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news20090816bil

2009-08-16 22:56:23 | Weblog
[Biography of the Day] from [Britannica]
August 16
Madonna
Born this day in 1958, American performer Madonna first rose to fame in the 1980s with catchy pop songs and provocative music videos and later achieved levels of power and control unprecedented for a woman in entertainment.


[On This Day] from [Britannica]
August 16
1996: Leonel Fernández Reyna inaugurated as president of the Dominican Republic
The youngest person ever elected president of the Dominican Republic, Leonel Fernández Reyna was sworn in this day in 1996 and soon instituted measures to end corruption and to improve the country's economy.


1960: The island of Cyprus became an independent republic.

1948: American baseball legend Babe Ruth died at age 53.

1913: Menachem Begin—prime minister of Israel (1977–83) who was the corecipient, with Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat, of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Peace—was born in Russia.

1819: A meeting of radicals held on St. Peter's Fields in Manchester, England, was dispersed with violence, an event that became known as the Peterloo Massacre.

1780: An American force was beaten by British troops under Lord Cornwallis in the Battle of Camden during the American Revolution.

963: Nicephorus II Phocas was crowned emperor of the Byzantine Empire in Hagia Sophia by the patriarch Polyeuctus.


[Today's Word] from [Dr. Kazuo Iwata]
August 16
There are only three events in a man's life;
birth, life and death;
But he is not conscious of being born,
he dies in pain,
and he forgets to live.
    Jean de La Bruyère; Caractères (born this day in 1645)

人間の一生にはわずか三つの出来事があるだけである。
Ningen-no issyo-niwa wazuka mittsu-no dekigoto-ga-aru-dake-de-aru.
誕生と、生きることと、死ぬことと。
Tanjo-to, ikiru-koto-to, shinu-koto-to.
しかし、生まれるのは気がつくわけはないし、
Shikashi, umareru-nowa kigatsuku-wake-wa-nai-shi,
死ぬときは、ああっ苦しいと言って死に、
Shinu-toki-wa, akkurushi-to itte shini,
生きているときは、生きていることを忘れている。
Ikiteiru-toki-wa, ikite-iru-koto-wo wasureteiru.



[日英混文稿]

news20090816jt1

2009-08-16 21:51:22 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Aso expresses war remorse; 'never again'
Japan 'caused tremendous damage'

By MASAMI ITO
Staff writer

Commemorating the 64th anniversary of the end of World War II, Prime Minister Taro Aso expressed deep remorse over the pain Japan inflicted on its neighbors and vowed never to engage in war again.

{Give peace a chance: Relatives of the war dead who oppose politicians' visits to Yasukuni Shrine march near the controversial site in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo, on Saturday with a banner calling for peace based on the Constitution.}

"Japan caused tremendous damage and suffering to the people of many countries, particularly to those of Asian nations," Aso said Saturday in a speech at Nippon Budokan Hall in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo. "On behalf of the people of Japan, I hereby express my feelings of profound remorse and sincere mourning for all the victims of the war."

Although Aso is known for being a hawk on foreign policy, he has avoided visiting Yasukuni Shrine, which is widely regarded as a symbol of Japan's past militarism.

Aso has proposed the controversial shrine be stripped of its religious status and be turned into a state-run war memorial. But the unpopular leader has yet to take any steps in that direction after nearly a year in office, and with a tough Lower House general election looming, Aso and his ruling Liberal Democratic Party could soon find themselves out of power.

Instead, he went to the annual ceremony at Nippon Budokan Hall, which commemorates about 2.3 million service members and 800,000 civilians who died in the war.

"We will sincerely look back on the past without allowing the lessons of that horrible war to erode and will faultlessly hand them down to the next generation," Aso said. "Japan renews its pledge not to engage in war and vows to actively work toward the establishment of lasting world peace."

Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko also attended the ceremony, with the Emperor expressing his "profound sorrow for the people who lost precious lives in the past war and their bereaved families."

"Looking back on history, I earnestly hope the horrors of war will not be repeated," the Emperor said. "Together with the public, I pay a heartfelt tribute to those who lost their lives on the battlefield and fell in the ravages of war, and pray for world peace and further development of our country."

Upper House President Satsuki Eda went one step further and called the past war "an act of invasion."

"Through our acts of invasion and colonization, our country has inflicted much suffering and sorrow not only on the Japanese people in and out of the country but also those of Asia and other regions," Eda said.

"Based on deep reflection of the past, it is our responsibility to reconfirm our strong resolution to never repeat such a tragic war and build a peaceful nation trusted by people throughout the world."

The health ministry said 4,957 relatives of war dead were expected to attend the ceremony. But as more than 60 years have passed since the end of war, the number of living relatives is decreasing.

Out of the 4,957 who attended, 4,620 are 64 years old or older. The oldest was 101-year-old Shizue Ikehata, whose husband died in 1944 in the Bashi Channel between Taiwan and the Philippines.

The youngest relative was 3-year-old Kaio Miyagi, the great grandchild of Tokusei Miyagi, who died around the main island of Okinawa.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
LDP enemy Tanaka signs up with DPJ
Kyodo News

Former Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka and her husband, Naoki, said Saturday that they have agreed to join the Democratic Party of Japan.

{Join the party: Former Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka holds a news conference with Democratic Party of Japan President Yukio Hatoyama in Nagaoka, Niigata Prefecture, on Saturday.}

Tanaka, formerly an independent in the House of Representatives, and her husband, an independent in the Upper House, made their decisions the same day in a meeting with DPJ leader Yukio Hatoyama.

Tanaka will run on the DPJ ticket from her No. 5 constituency in Niigata Prefecture, the two told a news conference.

"I need a place as (the Japanese political scene) develops into a two-party system," said Tanaka, a daughter of late Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. "I cannot realize my promises for the electorate alone."

Tanaka resigned from the Lower House in August 2002 after she was ordered to suspend her membership in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party for two years in connection with money scandals involving her state-paid secretaries.

After leaving the LDP, the outspoken former foreign minister won a seat in the 2003 Lower House election as an independent, and later participated in a parliamentary group affiliated with the DPJ.

Tanaka's husband left the LDP last October.

The DPJ, which is widely seen to have a good chance of taking power after the Aug. 30 general election, decided to back Tanaka on Aug. 6.

Happiness chief exits
A political group backed by the Happy Science religious corporation, the Happiness Realization Party, said Saturday its head has withdrawn his bid to run in this month's national election.

Ryuho Okawa has been dropped, along with his wife, Kyoko, from the list of candidates the group plans to field for the proportional representation portion of the Aug. 30 House of Representatives election.

Ryuho Okawa had been placed on top among the party's candidates for the Tokyo block.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Koizumi, Abe make Yasukuni visit
Former prime ministers, Cabinet ministers, other lawmakers pay surrender day respects

By KAZUAKI NAGATA
Staff writer

Despite the hectic runup to the general election, former Prime Ministers Junichiro Koizumi and Shinzo Abe, as well as a Cabinet minister and other Diet members, found time to visit Yasukuni Shrine on Saturday.

{Sixty-four years on: Three women pray on Saturday at Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery, where the remains of unknown soldiers and civilians who died overseas during the war are buried.}

Prime Minister Taro Aso, however, opted not to visit the shrine, which is widely viewed as a symbol of Japan's past militarism, on the 64th anniversary of the end of the war.

Thirty-five current and former Diet members visited as a group that encourages lawmakers to visit Yasukuni and paid their respects.

The turnout was more than expected, said Yoshinobu Shimamura, a former Lower House member who chairs the group.

The shrine, which honors the nation's 2.47 million war dead, along with convicted Class A war criminals, has long been a source of friction with Japan's neighbors.

Koizumi made annual visits to Yasukuni during his 2001-2006 tenure as prime minister, and his visit in his final year in office provoked especially harsh criticism from China and South Korea.

Koizumi did not respond to reporters' questions during his visit, while Abe said he visited the shrine to pay his respects to the war dead.

Asked about Aso's decision to refrain, Shimamura said he thought the prime minister would probably like to visit the shrine as he went there before becoming prime minister.

