Thursday, May 31, 2007

Bush's Amazing Achievement

The New York Review of Books
Review

By Jonathan Freedland


Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic
by Chalmers Johnson

Metropolitan, 354 pp., $26.00


Second Chance: Three Presidents and the Crisis of American Superpower
by Zbigniew Brzezinski

Basic, 234 pp., $26.95


Statecraft and How to Restore America's Standing in the World
by Dennis Ross

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 384 pp., $25.00

1.

One of the few foreign policy achievements of the Bush administration has been the creation of a near consensus among those who study international affairs, a shared view that stretches, however improbably, from Noam Chomsky to Brent Scowcroft, from the antiwar protesters on the streets of San Francisco to the well-upholstered office of former secretary of state James Baker. This new consensus holds that the 2003 invasion of Iraq was a calamity, that the presidency of George W. Bush has reduced America's standing in the world and made the United States less, not more, secure, leaving its enemies emboldened and its friends alienated. Paid-up members of the nation's foreign policy establishment, those who have held some of the most senior offices in the land, speak in a language once confined to the T-shirts of placard-wielding demonstrators. They rail against deception and dishonesty, imperialism and corruption. The only dispute between them is over the size and depth of the hole into which Bush has led the country he pledged to serve.

Last December's Baker-Hamilton report, drawn up by a bipartisan panel of ten Washington eminences with perhaps a couple of centuries of national security experience between them and not a radical bone in their collective body, described the mess the Bush team had left in Iraq as "grave and deteriorating." The seventy-nine recommendations they made amounted to a demand that the administration repudiate its entire policy and start again. In the words of former congressman Lee Hamilton, James Baker's co-chair and a rock-solid establishment figure, "Our ship of state has hit rough waters. It must now chart a new way forward."[1]

So it comes as less of a surprise than once it might have to see Dennis Ross and Zbigniew Brzezinski—two further fixtures of the national security elite—step forward to slam the administration in terms that would, in an earlier era, have seemed uncouth for men of their rank. Neither Ross, who served as Middle East envoy for both George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, nor Brzezinski, a conservative Democrat and cold war hawk, could be dismissed as Nation-reading, Howard Dean types. Yet in withering new books they both eviscerate the Bush record, writing in the tone of exasperated elders who handed over the family business to a new generation, only to see their successors drive the firm into bankruptcy. Both books offer rescue plans for a US foreign policy they consider to be in tatters.


Accordingly, their arguments are less striking than the fact that it is Ross and Brzezinski who are making them. Those who have been listening to theantiwar movement since 2002 will nod along at this assessment of the Iraq adventure:
It is hard to exaggerate the Bush administration's fundamental miscalculations on Iraq, including but not limited to unrealistic policy objectives; fundamental intelligence failures; catastrophically poor understanding of what would characterize the post-Saddam period, and completely unrealistic planning as a result; denial of the existence of an insurgency for several months; and the absence of a consistent explanation to the American people or the international community about the reasons for the war.
Small wonder that after nearly four years of warfare, Iraq has been a disaster, costing thousands of lives, requiring the expenditure of hundreds of billions of dollars, stretching our forces and reserve system to the breaking point, and becoming a magnet for terrorists and hostility toward the United States throughout the Muslim world.

But they should marvel that it comes from Dennis Ross, a loyal former lieutenant of Baker's who writes glowingly of Bush père and who was as comfortable in a Republican administration as a Democratic one. If they do not, then it is only because Chuck Hagel, Gordon Smith, Scowcroft, and even the late Gerald Ford have made Republican attacks on the Bush record since 2001 seem normal.



Similarly, a sentence like this has been uttered in European chancelleries every week for five years:

The Iraq War in all its aspects has turned into a calamity—in the way it was internally decided, externally promoted, and has been conducted—and it has already stamped the Bush presidency as a historical failure.

