Balance of Power Shift Coming Says Wolfensohn, Former World Bank  President           
In the next 40 years, a global power shift will see  today's  leading economic countries drop from having 80% of the world's  income to 35%,  says John Wolfensohn, former World Bank president.  By  2030, two-thirds of people in the world's  middle class will be Chinese.
       January 2010 
     
STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
James Wolfensohn is all  about balance. The former World Bank president introduced himself to a  student audience Jan. 11 by talking about how he is grateful at this  point in his life to devote time and money to a "balance between  business and nonbusiness activities." And in the speech before an  overflow crowd, he urged students to "enrich your life as you enrich  your business."
     
"That aspect of duality is the thing that has made my life  meaningful" he said.
     
But the balance of power in the world is what Wolfensohn spent  the majority of his hour-long appearance on. A huge power shift will  occur in the next 40 years that will reduce the influence of the  wealthiest countries, he said. As population and GDP grows in countries  such as China and India, they will assume a larger role in relationship  to the United States and Europe. The developed countries will drop from  having 80% of the world's income to 35%. "There will be a monumental  shift of economic power. It's not just a moderation trend, but a  fundamental change in the world balance," he said.
     
By 2030, two-thirds of people in the world's middle class will be  Chinese, Wolfensohn said. "These are not trivial changes -- they are  tectonic changes in the way the planet works. In my generation we didn't  have to think about it. We knew we were a rich country."
     
But today's students will have to confront a new world in which  Africa is no longer an isolated continent but the fastest-growing market  for cell phones. 
     
Looking around the auditorium, Wolfensohn noted that many more  students from China and India travel to the United States to study,  rather than the other way around. In 2007 just 11,200 Americans studied  in China. That year more than 110,000 Chinese were studying in the  United States.
     
"It's a tragedy in terms of the potential of young people that  they're still being guided to look at European countries," he said.
     
Wolfensohn was making a repeat appearance at the Stanford  Graduate School of Business as a speaker in the Global Management  Program's Global Speaker Series. In 2004, while still at the helm of the  World Bank, he spoke about how developed countries were delivering on  the promise they made to aid developing ones.
     
He stepped down in 2005 from a decade-long career heading the  agency that is in charge of redistributing the world's wealth from the  rich to the poor. He now heads an investment banking firm in New York.  At 76, he is still advising organizations and governments on economic  policy and helps developing countries through his foundation.
     
Asked about whether humanitarian aid to Africa was a help or a  hindrance, Wolfensohn said aid organizations need to be selective.  "There are some extremely corrupt countries," he said, adding that the  best countries should be rewarded. "I say to the others: it's not  acceptable to steal."
     
He also predicted a shakeup in how the leadership of the World  Bank and the International Monetary Fund would be appointed.  Traditionally, the president of the former was from the United States  and the latter from Europe. The bank may be "internationalized" in the  future.
     
The World Bank's stated goal is to reduce poverty. As an  international financial institution, it provides loans to developing  countries for capital programs. It was created out of World War II with  France as the first recipient of world aid. In the late 1960s the  emphasis shifted to loans for developing countries.
     
Wolfensohn is a native of Sydney, Australia, and a naturalized  U.S. citizen. In addition to his firm, Wolfensohn & Co., he is an  honorary trustee of the Brookings Institution. He was appointed to head  the World Bank in 1995 by President Bill Clinton and served two terms.
   
     
Joyce Routson
   2010/02/24 
New US-free Americas bloc agreed                                                                                                   
Latin American and Caribbean nations have agreed to set up a new  regional body without the US and Canada.                        
                        