"With the election coming up, there are various opinions from those who promote the visits and who don't within the Liberal Democratic Party. I think Aso considered those voices," said Shimamura.

Seiko Noda, state minister in charge of consumer affairs, was the only Cabinet member to visit Yasukuni on Saturday.

Scenes from Yasukuni Shrine

Photos appear in a pop-up window While acknowledging there are various views on the shrine, she visits Yasukuni annually as she considers the day important despite her status as a minister, she said.

Noda said visiting Yasukuni reconfirmed for her that "we should never have a war. Peace is not something that naturally exists — it is something that has been built."

Democratic Party of Japan President Yukio Hatoyama was absent from Yasukuni. He has already declared that he will not visit the shrine as prime minister if the DPJ takes power in the election.

Hatoyama has also mentioned the possibility of establishing a new national facility that commemorates the war dead where people can go regardless of their religious views, including the Emperor.

Shimamura, however, slammed the proposal, saying it is questionable whether the spirits of the war dead would chose that option.

He also said a new facility would probably not attract the same crowds. Last year, over 150,000 people visited the shrine.

Despite the hot summer weather, a wide range of people were at Yasukuni Saturday.

news20090816jt2

2009-08-16 21:42:00 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Okinawan first to die of swine flu

NAHA, Okinawa Pref. (Kyodo) A 57-year-old man from Okinawa Prefecture has become the first person in the nation to die of H1N1 swine flu, the Okinawa Prefectural Government said Saturday.

More than 4,000 people have caught the new flu, known locally as "shingata" (new-type) influenza, since Japan's first case was confirmed in May.

The patient, a resident of Ginowan, was suffering from a heart and kidney illness, the prefectural government said.

The man fell ill on Aug. 9, complaining of a sore throat, and developed a 37-degree fever the following day. A simple examination indicated he did not have H1N1.

But after his temperature hit 39 on Wednesday, local health authorities conducted another simple examination, in which he tested positive for the type A influenza, the local government said.

Despite treatment with Tamiflu, the man's condition deteriorated until he died at 6:54 a.m. Saturday, authorities said, adding an additional, more detailed, test confirmed that he had indeed caught swine flu.

No one who was in close proximity to the man has developed swine flu symptoms, Okinawa Prefecture officials added.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
DPJ would nix launch of unified pension body
Kyodo News

The Democratic Party of Japan plans to freeze the launch of a public corporation designed to take over management of the pension system if it comes to power in the Aug. 30 general election, sources said Saturday.

Instead, the largest opposition party wants to preserve the Social Insurance Agency for the time being and take on the task of sorting out the millions of mismanaged pension records that surfaced in 2007 — one of its main election pledges.

In the next extraordinary Diet session, expected to be convened this fall, the DPJ, which envisions creating an agency that would be in charge of collecting both taxes and pension premiums, plans to submit a bill aimed at blocking the launch of the public corporation, which is scheduled for January, the sources said.

The DPJ has said the pension issue needs to be tackled intensively for more than two years as a national project. It is worried that establishing a new entity where employees would not have public servant status could undermine government oversight of pension issues.

After the record-keeping scandal broke, the government enacted a law in June 2007 to transfer the agency's pension division to a new corporation that would be put in charge of premium collection, pension payments and record-keeping.

The government, led by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and New Komeito, set a deadline of next January for transferring the agency's pension duties to the new body.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Foreigners size up lay judge system
Citizens' willingness to serve contrasts with other nations that allow public participation

By SETSUKO KAMIYA
Staff writer

The launch of the lay judge system for criminal trials is being observed with great interest overseas, where public participation in court cases is well established, a prominent expert on the U.S. jury system said.

"It's a very important moment, not just for Japan but for many people who look at lay participation and think about it as a valuable part of society," Cornell Law School professor Valerie Hans said during a recent visit to Tokyo.

Hans was vacationing with her family in Japan while the first "saibanin" lay judge trial took place at the Tokyo District Court from Aug. 3 to 6.

Under the new system, six citizens randomly chosen from a list of eligible voters sit on the bench together with three professional judges.

The group works together to determine the facts and participate in sentencing if the accused is found guilty. Germany, France and Italy use similar systems.

On the other hand, the roles of jury and judge are different in the United States. In the U.S. jury system, 12 randomly chosen citizens decide what the facts of a crime are based on the evidence, but if they find the accused guilty, it is up to a professional judge to mete out the sentence.

In the first lay judge case, held at the Tokyo District Court, the team of judges convicted a 72-year-old man of murdering a 66-year-old female neighbor in May and handed down a 15-year prison term. The man later decided to appeal.

Reading news reports on the historic case, Hans, coauthor of "American Juries: The Verdict," cited several examples that struck her as "remarkable" from an American perspective.

As courts in the U.S. struggle to get more people to participate in the jury selection process, Hans said she was impressed by the high turnout for lay judge candidates.

Of those who were summoned for service in Tokyo, 47 out of 49 reported for duty.

The second case, which was tried from Monday to Wednesday at the Saitama District Court, also drew high turnout, with 41 out of the 44 lay judge candidates summoned reporting for duty.

Getting more people to take part in the selection process is crucial because jurors should reflect values from all communities, Hans said, adding that Americans tend to overestimate how time-consuming and difficult it is to serve on a jury.

Research has shown that once people take part as jurors their estimation of the court system not only rises, but they are more likely to vote in the future because the jury experience helps them engage with the public good and the community as a whole, she said.

"What's remarkable about Japan's experiment is that you can observe the introduction of the new system and see whether or not it changes public views and opinion about the legal system generally, and indeed whether it makes Japanese citizens feel more connected to what is going on in their government," she said.

But unlike the U.S., where jurors are allowed to speak freely about the case and the deliberations once they reach a verdict, lay judges have an obligation to keep such details confidential.

Considering that the jury experience enhances people's participation and engagement in society, requiring lay judges to remain virtually silent about the experience misses the opportunity to spread the positive factors of citizen participation, she said.

Hans has been in Japan several times to study how the courts and legal professionals prepared for the introduction of the lay judge system. In her interviews with judges two years ago, Hans said she was impressed by their attitude at the mock trials, because they were careful to make sure that the lay judges spoke first during deliberations before the professionals gave their own opinions and views.

In the first case in Tokyo, lay judges questioned the witnesses about the inconsistencies between their signed interrogation papers and their testimony in court.

They also asked questions related to the witnesses' motives.

"Lay people can really make a major contribution in assessing the credibility by bringing in all their lay experience, community experience in trying to assess whether people are telling the truth or not," Hans said.

In many other countries where lay judges sit with professional counterparts, research shows that professionals, if they wish, can very easily dominate lay judges, according to Hans.

Care must be taken that this does not occur in Japan, but "if the judges are convinced that it's worthwhile and valuable (for the public to have an active role), then it really has a chance as a vibrant and lively system where professional and lay judges come together to look at a case with all its complexity," she said.

Compared to a German court she has observed previously, Hans said she thought that the lay judges were participating more actively and directly asking the witnesses questions.

That fact was actually an indication that lay judges were exerting some power and independence, she said.

"What we know from research is that happens when the professional judges are open to having it happen," Hans said. "If they have an attitude that is supportive of lay judges, lay judges can operate very well and do really well in understanding evidence and reaching competent decisions."


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Automakers to restart Tokai plants

NAGOYA (Kyodo) Toyota Motor Corp. and other manufacturers said they will resume operations next week after determining that their facilities were not damaged by the earthquakes that struck the Tokai region at the start of the Bon holiday season.

Toyota will reopen 12 plants in Aichi Prefecture on Monday and said its suppliers did not report any damage from Tuesday's strong quake.

Yamaha Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co. said they will resume operations in Shizuoka Prefecture on Monday, while Suzuki Motor Corp. said it will restart plants in both prefectures on Tuesday.

news20090816jt3

2009-08-16 21:39:51 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Shizuoka residents were prepared for hard-hitting quake

SHIZUOKA (Kyodo) Damage from the strong earthquake that hit Shizuoka Prefecture on Tuesday was limited because residents secured some or most of their furniture in advance, the results of an online survey say.