Yet that verdict comes not from some Venusian in Paris or Berlin but from Brzezinksi, that hardheaded Martian creature of Washington. Lest there be any doubt, the former national security adviser to Jimmy Carter issues a report card on the three presidencies since the end of the cold war. George H.W. Bush gets a B, praised for his calm management of the expiration of the Soviet Union and the united international front he constructed for his own desert confrontation with Saddam. Clinton manages a C, credited for effective championing of globalization and oversight of NATO enlargement, but debited for allowing too many important matters, especially nuclear proliferation, to drift. Bush's son is slapped with an unambiguous F.


That verdict is rooted in the administration's invasion.....

Read more

Saturday, May 26, 2007

le scaphandre et le papillon

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
Director: Julian Schnabel


There has been much anticipation surrounding Schnabel's 3rd movie in 11 years. His previous two movies certainly rank among my most favored -- I promise a post featuring his other two movies: Before Night Falls (2000)
about the life of Cuban poet Reynaldo Arenas, and Basquiat (1996) obviously about Jean Michele Basquiat, a friend of Schnable's and fellow neo-expressionist. Let's see how this one does at Cannes this year. By the way this is on my wish list whenever it comes out.


Monday, May 21, 2007

ROYAL DE LUXE II: FACE-OFF IN REYKJAVIK

May 21, 2007

3Quarksdaily

Elatia Harris

Giantnlittlegirl_2_2

Last weekend in Reykjavik, the renowned French street theatre company, Royal de Luxe, enacted the latest episode in The Saga of the Giants, a outdoor drama for colossal, crane-operated marionettes that has since 1993 unfolded in continental Europe, the UK, Africa and South America.



Read more

The World’s Fastest-Growing Religions

FP Logo
FP Logo
Posted May 2007
From Muslims in Europe to evangelical Christians in Africa, it is religious believers who are shaping the early 21st Century. Charismatic movements are sweeping throughout the Southern Hemisphere, while high birth rates among immigrants are provoking soul-seeking in the historically Christian West. For this week's List, FP looks at the fast-growing faiths that are upending the old world order.


QASSEM ZEIN/AFP/Getty Images

Islam

Growth rate*: 1.84 percent

Adherents: 1.3 billion

Behind the trend: High birthrates in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe

Areas to watch: The world’s largest Muslim populations are in fast-growing countries such as Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, Egypt, and Iran. Islam also happens to be the fastest growing religion in Europe, where an influx of Muslim immigrants from North Africa, Turkey, and South Asia has sent shock waves into a mostly Christian and secular population whose birthrates have stagnated. The “Muslim question” has empowered anti-immigrant parties in France, Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Germany, while sparking a fierce debate over the place of women in Islam and symbols of faith like the Muslim head scarf.


Moshe Milner/GPO/Newsmakers

Bahaism

Growth rate: 1.70 percent

Adherents: 7.7 million

Behind the trend: High birthrates in India

Areas to watch: Bahais are spread throughout the world, but a good chunk—around 1.8 million—live in India. The Bahai faith, an offshoot of Islam, was founded in 1863 in Iran by Bahá’u’lláh, who claimed to be the latest in a line of prophets stretching from Abraham to Jesus Christ to Mohammed. Today, Bahais often suffer persecution in the Middle East; it probably doesn’t help matters that the world headquarters of the Bahai faith are in Haifa, Israel.


RAVEENDRAN/AFP/Getty Images

Sikhism

Growth rate: 1.62 percent

Adherents: 25.8 million

Behind the trend: High birthrates in India

Areas to watch: Thousands of Sikhs were killed during the bloody partition between Pakistan and India in 1947, and at least 3,000 Sikhs were killed by Hindu mobs in New Delhi following the assassination of Indira Gandhi by a pair of Sikh extremists in 1984. Today, Sikhs are prospering. The prime minister of India, Manmohan Singh, is Sikh. Over 90 percent of the world’s Sikhs live in India; of those, a large majority are concentrated in the northern Indian state of Punjab. Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States host growing Sikh minorities of several hundred thousand people each. In several isolated incidents after 9/11, turban-wearing Sikh men in Britain and the United States were mistaken for Muslims and attacked.


