1/25/2015

An "Outsider" Newsflash : On the Reality in Israel: Arabs, go vote and create an alternative to the government that excludes you - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz

+Haaretz of Israel has laid out the stark realities of the harsh life Israeli Arabs face today which the current leadership has helped to fuel.     It is gratifying to see the Israeli Arabs putting up a joint slate and hopefully will end up propelling the Israeli Left to Power so that at least one of the potential challenges in the Middle East is mitigated--It is compelling Reading: 



Arabs, go vote and create an alternative to the government that excludes you - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz

1/24/2015

Notations For the Week-End: A Very Challenging Week On the Iran Front

It is the post-SOTU (State of the Union) in the United States as the GOP has come out swinging against President Obama's proposals.    His particular veto threat over Iran is especially poignant.

Unknown to the World Community, The Israeli Prime Minister had ordered the Israeli Ambassador and AIPAC (The American Israeli Public Affairs Committee) to begin a concerted effort to undermine the current talks with Iran by advocating for even tougher sanctions.   +Haaretz הארץ brilliantly documented the behind the scene manipulative efforts that ultimately resulted in the controversial invite extended to the Israeli Prime Minister to address a joint session of Congress:




The conservatives are up in arms criticizing why The President, the Vice President and the Secretary of State are not meeting the Israeli Prime Minister.   What is also very disturbing is the tacit disregard shown by the Israeli Prime Minister in having accepted this invitation and the disregard shown by the Speaker.   Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif said it plainly if Congress pulls off this stunt:




The apparent tone deaf nature of the realities on the ground was ever so evident as we reviewed the twitter feed of the US House Speaker with the citations it noted.    This is as Europe came out forcefully in favor of continued negotiations with Iran--and we have decided to note this in its' entirety here for reference: (retrieved 1/24/2015): 

Give diplomacy with Iran a chance 

January 21


Laurent Fabius is France’s minister of foreign affairs and international development. Philip Hammond is Britain’s foreign secretary. Frank-Walter Steinmeier is Germany’s federal minister for foreign affairs. Federica Mogherini is high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy. 
In November 2013, after many months of negotiations, the E3+3 (France, Germany and Britain, together with the United States, Russia and China, a partnership also referred to sometimes as the P5+1) and Iran reached an interim agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. This agreement has had three main benefits.
First, it has stopped the progress of the most sensitive elements of Iran’s nuclear program. Under the Joint Plan of Action agreed to by Iran and the six partners in the talks, which are being coordinated by the European Union, Iran has ceased production of its most highly enriched uranium, limited its production of new centrifuges for enriching uranium and refrained from installing additional centrifuges. Iran has also agreed to cease progress toward bringing on line the nuclear reactor at Arak. As a result, Iran today is further away from obtaining enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon than before the negotiations.
At the same time, the international community has gained improved access to Iran’s nuclear facilities, allowing the world to verify whether Iran is living up to its commitments. Whereas previous inspections only occurred once every few weeks, the International Atomic Energy Agency is now able to conduct daily inspections of the Natanz and Fordow facilities, and the Arak reactor is now subject to monthly inspections.
And last but not least, the interim agreement has given us time and space to try to negotiate a long-term settlement to the Iranian nuclear issue, which is critical for the future of international and regional security.
This progress would have been impossible without the international consensus on the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program and the unity with which we have acted. Together, the international community built a sanctions regime that brought Iran to the negotiating table.
Today, the IAEA continues to verify that Iran is meeting its commitments. In exchange, we are fulfilling our commitment to provide Iran with limited sanctions relief, even as we continue to enforce our core sanctions regime and keep the pressure on Iran. And, during the past year, the six partners have worked in close consultation with each other and with our close allies to keep negotiating — to see if we can achieve a comprehensive and lasting solution to the threat of a nuclear Iran.
Our objective remains clear. We want a comprehensive solution that both recognizes the Iranian people’s right to access peaceful nuclear energy and allows the international community to verify that Iran cannot obtain a nuclear weapon. Any agreement must provide concrete, verifiable and long-lasting assurances that Iran’s nuclear program is and will remain exclusively peaceful. Nothing less will do. It is now up to Iran to make a strategic choice between open-ended cooperation and further isolation.
To be sure, difficult challenges lie ahead, and critical differences between Iran and the international community must be addressed. That is why weextended the negotiating window until later this year.
In this context, our responsibility is to make sure diplomacy is given the best possible chance to succeed. Maintaining pressure on Iran through our existing sanctions is essential. But introducing new hurdles at this critical stage of the negotiations, including through additional nuclear-related sanctions legislation on Iran, would jeopardize our efforts at a critical juncture. While many Iranians know how much they stand to gain by overcoming isolation and engaging with the world, there are also those in Tehran who oppose any nuclear deal. We should not give them new arguments. New sanctions at this moment might also fracture the international coalition that has made sanctions so effective so far. Rather than strengthening our negotiating position, new sanctions legislation at this point would set us back.
Let us be clear: If Iran violates its commitments or proves unwilling to agree to a comprehensive, verifiable understanding that meets the international community’s bottom line, we will have no choice but to further increase pressure on it. For the first time, however, we may have a real chance to resolve one of the world’s long-standing security threats — and the chance to do it peacefully. We can’t let that chance pass us by or do anything to derail our progress. We have a historic opportunity that might not come again. With the eyes of the world upon us, we must demonstrate our commitment to diplomacy to try to resolve the Iranian nuclear issue within the deadline we have set. That is the surest path to reaching a comprehensive, lasting solution that will make the world and the region safer.
This is as the so-called conservative opposition in Iran continues to mount even more vicious attacks on Javad Zarif.    The most laughable one of all was when the head of the Basij (Iran's Popular Militia)  came out and criticized Zarif for the famous 15-minute stroll.   The commander said, "...Zarif does not know diplomacy".    It was just laughable beyond words.   
What Congress must note is the last paragraph in this from the Big-Four in Europe.  We have highlighted it all in "Bold" for all to see.     Challenging times indeed.....