                        The new bloc would be an alternative to the Organisation of  American States (OAS), the main forum for regional affairs in the past  50 years.                         
                        Mexico has been hosting a regional summit in the beach resort of  Cancun.                         
                        The OAS has been dogged by rifts between some members and the US  over economic policy and trade, and criticised for promoting US  interests.                                              
                                                                    'Regional integration'                                                
                        The proposed new grouping was one of the main issues on the agenda  of the two-day summit, which ended on Tuesday.                         
                        It "must as a priority push for regional integration... and  promote the regional agenda in global meetings", Mexican President  Felipe Calderon told the summit, which includes leaders and  representatives from 32 countries.                    
 Cuban President Raul Castro was quick to applaud Mr Calderon's  announcement as a historic move toward "the constitution of a purely  Latin American and Caribbean regional organisation".                         
                        Cuba was suspended from the OAS in 1962 because of its socialist  political system. In 2009, the OAS voted to lift Cuba's suspension but  the country has declined to rejoin.                         
                        Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez earlier expressed his support for  the proposal, citing it as a move away from US "colonising" of the  region.                         
                        A US State Department official, Arturo Valenzuela, said he did not  see the new body as a problem.                         
                        "This should not be an effort that would replace the OAS, " he  said.                         
                        The terms of the new bloc and whether it would replace the Rio  Group of Latin American countries has not been clarified.                         
                        "It's very important that we don't try to replace the OAS," said  Chile's President-elect Sebastian Pinera. "The OAS is a permanent  organisation that has its own functions."                         
                        On Monday, Bolivian President Evo Morales proposed that it begin  operating in July 2011 with a summit hosted by Venezuela.                         
                                                Falklands row                                                
                        The Cancun summit has also unanimously backed Argentina's claim  over the British-owned Falklands.                         
                        Argentina is angered that a UK firm has begun drilling for oil off  the Falkland Islands, which lie about 450km (280 miles) off the  Argentine coast.                         
                        Argentina and Britain went to war over the South Atlantic islands,  which Argentina calls the Malvinas, in 1982, after Buenos Aires invaded  them.                         
                        The leaders at Cancun also discussed whether to recognise Porfirio  Lobo as the legitimate president of Honduras after he was elected  president under interim authorities following a 28 June coup that ousted  Manuel Zelaya.                         
                        A long-term plan to help Haiti recover from the devastating  January earthquake was also on the agenda.                     
 Argentina cemented a Latin American front over the Falklands yesterday  as a  British oil rig began drilling in the disputed seas around the islands.  
 
 Regional leaders at the Rio Group summit in Mexico were expected to sign  up  for a resolution backing Argentina in its escalating row with Britain  after  Brazil and Chile pledged their support.  
 
 Venezuela’s vociferous President, Hugo Chávez, set the tone of the  summit,  offering military support. Characterising Britain as an imperialist  relic,  Mr Chávez demanded the return of "Las Malvinas", as they are  known to Argentinians.  
 
 “The English are still threatening Argentina. Things have changed. We  are no  longer in 1982,” he warned. “If conflict breaks out, be sure Argentina  will  not be alone like it was back then.” 
       
  
 British control of the archipelago was “anti-historic and irrational”,  the  former paratrooper continued, asking “why the English speak of democracy  but  still have a Queen”. 
 
 Unlike 1982, when some Latin American nations, notably President  Pinochet’s  Chile, backed Britain’s campaign to repel Argentina’s brief invasion of  the  islands, the continent now enjoys strong ties between ideologically  aligned  governments and could mount a powerful resistance to British oil  operations.  
 
 Mr Chávez was joined by President Ortega of Nicaragua, who predicted  that the  Rio Group would throw its weight behind Argentina’s claim. “We will back  a  resolution demanding that England return Las Malvinas to its rightful  owner,  that it return the islands to Argentina,” he said.  
 
 Brazil, the biggest regional power and traditionally Argentina’s main  rival,  was similarly supportive. “Las Malvinas must be reintegrated into  Argentine  sovereignty,” Marco Aurelio García, foreign policy adviser to President  Lula  da Silva, said, adding: “Unlike in the past, today there is a consensus  in  Latin America behind Argentina’s claims.” 
 
 Almost three decades on from the confict, the defeat of Argentina still  stings  the national consciousness as an historic injury which must be  redressed.  President Fernández de Kirchner of Argentina has made the issue a  central  plank of her presidency, whipping up long-simmering resentments that  have  only been compounded by the prospect of a black gold bonanza in the  isolated, windswept archipelago.  
 
 The British Geological Survey estimates that up to 60 billion barrels of  oil  could be beneath Falklands waters, although Desire Petroleum, the  company  carrying out the drilling, says that the commericially viable reserves  are  much smaller.  
 
 Desire said that test drilling at the Liz 14/19-A exploration site off  the  Falklands began at 1415 GMT yesterday. “Drilling operations are expected  to  take approximately 30 days and a further announcement will be made once  drilling is completed.  
 
