Saturday, August 16, 2008

A few hours ago, I was so worn out on teh Russia stuff I was gonna take the day off.

Then I started digging more. And got intrigued by what I was finding.

I'll start with yesterday's and todays stuff, then we'll do the thymewarp to last summer.



The Russian-Georgian War: Implications for the Middle East

  • Moscow formulated far-reaching goals when it carefully prepared - over a period of at least two and a half years - for a land invasion of Georgia. These goals included: expelling Georgian troops and effectively terminating Georgian sovereignty in South Ossetia and Abkhazia; bringing down President Mikheil Saakashvili and installing a more pro-Russian leadership in Tbilisi; and preventing Georgia from joining NATO.
  • Russia's long-term strategic goals include increasing its control of the Caucasus, especially over strategic energy pipelines. If a pro-Russian regime is established in Georgia, it will bring the strategic Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and the Baku-Erzurum (Turkey) gas pipeline under Moscow's control.
  • In recent years, Moscow granted the majority of Abkhazs and South Ossetians Russian citizenship. Use of Russian citizenship to create a "protected" population residing in a neighboring state to undermine its sovereignty is a slippery slope which is now leading to a redrawing of the former Soviet borders.
  • Russian continental power is on the rise. Israel should understand it and not provoke Moscow unnecessarily, while defending its own national security interests staunchly. Small states need to treat nuclear armed great powers with respect.
  • U.S. intelligence-gathering and analysis on the Russian threat to Georgia failed. So did U.S. military assistance to Georgia, worth around $2 billion over the last 15 years. This is something to remember when looking at recent American intelligence assessments of the Iranian nuclear threat or the unsuccessful training of Palestinian Authority security forces against Hamas.

The long-term outcomes of the current Russian-Georgian war will be felt far and wide, from Afghanistan to Iran, and from the Caspian to the Mediterranean. The war is a mid-sized earthquake which indicates that the geopolitical tectonic plates are shifting, and nations in the Middle East, including Israel, need to take notice.



Preliminary Conclusions From The War In Georgia

  • The political Group of Eight has de facto been transformed into a G7. The series of political defeats suffered by the Russian leadership, starting with the Rose Revolution in 2003, the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004 and continuing through the NATO summit in Bucharest in April, has been extended by a new failure.
  • The main achievement of the Russian leadership -- which the modern world could not (or did not want to) believe -- is the resurrection of fear of the "Russian bear." The world will long remember its fear and (albeit temporary) helplessness.

Russia threatens nuclear attack on Poland over US missile shield deal

Only 24 hours after the weapons agreement was signed Russia's deputy chief of staff warned Poland "is exposing itself to a strike 100 per cent".

General Anatoly Nogovitsyn said that any new US assets in Europe could come under Russian nuclear attack with his forces targeting "the allies of countries having nuclear weapons".

He told Russia's Interfax news agency: "By hosting these, Poland is making itself a target. This is 100 per cent certain. It becomes a target for attack. Such targets are destroyed as a first priority."

Russia's nuclear rhetoric marks an intense new phase in the war of words over Georgia. The Caucasus conflict has spiralled into a Cold War style confrontation between Moscow and Washington in less than a week.

The stand off between the two cold War powers was underlined by Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, who dismissed US claims that the silo is a deterrent against 'rogue states' like Iran as "a fairy tale". He told reporters at the Black Sea resort of Sochi: "The deployment of new missile defence facilities in Europe is aimed against the Russian Federation."

President George W. Bush in a brief but pointed statement earlier in the day said: "The Cold War is over… Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century."

Bad Russia! No gold star for you!

Iran gambles over Georgia's crisis

Behind Iran's official silence is a combination of factors. These range from Iran's common cause with Moscow against expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), interpreting this crisis as a major setback for NATO's "eastward expansion" in light of the unabashed pro-West predilections of Tbilisi's government, to Iran's sensitivity to Russia's national security concerns. The latter are heightened by the US's plans to install anti-missile systems in Eastern Europe, not to overlook Iran's concern as not to give the Kremlin any ammunition that could be used against it in Tehran's standoff over its nuclear program.

Representing a serious new rift in US-Russia relations, the conflict in the Caucasus, paralyzing the UN Security Council and igniting Cold War-type rhetoric between the two military superpowers, is simultaneously a major distraction from the Iran nuclear crisis and may even spell doom for the multilateralist "Iran Six" diplomacy. This involves the US, Britain, Russia, France, China and Germany in negotiations over Iran's uranium-enrichment program, which some believed is aimed at making nuclear weapons.

Rice calls on Moscow to quit 'at once'

Tensions between Washington and Moscow took a new turn yesterday as Condoleezza Rice, US secretary of state, called on Russian troops to withdraw from occupied areas in Georgia "immediately". She made the call after Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgian president, signed a new ceasefire agreement with Russia.

Her call came as Nicolas Sarkozy, French president, spoke to Dmitry Medvedev, his Russian counterpart, who agreed to sign the accord and said that Moscow would "scrupulously" respect the elements of the agreement, "notably those concerning the withdrawal of Russian forces". However, the French statement gave no indication of when Mr Medvedev might sign the agreement.

Ms Rice's visit to Tbilisi capped a week that saw the brief Russia-Georgia conflict turn from a hot but localised war into a diplomatic confrontation between Moscow and Washington with cold war overtones.

"Our most urgent task today is the immediate and orderly withdrawal of Russian armed forces and the return of those forces to Russia," Ms Rice said. "Russian forces need to leave Georgia at once."

Or I'll wag my finger at you!

Bush: No room for debate on status of breakaway provinces

US President George W. Bush sent a stern warning to Russia on Saturday that it cannot lay claim to two breakaway provinces in neighboring Georgia, a US ally, and said there was no room for debate on that point.

Searching for signs of progress, Bush said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's signing Saturday of a cease-fire plan was "an important development. That's a hopeful step," Bush told reporters at his ranch. "Russia now needs to honor that agreement" and withdraw forces from the much smaller former Soviet state.

The Russian foreign minister said Thursday that Georgia could "forget about" getting back the two separatist regions, South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Medvedev also met with their leaders in Kremlin this past week, raising the prospect that Moscow could absorb the regions even though the territory is internationally recognized as being within Georgia's borders.

Libya says Russia emerging as counterbalance to U.S. dominance

MOSCOW, August 14 (RIA Novosti) - Libya said the conflict in Georgia and its breakaway republic of South Ossetia has signaled an end to the dominance of the United States in global affairs, a Russian daily reported on Thursday.

"What happened in Georgia is a good sign, which means America is no longer the sole world power setting the rules of the game," the Libyan president's eldest son Seif al Islam Qaddafi said in an interview with Kommersant.

"There is a balance in the world now. Russia is resurging, which is good for us, for the entire Middle East," said Seif al Islam, who runs the Qaddafi Foundation, a non-governmental body, told the paper.

US must share power in new world order, says Turkey's controversial president

Days after Russia scored a stunning geopolitical victory in the Caucasus, President Abdullah Gül of Turkey said he saw a new multipolar world emerging from the wreckage of war.

The conflict in Georgia, Gül asserted, showed that the United States could no longer shape global politics on its own, and should begin sharing power with other countries.

"I don't think you can control all the world from one centre," Gül told the Guardian. "There are big nations. There are huge populations. There is unbelievable economic development in some parts of the world. So what we have to do is, instead of unilateral actions, act all together, make common decisions and have consultations with the world. A new world order, if I can say it, should emerge."

Russian Troops in No Rush to Withdraw From Georgia (Update1)

Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Hours after Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed a European Union-brokered peace plan to end a week-long war with Georgia, his troops were dug in around the town of Gori, signaling they're in no rush to retreat.

Gori, near the breakaway South Ossetia region that sparked the conflict, is the transport hub that connects Georgia's east and west. Russian troops withdrew their checkpoints this afternoon to positions about half a kilometer (0.3 miles) behind the town of Kaspi, located between Gori and the Georgian capital of Tbilisi. A reporter for Bloomberg News was among a group of journalists traveling with the Russian military at the government's invitation.

Georgia forced to accept a Russian occupation

President Saakashvili was forced to accept defeat yesterday as he signed a peace agreement that gives the Russian Army the right to patrol on Georgian soil.

In a critical amendment to the ceasefire drawn up by President Sarkozy of France, the Kremlin forced Mr Saakashvili to accept that Russian troops could control a buffer zone of Georgian territory up to 10km beyond the border of the breakaway region of South Ossetia.

Mr Saakashvili was humiliated further when the final text of the agreement, delivered personally by Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State, removed a reference to Russian recognition of Georgia’s territorial integrity. It referred only to independence and sovereignty, a day after Ser-gei Lavrov, the Russian Foreign Minister, said that the world could forget about Georgia’s territorial integrity.

