sábado, 19 de novembro de 2011

Sun., Nov. 20, 2011 Market Moves: 76.72-76.74 yen/dollar [5 p.m. JST Fri.] 【MyToyota.jp】Car search in Tokyo
PHOTO NEWS
Out of nowhere: Debris is all that remains Saturday of a house destroyed by a suspected tornado that struck the previous day, killing three people in Tokunoshima, a town on a remote southern island in Kagoshima Prefecture. KYODO PHOTO

Apparent twister kills three on remote isle


Three people are killed on a remote southern island by an apparent tornado that destroyed a house in the town of Tokunoshima, Kagoshima Prefecture.

23 prefectures reluctant to help Tohoku dispose of disaster debris


More than half of the prefectures polled by the Environment Ministry do not plan to accept quake and tsunami debris from disaster-stricken Tohoku.

Taiwan plane brings tourists back to Fukushima


A TransAsia Airways chartered flight with 180 tourists onboard lands at Fukushima airport, the first international flight to arrive since March 11, giving the region's badly-hit tourism industry a much needed lift.
TOKYO (8 a.m.)
17°C
Cloudy
Humidity: 87%
Winds: NNE at 6 kph
Pressure: 1001 hpa


Special Supplements

Find out about Kochi's natural and scenic retreats, such as the Muroto Geopark and Shimanto River, while learning about its renowned hospitality.
Study in Japan, Work around the World
Find an international school in Japan from a nationwide list while learning about the latest developments in international school education.
What drives a person to become a true professional in his or her field? We find out in this new series.
ジャパンタイムズが勧める安心して学べる日本語学校特集
The latest deals on international airfares
いま求められるのはグローバル人材。「これからの世界と仕事」を考える、きっかけフリーペーパー。
Learn about innovative strategies and successful business philosophies from Japanese executives in our series, Wisdom of Entrepreneurs
通訳・翻訳業界の総合ガイドブック2012年度版が誕生!一部コンテンツをウェブで公開中。
Learn about foreign countries with our National Day specials and see which world leaders have visited Japan.
外資・グローバル企業の求人が満載。英語を活かして転職するならジャパンタイムズジョブ!

International Reports

As Thailand and Japan prepare for the 125th year since the start of their diplomatic relations, companies in both countries continue to strengthen the partnership.

  The Japan Times Online Updates


Sponsored links (Lifestyle)
ホテル予約 宿泊 旅行   福岡 マンション
中古車・中古車情報   表参道 結婚式 二次会
結婚式 招待状・席次表    








A piece of your mind
To partner or not partner ...



Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda Japan has announced that Japan would take part in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations. What's your take on this?



I'm against it. Japan's farmers must be protected.


The partnership is crucial for the Japanese economy.


If talks don't go well, Japan shouldn't participate.


I don't know enough about it.





Total Votes : 577

View past polls

Dragons edge Hawks; series tied 3-3
By JASON COSKREY
The Dragons, who lost Games 3, 4, and 5 at home, score two runs in the first inning and never trail en route to a 2-1 victory in Game 6 of the Japan Series.
J.LEAGUE SOCCER
Grampus climb into first place after dramatic triumph

FIGURE SKATING
Murakami fourth after short program at Trophee Bompard

WEEK 3
Smiles return to Tohoku as the circus comes to town
By ERIKO ARITA
At Nakamura Daiichi Elementary School in Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, a theater company named La Tatan Sha recently staged a musical for the students that featured live painting. ...
WEEK 3
Paradoxes pervade gender issues' public face in Japan
By JACKIE HOFFART
WEEK 3
French researchers seek raison d'etre of hikikomori
By TOMOKO OTAKE
Proud love pervades NHK's 'Madame Butterfly'
By EDAN CORKILL
"Well, little Chrysantheme, let us part good friends; one last kiss even, if you like. I took you to amuse me; you have not perhaps succeeded very well, but after all you have done what you could: given me your ...
'Koi no Tsumi (Guilty of Romance)'
In Sono's Tokyo, the whores hustle and the hustlers whore
By MARK SCHILLING
How can a film shock today's jaded audiences, for whom blood spurts and flying body parts prompt laughter instead of gasps? How can a filmmaker transgress when nearly everything is allowed? Taken far enough, this line of inquiry can lead ...
'George Harrison: Living in the Material World' / 'Under Control'
Pop star to power plant, all things must pass
By GIOVANNI FAZIO
'Henry's Crime'
The light at the end of the tunnel is ... Keanu?
By KAORI SHOJI
Volunteer-led Tohoku cinema provides welcome escapism
By MARK SCHILLING
Movie listings of currently showing films in Japan
Plenty of wine — and food to match
By ROBBIE SWINNERTON
For the longest time, one of our most vociferous complaints about Tokyo was that there weren't enough wine bars worthy of the name. These days, thankfully, we are spoiled for choice in every price range. One of the best of ...
Fresh-baked bread to suit every dish on the menu
By ROBBIE SWINNERTON
Mushrooms and much more in Moto-Yoyogi
By ROBBIE SWINNERTON
Memories of Mount Takao
By SKYE HOHMANN
Sometimes in the Japanese autumn, when the days are still warm and the air is beginning to smell of persimmons and fallen leaves, my mind stumbles across a day nearly 20 years ago now, and I turn the memory over ...
Taking it easy on Tokashiki
By HILLEL WRIGHT
You don't need to be bbarking to wwoof
By MIKE HAMILTON
Dvorak opera to make debut
By CHIHO IUCHI
Czech composer Antonin Dvorak's (1841-1904) symphonies, such as Symphony No. 9 "From the New World," are well known to Japanese audiences. However, his operatic works have not been performed that often in Japan. ...
Holiday season starts with market in Osaka
By MONICA TANDUNG
Folksy gig is family friendly
By MATTHEW HOLMES
Gainsbourg's muse to stop by Japan on her way to North America
By ERIKO ARITA
Fukuoka's got talent
By MATTHEW HOLMES
Westin Miyako maple boxed lunches

The pick of this week's specials at Japan's hotels and restaurants.

