Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Renaud Girard: «L’Europe paiera l’inconséquence des États-Unis en Afghanistan»

LE FIGARO : CHRONIQUE - À moyen terme, la victoire talibane agira comme un élixir de force pour tous les mouvements de Frères musulmans qui ont secrètement juré la perte de la civilisation occidentale, argumente l’auteur.

Un soldat américain pointe son arme vers un Afghan lors d’une scène de chaos à l’aéroport de Kaboul, le 16 août 2021. WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP

Vingt ans après qu’elle eut commencé une guerre contre eux, l’Amérique a donc rendu aux talibans l’Afghanistan. Elle aurait préféré qu’il y eût un délai de carence et qu’elle ne fût pas obligée de revivre, à Kaboul, les scènes de chaos de l’évacuation de Saïgon en 1975.

Plus Biden et Blinken s’expriment dans les médias pour tenter de justifier leur abandon précipité d’un allié, plus ils s’enfoncent, plus ils se ridiculisent, plus ils soulignent la honte américaine. Car l’histoire retiendra la date du 15 août 2021 et cette reprise de Kaboul par les talibans comme le premier grand revers géopolitique des États-Unis au XXIe siècle. Quant aux interventions de Pompeo, l’ancien secrétaire d’État de Trump, qui se permet de critiquer l’Administration présente et s’indigne que les talibans n’aient pas été obligés de respecter toutes les clauses de l’accord qu’il avait négocié avec eux en 2020, elles sont pathétiques. Mais on sent surtout, chez les responsables américains, la volonté de faire le dos rond, en attendant que les médias optent pour un autre festin. Car ils savent que, finalement, ce sera l’Europe - et non l’Amérique - qui paiera le prix fort de leur inconséquence. » | Par Renaud Girard | Publié : lundi 16 août 2021 ; mis à jour : mardi 17 août 2021

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Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — August 18, 2021

Wok de légumes par Pierre-Dominique Cécillon pour Larousse Cuisine

Pour: 4 personnes. Préparation: 15 minutes . Cuisson: 10 minutes environ. Difficulté: Facile. Vues sur YouTube : 82,002


Ingrédients:

2 carottes,
1 petit morceau de gingembre frais,
150 g de haricots verts,
2 branches de céleri,
1 botte de radis roses,
100 g de champignons de Paris,
100 g de germes de soja,
50 g de tomates cerise,
1 gousse d'ail,
2 cuill. à soupe d'huile d'arachide ou de pépins de raisins,
1 cuill. à soupe de sauce soja,
1 cuill. à café de fécule (facultatif)
, 1 poignée de pignons de pin, poivre,
1 bouquet de coriandre

Préparation:

1.Préparez les légumes : lavez, épluchez les carottes et découpez-les en bâtonnets. Épluchez le gingembre (comme une pomme de terre) et râpez-le. Lavez les haricots verts, effilez-les et coupez-les en deux. Lavez les branches de céleri, effilez-les et coupez-les en petits bâtonnets. Découpez les radis en rondelles. Émincez les champignons. Lavez et séchez les germes de soja. Lavez les tomates cerise et coupez-les en deux. Épluchez la gousse d'ail.

2.Faites chauffer l'huile dans le wok. Ajoutez les carottes, faites-les revenir en les répartissant bien dans tout le wok. Ajoutez ensuite les haricots verts puis le céleri, les radis, les champignons et les germes de soja. Faites sauter quelques minutes puis ajoutez le gingembre, les tomates cerises et l'ail. Faites sauter délicatement pendant 5 minutes environ, en remuant pour bien mélanger les légumes. Parsemez d'une poignée de pignons de pin.

3.Versez de la sauce soja (qui va saler le plat). Remuez, ajoutez un peu de poivre selon votre goût et la fécule, si vous voulez faire épaissir la sauce. Faites chauffer pendant 5 minutes encore. Pendant ce temps, ciselez la coriandre. 4.Parsemez le wok de coriandre fraîche et servez bien chaud.

Sous pression de Bruxelles, Varsovie promet de revoir sa réforme de la justice

LE FIGARO : DÉCRYPTAGE - Le bras de fer entre l’UE et le gouvernement nationaliste-conservateur semble cependant voué à se durcir.

Mateusz Morawiecki, premier ministre polonais, le 13 juillet, à la Commission européenne à Bruxelles. PASCAL ROSSIGNOL/AFP

Bruxelles

Entre Bruxelles et Varsovie, l’humeur est électrique. Si le gouvernement de Mateusz Morawiecki semble céder dans le bras de fer sur la chambre disciplinaire des juges polonais, le sentiment est celui d’une confrontation chaque fois plus frontale.

Justice, droit des LGBT, médias… Les différends se sont intensifiés ces derniers mois, avec comme point d’orgue la décision de la Cour de justice de l’UE (CJUE) du 14 juillet, ordonnant la suspension immédiate des activités de la chambre disciplinaire utilisée pour museler les juges. La Commission européenne avait donné à la Pologne jusqu’au 16 août pour appliquer l’ordonnance. Sans quoi, des sanctions financières seraient imposées. Gagner du temps » | Par Leonor Hubaut | mardi 17 août 2021

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La Hongrie et la Pologne s’éloignent encore des valeurs communes de l’UE : L’Union européenne s’inquiète des dérives de l’État de droit et multiplient les mises en garde face aux tentations autoritaires des deux États membres. »

Making of #Mundpropaganda

Dec 10, 2013 • Mit der Aktion #Mundpropaganda kämpft GQ gegen Intoleranz. Mit dabei: Männer wie Herbert Grönemeyer und August Diehl, Moses Pelham und Thomas D, Fettes Brot, Revolverheld, Kostja Ullmann, Ken Duken und die Beachvolleyball-Olympiasieger Julius Brink und Jonas Reckermann. YouTube Aufrufe: 882,801

The Guardian View on Britain’s Afghan Failure: A Military and Political Disaster

THE GUARDIAN: The fall of Kabul to the Taliban should spark a more honest debate about the UK’s unconditional support for US plans

The UK’s latest Afghan war, the fourth since 1839, has ended in failure. There is no consolation in claiming that this shameful retreat was down to a bungled withdrawal of US forces by Joe Biden. Britain scuttled out at the same time, the prime minister telling MPs on the day of Mr Biden’s announcement that “there is no military path to victory for the Taliban”. As events subsequently proved, Boris Johnson’s assessment of the situation was badly wrong. The extent of the military and political catastrophe for the UK that the blitzkrieg Taliban takeover represents is hard to overstate.

