MIKIVERSE HEADLINE NEWS

Showing posts with label The Age. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Age. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

MORE AUSTRALIAN'S KILLED IN FUTILE AFGHANI INVASION THAT IS REMINISCENT OF FAILED VIETNAM INVASION

Two Australian soldiers killed by bomb on first tour of Afghanistan
June 8, 2010 - 12:05PM
By Tetractys Merkaba in red, & AFP, AAP and Paul Tatnell in black.
Two Australian soldiers and a sniffer dog have been killed by a roadside bomb during their first tour of duty in Afghanistan.

The Diggers -A nice propagandistic label, that is untrue, because, as previously discussed, the digger appellation, was originally applied to the A.N.Z.A.C's of WW1 who engaged in the failed invasion of Gallipoli. This label is designed to steer your mind into thinking that these invaders are cut from the same cloth as the original diggers- belonged to the Mentoring Task Force and are the first Australians to die in 11 months, bringing the total number of deaths in the campaign to 13.

Acting Defence Force chief David Hurley said the troops were based in Brisbane with the 2nd combat engineer regiment.

They were killed by a roadside bomb explosion in the Mirabad Valley on Monday morning Afghanistan time.

One soldier was killed instantly. The second was given emergency first aid by his fellow soldiers and taken to a nearby hospital but later died.

Lieutenant-General Hurley said the two soldiers, who were part of a foot patrol, were evacuated to the Tarin Kowt base by helicopter following the explosion.

"It was about 10 minutes out to the site and back.

"It was 38 minutes from wheels off, from the incident being announced, to the two soldiers returning to the base."

Lieutenant-General Hurley said Monday had been "a hard day in theatre".

"There's a lot of troops in action and a lot going on.

"This has just been a difficult day for us."

He said military investigators were already looking into the deaths.

"We have sent in our weapons intelligence team to conduct a technical inspection," he said.

Asked if the NATO-led coalition was winning the almost decade long war, he said: "Bodies aren't going to tell whether you win or lose this war.

"Some good things are happening and we're heading in the right direction."

Lieutenant-General Hurley said it was the first time since the Vietnam war that two Australian soldiers had died in combat on the same day.

10 NATO soldiers killed

In total 10 NATO soldiers were killed on Monday.

Lieutenant-General Hurley said there were no other Australian or Afghan casualties.

"However, an explosive detection dog also died in the incident," he said.

An investigation will be held to determine the "exact details of the incident".

"I speak for the entire ADF [Australian Defence Force] and Defence community when I tell you I am deeply saddened by the loss of these two brave Australian soldiers," Lieutenant-General Hurley said.

Houston devastated

Defence force chief Angus Houston in a statement read out by his deputy said he was devastated to hear about the deaths.

"Foremost in my thoughts at this time are the families of these two soldiers ... who today are suffering overwhelming shock and anguish." It was a pity that these soldiers and there families were not foremost in Houston's mind before they were killed in a futile, dangerous and unsuccessful invasion.

It was too early for words to provide comfort to the families of the men, but Air Chief Marshal Houston said he wanted them to know both were outstanding Australians. I say they have paid too high a price for their ignorance, that their leaders in the chain of command failed them by allowing them to participate in a pointless & failing invasion.

"Quietly serving our nation and demonstrating every day the very best of what Aussies pride themselves on displaying to the world - courage, determination, mateship and selfless service."

He also had a message to Australian troops still serving in Afghanistan.

"I ask you to look after and support each other. Because you know damn well that the Un-Australian "Defence" Force, the Australian Government, the opposition, & the corporate media will not support you under any circumstances. In fact, ALL of these aforementioned groups will seek to capitalise on your efforts for their own gain.

"We will support you but I need you to make sure you seek any assistance that you may need to come to terms with your loss.

"Draw strength from one another and pay tribute to your mates."

Air Chief Marshal Houston, who is overseas with Senator Faulkner, asked the media to respect the wish of the families not to make public the names of the dead soldiers.

Constant dangers: Faulkner

The deaths were a reminder of the constant dangers faced by Australian troops in Afghanistan, Defence Minister John Faulkner said in a statement, which was read out by Defence Personnel Minister Greg Combet.

"While all Australians will mourn along with those two families, the immensity of their grief cannot be shared," Senator Faulkner said.

"The manner of their deaths from an insidious and indiscriminate improvised explosive device again shows the callous and truly despicable nature of our enemy." I say that it is not callous to defend your homeland against an invading force. It is callous, and truly despicable to try to capitalise on these deaths to score political points, or, to sell newspapers.

It was a great loss to the nation -but obviously not significant enough to end this pointless and futile invasion- and Senator Faulkner sent his sincere condolences to the families of both men.

Seven US soldiers killed

Five US soldiers were killed by an improvised explosive device (IED) in eastern Afghanistan, while another American died in a separate IED attack and the seventh one from small arms fire in the south, said Lieutenant Colonel Beth Robbins in Washington. Three other NATO service members from other countries were also killed in attacks on Monday, two of whom were the Australians.

The French government announced that one of the deaths was a sergeant in the French Foreign Legion.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy "forcefully condemned this blind violence and expressed France's determination to continue working as part of the International Security Assistance Force [ISAF]", his office said. France too knows how to use propaganda to shift blame from themselves as an invasive force, and onto the victim of this invasive force when they defend themselves. Israel has been unsuccessfully trying this tactic to defend its disgraceful attack on the humanitarian boats running the Giza Blockade recently.

Suicide attack on an Afghan police training centre

Separately, two foreign contractors, -notice how casually the phrase foreign contractors is inserted. This means private employees of a private corporation and is another example of the blurring of the lines between the private and the government. This is because your government is actually a registered for profit corporation, and lets not get into the murky waters of the connections between the people who walk from government to private company and -stand up Mr. Dick Cheney- back to government and then to the the private sector again- one of them an American, were killed on Monday in a suicide attack on an Afghan police training centre in the southern city of Kandahar, the US embassy said. Three militants armed with bombs and guns were killed in the attack.

One of the rebels -dehumanizing these people helps the ignorant to work out the good & bad guys easily, just the same as the movies- detonated a bomb-filled car along the wall of the facility hoping to punch open a route for his comrades, the interior ministry said in Kabul.

The two others were shot dead by police guards, ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary told AFP.

There was no claim of responsibility for the bombing but Afghanistan's Taliban is leading a nearly nine-year insurgency to bring down the Western-backed government and evict foreign troops.

Elsewhere, in the southern province of Ghazni, police said five Afghan security guards were killed in two separate attacks while they were escorting NATO logistics convoys.

"There were two roadside bomb attacks against the convoys in Andar and Ab Band districts. Three guards were killed in Andar district and two were killed in Ab Band district," said Ghazni police chief Khial Baz Shairzai.

NATO, US and Afghan troops are preparing their biggest offensive yet against the Taliban in Kandahar province, with total foreign troop numbers in the country set to peak at 150,000 by August.

US President Barack Obama hopes the counter-insurgency strategy focused on the south can allow US troops to start withdrawing next year.

According to an AFP tally, based on one kept by the independent website icasualties.org, 245 foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan so far this year. Last year was the deadliest yet with 520 killed.

Monday's toll was the highest for a single day since the deaths of 11 French soldiers on one day in August 2008. The latest deaths follow Sunday's killings of five NATO soldiers, four of them Americans, in two separate attacks and a vehicle accident.

Plan to reintegrate Taliban fighters

In Madrid, US special envoy Richard Holbrooke said more funds for Afghanistan's plan to reintegrate Taliban fighters who renounce violence -More employment of the Orwellian language known as 'doublespeak'- were likely to be pledged next month at a conference in Kabul.

The July 20 conference is a follow-up to a London summit in January, when donors pledged an initial $US140 million to a so-called Afghanistan Peace and Reconciliation Programme trust fund.

"Almost $US200 million has been committed under a programme led by the Japanese ... and there will more developments on this at the Kabul conference," Mr Holbrooke said.

US soldier charged with murdering civilians

In Washington a US army spokeswoman said an American soldier had been charged with the murder of three civilians in Afghanistan -It's murder when it is not authorised, or not performed by an authorised agent, or, it was authorised, but the wrong guy was hit, or, it was authorised and the right guy was hit, but we were not technically supposed to hit him- and four others had been implicated but not charged in the crimes.