AFP/Getty Images

Jainism

Growth rate: 1.57 percent

Adherents: 5.9 million

Behind the trend: High birthrates in India

Areas to watch: Jains are a small but relatively powerful minority in India, making up about half of one percent of the population. They tend to be concentrated in Rajasthan and Gujarat. Outside of India, some of the largest concentrations of Jains are in Leicester, UK; Mombasa, Kenya; and major cities in the United States.


Mario Tama/Getty Images

Hinduism

Growth rate: 1.52 percent

Adherents: 870 million

Behind the trend: Surprise! High birthrates in India

Areas to watch: Most of the world’s Hindus live in India, and, to a lesser extent, Bangladesh, and Nepal. Significant Hindu minorities also live in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Malaysia. Since the 1960s, Hindus have become a growing presence in the United States, with as many as 1.5 million generally well-off adherents spread across the continent and prevalent in Texas, New Jersey, and Ohio. There are also several hundred thousand Hindus in the United Kingdom and South Africa, and there is a small Hindu minority in Russia, where its presence has aroused controversy in the Russian Orthodox Church.


PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images

Christianity

Growth rate: 1.38 percent

Adherents: 2.2 billion

Behind the trend: High birthrates and conversions in the global South

Areas to watch: Pentecostal movements in Latin America, Africa, China, and India. The fastest-growing individual church in the world is Misión Carismática Internacional in Colombia; the Pentecostal denomination began in 1983 in Bogotá and now boasts 150,000 members. Then there’s Orissa Baptist Evangelical Crusade in India, which reports some 670,000 adherents. And in China, tens of millions of Christians practice their faith under the watchful eye of a very suspicious—and often hostile—Chinese government.

*Growth rates over the period from 2000 to 2005; all figures from the nondenominational World Christian Database, a project of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.

Accepting Realities in Iraq

MIDDLE EAST PROGRAMME BRIEFING PAPER MEP BP 07/02



MAY 2007
Gareth Stansfield, Chatham House and University of Exeter

Summary

Iraq has fractured into regional power bases. Political, security and economic power has devolved to local sectarian, ethnic or tribal political groupings. The Iraqi government is only one of several ‘state-like’ actors. The regionalization of Iraqi political life needs to be recognized as a defining feature of Iraq’s political structure.

There is not ‘a’ civil war in Iraq, but many civil wars and insurgencies involving a number of communities and organizations struggling for power. The surge is not curbing the high level of violence, and improvements in security cannot happen in a matter of months.

The conflicts have become internalized between Iraqis as the polarization of sectarian and ethnic identities reaches ever deeper into Iraqi society and causes the breakdown of social cohesion.

Critical destabilizing issues will come to the fore in 2007–8. Federalism, the control of oil and control of disputed territories need to be resolved.

Each of Iraq’s three major neighbouring states, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, has different reasons for seeing the instability there continue, and each uses different methods to influence developments.

These current harsh realities need to be accepted if new strategies are to have any chance of preventing the failure and collapse of Iraq. A political solution will require engagement with organizations possessing popular legitimacy and needs to be an Iraqi accommodation, rather than a regional or US-imposed approach.

Introduction: appreciating the scale of the problem

A critical time has now arrived for the future of Iraq. The situation continues to deteriorate markedly, not just in terms of the numbers of bombs exploding and corpses being found on the streets, but in terms of the nature of the violence – including the brutality of Iraqi-on-Iraqi violence. This internecine fighting is perhaps the greatest threat to the preservation of some social cohesion upon which a future can be built.

