Saturday, November 19, 2011

Why Syria?s revolution needs a Benghazi

- / AFP - Getty Images

An image aken from a video uploaded on YouTube shows Syrian anti-government protesters waving the former Syrian flag during a demonstration in Khirbet al-Ghazaleh in Daraa province on November 18, 2011.

By Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News Correspondent

Ayman Mohyeldin covered the Middle East for several years as a correspondent for Al Jazeera?s English language channel. He reported extensively on the revolution in Egypt earlier this year, as well as on Tunisia?s fall. He recently became an NBC News Correspondent.

ANALYSIS

This Friday marks the end of another week of political upheaval across the Arab world with the international spotlight honing in Syria.
In the past week, the often-impotent League of Arab States took a stand against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The decision by the Arab League is a positive step, albeit late.

After Assad?s failure to meet a deadline to withdraw the Syrian military off the streets and talk to his political foes, the Arab League suspended Syria?s membership.

The move came after the organization assumed that Assad?s regime was genuinely engaged with it to end the Syrian uprisings through a brokered or negotiated settlement. This proved to be a false assumption. Force was the ultimate weapon of choice for the regime ? reforms and negotiations were simply diplomatic covers to give the government the time to deal with the issue militarily.


The ?Arab? decision
Beyond the somewhat symbolic gesture of isolating Syria from the Arab world, the Arab League decision could potentially have an impact on the ground. It?s not so much that it will deter the Syrian regime from continuing its military operations against protesters as it will likely embolden the opposition.

The Arab League?s decision has effectively told the opposition, both internally and externally, that the Arab world no longer wants to do business with Assad ? and new alternatives are welcomed.

This is also a call being echoed individually by Arab leaders, such as Jordan?s King Abdullah, who earlier this week was the first Arab leader to openly call for Assad to step down. "If Bashar [Assad] has the interest of his country [at heart] he would step down, but he would also create an ability to reach out and start a new phase of Syrian political life," Abdullah told the BBC.

Neighboring and regional countries from Iran to Turkey to Qatar, as well as non-state players like Hezbollah, will now have a choice to make.? Come to the strategic defense of the embattled Assad regime and risk a similar public wrath and condemnation or work against the regime by recognizing, aiding, funding and even arming the opposition in accordance with the collective regional will.

Qatar is one country that was instrumental in arming and funding the Libyan opposition. It would not come as a surprise if Qatari funds and weapons ended up in the hands of Syrian opposition by way of Turkey or Jordan.

Internationalizing the conflict
But the Arab Leagues decision, also poses a dilemma for the international community. With no military capabilities, no standing military force or technical capabilities, the Arab League can do very little to actually stop the regime and protect civilians.

In Libya, the League essentially kicked the issue up to the international arena, first to the U.N. and then NATO, which imposed the no-fly zone and carried out subsequent airstrikes that ultimately turned the tide against Moammar Gadhafi?s forces.

By condemning Syria and suspending its membership, the Arab League has played pretty much all the cards it has. Yes, it can try to further isolate and sanction the regime, but member states have already begun doing that unilaterally but withdrawing ambassadors and suspending bilateral trade and investments with Damascus.

?

Unlike its mantra when it comes to Iran?s nuclear program and a possible military strike, the U.S. has maintained that, ?it?s keeping its options on the table? in terms of Syria. But the U.S. and other Western powers have also made it clear that any Libyan-style NATO operations are off the table.

In remarks to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Nov. 9, Jeffrey Feltman, the State Department?s Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs, said: ?Overall, the [Obama] administration is following a careful but deliberate and principled course. This is necessary given Syria?s complex and unique circumstances. We do not seek further militarization of this conflict. Syria is not Libya.?

This has given Assad a lifeline ? he knows that his use of force will not be countered by any international use of force, no matter how bad it gets.

Assad?s options
With the international community unwilling to act militarily and the Arab League having exhausted their options, Assad can now shift his focus from the international diplomatic arena to his immediate existential threat ? his own people.

He has demonstrated his willingness to use force to suppress those he has labeled as terrorists and militants. He has also rejected any notion of stepping down, seeking refuge in another Arab country or transitioning power to alternative forces.

And at this point, it?s unlikely that Assad will reach full international isolation so long as Russia, a longtime ally, and China continue to drag their feet on taking a firm stance.