Specialist -What is a "specialist"?- Jeremy Morlock, 22, was charged on Friday with premeditated murder and assault in three separate incidents that occurred in Kandahar province between January and May this year.

AFP, AAP and Paul Tatnell

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/two-australian-soldiers--killed-by-bomb-on-first-tour-of-afghanistan-20100608-xreo.html

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Pope must answer for crimes against humanity

Geoffrey Robertson
April 4, 2010 - 2:00AM

WELL may the Pope defy ''the petty gossip of dominant opinion''. But the Holy See can no longer ignore international law, which now counts the widespread or systematic sexual abuse of children as a crime against humanity.

The anomalous claim of the Vatican to be a state - and of the Pope to be a head of state and hence immune from legal action - cannot stand up to scrutiny.

The shocking finding of Judge Murphy's commission in Ireland was not merely that sexual abuse was ''endemic'' in boys' institutions but that the church hierarchy protected the perpetrators and allowed them to take up new positions teaching other children after their victims had been sworn to secrecy.

This conduct amounted to the criminal offence of aiding and abetting sex with minors. In legal actions against Catholic archdioceses in the US, it has been alleged that the same conduct reflected Vatican policy as approved by Cardinal Ratzinger (as the Pope then was) as late as November 2002.

In the US, 11,750 allegations of child abuse have featured in actions settled by archdioceses - in LA for $US660 million ($717 million); in Boston for $US100 million.

In 2005, a test case in Texas failed because the Vatican sought and obtained the intercession of President George Bush, who agreed to claim sovereign immunity on the Pope's behalf. Bush's lawyer John Bellinger III certified that Pope Benedict XVI was immune from suit ''as the head of a foreign state''.

But the papal states were extinguished by invasion in 1870 and the Vatican was created by fascist Italy in 1929 when Benito Mussolini endowed this tiny enclave with ''sovereignty in the international field''.

But head of state immunity provides no protection for the Pope in the International Criminal Court. The ICC statute definition of a crime against humanity includes rape and sexual slavery and similarly inhumane acts causing harm to mental or physical health, committed against civilians on a widespread or systematic scale, if condoned by a government or a de facto authority.

If acts of sexual abuse by priests are not isolated or sporadic, but part of a wide practice both known to and unpunished by their de facto authority then they fall within the temporal jurisdiction of the ICC - if that practice continued after July 2002, when the court was established.

Geoffrey Robertson, QC, is author of Crimes Against Humanity.

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/pope-must-answer-for-crimes-against-humanity-20100403-rkro.html

Friday, February 26, 2010

Melbourne Age article, They like to watch...

Earlier this month, Australia Post's managers were accused of spying on staff. By using computerised letterboxes, they were able to catch workers falsifying their time sheets. Instead of denying the claims, senior management said they were entitled to secretly monitor their employees because the organisation isn't answerable to state laws.

Perhaps this lack of trust is explained by a global report released at the end of last year, the Global Retail Theft Barometer. It found that Australia was the only country in the Asia Pacific region to list employee theft as the main reason for missing profits and stock shortages. The majority of countries blamed shoplifting for their retail shrinkage rates.

Spying is nothing new for call centre workers, of course. Many of them have their phone conversations recorded "for quality and training purposes", but in reality, they're also used for espionage - or just for a giggle. I used to work in one where managers would listen to employees' personal calls and share with their colleagues what they'd heard.

Boeing allegedly employs a team of investigators who have the authority to read employees' private emails. They even follow workers and secretly take photos and videos of them. In certain cases, they covertly monitor employees' monitors, seeing in real time what their team members are doing on their computers, including their keystrokes.

Hewlett-Packard has faced the most public scrutiny over this issue. In 2006, they were ordered by a court to pay $14.5 million as a result of over-the-top espionage. They read their workers' emails and instant messages, used deception to obtain their phone records, and even initiated physical surveillance of one of their board members.

Internet monitoring is the default way to nab people. I saw a report in one company listing the websites employees had visited, the time spent on each site, and the links that were clicked. This was then used to sack staff because it's easier to dismiss people for inappropriate internet usage than it is to get rid of them for poor performance. Eight blokes had their employment terminated when a check of their emails by the IT department discovered they were forwarding pornographic images to each other.

Potential employees are being spied upon, too. Last year, a poll by Development Dimensions International revealed that 40 per cent of interviewers were worried they didn't have enough information about a candidate to make a decision, so 25 percent of them checked social networking sites, such as MySpace, to find out what a candidate was really like. 60 per cent of those who logged on found the information they needed and were subsequently able to make a hiring choice they felt was right.

Bosses are taking a peek at social networking sites as well. Fearful of what their employees are saying about the company on sites like Twitter, they check their workers' accounts and reprimand them for negative comments. For example, in the UK last February, a teenager was sacked for saying her work was boring on Facebook. In April, a worker in Switzerland was fired for using Facebook while she was sick at home. And in NSW last September, prison officers took their employer to the Industrial Relations Commission seeking the right to criticise their company online.

In some cases, it's understandable to spy on workers, especially when the risk of stolen intellectual property, fraudulent compensation claims, and potential harassment is high. But managers need to be careful that their attempts to minimise risk don't intrude on their employees' privacy. The difference between necessary precautions and micromanagement is small, but the adverse impact on morale is significant. At the very least, give employees advance notice in writing of any surveillance activities.

Once upon a time, managers would just spy with their little eye, but now something beginning with T is making this task simpler. And that word is 'technology'. The rate of employee-monitoring software is increasing in both usage and effectiveness, and it's turning big brother into a big bother.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Tetractys Merkaba BREAKS DOWN INFLAMMATORY & IGNORANT AGE ARTICLE BY PETER ROEBUCK ABOUT SPORT & TERRORISM

By Tetractys Merkaba,

I will dissect this column in red italic as always.


Sport the target as terrorists cross the line

Peter Roebuck -A cricket writer for The Age in Melbourne, The Sydney Morning Herald, and other Fairfax publications.
February 17, 2010 - 3:00AM

THE FOUL smell of evil hovers over sport. This is such an emotionally ridden, opinion, that it could be taken from a tabloid story. What is the meaning of such a strong opening statement? It is an attempt to condition you to Roebuck's belief that terrorists are about to target sporting events. This is the promulgation of fear. Is is justified? This article will try to convince you that it is. Now the terrorists talk of destroying the Commonwealth Games, among the most ancient, absurd and happiest of sporting occasions. The phrase 'the terrorists talk' employs a group blame mentality, rather than specifically looking at a group, or, organisation. It implies an agreement with you on the basis that you know WHO the terrorists are. Roebuck claims that these terrorists want to destroy the games, yet, it is hard to believe him given the precedent set at the Munich Olympic Games in 1972 which DID NOT stop the games. Maybe the games suffer more from the absence of elite athletes such as world #1 sprinter, Usain Bolt. As for being ancient, the Commonwealth, or, EMPIRE Games, have been around for 80 years, starting in Hamilton, Ontario in August, 1930. There were eleven participants, all men, and a look through the participating countries -Australia, Bermuda, British Guinea, Canada, England, Ireland, Newfoundland, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa and Wales- compared to members of the British Empire at the time reveals more than a hint of racism. For example, where are Malaya, India, Jamaica, Hong Kong & Trinidad?

Now they talk of disrupting the hockey World Cup, another glorious and unspoilt enterprise in which numerous nations compete. Perchance Pakistan might play India in the final. I hate to go back to history, but....during the Cold War, America and Russia competed against each other in sports such as basketball, ice hockey, swimming, gymnastics and track and field without feeling the need to employ nuclear devices, or, for their supporters to kill, maim, or, injure each other. Of course, I could point out that the odds of an India v Pakistan final are quite slim, given their respective abilities at hockey. Yet, here we have the first mention of a specific nation, India, and Pakistan. The ICC has banned cricket from being played in Pakistan because of so-called security risks and the Commonwealth Games are being played in India...Perhaps that is the problem. These miseries cannot tolerate anything progressive. This pure opinion, otherwise known as hearsay, or conjecture, as is the next sentence. Humanity itself is their enemy.

