The queen of all asswipes

Moira’s not real impressed by Chirac’s recurring case of the vapors: Did he gather up his petticoats and flounce out of the room after this Scarlett impersonation? Is it proper that the leader of a great democratic nation conduct himself like the cheese of some inconsequential satrapy, touchy about his gold braid and ritual deference? … Continue reading “The queen of all asswipes”

Moira’s not real impressed by Chirac’s recurring case of the vapors:

Did he gather up his petticoats and flounce out of the room after this Scarlett impersonation? Is it proper that the leader of a great democratic nation conduct himself like the cheese of some inconsequential satrapy, touchy about his gold braid and ritual deference?

Some of the reader comments are classic.

Planning for a liberated Iraq

Ahmad Chalabi, the head of the Iraqi National Congress, has a sharp Op-Ed in OpinionJournal on the nature of liberated Iraq’s government: SULEIMANIYAH, Iraq–We the Iraqis are ready to embark on a final journey to fulfill our destiny as a dignified and free nation. Here in northern Iraq, I am surrounded by fellow Iraqi patriots, … Continue reading “Planning for a liberated Iraq”

Ahmad Chalabi, the head of the Iraqi National Congress, has a sharp Op-Ed in OpinionJournal on the nature of liberated Iraq’s government:

SULEIMANIYAH, Iraq–We the Iraqis are ready to embark on a final journey to fulfill our destiny as a dignified and free nation. Here in northern Iraq, I am surrounded by fellow Iraqi patriots, many of whom are now gathering in this liberated zone. We have long been united around the goal of claiming our country from the hands of tyranny. Our struggle for freedom has been a long epic, but our hour of liberation is now beginning.

While the day of Iraq’s freedom is at hand, a day of reckoning for U.S.-Iraqi relations is also close by. After decades of struggle the Iraqi people, with the assistance of the U.S., have a chance finally to construct a free and democratic society at peace with itself and with the world. This cooperation between the Iraqi people and the U.S. also has the potential of being a historical watershed between the Arab and Muslim world and America.

There’s a huge debate going on right now as to whether liberated Iraq will be governed by the US military, only to make the transition to self-rule over a two year period, or, as the INC wishes, the transition to an indigenous democracy is more immediate.

This struggle, as I’ve mentioned, reflects a split within the Administration, with the CIA and State Department favoring gradualism, and the White House and the Pentagon favoring a quicker transition. The INC is probably jumping the gun a bit, as the final decision will probably depend on how the fighting goes, and whether the Iraqi resistance plays a significant role. It’s one thing to sit outside the country and talk about your popular support, and another to prove it on the battlefield.

Chalabi is showing a tin ear to the politics of the liberation, as there is still significant opposition to any military action not sanctioned by the collection of ne’er do wells we call the UN, especially among the European left. The liberation forces need to show unity until the fighting actually finishes, and I can’t say I’m at all impressed by the INC’s behavior these past days.

Link via Dean Esmay, who also has a great link to a letter from Northern Iraq.

Protest numbers in perspective

LA newspaper mogul Ken Layne puts attendance figures on the weekend protests against the liberation of Iraq in perspective: More than 200,000 people showed up for the Daytona race on Sunday, despite the rain. (29 million watched it on teevee.) The car race and the war protest in New York had about the same turnout. … Continue reading “Protest numbers in perspective”

LA newspaper mogul Ken Layne puts attendance figures on the weekend protests against the liberation of Iraq in perspective:

More than 200,000 people showed up for the Daytona race on Sunday, despite the rain. (29 million watched it on teevee.) The car race and the war protest in New York had about the same turnout. I’d say the protest got more news coverage than Daytona, but that’s okay. If nobody went to the car race, that would be big news.

I wonder how many of the folks who turned out for the Daytona 500 are pro-Saddam? My guess is it would be somewhere close to negative numbers.

18th resolution ready to go

The AP reports that the 18th resolution in the 12-year-old rush to war is ready for action: Officials in London and Washington were moving ahead, toning down what was supposed to be a very tough resolution. Diplomats said the final text will place Iraq in material breach of its obligations and reiterate that Saddam now … Continue reading “18th resolution ready to go”

The AP reports that the 18th resolution in the 12-year-old rush to war is ready for action:

Officials in London and Washington were moving ahead, toning down what was supposed to be a very tough resolution. Diplomats said the final text will place Iraq in material breach of its obligations and reiterate that Saddam now faces serious consequences, but it likely will not make an explicit call to arms.

“Serious consequences” is just the kind of wiggly phrasing that can let both sides claim victory. Apparently some 40 smaller countries intend to deliver speeches for a couple of days before the votes are tallied, which should allow for all countries that might become targets of Aql Qaeda to claim innocence. It sure is great we have this multinational body standing ready to duck any and all tough issues that might come its way.

Vivato’s smart antenna

Glenn Fleischman interviews Mr. Omninet Phil Belanger for Wi-Fi News: Vivato Unleashed and mines some interesting details about how the Vivato system works. It’s clearly a generation ahead of the other “smart antenna” systems in the works, and stands out for its combination of technology and channel marketing sense. If I were working for a … Continue reading “Vivato’s smart antenna”

Glenn Fleischman interviews Mr. Omninet Phil Belanger for Wi-Fi News: Vivato Unleashed and mines some interesting details about how the Vivato system works. It’s clearly a generation ahead of the other “smart antenna” systems in the works, and stands out for its combination of technology and channel marketing sense. If I were working for a company that thinks it has a smart antenna in the works, I’d be worried, but I’m not, so I’m amused at the prospect of coming trainwrecks. It’s about time Belanger had some success, BTW — he’s been slogging away at LANs since he was at Corvus in the early 80s.

