Usually the TMO sees only 'the beautiful teeth' of the rotting corpse of the 
dead dog. 

The Global Good News   http://www.globalgoodnews.com/world-peace.html   site 
has 
apparently added a new column, "Flops". The "Flops" Column is given equal 
visibility with 
the "Positive Trends" and "Successes" columns.  Today's "Flops" column includes 
the 
following stories:

US mars Russia's image and rejects friendship, says President Putin
21 December 2007 - Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the United States 
of trying 
to undermine Russia to further its global dominance and said Washington had 
ignored 
Moscow's attempts to build a friendship. In an interview with Time magazine, 
which 
named the Russian president its 'Person of the Year' for 2007 on Wednesday, 
Putin said 
Washington had adopted its strategy of belittling Russia to try to influence 
the country's 
domestic and foreign policy. (more)

2007 deadliest year for journalists since 1994
20 December 2007 - At least 64 journalists were killed in 2007, making it the 
deadliest 
year in more than a decade with Iraq the most dangerous place in the world to 
report, a US 
media watchdog said on Monday. The New York-based Committee to Protect 
Journalists 
said the number of deaths was up from 56 last year. Somalia was ranked the 
second 
deadliest country with seven journalists' deaths in 2007. (more)

Israel pledges more airstrikes in Gaza
19 December 2007 - Israel will keep striking the leaders of groups that launch 
rockets 
from the Gaza Strip, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert pledged Tuesday after 
an hours-
long aerial assault killed 12 militants including the commander of the 
extremist group 
Islamic Jihad. Israel has intensified its activity in Gaza since Hamas seized 
control of Gaza, 
carrying out airstrikes and limited ground incursions in response to near-daily 
rocket 
attacks on southern Israeli communities. The Israeli operation that ended 
Tuesday was the 
deadliest since Hamas took over Gaza in June. (more)

Land mines still buried in Mauritania
19 December 2007 - Officials in Mauritania need about US$14 million to help 
clear land 
mines buried beneath the desert, relics of a brutal desert war over the Western 
Sahara 
territory in the 1970s. According to mapping conducted by the United Nations 
Development Programme (UNDP) in conjunction with the newly formed national 
demining 
agency, at least 60 communities in Mauritania are affected by mines. (more)

UN extends US-led force in Iraq
19 December 2007 - The UN Security Council voted unanimously Tuesday to extend 
the 
US-led multinational force in Iraq for one year, a move that Iraq's prime 
minister said 
would be his nation's 'final request' for help. A little over a year ago, the 
Security Council 
voted unanimously to extend the force's mandate through 2007. Authorization for 
the 
160,000-strong multinational force was extended until the end of 2008 because 
'the 
threat in Iraq continues to constitute a threat to international peace and 
security', 
according to the resolution. (more)

Turkish army sends soldiers into Iraq
18 December 2007 - The Turkish army sent soldiers about 1.5 miles into northern 
Iraq in 
an overnight operation on Tuesday, Kurdish officials said. A Turkish official 
said the 
troops seeking Kurdish rebels were still in Iraq by midmorning. It was not 
clear how long 
the Turkish soldiers who entered Iraq on Tuesday would stay, but a Turkish 
government 
official said they were sent as 'reinforcements' to existing Turkish troops 
stationed further 
inside Iraq. (more)

US and allies review Afghanistan war as attacks soar
18 December 2007 - Insurgent violence is at its highest level in Afghanistan 
since US-led 
forces ousted the Taliban after the 11 September 2001 attacks against the 
United States. 
Suicide bombings, for example, have climbed 30 per cent in some areas, 
according to US 
military officers. The US military has also said it sees signs al Qaeda is 
returning to 
Afghanistan after facing defeat in parts of Iraq. Faced with a strengthened 
Taliban and 
signs al Qaeda is regrouping in its former stronghold, the United States and 
NATO are 
conducting a wide-ranging review of operations in Afghanistan, US officials 
said on 
Monday. (more)

Russia test-fires new intercontinental missile
17 December 2007 - Russia on Monday test-launched a new intercontinental 
ballistic 
missile, part of a system that can outperform any anti-missile system likely to 
be 
deployed, according to the officer in charge of missile forces. Missile tests 
have become 
regular occurrences by the armed forces in the past few years. They are viewed 
by the 
political and military leadership as evidence of a revival of military might. 
The United 
States plans to deploy a missile defence system in central Europe to defend 
against attacks 
by rogue states and it is not aimed at Russia, but Moscow says the system 
threatens its 
security and has promised counter-measures. (more)

Democratic Republic of Congo displaced recruited to fight, says UN refugee chief
16 December 2007 - Armed groups in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo are 
recruiting fighters in camps for those displaced by violence, the UN refugee 
chief said on 
Sunday, as diplomats tried to revive a peace plan that has failed to halt 
fighting. Violence 
has forced nearly one in six people in Democratic Republic of the Congo's 
violent North 
Kivu province from their homes, and tens of thousands have been displaced in 
the past 
fortnight by fighting between the army and renegade Tutsi general Laurent 
Nkunda. In the 
ramshackle camps where they shelter, civilians are still not safe from being 
pressed to join 
armed factions in a conflict where human rights groups have accused all sides 
of 
recruiting child soldiers -- a feature of Democratic Republic of the Congo's 
1998-2003 
war. (more)

EU leaders renew sanctions warning to Iran
16 December 2007 - Leaders of the European Union reiterated on Friday their 
support for 
possible additional UN sanctions against Iran if it fails to give up nuclear 
enrichment work 
and repeated an offer of support if it did so. The statement at a summit in 
Brussels came 
despite a US National Intelligence Estimate this month that Iran had stopped 
its nuclear 
weapons programme in 2003, a surprise announcement diplomats say increased 
reluctance among already sceptical Russia and China for a third round of 
sanctions. (more)




Reply via email to