Now they talk about stopping the IPL, the most cosmopolitan of cricketing activities, a tournament in which people from all corners, including supposedly bitter rivals, play in the same sides. Except for the raft of talented Pakistani cricketers who were all ignored for potentially racist reasons. For all its failings IPL is a time of merriment and liberalism. No wonder it has become a target. Narrow-minded people only have one agenda. They despise the possibility of love. What??? Isn't it interesting how some people insist on draining human faculties from their enemies? This is a time-honoured tradition. In Australia, during the shameful, degrading, and disgraceful stolen generation era, Originie children who were considered 'too black' were removed from their families, the intention being, ultimately, to breed the 'black' out of them. Nazi German also dehumanized Jews in the 1930's as a prelude to the holocaust. This is either reprehensible, or, ignorant behaviour from Roebuck. It is self-interest camouflaged as self-flagellation.

Inevitably sport will be shaken to the core by these latest threats. Notice the lack of proof to back up his statement. Notice the lack of information regarding the threats. Notice that it is sport itself that will be affected by a game of hockey, the Commonwealth Games and the tippety 20 cricket tournement. I'm not convinced that the Melbourne Cup, the A.F.L Grand Final, NBA Basketball in the States, hurling in Ireland, the Ashes cricket series next summer, junior athletics, or, a whole host of different sport is going to be affected by these vague, unnamed, so-called threats. Sportsmen and women will wonder whether taking part is worth the risk. This statement presumes that sportspersons haven't contemplated, or taken action before on so-called safety grounds. Australia refused to play Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka during the 1996 World Cup, which was of course five years before the 9/11 inside job, which is the precipitation of these 'problems'. Governments will meet with solemn faces and discuss whether they dare send their sons and daughters into this grimness. Sportsmen are not soldiers; they did not sign up for this deal. They trained for years and often decades, pushed themselves to their limits and yearn for the chance to represent their country in sporting conflict.

Of course, sporting bodies and governments ought to defy the threats. But that's easier said than done. Authorities cannot toy with lives, cannot tell athletes that it's all going to be OK. Sometimes it ain't so. Sometimes the terrorists achieve their foul purposes; they did so in Munich in 1972 and not so long ago they struck in the streets of Pakistan as bullets blazed at the Sri Lankan cricket team bus. They did so again in Angola recently as more lives were lost. Yet, incredibly, Sport continues unabated...

So much for sport as a separate world. It wasn't a separate world at the Olympic Games in 1936, nor, was it when South Africa was expelled from international sport for racism while the same governments who were oh-so-appalled at South Africa's racism were more than happy to engage in trade with these same racist South African governments. The U.S refused to attend the Moscow Olympics in 1980, the Russians refused to attend the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. SPORT AND POLITICS ARE INTERMINGLED. They have been since Nero threw Christians to the lions. So much for the notion that terrorists will not cross that line, have any sense that it exists. Clearly sportsmen are regarded as fair game. Not from this article it isn't. Indeed they are stating to become primary targets. Presumably the terrorists regard them as they symbols of all they detest. If that does not persuade sceptics that sport is worth the bother, nothing will. If a presumption doesn't convince you, nothing will.....hmmm.....that is some interesting 'logic'.

The Commonwealth Games are due to be held in Delhi, amid swarming masses and glorious buildings, the smog and the smiles of India. Everyone has been predicting chaos. That's always the case with India. Nothing happens till the last minute. Anyone inspecting broadcasting boxes or stands two days beforehand is wasting his time. Now, though, the Games themselves are under the severest of threats. Already the bomb in the Pune bakery had added to the nervousness. As opposed to the countless other bombs that have gone off in India.

India is in the front line. It will put on a brave face. Alas it only takes one call, one threat, to spread the scare.

Now athletes and hockey players will fear that their aspirations are to be thwarted. Players are driven by the dream of holding up a gold medal or a World Cup. But they also want to live. Sportsmen are prepared to risk their careers on the roll of a dice, but not their lives. Pure opinion, emotionally delivered.

Except by those taking part, the IPL would not be as much missed. Even so, its cancellation would be a victory for the sour. After the threats from Shiv Sena, -An elected, right wing political party, based in Mumbai- it was already under pressure. Now it may sink.

Governments and sporting bodies will remain calm over the next few days and weeks. Naturally they will examine the seriousness of the threats. Promises will be made about security. Competitors from the more ravaged nations might brush them off. Reassuring athletes from safer havens will be incomparably more difficult.

Games can be stopped with a message. Inevitably sport itself and life itself will suffer. Meanwhile the organisers of the terror send their children to their deaths. The last sentence, like the first, is an emotionally charged tabloid sentence.

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/sport/cricket/sport-the-target-as-terrorists-cross-the-line-20100216-o8x9.html

This is a nonsensical article that many of us would simply dismiss. The real danger is that many people who will read this are sporting fans that know nothing about the real agenda in our world. This makes them susceptible to this type of article that blurs the boundary between opinion and 'facts'. In this fast paced world where many people possess neither the time, nor, the inclination to delve deeper into the terrorist issue, they are inclined to sub/conciously embody these opinions as their own. People like these will argue that 9/11 was an outside job, without really knowing why they are so dogmatically holding onto that consideration. This is one of the reasons why.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Israel shrugs off fury over settlement drive

Jason Koutsoukis, Jerusalem and Anne Davies, Washington
November 19, 2009 - 12:00AM

ISRAELI Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has brushed aside international anger about the expansion of Jewish neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem by defining the new plans as ''standard procedure''.

On Tuesday the Jerusalem municipality approved the construction of another 900 housing units in Gilo, which is built on land annexed by Israel after the 1967 Six Day War and is regarded as an illegal settlement by the United Nations.

''The construction in Gilo has been going on for decades, and there is nothing new in the planning procedures,'' said a spokesman for Mr Netanyahu.

Gilo, south of the Jerusalem centre, has 40,000 Jewish residents and completes a ring of Jewish neighbourhoods through East Jerusalem that Palestinians argue prevents the eastern side of the city from becoming a future capital of a Palestinian state.

The new construction plans raised the ire of the US, Britain and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

US State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said: ''We find the Jerusalem planning committee decision to move forward the approval process for the expansion of Gilo, in Jerusalem, as dismaying.''

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said in a statement: ''At a time when we are working to relaunch negotiations, these actions make it more difficult for our efforts to succeed.''

The White House went further and reprimanded Israel about other activities related to housing.

''The US also objects to other Israeli practices in Jerusalem related to housing, including the continuing pattern of evictions and demolitions of Palestinian homes,'' Mr Gibbs said.

''Our position is clear: the status of Jerusalem is a permanent status issue that must be resolved through negotiations between the parties.''

Diplomatic sources said that Israeli officials ignored a request on Monday by US President Barack Obama's Middle East envoy George Mitchell to halt the Gilo decision.

Mr Ban also issued a tersely worded statement deploring the Israeli Government's decision on the Gilo settlement, stressing that it was built on Palestinian territory occupied by Israel in the 1967 war.

''The Secretary-General reiterates his position that settlements are illegal, and calls on Israel to respect its commitments under the road map to cease all settlement activity, including natural growth,'' a statement issued by his office said, referring to the peace plan that foresees two states - Israel and Palestine - living side by side in peace and security.

Since Mr Obama was sworn into office in January, a key plank of his strategy to restart peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians has been to demand that Israel cease all settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Israel has repeatedly refused to consider a construction freeze of any kind in East Jerusalem, offering instead to impose a temporary construction freeze in the West Bank during the resumption of future negotiations with the Palestinians.

Despite its ostensibly tough stance, the Obama Administration has sent mixed signals.

Last month US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Mr Netanyahu's offer as ''unprecedented''.

But in the face of a furious response from the Arab world, and the announcement by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas that he would quit politics, Mr Obama has renewed his insistence that Israel halt all settlement construction.

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/israel-shrugs-off-fury-over-settlement-drive-20091118-imhm.html

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Rudd blames climate sceptics for global sabotage

Adam Morton and Daniel Flitton
November 7, 2009 - 12:09AM

KEVIN Rudd has launched a full frontal assault on global warming sceptics, lumping Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull in with a ''new league of world government conspiracy theorists'' he accuses of sabotaging progress on a climate treaty.