Some analysts contend that the level of violence in Iraq has in fact declined, particularly since the onset of the US-led military surge designed to improve the security situation in Baghdad.1 However, if numbers of bomb attacks can be used as an indicator, then it can reasonably be assumed that the security situation remains as perilous as before the surge. The number of multiple fatality bombings in Iraq remained constant in March and April 2007 and, according to the Iraqi authorities, 1,500 civilians were killed in April alone.2

Although the number of civilian deaths in Baghdad has declined since the surge, the continued activities of Al-Qaeda and other groups have ensured that overall fatality rates across the rest of Iraq have, if anything, increased.3 In addition, the number of US soldiers killed in Iraq since January 2007 also rose, with 104 deaths in April alone....

Read More: PDF on Chathamhouse.org or HTML

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

anoush abrar


http://www.anoush.ch/Press/realisation/Dresscode/dresscode01.jpg

biography.born 1976 in Iran, lives and works in Lausanne, Switzerland.

exhibitions
2007 Bizarre Love Triangle, fette's gallery, Los Angeles, USA
2006 "Portrait Prize" at the National Portrait Gallery, London, UK
2006 "Dresscode" at the Historisches museum St-Gallen, Switzerland
2006 "Dialectique" - solo exhibition, Salle Centrale de la Madeleine, Geneva, Switzerland
2006 "Preview", at the Swiss National Museum, Zurich, Switzerland
2006 "The Deadly Sins", Biennal internationale de l'image de Nancy, Nancy, France
2006 "ReGeneration, 50 Photographers of Tomorrow 2005-2025", at Aperture Gallery, New York, USA
2005 "ReGeneration. 50 Photografi di domani, 2005-2025", at Gallery Carla Sozzani, Milan, Italy
2005 "Espace Abstract" Solo Exhibition
2005 10e Edition du Festival Voies Off, Rencontre photographiques d’Arles, France
2005 “New Photographers 2006”, Curated by Getty Images and presented at the “Cannes Lions International
Advertising Festival 2005”, France
2005 “ReGeneration. 50 Photographers of Tomorrow, 2005-2025”, at the Musée de l’Elysée, Switzerland
2005 Exhibition in Hamburg for the Klubfoto Selection “Respect”, Germany
2005 "Spike Gallery", Exhibition of the Guess? & W magazine "Behind the lens" contest, New York, USA
2005 RETRO – PROSPECTIVE, Scène Nationale de Chambéry, France
2004 "Soirée Shot ‘04", Zurich, Switzerland
2004 "Harold’s Gallery", Los Angeles, USA
2004 "Swiss Design 2004 - Innovation", Museum Bellerive, Zurich, Switzerland
2004 "Tabacco Warehouse", New York, USA
2004 HGK, Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst, Basel, Switzerland
2004 "Maison Européenne de la photographie", Paris, France
2004 HGKL, Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst, Lucerne, Switzerland
2004 "Renc’art" CEPV, Ecole d’art appliqués Vevey, Switzerland
2003 "Image House Gallery", Zurich, Switzerland
2003 "MUDAC", Exhibition at the museum of contemporary art, Lausanne, Switzerland
2003 "Artone Gallery", Exhibition in Zurich, Switzerland
2003 VFG "The Selection", Exhibition in Zurich, Switzerland
2003 FIAMH, "Villa Noailles " 18th International Fashion and Photography, Hyères, France
2003 Exhibition at the Swiss Cultural Center in Paris, France
2003 Exhibition at the Fotomuseum of Winterthur for it’s 10th birthday, Switzerland
2002 "Fotoestordito 2002", Exhibition in Rome, Italy
2002 "Pro Helvetia", Exhibition at the Swiss Cultural Center in Paris, France

awards
2005 International Photography Award IPA 2005
2005 Guess? & W magazine "Behind the lens"
2004 "Art + Commerce 2004 Festival of Emerging Photographers"
2004 "2004 Wraparound photo annual" : The year in Vision”
2004 Fnac Photography
2004 Swiss Federal Grant 2004
2003 FIAMH, « VFG », 8e Prix des Jeunes Talents, Zurich, Switzerland
2003 FIAMH, « Villa Noailles », 18th International Fashion and Photography, Hyères, France
2003 Swiss Federal Grant 2003
2001 Breguet Watch poster competition, 200e Anniversary of the Tourbillon, Grand prize from the Jury
2001 : Breguet Watch poster competition, 200e Anniversary of the Tourbillon, 3rd prize

> link to his website.

