Saturday, November 29, 2008

Mumbai mayhem caused by... Pakistan? No way!

Over Thanksgiving Break, my family and I were glued to the news coming out of India.  Several terrorists had taken over five-star hotels, a Jewish community center, and a movie theater.  My family was utterly shocked--but not so much at news coverage as the analysis.  There were a myriad of talking heads, including Deepak Chopra (a spiritual healer for goodness sake!) and several inept professors from our nation's leading institutions.  It doesn't take a Ph.D. from Harvard to figure out who was behind this attack: PAKISTAN.  I'm sorry.  I said it.  And I've been saying it since I heard the news.  Call me a racist, but you know what?  Today the media found out that they were from Pakistan, carrying fake British passports and student IDs.  Now I wouldn't be surprised if the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan's biggest intel agency, were training them and providing these fake documents.

I'm not one for conspiracies.  I don't purposely look for alternatives, like government intrigue, to quench my thirst for curiosity because curiosity killed the cat.  I like being a live cat. But blaming these atrocious attacks targeting American and British citizens on Pakistan is relatively safe.  It's like betting big when you have pocket aces: I'd strongly recommend you do it.

A few days after the attacks the pundits started to criticize India's lax security policies.  That's just silly.  You build a bulletproof building, they'll use bombs.  Make it bombproof, expect a nuke at your doorstep.  If anything, they should be criticizing Pakistan's lax attitude towards these terrorists.  While coolly accepting billions of dollars in aid from America, Pakistan peddles to the needs of these terrorist organization.  I'm surprised it took the New York Times so long to find that one out.

If there's anything to learn from this, India should take up Pakistan's offer to help find these terrorists by asking where ISI headquarters is located and neutralize that target, for the sake of India and the world of democracy.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

The U.S. Election and the Middle East

The Middle East has been and will remain one of the central focuses of U.S.’s foreign policy in the coming years. President-Elect Obama will doubtless need to reevaluate America’s alliances, commitments, and objectives in the Middle East beyond the immediate concerns of U.S. troop commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan. 
    

This was the topic of Cornell International Affairs Review’s third event of the fall semester, “The 2008 Election and the Middle East,” which featured distinguished Near Eastern Studies Professor Ross Brann. As Professor Brann made clear, the Middle East is laced with conflict. In the Sudan, the Darfur region continues to be a humanitarian tragedy that has yet to be stabilized. Somalia faces warring tribes, disagreeing factions, civil strife, and lacks any sort of stable government or civil authority. Many non-oil producing countries in the region have been destabilized by the volatility in the food market, and this has the potential of adding to political/social instability in many countries. Turkey recently experienced a severe constitutional crisis, and is now dealing with the ongoing instability of its Southern Kurdish regions. Lebanon is but another country with a weak governmental authority and extralegal paramilitary forces whose strengths outweigh those of the government. On top of all of these sources of instability looms the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Iraq, and the growing threat of Iran. 
    

Anti-Americanism has been growing in the Middle East, and over 90% of people view the United States as a threat to regional security. Professor Brann also argued that, even when Iraq is taken out of the picture, we are increasingly viewed as the guardians of the status quo in the region. The problem can be seen as a general consequence of U.S. policy failure. In the past, our foreign policy involved a traditional balance between coercion and diplomacy, but is now guided more by military intervention and the unilateral threat of coercion. The conclusion seemed to be that a return to a more traditional foreign policy would do a world of good for the U.S.’s standing role in Middle Eastern conflict. 
    

The focus of Professor Brann’s lecture was U.S. foreign policy, but it is also important to consider the limits of U.S. policy as a tool for mediating Middle East conflict. Would a more traditional foreign policy employing a more multilateral approach really prevent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from calling the United States the Great Satan, or curb the PLO’s  intentions of eliminating Israel? And what about Islamo-Fascist hatred of the West? It would be naive to believe that, had the U.S. been pursuing a different foreign policy at the time, the events of 9/11 would never have occurred. The Bush administration’s alleged policy failure can only account for so many conflicts in the region. 
    