After signing the peace agreement, an emotional Mr Saakashvili said defiantly: “A significant part of Georgian territory remains under foreign military occupation. Never, ever will Georgia reconcile itself with the occupation of even one square kilometre of its territory.”


Georgia rail bridge blown up; Russia rejects blame

KASPI, Georgia - Georgia accused Russian troops on Saturday of blowing up a railway bridge on the main line west of the capital Tbilisi, but Russia denied carrying out any such operation.

A Reuters cameraman near the town of Kaspi, 45 km (30 miles) west of Tbilisi, said one end of the bridge had collapsed on to the bank of the Mtkvari River in a tangled mess of metal and rubble.

Villagers said the bridge had been blown up on Saturday by men in uniform who arrived by military jeep, uncoiled wires and detonated explosives remotely.

They said the men responsible were Russians, but the Russian General Staff denied this.

Well, we all know the Russians wouldn't lie, would they?

Georgians Force to Clean South Ossetia Streets

Russian troops and their armed allies forced Georgian men to clean the streets of South Ossetia's bombed-out capital Saturday, avenging Georgia's attack on the breakaway province a week ago.

Three teams of ethnic Georgian men in their 40s and 50s were seen hauling debris from the streets of Tskhinvali. When approached, one of them confirmed he was being forced to work.

"Labor even turns monkeys into humans," said a Russian officer, who along with armed Ossetians escorted one group of about two dozen Georgians through the streets of the capital.

The Russian officer threatened to arrest an Associated Press photographer if he took pictures, and would not give his name.

Israel to surrender Jerusalem property to Russia

The government of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is in the final stages of surrendering control of a major piece of property in downtown Jerusalem to Russia, reported The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.

Former Russian President Vladimir Putin laid claim to Jerusalem's St. Sergius Church and its grounds about four years ago. Already then, Olmert expressed his willingness to relinquish the property, which also houses a branch of Israel's Agricultural Ministry and several environmental protection organizations.

The official transfer is expected to take place in the coming weeks,
according to a Foreign Ministry official.

Critics of the move noted that Russia is eyeing a number of other properties in downtown Jerusalem that at various times over the past few hundred years were owned by the Russian Orthodox Church.

Also of concern is the precedent that surrendering property to the Russians will set, as many other plots in Jerusalem, including the land upon which the Knesset is built, are technically owned by the Greek Orthodox Church.

Why does Russia want land in Jerusalem?

Remarks with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili

And I shouted to the world, this is for – to bring in tanks. They built tank bases all over Abkhazia and in South Ossetia, in place of Java, without bringing in tanks yet. We told the world, this is about starting an invasion.

They started to bring in lots of military specialists, reconnaissance. They brought in paratroopers. Again, we screamed to the world, stop it. And there were some statements from Washington, but I have to tell you that for most of the European countries, with noticeably some remarkable exceptions, there was pretty muted and quiet reaction to all this. And the Russians were carefully watching this reaction. They were doing step by step – first some infrastructure, then some additional troops, then (inaudible) acts, then again infrastructure, again some intrusion – and wait, watching carefully what Europeans have to say, watching carefully what would be the counter-reaction of the international community. And it really did not follow.

And, Madame Secretary, as we were standing here last time a few weeks ago, there was intrusion of the Georgian – of Russian planes into Georgian airspace, just exactly in the lines of South Ossetia. And you remember as well as I do that then we downplayed it. I downplayed it myself. I said, well, they are here just to salute Secretary Rice. And normally, in the past, Russians would deny that. But that time they said, yes, this is us, we flew there, implying that there was intent to bomb against Georgians. And again, they watched the European reactions. No European country said anything about it.

So who invited the trouble here? Who invited this arrogance here? Who invited these innocent deaths here? Who is – not only those people who perpetrate them are responsible, but also those people who failed to stop it. And who is trying now to look for every excuse, saying, oh, you know, Georgians might have started it. Excuse me? Twelve-hundred tanks came into Georgia within few hours. There is no way you can mobilize those tanks in such a fast period unless you were ready. There were Russian pensioners taken off the streets of Moscow to fly the planes several days before the invasion. There was no way they were not preparing invasion. Why would they call back the pensioners? There were all these movements on the ground all around the place.

You know when it all started? I want the world to know. I was gone for holidays. My Defense Minister was gone for holidays. When the thing started, I had to rush back, cut my holiday short when the tensions started to raise. I had to summon back my – our Defense Minister. But most of our officials were gone. Most of decision-makers I tried to reach were gone for vacations. It was brilliantly selected timing for this intervention.

And, unfortunately, today we are looking evil directly in the eye. And today this evil is very strong, very nasty, and very dangerous – for everybody, not only for us.

...

Russia has lots of tanks, but Russia, no tank is enough to crush the will of the free people. Because freedom’s light will never die here, because 1921 will never repeat itself here. Peace will never die and nor will liberty, democracy, and independence of Georgia.

...

And you know what? It’s always about something. Maybe – I would like – the world should ask the questions. When Russians destroyed Yukos, when Putin destroyed Yukos, nobody said anything. Then they start to say, oh, Russia has nice investment environment, because everybody has his own interest. When Russia went after international – when Russian agents poisoned President of Ukraine – ask Ukrainians, they have all the proof and evidence. Look at the face of President Yushchenko. Did any of big decision-makers do or say anything about that? Not talking about Russian agents that were killed in London and they carried out, basically, nuclear attack on downtown of London. Well, you know, that’s almost natural – comes as natural right to Russian leadership, because if they can poison President of Ukraine, what about their own agents? Why not?

How many different forms of polonium they can send to the world? Now it’s cluster bombs killing my children and women here and, by the way, your colleagues, foreign journalists. How many more things can these barbarians do, these cold-blooded killers do for the world not to blame the victims? Can you say that, you know, the victim of rape is to be blamed for the rape because she wore a short skirt? Or the victim of, you know, killing be blamed for the killing because he provoked the killer with, you know, some strange look in his eyes? That’s exactly what some of the people were trying to do now toward Georgia for the last several days.

Excuse me, but that’s exactly the guarantee that it will happen over and over and over again. Because the people with you are dealing – with whom you are dealing, they are all about – for them, lying is instrument of communication. Bullying and blackmailing is the best things they enjoy and the only thing they understand. It’s unity and strength of international community; nothing else can deter and stop them, because otherwise, they are like – they will stop – keep advancing, they will keep killing, they will keep destroying other countries. That’s what they are trying to do to my country right now as we speak.

These are the words of the man the West has abandoned. Please, please keep him and his nation in your prayers.

*****

Okay, flashback to July 31 this year:

Libya, Russia draft stronger energy ties

Al-Mahmoudi said Libya was planning to open an office in Moscow of its investment agency and hailed energy cooperation as a new era in bilateral relations.

"Our cooperation is elevated from a purely military and technical level," he said. "This is indeed a development worthy of mention in history texts."

The arms trade remains an important element of bilateral ties. Moscow hopes to sell Libya 2.5 billion euros worth of anti-aircraft systems, jet fighters, helicopters and warships.

Flashback to March 2007

Russia, Saudi Arabia sign $100-mln contract to build oil pipeline

BEIRUT, March 31 (RIA Novosti) - A Russian company signed Saturday the first ever contract, worth more than $100 million, to build an oil pipeline in Saudi Arabia with a Saudi company.

Stroytransgaz, a construction arm of Russia's energy giant Gazprom [RTS: GAZP], and Saudi Aramco concluded the contract in Dhahran. This is a breakthrough for Russian business to a totally new market, which is the most attractive in the Middle East.

The vice president of Saudi Aramco, Ali al-Ajmi, who signed the document from the Saudi side, welcomed the arrival of "a powerful Russian organization having its own advanced technology and a big working experience both in Russia and abroad."

He also said he hopes that this first ever contract of a Russian contractor to build oil and gas facilities in Saudi Arabia "will mark the beginning of a long-term mutually advantageous cooperation between the two companies."

Flashback to May 2007

What the Russian papers say
04/05/2007 20:00
MOSCOW, May 4 (RIA Novosti) U.S. missile defenses in Eastern Europe could trigger new arms race - Russian military chief of staff / Libya to spend over $2.2 billion on Russian arms/ Kazakhstan refuses to build trans-Caspian pipeline bypassing Russia/ Norilsk Nickel lays claim to 20% of global nickel market/ Gazprom, Rosneft may clash over Yukos assets

Human rights group accuses China, Russia supplying arms used in Darfur violence

CAIRO, Egypt: China and Russia, two of Sudan's trade allies, were accused by a top human rights group of supplying weapons to Khartoum that were used to fuel deadly violence in Darfur. The allegations, a violation of a U.N. arms embargo, come as Moscow and China have balked at U.S. and British efforts to put new pressure on Sudan.

