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Polypill ‘can halve heart disease risk’

March 31st, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/68015?ns=guardianpageName=Society27polypill2C+says+studych=Societyc3=The+Guardianc4=Health+2928Science2CMedical+research+292CHeart+failure2CStroke+prevention2CSociety2CWorld+newsc5=Society+Weekly2CHealth+Societyc6=Sarah+Boseleyc7=2009_03_31c8=1192166c9=Article+29c10=GUc11=Societyc12=Healthc13=c14=h2=GU2FHealthh2=GU2FHealthc13=c10=News+29c25=c26=Gdn28nbs2FHealth2F28Content+type7C119216627polypill2C+says+study%7C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpstrong/strongHealthy people who take a cheap five-in-one combination “polypill” of aspirin and cholesterol and blood pressure-­lowering drugs, could slash heart disease and strokes by half, the authors of a study presented yesterday say./ppThe polypill concept has been around for some years, but the news from the American College of Cardiology annual conference brought it closer to a reality. The combination drug, manufactured cheaply by an Indian generics company, has been tested in 412 volunteers. Others in the trial in 50 centres in India, which included more than 2,000 people, took the blood pressure and cholesterol-­lowering drugs individually./ppThe object of this early trial, also published online by the Lancet, was to see whether the cocktail of drugs in one pill worked as well as the drugs taken ­separately./ppThe researchers found that the Polycap, as the pill has been named, reduced blood pressure and heart rate just as effectively. It also lowered cholesterol, but not quite as much as the statin it contains would have done on its own./ppBut the researchers, Dr Salim Yusuf of the Population Health Research Institute at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario in Canada, andnbsp;Dr Prem Pais of St John’s Medical College in Bangalore, India, and colleagues point out that there are major advantages to combining five pills in one. People who have been told they are at slight or moderate risk of a heart attack or stroke but are otherwise healthy are far more likely to take a single daily pill than a large number of different drugs./ppThe largest and most important target for the polypill would be the developing world, where heart attacks and strokes are soaring and a wide range of medicines are not available or are too expensive./ppIt would also find a market in wealthy countries, however, because of its convenience. Each year almost 200,000 Britons are killed by heart and artery disease. A fifth of all deaths before the age of 75 in men and 10% of those in women are due to ­cardiovascular disease./ppProfessor Malcolm Law, from the ­Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine in London, who was one of the pioneers of the polypill, said: “We have long advocated the polypill as a safe and effective way of greatly reducing the incidence of heart attacks and strokes in the population./pp”This study shows that it’s possible to make such a product that is effective and doesn’t have adverse side effects.”/ppHe said a polypill such as the one used in the study would be easily affordable and greatly reduce the cost burden of doctors’ appointments, blood and cholesterol tests, and treatment./pp”These drugs are off-patent and cost pennies,” said Law. “You might be talking in terms of 50p a day. There’s no way it’s going to drain resources./pp”It’s not going to make megabucks for anyone, but it’s a public health thing.”/ppThe volunteers in the study had a relatively low risk of heart attacks and strokes. Each had at least one risk factor, such as raised blood pressure, a smoking habit or obesity. In a higher risk population, the polypill might be expected to reduce rates of heart attacks and strokes by around 75%, said Law./pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/health”Health/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/drugs”Drugs/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/medical-research”Medical research/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/heart-attack”Heart attack/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/heart-failure”Heart failure/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/stroke-emergency-care”Stroke, emergency care/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/stroke-prevention”Stroke prevention/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/9AKKjE5rGVlQ6-MH-Pdr_7QebEU/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/9AKKjE5rGVlQ6-MH-Pdr_7QebEU/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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Skype for iPhone now live in US

March 31st, 2009

It’s finally here, and even a few minutes early. Skype for iPhone is now available in the US iTunes store, free of charge. We’ve heard great thing from the folks in Japan who’ve been fiddling with it for the last twelve hours, and so far it’s sounding pretty good for us, too, with only minor hiccups. Not sure if it’s a glitch, but despite what we heard earlier , we seem to be able to dial out while on 3G and not over WiFi. Hit up the read link for quickest route to the app store page, and let us know what you think. Betcha wish you could ditch that AT&T voice plan now, huh? [Thanks to everyone who sent this in!] Filed under: Cellphones Skype for iPhone now live in US originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Mar 2009 23:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read ?|? Permalink ?|? Email this ?|? Comments

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‘Misplaced optimism’ in Afghanistan