1/22/2015

Notations From the Grid: On #Davos2015 , Iraq & Yemen

This is as there was yet another London Conference on Iraq and a lot of "Happy Talk"--as the Merchants of Death of Daesh (known in Western Media as IS/ISIL) continue to wreck havoc on the innocent.   What was striking also was how there continues to be a tacit acknowledgment yet again that Iraq has to be rebuilt.     It was ever so gratifying to hear the US Secretary of State refer to them as Daesh as he spoke in London after the meeting with the British Foreign Secretary and the Iraqi Prime Minister..

As we went to press with this latest edition of "Notations from the Grid", we saw this on the Al Arabeya Twitter feed:




The Huthis in Yemen seem to have prevailed--and Al Qaeda will further make inroads as this power vacuum develops--which wrecks the policy considerations by the United States and Saudi Arabia.



1/21/2015

Notations From the Grid On Our World : On #Iran, #Syria, #Israel & Other Thoughts

It is the day after the State of the Union.   President Obama has gone to Idaho to make the case for his initiatives before heading off to India for India's Republic Day.   It appears that India has truly laid out quite a welcome for him:




What was surprising was an invitation by the Speaker of the House to the Prime Minister of Israel to come before the Congress to address "radical Islam" and the Iran Nuclear Threat.    The White House was understandbly irritated by this:




The President said that all options were on the table, but talking is better than shooting.   Yet, it is so unfortuante that someone who has done so much to undermine the Peace Process is being asked to speak before Congress.    This headline truly underscored the ironic nature of it all:




It is also quite unfortunate that the Republicans have elected to intervene in as overt a way as they have to support the Israeli Prime Minister's bid for re-election.    It is also not surprising that the Israeli Prime Minister has accepted this because he also snubbed the French President as he said he would go to Paris after the French President told him not to--based on some very telling reporting from Haaretz.   Iran, though, buried the General that was killed in the Israeli Drone strike inside Syria:

As we finished "going to press" here on this latest developments, we saw this :




Whether this scandal engulfes Ahmadinjead, the former President is another matter.  Although he may not spending a day in jail, the fact that this was headlined on IRNA, the Official Iranian Government News agency, is in and of itself huge.    Is this part of the subtle openness Rouhani has been pushing despite profound odds--as exemplified by the demand by the head of the Basij for an "apology" from Foreign Minister Zarif remains to be seen.