The UK is currently driven by a desire to stay close to the US. But America is a superpower, able to shrug off defeats and move on. The blow of losing Kabul is felt more deeply in a Britain shorn of substantial global influence. This has led the UK to take Washington’s lead in military affairs. In Afghanistan, the US judgment that a combination of special forces, local proxies and air power would wipe out domestic resistance to a military occupation was flawed. The Afghan security forces that Nato trained were exposed as a shell. In 20 years, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project, more than 170,000 Afghans have lost their lives. The death toll was rising. In June almost 1,000 Afghans were killed in the simmering civil war. A few weeks later half the country was under Taliban control. » | Editorial | Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Biden Rattles U.K. With His Afghanistan Policy: Britain was the second-largest supplier of troops to Afghanistan, and the United States’ rapid withdrawal from the country has left some embittered. »

We are being led by clowns, fools and idiots! These so-called leaders have absolutely no understanding of so many important geopolitical matters; further, they never think through the impact of their stupid policy decisions on the lives of others, especially the lives of others living in foreign lands. As for understanding Islam and the Islamic world, they are totally and utterly clueless!

As far as the US is concerned, it is high time that American voters started electing leaders of a higher calibre. They need to choose leaders of distinction. There are very many Ivy League university graduates in America who would surely qualify. In addition, why do Americans always choose such old presidents? Trump was an old clown; Biden is … © Mark

Taliban Promise Peace, but Doubt and Fear Persist

THE NEW YORK TIMES: In their first statement since taking control, the Taliban hinted at a rule unlike their brutal regime a generation ago, trying to placate skeptics.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s chief spokesman, speaking Tuesday at their first news conference since taking control of Kabul, Afghanistan. Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

KABUL, Afghanistan — For the first time since retaking power in Afghanistan, the Taliban’s leaders on Tuesday sketched out what their control of the country could look like, promising peace at home and urging the world to look past their history of violence and repression.

“We don’t want Afghanistan to be a battlefield anymore — from today onward, war is over,” said Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s longtime chief spokesman, in a news conference in Kabul, the capital.

Mr. Mujahid, a high-ranking leader, said the Taliban had declared a blanket amnesty, vowing no reprisals against former enemies. And the group has in some places appealed to civil servants — including women — to continue to go to work.

After days of uncertainty around the world over Afghanistan’s swift fall to a group notorious for its brutality, Mr. Mujahid’s words, delivered in a restrained tone, were a glimpse into a Taliban desire to portray themselves as ready to join the international mainstream.

But much of the world is wary of their reassurances. After taking over Afghanistan in 1996, the Taliban imposed their harsh interpretation of Islam with punishments like floggings, amputations and mass executions.

On Tuesday, a Biden administration official confirmed that any central bank assets the Afghan government had kept in the United States would not be available to the Taliban.

Many Afghans, too, remain utterly unconvinced by the new face presented by the Taliban, and its promises of political pluralism and women’s and minority rights. » | Mujib Mashal and Richard Pérez-Peña | Published: Tuesday, August 17, 2021; Updated: Wednesday, August 18, 2021

The first outpouring of public anger is met with Taliban force »

I Was a Marine in Afghanistan. We Sacrificed Lives for a Lie »

Nicht einmal in Burka traut sie sich raus


GEFANGEN IN KABUL

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Eine Tätowiererin, ein Breakdancer und eine Fotografin fielen in Kabul auch vor dem Einmarsch schon auf. Jetzt bangen sie um ihr Leben und ringen mit der Frage: Fliehen oder anpassen?

„Seit Sonntag verstecken wir uns“, erzählt Nargis in einer Whatsapp-Nachricht. Sie ist 27 Jahre alt und alleinerziehende Mutter, sie lebt in Kabul und hat in den vergangenen zwei Jahren als Tätowiererin gearbeitet. Zudem betrieb sie ein Kosmetik- und Massagestudio. Die Wände schmückte sie mit Postern von stark geschminkten Frauen in glitzernden Kleidern.

Damit war Nargis, die in Wirklichkeit anders heißt, auch schon vor der Machtübernahme der Taliban eine schillernde, für manche vielleicht sogar verpönte Person. Doch das Geschäft lief gut – so gut sogar, dass sie, die vor Jahren einer missbräuchlichen Ehe entkommen war, ihrem neunjährigen Sohn einiges bieten konnte: Privatschule, Fremdsprachenunterricht, eine Schildkröte als Haustier.

Jetzt haben beide Angst. „Das Studio habe ich abgeschlossen, selbst in die Nähe des Gebäudes und in den Stadtteil traue ich mich nicht, weil ich schon in der Vergangenheit Drohungen von den Taliban erhalten habe“, berichtet sie. Wir sind völlig untergetaucht, nicht einmal zum Einkaufen gehe ich nach draußen, und auch mit anderen Familienmitgliedern spreche ich kaum – nur mit denen, bei denen wir uns verstecken.“ » | Von Stefanie Glinski | Mittwoch, 18. August 2021

For Afghan Women, Taliban Stir Fears of Return to a Repressive Past: Since the U.S. ousted the Taliban, women and girls have rejoined society in ways that would have been unimaginable under their rule. Now those gains are threatened. »

Afghanistan: The 'pure devastation and guilt' of British-Afghans »

Schutz für Frauen und Opposition – Die Taliban inszenieren sich als grosse Versöhner

Jahrelang war er für die internationalen Medien nur eine Stimme am Telefon: Sprecher Sabihullah Mudschahid (l.) beim ersten Medienauftritt der Taliban nach dem Fall von Kabul. | Foto: Hoshang Hashimi (AFP, Getty Images)

Erste Pressekonferenz

TAGES ANZEIGER: Die Radikal-Islamisten-Miliz versucht bei ihrem öffentlichen Auftritt nach dem Fall von Kabul, die Weltgemeinschaft und ihre Gegner im Land zu beruhigen. Das dürfte Kalkül sein.