The attack came as senior politicians conceded a treaty to cut greenhouse gas emissions is not possible this year, and will be delayed at least six months.

Wealthy nations said the best hope for next month's Copenhagen climate summit was a ''politically binding'' agreement, setting out timelines and emissions targets for rich nations, as well as funding for poor nations to adapt to climate impacts.

The pessimism followed a week in which 50 African nations briefly walked out of UN climate talks in Barcelona, accusing the leaders of wealthy nations - including, by name, Mr Rudd - of not doing enough to cut emissions.

''I don't think we can get a legally binding agreement by Copenhagen - I think that we can get that within a year after Copenhagen," UN climate chief Yvo de Boer said.

Climate Change Minister Penny Wong said the minimum result for Copenhagen to be considered a success would be ''an effective political agreement''.

Yesterday the Prime Minister accused conservative politicians and media commentators of ''quite literally holding the world to ransom, provoking fear campaigns in every country they can''.

Speaking in Sydney, he said climate sceptics came in several guises: from those in outright denial - comparing them with cigarette companies that dismissed a link between smoking and lung cancer - to those who paid lip service to the scientific evidence but preached a wait-and-see response. ''It's time to remove any polite veneer from this debate,'' Mr Rudd said. ''The stakes are that high.''

''If Copenhagen does not deliver the outcome we so urgently need, no individual climate change sceptic will be responsible, but each of them will have played their part.''

He said Mr Turnbull's refusal to back the proposed emissions trading scheme was evidence of entrenched scepticism in conservative politics.

The speech came as negotiations continue over amendments to the emissions trading scheme. Senator Wong confirmed the Government would not accept all the Opposition's proposals due to updated Treasury costings revealing a massive shortfall in revenue from the scheme.

Mr Turnbull dismissed Mr Rudd's attack as an attempt to distract attention from the controversy over border protection policy. ''He ought to calm down and concentrate on the negotiations,'' Mr Turnbull said.

This week's UN climate meeting was the last before the Copenhagen conference. Observers believe a legal treaty may be possible at a second Copenhagen meeting in mid-2010 or at another UN summit in Mexico next December.

The US this week tried to push responsibility for the perceived failure of climate talks on to China. Its chief climate envoy, Todd Stern, said the US would not agree to emissions targets unless China made similar moves.

But a new analysis suggests developing countries are acting. Consultants Ecofys found major developing nations are on track to slow their emissions growth by more than 20 per cent by 2020.

This meets one of the Rudd Government's conditions for Australia to set a target of a 25 per cent cut in emissions by 2020. But the condition that Australia wants other rich nations to meet - that they agree to cut emissions by at least 25 per cent in total - has not been met.

With AGENCIES

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/environment/rudd-blames-climate-sceptics-for-global-sabotage-20091106-i28m.html
Prime Minister's address to the Lowy Institute

November 7, 2009 - 12:09AM

I acknowledge the First Australians on whose land we meet, and whose cultures we celebrate as among the oldest continuing cultures in human history.

Thank you Michael and thanks to all the supporters of the Lowy Institute for joining us today.

As you know, I attended the Major Economies Forum in L’Aquila in July; I was recently at the G20 Leaders meeting in Pittsburgh; and next week I will travel to the APEC Leaders meeting in Singapore.

At each of these meetings, and in constant bilateral conversations being conducted by national leaders around the world, the common thematic is: What does our nation, what does our region and what does the world do to respond to climate change, the greatest long term threat to us all?

As APEC leaders gather in Singapore next week, this is a critical question.

The Asia Pacific region will play the key role in leading the world into economic recovery. Similarly, our region must play a central role if we are to forge a global consensus on tackling climate change.

This afternoon I want to set out the views that I will be reflecting to other world leaders in the days and weeks ahead, in bilateral conversations and in forums such as APEC, leading up to the Copenhagen summit.

Australia and the world today stand at critical junctures in our national and global strategies to tackle climate change.

It is around 20 days until the Senate votes on the Australian Government’s Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.

20 days until the most important vote on our national strategy to tackle climate change.

20 days away from the vote on the Government’s cap and trade emissions trading system which both sides of politics have recognised as the lowest cost way to tackle climate change.

And we are just 31 days away from the Copenhagen Conference of Parties – an historic moment to forge a global deal to put a global price on carbon.

Today we are approaching the crossroads. Both these policies are reaching crunch time.

When you strip away all the political rhetoric, all the political excuses, there are two stark choices – action or inaction. The resolve of the Australian Government is clear – we choose action, and we do so because Australia’s fundamental economic and environmental interests lie in action.

Action now. Not action delayed.

As one of the hottest and driest continents on earth, Australia’s environment and economy will be among the hardest and fastest hit by climate change if we do not act now. The scientific evidence from the CSIRO and other expert bodies have outlined the implications for Australia, in the absence of national and global action on climate change:

Temperatures in Australia rising by around five degrees by the end of the century.

By 2070, up to 40 per cent more drought months are projected in eastern Australia and up to 80 per cent more in south-western Australia.
A fall in irrigated agricultural production in the Murray Darling Basin of over 90 per cent by 2100.
Storm surges and rising sea levels – putting at risk over 700,000 homes and businesses around our coastlines, with insurance companies warning that preliminary estimates of the value of property in Australia exposed to the risk of land being inundated or eroded by rising sea levels range from $50 billion to $150 billion.
Our Gross National Product dropping by nearly two and a half per cent through the course of this century from the devastation climate change would wreak on our infrastructure alone.

The Government took a plan to tackle climate change to the last election, to tackle the risks climate change poses to our planet, and especially to the health, lifestyle and livelihoods of our children.

That plan included two fundamental parts:

First, a domestic plan of action to reduce Australia’s carbon pollution, including:

Expanding the Renewable Energy Target to 20 per cent by 2020 (and subsequently directly investing over $2 billion in renewable energy, including investment in large scale solar generating capacity that will be three times larger than the world’s current largest project).
A national energy efficiency strategy to reduce the energy that we can consume, and undertaking the largest investment in energy efficiency ever seen in this country.
A Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme that will increase the cost of carbon over time and facilitate a transition to a low carbon pollution economy.

The second part of our strategy is participation in global action to tackle climate change, including:

ratifying the Kyoto Protocol;
participating in global technology transfers – including Australian leadership in a global coalition to develop carbon capture and storage through the Australia-initiated Global Carbon Capture and Storage Institute; and
strong engagement towards a new post-Kyoto global agreement .

This was the platform we took to the Australian people at the election. This is the program of action we have been prosecuting over the past two years. Yet the cornerstone of this program of action, the CPRS, still lies stymied in the Senate.

Australia has certainly not been alone in our endeavours to tackle global climate change. At the same time, around the world we have seen nations of every political stripe take concrete action to work towards legislation in this critical area – actions which have been slowly building towards coordinated international action to tackle climate change. And most nations have been engaged in the multilateral process – through the Bali Roadmap two years ago, through the 14th Conference of the Parties in Poznan, Poland last year, and the intensifying global negotiations leading up to the 15th Conference of Parties in Copenhagen this year.

Today, the culmination of this domestic and global action is in sight. Much progress has been made, but, the truth is that there is still a long way to go. In fact, the hardest part of our journey is ahead of us over the next 31 days.

This is a profoundly important time for our nation, for our world and for our planet.

In Australia, we must pass our Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme – to deliver certainty for business at home and to play our part abroad in any global agreement to bring greenhouse gases down.

President Obama in the United States is also working hard so that he can take strong commitments to Copenhagen. And let us never forget that in the US, as in Australia, under both our respective previous governments, zero action was taken on bringing in cap and trade schemes meaning that the governments that replaced them began with a zero start.

Other countries are striving to build domestic political momentum in their own countries to take strong commitments into the global deal.

The challenge we face, and others around the world face, is to build momentum and overcome domestic political constraints.

The truth is this is hard, because the climate change skeptics, the climate change deniers, the opponents of climate change action are active in every country.

They are a minority. They are powerful. And invariably they are driven by vested interests.

Powerful enough to so far block domestic legislation in Australia, powerful enough to so far slow down the passage of legislation through the US Congress. And ultimately – by limiting the ambition of national climate change commitments – they are powerful enough to threaten a deal on global climate change both in Copenhagen and beyond.