Tokyo-based Survey Research Center Co. said people were significantly more prepared than they were during the fatal quakes that struck the Noto Peninsula in Ishikawa Prefecture in March 2007 and Niigata Prefecture in July 2007.

Shizuokans are also well-aware that the so-called Tokai earthquake could wreak devastation on the region at any time.

"The residents' disaster awareness may have helped reduce the damage from the recent earthquakes," the center said. According to the survey, 60.3 percent of Shizuoka's residents used straps to secure their furniture before Tuesday's quake — far higher than the 38.4 percent in Niigata and 25.8 percent in Ishikawa.

Also, 15.0 percent of Shizuokans said they had their houses tested for quake resistance, versus 1.6 percent in Ishikawa and 1.2 percent in Niigata.

They also surpassed their counterparts in earthquake insurance, with 34.8 percent claiming coverage in Shizuoka versus 16.4 percent in Niigata and 12.1 percent in Ishikawa.

The survey polled about 700 people 20 or older in Shizuoka on Wednesday and Thursday and compared the results with similar surveys taken in the aftermath of the 2007 quakes.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Afghan held over heroin chemical

YOKOHAMA (Kyodo) An Afghan man suspected of attempting to ship acetic anhydride, a compound used to synthesize heroin, found in freight containers destined for Afghanistan in February has been arrested, investigative sources said Saturday.

The Kanagawa Prefectural Police made the arrest on July 31, about five months after some 2 tons of the chemical was found at the port of Yokohama. Police are trying to determine whether there is a link between the unidentified man and an organized smuggling ring, the sources said.

The man denied the allegations, according to the investigative sources.

The man, who is in his 30s, sells used cars in Tochigi Prefecture, the sources said. He left Japan before the substance was confiscated in late February and was arrested for allegedly violating the customs law when he re-entered the country via Narita airport, they said.

An arrest warrant was issued for the man on suspicion of trying to ship acetic anhydride to Afghanistan without permission, after bringing the substance to the port in more than 100 small tanks in late February.

The Kanagawa police suspect nearly a dozen people, including Japanese, Pakistanis and other Afghans, were involved in the operation.

At Yokohama port, 4 tons of acetic anhydride have also been discovered in freight containers bound for the United Arab Emirates, while 2 1/2 tons are being held at the port of Nagoya.

Regulations require both importers and exporters to report their trade plans to the government when dealing in chemicals that have acetic anhydride in 50 percent or more of their components.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
Bon return rush fills up airports

NARITA, Chiba Pref. (Kyodo) The Bon return rush began Saturday at Narita airport in Chiba Prefecture and Kansai International Airport near Osaka as travelers who went abroad for the summer holidays started heading back.

Smaller airports, as well as bullet trains, regular trains and expressways, also grew crowded as travelers returned to Tokyo after visiting their hometowns or resting at various resorts in Japan.

The rush is expected to continue through Monday at Narita, the main international gateway to Tokyo, and peak Sunday at Kansai airport.

At Narita, about 43,000 travelers were expected to return on Saturday, down some 8,000 from peak time last year, the airport said.

The drop was attributed to the recession, the swine flu pandemic, and travel plans delayed until fall to take advantage of the consecutive public holidays in September.

Chiyoko Watanuki, 57, of Maebashi, Gunma Prefecture, said she arrived at Narita after spending four days in Saipan with five family members. "I enjoyed myself swimming in the sea with my grandchildren," she said.

Meanwhile, traffic was heavy on some expressways. Part of the Chuo Expressway got congested as drivers tried to avoid the Tomei Expressway, part of which was closed by damage from Tuesday's earthquake in Shizuoka Prefecture.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
KANSAI: Who & What
Aqua Metropolis Osaka gears up for '09 launch


Osaka will stage the Aqua Metropolis Osaka 2009 arts and entertainment program from Aug. 22 to Oct. 12 around the Nakanoshima district in Kita Ward.

Some of the highlights include evening illumination events in Nakanoshima Park and "High Way Movie," which projects animations on the bottom of the Hanshin Expressway bridge.

On Aug. 23, 30, Sept. 20 and Oct. 11, morning markets will open at Fukushima Port and Hachiken Yahama Pier, with boats carrying fresh local vegetables and fruits coming to sell them. The markets will open at 10 a.m. and run until all items are sold out.

A daytime market and cafe will be set up from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Hachiken Yahama Pier from Aug. 22 to 31, Sept. 19 to 23, and from Oct. 9 to 12.

All venues are near Yodoyabashi Station on the Keihan or Midosuji subway lines, or about 20 minutes on foot from the JR Osaka and Umeda subway stations. Admission is free.

For details and schedule of the events, check out the Web site www.suito-osaka2009.jp (in Japanese and English) or send a message using the online inquiry form.

Kyoto museum to hold free classical concerts

The Kyoto National Museum will host free classical music concerts on Aug. 21, 28 and Sept. 4.

Flute quartet Lathyrus will perform five scores, including "Polovetsian Dances" by Alexander Borodin and "Fantaisie Pastorale Hongroise" by Franz Doppler.

The concerts will be held from 11 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

The venue is the central hall of the museum's special exhibition building, which is a seven-minute walk east of Shichijo Station on the Keihan Railway Line.

Admission to the special exhibition building, where "On the Trail of Texts Along the Silk Road: The Russian Expedition's Discovery of Manuscripts in Central Asia" is showing until Sept. 6, is \1,200 for adults, \800 for university and high school students, and free for junior high and elementary school students.

For further information, check out the museum's Web site at www.kyohaku.go.jp/ or call (075) 525-2473.

Tempozan Market Place plans food culture bash

The Tempozan Market Place, a commercial facility next to Kaiyukan aquarium, is holding a festival on the theme of food culture until Aug. 31.

The Natsu no Naniwa Kuishinbo Yokocho Omatsuri (Osaka's Big Eater Alley Way's Summer Festival) will re-create the downtown alleys of 1970s Osaka, including such features as the "kami shibai" (picture card) shows, displays of the home electronics and furniture of the time, and workshops that teach how to play with traditional toys like "ken dama" (cup and ball), paper airplanes and stilts.

The kami shibai shows will be held at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. on Sundays and holidays. The toy workshops will start at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. on Saturday.

Admission is free. The venue for the food culture festival is on the second floor of Tempozan Market Place, a five-minute walk from Osakako Station on the Chuo subway line.

news20090816jt4

2009-08-16 21:27:36 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
ELECTION 2009
'Telepolitics,' polls shake up status quo

By REIJI YOSHIDA
Staff writer

Japanese politics has been in a chaotic state for the past few years, perplexing millions of voters. The country has seen four prime ministers in the past three years, and the latest — Taro Aso — could be forced out if the Democratic Party of Japan, the largest opposition force, grabs power in the Aug. 30 election.

A victory would terminate the almost-unbroken 54-year postwar rule of the Liberal Democratic Party.

Observers say against the backdrop of this political instability is the LDP's gradual decline following the end, in the 1990s, of Japan's extended postwar economic growth.

The increasing need for telegenic charm and ever more sophisticated and frequent opinion polls over the past several years is further destabilizing the power structure of Japanese politics, they say.

"It's synergetic effects," said Masao Matsumoto, a Saitama University professor and leading expert on opinion poll methodology.

The professor said that as the LDP's grip on power continues to weaken, Diet members are overreacting to media polls to cater to voters.

"In a time of political instability, they don't have anything they can rely on, except for popularity as shown in media polls," he said.

The LDP was established in 1955. Until the mid-1990s its grip on power was firm, allowing Japan to enjoy exceptionally stable politics compared with the rest of postwar Asia.

According to Rei Shiratori, president of the Institute for Political Studies in Japan, the LDP retained wide support in various quarters by maintaining a big-government policy.

"The LDP is a conservative party, which usually advocates a small-government policy. But the LDP was a catch-all party and advocated a big government and welfare-oriented state. That's the reason why the party has had wide support among voters since its establishment in 1955," he said.