Entweder haben die Taliban sich gewandelt oder sie haben schlicht jede Menge Kreide gefressen: Die militanten Islamisten wollten die Macht in Afghanistan teilen, versprach der Sprecher der Bewegung bei der ersten Pressekonferenz nach der Einnahme von Kabul. Man werde auch andere politische Kräfte an der Macht in Afghanistan teilhaben lassen, sagte Sprecher Sabihullah Mudschahid. «Wenn die Regierung gebildet ist, wird jeder einen Teil daran haben.»

Besonderes Aufsehen erregte auch der Taliban-Sprecher selbst: Über Jahre hinweg war Sabihullah Mudschahid für die internationalen Medien eine Stimme am Telefon gewesen, mehr nicht. Nun sass er leibhaftig in Kabul und sprach in die Mikrofone, als offizielle Stimme und als Gesicht der für ihre Brutalität und ihr drakonisches Scharia-Regime gefürchteten Taliban. Wird Baradar Regierungschef? » | Tomas Avenarius aus Istanbul | Mittwoch, 18. August 2021

Die Wut der US-Veteranen: «Es war sinnlos, dort zu sein, zu sehen, wie Freunde ihr Leben verlieren» – US-Veteranen sind schockiert über die Machtübernahme der Taliban in Afghanistan. Und sie fragen sich, ob ihr Einsatz umsonst war. »

Afghanistan: l’Europe face au spectre d’une nouvelle crise migratoire

LE FIGARO : DÉCRYPTAGE - Les Vingt-Sept, qui n’ont pas unifié leur politique d’accueil après 2016, se sentent vulnérables.

640 Afghans, entassés dans un avion-cargo américain, ont pu quitter Kaboul dès dimanche, à destination du Qatar. Les Européens vont multiplier les vols pour évacuer leurs ressortissants et le personnel afghan de leurs missions diplomatiques. CAPT. CHRIS HERBERT/AFP

Bruxelles

Surpris par la vitesse de la chute du gouvernement et des forces armées afghanes, les Européens ont pour priorité d’évacuer leurs ressortissants ainsi que le personnel afghan employé dans leurs missions diplomatiques. Une question de «devoir et dignité», plaide le président Emmanuel Macron.

Pour l’aspect pratique, c’est à l’Otan que la coordination se fait. Les alliés «travaillent sans relâche pour maintenir les opérations à l’aéroport de Kaboul», assurait Jens Stoltenberg après une réunion d’urgence ce mardi. «Environ 800 civils travaillant pour l’Otan sont restés pour assurer des fonctions cruciales, y compris le trafic aérien, la gestion des carburants et communication», explique le secrétaire général de l’Alliance, en plus des soldats américains, turcs, britanniques, français et autres qui sont sur place.

Si des avions allemands et néerlandais n’ont pas pu atterrir lundi soir, la situation se stabilise, permettant un «retour graduel» des opérations, confie un diplomate. Et les alliés vont multiplier les vols pour évacuer aussi vite que possible. Il faudra probablement parler avec les talibans pour assurer ces évacuations, pointe Josep Borrel, Haut Représentant de l’Union après une réunion des ministres des Affaires étrangères de l’UE, aussi ce mardi. » | Par Leonor Hubaut | Publié : mardi 17 août 2021 ; mis à jour : mercredi 18 août 2021

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Am Knutschen !

Snogging ! / En train de se bécoter !

Ich bedanke mich bei Google Images and Wikimedia Commons – File: Kissing in Berlin for this super photo.

Bee Gees: Alone

Views on YouTube: 17,476,807

Fighting Homophobia

GQ Deutschland started a campaign back in 2013 to fight against homophobia. Straight actors kissed on the lips in the #Mundpropaganda campaign. Check out GQ Deutschland for more information.

With many thanks to gcn for this great photo. It’s where I found the photograph. Actually via Google Images.

Bee Gees: You Win Again (1987)

Views on YouTube: 50,578,227

America, the World’s Superpower, Has Been Humiliated – Big Time!

Joe Biden and his henchmen can put all the positive spin on this disaster in Afghanistan as much as they like. There is but one way to interpret this: The mighty USA has been routed! And by whom? By a ramshackle group of ill-equipped, ill-educated, ne’er-do-wells! So much for the power of the Superpower!

The mere fact that Americans thought they could bring democracy to a backward, unenlightened country such as Afghanistan beggars belief! That they have even tried has been bad enough; but to have tried and allowed their ridiculous experiment to fail before the eyes of the world is not only sad, it is a demonstration of the inability of successive administrations to understand not only Islam, but how it functions, or Islam’s intentions. It is also a first-class demonstration to the world that Americans don’t even know how a true democracy should function or why their own system of government is able to survive!

If Americans don’t even understand the underpinnings of their own governmental system, then what hope is the for them to understand how a radically different system of government, based on Shariah law, operates?

The mere fact that Americans have been trying to bring democracy to Afghanistan over a protracted period of time–twenty years–would be laughable were it not so misguided and sad. This débâcle has exposed not only the sadness of the lack of leadership in America today, but it has also exposed its leadership’s ignorance, both in the government and in the military.

All Rights Reserved
© Mark Alexander

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

LOVING: A Short Documentary

Oct 3, 2020 • Signed, numbered, dedicated, special Limited Editions and Retail Editions of our book "LOVING A Photographic History of Men in Love 1850s - 1950s". This book is available here. Follow on Instagram @lovingbynealandhugh

Afghanistan: «Capitulation»

L’éditorial du Figaro, par Philippe Gélie.


Afghanistan: «Capitulation» – L’éditorial du Figaro, par Philippe Gélie. »

Vintage Gay: Elegant Gentlemen in Love

It’s nice to see how gays from earlier times combined their gayness with refinement, handsomeness and elegance.

With many thanks to Pinterest and The Gaily Grind for this great vintage photo.

Robert Schumann: Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54 – Martha Argerich & Riccardo Chailly

Views on YouTube: 2,070,108

Islam: The Enemy of Democracy and Freedom

MARK ALEXANDER: This essay was first published on April 20, 2007. It is relevant even today. In fact, given what has happened in Afghanistan in the past few days, it is arguably even more relevant today than ever.

