Wednesday, December 28, 2011

 

Raising bioethical standards


From The Hindu

Last year archival research by Professor Susan Reverby of Wellesley College revealed that during 1946-48 United States scientists had conducted a series of macabre human experiments on vulnerable Guatemalans. The experiments, now widely acknowledged to be a gross violation of modern-day bioethics standards, saw a U.S. team headed by John Cutler, a U.S. Public Health Service medical officer, clandestinely infect Gatemalan prison and mental hospital inmates with sexually transmitted diseases such as syphilis, gonorrhoea, and chancroid to purportedly test the effectiveness of penicillin.

Following the publication of Professor Reverby’s research, the Obama administration issued an apology to Guatemala and subsequently Mr. Obama constituted a Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues to delve into what happened in Guatemala and, equally importantly, what the current status of protections for human subjects of medical research is, and how those protections could be enhanced. The Commssion reported its findings earlier this month, and while it could not identify any risks that a Guatemalan-type operation would be conducted again, it did highlight several areas where protections could be strengthened.


The ideas emerging from the Commission’s report will influence the course of the growing debate around bioethics standards in developing countries such as India, where pharmaceutical companies and other institutions are expanding their clinical trials operations and not all subjects in such human experiments may be able to provide informed consent. In this context a member of President Obama’s high-level commission, eminent Indian-American scientist Raju Kucherlapati, spoke to Narayan Lakshman about the principles that the Commission outlined as comprising a basic framework for protecting participants in human-subjects research.


As the Paul C. Cabot Professor of Genetics and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Professor Kucherlapati is not only considered an expert on questions of U.S. bioethics issues but has also played a vital role on the frontier of medical research in the Human Genome Project. Originally from Andhra Pradesh, Professor Kucherlapati received his B.S. and M.A. in Biology from universities in India, and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana. Edited transcript of the interview:

You are a member of President Obama’s Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues and part of the team that produced this week’s report. Could you put the report in the context of the 1940s Guatemalan human experiments and explain how serious it is that the Commission found gaps in the current state of human subject protections?

As you probably know, the history of how the report came about was that Professor Susan Reverby from Wellesley College published a paper describing some of the events that happened in the late 1940s in Guatemala, which were done by one United States Public Health Service physician John Cutler. When those revelations came out President Barack Obama apologised to the Guatemalan government about the unfortunate events that happened and asked the Presidential Commission to do three things.

First, he wanted to have a full accounting of what happened in Guatemala. Second, he asked the Presidential Commission to consult with the international community and based upon those deliberations he wanted to ask whether we have adequate safeguards to protect human subjects in research studies conducted in the U.S. and abroad with federal support. So those were the charges for the Commission.

Commission first wrote a report in September called Ethically Impossible, in a task to describe in detail what the Commission had been able to find out about the events that occurred between 1946 and 1948 in Guatemala. Then it also produced a report that came from the international commission that was established by the Chair of the Commission and that is called Research Across Borders. The report that you are referring to, which came out yesterday, was the Commission’s deliberation on aspects of protecting participants in human subject research.

The most worrying finding by the Commission in some ways seemed to be the fact that federal agencies do not even have the capability to track the involvement of human subjects in research conducted on a vast scale, over 55,000 projects worldwide. How do you think such a serious structural flaw could be rectified?

I don’t know if I would characterise it in the way you have. First of all, the Commission felt that to be able to fully assess whether there are any issues it would be important to understand the scope of clinical research studies conducted with federal funds. It sought intervention from various governmental agencies to provide that information. It indeed received that information from all of the agencies from whom it sought information and that information is summarised in the report.

One other thing was that the degree of detail of the information that each of the agencies was able to provide was different. Of course the format of all of the reports data from the different agencies was also somewhat different. That suggested that the public has no easy access to all of the information of federally-funded human-subjects research.

Based upon that the first recommendation that the Commission makes is that each department or agency that supports this sort of research should make publicly available the specific data elements of each programme. That would include what the title of the programme is, who the investigator is, where that study is done and what amount of funding is provided for that.

Although that information is revealing it is not exactly in a single database. But if each of the agencies has that information then somebody within the U.S. government could provide a portal through which all of this information would become available.

But having said that the Commission has not found any specific instances in which there have been any problems with the protection of human subjects in any of the studies that it has conducted.

Do you have any sense of how the Commission’s findings are going to be taken forward and whether they will be translated into actual policy changes by the Obama administration? What comes next?

First of all, this is done at the request of the President and the report has been submitted to the President. The President and his staff would read the report very carefully. Representatives of the Commission will brief the appropriate staff with more details and background as needed.

The second thing that happens when these types of reports are released is that there is a significant amount of public interest in them. There are many public fora where the results are discussed extensively. Whether or not the President and the executive branch would take on all the recommendations or not, that is up to the President to make that decision.

But in many of these things the Commission has recommended that if the executive branch does not adopt these recommendations then at least it [should] provide a reason and a rationale as to why that is the case. We will see how far the recommendations will be accepted by the President.

In the context of the human experiments in Guatemala, which members of the Commission have described as “chillingly egregious” could you comment on the Commission’s view on compensation to the victims and their families? More generally, what are the guiding principles for such compensation in your view?

I think the issues with regard to compensation were not studied in the context of Guatemala and that is under litigation right now, so I do not have anything to say about compensation in the case of the Guatemala studies.

But as I mentioned the report called Research Across Borders, that is the proceedings of the international research panel of the Presidential Commission, discusses the particular issue of compensation. That group felt that the compensation mechanisms in the U.S. and the rest of the world are different, and they recommended that the U.S. think about compensation mechanisms that [are similar to the kinds of mechanisms] used in the rest of the world. That aspect has been studied very carefully by the Commission and discussed in public fora.

Despite all of that, the one clear consensus is, first of all, the idea that all of the individuals who agree to participate in research are making a significant contribution to society as a whole. The Commission felt that despite every kind of effort that one might take to mitigate risk or harm, if anything happens, the individual participants should not be left alone to pay for the cost of treating injuries that directly relate to that research.
But having said that it is not clear whether the systems that we have in the U.S. are inadequate. There is no reason to suggest or evidence to support, except for the international panel’s view, the idea that in the U.S., how individuals are compensated within the system is inadequate.

One of the recommendations that the Commission makes is that the U.S. government should first evaluate whether the systems that we have in place for compensating research-related injuries to participants is adequate or not adequate. If that study reveals that it is not adequate then [the Commission would recommend that the U.S. government] conduct a pilot study [through] the National Institutes of Health – because that is the agency which provides the majority of support for this human-subject related research – to evaluate different types of methodologies and say which might be the most appropriate.

Could you explain whether the Commission’s findings have any implications for human experiments conducted by the private sector, rather than government-funded research? What is the scale of private sector research and is there a risk that the commercial motive heightens the risk of unethical treatment of human subjects?

The President’s charge to the Commission is to look at whether we have adequate protections for research supported by the U.S. government, whether it is in this country or elsewhere. But the Commission felt that many of the ethical principles that are dealt with are not specific to publicly-funded research and that they would apply equally to privately-funded human-subjects research. So the principles apply everywhere.
he second question is what are the kinds of regulations that are currently in place for privately-funded research in the U.S.? Many of them are research efforts that are supported by pharmaceutical companies or biotechnology companies trying to develop drugs for a variety of different conditions.

In this country any private entity that is seeking approval for a new drug or treatment would have to go through the Food and Drug Administration. The FDA has rules. The FDA rules are very similar, if not identical, to the rules established by many other federal agencies which follow a set of rules called the Common Rules, which [in turn] define the criteria and conditions under which human-subjects research can be conducted. In a way anything that goes to the FDA would have to follow guidelines and regulations which are very similar to the ones that the Commission has talked about.