Iran courts the US at Russia's expense

Asia Time Online - Daily News
By Kaveh L Afrasiabi

Iran's relations with the Arab world have taken a dramatic turn for the better, in light of Iran's overtures toward the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, as well as in President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's announcement that Iran is prepared to resume full diplomatic relations with Egypt.

That announcement was made on Monday as Ahmadinejad visited the United Arab Emirates and received a rousing official welcome. Widely interpreted as Iran's timely response to US Vice President Dick Cheney's tour of the region and his warning that the United States will not allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons or to dominate the region, Ahmadinejad's arrival in Dubai coincided with an Iranian olive branch toward not only Egypt but also the US. This is illustrated by Tehran's announcement that it has accepted the United States' invitation for direct talks between American and Iranian ambassadors in Baghdad.

"Iran's foreign policy is moving in the direction of constructive engagement on all fronts," a member of Iran's parliament, the Majlis, announced, adding that the resumption of relations with Egypt will have "positive effects on the whole region".

It is now up to Egypt to bury the hatchet and respond to Ahmadinejad's significant policy announcement. According to some Tehran political analysts, however, there are some voices within the Egyptian government who prefer the status quo, whereby Egypt can capitalize on foreign assistance as a result of its role as a counterweight to Iran, given the growing reliance of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) on "out of area" Egypt.

On the other hand, Iran's GCC policy, of pushing the arch of the common or collective security arrangement by all the Gulf states based on the principle of self-reliance, undermines Egypt's attempt to insert itself in the region's security calculus. Similarly, the US is disquieted by official GCC pronouncements that echo Iran's call for the withdrawal of foreign forces from the region.

Should Iran remain consistent on the present pattern of regional policy and succeed in helping with the security nightmare in Iraq, then the US/Israeli policy of creating a Sunni-led anti-Iran alliance in the Arab world would vanish into thin air. The process of confidence-building between Iran and the GCC states, which are in dispute with Iran over the three islands of Abu Moussa and Little and Big Tunb, is a long one, however, and Tehran must be careful not send any "mixed signals" that would eradicate the present gains. The GCC comprises Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Dialogue with the US and Iran's new realism
Reflecting a new level of sophistication and diplomatic pro.....

Read More

Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions in Iran's Foreign Policy (Westview Press) and co-author of "Negotiating Iran's Nuclear Populism", Brown Journal of World Affairs, Volume XII, Issue 2, Summer 2005, with Mustafa Kibaroglu. He also wrote "Keeping Iran's nuclear potential latent", Harvard International Review, and is author of Iran's Nuclear Program: Debating Facts Versus Fiction.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Attacking Iran -- The market impact of a surprise Israeli strike on its nuclear facilities

A friend sent me this -- an investment strategy paper prepared by ING Bank
by:
Charles Robertson

Chief Economist, Emerging Europe, Middle East and Africa London (44 20) 7767 5310 charles.robertson@uk.ing.com
Mark Cliffe
Global Head of Economics and Strategy London (44 20) 7767 6283 mark.cliffe@uk.ing.com
A high impact, if low probability, scenario?

The financial markets are assuming that an Israeli and/or US attack on Iran is unlikely. However, bellicose rhetoric from Israel and an imminent build-up of US forces in the Gulf suggest that they could be in for a shock.

An imminent attack would seem unlikely, given the weakness of the Israeli and US administrations, and hopes for regime change in Iran. However, Iran’s threats to Israel’s existence, and fears that it will acquire nuclear weapons within two years, suggest that President Bush may sanction action before he leaves office at the end of 2008.

However, within a month the US will have two aircraft carrier battle groups and a new expeditionary Marine strike force in the Persian Gulf, which might provide a shield for an Israeli bombing of Iran’s facilities. Israel reportedly has the weaponry to at least delay the nuclear programme.