China and Russia quickly rejected Amnesty International's allegations Tuesday that they supplied weapons and equipment that were used in Darfur. Khartoum called the report false.

"The report is totally incorrect. ... It is the sort of claim that has no material proof," Sudanese government spokesman Bakri Mulah told The Associated Press from Khartoum.

Russia and Syria enter gas deal

Russia has signed a deal to build more gas processing plants in Syria, according to the Syrian SANA news network. The Associated Press and Itar-Tass reported the story.

Russia will spend roughly $218 million constructing three gas-processing plants in order to produce 3.2 million cubic meters of gas per day. The Russian firm Story Gas will collaborate with the Syrian Gas Company to operate the plant. The construction is expected to be complete in 20 months.

Syria Is Said to Deliver Russia’s Air-Defense Missiles to Iran

Syria intends to supply to Iran ten Pantsyr-S1E air-defense systems that it will buy in Russia. Moscow won’t be officially notified about Iran’s portion of the deal, Israel’s Haaretz reported referring to Jane's Defense Weekly.

According to Haaretz, the contract for supplying 50 Pantsyr-S1Es to Syria worth over $730 million was concluded earlier this year. Iran has allegedly undertaken to pay for a portion of Syrian order in addition to its own purchase.

When it comes to Pantsyr air-defense systems, the contract with the United Arab Emirates was concluded in February. The Emirates ordered 50 systems based on facilities of MAN trucks. The contract budget is $734 million.

June 2007

Newspaper: Russia starts delivery of advanced fighter jets to Syria

MOSCOW: Russia has started delivery of top-of-the-line fighter jets to Syria under a new deal estimated to be worth US$1 billion (€746 million), a newspaper said Tuesday — but the report was quickly denied by the state arms trader.

The business daily Kommersant said Russia had begun delivering five MiG-31E jets under a deal apparently negotiated during Syrian President Bashar Assad's trip to Moscow last autumn.

Commenting on the report, Russia's Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said in a statement that "all of Russia's deals in the sphere of military-technical cooperation comply with international law and Russia's obligations under various treaties and United Nations resolutions." He would not elaborate.

July 2007

Russia votes to allow private armies for energy giants

Russia's parliament voted yesterday to allow the country's two biggest energy monopolies, Gazprom and the state oil pipeline company Transneft, to employ and arm private security units. Under the deal, Russia's interior ministry will supply Gazprom with guns from its own armoury.

Supporters of the plan say that Russia's oil and gas installations - which are key to the country's boom and burgeoning economic revival - have to be protected from terrorist attack at all cost.

"A couple of terrorist acts and an ensuing ecological catastrophe would be enough to immediately declare Russia an unreliable partner and supplier of energy reserves," said Alexander Gurov, one of 341 MPs who backed the new law in the country's 450-seat Duma.

However, Gennady Gudkov of the Fair Russia party, said the law paved the way for the creation of corporate armies and described it as "a Pandora's box".

August 2007

New Photos Indicate Arms Flow to Darfur

Recent photographs purportedly showing Sudanese soldiers in the Darfur region moving containers from a Russian-made Antonov cargo plane onto military trucks reinforce suspicions that Sudan continues to violate a U.N.-imposed arms embargo, the London-based human rights group Amnesty International said.

The photographs, taken in July and released today by the rights group, also purportedly show Russian-supplied Mi-7 and Mi-24 military helicopters in the town of Geneina in Darfur.

Eyewitnesses in Darfur and the International Peace Information Service, based in Antwerp, Belgium, sent the photographs to Amnesty. The images bolster evidence published in a May report by Amnesty that accused Russia and China of having broken the arms embargo, according to a news release from the human rights group.

Russia fumes at claim it flamed tension with Syria

Top Defense Ministry official Amos Gilad's accusation on Thursday that Russia was partly responsible for recent tensions between Syria and Israel could undermine Israeli-Russian relations, a senior Russian diplomat in Tel Aviv told The Jerusalem Post.

Andrey Demidov, the No. 2 official at the Russian Embassy, said he was "disappointed" and "regretted" reports published Thursday that Russia was largely behind tensions between Syria and Israel, in an effort to increase arms sales to Damascus. "And I regret the statement made by Amos Gilad, because it can only undermine our relations," Demidov said.

Gilad, head of the Defense Ministry's Diplomatic-Military Bureau, said in an Army Radio interview, "At a certain time, the Russians caused the Syrians to believe that Israel was preparing for war.

"I think that they have stopped this," Gilad added. "Syria is not planning on attacking Israel, and Israel is definitely not planning on attacking Syria."

And that's just a little bit. There's so much of this stuff... and most of it wasn't headline news, here in the US.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Earthquake Shakes Costa Rica
[the 5.5 in Panama last night]


Magnitude 5.1 - BOUGAINVILLE REGION, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
2008 August 15 02:36:58 UTC


Magnitude 4.5 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 15 03:37:32 UTC


Fresh tremor of 4.9 on R-scale hits southwest Chinas Wenchuan province

From Monday noon to Wednesday noon, three aftershocks from 4 to 4.9 degrees and 570 aftershocks at or below magnitude-3.9 were monitored in the quake zone, according to the China Earthquake Administration. A total of 23,880 aftershocks had been detected since May 12, reported the Chinese news agency.



Magnitude 4.6 - OFFSHORE GUATEMALA
2008 August 16 01:46:38 UTC


Magnitude 5.0 - NEAR THE NORTH COAST OF GREENLAND
2008 August 15 15:52:51 UTC


Magnitude 5.9 - SAMAR, PHILIPPINES
2008 August 15 10:25:16 UTC
Strong quake causes minor damage in Philippines


Disaster Goes Global
The eruption in 1600 of a seemingly quiet volcano in Peru changed global climate and triggered famine as far away as Russia

Many volcanoes, besides killing local residents during their eruptions, have caused indirect deaths by triggering famines in the surrounding regions, says Lee Siebert, a volcanologist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. In 1783, for example, the clouds of volcanic ash and poisonous gases lofted during the eruption of Laki in Iceland killed more than half of the nation’s livestock, which in turn led to a food shortage that resulted in the death of about one-quarter of the population there. Also that year, an eruption of Asama, one of Japan’s most active volcanoes, may have contributed to a local famine that lasted four years and killed between 300,000 and 1 million Japanese, Siebert says.

The local and regional effects of volcanoes are common and often well-documented. However, the purported long-distance link between Huaynaputina and the subsequent famine and social unrest in Russia marks the only instance besides Tambora in which a specific volcano has been blamed for causing global misery, Verosub says.



Evolving Earth: Plate Tectonics

Some folks gotta work evolution into everything, don't they? Nonetheless, this site has some pretty good maps showing plate tectonics and seismic hazards.

It is interesting to note that an unusual portion of recent quakes are near the north pole, caused by friction along the plate boundary between North America and Russia. How's that for metaphorical?

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Magnitude 5.0 - HINDU KUSH REGION, AFGHANISTAN
2008 August 12 05:25:37 UTC
Medium scale quake felt in Peshawar


Magnitude 5.9 - SANTA CRUZ ISLANDS
2008 August 12 05:26:03 UTC
Magnitude 5.9 quake strikes off Vanuatu


Magnitude 5.1 - FIJI REGION
2008 August 12 06:09:05 UTC
Magnitude 2.9 - NEVADA
2008 August 12 10:58:45 UTC

Aleutian volcanos continue to cause problems

UNALASKA, AK (2008-08-12) The ash cloud from Kasatochi Volcano has drifted over 1650 miles into the flight paths of aircraft in Anchorage and caused more than 50 flight cancellations Sunday and Monday. The oval shaped ash cloud was 300 miles at its widest point and moving around 39,000 to 40,000 feet in the air. This is an old ash cloud emitted during the initial eruption last Thursday.

Alaska Volcano Observatory scientist Chris Waythomas says the ash might cause more delays over the next few days and that Kasatochi may not be through erupting."Our opinion is that it's still a restless volcano and it would not be a big surprise if we saw some more activity out at Kasatochi," he said.