In addition, of course, in the studies that are conducted outside of the U.S. each of the countries has their own rules and regulations and [companies] may have to follow those regulations as well. There have been discussions as to whether some of these privately-funded research efforts do or do not take advantage of research that is done in other countries. The report deals with some of those types of issues. Regarding those aspects the Commission really recommends that any research that is done outside of the U.S. should take into consideration the local interest, that is, whether it would benefit the communities in which the research is conducted. The benefits could be any one of many different things but nevertheless the Commission recommends that those types of things should be taken into consideration carefully.

There are other sorts of issues with regard to how publicly-funded research outside the U.S. should be conducted and we all felt that the same principles apply whether it is supported by public or private funds.

According to the World Health Organisation the clinical trials industry in India was valued at over $1 billion in 2010 and is growing fast. Given this booming industry, there may be some risks for human subjects there. Based on the experience of the United States, including the most recent debate engendered by the Commission, what reforms are necessary in developing countries like India to have a sufficiently robust bioethics framework?

First of all I think that one of the most important things that the report [by the Commission] talks about is that each country should have the appropriate amount of infrastructure and people who are knowledgeable about the protection of human subjects or the ethical aspects of protecting human subjects. [This infrastructure] should either be in place or before such studies are initiated [there should be an expectation] that such infrastructure can be put together. So that’s number one – there has to be a significant number of people who are knowledgeable about these things.

The second, very important thing is that in making decisions about proper research there should be a significant amount of community involvement. When we say “community” the Commission refers to local communities because the needs of the community in which the research is conducted must be very different [across communities]. The studies that are conducted should not harm but should be of benefit to the community. The only way that you would be able to make sure that that is the case is through engagement with that community.

The third aspect is that there have been lots of discussions on the nature of the trials that should be conducted. For example placebos can be used in such studies and obviously one cannot make a generalised statement about whether a particular type of study is appropriate or not appropriate, but those or all decisions that have to be made on a case-by-case basis by informed people that include the local community.

On a different but related note, you have been closely involved in the Human Genome Project. Could you update us on where it stands now and whether its ultimate benefits in terms of new treatments for some diseases are likely to be realised in the near future?

There are dramatic changes occurring in our ability to sequence the human genome. I was part of the human genome mapping and sequencing efforts. When those efforts were completed in 2003 it was estimated that we had spent approximately $2.5-3 billion to sequence a single human genome. This year several companies in the U.S. have begun to offer whole genome sequencing for less than $10,000. So the cost of sequencing has gone down very significantly over the last eight years or so. It is anticipated that this cost would go down even more in the next few years.
Second, in the case of some disorders, especially cancer, it is becoming increasingly clear that when we examine the total genome of cancer tissues we are able to obtain a tremendous amount of information that is helping us define the ideology of cancers. But it is also in many instances providing knowledge on how we might be able to use that information immediately to treat that patient.
So these types of methodologies are already revolutionising the way that we care for patients and I anticipate that in the next five to ten years there is going to be an increase in the utilisation of sequencing technologies to, first, assess individual risk for different disorders, second, to diagnose that disease more accurately, and third, to use that information to help physicians make informed treatment decisions. All of those aspects are beginning to right now revolutionise the way medicine is practiced and that will continue for the next many years.

As an eminent Indian-American and a leading thinker in your field, can you tell us about your background including your connection to India?

I was born in a town in Andhra Pradesh and I went to undergraduate school in India. I left when I was 23 years old and came to the U.S. to do my PhD and I stayed here. I was rather young when I left India so I don’t have intimate knowledge of India but several years ago I was a member of the Scientific Advisory Committee for the Department of Biotechnology of the Government of India. During the time that I served on that committee I had an opportunity to understand about the nature of investments that the government was making in biotechnology and how that is being utilised. I advised the government at that time about new approaches that might benefit the Indian population.

Do you think those investments were of the kind that might make India a global player in this field?

I think that India has made very, very significant strides and clearly they are not behind anybody in terms of the ability to use these types of technologies. For example there is an international consortium to understand cancer and India is a part of that consortium. Each member of the consortium is looking at cancers that are relevant to that particular part of the world’s geography. India is doing studies on cancers that are much more important [to it].

Indian scientists have also been actively involved in understanding genetic factors that are important in human disease and those are again being applied to diseases that are much more important to India. So I think they are indeed part of the international community and they are embracing new technologies and new ideas and incorporating them into the way that is appropriate to practising medicine in India.

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

 

The West's misconceptions about North Korea


From The Hindu

 
Following the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il less than two weeks ago, the world has speculated on the succession question and what that means for stability in a region populated with nuclear weapons. While many discussions have focused on the uncertainty surrounding the Pyongyang's process of selecting its next leader, Bruce Cumings of the University of Chicago, the preeminent American scholar on the Korean Peninsula, has for years consistently outlined a contrarian view of North Korean politics that defies common stereotypes of the country. In an email interview, Professor Cumings spoke to Narayan Lakshman about how he expects North Korea to stride forth into the 21st century after the loss of its “Dear Leader.”

At the University of Chicago Prof. Cumings' research and teaching focus on modern Korean history, 20th century international history, U.S.-East Asian relations, East Asian political economy, and American foreign relations. His first book, The Origins of the Korean War, won the John King Fairbank Book Award of the American Historical Association, and the second volume of this study won the Quincy Wright Book Award of the International Studies Association. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1999, and in 2007 he won the Kim Dae Jung Prize for Scholarly Contributions to Democracy, Human Rights and Peace.

What do you think the United States can do in the immediate aftermath of Kim Jong-il's passing to influence outcomes in the region?

For the time being I don't see any way the U.S. can influence the situation in North Korea, but it should refrain from making comments about a “power struggle” in the North [as Hillary Clinton did several times in 2009], which is not likely to be true, and will be taken as very insulting by the leadership.

Who will Kim Jong-il's successor be and what sort of transition process can we expect?

The only real precedent we have for the aftermath of Kim's death is what happened in 1994 when Kim Il-sung died, and there was next to no serious disruption in the leadership of the country, then or since. Kim Jong-il did not appear for several years, the equivalent of the three years of mourning required of the prince when the king died in pre-modern Korea; during this time the leadership seemed paralysed, doing nothing, or very little, to stem the famine that quickly swept the country after 1995. But, on the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the regime in September 1998, there was Kim Jong-il emerging clearly on top. So one can expect a similar passage in the North for the next months and years, except that Kim Jong-un has far less experience than his father — Kim Jong-il was clearly going to be his father's successor from the early 1970s onward, and had decades of experience in all kinds of roles before he became the top leader. The person who will most likely serve as a bridge between father and son is Jong-il's brother-in-law, Chang Song-taek, who has long been in charge of the top security agencies.

His role will be analogous to that of the Taewon'gun in the 1860s, regent to King Kojong, when the Kojong was much younger even than Kim Jong-un, but this regent successfully guided Kojong until he became a genuine leader, one whose rule lasted for decades.

If he becomes North Korea's next leader, do you think the younger Kim will manage the country differently to his father?

The best hope for the future is the Swiss education that Jong-un and his brothers got, giving them years of experience in a free Western country, whereas neither Jong-il nor his father had any experience of the West — neither got farther than East Berlin. Many changes have also happened in recent years in the North — hundreds if not thousands of markets, many joint ventures with foreign firms, the huge export zone at Kaeson, where foreign firms employ more than 40,000 North Koreans. So, that might make for a “happy ending” in the form of a soft landing for this dictatorship, more opening to the outside world, and eventual decompression of totalitarianism. The caveat here is the Arab Spring of 2011, which began in Tunisia but spread not just throughout the Middle East but by the end of the year to Occupy Wall Street and huge demonstrations in Russia against Putin. That will make the Pyongyang leadership very wary of its own people.

What is your view on the suggestion that the transition period poses certain risks that could exacerbate uncertainty for the country?