Shiratori said that, in theory at least, a catch-all party is impossible to sustain given the inherent conflicts of interest it generates, such as between producers and consumers, or urban and rural voters.

But the LDP-led government won support by using pork-barrel politics funded by tax revenues that continued to rise with Japan's rapid growth after the war, Shiratori said.

The LDP's formula for success, however, lost its validity during the economic decline of the '90s as the government started whittling down the budget, Shiratori said.

In a symbolic move, then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, who was in office from 2001 to 2006, introduced a fiscal policy that obliges the government to cut public works spending by 3 percent each year. This has resulted in considerable damage to the regional economies, which are traditionally among the LDP's strongest support bases.

Koizumi also established a rule to curb social security spending by \220 billion each year, a move that angered another traditional LDP support group: doctors associations.

"Prime Minister Koizumi has abandoned the big-government policy, prompting voters to flock to the DPJ, which now says it puts top priority on people's lives and social safety nets. In that sense, Koizumi has destroyed the LDP and its support base," Shiratori said.

Koizumi, known for his powerful communication skills and sound bite laden speeches, is often described as the first Japanese political leader who fully utilized the power of television.

Observers say he kicked off the era of "telepolitics" in Japan, which further destabilized the system.

Telepolitics refers to the influence that sound bites has on voters. But instant and often superficial reactions on the part of voters can also shape politicians' behavior.

"Since Koizumi, TV stations and other media companies have all started trying to sell news (on politics) as entertainment," said Iwao Osaka, assistant professor at Rikkyo University in Tokyo and a leading expert on telepolitics in Japan.

Osaka said the arrival of telepolitics coincided with a revolution in opinion polls technology.

Around 2001, when Koizumi debuted as prime minister, all of the major Japanese newspapers began using so-called random digit dialing to conduct their opinion polls. In this method, computers randomly generate phone numbers and pollsters keep calling until they have secured a large enough sample of voters.

Previously, poll results were gathered based on costly and time-consuming interviews.

To conduct an interview-based survey, at least 3,000 voters had to be chosen in advance, with at least two to three weeks required to get the results published in a newspaper. Thus, in the 1990s, major newspapers conducted polls only several times a year.

But now, major newspapers conduct opinion polls each month using RDD. They also conduct additional surveys to instantly gauge every major political event, such as a gaffe by a prime minister or a scandal in the Cabinet.

"Now media firms can conduct a poll instantly whenever they want to do so. . . . It has considerably changed the course of politics," professor Matsumoto of Saitama University said.

In fact, Fukuda, Abe and Aso all lost political clout in the LDP each time a low opinion poll disgraced their Cabinets. Each result fueled fears that they would be ousted in the next election.

"Politicians have become too sensitive about opinion polls. They now rely too much on them" in making decisions, Matsumoto said.

The RDD method also enabled the politicians to conduct their own polls so they can cater to voters' changing sentiments, the professor pointed out.

According to a July 22 report by the daily Sankei Shimbun, dozens of LDP members began an attempt to remove Aso as president last month after learning that the results of a secret poll conducted by the party suggested it would be able to win only 130 to 150 seats in the Lower House election.

Losing over half the party's 303 seats would allow the DPJ to control the powerful chamber and unseat the LDP.

Both parties regularly conduct their own polls in each constituency, using them as a reference point for picking candidates and shaping policy.

"(The polls) have weakened the (policymaking) ability of the political parties. They are merely trying to rely on the popularity" of the party or each candidate after seeing the poll results, Matsumoto said.

Professor Osaka concurs, warning that a DPJ-led government might end up facing the same problems that the LDP did: fickle reactions magnified by frequent media polls, particularly in response to scandals involving its members.

The LDP, as an opposition party, would desperately try to exploit DPJ scandals as it did in 1993 and 1994 during its brief fall from power after the Lower House election, Osaka said.

"The DPJ has yet to have a solid support base of voters," Osaka said. "The party could quickly lose the support of the people once it starts losing its popularity."

news20090816jt5

2009-08-16 21:11:08 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[LIFE IN JAPAN]
Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009
COUNTERPOINT
Japanese attacks provoked a seismic 'me-too' shift Down Under

By ROGER PULVERS

"On 27 December [1941], with his government a mere 12 weeks old, [Prime Minister John] Curtin stood Australian foreign policy on its head by declaring that the country now 'looked to America' for protection from the Japanese. Until this ringing pronouncement, Australia, in truth, barely had a foreign policy. . . . Its foreign policy amounted to little more than adding a squeaky 'me too' to whatever Britain decided."

This quote, from Peter Grose's "An Awkward Truth" (Allen & Unwin; 2009) succinctly characterizes the reality of Australia's place in the world, not only in the years leading up to World War II, but also since. In many senses, Australia, following the United States unquestioningly into Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, has simply substituted one "me too-ism" for another.

The overriding belief in Australia is that the U.S. saved Australia from Japanese attack and occupation, and that this symbolizes a special relationship, similar to the one that Washington presumably courts with London. In effect, however, this special Australia-U.S. relationship is one of deference on the part of the distant and ever-obliging little partner.

The U.S. did not save Australia from the Japanese in World War II. Though the northern city of Darwin did come under attack by Japanese bombers, and ships in the harbor of Australia's most populous city, Sydney, were torpedoed by midget submarines, the Japanese had no serious intent to occupy the vast Antipodean continent. What would they do with it once they had it?

"An Awkward Truth" is about the air raid on Darwin on Feb. 19, 1942. As Grose tells us, "More bombs fell on Darwin than on Pearl Harbor. More ships were sunk in Darwin than in Pearl Harbor." (The loss of life was far greater at Pearl Harbor, owing to the fact that the ships there were more heavily manned.)

Less than a month after the attack on Darwin, the Commander of U.S. Armed Forces in the Far East, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, fled the Philippines. Barely stopping in Darwin, he went to Alice Springs in the center of Australia, then on to Adelaide and Melbourne by train. It was on the train that he penned what is perhaps his most famous pledge — "I shall return" — referring to his forced eviction from the Philippines.

The Japanese raid on Darwin in February 1942 was carried out by 242 aircraft. The town had a multinational population of less than 6,000 at the time, consisting, among others, of Aboriginal and white Australians, Europeans, Malays, Filipinos, and even a few Japanese. The primary goal of the attack was to knock out and neutralize Darwin as a possible Allied military hub.

What is astounding about the timing of the attack was that it took the Japanese only a little over two months from Pearl Harbor to repaint the map of Asia and the Pacific — all the way to Australia — in the red and white of the Rising Sun.

With the fall of Singapore on February 15, 1942, only four days before the Darwin air raid, it certainly looked as though the days of British rule in the Far East were numbered as it reeled from what is still to this day its biggest-ever miliary defeat and surrender in terms of prisoners taken.

Australia's best fighting forces were far away from home, defending the Empire in the Middle East. Prime Minister Curtin cabled British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. He wanted those divisions returned. After all, wasn't it their duty to defend their homeland?

But to Churchill, there was no Australian homeland, only the Empire. Churchill refused and further stated that Australian forces would be sent no further east than Burma, where they were to be thrown into the (successful) effort to prevent the Japanese from extirpating the jewel out of the British imperial crown, namely India.

This proved to Curtin that the British commitment to Australia was only that of a master to a servant. As a result, Australia's loyalties were then transferred to what the nation saw as its new savior, the United States of America.

The truth of the first attack on Darwin (there were to be 62 raids in all) is not only awkward; it is bizarre.

Not a single Australian newspaper carried a report of the bombing. The War Cabinet meeting that took place later that day did not even mention the event. If you forego control of your sovereignty to a superior protector, be it Britain or the U.S., it is natural that you are unprepared for either a breach of that sovereignty or a proper response to its compromise.

Grose's book about the attack on Sydney Harbour by Japanese midget submarines, "A Very Rude Awakening" (Allen & Unwin; 2007), tells a similar story of a lack of preparation, both psychological and logistical. By the end of the attack by three midget submarines on May 31, 1942, 27 men were dead, including the six Japanese crew of the submarines.