 Tensions between the former adversaries rose last week to their highest  level  since the war, as Argentina attempted to block ships supplying what it  says  are “illegal” British activities and Britain hit back with a warning  that  the islands were much better defended than on the eve of the Argentine  invasion in 1982.  
February 24, 2010
  Gates Calls European Mood a Danger to Peace               WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who  has long called European contributions to NATO  inadequate, said Tuesday that public and political opposition to the  military had grown so great in Europe that it was directly affecting  operations in Afghanistan  and impeding the alliance’s broader security goals.
 
 “The demilitarization of Europe — where large swaths of the general  public and political class are averse to military force and the risks  that go with it — has gone from a blessing in the 20th century to an  impediment to achieving real security and lasting peace in the 21st,” he  told NATO officers and officials in a speech at the National  Defense University, the Defense Department-financed graduate school  for military officers and diplomats. 
 
A perception of European weakness, he warned, could provide a  “temptation to miscalculation and aggression” by hostile powers.
 
The meeting was a prelude to the alliance’s review this year of its  basic mission plan for the first time since 1999. “Right now,” Mr. Gates  said, “the alliance faces very serious, long-term, systemic problems.” 
 
 Mr. Gates’s blunt comments came just three days after the coalition  government of the Netherlands collapsed in a dispute over keeping Dutch  troops in Afghanistan. It now appears almost certain that most of the  2,000 Dutch troops there will be withdrawn this year. And polls show that the  Afghanistan war has grown increasingly unpopular in nearly every  European country.
 
 The defense secretary, putting a sharper point on his past  criticisms, outlined how NATO shortfalls were exacting a material toll  in Afghanistan. The alliance’s failure to finance needed helicopters and  cargo aircraft, for example, was “directly impacting operations,” he  said.
 
 Mr. Gates said that NATO also needed more aerial refueling tankers  and intelligence-gathering equipment “for immediate use on the  battlefield.”
 
Yet alliance members, he noted, were far from reaching their spending  commitments, with only 5 of 28 having reached the established target: 2  percent of gross  domestic product for defense. By comparison, the United States  spends more than 4 percent of its G.D.P. on its military.
 
  Dana Allin, a senior fellow with the   International  Institute of Strategic Studies in London, called Mr. Gates’s  remarks “very striking.”
 
 “Whether this is a conscious statement to sound a real sharp  warning, there’s no question that the frustration among the American  military establishment is palpable regarding coalition operations in  Afghanistan,” he said.
 
 Mr. Gates did soften his message a bit, noting that, not counting  United States forces, NATO troops in Afghanistan were to increase to  50,000 this year, from 30,000 last year.
 
“By any measure,” he said, “that is an extraordinary feat.”
 
More sobering, he said, was that just two months into the year, NATO  was facing shortfalls of hundreds of millions of euros — “a natural  consequence of having underinvested in collective defense for over a  decade.”
 
 NATO’s problems — greatly magnified by the expansion of its mandate  beyond European borders, following 9/11 — called for “serious,  far-reaching and immediate reforms,” Mr. Gates said.
 
 Indeed, the secretary general of NATO, Anders Fogh  Rasmussen, last month turned to an unlikely source — Russia — to  request helicopters for use in Afghanistan, arguing that this would help  reduce the terrorism threat and drug trade on a border of the former  Soviet Union. 
 
 Mr. Rasmussen, speaking at the same meeting as Mr. Gates, said that  NATO’s members needed to better coordinate their weapons purchases. The European Union and  NATO should collaborate on developing capabilities like heavy-lift  helicopters, he said, and avoid “spending double money.”
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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7035719.ece
Dutch confirm Afghan troop pullout sparking fears of domino effect
February 22, 2010  
 Nato was left in fear of further troop withdrawals from Afghanistan  yesterday  after the Dutch Prime Minister conceded that he could not prevent his  forces  being pulled out this year after the collapse of the Government in The  Hague. 
 
 Jan Peter Balkenende lost the argument over extending the deployment at a   16-hour Cabinet session, in the first big reversal for the recently  appointed Nato leader, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who had publicly requested  a  continued Dutch commitment. 
 