The media — the New York Times, CNN, Fox, and many other outlets here and abroad — constantly mistake this regime for a one-man dictatorship. In fact an entire generation of leaders rose in tandem with Kim Jong-il and they are now in power and have much privilege to protect, with Jong-un being the key symbol of continuity and power. Furthermore, a senior generation guided the transition to both Jong-il and his son — the ones still alive still being strong leaders on the most powerful body, the National Defence Commission; they may be octogenarians, but they have a huge army behind them, and this is also one of the most patriarchal societies in the world. So their guidance and control will most likely enable a second reasonably stable political transition. We can also hope that the new leadership will have much more concern for the welfare of their own people, rather than simply securing their own power — the latter being the epitaph for Kim Jong-il's 17-years of leadership, a record of failure at almost every level except the critical one of maintaining maximum power for his family and the regime.

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Hacktivists post security firm private data online

From The Hindu

 
It reads like a list of all the companies that the Occupy Wall Street Movement would target. Over the Christmas weekend a self-fashioned Robin-Hood-style group of internet activists called Anonymous hacked into the databases of a Texas-based security firm and posted a list of over 4,000 customers of the firm along with their private information on the Internet.

Assuming the list is genuine it would appear that the firm, called Stratfor, provided global intelligence reports to major banks and consulting firms, airlines, mining companies, communications giants, software majors and weapons manufacturers among others. Stratfor, which operates out of Austin, Texas, only noted that its website was, “currently undergoing maintenance.”

In response to a query from The Hindu a Stratfor representative said, “Unfortunately, we can't give any more info beyond what we've sent out to our members. We're dealing with an ongoing law enforcement investigation and figuring out who, what, how, etc. I'm really sorry I can't do more - my hands are tied.”

However Stratfor did supply the statement that its management issued to its members, including a comment from Stratfor official George Friedman, who apologised for the “unfortunate incident, saying, “On December 24th an unauthorized party disclosed personally identifiable information and related credit card data of some of our members. We have reason to believe that your personal and credit card data could have been included in the information that was illegally obtained and disclosed.”

Mr. Friedman confirmed that as part of the publicly released data was “a list of our members;” however he disputed the claim of the “unauthorised party” that that list included Stratfor's private clients. “Contrary to this assertion the disclosure was merely a list of some of the members that have purchased our publications and does not comprise a list of individuals or entities that have a relationship with Stratfor beyond their purchase of our subscription-based publications,” Mr. Friedman said.

Following the posting, which included credit card numbers and passwords, hackers were quoted as saying that “The goal was to pilfer funds from individuals' accounts to give away as Christmas donations,” and some purported victims had confirmed that unauthorised transactions linked to their credit cards had taken place.

On its Twitter account, where Anonymous posted the full Stratfor list, the “hacktivist” group said, “Not so private and secret anymore?” Anonymous further hinted that it had been able to break into the Stratfor system because Stratfor had failed to encrypt private data.

Suggesting that only a “small slice of the 200 gigabytes worth” of data it obtained from Stratforwas online, it promised further leaks.

In what will no doubt be a closely-watched development Anonymous said in a statement to media via its Twitter account that it would “pick up the pace of releasing peoples' credit card information.”

The group asked, “How does a drop of 30,000 additional names, credit cards, addresses, phone numbers... hashed passwords sound? Sounds like a financial calamity to us. And just as the markets in the U.S. are opening after the holiday weekend? Might be trouble.” It added that on Tuesday it would reveal the entire customer database from an online military and law enforcement supply store.

Both offering a way out and indicating where its sympathies lay, the group however said, “This could all be averted. Have you given our comrade Bradley Manning his holiday feast yet, at a fancy restaurant of his choosing? Better make it happen, captain.”

Anonymous' Twitter account is @AnonymousIRC and it has posted data at http://pastebin.com/8MtFze0s

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

 

U.S. regulator approves new reactor design


From The Hindu

The United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission has voted to approve a rule certifying an amended version of nuclear reactor producer Westinghouse's AP1000 reactor design for use in the U.S. The NRC said that this amended certification would be incorporated into regulations and be valid for 15 years.
NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko said “The Commission is able to reach this final step in approving the amended AP1000 reactor design due to the staff's dedicated work ensuring the design meets NRC's safety requirements.” The approval by the NRC clears the path for two utility companies to embark on a slew of construction on projects in the U.S. states of South Carolina and Georgia, reports said. 

Assessment

He added that the design provided “enhanced safety margins through use of simplified, inherent, passive, or other innovative safety and security functions, and also has been assessed to ensure it could withstand damage from an aircraft impact without significant release of radioactive materials.”

While the certification issue for the Westinghouse reactor had been plagued by doubts following the nuclear accident at the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear installation in Japan in March 2011, the subsidiary of Toshiba Corporation has now won a considerable victory in obtaining the NRC approval. Specifically, the AP1000 includes design improvements that will ensure that it shuts down safely in the event of a catastrophic loss of electrical power, as occurred in the Fukushima-Daiichi case.

In announcing its approval, the NRC touched upon some of the design aspects of the AP1000 that had clearly appealed to the Commission. The NRC noted that the AP1000 was a 1,100 MW electric pressurised-water reactor that included “passive safety features that would cool down the reactor after an accident without the need for human intervention.”
Certification

The NRC further noted that Westinghouse had submitted an application for certification of the original AP1000 standard plant design on March 28, 2002, and that the NRC issued a rule certifying that design on January 27, 2006. Evidently, design improvements, possibly required by the NRC, extended the review process by five years. The NRC's latest certification to Westinghouse comes in the wake of the latter's application to amend the AP1000, submitted on May 27, 2007.

The NRC's extensive technical review of the amendment request focussed on ensuring the agency's safety requirements had been met, NRC officials said.

In 2010, an Indian official had said to The Hindu, “We are aware of the issue of safety concerns in the AP1000 reactors. These are not insurmountable but they will have to be addressed before they are brought to India.” India has still not proceeded with inking any deals with U.S. nuclear power companies to invest in reactors given outstanding concerns about whether India's nuclear liability law offers adequate protections to suppliers.

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Payroll tax cut, a crucial victory for Obama

From The Hindu

John Boehner, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, agreed to extend the Democrat-supported payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits for two months into the New Year, thereby forestalling a tax rise of $40 per week for an average middle class family and handing President Barack Obama an important election-year victory.

After weeks of intensifying pressure over a deal that had hit a stalemate in Congress, Mr. Boehner's about-turn came after his Republican colleagues in the Senate threw their weight behind the White House plan. Once passed into law the bill is likely to impact the welfare of 160 million working families and several million unemployed persons.

Announcing his decision, said to be unpopular with a significant number of rank-and-file House Republicans, Mr. Boehner said in a news conference on Thursday, “Sometimes it's hard to do the right thing and sometimes it's politically difficult to do the right thing. But when everybody called for a one-year extension of the payroll tax deduction, when everybody wanted a full year of extended unemployment benefits, we were here fighting for the right things.”

While admitting that his opposition to the bill, branded as obstructionism by Mr. Obama, “may not have been the politically smartest thing in the world,” Mr. Boehner however warned of the consequences of failing to extend the tax cut beyond the two-month mark.

“When you look at this, it is just another short-term extension,” he said, adding, “Kicking the can down the road for a couple of months does cause problems. Mr. Boehner also sought to link Republicans' cooperation with Democrats on the bill to Republican support for the Keystone Pipeline .

Unsurprisingly Mr. Obama greeted the news with an upbeat response, saying, “Today, I congratulate members of Congress for ending the partisan stalemate by reaching an agreement that meets that test.”
Emphasising that the average American family earning about $50,000 per year would receive around $1,000 extra, he drew attention to the need to cobble together a year-long extension of the scheme as well. “When Congress returns, I urge them to keep working to reach an agreement that will extend this tax cut and unemployment insurance for all of 2012 without drama or delay,” he said.

