeons on Par with Primates in Numerical Competence"]

Researchers trained pigeons with cards on which were pictures of one, two or three shapes, sometimes in different sizes and colors. The birds were ultimately able to correctly pick a card with one large green square first, followed by a card with two small red ovals, followed by one showing three long blue rods.

Then, the pigeons demonstrated a new ability?faced with two cards each showing up to nine images, they could tell which card had more. Which indicates that they had an abstract understanding of the single-digit amounts. Rhesus monkeys trained in a similar way displayed the same talents. Whether this shared ability evolved independently or came from a common ancestor is unclear. But it is clear that birdbrains aren?t so dumb.

?Sophie Bushwick

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast.]?


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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Video: Tick by Tick: 4 Charts to Watch in 2012

Jordan Kotick, Barclay's Capital takes a technical look at the charts to see where the market is headed.

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Canada not on board flight emissions trading plan

The federal government has vowed to keep up its fight against the European Union's emissions trading scheme that could cost Canadian and international airlines billions of dollars in EU airspace emissions fees.

Yet emboldened by the European Court of Justice's Dec. 21 decision, the European Commission told airlines to get ready for the new law, sparking fears of an international trade war.

"At this time of economic uncertainty, actions should not come at the price of international aviation, which plays such an important role in all of our economies," Transport Minister Denis Lebel wrote in a Dec. 8. letter to Slim Kallas, vice-president of the EU Commission for Transport.

"I've listened closely to the concerns expressed by Canada's industry and have concluded that taking scarce funds from the sector in the current economic climate would not be the best route to achieving emissions reductions," he continued.

Lebel also emphasized Canada's opposition to the EU's "unilateral" approach to tackling emissions in the airline industry.

He urged his European counterpart to abandon the plan and to join the international community in developing a global approach for tackling emissions in the airline industry under the auspices of the International Civil Aviation Organization, a UN agency. Action plans from ICAO members are expected in June.

On Dec. 21, the European Court of Justice rejected the legal challenge by U.S., Canadian and international airlines that called the EU proposal a violation of several international aviation agreements by imposing unfair penalties on non-EU carriers.

Under the EU scheme, all airlines, regardless of their country of origin, would have to pay for 15 per cent of the polluting rights accorded to them in 2012, the figure then rising to 18 per cent between 2013 and 2020.

Airlines say the move would cost them billions of dollars.

Canada is joined by 26 countries, including the U.S., China, Brazil and India, which signed a joint-ICAO declaration in September opposing the plan. They also urged the EU to join the international community to develop a global emissions plan.

Upon hearing the decision, the National Airlines Council of Canada expressed its "disappointment," saying it will begin talks with the Canadian government and other aviation powers "in earnest," NACC president George Petsika told Postmedia News.

"That's what we do in a free and democratic society," he said.

Charging fees for non-EU planes flying in EU airspace is "illegal under international law because emissions produced in international air space over high seas, that territory does not belong to the EU," Petsikas said. "This violates the principles of sovereignty under international law."

Echoing Lebel's earlier position, Petsikas said the matter should be brought before the ICAO.

Last month, the ICAO urged the EU to exclude foreign carriers from the new rules.

"All parties should agree to a global approach, not just one country or one territory, not just the EU dictating the rules of other countries," Petsikas said.

Meanwhile, a trade war could soon be on the horizon after strong language from both sides.

The European Court of Justice defended the EU's approach as "valid," and that it "infringes neither the principles of customary international law at issue nor the Open Skies Agreement" covering trans-Atlantic flights.

Non-EU airlines could "choose" whether to make commercial flights to and from EU airports, the court said.

"After crystal clear ruling today, EU now expects U.S. airlines to respect EU law, as EU respects U.S. law," EU climate change commissioner Connie Hedegaard wrote on Twitter.

Earlier this month, the U.S. voiced threats of reprisal should the EU move forward with the program.

