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From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
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Subject: September 10 update
10 September, 2012
Article 1.
NYT
A New Kind of Warfare
Editorial
The Economist
War and diplomacy in Syria
,tIcie 3.
Al-Monitor
Will Morsi Really Offer Change for Gaza
Sophie Claudet with Saleh Jadallah
Article 4.
Guardian
Gaza: an early warning of disaster
Robert Turner
5
The Economist
Asia's next revolution
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The Daily Beast
Israel's settler movement - stronger than
ever
Dan Ephron
Article 7.
AI-Ahram Weekly
Political Islam versus modernity
Tarek Heggy
Ankle I
NYT
A New Kind of Warfare
Editorial
September 9, 2012 -- Cybersecurity efforts in the United States
have largely centered on defending computer networks against
attacks by hackers, criminals and foreign governments, mainly
China. Increasingly, however, the focus is on developing
offensive capabilities, on figuring out how and when the United
States might unleash its own malware to disrupt an adversary's
networks. That is potentially dangerous territory.
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Such malware is believed to have little deterrent value against
criminals who use computers to steal money from banks or spies
who pilfer industrial secrets. But faced with rising intrusions
against computers that run America's military systems and its
essential infrastructure — its power grid, for instance, and its
telecommunications networks — the military here (and
elsewhere) sees disruptive software as an essential new tool of
war. According to a study by the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, the 15 countries with the biggest military
budgets are all investing in offensive cyber capabilities.
The latest step occurred last month when the United States sent
out bids for technologies "to destroy, deny, degrade, disrupt,
corrupt or usurp" an adversary's attempt to use cyberspace for
advantage. The Air Force asked for proposals to plan for and
manage cyberwarfare, including the ability to launch superfast
computer attacks and withstand retaliation.
The United States, China, Russia, Britain and Israel began
developing basic cyberattack capabilities at least a decade ago
and are still figuring out how to integrate them into their military
operations. Experts say cyberweapons will be used before or
during conflicts involving conventional weapons to infect an
adversary's network and disrupt a target, including shutting
down military communications. The most prominent example is
the Stuxnet virus deployed in 2010 by the United States and
Israel to set back Iran's nuclear program. Other cyberattacks
occurred in 2007 against Syria and 1998 against Serbia.
Crucial questions remain unanswered, including what laws of
war would apply to decisions to launch an attack. The United
States still hasn't figured out what impact cyberweapons could
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have on actual battlefield operations or when an aggressive
cyber response is required. Nor has Washington settled on who
would authorize an attack; experts see roles for both the
president and military commanders. There is also the unresolved
issue of how to minimize collateral damage — like making sure
malware does not cripple a civilian hospital.
Another big concern is China, which is blamed for stealing
American military secrets. Washington has not had much
success persuading Beijing to rein in its hackers. There is a
serious risk of miscalculation if, for example, there is a
confrontation in the South China Sea. China could misinterpret
a move, unleash a cyberattack and trigger a real cyberwar.
What's clearly needed are new international understandings
about what constitutes cyber aggression and how governments
should respond. Meanwhile, the United States must do what it
can to protect its own networks.
Article 2
The Economist
War and diplomacy in Syria
Sep 8th 2012 -- Lakhdar Brahimi, the experienced Algerian
peacemaker who recently replaced Kofi Annan as the UN's
special envoy for Syria, describes his new task as "nearly
impossible". That seems a sound judgment. Syria's beleaguered
but ruthless regime refuses to talk to its opponents until they lay
down their arms. For their part, the outgunned, fractious but
resilient rebels will not talk to the regime until President Bashar
Assad goes. The rest of the world watches in dismay or quietly
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fuels the conflict, as misery mounts. In August alone, the
number of Syrian refugees applying for asylum abroad doubled,
to 200,000. Mr Assad has tried various tactics to stamp out the
uprising, now entering its 18th month. First he promised reform,
as his security forces shot at peaceful protesters. Then the
regime claimed that all was well but for a few rogue "terrorists".
Now, having admitted that he is fighting a real war, Mr Assad is
offering a choice: his regime must be accepted or his army will
scorch the earth of those who go against it. The regional
governor in charge of Daraya, a rebellious working-class suburb
of the capital, Damascus, that was devastated by Mr Assad's
forces in August, recently visited it bearing bread. A kindly
speech about resupplying the stricken town was followed by a
stark warning, says a resident at the scene: harbour the rebels
again and Daraya will be razed to the ground. Such warnings are
taken seriously. Across the country, the army's snipers, artillery
and war planes ceaselessly pummel areas suspected of rebel
sympathies. With growing frequency clusters of corpses, usually
of young men with hands bound, have been found dumped by
the road in government-held areas. On September 5th, 45 such
bodies were said to have been retrieved in one incident. Ruthless
loyalist assaults have kept central Damascus firmly under
government control. Loyalist forces have regained patches of
ground in Aleppo, the fiercely contested second city. Yet there
are signs of ebbing government strength. The practice of
pushing oil drums full of explosives out of helicopters suggests
that the air force may be running out of bombs. The regime has
also begun drafting reservists into the army, whose combat
strength, on paper, of 280,000 men is being badly depleted by
casualties, defections and dipping morale. "We don't know if
they need us or just want us so we can't fight against them," says
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a 30-year-old who left for Lebanon as soon as the police came
knocking to call him up.