Interesting times.....




1/20/2015

Notations on Our World: On #SOTU , Yemen & Other Thoughts

The Annual State of the Union is to be delivered by President Obama tonight.   The US Media is abuzz and is "Gearing up" for it with wall-to-wall coverage.    This is as the GOP is preparing for its' response by a number of emerging starts including a newly elected Senator from Iowa.

There are a number of interesting initiatives the President has proposed.      It will be interesting to see whether the GOP is receptive to such proposals.    The President has noted that this is the 4th Quarter for him--but it appears that he is bound to go out on a bang.  It will be on the White House Website when it begins @ http://www.whitehouse.gov/sotu   The view from the across the pond was also quite telling (and somewhat hopeful):




Hopefully this will be translated into concerte achievements and overcome the paralysis of the last number of years.   The President will be on the road later on and will be visiting India.    India is gearing up in a major way to host the President and the President will be treated to a private tour of the Taj Mahal.   We reported on it during the "Daily Run on the Grid" Earlier:







We have also been following the very worrisome developments in Yemen: 




The Shitte Rebels attacked the President's private home while he was inside.   As the Yemen drama is unfolding, there is the latest out of the Daesh merchants of death as they have demanded a $ 200 Million ransom from the Government of Japan or they will execute two Japanese hostages--and as Israel's latest foray into Syria resulted in a number of Hezbollah Commanders and an Iranian General being killed.    

Truly Challenging Times......




1/19/2015

Notations on Our World: On The Plight of Muslims and "Not Fearing Death Squads"

As a new week dawns here in #Outsiders, we ran across a moving and ever so eloquent by the eminent scholar Professor Dabashi of Columbia University that speaks for itself about the realities out there today in the aftermath of the attack in France.     This was published earlier today at Alaraby.co.uk and we decided to release its' entire text here.

Source:    http://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/comment/16bc17df-a32f-4736-906f-6ad6ca3bd03d, retreieved 1/19/2015
Don't fear the death squads

Don't fear the death squads

By: Hamid DabashiDate of publication 19 January, 2015

 

for your parochialism
your provincialism
or your ignorance

The politics of post-Charlie Hebdo incident has become positively polarized. On one side you have a militantly mobilized army of liberal fear and loathing against Islam and Muslims. On the other, you have Muslims who refuse to be intimidated by this charade and emphatically assert their defiance to jump on the “Je sui Charlie” bandwagon.
 








The smarter the liberal Islamophobes think they are, the better they seek to hide it under “the freedom of speech” truism, as if by being a Muslim you are ipso facto against that freedom. That in effect reveals an even more sinister form of Islamophobia.

But the battle is waged fairly and the skirmishes continue apace — as they should. In his powerful poem, Bad MuslimAsam Ahmad puts the defiance in chapter and verse:

I will not apologize
until every single european
apologizes for the massacres
holocausts genocides famines
committed in your names
until you personally apologize
for palestine kashmir algeria the
congo
for drawing lines
in the sand
that still fester
like bloody wounds

In the midst of this thickening dust of polarized politics of position and counter-position, identity and alterity, people who care for the free and democratic future of the Muslim world at large need to beware of a far more serious issue that may get lost in the thick smoke screen of this particular European moment.

We have already been here and done that – distracted by a relatively minor incident while a much more colossal calamity was under way: a militant group of Muslims does something outrageous and generates fury, and as the world attention (triggered by an incident that involves European or American bodies) is drawn to that fury, people lose sight of something far more critical and costly.


Precisely at the European moment when world attention was forcefully drawn to Paris for the vicious murder of a handful of French satirists, the murderous Islamist gang Boko Haram slaughtered an estimated 2,000 human beings in Northern Nigerian villages (and the reports today on BBC World about how one family lost the only breadwinner and a wife and two little girls are now forced to beg was heartbreaking to watch--Daily Outsider Editors..)
 