I wish our leaders and politicians would take the trouble to understand the nature of Islam. It would save us all a great deal of pain, heartache, trouble and wasted tax dollars!

Islam and democracy are wholly and totally incompatible. They have never been compatible; and never will be!

To say this is not in any way to cast Islam in a bad light. Not at all! Being different doesn’t have to mean bad at all. Simply put: In many fundamental ways, they are poles apart. And if the Islamic world and the Western world are ever to get on, those differences must be understood and respected.

Democracy cannot be imposed on a nation as different as Afghanistan is from the USA, UK, or any European country. Democracy must emerge. But whilst Islam is these people’s guide, true democracy will never spring forth. My reasoning is given in the essay that follows. I stood by my words in 2007 and I stand by my words today. No politician can change the nature of a faith.

Whilst Christianity and Islam resemble each other in some ways, there are many, many fundamental differences; and those differences cannot be reconciled.

I ask you to read my essay that follows and give it some serious thought. I mean no harm to any Muslim; indeed, in years gone by, I had some wonderful friends who were Muslims and surely still are. I will say this now: You will never get a warmer welcome from anyone than you will get from a good Muslim. Muslims are given to warmth, hospitality, generosity and kindness. In many ways, they are so misunderstood. But it is the sine qua non of good relations that each side understand the other. Moreover, differences must not only be understood; they must also be respected in a reciprocal manner. Without reciprocity, there will always be potential conflict.

I hope you enjoy the essay that follows:


Until 9/11, the western world was largely ignorant of the religion of Islam, of its goals, of its aspirations. Indeed, even since 9/11, most people, and that includes our politicians, would not score very highly in a test of their knowledge on the subject. It should be obvious to all thinking people that our politicians are actually unaware, dare I say blind, to the dangers that Islam will increasingly cause us. It is truly a case of the blind leading the blind! That means to say, uninformed and unthinking politicians leading an ill-informed electorate. But this is what we have right now. The same can hardly be said of Muslims in the Islamic world, though; for their knowledge of Christianity far surpasses - even though much of their knowledge is quite distorted - any knowledge of Islam by the man in the street in the West.

As the old saying goes, knowledge is power. But what we often don't hear uttered is its converse: Ignorance is weakness.

The West is far weaker than it need be because of this ignorance of Islam, since Islam is our greatest enemy. The greatest enemy since Nazism and communism. I'll give you some good reasons why this is so. And none of them - absolutely none of them - are based on hatred.

Islam is the enemy of the West for a plethora of good, solid reasons, and if we wish to survive as a civilization, we are going to have to bite the bullet and deal, head on, with the issues these reasons raise. Let us begin...

First and foremost, we are dealing with a religion which does not recognize any separation of politics and religion, any separation of the political from the spiritual. For Muslims, life is one coherent whole: the political and spiritual both meld into one. This has always been so, and always will be. No re-classification of the religion into two separate parts is possible because of Islam's very nature.

In Islam, all power rests with Allah, the god of Muslims. The Qur'an, their holy book, is always taken literally. Those words are considered to be the actual words of Allah. Therefore, none of these words can be changed, for to change any of them would be tantamount to tampering with Allah's words. This would be a grave sin in their eyes.

For the same reason that the words contained in the Qur'an cannot be changed, they cannot, therefore, be re-interpreted either. So do not hold your breath for any kind of reformation in this religion, because it’s not going to happen.

In Islam, all power rests with Allah, and it filters down via his vice-gerents on earth to the people. Hence the great desire among Muslims to restore the caliphate. Contrast this with the Western model of government.

In the West, the ideal political system is democracy. In democracy, all power rests with the people, and they exercise that power at the polls. In a democracy, all power filters in the opposite direction from Islam. In democracy it filters up; in Islam, down! Herein lies the greatest barrier to the miscibility of the two worlds: the western world and the Islamic world.

Without digressing too much here, I should like to add that this is the main reason why George W Bush and Blair's venture into Iraq to bring democracy there was a grave error of judgment. We are now seeing the experiment failing before our very eyes. How can one bring democracy to a region of the world where the people who inhabit that region believe that all power rests with Allah, and where they believe that Allah has prescribed their way of life for them for then, for now, and for all time?

I would suggest that where such a dichotomy exists, the most sensible and prudent thing to do would be for us to lead our lives as we see fit, and for those people to be allowed to live their lives as they see fit. That way, there would be hope of some peace in this world.

But this is not what we have done. We have done the very opposite of this: We have entered the Middle East in the hope - the vain hope in my opinion - of bringing our way of doing things, our way of life, to them; furthermore, we have allowed millions and millions of Muslims into the West - and at the very time when Christianity, the religion which underpins the West, is greatly weakened anyway - which will only give us headaches for the years ahead. Why? Because Muslims who immigrate bring their hopes and dreams and aspirations with them, hopes and dreams of establishing Islam everywhere on earth. To Islamize the world is the main aspiration of the Muslim; and we have seen in France in the recent past the manifestation of aggression in its cause. For what happened in France was in no small part because of the Muslim's desire to establish Allah's caliphate here on earth. These were the first rumblings, the first roar of the lion! Expect more of this in the future, as Islam grows stronger and stronger.

Muslims, by and large, do not respect non-Muslims. How can they? Their religion does not allow them to do so. Their religion preaches that Muslims are superior to non-Muslims; indeed, they use the derogatory term infidel for us. This word to some Westerners might simply mean that they call us infidels because we are people who do not subscribe to their faith. This, after all, would be quite logical, since to us it simply means not fidèle, or not true to the faith. But this does not completely describe what Muslims mean by this term. To Muslims, to be called an infidel is an insult indeed. It has connotations of inferiority, backwardness, and even uncleanness.