Even if it were fully isolated, it does not mean the Syrian regime would crumble. Assad?s legitimacy may have eroded but his capabilities to rule can remain in place for the foreseeable future so long as he does not lose physical territory in his own country or key supply routes that can be used by the opposition to smuggle in weapons, cash and resources from neighboring countries.

In addition, Assad has been a close ally of Iran and Hezbollah and may be inclined to cash in favors for the years of support he provided both of them in the wake of their own regional political isolation and diplomatic hardships.

Free Syrian Army
Although it is in its nascent stages, the Free Syria Army ? a growing group of army defectors carrying out attacks against regime elements inside Syria ? could prove to be the tipping balance in this conflict. But the Free Syria Army has a long way to go before it can succeed operationally and politically.

Complete with its own Facebook page, the FSA says it has tens of thousands of soldiers all across the country ?capable of targeting the regime in its most strategic locations,? as it demonstrated with their high-profile attack on the Air Force Intelligence complex on the edge of Damascus earlier this week.?

For now, the leader of the FSA, Col. Riad al Asaad, is operating along the Syria-Turkey border (which has significant ramifications on Turkey?s role inside Syria). In a phone interview posted on the Facebook page, Asaad said the FSA is drawing its financial and military support from within the ranks of the regime?s military and the people of Syria, an indication that members of the regime?s security apparatus are defecting in large numbers.

While this may be the case, these forces have yet to prove they can act as a military deterrent to the regime. More important, for the FSA to succeed, it must capture and secure a base of operations within the country that can become the ?liberated? capital of the opposition, similar to the way Libyan rebels held Benghazi, that nation?s second-largest city. This city would then allow a political and military opposition council to form and operate directly against the regime within the country. When the Libyan opposition managed to ?liberate? Benghazi and make it a safe haven from which it could operate, the countdown on the Gadhafi regime began.

To do so, the FSA must also secure a border with a neighboring country that can serve as a conduit for supplies, medical assistance and safe travel.

But for now the Syrian opposition, both politically and militarily, are not functioning as a single cohesive unit with a base of operation and coordinated messaging. This can improve with time, especially with the help of countries such as Turkey, which is clearly allowing the FSA to operate from within its own borders.

Mustafa Ozer / AFP - Getty Images

Syrians living in Turkey chant slogans as they wave Turkish and Syrian flags protesting against the government of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad after Friday prayers during a demonstration in front of the Syrian consulate in Istanbul, on Nov. 18.

Turkey?s backyard
Throughout the Arab Awakening, Turkey has been involved in almost every revolution. For the most part, it has been involved politically in calling on previous leaders to step down ? often times ahead of other Arab or European leaders. Sometimes its positions faltered early, as was the case in Libya. But now the Arab revolutions have reached Turkey?s doorstep and there is no ambiguity about its role.

On one hand, it has been among the most critical of the Assad regime. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan had invested a lot of political and diplomatic effort in working with Syria ? increasing trade, attempting to negotiate a final peace deal with Israel and bolstering bilateral Turkish-Syrian relations.

But once the uprisings began, the Syrian regime shunned Turkish mediation efforts ? at times brazenly in the public eye. At one point, Syrian tanks reportedly entered Turkish territory in July as thousands were fleeing the fighting.

Turkey in return has made its position clear with its actions: It has given safe refuge to thousands of Syrian refugees; it has allowed the leadership of the FSA to reside in Turkey along its border with Syria; and Turkey has reportedly intercepted arms shipments making their way into Syria.

As a NATO member and a powerful regional player, Turkey may attempt to assume more of the strategic role in facilitating assistance to the Syrian opposition if the FSA can manage to secure a base of operations and safe routes to Turkey from within Syria.

Civil war?
With the stage set, regionally and domestically, there is one inevitability: The conflict in Syria is certain to escalate.

Unlike other Arab revolutions, each with it own challenges and strategic significance, Syria takes it to a whole new level.

Like every other Arab leader who has fled, or has been deposed or has been killed by his own people, Assad has warned that after him there will be chaos and that the region would be engulfed in violence.