The U.S.’s disadvantageous position in the Middle East is also not a foregone conclusion. Consider this alternative viewpoint offered by Georgetown's Grant Gibson: in the nineties states such as Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, the Gulf States, and Egypt acted independently of, and often in opposition to, American foreign policy. However, the twin rise of Islamist terrorism and Iran have caused a paradigm shift in the region. Both Al-Qaeda and Iran represent forces diametrically opposed to the current regimes of the aforementioned countries. As the decade has worn on, these twin threats have shown themselves capable of striking within these states and extending their influence. This fear of Iran and Islamists has led large swathes of the Middle East to turn to the United States to guarantee security. American military bases, defense agreements, and American arms have proliferated at a rapid rate across the region. American influence has reached the point where there are only two countries not considered "allies" (i.e. quasi-client states) in the region: Syria and Iran. So, perhaps, despite all of the negative public opinion polls, the U.S. actually holds a slightly advantageous position in the Middle East. 

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The Third Worth Ignoring

It's official-- thirty-two per cent of our population either never watches the news or watches it high.

According to a new Gallup Poll, 32% of Americans believe that the media coverage of John McCain is "unfairly positive," leading me to question what the media is actually supposed to be doing to John McCain. If giving his opp0nent a 3:1 screen time advantage and letting most liberal talking heads use him as a punching bag is "unfairly positive," somebody needs to research new ways to make John McCain look bad. Or-- excuse me-- stop making him look so damn good.

Let's be serious for one second. Have the media ever done anything in the post-primary cycle to make John McCain look like a good candidate? I have my issues with him, to be sure-- I don't even want to hear the two names McCain and Kennedy in the same sentence after that fiasco. But he's taking a pounding by most media outlets, particularly when most of them are mesmerized by Barack Obama's showmanship and the only shows on which he gets significant screen time are The Daily Show and The Colbert Report (although in fairness, they have begun to take the time to go after Obama).

So where could these 32% be getting the idea that McCain's being coddled? Is it because FOX News isn't mindlessly attacking him? Is it because CNN and even MSNBC have begun to embrace the idea that McCain's not a carbon copy of Dubya? Or is it because they, not agreeing with McCain's ideas, are shocked that it doesn't sound as though MoveOn.org is writing all of the stories that get broadcast? Whatever it is, somebody'd better escort these people to a nearby TV... or at least get me fifty bucks' worth of whatever they're on.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Review Publicity

Since the relaunch, some Cornell-related publications have taken notice ofthe new site.

From metaezra:

-- The Cornell Review rises from the dead. But it'll never be the same without Joe Sabia.

From PaulIbrahim.com :

Jordan Fabian, the co-Editor-in-Chief of the Cornell Review, my old college paper, has informed me that the Review is back online after a couple-year hiatus. It's at http://www.thecornellreview.com.

Hopefully, more to follow.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Just put it on the expense account!

This is why you have to love big government

Monday, April 7, 2008

And We're Back

After about 18 months of living in the stone age, the Review has finally returned to the internet!

Check out the website and look for features coming soon, such as reader feedback and comments, web-only content, and an active blog run by the Review's staff (which of course is linked to the website).

Thanks to Raza Hoda '11 for building the new site and to Will Cohen '09 for helping get us to where we needed to be.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Starving artists

BlackBerries in hand, members of the Writer's Guild of America have taken to the streets to protest the grinding poverty in which they languish at the hands of unscrupulous Hollywood executives. Yep, an average salary of $200K per year can sure be a drag. From the New York Times:

Under the previous contract, which expired Wednesday night, the six major studios must pay a minimum of $106,000 for an original screenplay, while networks must pay at least $20,956 for a teleplay for a prime-time comedy and $30,823 for a prime-time drama.

Many working writers earn much more. The writer of a major studio release can expect a paycheck of at least $1 million, according to union members, while “name” screenwriters might earn in the $4 million range per picture. The average working writer in Hollywood takes home about $200,000 a year, according to the studios and networks, which are represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.


This blatant exploitation by the studio heads is even more outrageous when you consider the value of screenwriters' contributions to society....