March 30th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/164?ns=guardianpageName=UK+news3A+soldiers2C+chaos2CAfghanistan+292CUK+newsc5=Not+commercially+usefulc6=Richard+Norton-Taylorc7=2009_03_30c8=1191641c9=Article+29c10=GUc11=UK+newsc12=Militaryc13=c14=h2=GU2FMilitaryh2=GU2FMilitaryc13=c10=News+29c25=c26=Gdn28nbs2FMilitary2F28Content+type7C11916413A+soldiers2C+chaos7C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divp• British military chief says aims in south were naive br /• Account in book tells of crude tactics and old kit/ppBritain’s top diplomat in Afghanistan has admitted to “misplaced optimism”, and a senior commander has said that military policy is being made up as they go along, according to an account by UK soldiers fighting the Taliban, which will be published this week./ppOperaton Snakebite, by Stephen Grey, a journalist, describes behind-the-scenes tension between British troops and officials in Afghanistan and London, the poor state of the army’s equipment, and the political and military chaos that occurred in 2007 as British and US troops retook from the Taliban the district of Musa Qala, a place regarded as a key objective in the province of Helmand./ppBrigadier John Lorimer, commander of UK forces in southern Afghanistan, is quoted as comparing the operations to having been “mowing the lawn”, when Taliban fighters returned quickly to villages seized but then let go by the stretched British troops./ppSherard Cowper-Coles, the UK ambassador in Kabul, described his job as sending back to London the unvarnished truth. “You know a lot of people had been rather naive about what could be done here in Afghanistan. There was still sort of a hangover of misplaced optimism,” Grey quotes him as saying./ppJohn Reid, defence secretary at the time of the initial deployment of 3,000 British troops in April 2006, said: “We are in the south to help … the Afghan people construct their own democracy. We would be perfectly happy to leave in three years and without firing one shot because our job is to protect the reconstruction.”/ppThree years later military commanders and ministers admit that the situation in Afghanistan was little understood. General Sir Richard Dannatt, head of the army, suggests the tactics were crude and self-defeating. He said that “in the early days the troops probably wound up - maybe still are - killing lots of farmers”./ppThese are the people who must now be won over and persuaded to switch from growing opium poppies to wheat../ppBrigadier Andrew Mackay, who took over command from Lorimer in 2007, said he had felt like a student - getting to grips with Afghanistan, thinking about counter insurgency doctrine and the principles of managing a large organisation. He said he was struck by the lack of clear direction from above. There was a sense of “making it up as we go along”, he said./ppMackay signed a “ground truth” memo, sent to London, which listed serious problems with his soldiers’ equipment. It noted that many of the engines of the Household Cavalry’s ageing Scimitar reconnaissaince tanks did not work. Tanks labelled “working” could not even get into reverse gear without the driver first having to restart the engine, a limitation “not helpful in combat”, the memo said./ppA quarter of the Mastiff armoured vehicles were out of action for weeks because of suspension problems, and many of the new Vector armoured vehicles in Helmand were not being used because “the wheels just kept falling off”. Heavy machine guns and reinforced Land Rovers were also in short supply, the memo added./ppThe operation to take back Musa Qala in 2007 revealed tensions between US and British forces. Grey quotes an American officer describing the two countries’ potentially conflicting rules of engagement as a “huge friction point”. UK commanders on the ground had to ask permission to strike targets inside the town, while US troops could fire without having to gain approval if it was considered to be in self defence./ppUS special forces were also accused, not least by the president, Hamid Karzai, of killing civilians, in their own raids and in action where they called up US gunships./ppGrey says British forces from the Special Boat Service also killed civilians in raids. There was outrage, he says, over one SBS raid on an alleged drugs smuggler in the Nad Ali, in which a villager and his six- year-old son were killed. A soldier said he thought the man had been reaching for a gun but the latter proved unarmed./ppGeneral Sir David Richards, who takes over from Dannatt in the summer, is quoted as questioning “take down” operations which, he said, risked “alienating a lot of people”./ppMeanwhile British troops have not done reconstruction work because it is considered only for civilians - yet civilians can not do it because of the lack of security./pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/military”Military/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/afghanistan”Afghanistan/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/jV-8dItZ-ye2gBSz1IVGBu_5v3A/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/jV-8dItZ-ye2gBSz1IVGBu_5v3A/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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‘Blue-eyed bankers’ prompt G20 rift