A key imponderable is the extent of Iranian retaliation.

Although missile and terrorist attacks on Israel and US interests would be likely, the threat of massive US retaliation, regional conflict and long-term damage to its political and commercial interests might limit Iran’s response.

The financial market impact would be dramatic, even if Iranian retaliation were restrained. Risk assets have risen strongly over the past three years, and a surprise attack on Iran would catch out markets pricing in little volatility. The US dollar, government bond yields, stock markets and industrial raw materials would all fall. Oil and gold prices, could spike, boosting related equities, debt and currencies. Other credit spreads would widen, and the unwinding of carry trades would see funding currencies benefit, although Japan, dependent on Iranian oil, might lag others such as the Swiss franc. A prime casualty might be the Turkish lira, which could fall 10-20%. The duration of these effects would depend on the extent of Iranian retaliation: a constrained response would make them short-lived.

Top trades in the event of an attack on Iran

Currencies

Buy CHF, Buy NOK Sell TRY

Commodities

Buy Oil and Gold Sell industrial commodities

Equities

Outperform Oils, Lukoil, Gazprom Sell Turkey, Israel

EM Bonds

Russia/Kazakhstan – Outperform Sell Turkey/Iraq

Developed Bonds

Buy 5yr US paper Buy Euro 10*10yr volatility Sell Itraxx Main

Download the entire Report in PDF, an interesting read.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Log On, Shoot at an Iraqi: New Interactive Installation at the Flatfile Gallery

LEFT STOP RIGHT
SHOOT
gun ready in:
0:00
..

..



Development Team: Ben Chang (Software) || Dan Miller, Dimitris Michalaros (Hardware)

LOG IN TO SHOOT

Who Won in Iraq? Iran Did -- Big Time


In fact, Iran wins so big in this war I think that Dick Cheney's DNA should be checked out by a reputable lab, because he has to be a Persian mole. My theory is that they took a fiery young Revolutionary Guard from the slums of Tehran, dipped him in a vat of lye to get that pale, pasty Anglo skin, zapped his scalp for that authentic bald CEO look, squirted a quart of cholesterol into his arteries so he'd develop classic American cardiac disease, and parachuted him into the outskirts of some Wyoming town.

A funny thing happened on the floor of the Senate the other day. Somebody asked a serious question: "If the war in Iraq is lost, then who won?"

Of course Sen. Lindsay Graham, the guy who asked the question, didn't mean it to be serious. He was just scoring points off Majority Leader Harry Reid, the world's only Democratic Mormon. Reid had made a "gaffe" by saying in public what everybody already knows: "The war in Iraq is lost." When you say something obviously true in politics, it's called a "gaffe."

So Graham jumps in to embarrass Reid with his question.

But let's take the question seriously for a second here: who won in Iraq? To answer it, you have to start with a close-up of the region, then change magnification to look at the world picture. At a regional level the big winner is obvious: Iran. In fact, Iran wins so big in this war I think that Dick Cheney's DNA should be checked out by a reputable lab, because he has to be a Persian mole. My theory is that they took a fiery young Revolutionary Guard from the slums of Tehran, dipped him in a vat of lye to get that pale, pasty Anglo skin, zapped his scalp for that authentic bald CEO look, squirted a quart of cholesterol into his arteries so he'd develop classic American cardiac disease, and parachuted him into the outskirts of some Wyoming town.

And that's how our VP was born again, a half-frozen zombie with sagebrush twigs in his jumpsuit, stumbling into the first all-night coffee shop in Casper talking American with a Persian accent: "Hello my friends! Er, I mean, hello my fellow Americans! Coffee? I will have coffee at once, indeed, and is not free enterprise a glorious thing? Say, O brethren of the frosty tundra, what do you say we finish our donuts and march on Baghdad now, this very moment, to remove the Baathist abomination Saddam?"

