Up Front 04/08
Environmentalists will be closely monitoring a city investment after the announcement that a British based investment firm, Canopy Capital, has bought a large piece of the Guyanan rainforest – currently with the intention of not clearing it. Larger than the Mediterranean island of Mallorca, the tract of forest is home to some of the world’s most endangered species including jaguar, giant river otter, anaconda and giant anteater, and Canopy Capital hopes the investment will lead to conservation of the rainforest. Although the investment is not entirely based on altruistic ideals – the company hopes to sell it at a profit within the next 18 months – the concept of valuing rainforest for something other than land clearance is surely a step forward. Rainforests act as pumps, drawing water from the Atlantic Ocean inland to the Amazon, where they help to seed clouds and deliver moisture over vast distances. With deforestation contributing to a high percentage of greenhouse gas emissions, leaders at last December’s UN climate summit did agree to try to halt their destruction. However, no matter what the UN, Governments, NGOs or other charitable organisations do, it is the investment community that is likely to have the power to bring about meaningful change to the environment. Canopy Capital is creating a financial asset out of conserving a rainforest and, as one of their directors pointed out, if you can generate income from standing trees maybe people won’t chop them down.
Up Front 03/08
In a week when technology giant Microsoft was fined $1.3 billion for abusing its global dominance, it is amusing to see the lengths to which people will go when trying to outwit technology. For some time now, companies have been experimenting with ID implants for pets. The idea is that a microchip with identification details is implanted into a family pet. If the pet gets lost, the owner can be traced. However, as soon as the technology came out, someone pointed out that the chip could be easily accessed by a hacker. They could then arrange for dogs, cats, snakes, mice or even pet tarantulas to be delivered to the wrong owners. Imagine the carnage! A recent story about a lady in Sweden, who found a way to use technology to her advantage, shows that just about anyone can fool the microchips. Police in Koping, Sweden announced that they had arrested a 42 year-old woman for cheating a recycling machine that repaid a deposit on their recycled plastic bottles. The woman was spotted at her local Willys supermarket with a fishing line attached to a plastic bottle. Each time she dropped the bottle into the machine she fished it out again, storing up refunds each time. She is said to have clocked up nearly 100 Swedish kronor – about £8. She obviously knew she couldn’t live on the earnings from outsmarting the machine however, so at the same time had dispatched her 11 year-old son to use good old-fashioned shoplifting to put food on the table.
Up Front 02/08
This morning I had a typed conversation across the internet with my brother in China. As he teaches at a University in Eastern China, I asked about the Chinese perception of the western appetite for green thinking and environmental concern. He pointed to the recent news that the Chinese government is planning a ban on plastic bags from this June, a move that comes amid growing concern about pollution in China. He also pointed out that in 1999, the Chinese declared that the production and use of disposable Styrofoam tableware would no longer be tolerated. Calls for an end to the building of ‘The Great Wall of Styrofoam’, as he called it, apparently fell on deaf ears though, as the China Daily pointed out in January last year that up to 70 per cent of the nearly 12 billion disposable snack boxes of various kinds are still made of Styrofoam. The banning of plastic bags has recently been championed by a local organisation in Lyme Regis. See more on the website (www.turnlymegreen.co.uk). They also highlight a UK company that both manufactures and imports a range of biodegradable tableware, cutlery and take-away boxes. The company, Vegware (www.vegware.co.uk) supplies take-away boxes made from bagasse, a waste fibre made from pressing sugar cane. They say it is fully biodegradable and the good news for those Chinese authorities seeking a solution to their styrofoam problem is that it’s imported from China!
General Sir Michael Rose – Lessons of War
In January 2006, General Sir Michael Rose, a retired British army General who led United Nations forces in Bosnia, called for the impeachment of the then Prime Minister, Mr Tony Blair, for taking the country to war in Iraq on false grounds. Today, General Rose feels just as strongly that Mr Blair should be brought to book for his actions. In the same way that an employee of any company, accused of misleading the public should be investigated, General Rose feels that Tony Blair should be held to account for his part in deceiving both his parliament and the British public and for leading the country into a disastrous war. Since March 23rd 2003, when two British soldiers from Poole in Dorset became Britain’s first casualties of the war, tens of thousands of civilians, soldiers and insurgents have died. Some estimates put the figure of civilians dead at over half a million. Parts of Baghdad and other major cities have been reduced to wasteland and millions of citizens have been displaced by the fighting.