March 29th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/35127?ns=guardianpageName=World+news27Blue-eyed+bankers2CGlobalisation+2928Business2CGlobal+recession2CRecession+2928News2CWorld+news2CUK+news2CObserverc5=Investments2CBusiness+Markets28Content+type2FWorld+news2FWorld+news28Tone3A+Focus+29c27=editorialc42=World+news2F7CArticle+297C27+prompt+G20+divide%7C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpThe president of Brazil’s attack last week exposed the growing rift between the west and the world’s emerging powerhouses over how to tackle the global crisis. This week in London’s Docklands the G20 leaders will meet for a crucial summit. But what can it achieve? Gaby Hinsliff reports/ppThe small town of Jwaneng - which means “place of small stones” - in the Kalahari desert has helped to make Botswana one of the most stable countries in southern Africa. It is the home of the world’s richest diamond mine./ppBut last month the diamond company De Beers shut down production at Jwaneng and at its three other mines in Botswana. Demand for precious stones - which made up 70% of the country’s exports - has collapsed in the wake of the recession. Mines also lie mothballed in Namibia, while workers have been laid off in the Democratic Republic of Congo. /ppIt is a stark illustration of how wealthy westerners tightening their belts can hurt the vulnerable who scrape a living producing their now unwanted luxuries - from the sparkle in an earring to the coffee in a latte. While the recession threatens redundancy and repossession in Britain, in Africa it means life or death. /ppThe struggle of the world’s poorest to survive a crisis minted by the richest is shooting up the agenda of this week’s G20 summit in London, the largest gathering of world leaders here for 46 years. And Lord Malloch Brown, the Foreign Office minister, fears the economic storm buffeting a fragile continent may have violent consequences. /pp”If you look at the Democratic Republic of Congo, 200,000 miners have lost their jobs: in Katanga [the mining province] it is living hand to mouth with a few days’ worth of foreign exchange, waiting to get an IMF loan,” he said. /pp”The effort to integrate rebels in the national army, all that peacebuilding, is being incredibly affected by the fact they can’t afford to pay the army. There have been four coups in Africa in the past 12 months, not all of them solely as a consequence of this, but I have a sense of a creeping tide of instability coming back./pp”This is not to belittle people here losing their homes and their jobs, but in Africa I heard Bob Zellick, chairman of the World Bank, say that 400,000-500,000 infant deaths could occur as a result. People are dropping back into poverty, with a real risk to life.”/ppLast autumn in Washington, the G20 concluded that the developing world would be largely untouched by the banking crisis. Ten days ago, African leaders, including Botswana’s PM, met Gordon Brown to convince him otherwise. /ppNow ministers are working frantically on a package of aid, credit and trade boosts for Africa to unveil this week. But will that be enough to bridge the dangerous rift opening in the G20 - not between America and Europe, but between the developed countries who wrecked their own economies and the emerging nations suffering as a result? /ppThe attack last week by Brazil’s president, Luis da Silva, on “white blue-eyed bankers” revealed a new anger among some of the world’s most populous countries at being dragged into a mess not of their making - and a determination to hold the west to account./ppIndia’s prime minister will use the summit to challenge what it says is creeping protectionism costing Asian jobs. China will exact more influence over the IMF in return for bailing it out. Chile’s Michele Bachelet used a joint appearance with Brown to stress how, unlike Britain, her country saved vast revenues “during the good times” - which it is now having to spend./ppEven George Soros, the currency speculator and major Africa donor, yesterday warned that the G20 must insulate developing countries “against a calamity that is not of their making”. /ppSo will a new world order emerge from this clash of nations? And if so, will it be one in which Britain - the City neutered, its seats on international institutions from the UN to the IMF under pressure, and its military prowess threatened by tightening budgets - must accept it can no longer be a first-rank power? /ppIn London’s Docklands, at the waterfront ExCeL Centre, they have spent the week preparing for war. Volunteers have role-played battles, debated military tactics and scrutinised conflict scenarios. /ppFortunately, the war-gaming exhibition being staged at the G20 summit venue will have been dismantled by the time Barack Obama arrives on Tuesday night. But the predominant mood swirling around this summit remains one of anger, from the corridors of power to the streets of London where protesters threaten to hang effigies of bankers from the lampposts. /ppThe emergence of such hardliners worries Malloch Brown, who hopes the anger “can get channelled towards strong outcomes and not towards an atavistic rage”. But will there be a genuine breakthrough? After weeks of hyping the summit as the answer to Brown’s prayers, ministers are now lowering expectations. Asked about it last week, the education secretary, Ed Balls, retorted: “Are they in one weekend going to solve the problems of the world? Of course not.”/ppBrown has given up on a worldwide financial stimulus: climate change has dropped off the agenda, although the communiqueacute; will commit to make a success of December’s global warming summit in Copenhagen. /ppOminously, Germany’s Angela Merkel predicted yesterday that there would not be a final deal on banking regulation or trade, and the summit “will naturally not solve the economic crisis either”, adding they would need a second meeting. /ppMalloch Brown, however, is upbeat about the chances of a “big package” to boost Africa and a return of confidence to the financial markets. But the sheer logistics of getting agreement from a group that may control 85% of the world’s GDP but also spans huge differences of opinion and vested interests are daunting. /pp”There are 20 of them and they are in a room for maybe 10 hours. So they’ve got 30 minutes each, in effect,” says Tony Dolphin, chief economist at the IPPR, a think tank. “Even if there were only six issues, that’s five minutes per person per issue: what can they say in that time?”/ppWhich is why Brown has spent five days travelling, seeking to nail down a deal before the summit begins. But the risk of last-minute hiccups is still real. /pp”It’s a Rubik’s cube, and if just one person objects to one piece there’s a risk that other pieces get pulled out and the whole thing doesn’t hang together,” admits Malloch Brown. “This is a much bigger group of people than the typical summit and the final negotiations are much more complex.”