NASA MODIS Image of the Day: August 13, 2008 - Kasatochi Volcano on the Aleutian Islands Erupts


***


Magnitude 5.7 - CENTRAL EAST PACIFIC RISE
2008 August 13 01:32:45 UTC


Magnitude 2.2 - ALABAMA
2008 August 13 03:39:59 UTC
Magnitude 5.4 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 13 08:35:02 UTC
Magnitude 5.7 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 13 18:30:57 UTC



Magnitude 3.0 - OAHU REGION, HAWAII
2008 August 13 11:01:43 UTC
Small earthquake hits off Waianae Coast


Magnitude 4.6 - DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
2008 August 13 23:03:09 UTC
Temblores en Noreste; 4.6 en Nagua


Small earthquake shakes northern Israel
[3.2]


***

Magnitude 5.6 - ANATAHAN REG., NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS
2008 August 14 00:06:39 UTC


Magnitude 4.4 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 14 05:59:21 UTC
Magnitude 4.5 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 14 09:29:13 UTC
Magnitude 4.9 - NORTH OF SEVERNAYA ZEMLYA
2008 August 14 10:37:51 UTC


Magnitude 4.6 - GREENLAND SEA
2008 August 14 07:18:19 UTC


Magnitude 5.3 - KURIL ISLANDS
2008 August 14 11:10:29 UTC
Quake hits northern Japan


Magnitude 4.9 - CENTRAL MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
2008 August 14 17:16:20 UTC


Magnitude 5.5 - SOUTH OF PANAMA
2008 August 14 22:55:47 UTC


Earth moves for southern Costa Blanca
[Spain; 3.5]


Terremoto: scossa sismica tra Perugia e Macerata
[mainland Italy; 2.1]


Sicilia: la terra trema
[Sicily; 2.8]


Spike in activity at Chile's Chaiten volcano

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — The Chaiten volcano in southern Chile spewed a column of smoke 4 miles (6 kilometers) into the air and rained ash on a nearby village, in what geologists characterized Thursday as a brief spike in activity.



*****


Seismologists Unearth Answers To Mogul Swarm



Nation unprepared, quake expert says

Dave Rogers, professor of geological engineering at Missouri S&T, spoke about consequences resulting from a major earthquake in the central U.S. on Wednesday during the New Madrid Seismic Zone Conference held at S&T.

Rogers told the seminar audience how unprepared the country really is if an earthquake of 6.0 to 6.8 magnitude (which is expected) were to occur.

“We’re going to experience not only environmental problems and economic problems, but also an unprecedented public panic factor that will be hard to gauge,” said Rogers.



The US isn't the only nation concerned:

Istanbul vulnerable if big quake strikes - report

ISTANBUL, Aug 14 (Reuters) - A powerful earthquake could kill up to 90,000 people if it struck Turkey's biggest city Istanbul, which has suffered devastating quakes in the past, a report published by the city's municipality said on Thursday.

Material damage is estimated to be some $40 billion if there is a quake of 7.7 magnitude, with the rescue operation covering one million people, according to the report produced by the Japan International Cooperation Agency and the city council.

Another 135,000 people could be badly injured and more than half a million could be left homeless, according to the scenario.

Istanbul, like many areas of Turkey, is close to a major fault line and has suffered major earthquakes in the past.
A prayer for Georgia.

Psalm 146
1 Praise the LORD.

Praise the LORD, O my soul.

2 I will praise the LORD all my life;
I will sing praise to my God as long as I live.

3 Do not put your trust in princes,

in mortal men, who cannot save.

4 When their spirit departs, they return to the ground;

on that very day their plans come to nothing.

5 Blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob,

whose hope is in the LORD his God,

6 the Maker of heaven and earth,

the sea, and everything in them—
the LORD, who remains faithful forever.

7 He upholds the cause of the oppressed

and gives food to the hungry.
The LORD sets prisoners free,

8 the LORD gives sight to the blind,

the LORD lifts up those who are bowed down,
the LORD loves the righteous.

9 The LORD watches over the alien

and sustains the fatherless and the widow,
but he frustrates the ways of the wicked.

10 The LORD reigns forever,

your God, O Zion, for all generations.

Praise the LORD.


Georgian relief operation hampered as aid workers ambushed

"The Secretary General is extremely concerned by the impact of the recent conflict on the civilian population in Georgia, which has suffered loss of life and injury, significant damage to civilian property and infrastructure, as well as sizeable displacement," Ban's office said in a statement.

He reiterated "the critical importance of safe and unimpeded access for humanitarian actors to all conflict-affected areas."

Latest estimates by the Georgian and Russian governments put the number of displaced people in the region at nearly 115,000, up from a previous estimate of 100,000.




Pressure grows on Russia amid sabotage charges

"The United States spent 45 years working very hard to avoid a military confrontation with Russia. I see no reason to change that approach today," he said.

However, the world would look at Russia "through a different set of lenses" in the wake of its actions in Georgia, Gates said.

"The days and months to come will determine the future course of US-Russian relations," he told a Pentagon news conference.

"But, by the same token, my personal view is that there needs to be some consequences for the actions that Russia has taken against a sovereign state."

Two military exercises with the Russians have been cancelled, and the gamut of US military relations with Russia are under review, he said.





Bank analyst forecast Georgian crisis 2 days early

MOSCOW, Aug 14 (Reuters) - The outbreak of war between Georgia and Russia shocked most of the world last week, but an investment bank analyst predicted it two days in advance.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili sent troops into the breakaway, pro-Russian region of South Ossetia on Aug. 7, on the eve of the Beijing Olympic Games, and Russia responded with overwhelming military force.

Geoff Smith, a Kiev-based analyst for Renaissance Capital investment bank, had anticipated the Georgian move with uncanny prescience in an e-mail two days earlier to a fellow strategist.

"So whaddaya think? I say Saakashvili is going to 'restore the territorial integrity of Georgia' five minutes before the opening ceremony starts in Beijing and dare the Russians to invade while the games are on?" the note said.






Georgian villagers flee amid claims of atrocities by armed militias arriving from South Ossetia

Earlier this week, Nugzari Jashavili was walking across fields to his house in the Georgian village of Tkviavi. Some 50 metres away, he spotted gunmen approaching his neighbour Gela Chikladze.

"They grabbed him round the shoulder and slit his throat," Jashavili said. "There were five of them. They had arrived from South Ossetia in a jeep. They were going across the village from house to house."

Jashavili, 65, said he hid in a cornfield. He watched the Chechen and Ossetian irregulars help themselves to his furniture and 100-watt generator. Further down the road, he said, they shot his cousin Koba. They also executed another man, Shamila Okropridze.

The irregulars had come from the Russian-controlled South Ossetian capital, Tskinvali, five miles (8km) away. According to the villagers' accounts, the militias, with the apparent support of the Russian army, began a campaign of ethnic cleansing, killing teenage boys, stealing vehicles, looting and burning.






Russia wins concesssions in Georgia truce

PARIS (AP) — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will ask Georgia to sign a cease-fire agreement with Russia that includes concessions to Moscow but preserves Georgian borders, U.S. officials said Thursday.

The French-brokered agreement requires Russia to withdraw all of its combat forces from Georgia but gives Russian peacekeepers the express right to patrol beyond the disputed border region of South Ossetia that lies at the heart of the conflict, the officials said.





Killings in Gori, Georgia

In the village of Tedotsminda, which is near Gori, four civilian cars were found with murdered people in them-claimed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia.

The Associated Press reporter said fighters from Abkhazia had moved into Georgian territory.They planted their flag on a bridge on the river Inguri.

Meanwhile sources in Gori informed us that local commuters are rubbed on Gori highway by Russian, Kazakhstan and Ossetian military. Same problems are occurred inside the town and nearby villages as well.





THE RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN WAR WAS PREPLANNED IN MOSCOW

Moscow declared that it was forced to go to battle by the initial Georgian attack in South Ossetia (RIA-Novosti, August 8). But there is sufficient evidence that this massive invasion was preplanned beforehand for August (see EDM, June 12). The swiftness with which large Russian contingents were moved into Georgia, the rapid deployment of a Black Sea naval task force, the fact that large contingents of troops were sent to Abkhazia where there was no Georgian attack all seem to indicate a rigidly prepared battle plan. This war was not an improvised reaction to a sudden Georgian military offensive in South Ossetia, since masses of troops cannot be held for long in 24-hour battle readiness. The invasion was inevitable, no matter what the Georgians did.

It seems the main drive of the Russian invasion was Georgia's aspiration to join NATO, while the separatist problem was only a pretext. Georgia occupies a key geopolitical position, and Moscow is afraid that if George joins NATO, Russia will be flushed out of Transcaucasia. The NATO summit in Bucharest, Romania, last April, where Ukraine and Georgia did not get the so-called Membership Action Plan or MAP to join the Alliance but were promised eventual membership, seems to have prompted a decision to go to war (Interfax, April 3).




'Where was God?' ask refugees from Georgia war

ALAGIR, Russia -- Sarmat Kapisov ran all night through the forest with his family, fleeing the fighting in South Ossetia and headed for the Georgia-Russia border. On his back, the 17-year-old carried his brother, who has cerebral palsy.