Earlier in the day Mr. Obama had resorted to a dramatic move of appearing before media alongside a group of citizens who had written to him about the difficulties they had faced owing to the imminent expiration of the cut and the aid. Mr. Obama cited examples of a man in New York who had to forgo the occasional pizza night with his daughters and the situation of another man who said that having an extra $40 in his cheque would buy enough heating oil to keep his family warm for three nights.

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

 

Both sides to blame for NATO attack: U.S.


From The Hindu

The United States has ironically risked escalating anger in Pakistan over the November 26 North Atlantic Treaty Organisation attack, as it issued a half-baked apology for the “misunderstanding,” and defended NATO for acting in “self defence and with appropriate force after being fired upon.”

Following the killing of 24 Pakistani soldiers the shooting incident in Mohmand near the Afghan border tensions were inflamed and Pakistan subsequently closed down a vital NATO supply route and denied the U.S. any further access to an important air base in Shamsi in Baluchistan.

In a formal statement the Pentagon did however echo earlier sentiments expressed by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defence Leon Panetta when it said it felt “deepest regret... for the loss of life and for the lack of proper coordination between U.S. and Pakistani forces that contributed to those losses.”

While the Pakistani establishment was reported to have called for an outright apology from U.S. President Barack Obama the White House has thus far refused to oblige. Mr. Obama spoke with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on the telephone and offered his condolences a further response from the President was shelved pending the outcome of the military probe.

Reporting back on an investigation that the U.S. undertook following the attack, the Pentagon also said that the findings and conclusions had been shared with the Pakistani and Afghan governments, as well as key NATO leadership.

Further diluting its apology the U.S. noted that the investigating officer found that U.S. forces, had acted based on what information they had available to them at the time and there was no intentional effort to target persons or places known to be part of the Pakistani military, or to deliberately provide inaccurate location information to Pakistani officials.

Placing blame squarely on inaccurate information about “the true location of Pakistani military units,” officials said that such gaps in information about the activities and placement of units “from both sides,” contributed to the tragic result.

Seeking to douse growing anti-American sentiment in Pakistan the U.S. also sought to reach out directly to its people, saying, “We further express sincere condolences to the Pakistani people, to the Pakistani government, and most importantly to the families of the Pakistani soldiers who were killed or wounded.”

Commenting on its future course of action the Pentagon statement noted that its focus would be to “learn from these mistakes and take whatever corrective measures are required to ensure an incident like this is not repeated.” While this might entail a review of outstanding questions of accountability, the U.S. said that it would seek to work with Pakistan to improve the level of trust between our two countries.

“We cannot operate effectively on the border -- or in other parts of our relationship -- without addressing the fundamental trust still lacking between us. We earnestly hope the Pakistani military will join us in bridging that gap,” the Pentagon statement emphasised.

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Israel faces an explosive situation


From The Hindu

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad may have a lot less to worry about than he thinks he does.
Back in 2009, following his anointment as President, Barack Obama secretly approved the sales of game-changing “bunker-buster” bombs to Israel. His predecessor George W. Bush had refused the Israelis' initial request in 2005, and frozen most U.S.-Israeli defence cooperation agreements “out of concern that Israel was transferring advanced military technology to China”.

However the 2009 transaction, which still remains an official secret despite officials leaking the story to Newsweek magazine earlier this year, must have made Iranian authorities lose many nights' sleep fearing that their aggressive neighbour would target them under the guise of going after underground nuclear reactors. Yet more recent developments suggest that it may well be the Israelis who will be worrying about the 5,000-pound bombs exploding too early, possibly over their own heads.

This week the U.S. Department of Justice revealed that a key supplier of components for the bunker-busters called Kaman Precision Products Inc., in Orlando, Florida, would be required to pay the federal government $4.75 million following allegations that it had submitted false claims for non-conforming fuzes sold to the U.S. Army for use in the bombs.

Prosecuting Kaman under the False Claims Act, the DoJ has filed for breach of contract and alleged that the defence contractor “knowingly substituted a component in four lots of fuzes that made them unsafe for use in military operations”. Specifically, the U.S.' allegations related to FMU-143 fuzes for use in hard target penetration warheads, said the DoJ in an angry statement.

In entering into a settlement with the U.S. government over the allegations, Kaman would further be required to adhere to a compliance programme and to dismiss administrative claims that it had made against the Army after the termination of its contract, the DoJ added.

Suggesting wilful negligence, the DoJ alleged that the non-conforming parts supplied by Kaman could cause the fuzes to fire prematurely, creating a hazard for military personnel and causing misfires of the warheads.

While the military was said to have discovered some unauthorised parts substitution and quarantined the defective fuzes, there was no clear statement that every such part had been detected and withdrawn.

Further the impact of Kaman's illicit activities on the supply chain of bunker busters for Israel appears 
beyond doubt. In a 2010 statement on U.S. military contracts, officials confirmed that “Kaman Precision Products... was awarded a $35,985,342 contract modification which will procure joint programmable fuze systems for four Foreign Military Sales countries at a total quantity of 10,518 units.” It might be anybody's guess which other three countries were recipients of the faulty bombs.

The FMS programme is the U.S. government-to-government method for selling defence equipment, services, and training. With the faulty fuzes possibly buried deep within the wiring of bombs loaded onto flight-ready Israeli F-16s, it may already be too late to stop Kaman's duds from entering foreign military systems.

Unless the well-worn system of product recalls, which in the U.S. is applied to everything from children's toys to power tools, also extends to laser-guided Massive Ordnance Penetrators, Mr. Ahmedinejad may wish to go slow on fortifying his buildings.

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Manning trial: focus on mental competency


From The Hindu

The pre-trial military hearing of Bradley Manning (24), the U.S. Army intelligence officer accused of leaking hundreds of thousands of confidential files to online whistleblower Wikileaks more than a year ago, will focus on one question: whether he was mentally competent and technically qualified to hold the sensitive role that he did.

With Mr. Manning facing the prospect of a military court-martial, which could theoretically impose the death penalty on the charge of “aiding the enemy,” his defence team has hinted that its arguments, beginning Wednesday, would likely draw attention to expert testimonies that he was “a troubled young man who shouldn't have had access to classified material, let alone be sent to Iraq,” and that the “military computer security [was] lax at Manning's Baghdad workplace, where soldiers played games, music and movies on computers meant for classified information”.

Led by his attorney David Coombs, Mr. Manning's defence will also raise the possibility that “soldiers other than Manning could have used the shared computers holding evidence of the alleged crimes,” sources said.

The defence arguments have begun this week following five days of testimony by the prosecution, which reached a dramatic climax on Tuesday when Adrian Lamo, the hacker who ultimately turned Mr. Manning in to the authorities, took to the stand.

In his statements, Mr. Lamo was quoted as saying he had traded instant messages and e-mails with Mr. Manning in May 2010 and “decided to go to the authorities right away because the soldier made claims of acts so egregious it required that response”.

Mr. Coombs' cross-examination of Mr. Lamo however was however built around the scenario of the hacker breaking the trust of a vulnerable Mr. Manning, who had spoken to Mr. Lamo in confidence about government data files.

Their exchange, quoted in the New York Times, saw Mr. Coombs asking Mr. Lamo, “Do you believe Mr. Manning was coming to you for moral support?” Mr. Lamo was quoted as replying, “I think he wanted to brag about what he had done.”

In the months leading to the trial numerous parties had called attention to Mr. Manning's fragile state, however, and attention was also focused on the conditions of his interment at a military prison in Quantico, Virginia.

A detailed report and video published by The Guardian newspaper in May showed that Mr. Manning was not only given a negative report by his commanding officers here, but was also noted by his colleagues as displaying signs buckling under enormous stress. Yet, in October 2009, Mr. Manning was sent to Forward Operating Base Hammer, near Baghdad.