But the regime's threats and its determination to consolidate
may work in some areas. Its narrative of an armed Islamist and
sectarian uprising is becoming self-fulfilling, thanks largely to
the violence inflicted overwhelmingly against Syria's Sunni
Muslim majority. Playing on fears of Sunni vengeance, the
ruling clan now offers arms to local self-defence militias that
draw from minorities other than its own Alawite sect, which
makes up a tenth of the population but dominates the security
forces. A mysterious spate of attacks attributed by the regime to
"terrorists" has stoked anxieties in Jaramana, a sprawling
Damascus suburb that houses many Christians and Druze.
"Some people want to throw their hands up and say OK,
whoever, we just want it to stop," says a local. Mr Assad may
be signalling a willingness to spread fires abroad, too. In
Lebanon alleged transcripts of an interrogation by the Lebanese
police of Michel Samaha, a former government minister close to
Mr Assad arrested in August, suggest that top Syrian security
officers had supplied him with bombs intended to kill various
Lebanese Sunni and Christian figures. Turkish officials suspect
that Mr Assad's regime has handed Syria's north-eastern
Kurdish areas to militias tied to the Kurdistan Workers' Party
(PKK), a guerrilla group that has been fighting Turkish forces
for over 30 years. The PKK was blamed for an attack in
southern Turkey on September 3rd that killed nine Turkish
policemen. Such divisive tactics have long been a hallmark of
the Assad family's rule. Although opposition fighters have
alienated some propertied city dwellers, they retain the support
of much of the rural population and have continued to wear
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down Mr Assad's forces. Attacks on government supply
convoys have stranded remoter army units and ground assaults
on air bases are beginning to take a toll on Mr Assad's air force:
three out of its 27 bases may no longer be operable. Helicopters
are now rarely sighted in Syria's rebel-dominated north-west
because fighters have fashioned weapons to shoot them down.
Pointing to their successes, rebel commanders say they will push
on, with or without outsiders' help. The American
administration has licensed the Syrian Support Group, an
organisation of exiles, to ignore the American arms embargo and
fund opposition fighters. Western leaders are growing less
squeamish about dishing out aid. "We are behind the curve in
seeing this as a military conflict while other regional actors step
up what they are doing," admits a Western diplomat, echoing
reports of a boost in arms shipments to the regime from Iran.
Moves by the disparate rebel militias to unify their command
structures have been quietly encouraged, in a sign of the West's
impatience with Syria's squabbling political opposition. Rather
than press for negotiations, Mr Brahimi may concentrate instead
on simply maintaining a UN foothold in Syria's quagmire, with
the intention of mediating at a more opportune time. That
moment is unlikely to result from a bold diplomatic initiative for
a long while. There is no sign of either side wanting to cease
fire. Perhaps a particularly jarring spike in violence might jolt
outside governments into more urgent diplomatic or even
military action. "I hope one day I see my home again," says a
dejected young writer now in exile. "But who knows if I will
recognise it."
Article 3.
Al-Monitor
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Will Morsi Really Offer Change for
Gaza
Sophie Claudet with Saleh Jadallah
Sep 9, 2012 -- Gaza City — When Egypt reopened the Rafah
crossing border with Gaza late last month, Palestinians hailed
the move as a possible end to their isolation from the rest of the
world after years of near-total closure enforced by both Israel
and former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. "Hamas
appreciates the Egyptian decision to completely reopen the
Rafah crossing, and considers this step as an evidence for the
good intention of the Egyptian leadership toward the Palestinian
people, especially in Gaza," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zohri
said. On Aug. 25, Egypt said the Rafah terminal would stay
open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., 6 days a week except Fridays.
The Gaza Strip has four main crossings: three of them are
controlled by Israel and the Rafah border is under Hamas and
Egyptian control since Israel pulled out its settlers and army
from Gaza in 2005. Israel-controlled Erez crossing is mainly
used by businessmen, medical patients, foreigners and
Palestinian officials — all requiring permits that Israel delivers
sparingly. The other two passages, Karni and Karem Shalom, are
used for commercial purposes and unilaterally controlled by
Israel. And Gaza can only trade — albeit with great difficulties
— by way of land since both its seaport and airport were
destroyed by Israel during the second Intifada (2000-2005).