"It wasn't easy," Kapisov said, huddled alongside his mother and seven siblings, who have taken refuge here at an Orthodox convent across the Russian border.

The convent director, known as Mother Nonna, said thousands have passed through since the bloodshed began one week ago in the pro-Russian separatist province claimed by Georgia.




Danger on the Inside

You probably didn’t have much money in Georgia, Ukraine, or Kazakhstan, the three countries most immediately affected by this.

That’s good. And here’s why:

Georgia, which had been well run economically, but was too small to be on most investors’ radar screens, has become a very dangerous investment location, indeed.

Kazakhstan is likely to turn much more hostile to Western investors as it reorients itself towards a newly aggressive Russia. Companies like Italy’s Eni S.p.A. (ADR: E) that had appeared to do well out of their ability to invest in difficult environments like Kazakhstan will watch as that “difficult” mutates to “impossible,” perhaps even losing their proverbial shirts there.

Only the Ukraine seems to be trying its best to remain pro-Western, with its president, Viktor Yushchenko, flying in to Tbilisi to express solidarity with Georgia. However Ukraine has a presidential election next year – and no prize for guessing who will be trying to influence that election in favor of a pro-Russian anti-Western candidate, by violent means if necessary.


Poland, US reach missile shield deal

WARSAW (Thomson Financial) - Warsaw and Washington have reached a preliminary deal on basing a controversial U.S. missile shield in Poland, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced Thursday.

Russian warns against US missile defense in Poland

MOSCOW: A Russian lawmaker says an agreement to put American missiles in Poland will raise tensions between Moscow and Washington.

Parliamentary foreign affairs committee chairman Konstantin Kosachev is quoted by Interfax news agency as saying the agreement will spark "a real rise in tensions in Russian-American relations." He says the plan targets Russia.

Why Georgia Matters



By Roger Conrad
Published August 12th, 2008



Expedition officials compared the act to Neil Armstrong’s planting of the American flag on the moon, and the US Geological Survey determined, to a degree that should satisfy United Nations Convention on the Land of the Sea requirements (should the US eventually ratify it), that there’s not much ground for resource disputes in the area.


But Russia’s staking a tricolor claim to the North Pole was widely viewed as an act of aggression, “openly choreographed publicity stunt” or not.



Last week, symbolism became tanks and airstrikes as Russia celebrated the first anniversary of its deepwater claim by getting physical with the Republic of Georgia after several years of shadowboxing.


Accounts of Russia’s Arctic adventure framed it in terms of two larger themes: Russia’s restored sense of confidence and the international competition for oil and natural gas.


Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Protesters shot dead in Kashmir

At least 11 people were killed and many injured when security forces in Indian-administered Kashmir opened fire on stone-throwing Muslim protesters.

Thousands defied a curfew in Srinagar and other towns in the mainly Muslim Kashmir valley for a second day. One person died in clashes in Jammu region.

The curfew was imposed ahead of the burial of a senior separatist who died after police opened fire on Monday.



AFP secures seven of 15 villages in NCotabato

MANILA, Philippines - The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) on Tuesday said seven of 15 villages in North Cotabato have been cleared of Moro rebels.

Eastern Mindanao Command spokesman Major Armand Rico said the cleared villages are Dunguan in Aleosan; Baliki, Upper Labas and Lagindingan in Midsayap; Cabpangi in Pigcawayan; Barangay Gayonga in Northern Kabuntalan; and Gumaga in Libungan.

The rebel-occupied areas are Bagolibas, Dualing and Pagangan in Aleosan; Central Labas in Midsayap; Lower Labas and Matindigin in Pigcawayan; and Bualan and Kulambong in Pikit.





Philippine rebels say peace deal on shaky ground

JOLO, PHILIPPINES -- Efforts to revive a landmark peace deal could collapse if renewed fighting between government forces and Muslim rebels spreads in the southern Philippines, the guerrillas warned Tuesday.

Skirmishes between Philippine troops and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front continued in the southern region of Mindanao as government forces drove rebels from Christian villages that the guerrillas seized last week.

As many as 160,000 people have fled the fighting. Police say renegades led by rebel commander Ameril Umbra Kato looted and burned down homes, took land by force and killed livestock in at least 15 villages.

The rebels have killed three members of a family who were taken hostage Monday, police said.




Three die over 'wounded honour' in German ice cream parlour shooting
German police say that "wounded honour" between Turks may have been to blame for a shootout that left three people dead and a fourth critically injured.

But Roland Desch, of the Hesse state authorities in western Germany, said that other people connected to the dispute they suspect triggered the killings were still at large, and he could not rule out more violence.

He said police were working to "prevent any further clashes".

Local reports suggested that fights over informal betting ring dues may have sparked the attack, but police indications of "wounded honour" could also suggest that a female relation of one of the groups may have been involved.

Germany is frequently hit by so called "honour killings" over breaches of conservative social norms in the Turkish community.





Man fatally shoots Ark. Dem. chairman at party HQ

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — A man recently fired from a Target store barged into the Arkansas Democratic headquarters Wednesday and fatally shot the state party chairman before speeding off in his pickup. Police later shot and killed the suspect after a 30-mile chase.

Police identified the suspect as 50-year-old Timothy Dale Johnson of Searcy, a town about 50 miles northeast of Little Rock. They said that moments after the shooting, Johnson pointed a handgun at a worker at the nearby Arkansas Baptist headquarters. An official there said he told the worker, "I lost my job."

Chairman Bill Gwatney died four hours after the shooting. The 48-year-old former state senator had been planning to travel to the Democratic National Convention later this month as a superdelegate. He had backed Hillary Rodham Clinton but endorsed Barack Obama after she dropped out of the race.
...
Witnesses said the gunman entered the party offices shortly before noon and said he wanted to see Gwatney.

"He said he was interested in volunteering, but that was obviously a lie," said 17-year-old party volunteer Sam Higginbotham. He said that when the suspect was refused a meeting with Gwatney, he pushed past employees to reach the chairman's office.

Little Rock police spokesman Lt. Terry Hastings said the suspect and Gwatney introduced themselves to one another, at which time the suspect "pulled out a handgun and shot Gwatney several times." Hastings didn't say what the two discussed, but said their discussion was not a heated one.





California wildfires scorch state, federal budgets

SACRAMENTO (AP) - Faced with thousands of wildfires, California is struggling with what could be its most expensive wildfire season ever. Governor Schwarzenegger asked President Bush today to declare the state a disaster area in part because of the almost $300 million the state has spent fighting fires in just the past six weeks.

The money spent so far in 2008 is more than the state spent to fight fires in 9 of the previous 10 years.

Officials are scrambling to cover fire costs, with the state already facing a severe budget shortfall. One suggestion is to slap homeowners with a natural disaster charge.

Firefighters have battled more than 2,000 blazes this year, most sparked by a June 21 lightning storm. At the height of that battle, California was blazing through $13 million a day.

Fire costs are expected to rise during the upcoming Santa Ana season, when hot winds fan Southern California's fires.





***

Finally, here's something that looks to be good news:


USDA Raises Corn Estimates on 'Ideal' Weather
USDA increases corn production estimates on improved weather, forecasts lower prices

After months of rising food prices, there may be some relief coming with farmers on track to produce the second largest corn crop and fourth largest soybean crop in history.

In its first estimates this year based on field visits and farmer surveys, the U.S. Department of Agriculture sharply raised its estimate Tuesday of corn production and said "nearly ideal" weather has helped Midwestern farmers recover from June's devastating floods.

That recovery eventually may lead to lower prices for corn and soybeans, which in turn could provide some relief to meat producers who use the grains for animal feed.
Speaking of Russia...


Assad to discuss ME peace process in Russia

Syrian President Bashar Assad is scheduled to visit Moscow next week, the Russian News Agency RIA Novosti reported Monday.

Assad last visited Moscow in December 2006, and Israeli officials Monday dismissed the notion that this visit was in any way linked to Israel's sales of weapons to Georgia.

Although there was some concern in Jerusalem that if Israel did not dramatically reduce weapons shipments to Tbilisi, Russia would sell more advanced weaponry to Syria and Iran, Israeli officials estimated that the visit was a Russian effort to get more involved in the indirect Israeli-Syrian track.





Assad's a busy boy lately.


Syria, Lebanon Agree to Establish Diplomatic Ties
Syria, Lebanon agree to full diplomatic relations for first time, seeking to heal tensions

Syria and Lebanon agreed Wednesday to establish full diplomatic relations for the first time, taking a step toward healing tensions that have fueled decades of turmoil in Lebanon.