In a Dec. 16 letter to EU officials, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton listed 43 nations also opposed to the EU proposal.

"Halt or, at a minimum, delay or suspend application of this directive," she wrote. "Re-engage with the rest of the world. The United States stands ready to engage in such an effort. Absent such willingness on the part of the EU, we will be compelled to take appropriate action."

In October, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill directing the U.S. government to forbid American carriers from taking part "in any emissions trading scheme unilaterally established by the European Union."

Underscoring the potential for a significant trade row, in early in June, China blocked an order by Hong Kong Airlines for billions of euros worth of Airbus aircraft.

But it's not only non-EU parties that are worried about the new law: European airlines also have expressed fears of a damaging trade war.

SNonato(at)postmedia.com

Twitter.com/SheilaNonato

? Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F56/~3/hchQzGe_ZbY/story.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

01/14/2012 - Dinner Theater 'Bedrooms' with Monroe Community Players

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Ethiopian court: 2 Swedish reporters guilty

(AP) ? A court in Ethiopia convicted two Swedish journalists Wednesday of supporting terrorism after the pair illegally entered the country with an ethnic Somali rebel group.

The pair, who now face up to 15 years in prison at their sentencing next week, have said they were gathering news at the time of their arrest.

However, Judge Shemsu Sirgaga said that was "very unlikely," accusing the Ogaden National Liberation Front of organizing the Swedes' journey starting in London via Kenya and Somalia into Ethiopia.

Ethiopian troops captured Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye six months ago during a clash with rebels in Ethiopia's restive Somali region in the country's east, a no-go area for reporters. Ethiopia considers the rebel group a terrorist organization

The chairman of the Swedish Union of Journalists, Jonas Nordling, deplored the conviction, saying it is clearly aimed at deterring reporters from investigating alleged human rights abuses in the Ogaden region.

"This is a political verdict," Nordling said. "There is no evidence to support that this is a terror crime."

"They are two established reporters who have used accepted journalistic methods to enter the area," he said, adding Ethiopian officials "absolutely do not want to see an open examination of what happens in the Ogaden area."

The pair said they had been gathering news about a Swedish oil company that is exploring the Ethiopia's Somali region for oil. Sweden's foreign minister Carl Bildt has close ties to the firm ? Lundin Petrol. He was a former member of the company's board of directors.

Shemsu said that "journalism demands impartiality and balance but doesn't require violating the laws of a sovereign country."

"The court finds the defendants guilty as charged in a unanimous vote," he said.

The Swedes' lawyers, their family and the Swedish ambassador to Ethiopia left the court without making any comments.

In Sweden, Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said the Swedish government will immediately contact high-level officials in the Ethiopian government.

"Our starting point is and remains that they have been in the country on a journalistic mission. They should be freed as soon as possible to be able to reunite with their families in Sweden," Reinfeldt said.

Bildt, the country's foreign minister, said on Twitter that Sweden expresses "grave concern" over the verdict. "We will continue to work to set them free," he said.

Persson and Schibbye have acknowledged that they entered Ethiopia illegally.

"Your honor, I am a journalist and my job is to gather news. I am guilty of entering Ethiopia illegally, but I am not guilty of the other activities I am charged of," Schibbye said during the case's preliminary hearing in October.

"I entered the country illegally and nothing else," Persson added.

The international community has closely followed the terror trial against the Swedes. Rights groups and diplomats say Ethiopia's anti-terrorism proclamation restricts freedom of expression and is used as a tool to crack down on dissent.

The rights group Amnesty International said after the verdict that there was no evidence to suggest that the two Swedes were doing anything but carrying out work as reporters.

"We believe that these men are prisoners of conscience, prosecuted because of their legitimate work," said Claire Beston, Amnesty International's Ethiopia researcher. "The overly broad provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation allow the authorities to criminalize the exercise of freedom of expression."