/ppAs a result, many Labour MPs fear it may not produce results the public understands, thus widening a gulf between ordinary families anxious about their prospects and politicians seen as out of touch. Ministers are now belatedly trying to humanise a potentially dry and technical debate. /ppHarriet Harman, the equalities minister, will tomorrow publish a report to the summit which warns that women losing their jobs may not show up in the unemployment figures, since some will stay at home to raise children. It cites anecdotal evidence that many taking voluntary redundancy are women on maternity leave who cannot face fighting for their jobs. /ppEd Miliband, the climate secretary, yesterday entertained a delegation of American steelworkers, international union leaders and development charities for coffee and croissants at the Treasury to insist that their concerns over jobs, aid and climate change were not forgotten. /ppAides say, however, that the financial system must be fixed before moves to protect homes and livelihoods can succeed. But that does not mean that the conclusions of this summit will not affect the millions of ordinary Britons. Far from it. /ppWith Jamie Oliver preparing a summit dinner showcasing “budget British cooking”, and world leaders offered a downgraded goodie bag including a tea-towel, the mood of the summit is studiedly austere. But it is not only VIPs who will have to adjust their expectations./ppOne key issue for debate on Thursday is what role the difference in saving and spending habits between the two economic powerhouses of America and China played in triggering the crisis. /ppWhile Americans love to shop, often on credit, Chinese households traditionally put money aside. For years, China used those savings to invest abroad, particularly in US bonds - thus pumping billions into the US economy and helping fund more cheap credit. /ppMany economists believe a recovery now requires bursting that artificial bubble and rebalancing the economy so that Chinese consumers are encouraged spend a little more - reducing America’s trade deficit - and Americans a little less. Malloch Brown suggests Britons, too, will need to relearn the art of saving. /pp”There is the recognition that you are not going to go back to the world as it was before, and we must get a new balance between spending and saving and borrowing. You can’t have the old model where it was the US consumer who was widely seen as driving growth through his or her spending and borrowing./pp”You are going to see a situation where countries in Asia begin to spend and consume more at home and countries in the west have to move towards a more prudent lifestyle and live within their means.” Consumers will also have to learn “within environmental limits”, he said, which could also affect standards of living for those wedded to cars and cheap flights. /ppBut the toughest set of negotiations this week are likely to centre on trade. The communiqueacute; is expected to include pledges not to resort to protectionism, but is unlikely to specify what protectionism means - to the anger of emerging nations, who think it should forbid rich countries such as the US and UK forcing their bailed-out banks to prioritise domestic mortgage and business lending over overseas loans. /ppIt may not, however, be only the economic world order that shifts this week: the banking crisis is starting to shake the kaleidoscope of foreign policy, too. /ppAs MPs debated Iraq last week, three government departments slipped out a short joint statement to Parliament. Buried in it was the news that Britain is cutting its role in world peacekeeping and will be “unable to sustain funding levels to all regions”. /ppThe UK will withdraw from the UN mission to Kosovo, reduce activity in the Balkans, shift resources from west Africa and scrap programmes in Latin America. /ppThe move was blamed on falls in sterling, making Britain’s bills for the UN, EU and other international organisations that charge in dollars more expensive, as well as on new demands. But it underlines the other big question facing Britain this week: how long can it afford to remain a military world power? /ppThis week sees the publication of a review of military reservists, which is expected to accept they should be better prepared to meet increasing demands to back up over-stretched regular forces. And once Thursday’s summit is over, many of the same leaders will reassemble at Friday’s Nato summit. /ppPresident Barack Obama’s blunt message will be that Washington has shouldered too much of the burden in Afghanistan, and that Nato partners should do more. But amid a recession that threatens EU members’ defence budgets, he risks an equally blunt response. Merkel has promised to “explain forcefully” why Germany’s contribution to the war effort is already impressive - meaning Britain, which had resisted offering extra troops, may now do so. /ppThe summit is expected to agree a strategic review of Nato’s future role, but the elephant in the room - particularly given the absence of Obama’s defence secretary, Robert Gates, who is finalising US defence spending cuts - will be how much members are prepared to pay for their armed forces in leaner times. /ppSenior Labour figures are already debating whether to advocate slashing defence spending after the election and joining a common European defence policy instead. “We need to be honest about what we can do,” says one former cabinet minister. /ppSuch thinking has broad consequences. Amid the pre-summit horse-trading last week, Britain endorsed Brazil’s campaign for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, although new members risk diluting British influence. /pp”A crisis forces decisions,” notes Malloch Brown, who, as a former UN deputy secretary general, oversaw years of stalled talks on security council reform but who now argues it may be time to act. /ppSo will Britain, as one former treasury minister suggests, find itself bumped a few rungs down the international pecking order once the recession is over? Malloch Brown admits we may take a “cut in our cloth” internationally, but insists Britain still punches above its weight in peacekeeping, overseas aid and institutional reform: similarly, the IPPR’s Dolphin suggests Britain’s boldness in experimenting with measures such as quantitative easing will ensure that others keep looking to the UK for leadership. /ppFor now, however, Brown still faces a troubled few weeks finalising the 22 April budget./ppAny dreams of a major package of tax cuts and spending to kickstart the economy died when the Bank of England governor, Mervyn King, publicly warned that Britain could not afford it. But the prime minister insisted in Chile that he could still take “targeted actions” to boost cashflow - which could include heeding pleas from Labour MPs to channel more money to the poor, who are most likely to spend it. /ppThis week’s summit may just be the start of a worldwide redistribution, however small, from the chastened rich towards the angry poor. And if it is not, the G20 leaders may suffer the conse/pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/g20″G20/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/globalisation”Globalisation/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/banking”Banking/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/globalrecession”Global recession/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/economy”Economic policy/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/recession”Recession/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/london”London/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/04vnMShsi6l0QGqDRGCKfb0F5wY/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/04vnMShsi6l0QGqDRGCKfb0F5wY/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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UK backs Pakistan offensive