Many Lebanese had long seen Damascus' refusal of ties as proof it had not given up claims that its smaller neighbor is part of Syrian territory and still aimed to dominate Lebanon. The deal is a significant symbolic victory for them, acknowledging Lebanon as an independent state.

Syria, however, only agreed to relations after its influence in Lebanon was guaranteed by the creation on Tuesday of a unity government in Beirut that gives Damascus-allied Hezbollah a strong say in Lebanese decision-making.




Lebanon bomb blast hits bus

A bomb set off beside a moving bus in the Lebanese city of Tripoli has killed at least 18 people, mostly military personnel.

Officials say the bomb was sitting on the side of a main street and was detonated as the vehicle drove passed.

Reports say 10 off-duty soldiers were killed, along with eight civilians. Some 40 others were injured by the blast.




Taliban blow up Pakistan Air Force bus, 14 killed

Islamabad, Aug 12 (PTI) The Taliban today blew up a Pakistan Air Firce bus, killing 14 people, mostly airmen, in the northwest city of Peshawar, in retaliation to the ongoing military operation against militants in the country's restive tribal area.

The PAF vehicle was heading from an air force camp at Badabher to provincial capital Peshawar when it was attacked on a bridge in Kohat Road locality. Ten of the dead and five of the 11 injured were PAF personnel.

TV channels reported that 14 people, including a young girl had died in the attack. Inspector General of Police Muhammad Naveed Malik told reporters in Peshawar that 13 people were killed and 11 others injured.

He added the death toll could rise as some of the injured were in a serious condition.




Iran Set For Naval Drill

Iran will soon conduct a naval drill to prepare its forces for any external threats, Iran’s naval commander said.

The military exercise, named Caspian Border Watch, will enhance the capabilities of the Iranian navy, Naval Commander ‘Ali Muhammad Salami said, according to Iran’s Press TV.

The commander added it would prepare Iranian forces for “countering possible threats.”

Eight war vessels will be displayed during the three-day maneuver. No date for the beginning of the drill was given.



'Reports of Iran blockade are false'

Reports that a large American, British and French naval force - made up of nuclear aircraft carriers carrying dozens of fighter jets, warships and submarines - is en route to the Persian Gulf to blockade Iran are untrue, the US Department of Defense told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday.

"As a matter of policy we do not discuss current or future ship's movements. However, I can tell you that reports of an alleged naval blockade of Iran are false," said Lt.-Col. Patrick Ryder, a spokesman for the assistant secretary of defense for
public affairs.

"We routinely rotate deployed naval forces in the USCENTCOM area of responsibility to maintain our commitment to promoting security and stability in the region," he added. The US Central Command covers the Middle East, East Africa and Central Asia.



Naval blockades are considered acts of war. Of course we have to deny it.



PA: Reported peace offer unacceptable

The Palestinian Authority said on Tuesday it would reject an Israeli peace proposal published in the Hebrew press a day earlier which included withdrawal from most of the West Bank.

They said such a plan, which they did not confirm receiving, would be unacceptable because it did not call for the establishment of a contiguous Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.

Under the proposal, which was published in Haaretz, Israel would withdraw from 93 percent of the West Bank, in addition to all of the Gaza Strip, after the PA regains control over the Gaza Strip.





A China Threat From Pakistan?

A second deadly attack by suspected Muslim separatists in China's far west has sparked fears that what had until very recently been a largely dormant militant insurgency, has undergone a significant revival. The August 10 bombings at multiple locations throughout the city of Kuqa in the Muslim majority Xinjiang region also heightened concern among security analysts that the recent slew of attacks has been carried out by fighters trained and equipped by jihadist groups in neighboring Pakistan.



Attack in West China Kills 3 Security Officers

BEIJING — Three security officers were killed and one was wounded in a stabbing attack on Tuesday at a road checkpoint near Kashgar, an ancient Silk Road oasis in the far west of China, according to Xinhua, the state news agency.

The attack is the third in nine days against Chinese security forces in the autonomous region of Xinjiang, a vast area that is home to the Uighurs, a Muslim Turkic ethnic minority. Many Uighurs resent being ruled by ethnic Han Chinese.

The spate of violence is the largest in Xinjiang in years, and it coincides with the opening of the Olympics in Beijing, where China has stepped up security for fear of terrorist attacks.




Political killings rock China's north-west

While the world's greatest sporting festival continues in Beijing, in north-west China's Xinjiang Province there has been more political killing, the likes of which has not been seen for years.

According to Chinese media reports, more than 30 people have died in just over a week as Muslim separatists, members of the Uighur minority, try to upstage the Games by attacking police and other government workers.

In the latest incident three security workers were reportedly stabbed to death at a road block yesterday. China's police and military have responded with a large-scale security crackdown.




Chinese Activist Still Missing After Detention

BEIJING (AP) - A Christian activist who was detained on his way to a church service attended by President Bush on the opening weekend of the Olympics has not returned home, his brother said Monday.

Hua Huilin said he and his brother, Hua Huiqi, a member of Beijing's underground Christian church, were stopped by security agents in two black cars on Sunday while they were cycling to the Kuan Jie Protestant Church around dawn.

The pair was taken away in separate cars, and Hua Huilin said he was released a few hours later. He said his brother, however, remained missing.

"We're so worried," Hua Huilin said by telephone Monday. He said he had advised his brother against going because the Olympics were a sensitive period but went along in the end to keep him company.




'Mountains' of gold & oil deposits in China

BEIJING: China is fast turning out to be a global tiger in several commodities. The dragon country is currently the largest producer and consumer of a vast number of commodities--from agri sector to metals and minerals. Now China is catching up with South Africa in gold production also.

And there are 'mountains' of gold deposit in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the north-west of China, says a report published in the World Gold Council. It has reported an increase of 31 per cent for the first half of 2008, compared to the same period last year.

For the first six months the area produced 3.081 tonnes of gold. The district has a reputation in China from ancient times of "treasure on every mountain".

In the Xinjiang area - which covers 1.66 million square kilometres - gold ore can be found in over 600 locations and has an estimated gold resource of 207.48 tonnes. Within two years Xinjiang is predicted to add a further 100 tonnes of gold reserves and its annual production capacity should rise to ten tonnes.

The area borders on Mongolia, Pakistan and Russia.



China, Russia Set to Enhance Strategic Partnership - Chinese Foreign Minister
Monday, July 21, 2008 7:55 PM

BEIJING. July 21 (Interfax) - China and Russia will develop and deepen their strategic partnership and cooperation, as was agreed at the Beijing talks between the Russian and Chinese foreign ministers, Sergei Lavrov and Yang Jiechi, respectively.

"We have agreed that both parties will further endeavor to raise the level of political mutual trust and strategic partnership, to develop trade, economic relations, as well as cooperation in the field of science and technology, arts and culture, and cooperation on the regional level," the Chinese foreign minister said after the talks.

Today, the Russian-Chinese relations "have reached an unprecedented high level," he said. "Our strategic cooperation can be characterized by mutual support of the two countries' key interests," Yang Jiechi said.

"China and Russia have agreed to help each other on the most important international issues," the Chinese diplomat said, describing the talks as "fruitful."



So we're right back to Moscow again.
BP shuts oil pipeline in Georgia, supplies still get through

LONDON (AFP) — Energy giant BP announced Tuesday it had closed an oil pipeline
because of fighting in Georgia but said oil and gas supplies continued to flow from the Caspian Sea to the West by other routes.

A BP spokesman confirmed the company had shut the Baku-Supsa oil pipeline in Georgia as a precaution, but said oil was still being transported to the Georgian Black Sea port of Batumi by train and through an Azeri-operated pipeline.



Russian troops roll into strategic Georgian city

OUTSIDE GORI, Georgia (AP) — Russian troops and paramilitaries rolled into the strategic Georgian city of Gori on Wednesday, apparently violating a truce designed to end the conflict that has uprooted tens of thousands and scarred the Georgian landscape.

In Washington, President Bush said the United States planned a massive humanitarian effort involving American ships and aircraft, includiung a C-17 military cargo plane loaded with supplies that landed on Wednesday.

He said Russia must ensure that "all lines of communication and transport, including seaports, roads and airports," remain open to let deliveries and civilians through.

Georgian officials said Gori, a central hub on Georgia's main east-west highway, was looted and bombed by the Russians before they left later in the day and camped nearby.

Moscow denied the accusations, but it appeared to be on a technicality: a BBC reporter in Gori reported that Russians tanks were in the streets as their South Ossetian separatist allies seized Georgian cars, looted Georgian homes and then set some homes ablaze.


Oh, well that's just ducky then.



Bush steps up rhetoric against Russia

UPDATED: 11.40AM - President George W. Bush put the US more firmly than ever on Georgia's side in its conflict with Russia on Wednesday, sending humanitarian aid on American military planes to help the embattled ex-Soviet republic and displaying growing impatience with Moscow's aggression.

