115304263009098713

It just doesn’t seem right somehow that the weather is so utterly beautiful and nature so glorious while the world is going to hell in a handbasket. Internationally and domestically we are pretty well screwed. The Middle East is spiralling out of control and the government at home is being unprecedentedly investigated for corruption by the police.

It isn’t enough that the Observer today claims to have evidence that leads right to No 10 in the Lord Levy/cash for honours enquiry – to deepen the shame the Mail On Sunday has emails showing Cherie Blair using civil servants to arrange business between her new best friend Martha Greene’s boyfriend and the NHS.

Jonathan Metliss, who has been with Ms Greene for more than a year, is a director of a healthcare firm which already has an ?8million Government contract to operate the UK’s first-ever privately-run NHS walk-in health centre – and is bidding to open more.

[…]

Inquiries by The Mail on Sunday show that Mrs Blair has clearly warmed to Mr Metliss, despite his background as a supporter of the Conservative Party.

The lawyer, who sits on the executive board of Conservative Friends of Israel, has become a regular guest at Downing Street.

Last month, he watched the Trooping of the Colour from No10 at Mrs Blair’s invitation – remarking to her afterwards that he would try to get tickets for her and the Prime Minister to join him in watching England’s cricket team at the World Cup in the Caribbean.

Couldn’t’ve picked a worse time for this particular pustulent boil of corruption to burst.

The Middle East is on the verge of a regional conflagration, with all that implies in terms of bloodshed, death and destruction, not to mention a global energy crisis and ’70s style stagflation, all tacitly, nay openly encouraged by a country whose government is infested with open supporters of the chief agressor and whose leader is impotent to act even should he want to. It’s the end times, see, it’s pre-ordained.

All of which plays nicely into the hands of Vladimir Putin, with his iron grip on Russian energy reserves, a grip that will also also tighten on the throats of Western governments as the oil price soars above and beyond its current unprecedented 78 dollars a barrel.

Putin is so sanguine that he feels free to openly mock both Blair and Bush

.

Putin enjoys baiting Blair over Levy

By Alec Russell in St Petersburg

(Filed: 16/07/2006)

President Vladimir Putin took a swipe at Tony Blair and Lord Levy last night, making clear he thought British criticism of Russian democracy was hypocritical in light of the “cash for peerages” scandal.

Mr Putin was answering a question on the eve of a bilateral meeting today with Mr Blair on the first day of the two-day G8 summit.

Asked what his message would be to Mr Blair in view of implicit criticism by the British ambassador to Moscow of Mr Putin’s governance last week, the Russian leader started diplomatically. “We carefully hear out all our partners,” he said. “We take into consideration their views on such issues but we take our decisions ourselves.”

Mr Putin then spoke of Mr Blair’s embattled fundraiser.

“There are also other questions,” he said. “Questions, let’s say, about the fight against corruption. We’d be interested in hearing your experience, including how it applies to Lord Levy.”

Mr Blair was not available to respond, having just finished dinner with the G8 leaders and their spouses.

Where international leadership that could de-escalate the conflict should be there’s a vacuum. Blair has no international legitimacy whatsoever: if supporting the illegal war in Iraq hadn’t done it, the fact that his bagman Lord Levy is also his Middle East envoy, and an open Zionist (as are many other of his friends and associates) would have sunk any pretensions he had to objectivity. Bush is a lost cause already, as is amply illustrated by his passive-agressive lack of condemnation of Israel’s deliberate violence against civilians. “Do you what you like, just make it look good for the cameras”.

The US and UK government has already constructed a narrative that paints Iran and Syria as evil masterminds behind Hezbollah and are spoon-feeding tame journalists with it, when in fact its Israel’s intransigence that’s powering the escalation.

Christ, it’s a bloody mess. Best-case scenario domestically is that arrests are swift, a no confidence motion is put to the Commons, Parliament is dissolved, an election called and a colition government elected to push through rapid reform of the upper house and the PM’s powers of patronage. It won’t happen though, not while so many backbench Labour MP’s think they can just install Gordon Brown as PM and carry on as normal. They have no idea how angry the public are, all that matters is continuity of power.

As to what’ll happen internationally, I just don’t know and neither does anyone else, really. I can guess though. That’s why I’m so depressed.