March 29th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/10423?ns=guardianpageName=World+news28News2CForeign+policy2CUS+news2CNot+commercially+usefulc6=Mark+Townsendc7=2009_03_29c8=1191395c9=Article+29c10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Pakistanc13=c14=h2=GU2FPakistanh2=GU2FPakistanc13=c10=News+29c25=c26=Obs28nbs2FPakistan2F28Content+type7C11913957C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpDefence secretary insists Britain has to back American plans to hunt down al-Qaida leaders across the Afghan border/ppBritain has offered its full backing for a renewed military offensive inside Pakistan, as UK ministers confirmed the country was now “part of a single campaign” alongside Afghanistan. /ppDefence secretary John Hutton said the UK supported targeting Pakistan-based Taliban and al-Qaida positions and urged Europe to begin offering assistance to eradicate insurgents in the tribal regions bordering Afghanistan. /ppConfirming that Britain was being drawn into a widening regional conflict, Hutton said the time had come to target Taliban and al-Qaida havens inside Pakistan. In his most explicit statement of intent against Afghanistan’s troubled neighbour, Hutton said that the military objectives in the region must now have “an equal focus on both countries”. /ppHe added: “AQ [al-Qaida] is in retreat, scuttling across the border into Pakistan. Trying to buy time. Desperate to regroup. That is why there must be no let-up … there can be no escape, no hiding place.”/ppHe indicated that Britain, which has deep historical ties with Pakistan and remains its largest trading partner in Europe, must play a principal role in supporting the American military effort in the region. /ppThe defence secretary said: “In Europe, we can no longer offload the tough questions about how we deal effectively with AQ and the Taliban in Pakistan to the US. /pp”The political burden of dealing with the Pakistan side of the border must be shared. And there are many European countries with strong ties to Pakistan that can more effectively share that burden with America.”/ppHowever, the US tactic of targeting senior al-Qaida figures using drones inside Pakistan has drawn international condemnation and undermined public support in Pakistan. The country’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit warned recently that Islamabad regarded “drone attacks on our territory as a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty and definitely counter-productive”./ppAn MoD spokesman said that Britain was ready to offer military, political and diplomatic support to a renewed offensive in Pakistan’s tribal lands, but what precisely that entailed was dependent on the resources other Nato members were prepared to offer. However, the initial aim would be to support the Pakistani government, rather than place British forces on the ground inside the country. /ppUS officials yesterday indicated that attacks along Pakistan’s western frontier, apparently by unmanned CIA aircraft, would continue, amid speculation that coalition ground units may begin crossing into Pakistan’s borderlands at some point. A Pentagon spokesman, lieutenant-colonel Mark Wright, told the Observer that the US had already offered to launch “joint-military operations” with Pakistan’s Frontier Corps in the tribal areas. /ppThe most recent evidence that Pakistan was becoming an increased focus of concern surfaced last week when Gordon Brown pinpointed al-Qaida in Pakistan as the greatest threat facing the UK in his national security strategy. Two thirds of terror plots uncovered by British intelligence agencies have a Pakistani connection. /ppAdditional military resources are also likely to be deployed to the region once Britain withdraws its 4,000-strong force from Iraq this July, with moves to increase troop numbers in Afghanistan from 8,300 to potentially above 10,000 within a year. /ppThe new-found focus on Pakistan will dominate Nato’s 60th anniversary summit in Strasbourg this week, in which Britain and the US will attempt to drum up more support for the twin Afghanistan and Pakistan - AfPak - mission. President Obama has promised an extra 21,000 troops for Afghanistan on top of the 38,000 US troops already there. By contrast, Nato has sent 32,000, with Germany so far sending just 3,640, France 2,780 and Spain 780. These three countries will, say Nato sources, be under pressure to increase their contingent. /ppDefence officials in Whitehall are increasingly exasperated that, even as the conflict broadens, prominent Nato members are not pulling their weight. Hutton condemned “the massive leadership imbalance” between Europe and the US in Nato. He added: “It’s an imbalance set to grow in the coming months as America commits vastly more resources of every kind to the mission in Afghanistan.”/pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/pakistan”Pakistan/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/foreignpolicy”Foreign policy/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa”United States/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/-B7SSIGtTWRIms0FjFwk1SD8ffk/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/-B7SSIGtTWRIms0FjFwk1SD8ffk/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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Return home for art looted by Nazis