I was deeply moved by the passage in "A Very Rude Awakening" describing the funeral, with a three-volley salute, given the Japanese sailors whose bodies were recovered. Bear in mind that this took place in June 1942, only a month before Australian and Japanese forces were literally at each other throats in Papua. The ashes of the sailors were returned to Japan via the Swiss diplomatic mission. Rear-Admiral Gerard Charles Muirhead-Gould spoke at the funeral in praise of the courage of the Japanese, and subsequently defended his stance in this way . . .

" . . . Should we not accord full honours to such brave men as these? . . . Theirs was a courage which was not the property or the tradition or the heritage of any one nation . . . . However horrible war and its results may be, it is a courage which is recognized and universally admired."

The admiral noted that these were "such honors as we hope may be accorded to our own comrades who have died in enemy hands . . . "

The attacks on the remote city of Darwin in Australia's north, and on the ships in Sydney Harbour, are of pale significance when compared to what was to follow in Asia and the Pacific.

MacArthur moved his headquarters from Melbourne to Brisbane, then on to Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea. His disdain for the safety of Australian troops is legendary. In the bloody battle of Buna in New Guinea that lasted for over two months from November 1942, he used Australian troops as cannon fodder in order to claim an "American" victory against the Japanese — yet mentioned only American casualties in his reports to Washington, to show how he achieved victory with so few dead and injured. Such was the U.S. commitment to their special partners down under.

With Australia overidentifying with American interests and participating enthusiastically in every major U.S. military action since World War II, it is clear that there are still many "awkward truths" and "rude awakenings" for Australians to confront and overcome before they can appear to the world as a people who understand their own instincts and know how to trust them.

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2009-08-16 20:26:01 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [Los Angeles Times]

[National News]
GOP seeks its revival in the revolt against Obama's healthcare plan
Party leaders want to turn the conservative activism into votes, but find themselves the target of ire from many of the protesters.

By Janet Hook and Peter Wallsten
August 16, 2009

Reporting from Washington - Conservatives are calling it their August Revolt -- a surprising upsurge of activism against President Obama's proposed healthcare overhaul.

Spurred on by the success of their efforts to dominate the news at Democratic town hall meetings, conservative groups are reporting increases in membership lists and are joining forces to plan at least one mass demonstration in Washington next month.

But the conservative mobilization has also created an unusual dilemma for Republican leaders, who want to turn the enthusiasm into election victories next year but find themselves the target of ire from many of the same activists.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), chairman of the GOP's Senate campaign committee, was booed at a "tea party" rally in July for supporting the government bailout of the financial services industry.

And one of the GOP's most reliable conservatives, Rep. Bob Inglis of South Carolina, was shouted down at a recent town hall meeting when he criticized a conservative broadcaster and tried to counter claims that children would soon be forced to receive swine flu vaccinations.

"You cannot build a movement on something that is not credible," said a frustrated Inglis, referring to the vaccine issue and other false rumors being spread by more aggressive critics of the health bill.

"Going door to door, I found opposition tending toward hostility," Inglis added. "At town meetings, the hostility went straight through to hysteria."

Some GOP leaders, such as former vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, have tapped into the unrest -- with Palin stoking fears on her Facebook page of "Obama death panels" that would result from the healthcare legislation. That claim, too, has been widely discredited.

Finding a balance

Others are still trying to figure out how to balance the desires of the base with the need to appeal to moderate swing voters who might be turned off by high-volume rhetoric. Whether they find that balance could determine whether the Republican Party can win back independents who voted overwhelmingly for Obama last year but now, according to several polls, are questioning their commitment to him.

The GOP might take comfort in a new Gallup survey that shows more than a third of independents who have followed the healthcare rallies in the news have gained sympathy for the protesters' views, and just 16% have lost sympathy for them. And 35% of independents approve of Obama’s handling of healthcare policy.

But party leaders eager to win the middle have failed in recent years to appease the conservative base. Immigration reform, for example, proved to be a divisive issue for Republicans.

Complicating matters now is that some activists have mounted their effort against a healthcare overhaul largely outside the party machinery. They are relying on social networking websites such as Twitter and Facebook to recruit volunteers for town hall meetings and spread YouTube videos of encounters with lawmakers.

One new group, Smart Girl Politics, has drawn more than 10,000 members using the networking site Ning.

"I don't know that anybody would want to be associated with either party at this point," said Michelle Moore, a suburban St. Louis business owner and mother of two, who joined Smart Girl Politics and has helped drive activists to four town hall meetings hosted by Missouri's Democratic lawmakers.

Anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who for years has served as a moderator of sorts between factions of the conservative movement, called the new insurgency a "series of ganglia and nodes" that are all "fed up" with Obama but not unified around a particular leader.

"I think the Republicans need a year to put themselves in front of this parade," Norquist said.

There is some organization to the conservative agitation.

About a dozen groups, including the large and well-financed FreedomWorks, led by former House Republican leader Dick Armey of Texas, are sponsoring a march on Washington on Sept. 12.

Another longtime conservative group, the 60 Plus Assn., purchased a nearly $2-million cable TV ad buy alleging that the Obama plan would put seniors' well being in jeopardy.

Reporting from Washington - Republican officials hope those efforts will dovetail with signs of a party resurgence. GOP candidates are ahead in two closely watched governor's races this year in states won by Obama -- Virginia and New Jersey.

GOP fundraising, which suffered badly over the last few years, has also improved: The National Republican Senatorial Committee said its donor list has grown by 66,000.

Re-branding

Leaders are trying to re-brand the GOP as the party of fiscal discipline, fighting Obama on his economic stimulus plan, attacking his proposed global warming legislation as a massive tax increase, and portraying his healthcare agenda as a socialist takeover of the private sector.

But the newly energized grass roots don't appear ready to let Republicans off the hook for supporting recent government bailouts of automakers, banks and Wall Street investment giants, even if Obama and the Democrats were the primary targets for their anger.

When conservative Rep. J. Gresham Barrett (R-S.C.) addressed a mid-April anti-tax rally in Greenville, members of the audience booed and turned their backs to him. His crime against conservative orthodoxy: Barrett voted in late 2008 for the Wall Street bailout bill.

"I know you are mad," Barrett told the crowd. "I know you are frustrated and I hear it. You may boo, you may turn your back. But I have devoted my life for the conservative cause. We are fighting for you, and I will never turn my back on you."

Cornyn's status as a party campaign leader was no shield against catcalls at an Austin, Texas, rally sponsored by Americans for Prosperity, one of the conservative groups involved in the town hall protests.

Although he joined them in railing against "more spending and more government" in Washington, Cornyn was called a "traitor" and heckled throughout his speech to the Fourth of July crowd, apparently because of his support for the Wall Street bailout.

Another strand of the conservative movement burst onto the scene this summer at a town hall meeting held by moderate GOP Rep. Michael N. Castle of Delaware. He was confronted by a woman asking why Congress was not more aggressively pursuing claims that Obama was not born in the U.S. He drew a hailstorm of boos and roars when he insisted that Obama was a U.S. citizen.

Frontal assault

In many places, tensions between conservative activists and the party establishment has gone beyond catcalls to frontal political assaults. In Florida, conservatives have backed a primary challenge to Republican Gov. Charlie Crist, who is running for the U.S. Senate. He is viewed with suspicion because of his support of global warming legislation and Obama's stimulus plan.

In Indiana, even a Republican as conservative as Rep. Dan Burton -- a leader of the effort to impeach President Clinton -- is being opposed by several Republicans who say he has lost touch with the cause.

Inglis, who first came to Congress as part of the 1994 conservative class, now faces a primary challenge because of recent departures from party dogma on the Iraq war and some environmental issues.

After he was besieged by activists at this month's angry, unruly town meeting, Inglis sent the YouTube clip of the confrontation to his supporters and donors with the message: "This is what the opposition looks like."

news20090816nyt1

2009-08-16 19:55:31 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [The New York Times]

[U.S. News]
Women at Arms
G.I. Jane Breaks the Combat Barrier as War Evolves

By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
Published: August 15, 2009

As the convoy rumbled up the road in Iraq, Specialist Veronica Alfaro was struck by the beauty of fireflies dancing in the night. Then she heard the unmistakable pinging of tracer rounds and, in a Baghdad moment, realized the insects were illuminated bullets.