The opponents of action on climate change fall into one of three categories.

First, the climate science deniers.
Second, those that pay lip service to the science and the need to act on climate change but oppose every practicable mechanism being proposed to bring about that action.
Third, those in each country that believe their country should wait for others to act first.

Together, these groups, alive in every major country including Australia, constitute a powerful global force for inaction, and they are particularly entrenched in a range of conservative parties around the world.

As we approach Copenhagen, these three groups of climate skeptics are quite literally holding the world to ransom.

Provoking fear campaigns in every country they can.

Blocking or delaying domestic legislation in every country they can.

With the objective of slowing and if possible destroying the momentum towards a global deal on climate change.

As we approach the Copenhagen conference these groups of climate change deniers face a moment of truth, and the truth is this: we will need to work much harder to reach an agreement in Copenhagen because these advocates of inaction are holding back domestic commitments, and are in turn holding back global commitments on climate change.

It is time to be totally blunt about the agenda of the climate change skeptics in all their colours – some more sophisticated than others.

It is to destroy the CPRS at home, and it is to destroy agreed global action on climate change abroad, and our children’s fate – and our grandchildren’s fate – will lie entirely with them.

It’s time to remove any polite veneer from this debate. The stakes are that high.

The first category of those opposed to action is the vocal group of conservatives who do not accept the scientific consensus. This group believes the science is inconclusive and does not provide an evidentiary basis for anthropogenic climate change.

In Australia, before the 2007 election, this group was thought to be relatively small. There appeared – for a time – to be bipartisan consensus on the need for action on climate change. In recent times, this bipartisan support has frayed.

As one Liberal Member of Parliament said to Phil Coorey of the Sydney Morning Herald last year:

"[at the last election we supported an ETS because] we were staring at an electoral abyss. We had to pretend we cared."
(SMH, 28 JULY 2008)

More recently that pretence has been increasingly cast aside. Would-be Liberal leader Tony Abbott said in July this year that "the science … is contentious to say the least". (27 July 2009)

Liberal Senator Cory Bernardi said:

"I remain unconvinced about the need for an ETS given that carbon dioxide is vital for life on earth".

Liberal Senator Alan Eggleston said:

"Levels of carbon dioxide have risen in the world, but whether or not this is the sole cause or just a contributor to climate change is, I think, unanswered."
(11 AUGUST 2009)

Liberal Senate leader Nick Minchin said this year:

"CO2 is not by any stretch of the imagination a pollutant… This whole extraordinary scheme is based on the as yet unproven assertion that anthropogenic emissions of CO2 are the main driver of global warming."
(11 AUGUST 2009)

Alternative Liberal leader Joe Hockey – who knows better – has been drawn into the same sort of doublespeak, remarking on the Today Show in August:

"Look, climate change is real Karl, you know whether it is made by human beings or not that is open to dispute."
(12 AUGUST 2009)

Even the leader of the Opposition, once Minister for the Environment, Malcolm Turnbull, has flirted with this doublespeak, telling Alan Jones on 2GB:

"I think most people have at least some doubts about the science."
(19 JUNE 2009)

The tentacles of the climate change skeptics reach deep into the ranks of the Liberal Party and, once you add the National Party, its plan, the skeptics and the deniers are a major force.

Climate sceptics are also a powerful political lobby in the United States.

Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steel said on 6 March 2009:

"We are cooling. We are not warming. The warming you see out there, the supposed warming, and I am using my finger quotation marks here, is part of the cooling process."

House Minority Leader John Boehner said on April 19 2009:

"The idea that carbon dioxide is a carcinogen that is harmful to our environment is almost comical. Every time we exhale, we exhale carbon dioxide."

Republican Congressman John Shimkus said on 25 March 2009:

"If we decrease the use of carbon dioxide, are we not taking away plant food from the atmosphere?"

The legion of climate change skeptics are active across the world, and they happily play with our children’s future.

The clock is ticking for the planet, but the climate change skeptics simply do not care. The vested interests at work are simply too great.

It's been more than 30 years since the first World Climate Conference called on governments to guard against potential climate hazards.

It's been 20 years since the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was formed and produced its first report.

17 years ago, in 1992, the international community acknowledged the importance of tackling climate change at the Rio Earth Summit and created the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

And the most recent IPCC scientific conclusion in 2007 was that "warming of the climate system is unequivocal" and the "increase in global average temperatures since the mid 20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations."

This is the conclusion of 4,000 scientists appointed by governments from virtually every country in the world, and the term "very likely" is defined in the scientific conclusion of this report as being 90 per cent probable.

Attempts by politicians in this country and others to present what is an overwhelming global scientific consensus as little more than an unfolding debate, with two sides evenly represented in a legitimate scientific argument, are nothing short of intellectually dishonest. They are a political attempt to subvert what is now a longstanding scientific consensus, an attempt to twist the agreed science in the direction of a predetermined political agenda to kill climate change action.

It reminds me of the efforts of the smoking lobby decades ago as they tried for years to politically subvert by so-called scientific means that there was any link between smoking and lung cancer.

Put more simply: these climate change sceptics around the world would be laughable if they were not so politically powerful – particularly in the ranks of conservative parties.

The second group of do-nothing climate change skeptics are those who purport to accept the scientific consensus, but in the next breath are unwilling to support any of the practicable plans of action that would actually do something about climate change. This group plays lip service to the climate change science but when push comes to shove refuse to support climate change action. In Australia, these naysayers have successfully blocked the development of an emissions trading scheme for more than a decade.

After 12 years of inaction under the previous government, this government has worked to build a national consensus around our Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme. We took the concept to the people at the 2007 election, and since then we have methodically, clearly and comprehensively worked towards passage of our scheme.

The Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme Green Paper was released on 16 June 2008.

The Garnaut Climate Change Review was released on 30 September 2008.

The Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme White Paper was released on 15 December 2008.

The Draft Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme legislation was released in March.

There have been numerous Senate Inquiries.

There have also been numerous industry consultations.

As of May 2009, the Government had built wide support for action on climate through a carbon pollution reduction scheme.

There was broad business, environmental and community support from:

- The Business Council of Australia

- The Australian Industry group

- The Climate Institute

- The Australian Conservation Foundation

- The World Wildlife Fund

- The Australian Council of Social Services representing lower income Australians.



Today, after so many reports, reviews, consultations, not to mention the small matter of an election - the overwhelming need for Australia to tackle the great challenge of our generation is being frustrated by the do-nothing climate change skeptics.

As recently as last year, the Leader of the Opposition was emphatic in his support for an emissions trading scheme. He said it was the "central mechanism" in the fight against climate change.

Speaking at the National Press Club in May last year, he stated:

"The Emissions Trading Scheme is the central mechanism to decarbonise our economy."
(21 May 2008)


A few days later, he said:

"The biggest element in the fight against climate change has to be the emissions-trading scheme."
(HANSARD - 26 MAY 2008)

But still today, after so many reports and consultations, the Liberal Party, the National Party and other opponents of action raise objections to the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.

Their objections fall into three categories:

Some argue that the cost is too high in terms of its impact on our economy.

Others argue that the cost is too high in terms of its impact on households.

And others object to the system of global emissions trading because they believe it will unjustifiably transfer money and power from rich countries to poor countries.

Let us take each of these in turn.

First is the cost to our economy and jobs.

This has been a constant theme of the Liberal and National Parties’ attacks on the CPRS. Mr Turnbull said the CPRS "is guaranteed to slow our economic recovery, cost us jobs."

And the de facto leader of the National Party, Barnaby Joyce, refers to the emissions trading scheme as the "employment termination scheme" – whereas I thought any self-respecting National Party leader would be out there standing up for farmers facing 40 to 80 per cent more drought in the future, rather than betraying them.

The facts about the impact of unmitigated climate change on the one hand and the CPRS on the other tell a very different story, but that eternal motto of the Liberal and National Parties is never let the facts stand in the road of a good fear campaign – whether it’s debt, border security or climate change.

Here are the facts.

Treasury modelling done in 2008 demonstrates Australia can continue to achieve strong trend economic growth while making significant cuts in emissions through the CPRS. Treasury modelling also demonstrates that all major employment sectors grow over the years to 2020 - substantially increasing employment from today’s levels. Treasury modelling also projects that clean industries will create sustainable jobs of the future – in fact by 2050 the renewable electricity sector will be 30 times larger than it is today.