 “Our task as the lead nation [in Uruzgan province] ends in August,” Mr  Balkenende said. After a three-month draw-down, the Dutch will be  completely  out of Afghanistan by the end of the year. 
 
 There are concerns that other countries where public opinion is turning  against the Afghan campaign could follow, notably Canada, which has had  the  biggest proportional casualty rate and is committed to withdrawing its  2,800  troops by the end of next year. Another concern is the continued  presence of  1,000 Australian troops. The Canberra Government has repeatedly refused  to  take over the lead role in Uruzgan if Holland leaves, demanding that a  big  Nato power provide the main share of troop numbers. 
       
  
 Just as important is the impression that European countries are  struggling to  find their share of the 10,000 extra troops requested by US General  Stanley  McChrystal to join 30,000 extra US troops in Afghanistan, with France  ruling  out more forces and a fierce debate in Germany. 
 
 The Times understands that the Dutch forces in Uruzgan will be  replaced  by US troops, diverting them from the surge operation against the  Taleban. 
 
 Asadullah Hamdam, governor of Uruzgan, said that peace and  reconstruction  efforts would suffer, telling the BBC that the Dutch played a key role  in  building roads, training Afghan police and providing security for  civilians.  “If they withdraw and leave these projects incomplete, they will leave a  big  vacuum,” he said. 
 
 A British security source said: “This is a big setback because the Dutch  are  very highly rated. It is also a psychological blow, because as soon as  one  country leaves it starts making the public in other countries worried.” 
 
 Although the Dutch endured some sniping from bigger Nato powers about  their  perceived lack of aggression after they deployed to Uruzgan in 2006,  their  “population centric” strategy was a precursor of “The McChrystal  Doctrine”  adopted by British and American forces. 
 
 Mr Balkenende faces a general election in May after his main coalition  partners, PvdA, the Labour party, walked out rather than break a promise  to  withdraw the 1,950 Dutch troops this year. Wouter Bos, the Labour  leader,  said: “A plan was agreed to when our soldiers went to Afghanistan. Our  partners in the government did not want to stick to that plan, and on  the  basis of their refusal we have decided to resign.” 
 
 Mr Balkenende’s Christian Democrats and Labour are forecast to lose  seats in  the 150-member parliament. The two big gainers are forecast to be the  ultra-liberals D66 and the right-wing Party of Freedom of the  anti-Islamist  MP Geert Wilders. Both oppose the Afghan mission. 
 
 A recent poll put support for keeping Dutch troops in Uruzgan at 35 per  cent  compared with 58 per cent for withdrawal, after 21 Dutch deaths. 
 
 The Dutch mission in Afghanistan was due to end in 2008, but the  Government  extended it until August 2010 — a decision made while the head of Nato  was  Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, a former Dutch defence minister.  
  In October Mr Rasmussen said: “I would regret a Dutch withdrawal. We are  at a  critical juncture, where there should be no doubt about our firm  commitment.  Any doubts will simply play into the hands of those who want us to  fail.”  This month he issued a letter to The Hague requesting that Dutch troops  stay  for another year in a reduced training role, a gesture that may have  been  designed to be helpful by ending their frontline role, but which ended  up  dividing the Cabinet
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http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/02/21/87061/war-game-shows-how-attacking-iran.html
Feb. 21, 2010   
War game shows how attacking Iran could backfire 
Warren P. Strobel
McClatchy Newspapers
   
February 21, 2010
       
WASHINGTON  — Here's a war game involving  Iran, Israel and the U.S. that shows how unintended consequences can  spin out of control:
       
With diplomacy failing and precious intelligence just received  about two new secret Iranian nuclear facilities, Israel launches a  pre-emptive strike against Tehran's nuclear complex. The strike is  successful, wiping out six of Iran's key sites and setting back its  suspected quest for a bomb by years.
       
But what happens next isn't pretty.
       
The U.S. president and his National Security Council try to  keep the crisis from escalating. That sours U.S.-Israeli relations,  already stressed by the fact that Israel didn't inform Washington in  advance of the strike. The White House tries to open a channel for talks  with Iran, but is rejected.
       
Instead, Iran attacks Israel, both directly and through its  proxies in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip. It misinterprets U.S. actions as  weakness and mines the Straits of Hormuz, the world's chief oil artery.  That sparks a clash and a massive U.S. military reinforcement in the  Persian Gulf.
       