But the Rafah border crossing, which is the only window to the
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world for the great majority of Gazaans, was closed on Aug. 5
after an attack on an Egyptian security site in the Sinai peninsula
left 16 Egyptian soldiers dead, creating tensions between the two
sides.
Following the attack, Egypt accused Palestinian militants of
being involved in the attack, claiming that the gunmen came in
through tunnels dug between Gaza and Sinai used to smuggle
goods, fuel and construction materials. The incident resulted in
the temporary closing of Rafah.
Blockade devastated Gaza's fragile economy
Gazaans were all the more upset over the temporary closure
since they had pinned high hopes on the regime change in Egypt
following Mubarak's ouster — on top of which was the
reopening of the Rafah border crossing after years of blockade.
The sweeping victory of Hamas in the January 2006 Palestinian
general elections and the ensuing 2007 coup the hardline
Islamist movement staged in the Gaza Strip were met with a near
total blockade by Israel that was also heeded by Egypt. Years of
closure have not only prevented freedom of movement and free
trade but also contributed to skyrocketing poverty and
unemployment levels in the narrow Strip. In a report published
last week, the UN said 40 percent of the population lived in
poverty, 80 percent of whom depend on outside aid, and that
close to a third of Gazaans were jobless. Some 1.6 million
Gazaans are crammed into 146 square miles, making the Gaza
Strip one of the most populated places in the world. And the UN
estimates that the population will rise by half a million in the
next coming eight years, meaning that is urgent to find
employment opportunities for the Strip's every increasing youth.
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In fact, the international organization said that as things stand
Gaza won't be "livable" by 2020. No later than last week, an 18-
year old Gazaan set himself on fire in a desperate attempt to
protest his family's dire economic conditions. He died from his
wounds on Monday, September 3.
But so far, Israel has resisted international pressure to lift its
blockade, which it says prevents weapons from reaching Hamas.
In the primary stages of the 2007 blockade, the ousted Egyptian
regime also restricted movement. The old Egyptian regime used
to open the passage three days every two months. And Egypt
caused an uproar in the Arab and Muslim world when it sealed
its border with the Palestinian territory during Israel's Cast Lead
Operation, a move perceived as giving a free hand to the Jewish
state to wage an all-out war on Gaza. Hosni Mubarak eventually
eased the movement of Palestinian passengers after Israel
intercepted the Gaza-bound Turkish flotilla in 2010.
Egypt's new president hailed as potential savior
After Mubarak was toppled by a popular uprising in 2011,
Palestinians were happy to see him go as he was perceived to be
serving Israel's interests. When Mohammed Morsi was elected
president of Egypt in June, thousands of Gazaans flooded the
streets to express their joy holding pictures of Morsi to celebrate
the Islamist Party's victory: Hamas is very close in its ideology
to the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. In July, Hamas Prime
Minister Ismail Hanyieh traveled to Cairo to meet with Morsi. A
meeting during which the new Egyptian president promised to
help improve the lives of Palestinians in Gaza by facilitating
their travel and supplying the strip with fuel and power.
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But so far, little has changed.
Abed Ghani Abu Salama, a Palestinian teacher at a secondary
school, said that reopening the crossing was a good step.
However, he said he was hoping that the new Islamist leadership
in Egypt would completely lift the blockade on Gaza.
"The tyrant was brought down and now Egypt is experiencing a
new era of democracy. We hope Morsi will turn that black page
and open a new page for better relations ," Abu Salama told Al-
Monitor. "After years of suffering, Gaza residents need to be
rewarded not punished."
Others in Gaza said they were optimistic about the impact of the
Muslim Brotherhood's election. Abed Rahman al-Khaldi, a
university student who supports Hamas, said it was still early to
judge the Islamist leaders in Egypt but that he was counting on
their religious solidarity. His friend Abed Rahman, also a
Hamas supporter, said: "I do trust Brotherhood leaders but they
need a chance until they become stronger. If they have enough
power, they will not only open the crossing but will liberate
Palestine."
Abu Al-Waleed, a shop owner, said that after initially worrying
about the Egyptian president not holding enough power in the
face of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), he
now believes the president had no excuse to continue the same
policies towards Gaza.
"If President Morsi ends up adopting Mubarak's policy toward
Gaza, he will be responsible for isolating Gaza from the outside
world and for creating humanitarian crisis for all Gaza residents.
Now he has enough power to end the suffering of Gaza," Abu Al-
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Waleed said.