You see, Muslims believe that Islam is the perfection of religion for man for all time. They call it ad deen al kamal, the perfect religion. In their eyes, people who have not yet submitted to the will of Allah are in a state of pre-Islamic chaos, a state known to them as jahiliyyah. To Muslims, all Muslims, the whole world is classified in two parts: that part of the world which has submitted and is therefore in the Islamic state known as Dar ul Islam, or 'the House of Islam'; and that part of the world which has yet to submit and is therefore in a pre-Islamic, chaotic, jahiliyyic state known as Dar ul Harb, or the 'House of War'.

The 'House of War' is the part of the world which has yet to be taken over, and must at some point be taken over in the future. We, I am sorry to inform you, are in the 'House of War'. So we can expect anything at anytime.

Some people would ask why we were able to go for quite a long time without problems with Muslims. The answer to that is a simple one indeed. First of all, there were relatively few Muslims living in the West, so the ones that did live here were not powerful. Secondly, Muslims living in the Islamic world were, for the most part and for many years, poor by anyone's standards. This all changed with the Oil Embargo of the 70s - a time when the price of oil on the world markets soared. As a result of this, the Islamic world became rich and empowered. Money is power; and it talks loudly. In recent years we have seen evidence aplenty of Islam being on the move. I tell you now: If we do not find a way of clipping its wings here in the West, we shall lose our democracy, and we shall be in deep, deep trouble.

So the trouble we will have with Muslims will not come only from without, but in the future we can expect trouble from the Muslims within. The millions of Muslims living here in the West will not integrate, because it is not in their worldview to do so. It is also forbidden them by their very own Prophet Himself, the Prophet Muhammad. He forbade Muslims even to befriend infidels. He also exhorted them to kill us. And he certainly told them that they should live separate lives, and dress and behave differently, so that they could easily tell themselves apart.

No Western politician is going to be able to change these facts, for facts they are indeed. Moreover, as Islam will grow here, their numbers will become greater and greater, and they will be able to use our democratic system to outvote us and introduce their form of government based as it is on their beloved Shari'ah, or Quranic laws. How do you propose we shall be able to stop them? We shall be outnumbered, and as the outcome of democratic elections depends on the number of votes cast, we shall be able to do nothing about it. This time will come quicker than we might think, because so few babies are being born to infidel families.

The only thing left for people to do, will be to fight. Inevitably, at some point, civil war will ensue. If the political process fails people, then this will be all that will be left for them: civil war, guerre civile, Bürgerkrieg, call it what you will.

But one thing I can assure you, no politicians' sweet talk, posturing, or manœvring, will get us out of this one without conflict at some point in the future.

One of the biggest problems for the West is its devotion to the concept of freedom of religion. This is a lofty concept indeed, an ideal; but this devotion blinds people to one important reality: To the reality that Islam is not just a religion, but a political system, too. Indeed, it is more of a political system than anything else, and it is, in addition, a political system diametrically opposed to our own. It abhors freedom of choice, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of anything that we so cherish. The only thing one is free to do in Islam is become a Muslim, and submit to the will of Allah.

These two systems are totally immiscible, and unfortunately, we have imported this immiscibility right into the heart of the West; and to our own great disadvantage, and to the disadvantage of our long-term peace and security. What, I ask you, will the Americans do when the ever-growing Muslim population in America starts wanting to tinker with the Americans' beloved Constitution? When Muslims will see their way clear to supplant the Constitution with Shari'ah law?

Questions like these are the ones we should be grappling with NOW. To wait until the time comes would be foolish indeed.

Wake up to the harsh realities of life in the twenty-first century! We've got some collective thinking to do if we wish to save ourselves from darkness. Perhaps we shall, indeed, be forced to think about having to re-classify Islam as a political system first and foremost, a political system immiscible with our own, and one whose advance needs to be forestalled. This may be one of our only sensible alternatives. Since to give complete, unhampered freedom to Islam to grow here in the West is tantamount to digging our own graves.

All Rights Reserved
© Mark Alexander

Ina Garten's Balsamic Roasted Beef | Barefoot Contessa | Food Network

Views on YouTube: 52,146


Ingredients:

2 1/2 pounds filet of beef, trimmed and tied
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon aged balsamic vinegar
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon coarsely cracked black pepper

Directions [Method]:

Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F. [260C / Gas Mark 10] Line a sheet pan with aluminum foil. Place the beef on the sheet pan. Combine the mustard, vinegar, and salt in a small bowl. Spread the mixture on the filet and brush it evenly over the top and sides. Sprinkle the cracked pepper evenly all over the meat.

Roast the filet for 30 minutes exactly for medium-rare (25 minutes for rare and 35 minutes for medium). Remove the pan from the oven, cover tightly with aluminum [aluminium] foil, and allow the beef to rest on the pan for 10 minutes. Slice and serve hot or warm.

Note: This recipe was doubled for this episode.

Afghanistan: Warum die Regierungsarmee so wenig Widerstand leistete

Noch vor wenigen Wochen rechnete kaum ein Experte mit einem derart schnellen Siegeszug der Taliban. Die afghanischen Regierungsarmee - hier Soldaten auf einem Stützpunkt nördlich von Kabul im Juli - räumte zuletzt weitgehend kampflos das Feld. (Foto: ZAKERIA HASHIMI/AFP)| Oben, ein Screenshot von der Süddeutschen Zeitung.

SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG: 300 000 Mann stark - und dennoch überfordert: Die Soldaten der Regierung in Kabul setzten den islamistischen Kriegern wenig entgegen. Das hat auch mit einem Geburtsfehler der neu aufgebauten Streitkräfte zu tun.

Das Video, das im Netz kursierte und den Weg zum US-Sender CNN fand, ist schockierend, Amnesty International spricht von einem Kriegsverbrechen und "kaltblütigem Mord". Im nordafghanischen Dawlat Abad folgen etwa 20 Soldaten der afghanischen Armee der Aufforderung offenbar der Taliban, sich zu ergeben. Als sie unbewaffnet vor das Haus treten, eröffnen die Islamisten das Feuer. Es war, am 20. Juni dieses Jahres, ein Menetekel für den Kollaps der Regierungsstreitkräfte, der ANSF, und für das Schicksal der Besiegten. Die Ermordeten gehörten laut afghanischen Medienberichten einer Spezialeinheit an, die in eine Falle geraten war und sich verteidigte, bis ihr die Munition ausging. Sie rief über Funk nach Luftunterstützung, die aber niemals kam. Zu den Toten gehörte der Kommandooffizier Sohrab Azimi, der in Teilen der Öffentlichkeit wie ein Nationalheld verehrt wurde und ein erbitterter Feind der Islamisten gewesen war. » | Von Joachim Käppner | Dienstag, 17. August 2021

À Van, en Turquie, les Afghans qui fuient racontent les pratiques talibanes moyenâgeuses

LE FIGARO : REPORTAGE - Avec la chute de Kaboul, ce dimanche 15 août, c’est désormais tout un peuple qui se retrouve condamné aux mêmes ténèbres, sans issue de secours.