Another element of the Liberal and National fear campaign about the design of the CPRS is that it will impose unmanageable cost on households.

Again, Senator Joyce – fearmonger in chief on climate change, he who therefore betrays the real interests of Australian farmers – puts the position of the Liberal and National parties as follows:

"If you live in a cave with a candle you would probably be OK, but if your house is wired up for power then every electrical appliance will be attached to a power generator which in all likelihood will pay a tax and that tax will be passed on to you, the consumer."
(Joyce - 27 JULY 2009)

Again, the facts on the true household costs and impacts of the CPRS tell a different story. Treasury modelling again demonstrates that the price impact of the CPRS is modest. The CPRS is expected to raise household prices by 0.4 per cent in 2011-12 and 0.8 per cent in 2012-13, and the government has provided household compensation to help assist with these modest cost rises.

Pensioners, seniors, carers and people with disability and low-income households will receive additional support to fully meet the expected overall increase in the cost of living flowing from the scheme. Middle-income households will also receive additional support to help meet the expected overall increase in the cost of living flowing from the scheme.

A third argument from those who quibble with the design of the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme is that the international design aspects of the scheme are flawed.

Lord Christopher Monckton - a former adviser to Margaret Thatcher - was quoted this week in the Australian press by Janet Albrechtsen. Lord Monckton describes the potential Copenhagen agreement as a plan to set up a transnational "government" on a scale the world has never before seen. Enter the "world government" conspiracy theorists.

Lord Monckton also publicly warned Americans that "in the next few weeks, unless you stop it, your president will sign your freedom, your democracy and your prosperity away forever."

Janet Albrechtsen, in her understated neo-conservative way, refers to the potential Copenhagen agreement as a UN "power grab". This gaggle of world government conspiracy theorists are so far out there on the far right, that they rub up next to the global anarchists of the far left.

Those who argue that any multilateral action is by definition evil.

Those who argue that climate change does not represent a global market failure.

Those who argue that somehow the market will magically solve the problem.

And that uncoordinated national actions will fix the problem.

Without answering the basic logical question of how can we deal with an existential challenge for the whole planet which lies beyond the capacity of any individual national action to address.

The climate change deniers now form the comfortable bedfellows of the global conspiracy theorists – in total bald-faced denial of global scientific, economic and environmental reality. These arguments – thinly veiled attempts to create a new climate change global conspiracy theory – are now being used in Australia.

Like the arguments from climate change deniers, these arguments have zero basis in evidence.

Where is their equivalent evidence basis to Treasury modelling published by the Government of the industry and employment impacts of climate change?

Where is their equivalent evidence basis to Treasury modelling published by the Government on the cost impacts for households from the CPRS – and on the adequacy of the compensation arrangements put in place by the Government in our White Paper?

The answer once again is there is none.

Where is the evidence basis offered by the new league of world government conspiracy theorists that climate change can be effectively dealt with by market means or by uncoordinated national means?

Answer – there is none.

The truth is that the do-nothing climate change skeptics offer no alternative official body of evidence from any credible government in the world.

Absolutely none. The truth is they offer zero evidence.

Instead they offer maximum fear, the universal conservative stock in trade.

And by doing so, these do-nothing climate change skeptics are prepared to destroy our children’s future.

The third group of climate deniers are those who pretend to accept the science but then urge delay because they don’t want their country to be the first to act.

In Australia there was once a political consensus resisting this parochial view.

The Shergold Report commissioned by John Howard and written by the head of the Prime Minister’s department recommended that Australia should not wait for the rest of the world to act:

"... waiting until a truly global response emerges before imposing an emissions cap will place costs on Australia by increasing business uncertainty and delaying or losing investment."
(Report of the Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions Trading, June 2007, p.6)

The current Leader of the Opposition also stated that a domestic ETS would help in international negotiations too:

"... our first hand experience in implementing … an emissions trading system would be of considerable assistance in our international discussions and negotiation aimed at achieving an effective global agreement."
(Turnbull – SMH Opinion Piece – 9 July 2008)

Then the Leader of the Opposition stated he no longer supported domestic action before Copenhagen:

"I would not find, I would not support finalising the design this year. Even the best designed scheme in theory needs to have the input of the knowledge of what happens at Copenhagen and what the Americans will do."
(AM – 16 MARCH 2009)

Seven times the Liberals and Nationals have promised to make a decision on their policy on climate change – and seven times they have delayed.

In December 2007 they said wait for Garnaut.

In September 2008 they said wait for Treasury modelling.

In September 2008 they said wait for the White Paper.

In December 2008 they said wait until the Pearce Report.

In April 2009 they said wait for the Senate Inquiry.

In May 2009 they said wait for the Productivity Commission - forgetting that the Productivity Commission already made a submission on emissions trading to the Howard Government’s Shergold Report.

Now the Liberals and National have said wait for Copenhagen and for President Obama’s scheme.

It is an endless cycle of delay – and I am sure that with December almost upon us, the eighth excuse cannot be far away – which will be to wait until the next year or the year after until all the rest of the world has acted at which time Australia will act.

What absolute political cowardice.

What an absolute failure of leadership.

What an absolute failure of logic.

The inescapable logic of this approach is that if every nation makes the decision not to act until others have done so, then no nation will ever act.

The immediate and inevitable consequence of this logic – if echoed in other countries – is that there will be no global deal as each nation says to its domestic constituencies that they cannot act because others have not acted.

The result is a negotiating stalemate. A permanent standoff.

And this of course is the consistent ambition of all three groups of do-nothing climate change deniers.

As we approach Copenhagen, it becomes clearer that the domestic political pressure produced by the climate change skeptics now has profound global consequences by reducing the momentum towards an ambitious global deal. The argument that we must not act until others do is an argument that has been used by political cowards since time immemorial – both of the left and the right.

To take just one example, it has been used as an argument to retain protectionism, stifling economic growth and global competition, and preventing the spread of global prosperity.

As many have noted, it is the international political version of the prisoner’s dilemma. If we allow our actions to be dictated by what we falsely conclude to be in our narrow self-interest, then we harm not just others but ourselves as well because climate change inaction harms us as well.

Climate change deniers are small in number, but they are too dangerous to be ignored. They are well resourced and well represented by political conservatives in many, many countries.

And the danger they pose is this – by collapsing political momentum towards national and global action on climate change, they collapse global political will to act at all. They are the stick that gets stuck in the wheel, that despite its size may yet bring the train to a complete stop.

And that is what they want, because they are driven by a narrowly defined self interest of the present and are utterly contemptuous towards our children’s interest in the future.

This brigade of do-nothing climate change skeptics are dangerous because if they succeed, then it is all of us who will suffer.

Our children.

And our grandchildren.

If we fail, then it will be a failure that will echo through future generations.

The consequences for Australia of failing to act domestically and internationally on climate change are severe. We know from formal global and national economic modelling that the costs of inaction are greater than the costs of acting. Treasury modelling from October 2008 shows that economies that defer action on climate change face long-term costs around 15 per cent higher than those that take action now.

The sooner we act, the better placed our companies will be to benefit from new emerging global markets, and to benefit from the economic gains from improved efficiency. Moving to a low pollution economy will require significant investment in renewable energy, carbon capture and storage, energy efficiency and other low emissions technologies.

We need to start giving the signal to investors that they need to factor the price of carbon into their decisions to make the investments we need. Importantly, business needs certainty to make these investments.

As Greig Gailey, former President of the Business Council of Australia said:

"Only business can make the many investments needed to transition Australia to a low carbon economy. To do this business needs certainty."

Without passage of the CPRS there will be no certainty for business. That is why business groups like the Business Council of Australia and the Australian Industry Group want to see the major parties come together and vote on the CPRS this year.

Heather Ridout, Chief Executive of the Australian Industry Group said:

".... many of our members are telling us that they are holding off making investments until there is a greater degree of clarity around domestic climate change legislation."
(ADECCO Group Australia Breakfast – 15 October 2009)

Russell Caplan, Chairman of Shell Australia, said:

"... we believe a far greater risk is that Australia misses the opportunity to put a policy framework in place to deal with this issue. This would create a climate of continuing uncertainty for industry and potentially delay the massive investments required."
(BRW - 6 August 2009)

These are the implications for Australia. These are the political challenges we now face both at home and abroad.

