• CL HOME
  • NEWS & POLITICS
  • MUSIC
  • MOVIES & TV
  • ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
  • FOOD & DRINK
  • GREEN COMMUNITY
  • SEX & LOVE
  • PLAYGROUND

Daily Loaf

Your daily source for the best in blog.


Axis of Evil 2: Electric Boogaloo

Posted by Tom Bortnyk on Dec. 13, 2009, at 2:42 pm

It seems North Korea’s Bond-villain dictator, Kim Jong-Il, is starting the holiday season early – by attempting to deliver guns and explosives via cargo plane to the Pakistani tribal region. Yes, the one-and-only Pakistani tribal region that is ground-zero for the Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants.

A spokesman for the Thai Air Force, Capt. Montol Suchookorn, confirmed that the plane originated out of North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang, and had requested to refuel in Bangkok. Thai authorities searched the plane at the request of the United States, and found almost 45 tons of weaponry, including “missiles, explosives, and tubes”. Five foreigners, four from Kazakhstan and one from Belarus, were detained by Thai authorities. The plane, and its deadly cargo, were impounded by the Thai military. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: afghanistan, al-qaeda, axis of evil, george w bush, hugo chavez, Iran, iraq, kim jong il, mahmoud ahmadinejad, north korea, pakistan, pyongyang, sectarian violence, taliban, thailand
Posted in News, Politics |



The debate over Iran’s nuclear facility

Posted by Ben Luongo on Oct. 7, 2009, at 12:40 am

Photo: Daniella Zalcman

Photo: Daniella Zalcman

Iran has taken center stage in the news, and everyone’s concern is over their disclosure of a second nuclear facility. This has sparked a debate in American politics on what to do with Iran now, and the pressure to act is high, especially from some of America’s intellectuals and leaders.

Paul Wolfowitz asserted in the Financial Times that we should “confront Tehran now.” Elliot Abrams confidently suggests that the Iranian people wouldn’t oppose a foreign use of force in their country. Senator Linsdey Graham argues that military action is a realistic last resort.

For many, its obvious that the U.S. has some necessary role to play in the latest development in Iran. While economic sanctions seem to be a popular option, many other don’t want to take the use of force off the table, at least as a last resort. The bottom line for those is that a nuclear Iran is absolutely unacceptable and, if all else fails, action would be necessary to destroy any nuclear program. However, with military action comes serious consequences.

There is very little to suggest that military action would have any lasting halting effect on their nuclear program. Robert Gates told CNN that “the reality is there is no military option that does anything more than buy time,” probably no more than a few years, and its seriously doubtful that that would be enough time to outlive the regime. An attack would only rally Iranians around the flag and give cause for Iran, who still finances militia groups across the region, to sabotage our efforts in Iran and Afghanistan.

Furthermore, the UN’s nuclear agency is reporting that Iran already has the data to make a nuclear bomb. Targeting their nuclear facilities would only destroy their facilities, not their information.

Most importantly, military action against Iran would become a self-defeating message. Secretary Gates also said:

“The only way you end up not having a nuclear-capable Iran is for the Iranian government to decide that their security is diminished by having those weapons as opposed to strengthened.”

In other words, Iran has to feel that it’s safer to not have nuclear weapons. It would be counter-productive, then, to employ means of force in an effort to persuade them of this for the reason that any act of aggression only proves the necessity of a strong self-defense. An effective message of concern over their nuclear program may be neccessary but may also become self-defeating if it employs the same methods it works to block. Rather, any action against them should follow the same rules it hopes to enforce.

It seems, then, that economic sanctions should be the best course of action, right?

Perhaps, although this option also carries very little evidence to suggest that economic sanctions would have any persuasive effect on Tehran. For one thing, Iran has been dealing with economic sanctions since the Islamic revolution in 1979. For another, it’s unclear how much Russia and China are willing to participate in sanctions considering their invested economic interests in Iran (reports estimate that China has $100 billion invested in Iran’s oil).

More importantly, the effects of economic sanctions are always felt more by the people living under the leadership than the leaders themselves. This starves and disables hundreds of thousands of people, while also providing those leaders with more ammunition to incite enmity and paranoia towards the U.S.

What are our options then?

Though this might seem unsatisfactory for many, weapons inspections might be the effective measure. Weapons inspections work, provided they’re given enough time, and Ahmadinejad says he will grant the IAEA(International Atomic Energy Agency) speed access to the facility at Qom. Are we to disregard such compliance by burdening their economy or bombing their facilities, which again could prove to be disastrous.

Perhaps the mistake is assuming that the U.S. can do anything at all, or that we should do anything. Our debate over what to do with Iran has left out an option – learn to live with a nuclear Iran. Remember, Iran has no history of starting wars, such a history belongs to Iraq and Israel. Iran has no rationale for attacking neighboring countries, especially since any attack would be met with collective retaliation. If anything, a nuclear Iran would be monitored more closely by its neighbors; Iran would be in a position where unpopular actions are no longer tolerated and economic sanctions would be easier to agree on.