Of an estimated 1.8 billion Muslims worldwide only a few million live in Europe and North America and they are more than capable of engaging in the historic struggle of defending (as they re-articulate) their faith. The screaming hypocrisy of Europeans and their turn to “freedom of speech” when it comes to denigrating and humiliating their Muslim populations (particularly the disenfranchised and destitute recent émigrés suffering hopelessly in their ghettos), underscored by their murderous colonial past, accentuated by having a war criminal like Binyamin Netanyahu lead their parade, are just too gaudily evident to worry they may get lost in the midst of this “Je suis Charlie” charade. If we care about the fate of our humanity – Muslim and non-Muslim – there is a larger context and concern that demands simultaneous attention.
 
‘Death to America’
 
I dislike Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons no more or less than I detest the slogan of “Death to America” when chanted by masses of mobilized and frenzied Muslim zealots on the Friday sermons staged by the custodians of the Islamic Republic on the occupied site of Tehran University. The slogan, of course, is far less targeted against Americans half way around the globe than it is against Iranians themselves, to frighten and silence and rule them with fear. The Iranian hostage crisis of 1979-1980 and Ayatollah Khomeini’s infamous fatwa against Salman Rushdie are the enduring gifts of the Iranian revolution to the world at large: How viciously militant Islamism creates smoke screens of fighting “the Great Satan” while robbing a nation of its magnificent cosmopolitan revolution and turning it into a diabolic Islamic Republic.
 
The so-called Islamic State (IS, formerly, ISIS), Boko Haram, and al-Qaeda and all their varied gestations, are today the most pestiferous counter-revolutionary machineries diverting the course of Arab and Muslim revolutions. Whatever their causes – ranging from the brutish US imperialism to the banalities of Israeli colonialism to local and regional tyrannies from one end of the Arab and Muslim world to another – their consequences immediately threaten the democratic future of Muslim lands first and foremost.
 
These Islamist thugs have one aim and one aim only: to derail the democratic and cosmopolitan course of Arab revolutions. Everything else is a sideshow. They bank on European and American racism and Islamophobia. They maliciously turn the legitimate grievances of Muslims and all other people against European colonial history and contemporary racism to the advantage of their own criminal and illegitimates aims. European leaders and their press might “freely” opt to fall into that trap. It is their business. But people who care for the democratic future of the Arab and Muslim world should not.
 
As with the case of the Salman Rushdie Affair of 1989, this murderous posturing of militant Islamists in Europe to tackle “the West” is a criminal ruse to rule the Muslim world with fear and loathing, with cruelty and thuggery, as Al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, the Taliban, and IS are now doing in territories under their control from Afghanistan to Nigeria.
 
The ruling fanaticism in the Islamic Republic of Iran is only the more institutionalized case of the same disease. The murder of a dozen journalists in Paris pales in comparison with the terror that Boko Haram and Islamic State and al-Qaeda, and the Taliban have perpetrated on Muslims from Africa to Asia, or over thirty years of systematic destruction of independent journalism in the Islamic Republic of Iran and in the Arab and rest of the Muslim world.
 
Ayatollah Khomeini and his lieutenants staged and used the American hostage crisis and the Salman Rushdie Affair of 1989 to divert world attention as they went about consolidating their brutish grip on power, seeking to destroy a magnificent cosmopolitan political culture and levelling it to their own contorted and crooked sizes. The taking of the US embassy in Iran in November 1979 by the so-called “Muslim Student Followers of the Imam’s Line” was no less treacherous an act of thievery against the cause of democracy in Iran than the CIA-sponsored coup of 1953, which they feigned to fear would be repeated in 1979.
 
Widespread and deep-rooted university purges followed that treacherous act, as did mass executions of political prisoners. With the stroke of one pen by Khomeini, mass graves were dug in the Khavaran cemetery, as successive “cultural revolutions” were led by militant ideologues. Meanwhile, the aching hearts of European and North American liberalism were bleeding profusely over the career opportunism of one Salman Rushdie.