___

Associated Press writer Malin Rising in Stockholm contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-21-AF-Ethiopia-Journalists/id-1ae9d76a7bd542119d7adb3d66a1a0fd

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

In the Former Rebel Capital: Benghazi Protests Libya's New Regime (Time.com)

In mid-February, protests in Libya in front of the Benghazi courthouse swelled into a revolution and civil war that brought down Muammar Gaddafi. Now, blocks away, Libyans are again demonstrating in Benghazi. But this time they are directing their ire at the country's new rulers, complaining that they are continuing in the deposed dictator's path. From the failure to purge Gaddafi loyalists in the government to the lack of accountability from their leaders, Benghazi residents believe that the National Transitional Council (NTC) -- formed to replace the ousted leader's regime -- has not addressed their concerns.

In Sharja square on Thursday night, hundreds of people gathered to deliver a loud litany of demands. (On Friday, the crowd was much larger, estimated at 3,000 to 4,000 people.) Men with bull horns shouted their complaints and the crowd roared with approval. Behind them, a 20-ft sign affixed to a building listed their grievances under the title "Demands to Correct the Revolution." "We did not fight the revolution so Gaddafi's cronies could keep their positions," complained Said Buhibla, 31. "They still control the ministries. They control the embassies abroad. The NTC must purify the government of Gaddafi supporters." (PHOTOS: Life in Benghazi During Wartime)

It is a demand the NTC will find difficult to meet. Gaddafi staffed senior ministerial positions with supporters of his 1969 revolution. Libya's international isolation prevented the emergence of a new generation of Western-trained Libyan professionals. Beginning in the late 1970's, Gaddafi tangled with the West and hunted dissidents in European countries, leading many to largely close their borders to Libyan students. Almost a decade of sanctions for Libya's involvement in the downing of a civilian airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland -- including a flight ban -- made it virtually impossible for Libyan students to study in Western universities. Those with the experience necessary to manage large bureaucracies and deal with technical issues were often associated with Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam, who for much of the last decade was viewed as the country's leading reformer. Among them were the NTC's former Prime Minister Mahmud Jibril and Shukri Ghanem, Gaddafi's last oil minister. Today, there are few trained Libyan specialists who can meet the protesters' demands.

"Gaps have emerged between a Tripoli-based NTC and the people," explained a 60 year old physician who only gave his name as Muhammad. "Benghazi is not well represented [in the NTC]." His complaint is echoed by many in eastern Libya. The February revolt was spearheaded by easterners, and the NTC was based in Benghazi before moving westward to the capital of Tripoli after Gaddafi's fall in September. Many had hoped the new leadership would rectify the deposed leader's long neglect of Libya's second city, Benghazi. He lavished industry and infrastructure projects on his birthplace of Sirte and the remote desert region of Sabha where he completed his high school studies. As luxury hotels sprouted up there, roads in Benghazi's residential remained unpaved. Sewage is pumped into a downtown lagoon. Today, the city's residents fear their early sacrifices for the revolution have been forgotten. (See "In Benghazi, a Nostalgia for Gaddafi as Libya's Rebels Fail to Keep the Peace.")

Many in Benghazi are also impatient with the NTC's pace of reforms. They complain that not only have their hopes for an economic windfall failed to materialize, but that the situation has actually deteriorated. "We expected the NTC to use the country's oil wealth to give us jobs now that the government is no longer sending our money to Africa like Gaddafi did," said Abd al-Basit al-Fituri, a clerk at the local courthouse. "But all we see is that the banks are still closed and that we can't even get our money out. The situation is worse now than it was before."