She jumped from behind the wheel of her gun truck, grabbed her medical bag and sprinted 50 yards to a stalled civilian truck. On the way, bullets kicked up dust near her feet. She pulled the badly wounded driver to the ground and got to work.

Despite her best efforts, the driver died, but her heroism that January night last year earned Specialist Alfaro a Bronze Star for valor. She had already received a combat action badge for fending off insurgents as a machine gunner.

“I did everything there,” Ms. Alfaro, 25, said of her time in Iraq. “I gunned. I drove. I ran as a truck commander. And underneath it all, I was a medic.”

Before 2001, America’s military women had rarely seen ground combat. Their jobs kept them mostly away from enemy lines, as military policy dictates.

But the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, often fought in marketplaces and alleyways, have changed that. In both countries, women have repeatedly proved their mettle in combat. The number of high-ranking women and women who command all-male units has climbed considerably along with their status in the military.

“Iraq has advanced the cause of full integration for women in the Army by leaps and bounds,” said Peter R. Mansoor, a retired Army colonel who served as executive officer to Gen. David H. Petraeus while he was the top American commander in Iraq. “They have earned the confidence and respect of male colleagues.”

Their success, widely known in the military, remains largely hidden from public view. In part, this is because their most challenging work is often the result of a quiet circumvention of military policy.

Women are barred from joining combat branches like the infantry, armor, Special Forces and most field artillery units and from doing support jobs while living with those smaller units. Women can lead some male troops into combat as officers, but they cannot serve with them in battle.

Yet, over and over, in Iraq and Afghanistan, Army commanders have resorted to bureaucratic trickery when they needed more soldiers for crucial jobs, like bomb disposal and intelligence. On paper, for instance, women have been “attached” to a combat unit rather than “assigned.”

This quiet change has not come seamlessly — and it has altered military culture on the battlefield in ways large and small. Women need separate bunks and bathrooms. They face sexual discrimination and rape, and counselors and rape kits are now common in war zones. Commanders also confront a new reality: that soldiers have sex, and some will be evacuated because they are pregnant.

Nonetheless, as soldiers in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, women have done nearly as much in battle as their male counterparts: patrolled streets with machine guns, served as gunners on vehicles, disposed of explosives, and driven trucks down bomb-ridden roads. They have proved indispensable in their ability to interact with and search Iraqi and Afghan women for weapons, a job men cannot do for cultural reasons. The Marine Corps has created revolving units — “lionesses” — dedicated to just this task.

A small number of women have even conducted raids, engaging the enemy directly in total disregard of existing policies.

Many experts, including David W. Barno, a retired lieutenant general who commanded forces in Afghanistan; Dr. Mansoor, who now teaches military history at Ohio State University; and John A. Nagl, a retired lieutenant colonel who helped write the Army’s new counterinsurgency field manual, say it is only a matter of time before regulations that have restricted women’s participation in war will be adjusted to meet the reality forged over the last eight years.

The Marine Corps, which is overwhelmingly male and designed for combat, recently opened two more categories of intelligence jobs to women, recognizing the value of their work in Iraq and Afghanistan. In gradually admitting women to combat, the United States will be catching up to the rest of the world. More than a dozen countries allow women in some or all ground combat occupations. Among those pushing boundaries most aggressively is Canada, which has recruited women for the infantry and sent them to Afghanistan.

But the United States military may well be steps ahead of Congress, where opening ground combat jobs to women has met deep resistance in the past.

Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, a group that opposes fully integrating women into the Army, said women were doing these jobs with no debate and no Congressional approval.

“I fault the Pentagon for not being straight with uniformed women,” said Ms. Donnelly, who supported unsuccessful efforts by some in Congress in 2005 to restrict women’s roles in these wars. “It’s an ‘anything goes’ situation.”

Poll numbers, however, show that a majority of the public supports allowing women to do more on the battlefield. Fifty-three percent of the respondents in a New York Times/CBS News poll in July, said they would favor permitting women to “join combat units, where they would be directly involved in the ground fighting.” The successful experiences of military women in Iraq and Afghanistan are being used to bolster the efforts of groups who favor letting gay soldiers serve openly. Those opposed to such change say that permitting service members to state their sexual orientation would disrupt the tight cohesion of a unit and lead to harassment and sexual liaisons — arguments also used against allowing women to serve alongside men. But women in Iraq and Afghanistan have debunked many of those fears.

“They made it work with women, which is more complicated in some ways, with sex-segregated facilities and new physical training standards,” said David Stacy, a lobbyist with the Human Rights Campaign, which works for gay equality. “If the military could make that work with good discipline and order, certainly integrating open service of gay and lesbians is within their capability. ”

From Necessity, Opportunity

No one envisioned that Afghanistan and Iraq would elevate the status of women in the armed forces.

But the Iraq insurgency obliterated conventional battle lines. The fight was on every base and street corner, and as the conflict grew longer and more complicated, the all-volunteer military required more soldiers and a different approach to fighting. Commanders were forced to stretch gender boundaries, or in a few cases, erase them altogether.

“We literally could not have fought this war without women,” said Dr. Nagl, who is now president of the Center for a New American Security, a military research institution in Washington.

Of the two million Americans who have fought in these wars since 2001, more than 220,000 of them, or 11 percent, have been women.

Like men, some women have come home bearing the mental and physical scars of bombs and bullets, loss and killing. Women who are veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars appear to suffer rates of post-traumatic stress disorder comparable to those of men, a recent study showed.

Men still make up the vast majority of the 5,000 war deaths since 2001; nearly 4,000 have been killed by enemy action But 121 women have also died, 66 killed in combat. The rest died in nonhostile action, which includes accidents, illness, suicide and friendly fire. And 620 women have been wounded.

Despite longstanding fears about how the public would react to women coming home in coffins, Americans have responded to their deaths and injuries no differently than to those of male casualties, analysts say. That is a reflection of changing social mores but also a result of the growing number of women — more than 356,000 today — who serve in the armed forces, including the Reserves and the National Guard, 16 percent of the total.

Over all, women say the gains they made in Iraq and Afghanistan have overshadowed the challenges they faced in a combat zone.

“As horrible as this war has been, I fully believe it has given women so many opportunities in the military,” said Linsay Rousseau Burnett, who was one of the first women to serve as a communication specialist with a brigade combat team in Iraq. “Before, they didn’t have the option.”

Although women make up only 6 percent of the top military ranks, these war years have ushered in a series of notable promotions. In 2008, 57 women were serving as generals and admirals in the active-duty military, more than double the number a decade earlier. Last year, Ann E. Dunwoody was the first woman to become a four-star Army general, the highest rank in today’s military and a significant milestone for women. And many more women now lead all-male combat troops into battle.

The Army does not keep complete statistics on the sex of soldiers who receive medals and tracks only active-duty soldiers. But two women have been awarded Silver Stars, one of the military’s highest honors. Many more women have been awarded medals for valor, the statistics show.

CONTINUED ON newsnyt2

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2009-08-16 19:48:29 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [The New York Times]

[U.S. News]
Women at Arms
G.I. Jane Breaks the Combat Barrier as War Evolves

By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
Published: August 15, 2009

CONTINUED FROM newsnyt1

To be sure, not all women in the military embrace the idea of going into combat. Like men, a few do what they can to try to get out of deployments. Military women and commanders say some women have timed their pregnancies to avoid deploying or have gotten pregnant in Iraq so they would be sent home. The Army declined to release numbers on how many women have been evacuated from a war zone for pregnancy.

In addition to the dangers, military life is grueling in other ways, especially for mothers juggling parenting and the demands of the military, which require long absences from home. And while the military is doing more to address the threat of sexual harassment and rape, it remains a persistent problem.

Bending Rules, Shifting Views

The rules governing what jobs military women can hold often seem contradictory or muddled. Women, for instance, can serve as machine gunners on Humvees but cannot operate Bradleys, the Army’s armored fighting vehicle. They can work with some long-range artillery but not short-range ones. Women can walk Iraq’s dangerous streets as members of the military police but not as members of the infantry.