Une famille afghane, épuisée, réfugiée depuis quelques jours à Van, en Turquie. OZKAN BILGIN/Anadolu Agency via AFP

Si le désespoir avait un visage, il ressemblerait à celui d’Abdul Karim Ouzbek. «J’avais déjà perdu deux enfants à cause des talibans. Aujourd’hui, j’ai perdu mon pays», chevrote ce natif de Takhar, en Afghanistan, réfugié in extremis à Van, en Turquie. Dimanche soir, il n’a pas fermé l’œil de la nuit, collé à l’écran de son smartphone, bombardé d’images de panique relayées sur les réseaux sociaux. Comme une traînée de poudre, le piège des «Étudiants en théologie» venait de se refermer sur l’Afghanistan. À 40 ans, ce père de six enfants connaît leurs méthodes moyenâgeuses - il les a déjà endurées de 1996 à l’intervention américaine de 2001. Il est familier de leurs menaces - il n’a cessé de les subir pendant la relative accalmie de ces deux dernières décennies. Jusqu’à ce que le danger frappe en direct à sa porte. » | Par Delphine Minoui | Publié : lundi 16 août 2021 ; mis à jour : mardi 17 août 2021

Réservé aux abonnés

Afghanistan: les dirigeants islamistes «veulent éviter d’être mis au ban des nations» – ENTRETIEN - Les talibans ont désormais une compréhension des enjeux internationaux qui devrait permettre aux Occidentaux d’obtenir des concessions, estime Romain Malejacq. »

EN DIRECT - Afghanistan : le chaos à l'aéroport de Kaboul est «une honte pour l'Occident», estime l'Allemagne »

«Die Länder müssen ihre Grenzen für afghanische Flüchtlinge öffnen»

Forderung von Malala Yousafzai

TAGES ANZEIGER: Die Friedensnobelpreisträgerin von 2014 spricht in einem BBC-Interview über die Situation der Menschen in Afghanistan.

«Jedes Land hat jetzt eine Rolle und eine Verantwortung»: Malala Yousafzai. Foto: Brendan Esposito (Keystone) | Oben ein Screenshot vom Tages Anzeiger

Die pakistanische Friedensnobelpreisträgerin Malala Yousafzai ruft Regierungen in aller Welt auf, Flüchtlinge aus Afghanistan aufzunehmen. «Jedes Land hat jetzt eine Rolle und eine Verantwortung», sagte die 24-Jährige in einem BBC-Interview, das am Montagabend ausgestrahlt wurde. «Die Länder müssen ihre Grenzen für afghanische Flüchtlinge öffnen, für die vertriebenen Menschen.»

Sie selbst habe sich bereits an Regierungen gewandt und auch den pakistanischen Premierminister Imran Khan um die Aufnahme von Geflüchteten gebeten. Ausserdem müssten Flüchtlingskinder und Mädchen in Camps Zugang zu Bildung bekommen. SP fordert Aufnahme von 10’000 Menschen aus Afghanistan » | cpm/sda | Dienstag, 17. August 2021


Read the BBC article here.

Malala: I Fear for My Afghan Sisters »

Afghanistan: Bilder des Zusammenbruchs

TAGES ANZEIGER: Die Taliban greifen nach der Macht in Afghanistan. Die Bilder der vergangenen Tage zeigen den ungebremsten Vormarsch der radikal-islamischen Milizen.

Screenshot von einem Bild in der Fotogalerie des Tages Anzeigers.

Hier können Sie die Fotogalerie anschauen und einen Kommentar hinzufügen.

The Taliban’s Victory in Afghanistan Has Laid Bare the Magnitude of Western Hubris

THE GUARDIAN: I was one of many who thought, in the wake of 9/11, that “something must be done”. We have learned a bitter lesson

Taliban fighters take control of the presidential palace in Kabul after the Afghan president Ashraf Ghani had fled the country. Photograph: Zabi Karimi/AP

Here ends the west’s grotesque delusion that it could use its military might to turn Afghanistan into a stable democracy, a shining path of moderate Islam. In the shadow of New York’s burning twin towers, I was one swept along on that “something must be done” tide, that drumbeat for a war to stop terror and liberate oppressed people. We have learned a bitter lesson.

How deceptively easy was the 2001 victory, as Taliban fighters fled to melt back into their own population famously murmuring, “You have watches, we have time.” They have just turned back the clock on 20 wasted years.

A year after that empty “victory”, I was in Afghanistan, seeking signs of cultural transformations and social progress. But it was already clear the west had neither the political will, financial generosity nor the attention span to match the windy rhetoric that breezed us there. » | Polly Toynbee | Tuesday, August 17, 2021

‘Was It Worth It?’: Veterans of Afghan Conflict Reel at Taliban Takeover

THE GUARDIAN: Former soldiers express anger and heartbreak as service in 20-year war rendered ‘pointless’

Chaos at Kabul airport as Afghans try to leave capital after the Taliban entered to city. Photograph: NurPhoto/Rex/Shutterstock

As chaotic scenes unfolded more than 4,000 miles away in Kabul, veterans of the 20-year conflict and families who lost loved ones on the battlefield have been asking the stark question: “Was it worth it?”

“There is a generation of Afghans who have been given a taste of what freedom is like, so you never know, but it feels pretty bleak at the moment,” said Andrew Fox, a former major in the Parachute Regiment who served on three tours of Afghanistan and who has spoken openly about the impact of PTSD on his own health.

“But as one of my friends said to me: it’s like the defining feature of our adult lives has turned out to be pointless. I think that’s where we all were … this week.

