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Iran delays long-range missile tests in Persian Gulf
This morning's key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com.
The first places to celebrate the arrival of 2012 were the two South Pacific nations of Samoa and Tokelan, the two countries that skipped a day yesterday when the international date line moved. BBC
1942 was the first full year of World War II. Here are the top ten stories of the year.
To this list we should add the assassination of Admiral Darlan for its political significance in the war. St. Petersburg Times, Dec 27, 1942
On the eighth day of its war games in Persian Gulf, Iran's navy announced that it's postponing its long-range missile tests, even though Iran's state media initially reported early Saturday that the long-range missles had already been launched. Deputy Navy Commander Mahmoud Moussavi later went on the English language Press TV channel to deny the missiles had in fact been fired: "The exercise of launching missiles will be carried out in the coming days." Analysts are saying that the conflicting reports on the missile tests were a "shrewd" move to make the West think twice about pressuring Iran on nuclear development. However, it sounds to me that there's a much more obvious explanation -- Iran's navy screwed up and something went wrong. Reuters
Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan has vowed to crush the Islamist terror group Boko Haram, and has declared a state of emergency in areas hard hit by violence blamed the group. The move came following a series of Christmas Day attacks in northeastern Nigeria, including four that killed about 40 people, most of them Christians. International borders with Cameroon and Chad have been closed, as well as internal borders where violence has been the greatest. The declaration comes as Northern Christian leaders warned that unless the Federal Government moves swiftly to apprehend the perpetrators of the dastardly attack, Nigeria could drift to another civil war. The northern Christian community also called on all concerned Nigerians, no matter their faith, to collaborate with them and the government to return peace and unity in the country. VOA and The Sun (Nigeria)
A dispute has arisen within the the Arab League team monitoring the violence in Syria. A youtube video shows a woman complaining to one of the Arab League monitors that she can't go to the store to get bread, because rooftop snipers are killing people on the street. In the video, the monitor says, "You're telling me there are snipers? You don't have to tell me, I saw them with my own eyes." He says the observers' concerns would be conveyed to the Arab League, and that if the snipers were not removed within 24 hours, action would be taken. However, the leader of the Arab League mission, Sudan's General Mohammed Ahmed al-Dabi, contradicted the account, saying that the monitor's account was hypothetical. Al-Dabi's statement will add to protesters' allegations that he is biased toward Syria, since he was part of the genocide conducted by Sudan in past years. BBC
The plan had been that Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh would come to the United States for medical treatment for injuries incurred from a bomb in his palace mosque in July, and that he would leave his son and nephew in charge of the country. But public unrest is increasing, and Saleh's regime appears to be deteriorating, and so Saleh has reversed his decision to leave. On several occasions since the Arab Spring protests began in Yemen, Saleh has agreed to step down, only to reverse his decision quickly. Apparently he's done it again. AP
Hundreds of Egyptians held protests Saturday outside a Cairo courthouse and in the port city of Alexandria to demand answers over who was behind the terrorist bombing outside Two Saints Church in Alexandria a year ago, killing 21 worshipers. The attack in Alexandria took place Jan. 1, 2011, striking worshipers leaving a New Year’s Eve Mass. A year later, no suspects are in custody. AP
Angry Kurds on Saturday assaulted a local Turkish government official who sought to offer condolences in a village in Turkey where 35 civilians were mistakenly killed in a military airstrike meant to target PKK terrorists, as we reported two days ago. The televised spectacle of men throwing punches and stones at Naif Yavuz, a district governor, was the latest eruption of fury over Wednesday's airstrikes, and it highlighted the deep gulf of trust between the Turkish state and large segments of its ethnic Kurd minority. AP
(Comments: For reader comments, questions and discussion,
see the 1-Jan-12 World View -- Top Ten Stories of the Year - 1942
thread of the Generational Dynamics forum. Comments may be
posted anonymously.)
(1-Jan-2012)
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