Mustafa Ibraheem, a Palestinian human rights activist, urged
Egypt to treat Palestinians fairly and not to inflict punishment on
them.
Egypt should deal with Gaza as they deal with any other country
in the Arab world. Even if someone from Gaza does wrong
against Egypt, they do not have the right to impose a collective
punishment on a whole people," the activist recently wrote
online in a veiled reference the temporary closing of Rafah
following the Sinai attack.
A free-trade zone with Egypt?
Palestinians are still waiting for more from Egypt.
According to an official at the Hamas ministry of interior, about
40,000 Palestinians, including medical patients and students
have their names registered with the ministry waiting for their
turn to travel. Palestinians officials are also hoping to create a
free-trade zone between Rafah and Egypt, on the very land
under which hundreds of tunnels are used by Palestinians to
smuggle in basic commodities — and not only weapons - from
Egypt to circumvent the blockade. Speeding up trade with
Egypt is all the more urgent that Morsi ordered the destruction
of more than 100 tunnels following the Aug. 5 Sinai attack. A
local Palestinian news agency reported last week that the land
authority in Gaza had already started leveling land to prepare the
ground for a duty-free zone, west of the Rafah crossing. But the
Hamas government may be getting ahead of itself. Although the
economy ministry sent a plan for a duty-free area to Egypt's
authorities, it has yet to receive an answer from Cairo.
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"Establishing a duty-free zone will play an important role in
lifting the blockade on Gaza and will strengthen the political
unity with Egypt as well as with the Arab and Muslim world,"
said Alaa Al-Rafati, the economy minister. "A special delegation
from the ministry will travel to Egypt to discuss the proposition
of this zone," Rafati added.
Separately, Hanyieh urged Egypt on Tuesday (Sept. 4) to let
much-needed Qatari fuel enter the Gaza Strip. "I call on the
Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi to give orders to the
concerned authorities in his government to ease the process of
sending the shipment of Qatari fuel and to accelerate the
procedures for establishing the duty-free zone," said the Hamas
prime minister as he was presiding over the first cabinet meeting
of his reshuffled government.
To date, Egypt has not sent the required amounts of Qatari fuel
to run Gaza's only power plant, which only resumed operations
in July after six years of inactivity because of the Israeli-
Egyptian siege. Besides its own power plant, Gaza relies and
Israel and Egypt for its electricity and had, until July,
experienced power cuts of up to 18 hours a day. Hamas is also
hoping to seal an agreement with Cairo to link its electricity grid
to Egypt's.
Saleh Jadallah is a Palestinian print and photofreelancer in
Gaza.
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Article 4.
Guardian
Gaza: an early warning of disaster
Robert Turner
9 September 2012 -- The international system is often accused
of failing to give adequate early warning; of being myopic and
not furnishing the appropriate powers with data and analysis that
would allow an effective, timely response to predictable
disasters. With the recent publication of the report, Gaza in
2020: a Liveable Place?, it would be hard to level these
accusations at the UN country team in the occupied Palestinian
territory. The report is a trend analysis based on data from
authoritative sources, such as the UN's specialised agencies, the
World Bank and the IMF, which sets out where Gaza will be in
less than eight years' time. This is early warning writ large.
By 2020 the population of the tiny Gaza Strip will grow by half
a million people: 500,000 more to be fed, housed, educated,
employed. More than half of the population will be under 18,
with one of the highest youth populations as a proportion
anywhere in the world.
The lack of safe drinking water is the most urgent concern in
Gaza today and it will only get worse in the years to come. The
coastal aquifer is the main water source, but 90% of its water is
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not safe for drinking without further treatment. Three times as
much water is currently extracted from the aquifer as is
recharged from rainfall every year. Thissituation is not
sustainable. By 2016, the aquifer may become unusable, and
damage to it may be irreversible by 2020 without remedial
action now. Already, people have to drill deeper and deeper to
reach groundwater. The UN Environment Programme
recommends resting the aquifer immediately, as it would
otherwise take centuries for it to recover. At the same time,
demand for water is projected to grow to 260m cubic meters per
year in 2020, 60% more than is currently extracted from the
aquifer.
Only one quarter of sewage is currently treated. The remaining
three quarters are dumped into the Mediterranean sea. Based on
population growth, the amount of sewage and waste water that is
generated per year could increase from 44m cubic meters today
to 57m cubic meters in 2020. Current treatment plants need to
be expanded and improved, and new ones built.
These predictions have profound implications for all
humanitarian and development organisations in Gaza, in
particular the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) which
works with Gaza's refugee communities. Some 70% of the
population are refugees, with UNRWA's current caseload of
over 1.2 million expected to rise to some 1.5 million by 2020.