It took a couple tries for Cheney-ajad to get his American accent right and chew his way into Bush Jr.'s head, but he eventually got us to do the Iranian Ayatollahs' dirty work for them by taking out Iraq, their only rival for regional power. Iraq is destroyed, and Tehran hasn't lost a single soldier in the process. Our invasion put their natural allies, the Shia, in power; gave their natural enemies, the Iraqi Sunni, a blood-draining feud that will never end; and provided them with a risk-free laboratory to spy on American forces in action. If they feel like trying out a new weapon or tactic to deal with U.S. armor, all they have to do is feed the supplies or diagrams to one of their puppet Shia groups, or even one of the Sunni suicide-commando clans.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

An exhausted US looks for a multipolar exit strategy

By David Ignatius
Daily Star staff
Saturday, May 05, 2007

After the Iraq debacle, nearly everyone seems to agree that "unilateralism" in foreign policy is a bad thing. Leading the march of born-again multilateralists is Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has been meeting with representatives of Syria, Iran and several dozen other nations in the hope that they can apply a collective tourniquet to Iraq, where America's go-it-alone approach is failing.

The "neighbors" meeting is an example of the kind of cooperative problem solving that everyone favors, in theory. The difficulty is that nobody today has any real experience with how a genuinely multilateral system might work. And the more you think about it, the more potential obstacles you begin to see in the passage from unilateral hell to multilateral heaven.

The nuclear strategist Herman Kahn pondered this problem in a 1983 essay on "multipolarity and stability." Kahn had made his name by "thinking about the unthinkable" - namely, the consequences of nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. But he recognized that the bipolar world of the Cold War had an inherent stability. The two superpowers understood the rules of the game, and because the dangers of conflict were so great, they learned to discipline themselves and their respective allies.

A multipolar world eventually would be stable, too, Kahn argued. He hypothesized that by 2000, there would be seven economic giants - the US, Japan, the Soviet Union, China, Germany, France and Brazil - and that they would gradually work out orderly rules. The problem was the transition. The moment of maximum danger, Kahn warned, would be in moving from a bipolar to a multipolar world.

We are now in that process of transition, and it's proving just as volatile as Kahn predicted. American power alone is demonstrably unable to achieve world order; we can't even maintain the peace in Baghdad. But no multilateral coalition has emerged as an alternative. The United Nations, the nominal instrument of collective security, allowed itself to be run out of Iraq by a terrorist bomb in the early months of the war.

The multilateral world is disorganized, on several levels. First, it's not clear what the "poles" of the emerging order are, or how they will align with each other. Is the Muslim world a pole? If so, who will lead it - Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan? Can the Muslim nations of the Middle East put aside their traditional rivalries and act responsibly in resolving a crisis? That's what the meeting of Iraq's neighbors this week is testing. An exhausted America finally seems ready for a multilateral exit strategy from Iraq, but are the neighbors able enough to deliver it?

Does Russia intend to organize a new pole of its own? President Vladimir Putin certainly sounds like he wants to regain a share of Moscow's old influence. But listening to an acrimonious debate last weekend at the Brussels Forum among diplomats from nations that once made up the Soviet bloc, it's obvious that this pole would be anything but stable. While a Putin ally was enthusing about the new Russia, someone in the back of the room - a Georgian? an Estonian? a Pole? - shouted out: "Liar," and you wondered for a moment if punches would be thrown.

The disorder goes deeper. Most of the major nations are on the cusp of political change. The US is the most obvious example: President George W. Bush will leave the White House in less than two years, but to whom? Public rage over Iraq is buffeting the two politicians who, just a few months ago, were their party's front-runners, Senator John McCain and Senator Hillary Clinton. The only certainty about the next president is that he or she will represent an America that is angry and unpredictable.

Big changes are coming in France and Britain, too. Gaullist foreign policy will outlive French President Jacques Chirac, just as the Atlantic alliance will survive the departure of British Prime Minister Tony Blair. But both moorings will probably be looser - adding additional drift. And what should we expect from a post-Putin Russia - assuming he follows through on his promise to retire next year?