In March 2011 P. J. Crowley, former Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Public Affairs and a spokesman for Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, said at a seminar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that the treatment meted out to Mr. Manning was “ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid on the part of the Department of Defence”. He has since resigned from the Department of State over his remarks on the case.

In January a non-profit group called Psychologists for Social Responsibility wrote an open letter to Secretary of Defence Robert Gates in which it said it was “deeply concerned about the conditions under which PFC Bradley Manning is being held,” citing in particular the fact that he was in solitary confinement for approximately 23 hours a day in a cell approximately six feet wide and 12 feet in length “for no discernable reason other than punishment...”

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Political instability worries U.S.

From The Hindu

Even as the reality of Democratic People's Republic of Korea leader Kim Jong-il’s death sunk in, speculation in Washington centred on the likely spike in uncertainty in the politics of that country and its potentially reduced engagement with the world that this could engender in the medium term.

In the face of the murky succession question in the DPRK reaction from the White House appeared to focus on the question of maintaining stability in the region. This was underscored by a phone call between President Barack Obama and President Lee Myung-bak of the Republic of Korea at midnight on Monday following news of Mr. Kim’s passing.

In the conversation the U.S. President reaffirmed his country’s “strong commitment to the stability of the Korean Peninsula and the security of our close ally, the Republic of Korea,” the White House said in a statement, adding that the two leaders would be staying closely in touch as the situation developed.

Commenting on the all-important nuclear question Richard Bush, Director of the Centre for Northeast Asian Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution said that “With Kim’s death the prospects for regional negotiations on North Korea’s nuclear program and other issues in the near term are very low.”

Mr. Bush noted that any successor regime would have to consolidate itself before it would be prepared to engage the United States, South Korea, and others. “While there had been movement towards such engagement... little can happen now,” he added.

In comments to the BBC former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, who led the delegation of the six-party nuclear talks on North Korea, said that he thought that the North Korean military was “going to be less inclined to do things with the international community [and] the Chinese are going to try and get in there very early and try to figure it out.”

Suggesting that the “heir-apparent, Kim Jong-un, [was] truly not ready [to be a] prime time player,” Mr. Hill said that that would imply that the country’s military would have a lot to say and Jang Song-taek, the brother-in-law of Kim Jong-il may have “a big role to play.”

Others however did not support the view that there was cause for concern in terms of the role of China in the future of DPRK politics. Robert Gallucci, President of the MacArthur Foundation and a specialist on the region’s politics, said, “I do not think we need to be overly concerned about a too-close relationship between Beijing and Pyongyang.”

He argued that the U.S. had gone to the Chinese many times since the Clinton administration through the Bush administration and possibly in the Obama administration too, “to get the Chinese to play a more active role in encouraging the North to be open to more negotiations...”

Dr. Gallucci further noted that significant changes in U.S. policies towards North Korea were unlikely. He said, “That there has been a willingness to engage the North directly in talks and to provide food assistance and other kinds of assistance and ultimately to improve the political relationship provided we can get the performance we need from the North Koreans that we need on their nuclear programme.” Dr. Gallucci said that such performance would entail initially a freeze on and then ultimately the dismantling of the programme.

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

 

Sighting Big Red

From The Hindu

Trust technology to give you some good cheer this Christmas.
If there is one system that the United States depends on to protect its skies from hostile forces it is the North American Aerospace Defence Command, or NORAD
.
However, even with its unrivalled firepower and high-tech satellite systems, the secretive organisation is put to its ultimate test every year around December 25 as it scrambles to track the most elusive target ever — Santa Claus.

Yes, you heard right.

Dating back to Christmas Eve, 1955, when a young Colonel, Harry Shoup, was manning the stations at NORAD predecessor CONAD (Continental Air Defence Command), the U.S. has deployed its most sophisticated electronic surveillance technology to map out the progress of a high-speed projectile only known by its codename, “Big Red.”

On Christmas Eve, 1955, Colonel Shoup, who was manning the station at NORAD predecessor CONAD (Continental Air Defence Command), was shaken to attention when suddenly a barrage of urgent calls came to his station, all demanding information on only one subject – the current location of the Bearded One, He Who is Laden with Gifts, and the patron saint of all well-behaved children.

But why were these calls coming to NORAD? In a twist of fate a vast number of eExcited kids started dialling the U.S. military that evening due to an advertisement that Santa had placed in a Colorado newspaper, which said: “Hey, Kiddies! Call me direct and be sure and dial the correct number.” Ironically, the boss of the North Pole got the number wrong and instead gave out the hotline number of CONAD.

However honouring the tradition of Colonel Shoup, who was unfazed and acted on his rigorous training, to this day a team of thousands of volunteers staff telephones and computers to answer calls and e-mails from children and adults from around the world. Every single call is answered and Santa’s latest location, whether Durban, South Africa, or Honolulu, Hawaii, is plotted out and transmitted.

With live updates numbering in their thousands provided in seven languages, NORAD says that its “NORAD Tracks Santa” website receives nearly nine million unique visitors from more than 200 countries and territories around the world. This year is the technological firepower deployed is unprecedented. However, according to officials, the entire exercise is down to one reindeer, Rudolph. it is only because of Rudolph’s bright red nose and the infrared signature that it gives off that NORAD is able to detect Santa’s sleigh at all.

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Ex-Freddie, Fannie chiefs charged with fraud


From The Hindu

In a move that marked one of the U.S. government's first major legal actions against company executives for their role in causing the 2008 financial meltdown, the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday charged six former bosses of the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) with securities fraud.

In its lawsuit against them, SEC authorities alleged that the federally-backed mortgage giants “knew and approved of misleading statements claiming the companies had minimal holdings of higher-risk mortgage loans, including subprime loans”.

In an odd twist to the case, however, the SEC hinted that the investigation and prosecution of wrongdoing may be limited to the lawsuits against the executives, rather than the corporate entities themselves. It did so when it noted that both companies had entered into a “Non-Prosecution Agreement” with the SEC.

As per this agreement, each company would accept responsibility for its conduct and not dispute, contest, or contradict the contents of an agreed-upon Statement of Facts without admitting or denying liability.
In committing to cooperate with the SEC's litigation against the former executives the concession that the two companies won was that the SEC would consider the “unique circumstances presented by the companies' current status, including the financial support provided to the companies by the U.S. Treasury, the role of the Federal Housing Finance Agency as conservator of each company, and the costs that may be imposed on U.S. taxpayers.”

The SEC named three former Fannie Mae executives – former Chief Executive Officer Daniel Mudd, former Chief Risk Officer Enrico Dallavecchia, and former Executive Vice President Thomas Lund — in the complaint filed in District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC's Enforcement Division commented on the case against the executives saying, “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives told the world that their subprime exposure was substantially smaller than it really was,” adding however that such material misstatements occurred during a time of acute investor interest in financial institutions' exposure to subprime loans, and misled the market about the amount of risk on the company's books.

Emphasising that all individuals, regardless of their rank or position, would be held accountable for “perpetuating half-truths or misrepresentations about matters materially important to the interest of our country's investors,” Mr. Khuzami and his colleagues said that when Fannie Mae began reporting its exposure to subprime loans in 2007, it admitted that the loans as those “made to borrowers with weaker credit histories”.

According to court documents stating the case against Freddie Mac, the SEC further alleged that the company led investors to believe that the firm had used a broad definition of subprime loans and was disclosing all of its Single-Family subprime loan exposure.

However former Freddie Mac Chairman and CEO Richard Syron and former Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer Patricia Cook had reinforced the “misleading perception when they each publicly proclaimed that the Single Family business had ‘basically no subprime exposure,'” the SEC said.