Because of its strategic location ? Syria is a country that borders both Israel and Iran, has porous borders with Iraq and Lebanon and has an internal ethnic composition rife with disparities and historical differences ? many are worried about the effects of the fall of the Assad regime on the region. That has paralyzed the international community. The lessons of Iraq are still fresh in everyone?s mind and few dare to deconstruct a regime if it means opening a Pandora?s box inside Syria.

Even Russia?s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned this week that the attacks by the FSA could mark the beginning of ?real civil war? in Syria.

But those who believe Syria is on the verge of civil war fail to recognize what these Arab revolutions are about. It?s precisely for this reason, I dislike the term, the Arab Spring.

I disagree with the term primarily because spring is a season with a beginning and an end and it that ultimately passes. But what is happening across the Arab world is much more of an ?Arab Awakening? -- and awakenings can be painful and groggy, even on a good morning.

More important, the people who are protesting on the streets in Syria and who have been for the past eight months did so not to impose an ideology but to get rid of one ? an ideology of oppression.

It?s for this reason I don?t believe the uprising in Syria is on the verge of a civil war. Nor was the Libya conflict a civil war. In revolutions, those fighting to change the regimes and those fighting to preserve regimes are not fighting ideological wars competing for the hearts and minds of citizens.

Those fighting for change are fighting for a cause ? freedom. Those fighting to save the regimes are struggling to maintain power and those that are doing the fighting on their behalf are mostly doing it out of fear ? not out of loyalty.

I think a real civil war, as we have seen around the world time and time, is when competing forces are fighting to advance ideologies and consolidate power. I don?t believe that is what the people in the Arab world who are facing down tanks, guns and bullets are fighting for today.

But then again, this is Friday and Fridays always mark the beginning of a new week of opportunity across the Arab world.

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/18/8883853-why-syrias-revolution-needs-a-benghazi

ryan torain world series game 3 sign language alphabet texas tech texas tech giuliana rancic giuliana rancic

Friday, November 18, 2011

In an enzyme critical for life, X-ray emission cracks mystery atom

ScienceDaily (Nov. 17, 2011) ? Like a shadowy character just hidden from view, a mystery atom in the middle of a complex enzyme called nitrogenase had long hindered scientists' ability to study the enzyme fully.

But now an international team of scientists led by Serena DeBeer, Cornell assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology, has pulled back the curtain using powerful synchrotron spectroscopy and computational modeling to reveal carbon as the once-elusive atom.

The research was published online Nov. 17 in the journal Science.

"For chemists, one of the first steps you want to be able to take is to actually model the site," said DeBeer. "It turns out that the chemistry of how this cluster behaves will be different depending on what atom is in the middle. This is the first step toward trying to unravel its mechanism."

Why nitrogenase? In nature, all life requires the element nitrogen from the atmosphere to form amino acids and build proteins. Bacteria need to convert nitrogen to ammonia as a precursor to more complex biosynthetic processes. The enzyme that catalyzes all this is nitrogenase, and it does it by breaking one of the strongest bonds in chemistry -- the nitrogen triple bond.

The chemical industry has figured out how to convert nitrogen to ammonia in high-temperature and high-pressure industrial environments. There's a fascination with understanding how the enzyme makes this same process work in nature, DeBeer said.

DeBeer and colleagues honed in on a subset of atoms in the relatively large enzyme, called the iron-molybdenum cofactor, which was thought to be the site where dinitrogen (N2) gets converted to ammonia, and where the mystery atom is situated inside.

The team used a method called X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Light Source to excite the electrons in the cofactor's iron cluster and to watch how electrons refilled the spots, called "holes," they left behind. The holes were sometimes filled by an electron belonging to a neighboring atom -- emitting X-ray signatures with distinct ionization potentials that would distinguish between different kinds of atoms.

This was how it was revealed that the cofactor contained a carbon atom, rather than a nitrogen or an oxygen atom, that was bound to the iron atoms in the cluster.

The paper's first author is Kyle M. Lancaster, a Cornell postdoctoral associate in chemistry. DeBeer's collaborators are at the University of Bonn in Germany, University of California-Irvine, Max Planck Institute and the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory at Stanford.

The research was supported by Cornell, the University of Bonn, the Max Planck Society and the National Institutes of Health.

Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:

Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cornell University, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kyle M. Lancaster, Michael Roemelt, Patrick Ettenhuber, Yilin Hu, Markus W. Ribbe, Frank Neese, Uwe Bergmann, and Serena DeBeer. X-ray Emission Spectroscopy Evidences a Central Carbon in the Nitrogenase Iron-Molybdenum Cofactor. Science, 18 November 2011: 974-977 DOI: 10.1126/science.1206445

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111117144007.htm

kat von d tiki barber minnesota vikings packers vs vikings packers vs vikings randall cobb packers score

Juhi Chawla to act opposite Sanjay

Juhi Chawla is ready to step back into the spotlight once again. The actress after a gap of 13 years would be seen working with Sanjay Dutt in Ajay Devgn?s home production ?SOS- Son Of Sardar?. The comic caper would star Juhi in lead opposite the deadly Dutt. The duo had shared the screen space [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/newslatest/~3/qPoRAnjRw88/5576.html

livestand power ball kelly slater kelly slater palindrome palindrome asana

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Catholic diocese ups offer for Crystal Cathedral (Providence Journal)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/161944927?client_source=feed&format=rss

tesla model s prohibition alex honnold how to make it in america how to make it in america nbc news donald driver

'Three Little Pigs' raise Taiwan campaign cash

It started early last month, when a small Taiwanese boy handed over his coin-filled piggy bank to the opposition candidate for president, only to have the government declare the donation illegal because it violated a prohibition on minors' involvement in political campaigns.

That gave rise to the Democratic Progressive Party's "Three Little Pigs" movement, which is now sweeping this island of 23 million people.

With a nod to the fairy tale, the DPP has been handing out hamster-sized plastic piggy banks in shiny oranges and reds. The idea is that by banding together to make small donations, tens of thousands of economically challenged workers and farmers can overcome the big bad wolf of Taiwanese corporate power and defeat incumbent Ma Ying-jeou and his supposedly capitalist cronies in the Jan. 14 presidential poll.

The piggy campaign is a salient reminder that not all Taiwanese politics revolves around the issue of the island's complex relations with China, from which it split amid civil war in 1949. While that issue tends to garner the most interest abroad, Taiwanese themselves are usually more concerned with bread and butter questions such as wages, inflation and jobs.

Taiwan's economy has fared relatively well in recent years, avoiding the slow growth syndrome that has afflicted most of the West. But complaints over rising income inequality have been mounting, fueled by a residential building boom that seems largely reserved for high-wage earners and a shift in the labor market that appears to punish relatively unskilled or undereducated workers.

That has provided a big political opening for Tsai Ing-wen, the 54-year-old DPP presidential candidate, and the star of the suddenly trendy piggy bank campaign.

Robin Hood heroine?
Scion of a wealthy family, the soft-spoken Tsai has been transformed almost overnight from a wonkish intellectual whose privileged background allowed her to study abroad, into a Robin Hood-like heroine committed to lifting the poor from the hardships of life.

"She is so extraordinary," said 63-year-old welfare recipient Bei Ling, who lives with her husband in the Taipei working class suburb of Banciao. "Whenever we see her on TV we are moved to tears."

Even Ma supporters ? and latest polls still give him a razor-thin lead over Tsai ? acknowledge that he can't compete with her in the garnering-love-from-the-masses department.

Since taking office 3 1/2 years ago, the 61-year-old Ma has won plaudits for helping Taiwan navigate through the global financial crisis, but has been widely criticized for his perceived inability to address the interests of blue-collar workers, farmers and others among the less well-off, and for his seeming lack of human empathy. Like Tsai he comes from a well-connected family whose privileged status helped underwrite his foreign education.

Story: Analysis: China watches nervously as Taiwan election nears
  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. Sandusky: 'I am innocent of those charges'
    2. Immigrant workers, farmers wary of Alabama law
    3. Ex-PSU grad assistant: Scandal isn't surprising
    4. Nice guys make better dancers, study says
    5. American girl, 12, builds 27 homes in Haiti
    6. Kindle Fire review: Yes, it's that good
    7. Tough talk won't alter U.S.-China trade

Tsai has worked hard at exploiting Ma's supposed weaknesses.

Clad in simple clothes and sometimes wearing a farmer's traditional straw hat, she has visited countless rural villages and working class districts across the island, chatting with farmers and laborers in front of countless television cameras, in an attempt to burnish her populist credentials.