March 28th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/35084?ns=guardianpageName=Art+and+design28Art+and+design2CBritish+Library28News2CArt+and+design2CWorld+news28News2CNot+commercially+usefulc6=Jenny+Percivalc7=2009_03_28c8=1191056c9=Article+29c10=GUc11=Art+and+designc12=Museumsc13=c14=h2=GU2FMuseumsh2=GU2FMuseumsc13=c10=News+29c25=c26=Gdn28nbs2FMuseums2F28Content+type7C11910567C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divp• Labour MP aims to close chapter from Holocaust br /• Families will decide if treasures stay on display/ppMinisters are preparing to back a new law that would allow museums to restore artwork looted by the Nazis to Holocaust survivors and their descendants./ppThe Holocaust (stolen art) restitution bill would reverse legislation that bans national museums and galleries, including the British Museum, British Library and National Gallery, from disposing of items in their collections. Ministers have been promising to change the law for a decade and, after attempts to introduce a government bill collapsed, are preparing to support a private members’ bill introduced by Andrew Dismore, the Labour MP for Hendon. /pp”I hope it will close another chapter from the Holocaust,” said Dismore. “It means recognising a right that has been denied for decades. I suspect many people would be prepared to allow their artwork to stay in public collections but it’s their right to decide what happens to it.” The bill gets its second reading on 15 May./ppThe move has been prompted by a number of cases, including that of Arthur Feldmann and his wife Gisela. When the Germans invaded Czechoslovakia in 1939, the Feldmanns were evicted from their home, leaving a collection of Old Master drawings in Gestapo hands. Arthur died after being tortured by the Nazis in the Spilberk Castle prison in his home city of Brno. Gisela died in Auschwitz./ppWith the help of the London-based Commission for Looted Art in Europe, Feldmann’s descendants proved that four of his drawings had ended up in the British Museum. The museum was prepared to return them to the family but was blocked by a high court judge. Instead the family negotiated a deal, including an ex-gratia payment of pound;175,000, that allows the drawings to remain in London. /ppFeldmann’s grandson Uri Peled, 66, who lives in Israel, said that although he did not wish to have the items returned, the principle of the bill - allowing the rightful owner to make the decision about what to do with their art - was important./pp”I am positive that Britain, a great democracy, will introduce such a law,” he said. “We were very pleased to leave the drawings with them [the British Museum] for the memory of our grandfather.”/ppThe Commission for Looted Art in Europe has helped to restore more than 3,000 items, including paintings, drawings, silver, books and manuscripts to their rightful owners over the past 10 years. However, experts expect the bill to apply to a relatively small number of items in UK museums. One such item could be Cupid Complaining to Venus, by Lucas Cranach, dated 1525. The painting, now in the National Gallery, was once part of Adolf Hitler’s private collection but its ownership between 1909 and 1945 remains a mystery./ppThe legislation is being drafted to apply to “objects stolen between 1933 and 1945 by the Nazi regime” to avoid bids to repatriate disputed artefacts such as the Parthenon sculptures, Rosetta stone, Benin bronzes and Lewis chessmen./ppChristopher Price, deputy chairman of the British Committee for the Reunification of the Parthenon Marbles, said: “It will give us publicity, even if it won’t shift the law. It could lead to more discussions about possible legislation on other disputed objects.”/ppPrice said the issue was timely because the Greeks are preparing for the official opening in June of a new euro;129 Acropolis museum to showcase the Parthenon sculptures. The building has space for the pieces removed by Lord Elgin in the 19th century and sold to the British Museum./ppThe museum said it was the legal owner of the sculptures and there could be no comparison to Nazi loot./ppThe Department for Culture, Media and Sport said the principle of the bill “is very much accepted … There will be attempts to broaden it beyond the Nazi era and one has to be aware of that and draft it in such a way that the risk is eliminated.”/ph2Stepping up the hunt/h2pDespite commitments made after the second world war, hundreds of thousands of artefacts stolen by the Nazis have not been returned to their rightful owners. However, over the last decade, the UK - like other governments - has stepped up efforts to help Holocaust survivors and their relatives trace and recover lost arts of work. The major UK museums maintain databases of items in their collection where there are gaps in provenance from 1933-45, while not-for-profit organisations like the Commission for Looted Art in Europe helps families and institutions research and recover looted property. To resolve cases where ownership is disputed, the government set up a committee known as the spoliation advisory panel in 2000. The panel can recommend financial compensation, an ex gratia payment and that an item be returned to its owner - but in the case of the UK’s 16 national museums and galleries it is currently powerless to enforce restitution./pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/museums”Museums/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/british-library”British Library/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/secondworldwar”Second world war/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/holocaust”Holocaust/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/blE-_dW_w0Rk73yZFmo1fNwx-YY/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/blE-_dW_w0Rk73yZFmo1fNwx-YY/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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Summit marks severe test for Brown