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U.S. panel finds gaps in bioethics protections

From The Hindu

Following last year's revelations that U.S. researchers had conducted macabre human experiments on Guatemalan prison and mental hospital inmates between 1946 and 1948, a presidential Bioethics Commission has said it could not unequivocally say all federally funded research provided human subjects with “optimal protections against avoidable harms and unethical treatment”.

After issuing a public apology to Guatemala, President Barack Obama urged the bipartisan presidential Commission to oversee a thorough review of regulations and international standards to assess whether they adequately protected human participants in federally funded research, no matter where such research occurred.

The Commission recommended several areas where immediate changes could be made to current rules and procedures, which could increase accountability and thereby reduce the likelihood of harm or unethical treatment.

In returning the results of its extensive review, the Bioethics Commission said a key reason why it still could not conclude that adequate protections were in place was the limited ability of some governmental agencies to identify basic information about current human subjects research.

In its study, the Commission considered a broad swath of global research operations, incorporating within its scope foreign sites and partners in biomedical research from 10 countries including India. Other nations from which experts were drawn into the Commission were Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, China, Egypt, Guatemala, Russia, and Uganda.

In comments following the release of the Commission's report, its Chair, Amy Gutmann, said, “The Commission is confident that what happened in Guatemala in the 1940s could not happen today.” However, she added, “It is also clear that improvements can be made to protect human subjects going forward.”

Ms. Gutmann criticised federal agencies for lacking the internal mechanisms to provide needed data about research that they funded. She noted that while Guatemala-style experimentation would not be permitted under today's robust system for human subjects' protection, “There still is a need for more transparency and public access to information about federally supported human-subjects research.”

Last December archival research by Professor Susan Reverby of Wellesley College revealed that vulnerable Guatemalans were clandestinely infected with sexually transmitted diseases such as syphilis, gonorrhoea and chancroid. The study, funded by a Department of State grant to the U.S. National Institute of Health, was purportedly aimed at testing the effectiveness of penicillin, which was relatively new at the time. The experiments, acknowledged by officials to be a gross violation of modern-day bioethics standards, were led by the late John Cutler, a U.S. Public Health Service medical officer.

Earlier this year, Stephen Hauser, a member of the Commission, said with at least 5,500 prisoners, mental patients, soldiers and children being drafted into the experiments, around 1300 individuals were exposed to venereal diseases by human contact or inoculations in research meant to test the drug penicillin and within that group “we believe that there were 83 deaths”.

Particularly chilling were the cases of a terminally-ill woman who had gonorrhoea-infected pus poured into her eyes. She died six months later. The Commission also commented on another documented case of seven women with epilepsy who were injected with syphilis below the back of the skull, said to be a risky procedure. Ultimately each of the women contracted bacterial meningitis.

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Switzerland may free nuclear smugglers

From The Hindu

In an unexpected turn of events Swiss authorities announced a decision to enter into a plea bargain with the notorious Tinner family members, who have been in jail over nuclear smuggling charges in the illicit network of disgraced Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan.

The Tinners, Friedrich and his two sons Urs and Marco, were also accused of being informants for the United States’ Central Intelligence Agency and one of the father-sons team was actually said to have been a CIA contractor.

The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland this week noted that it had formally filed charges against the Tinnners under the War Material Act, an indictment based on their alleged aiding of “the illegal nuclear weapons programme of an unknown state through various activities.”

However the Swiss authority also sought to close the case against the Tinners after the courts found verdicts of guilt “in relation to offences under the WMA and against one of the sons for forgery of documents.” The prosecutors said that the proceedings in respect of other offences had already been dropped and the court was “requested to accept a plea bargain between the parties covering sentences, the allocation of costs, the forfeiture of assets and other matters.”

One Washington think-tank that has closely tracked the case, the Institute for Science and International Security, said that the Tinners were expected to plead guilty in an agreement “that will likely include no further jail time.”

ISIS however said that it applauded the Swiss authorities’ announcement as it left in place “a precedent that proliferators will be prosecuted for their crimes by governments.” For years, the ongoing, unresolved case against the Tinners has exposed sensitive government activities and created a constitutional crisis in Switzerland, ISIS analysts said.

The case against the Tinners gained momentum last December after a Swiss Magistrate recommended bringing charges against them notwithstanding a “seven-year effort by the Central Intelligence Agency” to keep their own relationship with the Tinners secret.

According to media reports unnamed officials in the George W. Bush administration, which helped bust the Khan smuggling ring, also acknowledged that the Tinners secretly served as double agents for the CIA. In their latter capacity, the New York Times reported last year, the Tinners gave the U.S. spy agency information about Khan’s activities and helped the agency “introduce flaws into the equipment” sold by Khan to other countries.

In pushing forward charges Swiss Magistrate Andreas Müller in December 2010 had attacked his government for having “massively interfered in the wheels of justice by destroying almost all the evidence.” Less attention was however given to allegations of CIA break-ins in Switzerland, and an “unexplained decision by the agency not to seize electronic copies of a number of nuclear bomb designs found on the computers of the Tinner family.

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Blaming China and U.S., Canada says quitting Kyoto


From The Hindu

Canada this week set a dangerous precedent that could unravel global progress towards mitigating climate change, when it said that it had decided to pull out of the Kyoto Protocol.

Canadian Environment Minister Peter Kent said, “The Kyoto Protocol does not cover the world's two largest emitters, the United States and China, and therefore cannot work.” He added that the Protocol originally covered countries generating less than 30 per cent of global emissions and now it covered less than only 13 per cent and that number was only shrinking.

The Kyoto Protocol, which was adopted in 1997, is part of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, aimed at fighting global warming by stabilising greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere “at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system”.

Not surprisingly, China lashed out at Canada's plan to pull out of the agreement, with Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin reportedly describing the decision as being “regrettable,” and “against the efforts of the international community.”

Yet Mr. Kent said on Monday it was clear that the Protocol was not the path forward for a global solution to climate change, and if anything it was an impediment. “The Kyoto Protocol does not represent the path forward for Canada,” he noted, adding, “The Durban platform is a way forward to build on our work at Copenhagen and at Cancun.”

Canada's withdrawal comes at a time when it has increasingly gained the reputation of a climate “renegade” that has encouraged the rampant use of polluting energy platforms. For example, oil sands production, one of the most polluting forms of oil extraction, is at the heart of Canada's discussion with the U.S. regarding the now-infamous Keystone Pipeline.

Clearly, the impact of the global recession is also an unspoken factor in Canada's calculus. According to Mr. Kent, the cost of meeting Canada's obligations under Kyoto was in the range of $13.6 billion. “That is $1,600 from every Canadian family; that is the Kyoto cost to Canadians. That was the legacy of an incompetent liberal government,” he said.

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Gingrich draws flak for remarks on Palestinians


From The Hindu

Newt Gingrich is treading that fine line between being on fire and being in the line of fire. The former Speaker of the House, who is famous for causing a federal government shutdown owing to a personal rivalry with then-President Bill Clinton, has been the poll leader for several weeks now.

Yet last weekend he might have stepped into a maelstrom of controversy on the foreign policy front. Speaking to a Jewish channel earlier, he labelled the Palestinian bid for statehood as efforts of an “invented Palestinian people, who are in fact Arabs, and were historically part of the Arab community”.

While Saturday's Republican presidential debate in Ames, Iowa, might have served as an opportunity to rescind this remark, the thrice-married Mr. Gingrich instead chose to stick to his guns, retorting, “These people [Palestinians] are terrorists, they teach terrorism in their schools. They have textbooks that say, if there are 13 Jews and nine Jews are killed, how many Jews are left? We pay for those textbooks through our aid money.”

“It's fundamentally time for somebody to have the guts to stand up and say, enough lying about the Middle East [West Asia],” he went on to say. He also quoted Palestine's Ambassador to India who reportedly said there was no difference between the Palestinian Fatah and Hamas parties, and “We both agree that Israel has no right to exist.”