“On patrols we’d see the little girls and boys running around playing with their kites and they would talk to us and take a few sweets. They’re probably 16 or 17 now and the thought of those lovely little kids growing up to be adults who only knew a degree of freedom and suddenly being thrown back into oppression is heartbreaking.” » | Ben Quinn | Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Gay Humour


Image thanks to Snooki on Pinterest.

NB: It should be remembered that for some people, it is dangerous to come out. Especially for those living in less enlightened countries.

Queer Quote of the Day: Sir Ian McKellen on Coming Out

“I have never met a gay person who regrets coming out. …”

With thanks to the National Portrait Gallery for this partial quote. You can read the rest of the quotation here.

Photo of Sir Ian McKellen thanks to Google Images and The Stage, its origin.

Le plaisir d'un baiser !

Der Genuß eines Kußes! / The enjoyment of a kiss!

Merci beaucoup à Advocate pour cette photo.

About to Kiss!

Sur le point d'embrasser ! / Bald wird geküßt!

With thanks to Advocate for this great photo.

Diese zwei Männer haben sich schon geküßt. Nun haben sie das Gefühl, völlig zufrieden zu sein! Wonne! Siebter Himmel!

Ces deux hommes se sont déjà embrassés. Ils ont maintenant le sentiment d'être entièrement satisfait ! Bonheur absolu ! Septième ciel ! / These two men have already kissed. They now have the feeling of being completely satisfied! Bliss! Seventh heaven!

Un grand merci à Pride.com pour cette photo.

Les talibans imposent l’ordre islamiste à Kaboul

LE FIGARO : RÉCIT - À Kaboul, les vainqueurs tentent d’amadouer la population et les diplomates, mais en province les exactions se multiplient.

Le siège de Kaboul, tant redouté, n’a pas eu lieu. Les talibans y sont entrés comme dans tant d’autres villes afghanes ces derniers jours: sans fracas, triomphant d’avance, et sans faire face à aucune opposition de l’armée. Dans les rues, des blindés vides gisent encore, désertés par leurs occupants. Le président du pays avait filé dès dimanche matin au Tadjikistan avec ses proches conseillers, et de nombreux autres cadres du gouvernement afghan avaient aussi rejoint l’étranger. La place était vide, et les talibans l’ont prise. » | Par Margaux Benn | lundi 16 Août 2021

Michael Bolton: Drift Away

Please forgive me! I am posting this fabulous song again, because it's such an exciting sound! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. | Views on YouTube: 1,475,060

Monday, August 16, 2021

Disturbing Videos Show Chaos at Kabul Airport as Taliban Re-takes Afghanistan | Newsfeed

Aug 16, 2021 • At least seven people have reportedly been killed at Kabul airport as hundreds of people desperately tried to flee the country after the Taliban seized control.


Incompetence is too mild a word to describe this utter failure and humiliation of the USA! So is the term ‘paper tiger’. This is a disaster of enormous and apocalyptic proportions; and no amount of positive spin put on it by politicians, of whichever stripe or position, will be able to change this fact. We have witnessed the humiliation of the world’s so-called ‘superpower’! – © Mark

Joe Biden Putting a Positive Spin on a Disaster!


This débâcle in Afghanistan has exposed the cracks, fissures and weaknesses of America today. The USA is looking more like a paper tiger with each passing day! It is a sad fact that the United Kingdom, if indeed that nomenclature is apt–it often feels more disUnited than United after Brexit!–has hitched its wagon to the USA and abandoned its brothers, sisters and allies in Europe, where its true loyalties lie and belong.

As much as I love America and Americans–indeed my late partner was an American, so no-one can accuse me of being anti-American–I cannot help but feel that my nation’s destiny lies in and with Europe, not with the USA. A transatlantic friendship and partnership with the USA is delightful and very welcome; however, our true destiny must lie with our brothers, sisters and close friends in Europe. Vive l’Europe ! Es lebe Europa! Long live Europe! – © Mark

Sur le tarmac de l’aéroport de Kaboul, des scènes de chaos et de désespoir

LE FIGARO : Les autorités américaines qui ont pris le contrôle du site désormais réservé aux seuls militaires, ont décidé, lundi en fin de matinée, de suspendre les vols, le temps de rétablir l’ordre.

L’image d’un gros hélicoptère Chinook survolant l’ambassade américaine à Kaboul avait déjà rendu évident le parallèle entre Kaboul 2021 et Saïgon 1975. Les scènes de chaos à l’aéroport Hamid-Karzaï résonnent plus encore avec celles du grand port vietnamien il y a près d’un demi-siècle. Le secrétaire d’État Antony Blinken a beau assurer sur CNN, que «ceci n’est pas Saïgon», rien n’y fait. «Si ce n’est pas un Saïgon 2.0, je ne sais pas ce que c’est», a taclé le député conservateur britannique Tobias Ellwood. » | Par Tanguy Berthemet | lundi 16 août 2021

Frédéric Chopin: Maurizio Pollini: Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11: Allegro maestoso – Philharmonia Orchestra / Paul Kletzki

Provided to YouTube by Warner Classics } Remastered

Afghan Women Fear What Will Happen with the Taliban Once Again in Power

Displaced Afghan women pleading for help from a police officer in Kunduz, Afghanistan, last month. Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: A high school student in Kabul, Afghanistan’s war-scarred capital, worries that she now will not be allowed to graduate.

The girl, Wahida Sadeqi, 17, like many Afghan civilians in the wake of the U.S. troop withdrawal and ahead of a Taliban victory, keeps asking the same question: What will happen to me?

The American withdrawal, which effectively ends the longest war on foreign soil in United States history, is also likely to be the start of another difficult chapter for Afghanistan’s people.

“I am so worried about my future. It seems so murky. If the Taliban take over, I lose my identity,” said Ms. Sadeqi, an 11th grader at Pardis High School in Kabul. “It is about my existence. It is not about their withdrawal. I was born in 2004, and I have no idea what the Taliban did to women, but I know women were banned from everything.”

Uncertainty hangs over virtually every facet of life in Afghanistan. It is unclear what the future holds and whether the fighting will ever stop. For two decades, American leaders have pledged peace, prosperity, democracy, the end of terrorism and rights for women.