But my unequivocal message to the nation today is that this nation Australia will not be deterred.

Our course is clear.

That is why this government will press forward with our plan to tackle climate change domestically and globally.

Domestically we will press forward with the passage of the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.

It will be voted on in the House in the week beginning Monday November 16.

It will be introduced into the Senate immediately after the vote in the House.

It will then be voted on in the Senate in the week beginning 23 November.

We welcome the Opposition’s recent cooperation and I’m pleased to hear from Minister Wong that negotiations are proceeding in good faith. I’d like to personally commend the Member for Groome for his genuine efforts to engage with the Government in good faith to reach a reasonable outcome with the Government that will finally deliver action on Climate Change.

We are of course concerned by the comments of the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate that "even if the government accepts all our amendments, we may well still vote against the bill."
(NICK MINCHIN- 2UE- 30 OCTOBER 2009)

The do-nothing climate change skeptics are still alive and well in the Coalition. After 12 years of inaction, and after two years of preparation, the nation demands a genuine timetable and good faith negotiations to give business the certainty they need with climate change.

The Australian Government is also committed to intensively engaging to support an ambitious agreement in Copenhagen.

At Copenhagen we need an ambitious agreement on mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

As UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said yesterday, the formal UN negotiations are moving slowly.

The UN Secretary-General has said we must maximise the agreement we can reach in Copenhagen. They can resolve some issues, but not others.

Now is time for strenuous efforts by all leaders and ministers.

Denmark’s Prime Minister Rasmussen is engaging a growing number of leaders – in the Copenhagen Commitment Circle – to accelerate engagement by leaders.

Australia is committed to playing a leadership role and has joined Mexico and the UN Secretary-General in the initial group of 'friends of the Chair’ to help build consensus and draw out concrete commitments from across the world.

In July this year at the G8 meetings in L’Aquila, Australia helped form a 2 degree Celsius 450 ppm ambition for global action on climate change, and it was at this meeting that Australia launched the Global Carbon Capture and Storage Institute, a concrete initiative to make CCS technology a reality.

Australia is currently chair of the Pacific Island Forum which this year delivered the Pacific Leaders’ Climate Change Call to Action demanding urgent action on a real threat to the viability of some Pacific communities.

In September, Australia at the request of the UN Secretary-General co-chaired a roundtable at the UN Special Session on Climate Change – with a view to driving a sense of political urgency with other leaders, and representing the views of the Pacific.

Australia has launched the Forest Carbon Partnerships with Indonesia and Papua New Guinea – an initiative providing policy and technical support to protect the great forests in our neighbourhood.

And Australia has established a $150 million Climate Change Adaptation Fund - supporting vulnerable nations dealing with the real impact of climate change, with a strong focus on the Pacific.

For years – and then, with increasing intensity, in recent months – do-nothing climate change skeptics have been mounting a systematic campaign against action on climate change.

Their aim is not to convince every person on earth of the follies of acting on climate change. Their aim is to erode just enough of the political will that action becomes impossible.

By slowing the actions of each individual country, they aim to slowly drag global negotiations on climate change to a standstill. By hampering decisive action at a national level, they aim to make it impossible at an international level.

If Copenhagen does not deliver the outcome we so urgently need, no individual climate change skeptic will be responsible, but each of them will have played their part.

The corrosive effect of climate skeptics eroding the political will to act may be the disintegration of any possibility of meaningful action on climate change.

In this debate the climate change skeptics have erected an intellectual house of cards based on one simple premise: that the cost of not acting is nothing.

When you boil down their arguments, their world government conspiracy theories and their back of the envelope calculations – that in its starkest simplicity and entirety is what is left: that the cost of not acting is nothing.

That is the simplest premise upon which the scepticism of Malcolm, Barnaby, Andrew, Alan, Janet and even Lord Monckton is based. They cling to that single premise like a polar bear clings to a melting iceberg.

Without that premise, their scepticism is sunk. Malcolm, Barnaby, Andrew, Janet and the Thatcherite Lord Monckton are betting the house on that simple premise that the cost of not acting is nothing.

For people who claim to hold the conservative torch, their scepticism is in fact radical in its riskiness and recklessness. By deliberately undermining and eroding the capacity to achieve both domestic and international action on climate change the skeptics are attempting to force the world to take the single most reckless bet in our long history.

They are betting our future, the future of our children and our grandchildren, and they are doing so based on their own personal intuitions, their personal prejudices and their deeply ingrained political prejudices.

And they are doing so in the total absence of any genuine body of evidence.

Climate change skeptics in all their guises and disguises are not conservatives. They are radicals.

They are reckless gamblers who are betting all our futures on their arrogant assumption that their intuitions should triumph over the evidence.

The logic of these skeptics belongs in a casino, not a science lab, and not in the ranks of any responsible government.

Malcolm, Barnaby, Andrew, Janet, even Lord Monckton shouldn’t even bother with the pretence of science and just admit the currency of their prescription for inaction has all the legitimacy of a roulette wheel.

Basically, let’s just sit back, do nothing and see what happens.

The alternative – our alternative – is to base policy on the evidence.

No responsible government confronted with the evidence delivered by the 4,000 scientists associated with the international panel could then in conscience choose not to act. In any public company, it would represent a gross contempt of the most basic fiduciary duty.

Malcolm and Barnaby might like to bet the future of Australia on the off chance of winning an election, but this Government will not.

A fairly well-known bloke once said that when gambling:

You’ve got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em.

Know when to walk away, know when to run.

My message to the climate change skeptics, to the big betters and the big risk takers is this:

You are betting our children’s future and the future of our grandchildren.

You are betting our jobs, our houses, our farms, our reefs, our economy and our future on an intuition – on a gut feeling; on a political prejudice you have about science.

That is too big a risk, too radical a departure from the basic conservative principles of public policy.

Malcolm, Barnaby, Andrew, Janet – stop gambling with our future.

You’ve got to know when to fold 'em – and for the skeptics, that time has come.

The Government I lead will act.

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/environment/prime-ministers-address-to-the-lowy-institute-20091106-i2bo.html

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Iran threat on nuclear fuel talks

Jeffrey Fleishman, Cairo
October 21, 2009 - 12:00AM

IRAN has threatened to accelerate its uranium enrichment capabilities if talks with world powers in Vienna don't reach a compromise.

The talks are exploring an international plan to provide materials for Iran's nuclear program.

Negotiators from the US and Europe are seeking a deal that would allow Russia to enrich uranium as much as 20 per cent to fuel an Iranian medical research reactor to produce isotopes for treating cancer. The agreement would ease Western concern over Iran developing the ability to raise its own enrichment levels, which the US says could move Iran closer to building a nuclear weapon.

Iran has indicated it would allow another country to enrich a portion of its uranium. But officials said hours before the Vienna gathering that Iranians would step up their enrichment capacity if the talks failed.

The talks opened with acrimony as Iran threatened to ''retaliate'' against the US and Britain after Sunday's suicide bombing in the south-east that killed six commanders in the Revolutionary Guard. The Sunni Muslim militant group Jundallah claimed responsibility for the attack, which also killed 36 other people.

Tehran insists the organisation has direct ties to the US, British and Pakistani intelligence services. The three countries have denied the claims.

''If the Vienna talks fail to satisfy Iran, a letter will be written to the International Atomic Energy Agency to announce that Iran will take the necessary action to supply nuclear fuel to the Tehran reactor,'' Ali Shirzadian, spokesman for Iran's nuclear agency, said. ''Iran can enrich uranium at 20 per cent, and it will do so, if needed, to provide fuel for the reactor.''

Uranium in nature has very low levels of the isotope uranium-235, which is necessary for a nuclear reaction. It can fuel nuclear power plants if the isotope is enriched to about a 3 per cent level and can be used for medical treatments at higher levels. Ideally, it must be enriched to about 90 per cent to provide weapons-grade uranium, but cruder weapons can be made at lower levels.

The plan is for Russia to import Iran's stockpile of 3.5 per cent-enriched uranium, enrich it to 20 per cent and ship it to France to be turned into fuel rods that would be sent to Iran for use in the medical reactor.