Unsurprisingly his remarks provoked a strong reaction from West Asia, with the Arab League in particular “condemning” his statement calling it “racist and a cheap stunt to get votes”. Media reports also quoted Mohammed Sobeih, an Arab League official, describing Mr. Gingrich's comments as “irresponsible and dangerous”.

Media comments from the Gulf suggested took umbrage at Mr. Gingrich's frequent invocation of what some called a “slanted” history of West Asia. In Saturday's debate Mr. Gingrich said, “Remember there was no Palestine as a state. It was part of the Ottoman Empire... They had a chance to go many places. And for a variety of political reasons, we have sustained this war against Israel now since the 1940s, and I think it's tragic.”

Responding to this comment Gulf News said on its opinion pages, “If the Palestinian people are indeed ‘invented', then Gingrich should also accept the argument that the American people are, arguably, also ‘invented'.”

The newspaper went on to describe any such attempt by Mr. Gingrich to achieve political gains with such a statement as a “foolish idea,” adding that gaining the votes of the American Jewish community did not allow any candidate or politician to deny outright the rights of any given people.

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Monday, December 12, 2011

 

Burns to kick off Asia tour with Delhi visit


From The Hindu

The United States State Department has announced that Deputy Secretary of State William Burns will travel to India on December 10, 2011 for a series of meetings with senior government officials. 

In New Delhi Mr. Burns will aim to discuss “a broad range of bilateral, regional, and global issues, underscoring the continued growth in the strategic partnership,” the Department said in a statement. 

It further noted that he would travel to Mumbai as well, where he will meet with business leaders and join Consulate General employees for a ribbon-cutting at the American Consulate General’s new facility. 

On December 13, 2011, Mr. Burns will depart India for several Southeast Asian destinations including, Hanoi and Kuala Lumpur.

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Friday, December 09, 2011

 

Two killed in Virginia Tech shooting


From The Hindu

At least two individuals were killed on Wednesday afternoon in a shooting at Virginia Tech University, which in April 2007 was the site of the deadliest single-man gun rampage in the United States’ history.

One victim, police officer Deriek Crouse (39) was shot at near-point-blank range by the gunman, who police said to have approached the officer as he was making a traffic stop in a campus parking lot. Officer Crouse was an Army veteran with five children, officials added.

Staff confirmed via the university website that shortly past noon gunshots were reported in a parking lot. “Stay Inside. Secure doors. Emergency personnel [are] responding. Call 911 for help,” the site warned at the time.

Further updates from the university noted that the suspect, described as a white male wearing gray sweat pants, gray hat with a neon green brim, a maroon hooded jacket and backpack was “at large.”

Officials confirmed early on that a police officer at the university had been shot dead. According to witness reports received by the police, the shooter fled on foot heading toward a parking lot and at that parking lot, a second person was found. “That person is also deceased,” the university confirmed in an update to its website.

University officials also said that that a weapon was recovered near the second body found in a parking lot on campus, although at the time it was not clear if the second body was that of the gunman.

Media reports of a conference call with Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell said “The evidence was strong that the gunman was the second dead man... It was unclear, however, whether his wound was self-inflicted.”

On the call Rick Jenkins of the Virginia State Police said, “We have recovered clothing items that would lead us to believe that he would be one and the same,” however adding, “We are not in a situation to say that definitively at this point.”

By 4:30 pm the university announced that Virginia Tech Police, in conjunction with other law enforcement agencies, have determined that there is no longer an active threat or a need to secure in place. Resume normal activities.”

The event echoed the now-infamous shooting spree of Cho Seung-Hui, an English major at Virginia Tech, who on April 16, 2007 unleashed two separate attacks several hours apart and killed 32 people and wounded 25 others. He then turned the gun on himself.

Following that incident there was also criticism of slow reaction time of university authorities to reports of Cho’s killing spree underway. In Wednesday’s shooting, however, the university went into lockdown mode with minutes of the first reports of gunshots. Law enforcement officers, including a heavily-armed local SWAT team, were seen searching the campus for the shooter.

At a press conference held in the afternoon university authorities defended their response on this occasion saying, “Communication systems we have in place today did not exist in 2007.”

However according to reports the deaths came on the same day that Virginia Tech officials were appealing a fine levied upon them by authorities in Washington over the university’s response in 2007.

Coming in the wake of numerous other such shootings carried out by youth, including the Columbine massacre, the Virginia Tech killings of 2007 sparked off a round of nationwide soul-searching on gun control, particularly the question of firearm bans on college campuses.

The event also sent shockwaves abroad. The slaying of G.V. Loganathan, a Professor in the Virginia Tech Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering drew much attention to the case in India and, in particular, in Tamil Nadu.



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Blagojevich gets 14 years in jail


From The Hindu

Milorad “Rod” Blagojevich, former Illinois Governor and Democrat, was slapped with an unprecedented 14-year jail sentence in a federal corruption case after a jury found him guilty on 17 out of 20 charges earlier this year. He was convicted of wire fraud, attempted extortion, soliciting bribes, conspiracy to commit extortion and conspiracy to solicit and accept bribes.

Mr. Blagojevich’s time in prison, which will be a minimum of 12 years before he can be considered for parole, will see him reach the age of at least 67 before he is a free man. He has been asked to report to federal authorities on February 16.

Speaking after his sentencing U.S. District Judge James Zagel was said to have made it clear that “the former Governor’s position and the relentless history of corruption in Illinois” required a harsh message. “When it is the governor who goes bad, the fabric of Illinois is torn and disfigured and not easily repaired,” Judge Zagel said to Mr. Blagojevich, adding, “You did that damage.”

Possibly sensing that a tough sentence was coming his way Mr. Blagojevich had struck a penitent tone during the final hearings in court, saying, “I'm here convicted of crimes. The jury decided I was guilty. I am accepting of it. I acknowledge it and I, of course, am unbelievably sorry for it.”

Continuing the dubious tradition of Illinois Governors being sent to jail for wrongdoing – Mr. Blagojevich is the fourth since the 1970s – his arrest in December 2008 and two subsequent trials in 2010 and 2011 transfixed the nation.

Disbelief at the scope and scale of his crimes was centred on the disgraced Governor’s blatant attempt to solicit bribes for the “sale” of the Senate seat that then-Senator Barack Obama vacated when he left for the White House.

For months before his arrest police investigators had tapped his phones and, according to reports, “recorded profanity-laced conversations between the Governor and his advisers about their alleged plans to profit from his authority.”

While a first trial in the federal case against him saw him escape with a guilty verdict on only one of 24 charges, it was ruled a mistrial. A retrial in case was conducted in June this year, and on that occasion the jury found Mr. Blagojevich guilty of 11 counts related to the Senate seat and 6 counts related to fundraising extortion of a hospital executive.

After the first trial Mr. Blagojevich claimed victory saying, “This jury shows you that the government threw everything but the kitchen sink at me... They could not prove I did anything wrong – except for one nebulous charge from five years ago.”

Famed for his media showmanship Mr. Blagojevich will however face a different, bleaker reality in February.

While authorities were said to not yet have decided on where Mr. Blagojevich will serve time, reports said that he would certainly be “largely cut off from the outside world... will have to share a cell with other inmates and work a menial job, possibly scrubbing toilets or mopping floors, at just 12 cents an hour.”

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Fai pleads guilty to conspiracy

From The Hindu

Syed Ghulam Nabi Fai (62) , a Kashmiri-origin U.S. citizen arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation on July 19, 2011 for allegedly acting as an unregistered lobbyist of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to conspiracy and tax violations.


Fai’s guilty plea pertained to a decades-long scheme to conceal the transfer of at least $3.5 million from the government of Pakistan to fund his lobbying efforts in America related to Kashmir, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement.

