Puppet Masters
Now, in the second of what will be periodic "postcards" from the energy heartlands of the planet, he plunges eastward into tumultuous Central and South Asia and the great devolving battleground that, in Washington, now goes by the neologism of Af-Pak (for the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater of operations). There, the skies are filled with planes and unmanned aerial drones, and civilians as well as combatants die every day in increasing numbers as ever more frequent attacks and expanding conflicts make daily headlines, while, in Afghanistan, Washington continues to build new military bases and ready itself to send in reinforcements.
Those are, of course, the front-page stories. Energy, especially in the form of oil and natural gas, fuels everything from civilization to its various discontents and means of destruction, and yet it remains largely on the business pages of our papers. Even in a time of relatively depressed oil and gas prices, energy runs like an undercurrent just beneath global headlines. Under the carnage of war, that is, courses what Escobar likes to call the Liquid War, and just how the energy flows and through which territories controlled by whom does turn out to make -- quite literally -- a world of difference, even if that isn't what captures our attention most of the time.
The monarch does not conceal his feelings about the Israeli leader. He described their last encounter - 10 years ago when he had just come to the throne - as the "least pleasant" of his reign. But he, and President Mubarak of Egypt, are expected to meet the Israeli leader before his trip to Washington, where the future course of the region could be decided.
The King said that he was prepared to believe what Israelis have told him - that a right-wing Government in Israel is better able to deliver peace than the Left.
"All eyes will be looking to Washington," he said. "If there are no clear signals and no clear directives to all of us, there will be a feeling that this is just another American Government that is going to let us all down."
Obama does his Bush impression
The "lasting commitment" Washington war-time summit/photo-op between United States President Barack Obama and the AfPak twins, "Af" President Hamid Karzai and "Pak" President Asif Ali Zardari was far from being an urgent meeting to discuss ways to prevent the end of civilization as we know it. It has been all about the meticulous rebranding of the Pentagon's "Long War".
In Obama's own words, the "lasting commitment" is above all to "defeat al-Qaeda". As an afterthought, the president added, "But also to support the democratically elected, sovereign governments of both Pakistan and Afghanistan." To have George W Bush's man in Kabul and former premier Benazir Bhutto's widow defined as "sovereign", one would be excused for believing Bush is still in the White House.
Afghan officials in the western province of Farah told the BBC as many as 100 civilians might have died.
The civilians were said to have been hit while sheltering from fighting.
A US military team has been sent to Farah to investigate and Afghan President Hamid Karzai has ordered an Afghan inquiry.
But unlike St Petersburg in 1917 or Tehran in late 1978, Islamabad won't fall tomorrow to a turban revolution.
Shukri Ghanem said Libya is "very much interested in looking at different possibilities of investment" in a search for oil and gas deposits inside the island's exclusive economic zone.
Ghanem, who is the chairman of Libya's National Oil Corporation, did not elaborate.
He was speaking to newsmen shortly after exploratory talks in Nicosia with Commerce Minister Antonis Paschalides.
After taking hits on product safety for everything from tainted toys to tainted milk, China wasted no time banning U.S. pork imports in the wake of the swine flu outbreak.
China and a string of other countries have moved to ban pork and other meat products from some U.S. states over the past week. The trend on Tuesday drew a rebuke from U.S. officials, who are warning trading partners that such embargoes could trigger "serious trading disruptions."
The event is "Lawful Rebellion Conference" held in England in January 2009.
Who is actually ruling us? How are they ruling us? And under what law?
Do you ever get the feeling that the government is being run for someone else's benefit and not for the benefit of the governed?
You may be right.
Study the language they use. It reveals a lot.