A key complaint is the lack of transparency. "We don't know where our money is going. We don't know how the NTC is choosing new members," grumbles Mohamed Bayu, 30. "The NTC must stand up and say what it stands for." Even government officials admit that the protesters have a point. An NTC official explained how a key ministry left no paper trail detailing its transactions. "We don't have a single document tracing where the money went. How much things were bought and sold for. It is all in phone calls and conversations. That is not the democratic way. That is not even the Gaddafi way," says the official who requested anonymity because he was speaking about a sensitive topic. He is equally critical when discussing new NTC appointments. "We don't know how the new members were chosen, what the criteria used to select them was. I see only judges and lawyers and people good at lying," he sighs, flipping through a recently leaked list of new NTC members. (PHOTOS: Libya's New Regime)

"People were willing to be patient with the NTC's blunders while Gaddafi was in power. But now things have changed," explains Benghazi Political Science Professor Salah al-Sanussi. "They have failed to answer the demands of the people and violence against the politicians is possible."

Even NTC chairman Mustafa Abd al-Jalil is feeling the heat. Long admired by many Libyans for his probity and willingness to stand up to Gaddafi, whom he served as Justice Minister, Abd al-Jalil is now facing criticism that would have been unthinkable just months ago. "He thinks we are foolish," says Muftah Kusabat, 43, cradling his four-year-old son. "We will change him by force. He doesn't know what Benghazi means. But he will find out." Later, after an Abd al-Jalil supporter stopped his pick-up truck in front of the square and denounced the attacks against the NTC leader, a crowd swarmed his vehicle and tried to remove him by force.

It was a scene virtually unseen in eastern Libya since the NTC was formed in February. But with few changes apparent in post-Gaddafi Libya, protests are likely to continue until the council institutes the reforms that Libyans are demanding.

PHOTOS: Libya Celebrates Liberation

VIDEO: Why They Protest: Egypt, Libya and Syria

View this article on Time.com

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Last U.S. troops leave Iraq, ending war (Reuters)

K-CROSSING, Kuwait (Reuters) ? The last convoy of U.S. soldiers pulled out of Iraq on Sunday, ending nearly nine years of war that cost almost 4,500 American and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives, and left a country grappling with political uncertainty.

The war launched in March 2003 with missiles striking Baghdad to oust President Saddam Hussein closes with a fragile democracy still facing insurgents, sectarian tensions and the challenge of defining its place in an Arab region in turmoil.

As U.S. soldiers pulled out, Iraq's delicate power-sharing deal for , Sunni and Kurdish factions was already under pressure. The Shi'ite-led government asked parliament to fire the Sunni deputy prime minister, and security sources said the Sunni vice president faced an arrest warrant.

The final column of around 100 mostly U.S. military MRAP armoured vehicles carrying 500 U.S. troops trundled across the southern Iraq desert from their last base through the night and daybreak along an empty highway to the Kuwaiti border.

Honking their horns, the last batch of around 25 American military trucks and tractor trailers carrying Bradley fighting vehicles crossed the border early on Sunday morning, their crews waving at fellow troops along the route.

"I just can't wait to call my wife and kids and let them know I am safe," Sgt. First Class Rodolfo Ruiz said as the border came into sight. Soon afterwards, he told his men the mission was over, "Hey guys, you made it."

For U.S. President Barack Obama, the military pullout is the fulfilment of an election promise to bring troops home from a conflict inherited from his predecessor, the most unpopular war since Vietnam and one that tainted America's standing worldwide.

For Iraqis, though, the U.S. departure brings a sense of sovereignty tempered by nagging fears their country may slide once again into the kind of sectarian violence that killed many thousands of people at its peak in 2006-2007.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite-led government still struggles with a delicate power-sharing arrangement between Shi'ite, Kurdish and Sunni parties, leaving Iraq vulnerable to meddling by Sunni Arab nations and Shi'ite Iran.

The extent of those divisions was clear on Sunday when Maliki asked parliament for a vote of no confidence against Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq, and security sources and lawmakers said an arrest warrant had been issued for Tareq al-Hashemi, one of Iraq's two vice presidents.

Hashemi and Mutlaq are Iraq's two most-senior Sunni politicians. The security sources said only intervention by Sunni and Shi'ite politicians had blocked Hashemi's arrest after he was linked to terrorism by four bodyguards.