General Rose has written a book entitled Washington’s War: from independence to Iraq, which compares the current war in Iraq with the American War for Independence. It highlights key strategic errors made by the coalition forces in Iraq and points to lessons that should have been learned from the late 18th century American battle for independence from Britain. The book was written after General Rose had been employed to play a mentor role for US administration officials in training. A striking figure with boyish good looks, General Rose is animated and enthusiastic as he explains how the book came about. “The Americans have a very far-sighted programme where they take some of the rising stars of the administration away for a six-week course, part of which is to role-play different situations. This is for people from all across the board, finance, foreign affairs, defence, intelligence, the whole spectrum. When I was there we would visit battlefields from the American War for Independence and role-play various situations. One day I was talking to another of the mentors, Eliot Cohen, who is a prominent scholar of military affairs at the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and I said ‘I don’t think we’re talking about the American War for Independence here, I think we’re talking about the war in Iraq’ and he said ‘you know that is exactly what I was thinking’. So having thought about this for about three or four years I decided to write the book.”
In June 1775 George Washington commanded a band of rebels who were, in the eyes of the British, nothing more than a collection of ‘vagrants, deserters and thieves’. Yet he led them in a revolutionary war against the British which ended with American independence. General Rose maintains that both the strategy and the background to the creation of a rebel force in the American colonies, has remarkable similarities to the current war in Iraq, and although both British and American forces have successfully used counter-insurgency tactics throughout the world since, the lessons learned from that war were ignored when the coalition invaded Iraq. There may be many reasons why these lessons were not followed but General Rose feels that neither country is particularly proud of the outcome of that war. “The British are in denial about the American War for Independence” he says. “We don’t really teach it because we lost our great colony and made a complete mess of things. And the Americans are in a certain amount of denial also.” General Rose suggests that one set of land grabbers simply replaced another. “So in a way the Americans like to sort of air-brush that out. They love their founding fathers but they don’t actually go into it.”
In his book, General Rose makes telling observations on various aspects of the post Iraq invasion. He points out how American attempts to use conventional warfare, coupled with zero planning for the aftermath of the initial battle, quickly lost them the respect of the local population who had initially been so pleased to see Saddam Hussein overthrown. As the war had been started based on a need to find weapons of mass destruction, vital military units were immediately deployed to find these weapons, instead of working to secure the local population and protecting the country’s infrastructure.
However General Rose points out that, unlike Tony Blair, George Bush hadn’t quite put all his eggs in one basket. “George Bush was more subtle than Tony Blair” he says. “Blair pinned everything on weapons of mass destruction, where Bush had a whole string of reasons to go to war; extending democracy, creating a beacon of peace to shine throughout the Middle East, and also fighting terror long distance rather than on his home soil. He went for a much wider justification.”
But the immediate aftermath of invasion was messy. As General Rose points out in Washington’s War, General Jay Garner, the first chief administrator in Iraq, still had not received clear political instructions from Washington regarding the strategy that was to be followed by the occupying forces, even as the invasion had begun. As a result of this hesitation, distraction and general inaction by the coalition administration, there followed a complete breakdown of law and order in Iraq which led to the disintegration of civil authority. General Rose points to this lack of security as one of the reasons the local population sided with insurgency groups and turned against the occupying troops. The same happened during the American War for Independence when the British were unable to protect the settlers in their American colonies. And despite the diversity of the settler population at the time, they came together to fight an occupying army and won. The British army was left licking its wounds.
The question currently debated is whether the occupying force in Iraq will also lose. General Rose suggests that the recent change in tactic by the Americans, who he says have now spent over a trillion dollars on this war, is reducing the casualties and offering a way out. “The Americans are beginning to realise that their democratic dream is starting to visit upon them their worst nightmare” he says. “The majority Shia are ruling the country, but of course the Shia have the Iranians hand up their backs. Therefore they have actually spent a trillion dollars, had three thousand soldiers killed and trashed the country, bringing about their worst case scenario – the third biggest oil deposit in the world is now controlled by Iran. And what’s more the Iranians are spreading their tentacles. The Americans have finally realised this and have switched sides. They have now started supporting the Sunni. Since which time the graph of attacks and casualties has gone down.” General Rose thinks this new tactic may bring about a form of stability that could offer a way out to the Americans. “The current troop surge has had a marginal effect on this, and General Petraeus, who is heading up the surge, is an expert on this type of insurgency. He has realised you’ve got to change direction. The Sunni are neither anti-American nor are they anti-West. They never have been. They’ve always been allies. The reason they became anti-American is that they had been disempowered. Well the key is to re-empower them. And what Petraeus is doing is, by training the Sunni and arming them and putting the right people in the army, he is giving the Sunni some hope of regaining power.” General Rose also sees this as a possible road to victory for the Americans. He suggests the Americans will gradually decrease troop numbers and pull out, declaring victory. Then after a ‘decent interval’ there will be a military coup. “The Sunni will take over and run the country which they have always run.” he says. “Then the status quo will have returned and it will become stable again. The country will never break up, it will never disintegrate. But the Americans have now changed sides and are working with the Sunni.”