March 28th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/23836?ns=guardianpageName=Politics3A+Can+we+really+expect+a+global+new+deal+authored+by+Gordon+Brown2CG202CEuropean+Union+292CUS+news28News2CRecession+2928Business2CBusiness2CUK+news2CMiddle+East+Travel2CBusiness+Markets2CNot+commercially+usefulc6=Patrick+Wintour28Content+type2FPolitics2FPolitics28Tone3A+UK+news+29c27=editorialc42=Politics2F7CArticle+297CG203F%7C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpThe summit marks an extraordinary moment - and a severe test - for the prime minister/ppGordon Brown, preparing for the most important week of his political career as host of the G20 summit in London, yesterday visited the room in the presidential palace of Salvador Allende, the socialist Chilean leader. It was in this room in Santiago that Allende killed himself as the CIA-backed Augusto Pinochet seized power in a coup, marking the high-water mark of a brand of brutal American global power./ppNext week may mark the passing of that era as Barack Obama comes to London to agree to American participation in a new global order in which China takes its rightful place and markets bow before the power of democracy. That, at least, is the hope beating inside a tense Downing Street this weekend./ppWhatever happens on 2 April at the soulless ExCeL building in Docklands it will be an extraordinary few days in the capital. Obama, accompanied by his wife Michelle, will hold four bilateral meetings, including his first with Russia, the country with which he has pledged to press the reset button. The Queen will host a reception. Jamie Oliver will cook a budget British meal for the world leaders in Downing Street. Officials will quarrel through the night over the wording of the world leaders’ global new deal. Protesters may try to wreck the Square Mile./ppFor Brown himself, it represents an extraordinary moment. For two days this complex man will be the world’s host and global puppeteer./ppYet until late last year the G20 was one of the more obscure bodies in global governance. Since 1989 and the Asian financial crisis, finance ministers and bankers from the rich club of G8 nations had been meeting harmlessly with leaders from the emerging economies forming the G20. The forum allowed Asia, India, China and Latin America to have a voice at the rich man’s table./ppBut in the wake of the world recession, Brown and the French president Nicolas Sarkozy picked up an idea promoted for years by the Canadian finance minister, Paul Martin, for the G20 to meet at heads of government level./ppSarkozy and Brown persuaded a willing George Bush to host a meeting of world leaders from the G20 in Washington in November. Brown, aware that Britain was chairing the G20 this year, saw a chance to lead the planet in forging a new world order, just as Britain had been pivotal in the formation of Bretton Woods after the second world war./ppSince November the best minds in Whitehall have been diverted to preparing single-mindedly for this summit. John Major once likened EU talks to playing four-dimensional chess. The last few months have dwarfed such diplomatic complexities./ppIt is increasingly likely that if the summit is deemed a success, the G20 will become a permanent feature of the world’s political architecture. Brown has said he would like to see it given a permanent secretariat. Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, has suggested that the G20 leaders meet again in Sardinia in July at the end of the scheduled G8 summit. Britain thinks that is too early, but sees purpose in a catchup summit in the autumn, possibly to review the need for a fresh stimulus./ppForeign Office ministers say the Italians are not upset that their presidency of the G8 has been entirely eclipsed by the way in which Brown has dominated through the G20, but Berlusconi’s suggestion is an acknowledgement that economic power is irretrievably moving towards the new economies, including an increasingly engaged China./ppBut all that only adds to the pressure on Brown to deliver an outcome. The French prime minister, Francois Fillon, is one of many leaders to dread failure. “We have to issue a number of firm decisions. If the image of this round of the G20 is an image of impotence that would be dramatic,” he says./ppLord Malloch-Brown, the prime minister’s special envoy for the G20, said: “We can’t again engage in meaningless, empty commitments which don’t survive the flight home.” He said nervous traders would demand that the communique contains specific coordinated proposals, or the markets on 3 April would be “something of a disaster zone”./ppGently managing expectations has been one of Brown’s greatest challenges this week as he criss-crossed the continents on his chartered 747, engaged in some of the most intensive international diplomacy undertaken by a British prime minister, much of it by satellite phone at 30,000 feet./ppDowning Street officials on Brown’s world tour were keen to play down expectations of a major breakthrough at the summit. But at the Plaza hotel in New York he was at his most ambitious, talking of the gravity of the financial crisis, and how historical parallels showed that much could go wrong./ppIt was when the grandest veteran of US foreign policy, Richard Nixon’s former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, rose slowly to his feet that Brown gave his fullest explanation of his ambitions. Kissinger was to the point: “As an outsider I am shocked by the fact that we have put $500bn into the banks but have done very little, if anything, to meet the purposes for which the money was given to them. If this gap continues between how economic organisations operate and the necessity of governments then it seems to me very difficult to achieve the laudable objectives you have set out.”/ppBrown, an admirer of Kissinger, lit up. He said: “Global problems will need better global solutions. In the wake of the second world war, we managed to create an IMF [International Monetary Fund], a World Bank, a WTO [World Trade Organisation], a Marshall Plan. We had the capacity with vision and determination to create institutions based on the principle that for prosperity to be sustained it had to be shared and we had to have mechanisms by which we brought the whole world into this enterprise. /pp”I think we need the same vision now to say the IMF was built for the days when you were dealing with balance of payments problems of individual countries in essentially a national set of economies. Now we’ve got a global market place, global competition, global flows of capital, global sourcing of goods./pp”The institutions you need to deal with these problems are going to be quite different for this new era, so we must shape them.”/ppBrown also claimed that two achievements had already been chalked up. In the first place the “Washington consensus” - the view that the financial world should be regulated lightly and at a mainly national level - has gone. In the second place, the very fact that the summit is taking place is already producing concrete results as tax havens cough up./ppHowever, the prime minister, in the face of European opposition, has been forced to scale back plans for a co-ordinated fiscal stimulus. Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, had at one point suggested an average 2% stimulus this year. But the EU, led by the Germans, says it is more important to assess the impact of fiscal measures already announced rather than announce new ones. Chancellor Angela Merkel has also pointed out that social democracies, through their welfare systems, have automatic stabilisers built in during a recession in a way that the US does not./ppNo 10 said yesterday that the world was in the midst of a $2 trillion stimulus, much of it caused by the imminence of the summit, and insisted the issue could be revisited in 2010. Malloch-Brown said: “Europe leaves open at their peril the allegation or impression that somehow the world is looking to the American consumer to pull all of us out of this global crisis.” But he acknowledged in effect that there will be no further global stimulus this year. /ppSo how will Gordon Brown point to a political victory next week? There will be a stimulus of sorts, in that the IMF will see its funding doubled so it can do more to help struggling economies such as those in eastern Europe. There may also be agreement to set up a $100bn fund to provide trade finance guarantees. The WTO may also be given responsibility for monitoring and reporting publicly the trade impact of domestic recovery measures, just as the G20 finance ministers have tasked the IMF to monitor the economic impact of such measures./ppThe communique will also contain broad commitments that individual nation states should follow globally agreed principles on bank capital ratios, reshaping executive bonuses and tightening national regulation./ppThe political crunch may come in the extent to which the communique spells out new powers for the IMF and its proposed college of supervisers. The organisation is pushing to have financial firms overseen by “colleges of supervisors”, essentially regulators from a financial firm’s home country and other countries where it does business. But the IMF has not yet defined when a financial firm is “systemically important” enough to qualify for a higher level of regulation./ppThere may also be a skirmish about tax havens. France and Germany want clear sanctions for countries that refuse to cooperate, in an attempt to recover significant amounts of tax owed by high-income taxpayers. Brown is certain to claim historic progress in chasing down the tax evaders, but the small print will warrant close study./ppForcing their way on to the agenda late in the day are calls from China and Russia to see a new super-sovereign international reserve currency, disconnected from the interests of one nation, to replace the dollar. China has become increasingly worried that its $1trn of dollar assets are vulnerable to excessive US borrowing./ppThe increasingly assertive Chinese this week called for a timetable by which they and other emerging countries get more voting rights on the IMF./ppChina will make little progress on a new reserve currency this week, but it signals the next stage in the slow shift of power eastwards, a shift that dwarfs all else that will be agreed./ppOnce the protesters disperse, the security steel is dismantled and the media caravan heads off, Brown knows too that he will need to open a new chapter of his premiership. He will hope, in the words of Malloch-Brown, that the London summit comes to be seen as the moment the light started to shimmer at the end of the tunnel. Such is the audacity of hope./pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/economy”Economic policy/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/g20″G20/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/gordon-brown”Gordon Brown/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/eu”European Union/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/foreignpolicy”Foreign policy/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa”United States/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/globalisation”Globalisation/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/recession”Recession/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/banking”Banking/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/AqHnO9NPBowbTMNAcfMVEBx_LJQ/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/AqHnO9NPBowbTMNAcfMVEBx_LJQ/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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Father Sentenced for Breaking Toddler’s Pelvis