A nasty streak of racism

History is now repeating itself in an even more insidious way and on a much wider scale. As the ruling regime in the Islamic Republic singularly Shia-fied the cosmopolitan Iranian revolution of 1977-1979, its chief nemesis, Saudi Arabia began financing the most pernicious form of Wahabism, soon to be followed by other Persian Gulf potentates financing even more diabolic forms of Sunni fanaticism. Thus the militant Sunnification of Arab politics seeking to derail the Arab revolutions mirrors the violent Shiafication of the Iranian revolution.
 
After the catastrophic partition of India in 1947 in the course of its anticolonial struggles and the formation of Pakistan as an Islamic state in 1947, and after the equally catastrophic (as Palestinians rightly term it) establishment of the Jewish settler colony of Israel, the militant Shiafication of the Iranian revolution was the most disastrous event of modern history in the region. Exacerbating and deepening the denominational and sectarian identity politics of the region, the Islamic Republic of Iran emerged to face the Jewish state of Israel, adjacent to the rise of Hindufundamentalism in India and of Buddhist nationalism further to the East — all of course under the military suzerainty of US Christian imperialism. This is the terrorizing history of the last half a century that has afflicted millions of human beings living in the region.
 
Yes we are all Muslim, but Muslim is not all we are. Yes Islam is integral to who we are, but it is not definitive to who and what we are. Yes Islamic law is integral to being a Muslim but not definitive to being a Muslim. There is more than one way to be a Muslim and no Imam, no Mullah, no Sheikh, no sect, absolutely no one and nothing has a monopoly over defining who or what is a Muslim. Muslims are the descendants of vast and successive world and worldly empires. A rich and diversified intellectual, discursive, institutional, spiritual, and symbolic history informs the transnational public sphere upon which Muslims can now articulate who and what they are. There is more to “Islam” than any fraternity club of Mullahs or Imams or self-appointed “leaders” can imagine or legislate in their Shariah.
 
 Just because there is a nasty streak of racism and Islamophobia in Europe and North America and all they see in us is being a “Muslim” (which for them is a coded word for being a “terrorist”) it does not mean we too should reduce and compromise the diversified plurality, the rich complexity, the life-affirming multiplicity of who and what we are to their common denominator of fear and loathing. We are a world and we have inherited a worldliness of which both the Islamophobes and the Islamists (two sides of the same nasty coin) are constitutionally ignorant and every day that passes their ignorance increases. In order to break the vicious cycle between the militant Islamists and racist Islamophobes and deny them the monopoly of the dominant discourse we need to expose them simultaneously—for the ugly mirror image of each other that they are.

Power distorts a world shaped by grief. Read more

It is imperative for us to see Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Ayman al-Zawahiri for what they are, the fanatical counterparts and kindred souls of Anders Breivik, Geert Wilders, Pamela Geller, Bill Maher and Sam Harris. When a power-mongering Ayatollah issued a fatwa against a magnificent British Indian novelist and forever destroyed his literary career, Ayatollah Khomeini and Salman Rushdie became the doppelganger of each other: a militant Islamist and a fanatical Islamophobe. Khomeini now lives in Rushdie, and Rushdie died with Khomeini.
 
What criminal fanatics of al-Qaeda, Islamic State, and Boko Haram have come together to do is precisely what the Shia militants did to the Iranian revolution of 1977-1979 — derail these multifaceted, grassroots, emancipatory, cosmopolitan revolutions by distorting and derailing them into Islamist sectarianism. Muslims as citizens of one particular multifaceted culture in Iran were fooled and frightened and their liberating revolution derailed by fanatical Shia — their “religious intellectuals” in particular. Muslims at large from one end of the Muslim world to another should not be fooled and frightened again by fanatical Sunnis in the course of the Arab revolutions — their murderous death squads in particular. 

1/17/2015

Notations From the Grid For the Week-End (II): On Courageus Souls

As the debate over Islam and rightheousness continues onward beyond Paris, this perceptive and engaging reflection by the emminent Scholar Professor Dabashi underscored all who have defied the odds and to be agents of change:

We're also celebrating a birthday--the birthday of the great Mohamamd Ali. What he noted and shared by a Facebook Friend remembering the "Greatest" on his day is ever so perceptive: