Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Gamarala leads illicit commission Russian warship purchase, whereas P.M. heads free Indian warship gift ceremony !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-news 21.April.2018, 11.30PM)  Strange but true , no matter what opposition was mounted against the sordid deal , president Gamarala and wheeler dealer Kili Maharaja who went pell mell despite it have concluded all the necessary negotiations to purchase a Russian warship valued at US dollar 158 million  under the Russian aid program solely and wholly for the purpose of collecting illicit commission.
This Cheetah 5.1 class Frigate category ship which is going to plunge the country in a 15 years  lasting colossal debt , is being  portrayed as  a new warship and not an old one (as was exposed earlier)  by a news website which shamelessly stoops to do all  the sordid biddings of the president  despite the fact none has said anything officially in this regard .
Might we recall it is Lanka e news always first with the news and best with the views which exposed  this  deal first . We highlighted since  a number of ships have been gifted free to Sri Lanka  by foreign countries , if a loan is to be taken from Russia  , it is best if that loan is used for development purposes of the country.
If we are to reveal the number of ships gifted to SL after the advent of this present government  for coastal protection , it is as follows :
Two ships from India ; two ships from America;   three ships from Japan ; and four ships from Australia. That is 11 ships in all.  While there is a fleet of ships gifted free for coastal protection , if attempts are being made to buy another Russian ship at a colossal price while drowning the country in a sea of debt , the objective is obviously to permit the notorious  Sirisena family to  collect massive illicit commissions .
Meanwhile , SL has already received  a Second high Tech ship “Sidurala’ as a gift to be used for deep sea monitoring which was produced by Goa ship dockyard , India . The ceremony of  commissioning  this vessel   led by   Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe took place on the 19 th at the Eastern Container terminal , Colombo Port.
This ceremony was attended by a number of invitees including Fisheries and aquatic  resources development minister Mahinda Amaraweera , State minister of defense Ruwan Wijewardena ,Agriculture minister Duminda Dissanayake , Defense secretary lawyer Kapila Waidyaratne , Indian High Commissioner in SL Tharanjith Singh Sandu, Chief of staff of security Admiral Raveendra Wijegunaratne  and  Navy Commander  Vice Admiral Sirimevan Ranasinghe .
Photos of the event are herein..
---------------------------
by     (2018-04-21 19:58:42)

Support Now! Help Sri Lankan Torture Victims!


Rohan Jayasekera‘s London Marathon run to raise funds for Sri Lankan torture survivors. Money goes to Freedom from Torture – formerly the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture – is the only UK charity dedicated to provide the kind of specialist therapy that survivors of physical & mental abuse need. One ore day to go. You can still donate, make a small contribution!!
Rohan Jayasekera is an English journalist and former deputy CEO of Index on Censorship in London. He writes to Colombo Telegraph too. The link below gives more details about the event:
You can donate here
The charity Freedom from Torture currently provides therapeutic care for more survivors from Sri Lanka that any other nation – and incredibly, it’s been like that for seven years.
Freedom from Torture – formerly the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture – is the only UK charity dedicated to provide the kind of specialist therapy that survivors of physical & mental abuse need.
Journalist Rohan Jayasekera is chair of a local fundraising & awareness team for Freedom from Torture, and he’s running in this Sunday’s Virgin Money London Marathon 2018 to raise money for the charity’s work, and he wants your support.
You can sponsor him by following the link (bit.ly/rjruns).
The organisers pledge that every penny he raises will go to the charity – with no overheads charged online.
Every survivor of torture in the UK has a different story. It means their needs are different, too. That’s why the charity tailors the support it offers to suit each person who comes to its centres around the country.
Freedom from Torture provides counselling and expert medical assessments to support survivors’ asylum claims, plus a range of innovative group therapy activities, like gardening, music, creative writing and cookery.
As a journalist, The Write to Life programme is special to Rohan. It’s the longest running refugee writers’ group in the UK and the only one specifically for survivors of torture. Its mentors help survivors overcome their trauma by revisiting the most awful hours of their lives and through writing, come to terms with their experience.
The work of Freedom from Torture began more than 30 years ago growing out of Amnesty International’s Medical Group. Volunteer health professionals campaigned against violations of human rights and documented evidence of torture.
Sadly the legacies of torture live on with many survivors, and many countries – Sri Lanka among them – have been slow to deal with the men behind it. In July 2017, Ben Emmerson QC, the former UN Special Rapporteur on protection of human rights while countering terrorism, visited Sri Lanka and concluded that “the use of torture was and remains today, endemic and routine”.

Lankan couple nabbed with Rs 9.1mn gold at BIA

2018-04-22
A Sri Lankan couple, who attempted to smuggle out gold pieces and jewelry worth of Rs 9.1 million to Mumbai had been taken into custody by the Customs officers at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) this morning.
BIA Customs said the gold, weighing two kilogrammes and 355 grammes, was found during the luggage scan.
The suspects identified as traders from Maradana were to board the Mumbai bound flight at 5.45 this morning.
The Customs said that this was the first arrest made after the recent tax increase on gold.  BIA Customs is conducting investigations. (T.K.G. Kapila)

Prime Minister Theresa May’s amnesia


article_image
Theresa May

by Rajeewa Jayaweera- 

On Saturday, April 07, a suspected chemical gas attack killed 75 people including young children in Douma, a city around 10 km from Damascus with as many as 500 other causalities.

US, UK, France, European Union and GCC members blamed the Russian backed Syrian regime of Present Bashar al-Assad for the atrocity.

In the early hours of April 14, US warships and jets, accompanied by British and French air force jets launched a total of 105 missiles. They hit three chemical research and storage facilities in suburban Baghdad and Homs. Three Syrians deaths resulted from the bombings.

The need for those responsible for this horrific and cowardly act to be prosecuted must be stated at the outset, regardless if they belong to the Syrian regime, Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) or one of the other actors involved in the civil war.

UK Prime Minister Theresa May (TM), having agreed to Britain’s participation without sanction from British Parliament, on April 16 made a detailed statement in the House of Commons.

She justified Britain’s involvement as; "Actions we have taken with our American and French allies to degrade the Syrian regime’s chemical weapons capabilities and to deter their future use." She stated; "A significant body of information including intelligence indicates the Syrian regime is responsible for this latest attack."

Referring to previous occasions of suspected use of sarin gas, TM stated, "We needed to intervene rapidly to alleviate further indiscriminate humanitarian suffering. We have explored every possible diplomatic channel to do so, but our efforts have repeatedly been thwarted." She referred to the Syrian regime’s failure to honor its undertaking in August 2013 to dismantle its chemical weapons program and Russia’s failure to ensure Syria did so and stated the agreed process had not worked. The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) had confirmed in March 2018, dismantling of Syria’s chemical weapons program was incomplete. Referring to numerous Russian vetoes in the Security Council of Resolutions against Syria, she said "Regrettably, we had no choice but to conclude that diplomatic action on its own is not going to work" as it would mean "a Russian veto on our foreign policy."

Based on the Attorney General’s advice, the cabinet had concluded that "action was not only morally right but legally right to take military action together with our closest allies to alleviate further humanitarian suffering." She denied it was an intervention in a civil war and it was about regime change. It was about a limited, targeted and effective strike that sought to alleviate the humanitarian suffering of the Syrian people by degrading the Syrian regime’s chemical weapons capability and deterring their use.

Three conditions had formed the legal basis for intervention. (a) Convincing evidence accepted by the International community, of extreme humanitarian distress on a large scale, requiring immediate and urgent relief. (b) must be objectively clear that there is no practicable alternative to the use of force for lives to be saved. (c) the proposed use of force must be necessary and proportionate to the aim of relief of humanitarian suffering and must be strictly limited in time and scope.

She claimed, the criteria were similar to those of previous interventions. (i) UK’s role in the NATO intervention in Kosovo (ii) Intervention in 1991 with US and France (iii) In 1992 with the US to create safe heavens and enforce a ‘no fly zone’ in Iraq following the Gulf war, were also justified by humanitarian intervention. TM theorized; governments have long considered proportionate military action on an exceptional basis was necessary as a last resort to avert an overwhelming humanitarian catastrophe and was permissible under international law. According to her, "Careful scientific analysis was used to determine where best to target these missiles and maximize destruction of chemical stockpiles and to minimize any risks to the surrounding areas. Selected sites had been some distance from known population centers."

Three factors contributed for not awaiting the OPCW investigation. Firstly, United Nations Security Council (UNSC) mandated investigation teams to investigate previous incidents had indicated the Syrian regime’s culpability. Therefore, it was "highly likely" they were responsible for this attack and "highly likely" to continue using chemical weapons. Secondly, OPCW was only a fact-finding exercise but could not attribute responsibility due to the Russian veto to establish a Joint Investigatory Mechanism in the UNSC in November 2017 and once again last week. Thirdly, even if UNSC had established such a mechanism, it would not be able to act due to Russia vetoing any such action. She also gave her reasons for not awaiting Parliamentary sanction. The triumvirate could not wait to alleviate further humanitarian suffering caused by chemical weapons attacks. The UK was not just following orders from America. Preventing further use of chemical weapons by Syria was in Britain’s national interest. She insisted, "Britain could not allow the use of chemical weapons to become normalized either in Syria, on the streets of UK or elsewhere." She boasted of "broad-based international support for the action we have taken including by NATO, GCC and some countries in the region." Not recalling Parliament was due to the need for speed, essential to cooperate with partners to "alleviate further humanitarian suffering and maintain the vital security of the operation." She claimed it was a limited, targeted strike on a legal basis which has been used before and was a decision which required the evaluation of intelligence and information, not meant for sharing with parliament. She concluded stating, "We cannot go back to a world where the use of chemical weapons becomes normalized."

A day later, her own Foreign Secretary, speaking in Brussels at the EU stated, "these strikes would have no bearing on the civil war."

Theresa May’s statement contains several contradictions and at least one severe case of amnesia.

Members of Parliament, including those belonging to various interest groups, vociferous in their criticism and condemnation of other countries for acts of impunity related to human rights and similar issues cheered British impunity and jingoism during the Prime Minister’s statement.

Western leaders and governments mired in tricky personal and domestic political issues, habitually divert attention by involving their nations in trouble spots overseas. They are ideal diversions of public opinion, especially on matters of national security and a country’s military involved. President Trump is currently involved in multiple domestic issues. Critical among them is the investigation into possible Trump campaigners being complicit with alleged Russian interference in the US presidential election and buying the silence of an Adult film star before 2016 Presidential elections. TM and her Brexit Minister are facing exceedingly tricky negotiations in Brussels with just eleven months to Brexit with signs of a hard rather than a soft exit. President Macron in France is facing massive opposition to his labor reforms with regular work and train stoppages.

First and foremost, unilateral action by any one single or group of nations against another nation is a violation of the UN Charter which defines the principle of sovereign equality of member states. Syria is a member of the UN. Secretary-General of UN stated as much when he declared; "Action must be in self-defense or authorized by UN."

Even if Syria is guilty as accused, punitive action, collective or otherwise, for culpability deemed "highly likely," based on "a significant body of information including intelligence" is unacceptable as a justification for the bombings. After all, is it not the same intelligence agencies who ‘very carefully analyzed’ and provided ‘proof’ of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq for the US/British adventure in 2003 and the lack of such weapons was subsequently attributed to ‘faulty intelligence?’ Tony Blair’s purported justification, of WMDs in possession of the Iraqi regime capable of reaching London in less than 45 minutes proved to be the biggest lie of the decade. No investigative mechanism has been called to investigate this lie of Himalayan proportion.

As customary for world powers, TM displayed abject contempt for the UN process when she stated diplomatic action on its own would not work as it would mean a Russian veto "on our foreign policy." She made the UN irrelevant by implying UN could be bypassed in the decision-making process when it suits different agendas of superpowers. The moral and legal right to any intervention can only be a mandate sanctioned by the UN.

It is Britain, together with US, Russia, France, and China who thwart all attempts to reform UN procedures and do away with the veto power exercised by the five permanent members. Each time the US on its own or US, UK French combine makes use of this hegemonistic tool, it is a veto of Russian and occasionally, Chinese forging policy. The remaining 188 UN member states have no choice but to support one of the two factions or abstain.

Diplomacy, both bilateral and multilateral, works but at snail’s pace. Collective action by the three super powers with impunity and total disregard for laid down UN procedures is an act of terrorism, little different to the brand of terrorism unleashed by Daesh. The bombings deserve total condemnation.

Reference was made by TM to similar interventions in the past in Iraq in 1991 and 1992 and Kosovo in 1999. They were UN mandated operations. However, suffering from a sudden bout of amnesia, she made no mention of the unilateral intervention by US and UK in Iraq in 2003 despite objections from UN member states including France with a ‘we don’t give a damn’ attitude. Neither did she refer to the Libyan intervention in 2011 when the triumvirate exceeded the UN resolution sanctioning military action to take all necessary measures to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack’ into a regime change project. Ousting Muammar Gaddafi from power was never a part of the UN mandate.

While accusing Syria of using banned chemical weapons on civilians, TM remained silent on the use of banned cluster bombs and white phosphorus by Saudi Arabia in Yemen, a leading arms buyer from the UK, maiming thousands including children. As questioned by Jeremy Corbyn, would it justify a group of nations bombing Saudi airfields?

Having developed necessary technology, UK, and its allies are now able to carry out surgical strikes with deadly accuracy.

In the not too distant past, US and UK developed ‘carpet bombing’ into a fine art. RAF and USAF aircraft incinerated Dresden in Germany between February 13 and 15, 1945. Hiroshima and Nagasaki were devastated with atomic bombs on August 6 and 9, 1945.

These are examples of not alleviation but the aggravation of humanitarian suffering despite it being abundantly clear, the war was nearing its end in Europe (ended on May 04, 1945) and the Pacific (ended on September 02, 1945)

Such is the evil of nations who pontificate to small, powerless and economically backward countries at international forums such as UN[G1], UNHRC, and ICJ.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

The Palestinian women at the forefront of Gaza's protests

In socially conservative Gaza, women have been leading the Great Return March movement, uniting all Palestinians.
'I loved the sense of unity we all felt when both young men and women helped each other during the march protest,' said Taghreed al-Barawi, seen in the photo [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]
'I loved the sense of unity we all felt when both young men and women helped each other during the march protest,' said Taghreed al-Barawi, seen in the photo [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]


by & -20 Apr 2018


Gaza Strip - On one side of the fence, dozens of Israeli soldiers lay positioned behind sand dunes, tracking the Palestinian demonstrators through the crosshairs of their snipers.
On the other side, young women, with keffiyeh scarves covering half their faces to avoid tear gas suffocation, stand in front of the young protesting men, providing cover.

The people behind Gaza’s statistics


Muhammad al-Rabaia’s mother and three sons sit beside posters honoring their slain father and son.
Abed Zagout
Sarah Algherbawi- 21 April 2018
In Jihad Abu Jamous’ family, he was seen as the lucky one.
The 31-year-old, who gathered gravel to sell to workshops and construction workers for a few dollars a day, was from Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. He escaped a hereditary condition that affects almost his whole family, leaving most of them blind or partially sighted. He also avoided the chronic ailments that his mother, the only other person in the family with good eyesight, suffers.

Murdered Palestinian engineer was ‘senior member’ of Hamas

Relatives of Fadi al-Batsh, who was shot dead in Malaysia, suspect Israel of targeting him
Fadi al-Batsh’s relatives hold a banner featuring a picture of him at a mourning ceremony in his hometown of Jabaliya. Photograph: Adel Hana/AP

Associated Press in Gaza City-
Gaza’s ruling Hamas militant group has said that a man who was gunned down in Malaysia on Saturday was a key member of the organisation, raising suspicions that Israel was behind the killing.

Hamas said Palestinian engineer Fadi al-Batsh was a “loyal” member and a “scientist of Palestine’s youth scholars”. It gave no further details on his scientific accomplishments but said he had made important contributions and participated in international forums in the field of energy.

The funeral service by the Islamic movement’s militant wing suggested al-Batsh was one of its military commanders. At a mourning house in the Gaza Strip, a banner described al-Batsh as a member of the military wing.

Ten masked men in camouflage uniforms stood in a line outside the tent in Jabaliya, the victim’s home town, to greet mourners. The ceremony is typical for senior Hamas commanders.

Hamas stopped short of blaming Israel, saying only that he had been “assassinated by the hand of treachery”. But relatives of al-Batsh believe that Israel targeted him.

Malaysian police say the 34-year-old was shot by two assailants who fired at least eight bullets from a motorbike as he was heading to a mosque for dawn prayers in Kuala Lumpur. It said CCTV footage showed him being targeted by gunmen who had waited almost 20 minutes for him to arrive.

Malaysia’s deputy prime minister, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, said the government was looking into the possibility that “foreign agents” were involved in his killing. He told local media that initial investigations showed the assailants were white men riding a powerful BMW 1100cc motorbike.

The Israeli government had no comment but it allegedly has a long history of targeting wanted Palestinian militants during overseas operations. It has been linked to other killings, too, although it has rarely acknowledged them publicly.

Al-Batsh specialised in electrical and electronic engineering and worked at a Malaysian university.
He had lived there with his family for the past eight years and was an imam at a local mosque.

Israeli media reported that he was also deeply involved in the Hamas drone development project.

Israel and Hamas are bitter enemies who have fought three wars since 2008. Tensions have risen in recent weeks with a series of mass protests along the Gaza border in which 32 Palestinians have been shot dead by Israeli troops since late March.

Hamas says the protests are aimed at breaking a crippling border blockade, which was imposed by Israel and Egypt after the group overran Gaza in 2007, a year after winning Palestinian parliament elections. It says it also aims to assert the right of refugees to return to their former homes in Israel.

Israel accuses Hamas, which is sworn to Israel’s destruction and has carried out dozens of suicide bombings against it, of cynically exploiting Gaza civilians for its political aims by staging protests and trying to carry out attacks under their cover.

Protesters are aiming to participate in a large border march on 15 May, the 70th anniversary of Israel’s founding. The date is mourned by Palestinians as their “nakba”, or catastrophe, when hundreds of thousands were uprooted from their homes.

Ending war in Syria possible without outside intervention

2018-04-21 
ome 500,000 dead and counting. President Bashar al-Assad is going full blast at reducing the parts of his country still standing, but not under his control, to rubble. Russia hangs on his tail, providing both planes and soldiers but seemingly unable to wag the dog. The US launches, along with Britain and France, a brief rocket attack. (Should we now after two such attacks call President Donald Trump “Rocket Man 2”?)   
The attack is supposedly to draw the line on Assad’s use of chemical weapons. Perhaps he did do it, or possibly one of his local commanders took the initiative, but it is small beer compared with the horrors inflicted by conventional weapons day in day out. The UN Convention outlawing the use of chemical weapons was aimed at big time use of them when they become dangerous enough to dominate a battle field- as the Germans used them in the First World War and Saddam Hussein (then supported by US arms sales) used them against Iran and against his own Kurdish population when 5,000 were killed. 


So what do the outside players do next? Do they know where they are going? Trump last month said he was pulling out his 2,000 soldiers, who are inside Syria. Now, his Secretary of Defence says they will stay. Most if not all the EU countries appear to back or at least tolerate the supportive bombing action of British Prime Minister Theresa May, and French President Emmanuel Macron. Neither know much about the complexities of the Middle East but have decided to throw in their lot with Trump who knows even less.   
The three of them must have been told by their advisers that this attack is chicken feed compared with the murder that goes on every week. It, and the two previous uses of chemical weapons, are a small item in the seven years of civil war. They barely impinge on Assad. To be coherent the three nations should commit themselves to tens if not hundreds of thousands of boots on the ground to topple Assad. But they are very unlikely to do that. So where’s a coherent explanation for what they’ve just done?   

I recall what America’s top strategist, the late Zbigniew Brzezinski, wrote in Time magazine a year ago: “The Syrian conflict is a sectarian war in a volatile region whose potential to spread and directly threaten American interests would only be increased by US intervention…..American involvement would simply mobilize the extreme elements of the factions against the US and pose the danger that the conflict would spill over into the neighbourhood and set Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon on fire. (The factions he mentions are Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iran, Sunni Salafists, Iranian-aligned militias, Al Qaeda and ISIS.)….The recent Israeli bombing of weapons’ sites inside Syria conveys to some Arabs the sense that there is an external plot against them. That impression would be solidified if the US were now to enter the fight, suggesting a de facto American-Saudi-Israeli alliance, which would play into the hands of the extremists.……The various schemes that have been proposed for a kind of tiddlywinks intervention from around the edges of the conflict- no-fly zones, bombing Damascus and so forth- would simply make the situation worse”.   

"So what do the outside players do next? Do they know where they are going? Trump last month said he was pulling out his 2,000 soldiers, who are inside Syria. Now, his Secretary of Defence says they will stay. Most if not all the EU countries appear to back or at least tolerate the supportive bombing action of British Prime Minister Theresa May, and French President Emmanuel Macron"

So what should be done by the Western powers? At the moment they don’t seem to have any ideas, or not ones they want to share with the public, maybe because they know they will ridiculed. Mr Trump, is it all leading to an attack on Iran? The talented Danish artist, Linda Balle, writes on one side of one of her drawings, “Now Here”, and on the other side, as her dancing figure traverses the page, writes, “No Where.” That’s how it seems to be with the three Western allies.   
My answer is for the Western powers to remove themselves from the fray, apart from providing humanitarian aid. They should persuade Assad, in return for ending their military involvement, to make sure it is distributed around the country fairly. Aid organisations should be allowed free passage to wherever the choose to work.   

The US, the EU, Russia and Iran should apply themselves to negotiations. The previous UN effort failed partly because Iran, on the insistence of the US, was kept out.   
The outside powers must accept, however distasteful it may seem, that Assad has won the civil war. Like it not, that has to be the starting point. The outsiders, after conceding that, should demand amnesty for those who have opposed the regime.   
The Russians would support this. They have been trying to withdraw for quite some time but events keep pulling them back. As for Iran, it needs an entente with Syria rather than a future war.   
The pursuit of peace is possible, even at this late stage. But it has to be given priority. Bombing goes nowhere.   


For 17 years, the writer was a foreign affairs columnist and commentator for the International Herald Tribune/New York Times.  

North Korea says it will suspend nuclear and missile tests, shut down test site

  
 North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has declared that he will suspend nuclear and missile tests starting Saturday and that he will shut down the site where the previous six nuclear tests were conducted.

The surprising announcement comes just six days before Kim is set to meet South Korean President Moon Jae-in, a precursor to a historic summit between Kim and President Trump. The U.S. president is set to meet Kim at the end of May or beginning of June, although a location has not yet been set.
Both Moon and Trump have been saying that North Korea is now willing to “denuclearize,” a term that means different things to the two sides.

“North Korea has agreed to suspend all Nuclear Tests and close up a major test site,” Trump tweeted shortly after the announcement from Pyongyang. “This is very good news for North Korea and the World — big progress! Look forward to our Summit.”

But Kim’s statement on Saturday made no mention of North Korea giving up its program. It simply signaled a freeze, apparently because the leader is satisfied with the rapid progress the country made last year, developing what it said was a “super large heavy warhead” and a missile capable of carrying it to the U.S. mainland.

North Korea has “verified the completion of nuclear weapons,” Kim reportedly said during a meeting of the central committee of the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea, convened Friday to discuss policy issues related to “a new stage” in a “historic” period.

President Trump agreed March 8 to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un "by May." Here are three other big events in North Korean diplomacy. 
As such, it “will stop nuclear tests and launches of intercontinental ballistic missiles” effective immediately, he said.

“We no longer need any nuclear test or test launches of intermediate and intercontinental range ballistic missiles, and because of this the northern nuclear test site has finished its mission,” the official Korean Central News Agency quoted Kim as saying.

There has been considerable skepticism among North Korea experts that Kim, having poured so much money and effort into the program, not to mention his personal prestige, would give it up so readily.

Many pointed out that Kim’s statement does not in any way suggest that he’s about to do so.
“There is nothing in North Korea’s statement that signals a willingness to give up their nukes,” said Benjamin Silberstein, a North Korea researcher at the University of Pennsylvania.


Why does North Korea hate the U.S.? Look to the Korean War. 
“On the contrary, the tone of the message is one of confidence and strength,” he said.
Still, the step is part of a broader and rapidly developing effort to use diplomacy to resolve the standoff on the Korean Peninsula, following months of threats at the end of last year that stoked fears of a military conflict.

Next Friday, Kim will cross the Military Demarcation Line that has divided the peninsula since the end of the Korean War, becoming the first North Korean leader to do so since then. He will step into “Peace House” on the southern side of the line to meet Moon, with their encounter being broadcast live.

Moon signaled this week that everything was on the table at the meeting. 

“North Korea is expressing its intention for complete denuclearization,” Moon said Thursday. “And it is not making demands that the U.S. cannot accept, such as the withdrawal of the U.S. forces in Korea.”

The U.S. military has 28,000 troops stationed in South Korea, with backups in Japan and on Guam — the legacy of the standoff that has ensued since the Korean War ended in an armistice in 1953.
Trump also this week voiced optimism about his summit with Kim, although he said he would walk away from the talks if they were not looking constructive.

“I think we’re going to be successful,” Trump said shortly after it was revealed that his CIA director, Mike Pompeo, met Kim in Pyongyang over the Easter weekend for talks about the summit. “But for any reason if I think we’re not, we end,” the president said.
As the presidents of South Korea and the United States prepare for summits with the previously reclusive Kim, there has been much conjecture about what exactly the North Korean leader is prepared to discuss. 

North Korea had said very little about all this — and that had plenty of analysts worried that expectations for this summit are too high. 

The fact that the North has now signaled it is prepared to at least freeze its program is extremely significant, said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in Washington.

“North Korea’s pledge to close down its nuclear weapons testing site is a very significant pledge toward denuclearization,” Kimball said. “The U.S. and others should solidify this by securing North Korean signature and ratification of the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, along with a confidence-building visit by the Comprehensive Test Ban [Treaty] Organization.”
Others point out that North Korea has been sending signals through what it has not been saying. It’s not talking about the U.S. strike on Syria, about the U.S. military conducting drills in South Korea, or about the “heinous” and “hostile” United States.

It hasn’t even commented on the return of national security adviser John Bolton, a man the regime once derided as “human scum and a bloodsucker.”

This is a sharp change from its usual tirade of vitriol against the United States, especially at this time of year, when the U.S. and South Korean militaries are practicing war drills on the southern half of the peninsula.

It also hasn’t been using one of its favorite phrases, about being a “strong nuclear power,” since March 10 — the day after Trump agreed to meet with Kim. Previously, the phrase had appeared in the Rodong Sinmun, the mouthpiece of the Workers’ Party, on a daily basis.

“That’s not a coincidence,” said Peter Ward, a North Korea researcher at Seoul National University. “I think North Korea is on a serious drive for peace right now.”

But others were more circumspect, noting that Saturday’s announcement fits with North Korea’s previous declarations that it had “completed” its nuclear and missile programs.

“This echoes what Kim Jong Un has already said about its nuclear program. Kim Jong Un is satisfied,” said Melissa Hanham, a researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, Calif.

“This means North Korea is also satisfied with fewer tests than many other states that possess nuclear weapons,” she said.

Last year was an exceptionally busy one for North Korea’s nuclear and missile specialists. In September, the country detonated a huge nuclear device that it said was a hydrogen bomb.

This claim, experts said, was supported by the size of the blast, which caused a 6.3-magnitude earthquake in North Korea’s northeast, an area not known for natural seismic activity.

Mount Mantap, the 7,200-foot-high peak under which North Korea has detonated all its nuclear bombs, visibly shifted during that last nuclear test, leading some analysts to wonder if it was suffering from “tired mountain syndrome” and was at risk of collapsing.

If that were true, closing the site would be something North Korea would do anyway, although perhaps without announcing it at such a fortuitous time, if at all.

Then, after launching several intercontinental ballistic missiles in the middle of the year, the North fired an ICBM that it said put the entire U.S. mainland within reach and could carry a “super large heavy warhead.”

With that test, North Korea declared that its “rocket development process has been completed.”

A rogue man’s brandish to dictate the world-shattering


Donald Trump must be one of the most widely and fiercely lampooned people of all time; indeed, his entire life can be seen as a one-man war of attrition against the forces of irony.

by Anwar A. Khan-Apr 20, 2018
( April 20, 2018, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) Donald Trump and his administration are in shambles and plagued by a political knife-fight involving his own White House staff, probably calculated that he would benefit from the rally-round-the-flag phenomenon that accompanies U.S. military action in Syria on 14th April 2018. In fact, it is and will be considered as his dangerous Syria attack all the while. Sometimes, I cogitate that Newton’s dictum, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction” stands as grossly faulty, at least, in case of America. America is the most malevolent experiment the world has seen, but I am filled with fear or apprehension that many very bad things may happen from that fight in Syria by America.
As we see the overarching pretension of America is that it believes itself to be the final telomere of every human society. It believes, in the words of a U.S. military officer in Stanley Kubrick’s macabre masterpiece “Full Metal Jacket” that: “inside every gook is an American trying to get out.” Gook here, of course, being a placeholder for any non-American Identity. This pretension to being the universal destiny of human society is not an accidental facet of American Identity; rather it is the basis of it. Without this prime symbol with which to frame the American symbolic order, American Identity itself disappears. This much has been admitted by many. Internationally famed columnist Roger Cohen has made this acute observation, “America is an idea. Strip freedom, human rights, democracy and the rule of law from what the United States represents to the world and America itself is gutted.” But these are the ornaments of power with which they adorn their mythical being. So, it is down to America and it is down to everywhere.
American White House is now an abode of neo-mythos under the presidency of Donald Trump with a newfangled government activity. It gibes in definite but not specified or identified paths. It has, rather, chartered a shape of authoritative political orientation of Germany and Italy of Hitler, Mussolini… which the world witnessed during their regimes, but with respect to history trenchant lineaments finicky to the governmental economic system and acculturation of America in this century. This neo-mythos portrays the character or the qualities or peculiarities of the president and his snuggest advisors, and some of the principal corpuses in his cabinet. From a fuller sociological point of view, it reflects the electoral bases, class constituencies and alignments, and racist, fraid doctrines that has brought Donald Trump into authority. Neo-mythos dissertation and political praxis are now-a-days evident on regular basis in blistering assaults on the racially oppressed, immigrants, women, environmentalists, and workers. These have been companioned by a corroborated crusade to bring the judicatory, governmental employees, the military, spy agencies, and the press into line with this novel mythos and political realism. Trump’s obliterated missile strikes in Syria on last Saturday have pointed in the same direction.
Some say the details of the Trump hagiography don’t matter, that his policies may be up for discussion but his can-do bona fides are not—they are a given, unquestioned and unquestionable. They add that the foibles and quibbles have all been brought up in the past and they do not stick; he is a guy who knows how to get things done in a colossal way, and that’s all that counts, forget the other stuff. The fascists expect to find shortcuts around the chaos of humans acting freely together. But even in the autonomous council such ideologies recur, seeking always to restore some natural hierarchy. The White House’s “America First” policy, unfurled in Trump’s inaugural address, with its characteristically fascist rebirth form of ultra-nationalism is not aimed at domination of Europe and ME countries, as in Nazi Germany, but in restoring U.S. primacy over the entire world, leading to the potentially deadliest phase of imperialism. If the White House is now best described, as neo-fascist in its leanings, this does not extend to the entire US state.
Congress, the courts, the civil bureaucracy, the military, the state and local governments, and what is often called, after Louis Althusser, the “ideological state apparatus”—including the media and educational institutions—would need to be brought into line before a fully neo-fascist state could operate on its own violent terms. There is no doubt that liberal or capitalist democracy in the United States is now endangered. At the level of the political system as a whole, as political scientist Richard Falk has put it, in a “pre-fascist moment.”
Donald Trump must be one of the most widely and fiercely lampooned people of all time; indeed, his entire life can be seen as a one-man war of attrition against the forces of irony. His fortunes are not damaged by it. In fact, it is a war he keeps winning. Trump has a lot of fragile pride, but no shame. His campaign for president invited what must have been the largest onslaught of parodies, sketches, punch lines, unflattering cartoons and disparaging limericks that has ever been unleashed against a single individual. It had zero effect. In spite of it all, he managed to win. But they are all things to resist. Jack London reminds us these words, “There is a shadow of something colossal and menacing that even now is beginning to fall across the land. Call it the shadow of an oligarchy, if you will; it is the nearest I dare approximate it. What its nature may be I refuse to imagine. But what I wanted to say was this: You are in a perilous position.”
Trump’s savage military attack in Syria on last Saturday and his exculpated and assoiled action mechanisms have exposed that he has powerful pretensions to be a rogue leader right now, signaling to the world that no matter the concerns about his presidency, he has the right to use U.S. military power in any sovereign and independent country across the globe according to his free-will. His dictum, “It’s against this backdrop that the president should be going out of his way to reassure the public and the world that his principal focus is on the national security interests of the United States and its allies, and the broader goal of peace and stability in the region” is nothing but a sheer lie. The attack is a blatant violation of international laws. It has also snubbed Syria’s sovereignty. It is vital to understand that fascism is not in any sense a mere political aberration or anomaly, but has historically been one of two major modes of political management adopted by ruling classes in the advanced capitalist states like USA.
Russia and Iran have condemned the attacks. Russian President Putin called the strikes as an act of aggression. Russia has pointed out, “A pre-designed scenario is being implemented. Again, we are being threatened. We warned that such actions will not be left without consequences. All responsibility for them rests with Washington, London and Paris.” Trump’s bodacious annunciation, “mission accomplished” is evil and despicable. He acted as a monster. The Syrian people have suffered terribly. Using of chemical weapons must be stopped. Terrorism under the veiled cover of religion must be fought valourously to reduce it to ashes.
Trump is not in control, The Deep State and the military industrial Complex is running the circus. USA does not want to protect Syria from chemical weapons; it is an excuse to steal its oil. We witnessed their very ugly and savage faces during our glorious Liberation War in 1971 to establish Bangladesh. We should not care about going easy on people that cheer for death. We have built this world, it is time we stop pussyfooting around so people can keep their illusions. You and I only have what we have because America’s capitalist imperialist state killed and looted others. People all around the world should raise their hard voices in unison that no co-lateral damage to innocent civilians happens anywhere in the world.
After the Second World War, America’s abominable bullyragging into the internal affairs of independent and sovereign states across the world has been going on at full strength or intensity. This is quite unbearable and irremissible. The flunkies like Britain and France have joined this military strike on Syria as stooges of USA. They and their big brother, America, are bringing about unspeakable human disasters in Syria and elsewhere in the world. As a matter of fact, the dirty truth is Trump can’t be trusted. A rogue man’s brandish to dictate the world-shattering! Hence, the whole world excluding the devils’ world should be united in its disgust for any use of further military strikes by America in any other countries. Richard Lamm’s words are relevant here, “America does not need another political campaign based on denial and avoidance of some of our real problems. It needs a crusade to reform and renew our country, its institutions and political system.”
-The End –