Now, with the piggy campaign in full swing, she is inundated almost everywhere she goes with supporters presenting her with piggy banks stuffed with modest amounts of cash.

Government waste in spotlight
Tsai's cause is being helped by mounting public criticism of government waste, which resurfaced late last month following revelations that officials spent $7 million on a glitzy National Day production that that few people paid very much attention to.

Political commentator Hu Wen-hui of the pro-DPP Liberty Times newspaper wrote that with scandals like this, it's no surprise that Ma is locked in an extremely tight race.

"Millions of piggies are showing their anger against the Ma government," Hu wrote. "They embody a demand for revolutionary change."

Premier Wu Den-yih, Ma's vice-presidential running mate, said the piggies' innocent image did not reflect the true face of the DPP and its well-born presidential candidate.

"You don't turn a remote person into an approachable one just by giving her a piggy," he said.

Former DPP lawmaker Lin Cho-shui disagreed, saying the success of the piggy campaign reflected mounting popular unease over income inequality and rising unemployment.

"With middle and worker-class livelihoods under threat," he said, "it has fed into a collective social anxiety."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45283966/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

big east j.r. martinez peru earthquake peru earthquake big 12 last minute halloween costumes rum diary

Monday, November 14, 2011

552 million people could have diabetes by 2030

(AP) ? The International Diabetes Federation predicts that one in 10 adults could have diabetes by 2030, according to their latest statistics.

In a report issued on Monday, the advocacy group estimated that 552 million people would have diabetes in the next two decades based on things like aging and demographic changes. Currently, the group says that one in about eight people have diabetes.

The figure includes both types of diabetes as well as cases that are undiagnosed. The group expects the number of cases to jump by 90 percent even in Africa, where infectious diseases have previously been the top killer. Without including the impact of increasing obesity, the International Diabetes Federation said its figures were conservative.

According to the World Health Organization, there are about 346 million people worldwide with diabetes, with more than 80 percent of deaths occurring in developing countries. The agency projects diabetes deaths will double by 2030 and said the International Diabetes Federation's prediction was possible.

"It's a credible figure," said Gojka Roglic, head of WHO's diabetes unit. "But whether or not it's correct, we can't say."

Roglic said the projected future rise in diabetes cases was because of aging rather than the obesity epidemic. Most cases of diabetes are Type 2, the kind that mainly hits people in middle age, and is linked to weight gain and a sedentary lifestyle.

Roglic said a substantial number of future diabetes cases were preventable. "It's worrying because these people will have an illness which is serious, debilitating, and shortens their lives," she said. "But it doesn't have to happen if we take the right interventions."

___

Online:

www.idf.org

www.who.int

(This version CORRECTS Corrects global estimate to 552 million instead of 522 million in headlines and 2nd paragraph, adds that current diabetes estimate is one in eight people)

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-11-14-EU-MED-Diabetes-Numbers/id-145299e66e684ede938f5889ad9234d5

j. cole joe namath austin weather sacramento kings lisa vanderpump pef pef

Greentech: Turning Up the Pressure to Keep Gas in the Game

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Mazda has said it has no plans to bring hybrids or E.V.?s to the United States. It is instead banking on its new Skyactiv engine, which is more efficient.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=ab5994400cbca2d6a08bcff4cdbd765e

mona simpson tebow grady sizemore grady sizemore tim tebow samhain great pumpkin charlie brown

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Fleeing suspect found in Michigan leaf pile

(AP) ? Police investigating an alarm at a Michigan restaurant used a thermal imaging device to find a fleeing suspect hiding in a pile of leaves.

The Grand Rapids Press reports (http://bit.ly/vTxHRJ ) that when the man was discovered concealed under leaves in a bush in Hastings, near Grand Rapids, he ran off again ? and jumped into a river.

Police arrested the suspect after he went to a nearby motel to change his clothes. Officers found a backpack belonging to the man that contained waste from methamphetamine production and say he likely was making meth in the motel room.

The man is being held on a probation violation. He is expected to face drug charges.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2011-11-09-US-ODD-Leaf-Pile-Suspect-Found/id-f02cbf416cd246a185fd878439747afe

pay it forward pay it forward haunted houses favicon.ico favicon.ico nascar footloose