115290631839421746

News From The Pending Apocalypse

Arab-American blogger Dove’s Eye View has a very helpful compendium post up:

July 13, 2006

Blogging The Lebanese Crisis

A sample of blogs covering the Lebanese crisis 2006, plus useful links:

Global Voices Online excerpts from various bloggers, including yours truly.
The Lebanese Bloggers – a multi-person blog with many links.
The Lebanese Blogger Forum is one of the original group blogs from the post-Hariri days; they have many local Beirut and Sidon bloggers. Bob the blogger is from the next village over from mine, you can see his town from my uncle’s veranda.
Ur-Shalim – on the scene in Beirut, posts the leaflet dropped by the Israelis on the Southern suburbs.
Lebanese Political Journal – live blogging from West Beirut.

Someone asked in comments for a quick rundown of Lebanese political parties. You can do no better than read the Head Heeb’s Lebanese Politics for Beginners, developed in the days after Rafik Harirri’s assassination, February 2005. It’s a five-part series, thoroughly researched, and my reviewer (my Dad) says it’s spot on.

For daily Middle East and Lebanon news and comment, I depend on Juan Cole, The Arabist, Nur al-Cubicle and Abu-Aardvark. I sometimes check in with As’ad Abu-Khalil (the Angry Arab) but his style and substance are off-putting. Helena Cobban admires Hizbullah and Jumblatt too unreservedly for my taste but she is an experienced Lebanese hand and journalist.
Joshua Landis at Syria Comment always provides an invaluable perspective – he has lived in Syria, most recently last year, and is a scholar of Syria Studies. He also grew up in Beirut.
For local Beirut press, I check the Daily Star, the local English language newspaper, and Naharnet, which was associated with the “Cedar Revolution”. That means, for the Lebanon newbies, that it’s anti-Syrian, very sure that the West offers good solutions, and not sympathetic to the critique of empire. I don’t agree with everything but I check it for on-site English language reporting. The plain old newswires (AP and Reuters) fed through Yahoo News give lots of information as well.
UPDATE But in times of crisis, one has to read very critically. As’ad Abu-Khalil points out failures in logic by the AP News Wire reporter. I really get tired of Abu-Khalil’s attitude, but he is still a must-read. When I look at my list, it is very heavy on the Western establishment. I read Abu-Khalil for balance, and if you care about the situation, you should, too.
I look for anything Max Rodenbeck writes; he’s usually behind a byline-free screen at the Economist‘s Middle East desk (subscription required, or try free day pass), but sometimes he publishes longer analysis in the New York Review of Books. Max has his biases and quirks but he is very insightful, completely fluent in Arabic, and an old Cairo/Middle East hand. He is no leftie critic of empire but he’s no neo-con, either.
Anthony Shadid reports from Beirut.
A former CIA agent’s view (thanks to the eloquent, courageous columnist James Wolcott, who wrote a piece titled Punitive Response).

July 13, 2006 in Lebanon Permalink

115281762996128961

The Emperor’s New Herring

(Either that or he’s giving Merkel tips for when he sends JimmyJeff over on permanent loan.)

115279812884923836

Oy

Houston Chronicle:

More than 1,000 mourners gathered at First United Methodist Church, where Lay had been a member. They included friends, former Enron employees and erstwhile dignitaries, including former President George H.W. Bush, former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and ex-Houston Mayor Bob Lanier, who collapsed just before the service began and was taken by ambulance to St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital.

Lawson likened Lay to James Byrd, a black man who was dragged to death in a racially motivated murder near Jasper eight years ago.

“Ken Lay was neither black nor poor, as James Byrd was, but I’m angry because Ken was the victim of a lynching,” said Lawson, who predicted that history will vindicate Lay.

George Bush Sr. arriving at the memorial service

Did this bold statement cause any surprise, or protest, or even just a raised eyebrow or two? Hell, no. Since the senior partner in Bushco attended as proxy for the Chimperor and did not object, one might presume it met with Presidential approval too.

His comments, met by hearty applause, referred to Lay’s recent federal trial on fraud and conspiracy charges stemming from Enron’s unraveling in 2001 and four charges of bank fraud. Lay had planned to appeal his conviction and was awaiting sentencing when he died.

[My emphasis]