Six days into the fighting in the tiny, impoverished country wedged between Russia and Turkey on the Black Sea, Bush said Moscow's apparent violation of a cease-fire agreement puts its aspirations for global acceptance at risk. In brief but stern remarks from the White House, the president demanded that Russia end all military activity inside its neighbour and withdraw all troops sent in recent days into Georgian territory.

Amid some fear that Russian troops may be setting up for some type of medium-term occupation of parts of Georgia or even have intentions to press on to its capital of Tbilisi, Bush promised to "rally the free world in the defence of a free Georgia".



Yeah, right. :(




Bush Orders Military to Deliver Aid to Georgia

WASHINGTON — President Bush has directed the U.S. military to lead a humanitarian mission to Georgia where tens of thousands have been forced out of their homes following a Russian invasion last week that has been described by Georgia's president as an "ethnic cleansing."

A U.S. C-17 aircraft with humanitarian supplies already has arrived in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and another C-17 will arrive there Thursday with additional medical and humanitarian aid, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said after the president's announcement.

Speaking from the White House Rose Garden with Defense Secretary Bob Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Bush said the aid mission will be "vigorous and ongoing." He warned Russia not to interfere.

"We expect Russia to honor its commitment to let in all forms of humanitarian assistance. We expect Russia to insure that all lines of communication and transport, including seaports, airports, roads and airspace, remain open for the delivery of humanitarian assistance and for civilian transit," Bush said.


Yes, because the Russians would never do anything underhanded, slimy, and destructive.





Lavrov: US must choose between Russia and Georgia

The US must choose between the "virtual project" of Georgia and real partnership with Russia, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday, after US President George W. Bush demanded that Russia end all military activities in the former Soviet republic and dispatched US aid to devastated Georgians.

Lavrov said Georgia's leadership was "a special project of the United States. And we understand that the United States is worried about its project."

He was quoted by Russian news agencies as saying that at some point, the United States would have to choose "either support for a virtual project, or real partnership on issues that really demand collective action," referring to US cooperation with Russia in the UN Security Council on Iran and other global hot spots.


We can't afford to choose Georgia. The prospect of war with Russia... even if this nation had the fortitude, and I don't think we do, that's a mighty grim prospect.




Russia challenges George Bush as it advances through Georgia
Russia has thrown down a gauntlet to the United States, challenging President George W Bush to "choose" between Washington's relationship with Georgia and its future ties with Moscow.

After an EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels, Britain's Foreign Secretary David Miliband said: "Russian incursions into Georgia from South Ossetia or from Abkhazia are contrary to international law.

"The sight of Russian tanks rolling into parts of a sovereign country on its neighbouring borders will have brought a chill down the spine of many people, rightly."

Early in the day, President Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia berated his country's western allies for lack of assistance in the conflict.

But following Mr Bush's offer of humanitarian aid, he claimed that Georgia's ports and airports would be placed under US military protection, a suggestion quickly denied by the Pentagon.

Russian forces on Wednesday entered the main port at Poti and detonated explosives on three Georgian patrol vessels.






Looting reignites Russia-Georgia tensions

The body of a man, his mouth caked with blood, lay in a street in the village of Dzardzanis and nearby the body of a bearded man could be seen crushed under an overturned minivan, an AFP journalist reported.

Human Rights Watch said its researchers in South Ossetia had "witnessed terrifying scenes of destruction in four villages that used to be populated exclusively by ethnic Georgians."

Russian tanks have blocked the main highway connecting the rebel region of South Ossetia with the rest of Georgia, the Georgian Foreign Ministry said.

About 100 Georgian special forces, recently returned from Iraq, set up a road block with rocket launchers and other weapons on the main highway from Gori to Tbilisi, about 45 kilometers (30 miles) away.




***

So. What happens after Georgia is sqaushed?



Russia May Focus on Pro-U.S. Ukraine After Georgia

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Now that Russia has humiliated Georgia with a punishing military offensive, it may shift its attention to reining in pro-Western Ukraine, another American ally in the former Soviet Union.

Moving to counter any threat, Ukraine President Viktor Yushchenko today restricted the movement of Russia's Black Sea fleet, based in the Ukrainian port of Sevastopol, citing national security. The Foreign Ministry in Moscow denounced the decision as a "serious, new anti-Russian step.''






Ukraine imposes restrictions on Russian navy
Ukraine imposed new restrictions on Russian naval vessels based at Sevastopol on the Black Sea as former Soviet bloc states lined up to show support for Georgia in its fight with Russia.

President Victor Yushchenko raised the prospect of revoking an agreement that allows Russia to use the Crimean port until 2017 if Russian commanders defy the new restrictions. The presidential decree requires vessels blockading Georgia to ask Kiev's permission to return to the treaty port.

Reasserting control over its near neighbours is at the heart of Russia's foreign policy. It has ruthlessly cut winter energy supplies to secure compliance from Eastern Europe and used Russian-speaking minorities from the Baltics to Central Asia as leverage against states courting the West.

Mr Yushchenko joined the leaders of Poland and the Baltic states on a solidarity mission by a self-described group of "captive nations" of the USSR, to Tbilisi on Tuesday.





Russia ‘sticks foot in door’ of Arctic riches
August 3, 2008

Russia has begun a push to claim a vast chunk of disputed Arctic territory in an aggressive campaign to win control of the region's oil and gas resources.

A state-sponsored expedition, led by a Moscow geographical institute, is in the region gathering scientific data in an attempt to prove that vast swathes of the seabed belong to Russia.

In a heavily symbolic gesture, the Russian navy sent vessels from its Northern Fleet, based at Severomorsk, into the Arctic last month for the first time since 1991. An anti-submarine destroyer and the missile cruiser the Marshal Ustinov are now patrolling the area. Moscow claims the ships are there to protect its fishermen, but analysts believe they are Russia’s “foot in the door” in this energy-rich region.




US mission to Arctic will lay claim to gas reserves

A US Coast Guard cutter will set out on Thursday on a three-week trip to map a relatively unexplored area known as the Chukchi borderland, about 600 miles north of Alaska.

The cutter Healy will then launch again on September 6 accompanied by Canadian scientists aboard an icebreaker, who will conduct further tests to help identify the extent of the continental shelf north of Alaska.

The US is attempting to prove the Alaskan continental shelf stretches far beyond the 200-mile limit where coastal countries have sovereign rights over natural resources.

The joint operation comes amid increasing international competition to tap the Arctic's unexplored energy stores, thought to include 90 billion barrels of oil, about 15 per cent of the world's undiscovered reserves, as well as a third of the world's undiscovered natural gas, according to the US Geological Survey.

The five countries that border the Arctic Ocean - Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia and the US - dispute the sovereignty of the region's waters.

Russia has claimed 460,000 square miles of Arctic waters and in a move marking the escalating rivalry, planted its flag on the ocean floor of the North Pole last summer.





Rush to Arctic as warming opens oil deposits

It's a scramble for the spoils of global warming as the rapid melting of Arctic sea ice is opening access to previously unreachable deposits of oil and gas, setting off a race by northern nations - including the United States, Canada and Russia - to claim them.

The pursuit of those resources will be underscored this week as the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Healy sails north from Barrow, Alaska, on Thursday to map the sea floor of the Chukchi Cap, an area at the northern edge of the Beaufort Sea. The maps could bolster U.S. claims to the area as part of its extended outer continental shelf.

The U.S. Geological Survey confirmed last month what the oil industry had long suspected when the agency released an estimate that the area north of the Arctic Circle may hold as much as 90 billion barrels of oil and 1,669 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, or roughly 13 percent of the world's total undiscovered oil and 30 percent of the undiscovered natural gas.

The dash to stake out territory across the Arctic has accelerated since Russia sent one of its submarines last August to plant the country's flag on the sea floor beneath the North Pole, provoking an outcry by other nations that viewed it as an unauthorized land grab.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Ratings agencies see no swift reprieve for Georgia

LONDON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Georgia is likely to suffer lasting economic damage from its war with Russia, credit ratings agencies warned on Tuesday, saying foreign investment might dry up despite any halt in the conflict.

Ratings agencies Fitch and Standard & Poor's both downgraded Georgia on Friday after a Georgian offensive into the separatist region of South Ossetia was followed by Russian airstrikes and a much larger counter-offensive.




Putin's second war can have only one victor
Russian prime minister claims to be offering stability in Georgia, but critics say military action is part of a wider strategic game

For more than 200 years, tsars, generals, and politburos in Russia have controlled Georgia. But for the past 17 years since the collapse of the Soviet empire, the small country on the south side of the Caucasus has gingerly embraced a new experience as an independent state - unstable, immature, chaotic, corrupt, but hopeful.