So after four years and countless thousands dead, the battle for Iraq will have left much of the country a wasteland, and in the end the ruling Sunni population will take over again.
In his recently published book Surrender Is Not an Option, American hawk John Bolton, former US ambassador to the United Nations, asks us to view regime change and the aftermath in Baghdad as two quite separate items. General Rose is not convinced. He says, “But you can’t have one without the other! Blair said it was a noble thing to have gone for and ‘we have left them democracy’. Had he got the whole package together he might have been able to claim that but they’ve trashed the country. It’s appalling what they’ve done to that country!” He recalls a time when he was in the Baghdad Green Zone with an Iraqi bodyguard, who described how he used to bring his children there to picnic in the beautiful lush parkland. “What a telling remark” says General Rose. “What kind of a liberation is that! Blair just walked away into the sunset and got away with it. Someone really ought to be in Belmarsh for it.”
Whatever one thinks about the need for regime change in Iraq, and the aftermath of the invasion, there is no doubt that major errors were made in the manner of the execution of both. In his book, General Sir Michael Rose gives a detailed account of the lessons that should have been learned by one war. One can only hope that the lessons learnt in the current war are clear for all to see.
Washington’s War: from independence to Iraq is published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson ISBN 13 978 0 297 84698 7.
Up Front 01/08
Anyone used to driving the lanes of west Dorset knows it’s worth taking a little extra care and keeping the speed down, but even still there are occasional accidents. A friend of mine had a bump recently, and though he managed to pull in when a car coming down a hill towards him lost control, there was little he could do to stop the youngster slamming into his car. The boy was very apologetic and when an elderly gentleman shook his walking stick, complaining that the boy always drives too fast, he said he was sorry and knew he had made a mistake. As no one was hurt and there was only car damage to be dealt with the incident could easily have been sorted out in an honest fashion. That is until the boy’s father came on the scene. His immediate concern was to ensure that the boy took no blame for the incident, going so far as to stop the poor young man from apologising again as the parties began to move their vehicles away. The father’s action, telling his son not to take the blame, was probably a reaction to protect his child, but most people I have spoken to say it sent the wrong message. In this month’s magazine, a much decorated general calls for the ex-prime minister to accept blame for wrong doing in taking the country to war in Iraq. It is unlikely he ever will, but if the older generation teach those that learn from them, either by word or action, not to accept blame when they have done wrong, what hope have we for our children to make it a better world.
Up Front 12/07
You wouldn’t have to be a dedicated follower of football to have noticed that yet another manager of the England football squad has got the boot. After a team of some of the richest sportsmen in the country failed to perform against Croatia, the manager was unceremoniously put out to pasture. It’s interesting how distinctly football the whole scenario is. A bad result, that leaves England out of the Euro 2008 competition, infuriates fans and has a knock on effect on the economy. So football fans bay for blood, and they get it. Some people will find it hard to understand why the same doesn’t happen to a Police chief when, on his watch, an innocent man is shot dead on the tube. Or why a Chancellor doesn’t take a fall when the personal details of twenty-five million citizens go missing. As I write, thousands of families will be receiving personal letters of apology from Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, after computer discs with their bank details, and the names, ages and personal details of their children, went missing in the post. The main concern is that the information will fall into the hands of criminals who will attempt to use this information to take money from bank accounts. The possible consequences, when the scale is so large, just doesn’t bear thinking about. One friend of mine recently had his bank account used by someone who placed a £250 bet with an online casino. The bank’s fraud department weren’t able to give him any more details of the transaction but I sincerely hope the thief put the bet on England to win Euro 2008.