Perhaps we have overestimated America’s ability to secure the world. Moreover, perhaps we have overestimated the threat of a nuclear Iran to destroy it.

Tags: economic sanctions, Iran, military action, nuclear weapons, united nations
Posted in Politics |



First Monday in October, more U.S. troops dead in Afghanistan and the end of the Bobby Bowden era?

Posted by Mitch Perry on Oct. 5, 2009, at 11:15 am

Today the U.S. Supreme Court officially begins its new session, with Latina Justice Sonia Sotomayor bringing her perspective to the bench, succeeding David Souter.

USA Today reports that former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor said over the weekend that she regretted that some of her decisions “are being dismantled” by the current Court, led by John Roberts.

When asked how she reacted to having some of her rulings “undone,” the first female Justice ever named to the High Court responded, “How would you feel?  I’d be a little bit disappointed.”

Download the report here.

Meanwhile, with concerns escalating that offshore drilling could be coming to Florida, there will be a debate in Tallahassee later this month on the matter.

This comes after nearly 20 local governments and chambers of commerce have gone on the record in recent weeks proposing resolutions to oppose any move by Congress or the state Legislature to promote offshore drilling in Florida (Sierra Club member Phil Compton proposed that the Tampa City Council follow suit last week, and the Council is working on such a resolution).

Read the rest of this entry »

Blog Widget by LinkWithin

Tags: afghanistan, barack obama, Bill Kristol, Bobby Bowden, First Monday in October, Fox News, fsu, General Stanley McChrystal, Iran, National Security Advisor Jim Jones, nuclear weapons, offshore drilling, Sandra Day O'Connor, U.S. Supreme Court, United Nations Weapons Inspector Scott Ritter
Posted in Mitch Perry Report, News, Politics |

Loading search

WHAT IS DAILY LOAF?

It's Creative Loafing's one-stop-shop for all news relevant and irreverent.

Visit our homepage, cltampa.com, for more goodness.

SUBSCRIBE/FOLLOW

RSS Feed (click button for feed)
Facebook (follow us on Facebook)
Twitter (follow us on Twitter)

CATEGORIES

  • Activism
    • Opinion
  • Arts & Entertainment
    • Art Squeeze
    • Backstage Tampa Bay
    • Bill McKeen’s Book Blog
    • Events
    • Movies
      • Blockbusters
      • DVD/Blu-ray review
      • Movie Review
      • Reel Projections
      • Sundance Film Festival
      • Sunscreen Film Festival
    • Party Pics
    • Television
    • Theater
      • Theater Review
    • Visual Arts
  • Best of 2009
  • Best of the Bay
  • Best of the Decade
  • books
  • Business
  • CL Radio
    • ArtsSpeak Podcast
    • CL Sessions Podcast
    • Fusionistas podcast
    • Gamma Testing
    • Lost podcast
    • Mitch Perry Report
    • Nosh Pit Podcast
    • Project Runway Podcast
    • Reel Projections Podcast
    • Top Chef Podcast
  • CL TV
  • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Fusionistas
    • Mode Maven
  • Food and Restaurants
    • Drink
    • Food & Drink Events
    • Food News
    • Recipes & Cooking
    • Restaurant News
    • Restaurant Review
    • Top 50 Restaurants
    • Tournament of Ribs
    • Tournament of Tacos
  • Green Community
    • Green Jobs
    • Green Living
    • Green Policy
  • Holiday Guide Auction
  • humor
  • language
  • Music
    • Bombardier Manifesto
    • Concerts
    • Indie 101
    • Local Music
    • Music Review
    • Nine Bullets
    • Phish Saves America
    • Routes Music
  • Neighborhoods
  • News
    • Life As We Blow It
    • Politics
      • Florida Politics
      • Media Watch
      • Recessionomics
      • Tampa Bay Politics
  • photography
  • Playground
    • College
    • Diary of an Unemployed Housewife
    • Free shit
    • Lifestyle
      • Dreams
      • Health & Wellness
      • Parenting
      • The Stinky Drinkers
    • Pets
    • Shopping
    • Sports
      • MMA 101
      • Super Bowl
    • Tech
  • Poet's Notebook
  • Sex and Love
    • Education
    • LGBT
    • Relationships & Dating
    • Sex and Love events
    • Sex Reviews
    • Sex Terms Glossary
  • Summer Guide
  • SXSW
  • The Short List
  • tiglff
  • Uncategorized
  • video
  • Ybor
.

ARCHIVES/OLD STUFF

  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • Home
  • Best of the Bay
  • News
  • Music
  • Arts
  • Food & Drink
  • Blogs
  • Movies
  • CLTV
  • Sensory Overload
  • Bad Habits
  • Business Directory
  • Super Bowl
  • The Straight Dope
  • Promotions
  • Classifieds
  • Listings
  • Personals
  • Archives
  • CL on your Mobile
  • FAQs
  • Info
  • Advertising
  • Jobs
  • About Us
  • Submit a Listing
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Staff
  • RSS
  • National Advertising

© 2010 Creative Loafing Media All Rights Reserved.