''We need between 150 and 300 kilograms of nuclear fuel, and it would not be economical to produce it in Iran,'' Mr Shirzadian said. ''Iran's offer to have its uranium enriched abroad is a test of honesty for the West.''

But even as negotiations began, Iran signalled it would probably oppose France's involvement in the enrichment process. Iran's state-owned Press TV stated: ''Sources close to the meeting (said) that Iran might remove France from the list of bidders as Paris has failed to deliver its nuclear materials in the past.''

LOS ANGELES TIMES

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/iran-threat-on-nuclear-fuel-talks-20091020-h6wh.html

Scientist caught in spy sting

Washington
October 21, 2009 - 12:00AM

US AUTHORITIES have arrested a leading American scientist who had worked for the White House and NASA and charged him with attempting to sell top-secret information to Israel for $US11,000 ($A11,950).

Stewart Nozette, 52, was apprehended after a sting operation involving an undercover FBI agent, the Department of Justice said, adding that there was no wrongdoing by Israel.

Nozette, who was arrested in a Washington suburb and taken into custody, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison.

He developed an experiment that fuelled the discovery of water on the south pole of the moon, and previously held special security clearance at the Department of Energy on atomic materials.

In addition to stints at the US space agency NASA and the Department of Energy, Nozette worked at the White House on the National Space Council under then-president George Bush snr in 1989 and 1990.

In early September, Nozette received a phone call from a person ''purporting to be an Israeli intelligence officer, but who was in fact an undercover employee of the FBI'', the Justice Department said.

''Nozette met with the UCE [undercover employee] that day and discussed his willingness to work for Israeli intelligence,'' informing the agent that ''he had, in the past, held top security clearances and had access to US satellite information''.

First, Nozette answered questions for a $US2000 cash payment, including one answer that ''contained information classified as secret'', the Justice Department said.

Later in September, the suspect picked up a payment of $US9000 in cash and more questions, answers to which he returned to a drop-spot in a manila envelope this month.

AFP

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/scientist-caught-in-spy-sting-20091020-h6wg.html

No winner for African leadership prize

Mark Tran, London
October 21, 2009 - 12:00AM

A FOUNDATION set up to award a $US5 million ($A5.4 million) annual prize for good governance in Africa has said there will be no winner this year because it could not find anyone to award it to.

The Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership is awarded only to democratically elected heads of state who have left office in the past three years.

That requirement limits the pool of contenders, eliminating the continent's long-standing leaders, some of whom have held on to power for decades.

In a snub to recent former presidents and heads of state in Africa, the Mo Ibrahim Foundation - set up by the billionaire businessman and philanthropist - said its prize committee considered some credible candidates, but could not select a winner.

A Sudanese-born former British Telecom engineer, Mr Ibrahim moved to Britain in 1974 and created and sold two highly successful companies.

The Forbes rich list puts his wealth at $US2.5 billion, and he appears regularly at the top of lists of influential black Britons.

''It is the [independent] prize committee's decision not to award a prize this year and we entirely respect it,'' Mr Ibrahim said. ''We made clear at the launch of the foundation that there may be years when there is no winner.''

The seven-member prize committee is chaired by Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general.

Launched in 2007, the foundation was designed to encourage good governance in Africa and to hand out the world's largest annually awarded prize, worth $US5 million over 10 years and $US200,000 a year for life thereafter.

GUARDIAN

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/no-winner-for-african-leadership-prize-20091020-h6wk.html

Plaudits for new US policy on Sudan

Washington
October 21, 2009 - 12:00AM

AID groups have welcomed a new US carrot-and-stick policy towards Sudan but say its success depends on how hard President Barack Obama pushes his bid to stabilise the war-ravaged nation.

In particular, aid groups hailed the US Government for putting as much stress on ending the conflict in the western Darfur region as on carrying out the terms of a fragile 2005 agreement ending a 22-year civil war in the south.

It makes a lot of sense to put the Comprehensive Peace Agreement high on the agenda, according to Sam Bell, who heads the Genocide Intervention Network. But he said his group would reserve judgment until it saw how forcefully the Obama Administration pushed its policy.

''The key issue is what kind of diplomatic energy is the Administration putting into this? Is it a piece of paper or a strategy?'' he said.

After a seven-month review, Mr Obama on Monday unveiled a US policy of engagement with Sudan, but warned Khartoum to expect a tough response if it ignored incentives to stop abuses and genocide in western Darfur.

Jerry Fowler, president of the Save Darfur Coalition, an umbrella for more than 100 organisations, said three issues were critical to the policy's implementation.

''Incentives should not be provided before there is concrete and lasting progress on resolving Sudan's interlocking crises, opening political space for Sudanese to determine their future and protecting human rights,'' he said.

''Second, the US must generate multilateral support for both incentives and pressures.

''And third, we need to see substantial personal involvement from President Obama - for example, he must make Sudan a priority when he goes to China next month.''

China is seen as a key to ending the six-year war between the Government in Khartoum and Darfur rebels because it is an ally of the Sudanese regime, a weapons supplier and importer of oil from Sudan.

John Prendergast, a co-founder of the Enough Project - an initiative to end genocide and crimes against humanity - said the ''outlook is not optimistic''.

AFP


This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/plaudits-for-new-us-policy-on-sudan-20091020-h6wj.html

Karzai agrees to presidential poll run-off

Kabul
October 21, 2009 - 1:06AM

AFGHANISTAN will go back to the polls for a presidential run-off next month.

President Hamid Karzai said yesterday his country would head to the polls on November 7 after a United Nations-backed investigation into the August 20 vote found widespread fraud.

''Now it is again the turn of the people of Afghanistan to choose one of the two candidates,'' Mr Karzai said at a news conference, referring to himself and his main challenger, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah.

The UN-backed Electoral Complaints Commission found that more than a million ballots were suspect in the election, meaning that Mr Karzai fell short of the 50 per cent threshold needed to avoid a run-off.

Mr Karzai won 49.67 per cent of the vote, Agence France-Presse reported, citing an election official.

Accusations of fraud had delayed the final result in the election, complicating efforts by the United States to reshape war strategy in Afghanistan.

Standing next to Mr Karzai, US Senator John Kerry welcomed the announcement as a great opportunity. Senator Kerry was sent to Kabul to help resolve the election impasse.

Mr Karzai hailed the run-off as a step forward for democracy.

''This is not the right time to discuss investigations, this is the time to move forward to stability and national unity,'' he said.

''I call upon our nation to change this into an opportunity to strengthen our resolve and determination, to move our country forward and to participate in the new round of elections.''

Earlier, the Obama Administration had hoped Mr Karzai would accept the need for a run-off, despite his spokesman, Waheed Omar, suggesting he would be bound only by the country's Independent Election Commission, whose officials were appointed by his Government.

''We have to wait for the final announcement through legal channels, which is the Independent Election Commission, and once the IEC announces the results, then we are bound to accept it, based on the law,'' Mr Omar said.

''It is premature to say that the ECC has announced its findings and the winner is known. It is based on media reports that our friends say the election is gone to a run-off,'' he said.

The US, fearing that Mr Karzai would reject the ECC's findings, sent Senator Kerry, chairman of the Senate's Foreign Relations Committee, to Kabul on Monday, where he met Mr Karzai in the presidential palace.

In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said: ''I am very hopeful that we will see a resolution in line with the constitutional order in the next several days, but I don't want to pre-empt in any way President Karzai's statement, which will sort of set the stage for how we go forward in the next stage of this.''

Early election results showed Mr Karzai had won the election outright with 54 per cent of the vote, but there were immediately allegations of fraud.

Doubt over the result has created a headache for the US, which has been trying to finalise its policy on the next stage of the Afghan war. The US and coalition forces' commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, has asked for another 40,000 soldiers to bolster his counter-insurgency strategy, but most analysts believe that without a stable government and significant progress on the civilian reconstruction, the likelihood of success in Afghanistan is limited.

At the weekend, several Obama Administration aides stressed that the US decision on increasing force numbers depended on having a legitimate Afghan government that would eventually take control.

BLOOMBERG, AFP, with ANNE DAVIES

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/world/karzai-agrees-to-presidential-poll-runoff-20091020-h6wc.html