This 30% increase in refugees will require massive investment
to maintain current levels of service.
Take health: in 2011 there were over 4.4 million patient visits to
UNRWA health centres, that could be expected to rise to over
5.7 million annual visits at current rates. UNRWA's 21 health
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centres currently have an average catchment of approximately
57,000 registered refugees; without new clinics that would rise
to over 74,000 by 2020. To bring UNRWA closer to WHO
standards, the agency currently needs an additional 90 doctors
and 95 nurses. To maintain current service levels by 2020,
UNRWA would need to add five new health centres, 220
doctors and over 300 other health professionals, and that is
without improving the present level of service (over 100 patient
visits per doctor per day).
In the education sector, urrently UNRWA has 247 schools in
130 buildings, with 93% double shifting — the same building
serving two separate shifts of students and teachers each day. To
maintain our current student teacher ratio we would need over
2,000 teachers and support staff.
On social protection UNRWA distributes food to over 900,000
refugees, after which some 44% remain food insecure because of
a lack of jobs. Without improvements in the economy that can
only come about with the lifting of the blockade that figure will
rise to over 1 million. An additional 350,000 refugees by 2020
means some 20,000 new shelters will be required.
Our prescription to avert this looming but avoidable catastrophe
is simple. While the UN has condemned the rockets many times,
we continue to demand a lifting of the blockade, which is
costing the international community hundreds of millions of
dollars each year. Allow the people of Gaza to enjoy the
standards of development and economic prosperity for which
they yearn. They are capable of self-sufficiency. They do not
want the current levels of 80% aid dependency to continue and
neither do the world's taxpayers who fund the international aid
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agencies. Let us address the root causes of this looming disaster
rather than expecting the international community to foot the
bill to mitigate their disastrous consequences.
Robert Turner is Gaza Director of the UN Relief and Works
Agencyfor Palestine Refugees
Ankle 5.
The Economist
Asia's next revolution
Sep 8th 2012 -- ASIA'S economies have long wowed the world
with their dynamism. Thanks to years of spectacular growth,
more people have been pulled from abject poverty in modern
Asia than at any other time in history. But as they become more
affluent, the region's citizens want more from their
governments. Across the continent pressure is growing for
public pensions, national health insurance, unemployment
benefits and other hallmarks of social protection. As a result, the
world's most vibrant economies are shifting gear, away from
simply building wealth towards building a welfare state.
The speed and scale of this shift are mind-boggling (see article).
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Last October Indonesia's government promised to provide all its
citizens with health insurance by 2014. It is building the biggest
"single-payer" national health scheme—where one government
outfit collects the contributions and foots the bills—in the
world. In just two years China has extended pension coverage to
an additional 240m rural folk, far more than the total number of
people covered by Social Security, America's public-pension
system. A few years ago about 80% of people in rural China had
no health insurance. Now virtually everyone does. In India some
40m households benefit from a government scheme to provide
up to 100 days' work a year at the minimum wage, and the state
has extended health insurance to some 110m poor people, more
than double the number of uninsured in America.
If you take Germany's introduction of pensions in the 1880s as
the beginning and Britain's launch of its National Health
Service in 1948 as the apogee, the creation of Europe's welfare
states took more than half a century. Some Asian countries will
build theirs in a decade. If they get things wrong, especially
through unaffordable promises, they could wreck the world's
most dynamic economies. But if they create affordable safety
nets, they will not just improve life for their own citizens but
also become role models themselves. At a time when
governments in the rich world are failing to redesign states to
cope with ageing populations and gaping budget deficits, this
could be another area where Asia leapfrogs the West.
Beyond Bismarck and Beveridge
History offers many lessons for the Asians on what to avoid.
Europe's welfare states began as basic safety nets. But over time
they turned into cushions. That was partly because, after wars
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and the Depression, European societies made redistribution their
priority, but also because the recipients of welfare spending
became powerful interest groups. The eventual result, all too
often, was economic sclerosis with an ever-bigger state. America
has kept its safety net less generous, but has made mistakes in
creating its entitlements system—including making unaffordable
pension and health-care promises, and tying people's health
insurance to their employment.
The record in other parts of the emerging world, especially Latin
America, is even worse. Governments have tended to collect
insufficient tax revenue to cover their spending promises. Social
protection often aggravated inequalities, because pensions and
health care flowed to affluent urban workers but not the really
poor. Brazil famously has a first-world rate of government
spending but third-world public services. Asia's governments
are acutely conscious of all this. They have little desire to
replace traditions of hard work and thrift with a flabby welfare
dependency. The region's giants can seek inspiration not from
Greece but from tiny Singapore, where government spending is
only a fifth of GDP but schools and hospitals are among the best
in the world. So far, the safety nets in big Asian countries have
generally been minimalist: basic health insurance and pensions
which replace a small fraction of workers' former income. Even
now, the region's social spending relative to the size of its
economies is only about 30% of the rich-country average and
lower than any part of the emerging world except sub-Saharan
Africa.
