The US Is Militarizing the Pacific — and Not Taking Questions – (Truth Out \u2013 April 11, 2016)<\/a><\/b>
\nThe biggest US military re-alignment in a generation may be underway in the Asia-Pacific. Unveiled in 2011, the “Pacific Pivot” aims to transition US military and diplomatic resources away from the Middle East and toward the world’s most populous and economically dynamic region. The United States already has enormous resources invested in the region — including tens of thousands of troops, large aircraft carrier groups, and mutual defense treaties with powerful countries like South Korea and Japan. The pivot aims to bolster that military presence, as well as secure more political cooperation from US allies and boost trade through major pacts like the Trans Pacific Partnership, or TPP. “The United States is a Pacific Power,” President Obama told the Australian parliament in November 2011, “and we are here to stay.” In the shadow of a rising China, Obama promised that Washington “will allocate the resources necessary to maintain our strong military presence in this region.” Secretary of Defense Ash Carter has said that “passing TPP is as important to me as another aircraft carrier” — though he’s asking for actual armaments too, including “high-end capabilities” like the new long-range stealth bomber and anti-ship cruise missiles. Though overshadowed by unrest in the Middle East, the pivot remains very much underway. Already the US has expanded and established new military exercises and agreements with Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Vietnam, the Philippines, and other parts of Southeast Asia — as well as Myanmar, Bangladesh, India, Mongolia, and even China. Article includes numerous links to support its statements and goes on to raise relevant, thoughtful questions concerning the Pacific Pivot \u2013 which no senators have been willing to discuss, despite a year\u2019s worth of efforts by a reputable journalist to contact them. (Editor\u2019s note: We recommend this article.)<\/p>\nGLOBAL RELATIONS<\/b><\/p>\n
8 Ways to Defend against Terror Nonviolently \u2013 (Waging Nonviolence \u2013 January 22, 2016)<\/a><\/b>
\nThis article is a condensation of the syllabus of a course taught at Swarthmore College focused on the challenge of how to defend against terrorism, nonviolently. In the first place, who knew that non-military techniques have, in actual historical cases, reduced the threat of terror? The article then outlines the eight techniques starting with 1.\u00a0Ally-building and the infrastructure of economic development.<\/em>\u00a0Poverty and terrorism are indirectly linked. Economic development can reduce recruits and gain allies, especially if development is done in a democratic way. The terrorism by Northern Ireland\u2019s Irish Republican Army, for example, was strongly reduced by grassroots, job-creating, economic development.<\/p>\nI’m on the Kill List. This Is What It Feels Like to be Hunted by Drones. \u2013 (The Independent \u2013 April 12, 2016)<\/a><\/b>
\nI am in the strange position of knowing that I am on the \u2018Kill List\u2019. I know this because I have been told, and I know because I have been targeted for death over and over again. Four times missiles have been fired at me. I am extraordinarily fortunate to be alive. I don\u2019t want to end up a \u201cBugsplat\u201d \u2013 the ugly word that is used for what remains of a human being after being blown up by a Hellfire missile fired from a Predator drone. More importantly, I don\u2019t want my family to become victims, or even to live with the droning engines overhead, knowing that at any moment they could be vaporized. I took to the habit of sleeping under the trees, well above my home, to avoid acting as a magnet of death for my whole family. But one night my youngest son, Hilal (then aged six), followed me out to the mountainside. He said that he, too, feared the droning engines at night.\u00a0I tried to comfort him. I said that drones wouldn\u2019t target children, but Hilal refused to believe me. He said that missiles had often killed children.\u00a0It was then that I knew that I could not let them go on living like this.<\/p>\n