The intensity of violence and suicide bombings has subsided. But a stubborn Sunni Islamist insurgency and rival Shi'ite militias remain a threat, carrying out almost daily attacks, often on Iraqi government and security officials.

Iraq says its forces can contain the violence but they lack capabilities in areas such as air defence and intelligence gathering. A deal for several thousand U.S. troops to stay on as trainers fell apart over the sensitive issue of legal immunity.

For many Iraqis, security remains a worry - but no more than jobs and getting access to power in a country whose national grid provides only a few hours of electricity a day despite vast oil potential.

U.S. and foreign companies are already helping Iraq develop the world's fourth-largest oil reserves, but its economy needs investment in all sectors, from hospitals to infrastructure.

"We don't think about America... We think about electricity, jobs, our oil, our daily problems," said Abbas Jaber, a government employee in Baghdad. "They (Americans) left chaos."

GOING HOME

After Obama announced in October that troops would come home by the end of the year as scheduled, the number of U.S. military bases was whittled down quickly as hundreds of troops and trucks carrying equipment headed south to Kuwait.

U.S. forces, which had ended combat missions in 2010, paid $100,000 a month to tribal sheikhs to secure stretches of the highways leading south to reduce the risk of roadside bombings and attacks on the last convoys.

Only around 150 U.S. troops will remain in the country attached to a training and cooperation mission at the huge U.S. embassy on the banks of the Tigris river.

At the height of the war, more than 170,000 U.S. troops were in Iraq at more than 500 bases. By Saturday, there were fewer than 3,000 troops, and one base - Contingency Operating Base Adder, 300 km (185 miles) south of Baghdad.

At COB Adder, as dusk fell before the departure of the last convoy, soldiers slapped barbecue sauce on slabs of ribs brought from Kuwait and laid them on grills beside hotdogs and sausages.

Earlier, 25 soldiers sat on folding chairs in front of two armoured vehicles watching a five-minute ceremony as their brigade's flags were packed up for the last time before loading up their possessions and lining up their trucks.

The last troops flicked on the lights studding their MRAP vehicles and stacked flak jackets and helmets in neat piles, ready for the final departure for Kuwait and then home.

"A good chunk of me is happy to leave. I spent 31 months in this country," said Sgt. Steven Schirmer, 25, after three tours of Iraq since 2007. "It almost seems I can have a life now, though I know I am probably going to Afghanistan in 2013. Once these wars end I wonder what I will end up doing."

NEIGHBOURS KEEP WATCH

Iran and Turkey, major investors in Iraq, will be watching with Gulf nations to see how their neighbour handles its sectarian and ethnic tensions, as the crisis in Syria threatens to spill over its borders.

The fall of Saddam allowed the long-suppressed Shi'ite majority to rise to power. The Shi'ite-led government has drawn the country closer to Iran and Syria's Bashar al-Assad, who is struggling to put down a nine-month-old uprising.

Iraq's Sunni minority is chafing under what it sees as the increasingly authoritarian control of Maliki's Shi'ite coalition. Some local leaders are already pushing mainly Sunni provinces to demand more autonomy from Baghdad.

The main Sunni-backed political bloc Iraqiya said on Saturday it was temporarily suspending its participation in the parliament to protest against what it said was Maliki's unwillingness to deliver on power-sharing.

A dispute between the semi-autonomous Kurdish region and Maliki's central government over oil and territory is also brewing, and is a potential flashpoint after the buffer of the American military presence is gone.

"There is little to suggest that Iraq's government will manage, or be willing, to get itself out of the current stalemate," said Gala Riani, an analyst at IHS Global Insight.

"The perennial divisive issues that have become part of the fabric of Iraqi politics, such as divisions with Kurdistan and Sunni suspicions of the government, are also likely to persist."

(Additional reporting by Rania El Gamal, Suadad al-Salhy and Serena Chaudhry in Baghdad; Writing by Patrick Markey in Baghdad; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111218/wl_nm/us_iraq_withdrawal

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