That leaves a fair amount of room for expansion. But Asia also
faces a number of peculiarly tricky problems. One is
demography. Although a few countries, notably India, are
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relatively youthful, the region includes some of the world's most
rapidly ageing populations. Today China has five workers for
every old person. By 2035 the ratio will have fallen to two. In
America, by contrast, the baby-boom generation meant that the
Social Security system had five contributors per beneficiary in
1960, a quarter of a century after its introduction. It still has
three workers for every retired person.
Another problem is size, which makes welfare especially hard.
The three giants—China, India and Indonesia—are vast places
with huge regional income disparities within their borders.
Building a welfare state in any one of them is a bit like creating
a single welfare state across the European Union. Lastly, many
Asian workers (in India it is about 90%) are in the "informal"
economy, making it harder to verify their incomes or reach them
with transfers.
Cuddly tigers, not flabby cats
How should these challenges be overcome? There is no single
solution that applies from India to South Korea. Different
countries will, and should, experiment with different welfare
models. But there are three broad principles that all Asian
governments could usefully keep in mind. The first is to pay
even more attention to the affordability over time of any
promises. The size of most Asian pensions may be modest, but
people collect them at an early age. In China, for example,
women retire at 55; in Thailand many employees are obliged to
stop work at 60 and can withdraw their pension funds at 55.
That is patently unsustainable. Across Asia, retirement ages need
to rise, and should be indexed to life expectancy.
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Second, Asian governments need to target their social spending
more carefully. Crudely put, social provision should be about
protecting the poor more than subsidising the rich. In fast-ageing
societies, especially, handouts to the old must not squeeze out
investment in the young. Too many Asian governments still
waste oodles of public money on regressive universal subsidies.
Indonesia, for instance, last year spent nine times as much on
fuel subsidies as it did on health care, and the lion's share of
those subsidies flows to the country's most affluent. As they
promise a broader welfare state, Asia's politicians have the
political opportunity, and the economic responsibility, to get rid
of this kind of wasteful spending.
Third, Asia's reformers should concentrate on being both
flexible and innovative. Don't stifle labour markets with rigid
severance rules or over-generous minimum wages. Make sure
pensions are portable, between jobs and regions. Don't equate a
publicly funded safety net with government provision of services
(a single public payer may be the cheapest way to provide basic
health care, but that does not have to mean every nurse needs to
be a government employee). And use technology to avoid the
inefficiencies that hobble the rich world's public sector. From
making electronic health records ubiquitous to organising
transfer payments through mobile phones, Asian countries can
create new and efficient delivery systems with modern
technology. In the end, the success of Asia's great leap towards
welfare provision will be determined by politics as much as
economics. The continent's citizens will have to show a
willingness to plan ahead, work longer and eschew handouts
based on piling up debt for future generations: virtues that have
so far eluded their rich-world counterparts. Achieving that
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political maturity will require the biggest leap of all.
Article 6.
The Daily Beast
Israel's settler movement is alive and
stronger than ever
Dan Ephron
September 10, 2012 -- Dror Etkes should have been pleased. Six
years ago, the 44-year-old Israeli peace activist asked Israel's
High Court of Justice to intervene in the case of a Jewish
settlement outpost in the West Bank built on Palestinian
farmland. Etkes, who spends much of his time fighting
settlement expansion, thought the Migron outpost could be a test
case. But when the court finally ordered Israeli authorities to
evict the settlement's 50 families last week, he couldn't bring
himself to celebrate. For one thing, the government is now
building a much bigger housing project a few miles away to
accommodate the ousted residents. But the larger issue is that
more and more Israelis are migrating to settlements —a
disturbing trend for people still hoping to see a Palestinian state
established in the West Bank. Indeed, in the time it took to
process the Migron case, the settler population has swelled by
more than 30 percent to 360,000 (not counting those living in
East Jerusalem). And with an array of government incentives
and subsidies, there is little sign that the trend will subside. "It's
a bitter victory," Etkes said, speaking over the grinding of
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bulldozers where the new settlement is being built. Before its
destruction, Migron was the flagship of unauthorized settlement
outposts—communities erected without formal permission from
the Israeli government. Its removal is undoubtedly a setback for
the settler movement. But the story of Migron and dozens of
other outposts that even Israel deems illegal (most of the world
considers all West Bank settlements illegal) is a testament to the
vast influence the settlers wield in Israel and their ability to
consistently outmaneuver their opponents. Over the past decade,
Israeli governments have made repeated promises to dismantle
the outposts, including a specific pledge to the United States as
part of the 2003 peace plan known as the Roadmap. But most
are now likely to get retroactive approval and grow into full-
fledged settlements, making it harder and harder to imagine an
Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. "The objective [of the
settlers] was to prevent the establishment of an Arab country
between Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea," wrote Nahum
Barnea, one of Israel's most respected columnists, in the daily
newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth last month. "It is safe to say that
the objective has been achieved."