Vladimir Putin cannot abide that notion and appears bent on trying to restore a version of the status quo ante.

"Russia has played a positive, stabilising role in the Caucasus for centuries, a guarantor of security, cooperation and progress," the Russian prime minister said at the weekend. "This is how it was in the past and this is how it is going to be in future. Let there be no doubt about this."





Russia and Georgia continue attacks--online

Researchers studying botnets have reported an increase in attacks on Georgian Web sites, including that of the country's president, within the last two weeks. While the attacks--Web site defacement and denial-of-service packet floods--are reminiscent of the Internet attacks waged against Estonia in May 2007, Jose Nazario, security researcher for Arbor Networks, told CNET News that he's seeing evidence that Georgia is apparently fighting back, attacking at least one Moscow-based newspaper site.

As to the source, Nazario said that "almost all of the attacks are broadly and globally sourced. One attack appears to be very narrowly focused, possibly someone with some basic ping flood scripts." He said the exact tools being used had not been determined.





Russian military triumph leaves pro-West Georgia uncertain

MOSCOW; AND TBILISI, Georgia - There is an air of satisfaction in Moscow over what appears to be a crushing Russian victory in its muscular, five-day long intervention to preserve the quasi-independence of South Ossetia and weaken Georgia's West-leaning President Mikheil Saakashvili, whose drive to take his tiny country into NATO has deeply alarmed the Kremlin.

"The aggressor has been punished and has incurred very significant losses," said Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, who ordered an end to Russian combat operations on Tuesday just as French President Nicolas Sarkozy was arriving in Moscow to press for a cease-fire.

But in Georgia, the mood was grim and uncertain. The country's pro-Western spirit, confirmed in a referendum earlier this year, when more than 70 percent of Georgians supported immediate NATO membership, may have been dampened by what some see as a lack of support in their hour of crisis.





Georgia says Russia bombed after order to halt war

TBILISI, Georgia (AP) — Russia ordered a halt to the war in Georgia on Tuesday, after five days of air and land attacks that sent Georgia's army into headlong retreat and left towns, military bases and homes in the U.S. ally smoldering. Georgia insisted that Russian forces were still bombing and shelling.

Despite the televised order by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Russia launched an offensive Tuesday in Abkhazia, sending tanks, armored personnel carriers and artillery toward the breakaway region.

Georgian troops were forced out of their last stronghold in the separatist province, said Maj. Gen. Anatoly Zaitsev, a defense official in Abkhazia. The claim that Georgian forces were gone could not immediately be confirmed.





Shattered Georgia pays high price for peace

However, fighting continued after the ceasefire was announced. Forces backed by Russia launched an offensive in the only part of Abkhazia still under Georgian control. An area near the town of Gori was bombed. A Dutch television cameraman was killed by a shell, and his colleague was wounded. The Times was shown a fragment of what appeared to be a Grad missile that had struck an apartment building behind the main square.

The peace talks were delayed by arguments over Russia’s determination to “mop up pockets of resistance”, according to the French.

About 135 Russian military vehicles were seen driving through Georgia en route to the Kodori Gorge in Abkhazia, the last zone held by the Georgians. Abkhazian officials later claimed that their forces, not the Russians, had captured the area.

Later, Sergei Lavrov, the Russian Foreign Minister, appeared to toughen the ceasefire terms, saying that Georgia must also sign a binding treaty on the nonuse of force. He also demanded the departure of President Saakashvili.





Russians move toward gorge despite cease-fire

Russian-backed separatist forces on Tuesday forced Georgian troops out of the northern part of the gorge, their last stronghold in the region. Abkhazian military officials said only Abkhaz forces were involved in operations in the gorge.

Villagers who fled the gorge in recent days under intense bombardment from Russian planes and artillery, as well as separatist forces, said the area was virtually deserted and efforts to resist the attack had all but stopped. One man, who fled to Chuberi overnight from the gorge, said the last Georgian troops left Monday, though some pro-Georgian militiamen were trapped there.

"They were retreating. It wasn't panic, but they were trying to leave one by one, not
in groups," said Nugzar Tsulukidze, a 58-year-old man who belonged to a local ilitia. "It was no use, with just our rifles."

Hundreds of people displaced by fighting in Kodori were in Chuberi, about 25 miles southeast of the gorge, some staying in a dilapidated school building. Some said up to 3,000 people had been forced to leave their homes; the International Committee of the Red Cross said Georgian authorities had asked it to help 1,500 people, including 600 children, who were taking refuge in Chuberi from the fighting in Abkhazia.



Peace! Love! Puppydogs and sunshine and gooey cinnamon buns!
Russia orders halt to war, Georgia sceptical

MOSCOW/TBILISI, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev ordered a halt to military operations in Georgia on Tuesday but Tbilisi cast doubt on the announcement, saying Moscow was still bombing towns and villages.

The announcement coincided with the visit of French president Nicolas Sarkozy to Moscow on an EU peace mission and seemed intended to help international efforts to negotiate a lasting truce.Sarkozy said Russia and Georgia, who have been fighting since last Thursday, had not yet agreed a peace deal, adding: "We don't yet have peace. But we have a provisional cessation of hostilities. And everyone should be aware that this is considerable progress. There is still much work to be done....What we want is to secure the best result."

In a first U.S. reaction, Washington's envoy to the region, Matthew Bryza, termed the Russian move "extremely positive".


"Positive." Ugh.



Russia 'ends Georgia operation'

According to a Kremlin statement, Mr Medvedev told his defence minister and chief of staff that "the goal has been attained".

"I've decided to finish the operation to force the Georgian authorities to peace. The safety of our peacekeeping forces and civilian population has been restored," he said.

But Mr Medvedev warned that Russia would not tolerate any further Georgian military activity in South Ossetia, saying: "Should centres of resistance or other aggressive attempts arise, you must take the decision to destroy them."


Spin, spin, spin.



France: Cease-fire, not peace reached in Georgia

MOSCOW, Russia (CNN) -- The Russian and French presidents on Tuesday announced a six-point plan of principles for settling the immediate conflict in Georgia but stopped short of tackling the issues that sparked the violence.

"We have not achieved peace yet but we have achieved a provisional cease-fire of hostilities," French President Nicolas Sarkozy said.

The points include Russian agreements to conclude all military operations, return Russian armed forces to the line preceding the beginning of operations, and not use force again in Georgia.

In return Georgia would return its armed forces to their normal and permanent locations.

Both sides would provide free access for humanitarian assistance; and international consideration of the issues of South Ossetia and Abkhazia would be undertaken.

"All we need to do now is to stop suffering, stop the death of people," Sarkozy said. Stopping the fighting "is the most important objective."



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Day-by-day: Georgia-Russia crisis

Then, ahead of a meeting with French and EU President Nicolas Sarkozy, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announces that his forces will end their operation in Georgia, claiming that Russia's military aims have been achieved. Mr Medvedev reserves the right to "destroy" any "centres of resistance", and there is no mention of a withdrawal of troops to pre-conflict positions - a key European demand.

Mr Medvedev's move is welcomed by the visiting Mr Sarkozy, but within hours Georgia asserts that bombing raids are continuing against towns and villages in its territory.

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili speaks to a large crowd in central Tbilisi, accusing the Russians of staging a ruthless invasion of Georgia.





Georgia sues Russia for alleged ethnic cleansing

TBILISI, GEORGIA (AP) - The Georgian security council says it has filed a lawsuit in the International Court of Justice for alleged ethnic cleansing.

Council chief Alexander Lomaia told The Associated Press that Georgia made the filing Tuesday with the international court. He gave no other details of the lawsuit.

Russian officials have accused Georgia of committing genocide by launching an offensive last week to try to retake control of the breakaway province of South Ossetia. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, meanwhile, accused Russian forces Monday of cleansing another breakaway province, Abkhazia, of ethnic Georgians.





Allies weigh punishment for Russia

WASHINGTON - Scrambling to find ways to punish Russia for its invasion of pro-Western Georgia, the United States and its allies are considering expelling Moscow from an exclusive club of powerful nations and canceling an upcoming joint NATO-Russia military exercise, Bush administration officials said Tuesday.

But with little leverage in the face of an emboldened Moscow, Washington and its friends have been forced to face the uncomfortable reality that their options are limited to mainly symbolic measures, such as boycotting Russian-hosted meetings and events, that may have little or no long-term impact on Russia's behavior, the officials said.


Yeah, Pooty-Poot's quaking in his KGB boots.


This isn't over. It is, at best, a lull. Power, control, oil, money... too much at stake.

Georgia will not be the only battlefield.