And, they can lead combat engineers in war zones as officers, but cannot serve among them. This was the case for Maj. Kellie McCoy, 34, a wisp of an officer who is just over five feet tall. As a captain in 2003 and 2004, she served as the first female engineer company commander in the 82nd Airborne Division and led a platoon of combat engineers in Iraq.

On Sept. 14, 2003, her four-vehicle convoy drove into an ambush. It was attacked by multiple roadside bombs, rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire. Three soldiers were wounded in the ambush. As one of the wounded stood in the middle of the road, bloody and in shock, Major McCoy ran through enemy fire to get him, discharging her M4 as she led him back to her vehicle. Then, she and the others returned to the “kill zone” to rescue the remaining soldiers. Insurgents shot at them from 15 feet away. But eventually, all 12 soldiers piled into one four-seat Humvee and sped away.

Major McCoy received a Bronze Star for valor and, most important for her, the admiration of her troops. “I think my actions cemented their respect for me,” she wrote in an e-mail message from Iraq. “I worked hard to earn their respect.”

As an officer, Major McCoy’s assignment followed both the letter and the spirit of the regulations.

But in other cases, the rules were bent to get women into combat positions.

In 2004 and 2005, Michael A. Baumann, now a retired lieutenant colonel, commanded 30 enlisted women and 6 female officers as part of a unit patrolling in the Rashid district of Baghdad, an extremely dangerous area at the time.

On paper, he followed military policy. The women were technically assigned to a separate chemical company of the division. In reality, they were core members of his field artillery battalion. Mr. Baumann said the women trained and fought alongside his male soldiers. Everyone from Mr. Baumann’s commanders to the commanding general knew their true function, he said.

“We had to take everybody,” said Mr. Baumann, 46, who wrote a book about his time in Iraq called “Adjust Fire: Transforming to Win in Iraq.” “Nobody could be spared to do something like support.”

Brought up as an old-school Army warrior, Mr. Baumann said he had seriously doubted that women could physically handle infantry duties, citing the weight of the armor and the gear, the heat of Baghdad and the harshness of combat.

“I found out differently,” said Mr. Baumann, now chief financial officer for St. Paul Public Schools in Minnesota. “Not only could they handle it, but in the same way as males. I would go out on patrols every single day with my battalion. I was with them. I was next to them. I saw with my own eyes. I had full trust and confidence in their abilities.”

Mr. Baumann’s experience rings true to many men who have commanded women in Iraq. More than anything, it is seeing women perform under fire that has changed attitudes. But some experts say the hostility toward women in the military was fading on its own. Many young men today have grown up around female athletes, tough sisters and successful women.

As the experience of Iraq and Afghanistan sinks in, some experts and military officers believe that women should be allowed to join all-male combat units in phases (so long as job-specific physical exams are created to test the abilities of men and women).

For New Warfare, New Roles

War is different today, they say. Technology has changed the way some of these jobs are done, making them more mechanized and less strength-dependent. Warfare in Iraq involves a lot more driving than walking.

What is more, not all combat jobs are the same. Handling field artillery or working in Bradleys, for example, are jobs more suited to some women than light infantry duties, which can require carrying heavy packs for miles.

Still, most women in the military express little, if any, desire to join the grueling, testosterone-laden light infantry. But some say they are interested in artillery and armor.

Any change to the policy would require Congressional approval, which lawmakers say is unlikely in the middle of two wars. But women in the military and their allies want their performance in combat to count for something.

“We have to acknowledge it because the military is like any other corporation,” said Representative Loretta Sanchez, Democrat of California and the senior woman on the House Armed Services Committee. “If you are not on the front lines doing what is the main purpose of your existence, then you won’t be viewed as someone who can command.”

Military women said they were encouraged by the words of Representative John M. McHugh, the nominee for Army secretary, who just four years ago supported a failed push in Congress to restrict the role of women in combat zones.

At his Senate hearing in July, Mr. McHugh, Republican of New York, sought to allay concern. “Women in uniform today are not just invaluable,” he said, “they’re irreplaceable.” He added that he would look to expand the number of jobs available to them.

In Mr. Baumann’s view, the reality on the ground long ago outpaced the debate.

“We have crossed that line in Iraq,” he said. “Debate it all you want folks, but the military is going to do what the military needs to do. And they are needing to put women in combat.”

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2009-08-16 18:45:56 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] fom [The Washington Post]

[Virginia Politics]
McDonnell Ahead In Governor's Race
Va. Voters Aren't Locked In, Poll Says; Economy, Transportation Top Issues

By Jon Cohen and Anita Kumar
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, August 16, 2009

Republican Robert F. McDonnell has claimed a clear early lead over Democrat R. Creigh Deeds in the race for Virginia governor, according to a new Washington Post poll.

Widespread criticism of the direction of a state run for the past eight years by Democrats and an increasingly GOP-friendly electorate have propelled McDonnell, who runs competitively even in the Democratic strongholds of Northern Virginia.

Less than three months before Election Day, the poll shows that relatively few Virginia voters are following the race closely, signaling that it could fluctuate considerably between now and November. Even fewer claim deep knowledge of McDonnell, the former attorney general, or Deeds, a state senator, who are vying to succeed Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D). Most voters have not formed an opinion or say they are apt to change their minds.

McDonnell is favored over Deeds among all registered voters, 47 to 40 percent, and is up by an even steeper margin, 54 to 39 percent, among those who say they are certain to vote in November.

In vote-rich Northern Virginia, where President Obama and other successful Democrats have won large majorities, the two run about even, 45 percent for Deeds to 42 percent for McDonnell among all registered voters. Even in the innermost Washington suburbs -- which the Democrat from rural Bath County won handily in his party's primary -- the candidates are running about even. McDonnell, who lives outside Richmond, leads by nine points in the rest of the state.

McDonnell's advantage in a race being watched nationally as an early electoral test for Obama serves as a warning sign for Democrats, who are eager to hold on to the governor's mansion in what has become a crucial swing state.

Obama, who recently visited McLean to campaign with Deeds, won the state last year by seven points, becoming the first Democrat to carry Virginia since 1964. But while 75 percent of Virginia voters who backed Obama said they would vote for Deeds, 13 percent said they would vote for McDonnell.

"I am what I think of as a very centrist moderate, but because the White House and both sides of Congress are controlled by Democrats, I'll do anything to make sure there's a better balance of power," said Bob Leipzig, 65, a semiretired dentist from Leesburg who responded to the poll. "I have traditionally voted Republican nationally and the man statewide, but this time it's the party, period."

With Democrats and Republicans largely sticking with their party's candidate, the race is shaping up to be a battle for the middle. The poll shows that independents tilt heavily toward McDonnell by 50 to 32, but a huge number, 69 percent, are undecided or open to shifting their support.

Fred Weck, 70, of Great Falls said he is eager for the candidates to say more about who they are and what they would do. "What I keep looking for -- a lot of politicians try not to do it -- but for them to define themselves a little more definitively," he said. "I keep reading to try to figure out what this guy really believes."

McDonnell and Deeds are campaigning as moderates who can work across party lines to solve the state's problems, particularly on the economy and transportation. Deeds has a six-point edge among those who consider themselves ideological moderates -- a group Obama won in Virginia by 17 points.

McDonnell has mapped a different course than have recent Republican candidates, spending half of his time in Northern Virginia, focusing on such issues as land conservation, and pointing out where he agrees with Obama, Kaine and other Democrats. He has avoided talking about his conservative views on social issues, many of which helped him make a name for himself as a legislator.

Deeds has sought to appeal to independents by trying to portray McDonnell as outside the mainstream on such issues as abortion, which he raised in campaign stops last week. But the poll shows that Deeds's plan has yet to yield benefits. Fewer than three in 10 view McDonnell as too conservative, which is less than the number of respondents who view Deeds as too liberal.

McDonnell has spent much of the campaign trying to force Deeds to talk about controversial federal issues, including legislation on unions, climate change and health care, as he works to tie him to Obama and the Democratic Congress.