The saga of Migron began, improbably, with a cellphone tower
some 11 years ago, early in the second intifada. Palestinians
were ambushing Israelis in the West Bank, and settlers
complained that they were losing reception at a certain bend in
the road south of Ramallah. Worried that if an attack ensued,
victims wouldn't be able to call for help, Israeli authorities
placed a cell tower on a hill high above the bend. The tower
required a guard—Palestinians were also vandalizing Israeli
property—and the guard needed a trailer. By 2002 settlers had
towed several more trailers to the hilltop and called the place
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Migron, the name of the biblical town where King Saul camped
out before attacking the Philistines. The new squatters at
Migron never received permission from the Israeli government
to build a settlement. But that wasn't unusual. By 2003 scores of
unauthorized outposts dotted the West Bank—part of a right-
wing backlash against Israeli governments, which while
encouraging growth within settlements, had promised the U.S.
not to establish new ones. Yet Migron was different. The land
settlers seized there (and at a few other outposts) had specific
Palestinian owners—in this case, residents of the nearby villages
Burka and Deir Dibwan. Israeli courts going back to 1967 had
given their approval for settlements to be built on public land in
the West Bank— territory to which no one held a deed. But they
had struck down attempts to confiscate privately held land for
the purpose of settlements. The distinction made the squatters at
Migron lawbreakers twice over.
Itai Harel, a 38-year-old social worker, was among Migron's
first residents. He not only built a home in the settlement, but a
horse stable where he teaches troubled and disabled kids youths
to ride and care for the animals. Harel refused to speak to
reporters who visited the hilltop last week, a rocky plateau with
stunning vistas in every direction. The settlers were busy
packing their belongings and dismantling light fixtures, before
demolition crews arrived. But Harel's father, Israel, did talk to
Newsweek, scoffing at the idea that residents could establish
their community without at least implicit support from the
government. "Who installed the electricity, the water, the roads,
the security?" said Harel, who helped found the settler
movement. "They got approval from government offices for all
these things."
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In a way, Harel is right. In court proceedings, the state admitted
knowing from the outset that the land on which Migron was
built belonged to Palestinians. "Because the subject of
discussion is an outpost that was built on private lands, there is
no legal possibility to accept its existence," lawyers for the state
wrote in response to the petition. (The judges rejected claims by
the settlers that they had legally purchased the land from
Palestinians). And yet, for more than a decade, government
officials provided the settlers at Migron with all the services
required for a community to function.
Even after the court sided with Etkes and Palestinian land
owners in 2008, successive Israeli governments put off
dismantling Migron, hoping to avoid a collision with the
powerful settler lobby. Prime Minister Netanyahu stalled until
the high court practically forced his hand. Still, the Migron
settlers have promised to hold a grudge. "The government of
Israel will not be able to wash its hands of the brutal rape that is
being carried out under its open eyes, through its silent
approval," they said in statement last week. "Today, the prime
minister has gone down in eternal infamy as a member of a
destructive band of preceding prime ministers who chose to
raise a hand on the settlement enterprise in the land of Israel."
In the aftermath of the dismantling of Migron, that enterprise is
still going strong. Building starts spiked by 20 percent in 2011
over the previous year, according to the left-leaning group Peace
Now and 2012 could be even better for the settlers. With Israel's
economy starting to dip, the high financial price of settlement
expansion is getting more attention than usual. Dismantling
Migron and resettling its residents alone could cost of the state
millions of dollars. And yet, polls show nearly half of Israelis
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continue to support settlement expansion, while Netanyahu's
approval rating remains above 50 percent. Some activists now
argue that petitioning the high court over settlements should be
avoided because they've backfired too many times. After a court
case forced Netanyahu to evacuate roughly 30 families from
another outpost earlier this year, he simply approved the
construction of hundreds of new homes elsewhere in the West
Bank. The Migron eviction has triggered a similar spree.
Nevertheless, Etkes says he'll continue to fight back. After
obtaining land-registry data for the entire West Bank through
Israel's Freedom of Information Act, he now estimates that
about 35 percent of the territory on which settlements were built
is the private property of Palestinians. "It creates a discussion,"
he said about the court cases. "It forces Israelis to look at their
own reflection in the mirror." Unfortunately for Etkes,
reflections, like beauty, are often in the eye of the beholder.