The Internet is not a potato, it’s a napkin

David Weinberger has been thinking about the Internet, and the webheads and greedheads. He’s especially fascinated by a 20-year-old paper on network design: I’ve been thinking about the end of the Internet. No, not its collapse, but as in the”End-to-End” (E2E) argument, put definitively by David P. Reed, J.H. Saltzer, and D.D. Clark in their … Continue reading “The Internet is not a potato, it’s a napkin”

David Weinberger has been thinking about the Internet, and the webheads and greedheads. He’s especially fascinated by a 20-year-old paper on network design:

I’ve been thinking about the end of the Internet. No, not its collapse, but as in the”End-to-End” (E2E) argument, put definitively by David P. Reed, J.H. Saltzer, and D.D. Clark in their seminal article, End-to-End Arguments in System Design. The concept is simple: whenever possible, services should not be built into a network but should be allowed to arise at the network’s ends.

Let me prick this bubble, if I may: the Internet was not designed correctly. This is especially true from the standpoint of real-time services, such as streaming audio and video. The fundamental problem is that the end-to-end model only works when timed delivery is not important, because it’s not able to manage the system-to-system, network-to-network, and router-to-router links that have to be managed for bandwidth to be reserved and used efficiently by real-time services. The Internet runs on telephony-based services such as ATM and SONET that provide for real-time delivery, quality of service selection, and bandwidth sensitive billing, but the Internet protocols, especially IPv4, mask access to the controls that run these links and make real-time at best a matter of faith and prayer and massively over-built datalinks.

If the connection-oriented, end-to-end services provided by TCP had been implemented at the network layer instead of at the transport layer, the Internet would be poised to gracefully carry the next generation of services. But it wasn’t, so it’s not, and IPv6 doesn’t fully remedy the deficiencies. Don’t hold up any engineering exercise done twenty-five and thirty years ago as state-of-the-art, and don’t try and build a model of human morality on it – it’s a losing proposition.

Time for Germany to move out and get a job

The Observer reports that we’re pulling our troops out of Germany: America is to punish Germany for leading international opposition to a war against Iraq. The US will withdraw all its troops and bases from there and end military and industrial co-operation between the two countries – moves that could cost the Germans billions of … Continue reading “Time for Germany to move out and get a job”

The Observer reports that we’re pulling our troops out of Germany:

America is to punish Germany for leading international opposition to a war against Iraq. The US will withdraw all its troops and bases from there and end military and industrial co-operation between the two countries – moves that could cost the Germans billions of euros.

All this punishment talk aside, isn’t it about time Germany started footing the bill for its own national defense? If nothing else, this should put a damper on the German welfare state.

Vaclav Havel on the war of liberation

The New Yorker: Letter from Prague A year after Havel came to power, there was a crisis in Iraq, and now, as he was leaving office, he was involved in another. Earlier in the month, he had spent hours with his aides at his country villa, discussing the problem, and that day, in the Wall … Continue reading “Vaclav Havel on the war of liberation”

The New Yorker: Letter from Prague

A year after Havel came to power, there was a crisis in Iraq, and now, as he was leaving office, he was involved in another. Earlier in the month, he had spent hours with his aides at his country villa, discussing the problem, and that day, in the Wall Street Journal, there was a letter signed by Havel, along with seven other European leaders, which essentially agreed with the Bush Administration’s position. I asked him why.

“I think it’s not by chance that the idea of confronting evil may have found more support in those countries that have had a recent experience with totalitarian systems compared with other European countries that haven’t had the same sort of recent experience,” he said. “The Czech experience with Munich, with appeasement, with yielding to evil, with demanding more and more evidence that Hitler was truly evil — that may be one reason that we look at things differently than some others.”

Clarity in Arab protests

Arabs participating in the Saturday protests showed a unique awareness of the issues: About 10,000 people waving Iraqi, French and German flags and Saddam Hussein pictures marched peacefully but noisily through the Lebanese capital of Beirut. … In Amman, about 5,000 Jordanian demonstrators chanted “Death to the Americans and Victory to Iraq.” Some demonstrators carried … Continue reading “Clarity in Arab protests”

Arabs participating in the Saturday protests showed a unique awareness of the issues:

About 10,000 people waving Iraqi, French and German flags and Saddam Hussein pictures marched peacefully but noisily through the Lebanese capital of Beirut.

In Amman, about 5,000 Jordanian demonstrators chanted “Death to the Americans and Victory to Iraq.” Some demonstrators carried posters of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein urging him to launch missile attacks on Israel.

I’d like some pictures, but so far all I can round up is a man with a kid dressed like Saddam on his shoulders. The Arabs who came out to support the Baathist regime were at least honest about what they were doing.

What the Iraqis want

Michael J. Totten comments on this article from the Independent on what the Iraqis (remember them?) actually want: So did the people of Iraq plead for us to take to the streets to stop this war? No — the opposite. Even in a country where the price for this kind of dissidence is often torture … Continue reading “What the Iraqis want”

Michael J. Totten comments on this article from the Independent on what the Iraqis (remember them?) actually want:

So did the people of Iraq plead for us to take to the streets to stop this war? No — the opposite. Even in a country where the price for this kind of dissidence is often torture and murder, large numbers explained they want the Americans and British to help them dislodge Saddam through war.

I wish more of our “anti-war” people could read the British press.