Specifically Fai pleaded guilty on two counts of “criminal information,” the DOJ reported, explaining that the first count was conspiracy to falsify, conceal and cover up material facts he had a duty to disclose; and to defraud the Treasury Department by impeding the lawful functions of the IRS in the collection of revenue. The second count to which he admitted guilt was the charge of endeavouring to impede the administration of tax laws.

Following a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge Liam O’Grady in the Eastern District of Virginia, it was noted that Fai faces a maximum potential sentence of five years in prison for the conspiracy count and a maximum three years in prison for the tax violation. Sentencing has been set for March 9, 2012. Further as part of his plea agreement, Fai has agreed to forfeit his interest in $142,851.32 seized by the government in July 2011, the DO said.

In a case that rocked the already dismal U.S.-Pakistan relationship over the summer the arrest of Fai was followed by revelations that he had served as the director of the Kashmiri American Council, a non-governmental organisation in Washington, D.C According to court documents, the KAC was “secretly funded by officials employed by the government of Pakistan, including the ISI.”

Commenting on the case Neil MacBride, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, said, “For the last 20 years, Mr. Fai secretly took millions of dollars from Pakistani intelligence and lied about it to the U.S. government,” adding that as a paid operative of ISI, Fai did the bidding of his handlers in Pakistan while he met with U.S. elected officials, funded high-profile conferences and promoted the Kashmiri cause to decision-makers in Washington.

Casting a light upon some of the details of Fai’s scheme,the DOJ said in a statement that to prevent the Justice Department, FBI, Department of Treasury and the IRS from learning the source of the money he received from officials employed by the government of Pakistan and the ISI, Fai made a series of false statements and representations, according to court documents.

“For example, Fai told FBI agents in March 2007 that he had never met anyone who identified himself as being affiliated with the ISI and, in May 2009, he falsely denied to the IRS on a tax return for the KAC that the KAC had received any money from foreign sources in 2008,” the DOJ said.

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Wednesday, December 07, 2011

 

Occupy movement targets foreclosed homes


From The Hindu

The Occupy movement in the United States took its first step towards civil disobedience on Tuesday when it occupied homes foreclosed by banks in a bid to prevent families from being evicted.

In what it described as “a national day of action” Occupiers in Brooklyn, New York, said that their action was aimed at highlighting fraudulent lending practices and “illegal evictions by banks,” according to reports.
Besides New York, the aptly named “Occupy Our Homes” marches targeted near-foreclosed and vacant homes in Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta, San Francisco, Minneapolis, and Portland.

While the movement, which began in mid-September, was greeted with harsh crackdowns by police entailing the frequent use of pepper spray and mass arrests, there have been no reports of police action against the home occupiers thus far.

The latest phase in the movement underscores the economic havoc wreaked by continuing foreclosures in a post-recession U.S. economy that is tottering and enervated.

According to real estate site RealtryTrac “foreclosure activity recently hit a seven-month high, reported last month, [and] there were foreclosure filings on 230,678 properties across the country in October... an increase of seven per cent from the previous month.”

The website for the newly-created sub-group of the Occupy movement is www.occupyourhomes.org, in which it argues that the basic motivation for the focus on real estate was that, “Not only do we have thousands of people without homes, we have thousands of homes without people. Boarded-up houses are sitting empty – increasing crime, lowering the value of other homes in the neighbourhood, erasing the wealth that lifts families into the middle class.”

The group added that in 2008 it had discovered that “bankers and speculators had been gambling with our most valuable asset, our homes – betting against us and destroying trillions of dollars of our wealth.”

Arguing that the Occupy Wall Street movement and homeowners around the country were coming together to say, “Enough is enough," the home occupiers said that the 99 per cent standing up to Wall Street were demanding that they negotiate with homeowners instead of fraudulently foreclosing on them

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Drone downed in Iran reportedly CIA's

From The Hindu

The unmanned aerial vehicle said to have been captured by Iranian forces last week was being operated by the CIA, United States officials have been quoted as saying.

Reports in major U.S. news outlets such as the Washington Post and CNN quoted several unnamed officials confirming that “the unmanned surveillance plane lost by the United States in Iran was a stealth aircraft being used for secret missions by the CIA”, and Iran's military appeared to be in possession of one of the more sensitive surveillance platforms in the CIA's fleet.

The CIA's use of armed drones in countries such as Pakistan and Yemen is not officially acknowledged and in this instance, too, CIA and Pentagon spokespersons declined to comment.

However, the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan issued a statement that the drone, possibly an unarmed RQ-170 surveillance model, “may be a U.S. unarmed reconnaissance aircraft that had been flying a mission over western Afghanistan late last week”.

“The operators of the UAV lost control of the aircraft and had been working to determine its status,” said the statement. The Post noted the ISAF statement's suggestion that pilots lost control of the aircraft was accurate, according to U.S. officials who have disputed claims by Iran that its defence forces downed the aircraft, or that it had been felled by a sophisticated cyber-attack.

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Halliburton destroyed spill evidence: BP

From The Hindu

BP, the company held responsible for the worst oil spill in the United States' history, has accused one of its contracting companies, Halliburton of destroying vital evidence relating to the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20, 2010, in which 11 rig workers were killed and more than 200 million gallons of crude spewed into the Gulf of Mexico.

In a dramatic turn of events in the ongoing litigious slugfest between the corporate giants, BP said in a New Orleans federal court filing that Halliburton deliberately wiped out all traces of evidence about potential flaws in the cement slurry used to encase the ill-fated Macondo well.

Though proper cementing is a critical pre-requisite to avoid blowouts of the sort experienced in the Gulf disaster, BP's allegations suggest that Halliburton fudged its response to a court order to bring forth “inexplicably missing” computer modelling results.

In its papers BP said, “Halliburton has steadfastly refused to provide these critical testing and modelling results in discovery. Halliburton's refusal has been unwavering, despite repeated BP discovery requests and a specific order from this Court.”

As per BP's statement, Halliburton was said to have destroyed the results of physical slurry testing, an “egregious” act designed to “eliminate any risk that this evidence would be used against it at trial”.

The first trial for the oil spill is set to begin on February 27 2012 and will aim to apportion liability to each company involved and there will be further legal reviews to assign punitive damages and cleanup costs. BP has already set up a $20-billion fund to finance the clean-up and reconstruction of the Gulf coastline.

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U.S. left out of Lat Am’s organisation

From The Hindu 

The United States was handed a healthy helping of hemispherical humility last week when, along with Canada, it was excluded from a new organisation representing Latin American and Caribbean States, CELAC.

Predictably CELAC, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, has been strongly supported by Latin American political heavyweights who have fallen foul of the U.S. State Department, and at the top of that list is Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

On Friday Mr. Chavez, who appeared to have recovered from recent treatment for cancer, welcomed delegates, including Heads of State, from over 33 member-nations of the CELAC group.

He set the tone for the CELAC meetings when he said, “The Monroe Doctrine was imposed here: America for Americans, the Yankees,” adding, “They imposed their will during 200 years, but that's enough.”
Earlier the U.S. State Department issued a muted but critical response to questions about the implications of CELAC for the Organisation of American States, a major hemispherical body of which the U.S. is also a member.

Department Spokesman Mark Toner said at a briefing, “There [are] many sub-regional organisations in the hemisphere, some of which we belong to. Others, such as this, we don’t. We continue, obviously, to work through the OAS as the preeminent multilateral organization speaking for the hemisphere.”

The U.S. response notwithstanding, observers noted that the attendance of some of the major nations in Latin America might imply that the U.S. grip on the region’s politics was weakening. Among the attendees were Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Cuban President Raúl Castro, Mexican President Felipe Calderón, Argentinian President Cristina Kirchner, and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos.

In particular the inclusion of Cuba in CELAC reflects some Latin American nations’ desire to rebalance the structure and power of regional organisations, as Cuba has long been blacklisted by the U.S. and its membership of the U.S.-dominated OAS was suspended between 1962 and 2009.

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