Zero Gravity
By ROGER DAHL
Noodles
By GWEN MURANAKA

domingo, 13 de novembro de 2011

África e Ilhas do Índico

Pacotes

 
 
África e Ilhas do Índico


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Nuclear Iran Not the End of the World

A danger the U.S. and the rest of the world can live with
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Nuclear Iran Not the End of the World
by Jordan Michael Smith
12-Nov-2011
 
United Nations inspectors released new documents containing what is supposed to be a bombshell. “Iran has carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear device,” according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. The report is the most damning the agency has ever issued.
Unsurprisingly, hawks have jumped on the news to argue that America needs to attack Iran. “If we are in a position where Iran is close to getting a nuclear weapon, then action needs to be taken,” declared Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum. “A nuclear Iran poses a challenge to U.S. influence that cannot be tolerated,” argued Commentary magazine’s Jonathan Tobin. Liberals and leftists, by contrast, claim the report is not as harsh as what is being reported. The report will “not likely” contain a “smoking gun,” wrote Robert Dreyfuss of the Nation.
Dreyfuss is right that the report doesn’t contain unequivocal evidence that Iran has an active nuclear weapons program — but so what? If an Iranian nuke was not containable and a major threat to the United States, then America would be justified in destroying the program before it was fully realized. But it is neither. And it is unwise to overlook those points in favor of obsessively following the daily shifts of Iranian nuclear progress like traders scouring the Dow Jones. History and strategic logic say that a nuclear Iran would not represent a major threat to the U.S. or its allies.
The logic of Mutually Assured Destruction holds that a country with nuclear weapons will not attack another nuclear-armed country because it will itself face retaliation in the form of nuclear destruction. Destroying the enemy becomes a way of destroying oneself. MAD, as the policy came to be known during the Cold War, is unsettling but has proved 100 percent effective in preventing war between nuclear-armed states.
Iran is unique, argue the hawks of Washington and Tel Aviv. Unlike with every other country with nuclear weapons that has preceded it, this form of deterrence will not work with Iran, they say. The Iranian regime is distinguished by the radical Islamist ideology of its leaders, who believe death in the service of Allah is desirable. As a result, it is unlikely that “deterrence can be successful with religious extremists who regard life and death differently,” argued Clifford May, president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. For all the horrors of nuclear menaces from previous eras like the Soviet Union and Mao’s China, hawks claim, they were atheists committed to sustaining life on earth and hence subject to rational deterrence.
Objections to this argument are twofold. First, there is no indication the Iranian regime is committed to martyrdom at all. Consider its actions, not its words. Iran promised repeatedly that it would destroy Iraq in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War — and accept destruction itself — rather than accept a cease-fire or end hostilities. It even used human waves to clear minefields and declared the war a sacred jihad, promising to resist until victory. Nonetheless, in 1988 Iran sued for peace and accepted a compromised end to the war that left the country in no more of a favorable position than when the war began.
Moreover, the Islamic regime in Iran has not invaded a single other country, instead relying only on the low-risk strategy of supporting proxy groups like Hezbollah. According to the prizewinning book “Treacherous Alliance,” by Iranian-born scholar Trita Parsi, Iran also had extensive dealings with its sworn opponent, Israel, throughout the 1980s. If the religious extremists who lead Iran are prepared to commit national suicide, they have never displayed it. Just the opposite, in fact. They have shown they prize survival above all else.
Second, singling out the Iranian regime as particularly unstable and untrustworthy romanticizes challenges from the past. Far from predictable, the Soviet Union and Chinese governments that developed the bomb were totalitarian, expansionist and far more threatening to the United States than Iran has ever been. The same hawks who claim Iran cannot be trusted are ideological descendants (sometimes literal descendants) of the individuals who wrongly argued that the Soviets were gaining strength on America in the 1970s and were determined to destroy it.
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev’s infamous warning to the Western world that “we will bury you” was far more threatening to America than anything that Iran, with its third-rate military and economy, could ever do. Similarly, Mao Zedong, who developed China’s nuclear capabilities, was every bit as aggressive with his rhetoric as the Iranians are: “Let us imagine how many people would die if war breaks out. There are 2.7 billion people in the world, and a third could be lost. If it is a little higher it could be half … I say that if the worst came to the worst and one-half dies, there will still be one-half left, but imperialism would be razed to the ground and the whole world would become socialist. After a few years there would be 2.7 billion people again,” he said. And China, unlike present-day Iran, was a country with a huge military capacity and had matched Americans directly on the battlefield, on the Korean peninsula.
In retrospect, it is clear that nuclear weapons actually moderated China’s sabre-rattling, but that was hardly obvious at the time. Released documents showed that John F. Kennedy’s administration very seriously contemplated a strike on China’s nuclear program, as did previous administrations with the Soviets. The worst fears of hawks that China and the Soviets would deploy their nukes against the United States or its allies never materialized. And had America struck either China or the Soviet Union, the result would have been unmitigated, unnecessary disaster. The same is true of Iran today.
None of this is to say that an Iran armed with a nuclear weapon is a positive development. It isn’t. Nuclear proliferation in any region is problematic; in the chaos-ridden Middle East, it is simply dangerous. But it is a danger the United States and the rest of the world can live with. What America cannot afford is another unnecessary, poorly considered attack on a Muslim country in the heart of the Middle East. If only we had a reliable deterrent to prevent against that.
First published in Salon.com