March 27th, 2009

SANTA ANA — The father of a 2-year-old girl was sentenced today to four years in prison for breaking the toddler’s pelvis.brbr30-year-old Myron Lee Nielsen of Buena Park pleaded guilty on February 20 to felony child abuse causing great bodily injury to a child under 5, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s office.brbrProsecutors say Nielsen broke his daughter’s pelvis when he punched the little girl on August 14, 2006.  They also say Neilsen’s roommate, Michael James Bollinger, shoved the girl the next day, knocking the toddler into a piece of wooden furniture which caused severe brain trauma.brbrNielsen and his three children lived Bollinger’s home.  brbrBollinger, 38, is awaiting a June hearing to determine if he is competent to stand trial on two felony charges.  brbrBollinger faces one felony count of child abuse causing great bodily injury to a child under 5.  He also faces one felony count of sexual penetration by foreign object by force.  Authorities say that charge stems from an anal tear that was found when the victim was taken to a hospital.brbr Part of the little girl’s skull had to be removed to ease pressure in her brain caused by swelling.  The girl survived, but prosecutors say she continues to have medical problems.br

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Obama sets out new Afghan strategy

March 27th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/6098?ns=guardianpageName=World+news2CAfghanistan+2928News2CAl-Qaida+2928News2CWorld+newsc5=Not+commercially+useful28Content+type2FWorld+news2FWorld+news28Tone2FUnited+States2F28Content+type7C11907967C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpWhite House speech marks shift from Iraq to destroying the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan and Pakistan/ppPresident Barack Obama today set out a new strategy for the war in Afghanistan aimed at destroying the Taliban and al-Qaida elements there and in neighbouring Pakistan./ppThe president’s speech at the White House, at the end of a two-month policy review, marks a shift from the Bush administration’s concentration on Iraq to the deteriorating situation in Central Asia, which is set to become “Obama’s War”./ppSpeaking in front of an audience of troops and diplomats heading for Afghanistan as well as ambassadors from around the world, he said he wanted to talk candidly to the US people. To those Americans who wondered why the US was still there, he said that al-Qaida was in Pakistan plotting to attack the US and that if Afghanistan collapsed, al-Qaida would return as a threat there./pp”The safety of people round the world is at stake,” Obama said./ppAfter years of confusion over the exact US aims in Afghanistan, Obama has settled on a narrow – and what his military chiefs regard as achievable – objective of denying safe havens to al-Qaida and the Taliban./pp”So I want the American people to understand that we have a clear and focused goal: to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al-Qaida in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and to prevent their return to either country in the future. That is the goal that must be achieved. That is a cause that could not be more just. And to the terrorists who oppose us, my message is the same: we will defeat you,” Obama said./ppFlanked by his secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, and defence secretary, Robert Gates, he said that the Afghanistan-Pakistan border was the most dangerous place in the world./ppThe key to the new strategy is to build up the Afghan army and police force. Obama today announced an extra 4,000 US troops to help with training, with the intention of doubling the Afghan force from its current 65,000. He said this might have to be increased again as power was transferred to Afghanistan. This is a relatively cheap option for the US as the pay of each Afghan soldier is quite small./ppThis will be accompanied by a “surge” in US civilians to Afghanistan, doubling numbers to 900, to help rebuild the country’s infrastructure./ppObama last month ordered 17,500 US combat troops to Afghanistan to reinforce the 38,000 already there. But US military commanders are concerned that these will not be enough, anticipating a big Taliban push ahead of the country’s August election./ppA Taliban commander, Mullah Hayat Khan, expressed scepticism about the Obama plan. “Sending more troops will have no impact on the activities of the Taliban,” he told Reuters by phone./ppIn addition to the renewed focus on Afghanistan, the Obama administration is to step up pressure on Pakistan to tackle the al-Qaida and Taliban safe havens in the tribal areas along its border with Afghanistan. US military and civilian aid is to be increased./ppObama said that the days of the US giving Pakistan a blank cheque were over. He said he would ask Congress to increase aid to Pakistan but in return he expected Pakistan to tackle the safe havens./ppThe last element of the policy is to try to engage Afghanistan’s regional neighbours, including Russia and Iran, in helping to pacify Afghanistan./pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa”United States/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/afghanistan”Afghanistan/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/iraq”Iraq/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/al-qaida”Al-Qaida/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/barack-obama”Barack Obama/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/8ew6hmNwyfHsBCC1hV4ikXiDLi8/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/8ew6hmNwyfHsBCC1hV4ikXiDLi8/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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Time running out on Afghanistan, US fears

March 27th, 2009

div class=”track”img alt=”" src=”http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/44383?ns=guardianpageName=World+news2C+US+fearsch=World+newsc3=guardian.co.ukc4=Obama+administration28News2CPakistan+292CUS+news2CEwen+MacAskillc7=2009_03_27c8=1190309c9=Article+29c10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Obama+administrationc13=c14=h2=GU2FObama+administrationh2=GU2FObama+administrationc13=c10=News+29c25=c26=c27=editorialc42=World+news2F7CArticle+297CTime+running+out+on+Afghanistan7C” width=”1″ height=”1″ //divpWhite House concerned it only has a year to turn around Afghanistan and Pakistan before US public support wanes/ppThe Obama administration believes it has only a small window of opportunity, possibly just a year, to turn around the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan before US public support begins to erode, diplomatic and military officials say./ppPresident Barack Obama briefed members of Congress yesterday before the unveiling of his new policy on Afghanistan and Pakistan today./ppAmong the proposals is a plan to send 4,000 more US troops to Afghanistan - in addition to the 17,000 combat troops he ordered last month - to train the Afghan army. Instead of creating a national army, they will focus instead on the more modest goal of trying to turn ragtag militia groups into forces capable of providing protection against the Taliban and al-Qaida./ppMore emphasis is to be given to civilian projects, with the US to double its civilian contingent in the country to 900 to provide help with agriculture projects, small businesses and setting up a rudimentary judicial service./ppAn official said yesterday that Obama’s planners thought they had about 12 months to show measurable progress in Afghanistan before public support would wane and the policy turn into a Democratic-Republican political issue./ppThe planners fear the war could become an election issue as the mid-term Congressional elections in November next year draw near, and that Congress might be reluctant to fund the strategy./ppThe planners are also said to assume that the overall US strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan has a working life of three to five years./ppObama, in a TV interview on Sunday, talked of an “exit strategy” but not a time-frame. Democrats do not want a messy war overshadowing the president’s expected re-election attempt in 2012./ppPublic support for the strategy in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the US is seen as a crucial factor that could determine its fate. US cross-border drone attacks on targets in Pakistan are seen, in places, as damaging to public support. The US is not now expected to launch more cross-border ground raids./ppObama’s new Afghanistan and Pakistan policy is to set out an achievable objective: ensuring the two countries are not safe havens for terrorists wanting to attack Americans. The US is to step up the military offensive against the Taliban and al-Qaida in both Afghanistan and the tribal areas of north Pakistan./ppBut the military approach will be combined with projects aimed at winning hearts and minds. An official engaged in the review said: “You can send as many [troops] as you like, but unless you focus on other things it will not work.”/ppRelations between the Obama administration and Pakistan are being strained by CIA-operated Predator missile attacks inside Pakistan against suspected Taliban and al-Qaida operatives./ppA Pakistan foreign office spokesman, Abdul Basit, yesterday called on the US to rethink its use of drones. He spoke after a drone killed four in the North Waziristan region, only hours after another strike killed seven people in South Waziristan./ppThe US intends to try to improve relations with Pakistan by providing more aid. And the approach will involve Iran. Representatives from Tehran plan to go to a summit in The Hague on 31 March to discuss Afghanistan. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, will also be present. But Gordon Duguid, a state department spokesman, warned: “No substantive meetings are planned with Iranian officials.”/pdiv class=”related” style=”float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;”ullia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/obama-administration”Obama administration/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/afghanistan”Afghanistan/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/pakistan”Pakistan/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usforeignpolicy”US foreign policy/a/lilia href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa”United States/a/li/ul/divdiv class=”terms”a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk”guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our a href=”http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html”Terms Conditions/a | a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/help/feeds”More Feeds/a/divp style=”clear:both” / pa href=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/lf-_GVC72RtrrcY5S0SpFOb6J5Y/a”img src=”http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/lf-_GVC72RtrrcY5S0SpFOb6J5Y/i” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

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