Deeds has distanced himself from issues in Washington while pledging to follow in the footsteps of the last two Democratic governors, Sen. Mark R. Warner (Va.) and Kaine. The two remain popular among voters in the state -- with 68 percent and 55 percent approval, respectively -- but traditionally optimistic Virginians are now about evenly split on the direction of the state: Forty-seven percent believe Virginia is on the right path, while 45 percent are pessimistic.

Deeds receives the support of most of those who are positive about the state's direction. But McDonnell is winning by a wider margin among those holding a negative view. The Republican also picks up nearly a third of voters who approve of Kaine's job performance, on top of about three-quarters of those who disapprove.

The economy is issue No. 1 in the campaign, with voters about evenly split between Deeds and McDonnell on dealing with it. Health care, which has dominated national politics for the past month, is the second most-frequently mentioned issue in the governor's race, followed by education, transportation and taxes.

Northern Virginia's traffic woes push transportation issues up the ladder to second place in that region. Voters in Northern Virginia give Deeds a six-point edge on handling road and transit issues, with a quarter expressing no opinion or trusting neither of the two candidates.

McDonnell has proposed paying for transportation fixes in part by privatizing the state's liquor stores and adding tolls on some highways. Deeds has pledged to come up with a solution in his first year in office but has offered no funding plan and has been criticized for not saying whether he would raise taxes.

The poll shows that Virginians are split on which candidate would best handle the economy and other top issues, with large numbers undecided on who has the edge in dealing with transportation and abortion. McDonnell has an advantage on taxes and guns.

Peggy L. Wall, 75, a retired hospital worker from Vienna, calls herself an independent and said she is leaning slightly toward McDonnell because she believes he can create jobs.

"The next governor, he has to bring jobs to Virginia, and I'm not talking about the metropolitan area,'' she said. "I'm talking about the entire state, including the southwestern part of Virginia, where they really need jobs."

Ken Woollard, 51, an antiques dealer from Portsmouth, said he is leaning toward voting for Deeds after his business was hurt by the recession, partly because of the rising cost of health care. "I just feel like Deeds would be the one who would look forward and would really have a grasp on the economy," he said.

The Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone Aug. 11-14 among a random sample of 1,002 adults.

news20090816slt

2009-08-16 15:11:56 | Weblog
[Today's Paper: A summary of what's in the major U.S. newspapers] from [Slate Magazine]

The August Revolt
By Ben Whitford
Posted Sunday, Aug. 16, 2009, at 6:21 AM ET

The Los Angeles Times (LAT) leads with a report on the burgeoning Republican resistance to healthcare reform – a campaign that's energized the party's base, but about which many party leaders remain deeply ambivalent. The so-called "August revolt," powered by activists' antics at Democratic town-hall meetings, has helped reinvigorate conservative groups; still, some GOP lawmakers are wary of associating themselves with the campaigners' increasingly cartoonish attacks. "The hostility went straight through to hysteria," said South Carolina conservative Rep. Bob Ingliss after being booed down at one recent town-hall. "You cannot build a movement on something that is not credible."

The New York Times (NYT) leads with a report on the rising number of female troops gaining battle experience; while women remain barred from joining combat branches of the US military, they've repeatedly been sent to the front line in Iraq. The Washington Post (WP) leads local, with a new poll giving Republican Robert McDonnell a hefty early lead in the Virginia gubernatorial race: the GOP candidate is up by seven points overall, and up by 15 points among likely voters. Perhaps most troublingly for Dems, McDonnell is polling about even with his rival in vote-rich – and traditionally more liberal – northern Virginia, where he's played down his conservative credentials and focused instead on issues like land conservation.

Opposition to healthcare reform makes the front page on all three papers today. The activists like to cast their protests as spontaneous displays of popular outrage; still, the Post gets decent mileage from a report eying the conservative groups orchestrating the protests, which in some cases are led by established conservative-movement veterans and bankrolled by industry groups and conservative billionaires. The NYT eyes the battle for the airwaves: some $57 million has been spent on healthcare-related TV ads in the past six months, most of it in last six weeks. "We're looking at one of the biggest public policy ad wars ever," says one media analyst. So far, the war's being won by supporters of reform, who have outspent opponents by a ratio of about five to one.

Meanwhile, President Obama held his third and final healthcare town-hall yesterday, telling a friendly Colorado audience that while there was "no perfect, painless silver bullet," many of his plan's detractors were being disingenuous. The NYT picks up on Obama's push-back against unsubstantiated suggestions that he would implement "death panels" to deny care to the elderly: "I just lost my grandmother last year," he said. "So the notion that somehow I ran for public office, or members of Congress are in this so they can go around pulling the plug on grandma? I mean, when you start making arguments like that, that's simply dishonest." Still, the Post notes that the President appears to be resisting the temptation to attack his opponents, and is instead seeking to recalibrate his own message. He continues that effort on the NYT's op-ed page with a column calling for a more serious debate. "For all the scare tactics out there, what's truly scary — truly risky — is the prospect of doing nothing," he writes.

Above the fold, the NYT splashes a photo of a female US soldier in full battle gear charging into combat – an increasingly common sight in Iraq and Afghanistan, where troop shortages and shifting strategic needs are allowing more and more women to sidestep rules intended to keep them out of the line of fire. The trend has boosted women's status in the armed forces, and has helped catapult female officers up the ranks: "Iraq has advanced the cause of full integration for women in the Army by leaps and bounds," says one former colonel. But it's also led to calls for women to be granted formal parity with their male peers – and for gays and lesbians to be given the same opportunities for military service. "They made it work with women," said one gay-rights campaigner. "Certainly integrating open service of gay and lesbians is within their capability."

Virginia Sen. Jim Webb traveled to Burma's remote administrative capital yesterday for talks with General Than Shwe, chief of the country's ruling military junta, and was rewarded with the release of an American detainee and permission for a rare meeting with democracy campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi. Webb, who the Post notes is a long-time advocate of engagement with Burma, drew criticism from dissident groups for the trip; still, the NYT reports, the move comes as Obama officials are reassessing their hard line towards Burma's military leaders, and could paves the way for further US engagement.

A huge car bomb rocked one of Kabul's most secure streets yesterday, killing seven people and injuring more than 90 outside the NATO headquarters, barely a block from the US embassy and the presidential palace. The NYT notes that the blast presumably indicates the Taliban's intent to disrupt this week's presidential election through violence; if the group manages to suppress turnout in its own southern strongholds, the election's legitimacy could be thrown into question. "It is the Taliban who are trying to deny Afghans their political rights," a senior US official told the Post. "That's a lesson that ought to come home to all of us."

Meanwhile, reports the NYT, the Obama administration is to create a new counter-propaganda unit within the State Department to challenge the Taliban's dominance of local radio stations in Afghanistan and Pakistan; up to $150 million a year will be spent training journalists, establishing local radio stations and expanding cell-phone coverage across the region. "Concurrent with the insurgency is an information war," said project chief Richard Holbrooke. "We can't succeed, however you define success, if we cede the airways."

Iranian opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi yesterday announced the formation of a new grassroots political movement, dubbed the Green Way of Hope. The NYT says the move marks his continuing defiance in the face of fresh government crackdowns; still, notes the LAT, Moussavi's announcement failed to set out a specific political agenda or to give a clear strategy for rekindling the country's opposition movement. The Post reports that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country's supreme leader, appointed a hardline cleric as Iran's new judiciary chief; his first task will be to oversee the mass trial of more than 100 of Moussavi's supporters, who are accused of conspiring to overthrow Iran's Islamic government.

And finally, the NYT fronts a look at continuing tensions in Kashmir, where 500,000 Indian security forces remain in place despite the fact that separatist violence has ebbed to its lowest point in two decades. Local activists say that rape and extrajudicial killings by the Indian police and military are endemic, fueled by rules that shield troops deployed to the region from prosecution. "Maybe at some point in time when the militants were in the thousands it made sense to have so many soldiers here," said one opposition leader. "But at this point they are not helping in any way. Their mere presence has become a source of friction."