This recent war game conducted at the Saban Center for Middle  East Policy, part of the Washington-based Brookings Institution, a  center-left think tank, appears to dampen hopes for a simple solution to  Iran's real-world nuclear challenge.
       
The lesson is "once you start this, it's really hard to stop  it," said Kenneth Pollack, a former White House and CIA official who  oversaw the simulation.
       
Pollack and others who participated in the day-long exercise  late last year are quick to point out that war games are imperfect  mirrors of reality. How Iran's notoriously opaque and fractious  leadership would react in a real crisis is particularly hard to divine.
       
But the outcome underscores what diplomats, military officers  and analysts have long said: even a "successful" airstrike on Iran's  nuclear facilities — setting the program back by two to four years  —  could come at a tremendous, unpredictable cost.
       
"It's ... an option that has to be looked at very, very, very  carefully," a senior European diplomat said Friday. "Because we know  what the results could be, and they could be disastrous." He requested  anonymity to speak more frankly on the sensitive issue.
       
Tensions over Iran's nuclear program rose again this week after  the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog reported that the country could be secretly  developing a nuclear warhead to be placed atop a ballistic missile.  Additionally, Iran has begun enriching uranium closer to the purity  level needed for use in a nuclear weapon.
       
Israel, which sees Iran as a direct threat, has refused to rule  out military force, although officials there say they are counting for  now on diplomatic pressure. There have even been hints from Sunni Arab  states, particularly Saudi Arabia, that they would look the other way in  the event of a strike on Shiite Iran, a historic adversary.
       
Yet one of the Brookings war game's major conclusions is that  Israel could pay dearly for an attack on Iran.
       
By the end of the simulation, eight days after the fictitious  Israeli strike, Israel's prime minister, under heavy domestic pressure,  is forced to launch a 48-hour air blitz in southern Lebanon to halt  rocket attacks from Hezbollah, the militant group sponsored by Iran.  Israeli officials know the blitz is unlikely to achieve its objectives,  and prepare a larger, costlier operation in Lebanon, including ground  forces.
       
Israel's relations with the United States, its most important  ally, are damaged. To avoid damaging them further, Israel bows to  intense U.S. pressure and absorbs occasional missile strikes from Iran  without retaliating.
       
Some members of the "Israeli" team nonetheless felt that  setting back Iran's nuclear program "was worth it, even given what was a  pretty robust response," said one participant. He asked that his name  not be used, because under the game's ground rules, participants are  supposed to remain anonymous.
       
Jonathan Peled, an Israeli embassy spokesman, declined comment  on the war game or its outcome.
       
"All we can say is that Iran constitutes a threat not only to  Israel but to the region, to the US and to the world at large, and  therefore should be addressed without delay by the international  community, first and foremost through effective sanctions," he said.
       
The Brookings war game was one of three simulations regarding  Iran's nuclear program conducted in December. The other two, at Harvard  University and Tel Aviv University, reportedly found that neither  sanctions nor threats dissuaded Tehran from its suspected nuclear  weapons ambitions.
       
In the Brookings game, three teams of experts, including former  senior U.S. officials, played the Israeli, Iranian and American  leadership. They assembled in separate rooms at the think tank's  Washington headquarters. Israeli and U.S. "officials" communicated with  each other, but not with the Iranians.
       
One of the simulation's major findings was how aggressively the  Iranians responded to the attack — more aggressively, some participants  felt, than they would in real life — and how Washington and Tehran,  lacking direct communication, misunderstood each other.
       
Iran did not retaliate directly against the United States or  U.S. troops in Iraq or Afghanistan. But it struck back at Israel, then  attacked Dharan in eastern Saudi Arabia, then began mining the Straits  of Hormuz.
       
"There would be almost no incentive for Iran not to respond"  with force, said another participant, a member of the Iranian team. "It  was interesting to see how useful it was for Tehran to push the limits."
       
Without knowing it, Iran's last two actions crossed U.S. "red  lines," prompting an American military response.
       
"No one came out on top — (but) arguably the Iranians," the  Iran team member said.
       
The Tehran regime was also able to crush its domestic political  opposition.