Article 7.
Al-Ahram Weekly
Political Islam versus modernity
Tarek Heggy
"Bear witnessfor us, 0 pen/ That we shall not sleep/ That we
shall not dither between yes' and 'no'" Amal Donqol
It is my view that whether political Islam is defined as a
religious theocratic movement or a political movement in the
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modern sense of political movements, the currents of political
Islam have a position concerning the type of value system that
contemporary intellectuals in advanced societies recognise as
constituting the foundations of a culture of progress and
modernity. So a conversation must be held between some of
these value systems and the mentality and behaviour of
exponents of currents of political Islam. This is what I shall
attempt to do in this essay, which aims to place political Islam
side by side with a number of values associated with modernity
and progress. The conception of the modern state: modern
Islamists are unable to understand or accept or even admire the
modern state system, which is the product or the result of
centuries of political, cultural, social and economic struggle over
the course of human progress. When the Prophet took ill (during
the last days of his life) he tasked his close companion, Abu
Bakr Al-Siddiq, with deputising for him in leading the prayer.
When the prophet passed away shortly afterwards, a large
number of Muslims considered that this entrusting of the
leadership of the prayer constituted an indication from the
Prophet that Abu Bakr was to be his preferred successor. And
this is what in fact took place in the aftermath of the problems
associated with the Saqifa compact (saqifat bani sada). From the
very first day Abu Bakr became "the prophet's 'deputy' or
successor.
It is this historical model that dominates Islamists' thinking. This
model (necessarily a simplistic one in step with the simplicity of
a time of experimentation) prevails still over the mind-set of
most Islamists, in whom the interweaving of "religion" and
"politics" is a thoroughgoing one. Some decades later, attempts
were made to philosophise and theorise this experiment in a
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number of books known today as works on Al-Ahkam Al-
Sultaniya (Rulings on Governance), such as Al-Mawardi's Al-
Ahkam Al-Sultaniya. Even though the specifics of such rulings
do no more than reflect the condition and level of evolution in
man's political thinking over a period of five centuries starting
from the seventh century AD, specifics which are simplistic and
in many instances downright primitive and silly, the mind-set of
contemporary exponents of Islamism still retains an admiration
for them as something presenting a comprehensive alternative to
the system of the modern state.
PLURALISM: There is little doubt that the culture of more
progressive societies, and their general intellectual climate, are
founded upon the premise that "pluralism" constitutes one of the
most important markers of human existence in its most advanced
stage, and indeed that it is one of the prerequisites of human
progress. There can be no progress for peoples who do not
believe in pluralism or who fail to construct their culture and
general climate upon the acceptance of what pluralism achieves.
Just as Marxism presented a nemesis for pluralism when all of
its social, cultural, economic and political systems were founded
upon the dismissal of everyone and everything that opposed the
basic foundations of Marxism, political Islam can do naught else
but lead to this same dismissal -- for all the Islamists'
declarations of belief in pluralism. This is because the Islamist is
dominated by the thought that he is 100 per cent in the right.
After all, how can this not be the case given that God himself
enters with him into all epistemological, cultural, economic,
political, legal and constitutional arenas? And scientific arenas
too: where is the Islamist, for example, who accepts the theory
of evolution?
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OTHERNESS: This (or the acceptance of the other) is the
product of the debate on pluralism. If life (for those who believe
in pluralism) is founded upon a broad pluralism in various
spheres of living, organisation, thinking and principles, the first
thing it demands of modern man is to accept the other (in all that
"other's" various forms). But if the Islamist -- who believes that
God stands at his side and that he is the closest to truth in all
manner of arenas -- maintains any belief in accepting the other,
his acceptance is a relatively moderate (or at times microscopic)
one. He may tell us that he believes in the rights of woman, but
he will then tell us that women are qualified to work in "most"
but not all posts! And he will tell us, unequivocally, that a
woman (and even a non-Muslim) cannot become a head of state.
He will also tell us, in his own words, that he believes in
religious freedom, but he will lay down for others what it is that
they may believe in. For the Islamists in Egypt (writing now in
2012) are saying that a man has a right to be a Muslim or a Jew
or a Christian but he does not have the right to be a Buddhist or
a Bahaai. In the same way, Islamists cannot agree that freedom
of religion means that a Muslim can leave Islam.
RELATIVISM: Out of the womb of faith in pluralism issues
faith in otherness (the acceptance of the other). And out of the
womb of either comes "relativism". By this I mean that in the
culture and climate of a more progressive society the concept of
the relative nature of opinions, rulings, theories and
interpretations is widely shared. The Islamist may say, in his
own words, that
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