I supp0se she had to. Perhaps Julia Gillard would have been more circumspect if she had had time to read The Economist before chatting on the phone with US President Barack Obama.
With a detailed review of the lack of progress in the nine year Afghan war, the weekly news and views magazine concludes “presidential decisiveness cannot conceal a deeper truth. America and its allies are losing in Afghanistan.”
Yet there was our new Prime Minister overnight assuring the president who decisively sacked the general in charge of the war effort that Australia’s approach to the NATO-led coalition’s campaign would be the same as it was under her predecessor, Kevin Rudd.
A pity, really, that our leaders don’t have some of that Dutch courage.
Political promises are cheap. As Wayne Swan flies off to represent Australia at a meeting of the G20 group of countries being held in Ontario, Canada, it’s an appropriate time for a reminder of how political promises are cheap when world leaders get together for such events.
And it would be hard to illustrate it more clearly than in this page one offering on Thursday as Canada’s national newspaper The Globe and Mail previewed the meeting of the so-called G8 group taking place before the larger G20 event where Australia gets a guernsey.
God to save us? The gloomy view of Americans is that more than half of them think the next 40 years will see another world war and expect that there will be a major terrorist attack on the US with a nuclear weapon.
The good news for 41% of Americans is that they believe Jesus Christ will return sometime during this period.
This and other intriguing insights into how Americans see the future are provided in a survey published this week by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.
Does anyone care? Apparently an Australian cricket team is playing England at something or other. There once was a time when people would have been interested. When John Howard finally gets to head the international cricket organisation he will be presiding over a very minor sport indeed.
Howard head the International Cricket Council? I doubt it. He is being opposed by Sth Africa, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and India. Wonder if their colour has anything to do with it?
The Green Party tried to have a debate on Afghanistan in the Senate on two occasions. In both cases it was blocked by both Labor and the Coalition. To the best of my knowledge there has never been a debate in either House on the subject. It is truly astonishing that Australia should be embroiled in an illegal war for more than eight years and there is no parliamentary debate. Gillard cannot rely on the media for informed analysis because they merely sing from the same tired and discredited songsheet as the Americans.
What are the intgelligence agencies and DFAT doing to earn their money? Clearly not providing the PM (new or old) with informed advice. How sad is it that one of Gillard’s first acts as PM is to ring the chief war criminal and assure him of her continuing support.
Richard, this is a conspiracy only rivalled by the Mossad-CIA bombing of the Twin Towers! On the day you promised to find out who the party room briefings were delivered by, we had a staged coup! Coincidence? I think not – obviously the powers that be will stop at nothing to keep this a secret from the Australian public. And the media is only too happy to sit on this political dynamite. Shame!
Richard, The Economist is in fact a ‘newspaper’ and NOT! a ‘magazine’.