I listened to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad tell a news conference in Tehran last year that the post-1945 world order was ending. All of its institutions, starting with the United Nations, were becoming irrelevant, he argued. A new world would be shaped by rising powers that would create new rules of the international game.

At the time, I thought it was more of Ahmadinejad's crazy rhetoric. But I suspect that this vision of a world in transition may be correct: We're all multilateralists now, but we inhabit a world that makes the Cold War seem like the good old days.


Syndicated columnist David Ignatius is published regularly by THE DAILY STAR.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Sachiko Kodama, Yasushi Miyajima "Morpho Towers -- Two Standing Spirals" (2006-2007)

Collaborator: Tetsuhide Hidaka, Megumi Sato, Osamu Sumiya

(c)Sachiko Kodama & Yasushi Miyajima, music by Tetsuhide Hidaka
(Windows Media Player)

“Morpho Towers--Two Standing Spirals” is an installation
that consists of two ferrofluid sculptures that moves synthetically
to music. The two spiral towers stand on a large plate that hold ferrofluid.
When the music starts, the magnetic field around the tower is strengthened.
Spikes of ferrofluid are born from the bottom plate and move up, trembling
and rotating around the edge of the iron spiral.

The body of the tower was made by a new technique called “ferrofluid
sculpture” that enables artists to create dynamic sculptures with fluid
materials. This technique uses one electromagnet, and its iron core
is extended and sculpted. The ferrofluid covers the sculpted surface
of a three-dimensional iron shape that was made on an electronic NC
lathe. The movement of the spikes in the fluid is controlled dynamically
on the surface by adjusting the power of the electromagnet. The shape
of the iron body is designed as helical so that the fluid can move to
the top of the helical tower when the magnetic field is strong enough.

The surface of the tower responds dynamically to its magnetic environment.


When there is no magnetic field, the tower appears to be a simple spiral
shape. But when the magnetic field around the tower is strengthened,
spikes of ferrofluid are born; at the same time, the tower’s surface
dynamically morphs into a variety of textures ranging from soft fluid
to minute moss, or to spiky shark’s teeth, or again to a hard iron surface.
The ferrofluid, with its smooth, black surface that seems to draw people
in, reaches the top of the tower, spreading like a fractal, defying
gravity.

The spikes of ferrofluid are made to rotate around the edge of the spiral
cone, becoming large or small depending on the strength of the magnetic
field. In this work the speed of this rotation can be controlled without
motors or shaft mechanisms ? we simply control the magnetic power.

In this work, we are trying to activate analogue physical phenomena
(= fluid) precisely by utilizing digital music metadata. To control
the synchronization of the ferrofluid with the music playback in real
time, time series metadata are added to the music beforehand. The metadata
consist of musical information, such as beat position, chord progression,
and melody block information, and ferrofluid control information such
as DC bias voltage and AC pattern. Each data record has a time stamp
that indicates the timing of presentation. All data are stored in time-series
order.

These time series metadata must be accurate for precise control of timing,
so as to cancel the time delay of fluid movement. By this correction,
the time when the protuberance of the spike reaches its maximum size
is coincident with the beat of the music. As a result, the rhythm of
the fluid movement coincides with the musical rhythm. When there is
no sound, the fluid falls down into the plate.

As there are two towers in the installation, complicated expressions
of surfaces become possible. Each tower’s surface pulsates, like one
creature calling to the other.

Fluid moves synthetically with the music, as if it breathes, and the
condition of the fluid's surface emerges as autonomous and complex.
In this art we want to harmonize several opposing properties, such as
hardness (iron) / softness (fluid) and freedom (desire for design) /
restriction (natural powers such as gravity). This work emerges as an
autonomous transformation of the material itself: sometimes it seems
like a horn, sometimes a fir tree, and sometimes even like the Tower
of Babel.