Few of those promises have materialized in vast areas of Afghanistan, but now even in the cities where real progress occurred, there is fear that everything will be lost when the Americans leave. » | Thomas Gibbons-Neff | Published: Sunday, August 15, 2021; updated: Monday, August 16, 2021

Le retour des talibans à Kaboul scelle la déroute des Occidentaux

LE FIGARO : Vingt ans après en avoir été chassés, les combattants islamistes ont repris la capitale afghane. Le président Ashraf Ghani a quitté le pays et reconnu la victoire des talibans.

Un commerçant de Kaboul recouvre préventivement de blanc des publicités où l’ont voit des visages de femmes. Twitter Lotfullah Najafizada

Kaboul est tombée en quelques heures, sans combattre, scellant la victoire complète des talibans. Dimanche matin, les miliciens islamistes étaient dans les faubourgs de la capitale, devenue non officiellement une ville ouverte. Quelques heures plus tôt, ils avaient libéré les prisonniers de Pul-e Charkhi, l’immense prison de la ville. Pour éviter des «pertes de civils innocents», les responsables talibans ont ordonné à leurs troupes de freiner leur avancée.

«L’émirat islamique ordonne à toutes ses forces d’attendre aux portes de Kaboul, de ne pas essayer d’entrer dans la ville»,, annonçait en fin de matinée, sur Twitter, Zabihullah Mujahid, un porte-parole du mouvement. Dans ce communiqué, il promettait aussi une prise dans le calme, sans aucune vengeance envers les militaires ou les fonctionnaires ayant servi les autorités. Il assurait que toute personne désireuse de quitter la ville, notamment les étrangers, n’en serait pas empêchée. Dans une intervention à la BBC, Suhail Shaheen, un autre porte-parole, a affirmé que les talibans désiraient une «transition pacifique» sans se presser, «dans les jours prochains». » | Par Tanguy Berthemet | Publié : dimanche 15 août 2021 ; mis à jour : lundi 16 août 2021

Svjatoslav Richter: Rachmaninoff – Klavierkonzert Nr.2 in c-moll / Piano-Concerto No.2 in C minor; Op. 18

Sviatoslav Richter, Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra, Stanislaw Wislocki

Spain on a Fork: Spanish Onion Rice with Garlic Sauce | A Simply Delicious Recipe

Aug 16, 2021 • EPISODE 595 - How to Make Spanish Onion Rice with Garlic Sauce | Arroz a la Cebolla con Allioli


Get the recipe here.

If you wish to do so, you can become one of his patrons here.

Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — August 16, 2021

For Biden, Images of Defeat He Wanted to Avoid

NEWS ANALYSIS

THE NEW YORK TIMES: President Biden will go down in history, fairly or unfairly, as the president who presided over a humiliating final act in the American experiment in Afghanistan.

After seven months in which the Biden administration seemed to exude much-needed competence, everything about America’s last days in Afghanistan shattered the imagery. Credit...Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times

Rarely in modern presidential history have words come back to bite an American commander in chief as swiftly as these from President Biden a little more than five weeks ago: “There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of an embassy of the United States in Afghanistan.”

Then, digging the hole deeper, he added, “The likelihood there’s going to be the Taliban overrunning everything and owning the whole country is highly unlikely.”

On Sunday, the scramble to evacuate American civilians and embassy employees from Kabul — the very image that Mr. Biden and his aides agreed they had to avoid during recent meetings in the Oval Office — unfolded live on television, not from the U.S. Embassy roof but from the landing pad next to the building. And now that the Afghan government has collapsed with astonishing speed, the Taliban seem certain to be back in full control of the country when the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks is commemorated less than a month from today — exactly as they were 20 summers ago.

Mr. Biden will go down in history, fairly or unfairly, as the president who presided over a long-brewing, humiliating final act in the American experiment in Afghanistan. After seven months in which his administration seemed to exude much-needed competence — getting more than 70 percent of the country’s adults vaccinated, engineering surging job growth and making progress toward a bipartisan infrastructure bill — everything about America’s last days in Afghanistan shattered the imagery. » | David E. Sanger | Sunday, August 15, 2021

The Tragedy of Afghanistan

OPINION: THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A U.S. Chinook helicopter flew over the American Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday. Credit...Rahmat Gul/Associated Press

THE NEW YORK TIMES: The rapid reconquest of the capital, Kabul, by the Taliban after two decades of a staggeringly expensive, bloody effort to establish a secular government with functioning security forces in Afghanistan is, above all, unutterably tragic.

Tragic because the American dream of being the “indispensable nation” in shaping a world where the values of civil rights, women’s empowerment and religious tolerance rule proved to be just that: a dream.

This longest of American wars was code-named first Operation Enduring Freedom and then Operation Freedom’s Sentinel. Yet after $83 billion and at least 2,448 American service members’ lives lost in Afghanistan, it is difficult to see what of lasting significance has been achieved.

It is all the more tragic because of the certainty that many of the Afghans who worked with the American forces and bought into the dream — and especially the girls and women who had embraced a measure of equality — have been left to the mercy of a ruthless enemy. » | The Editorial Board | Sunday, August 15, 2021

Afghanistan: la faillite colossale du renseignement américain

LE FIGARO : DÉCRYPTAGE - Malgré les mises en garde contre les conséquences d’un retrait militaire unilatéral, aucun analyste n’avait prévu que le régime s’effondrerait aussi vite.

À Kaboul, dimanche, un hélicoptère de transport de l’armée américaine survole l’ambassade des États-Unis, dont le personnel a été évacué vers l’aéroport. WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP

L’effondrement du régime de Kaboul vient de prendre par surprise les Américains en pleine opération d’évacuation de leurs derniers personnels de la capitale afghane. Après dix-neuf ans de présence, malgré les gigantesques sommes dépensées dans la guerre la plus longue de leur histoire, les responsables américains se sont montrés une nouvelle fois incapables de comprendre les dynamiques à l’œuvre dans ce pays complexe. Dans la longue liste des erreurs commises depuis le début de leur intervention, la faillite du renseignement reste la plus accablante.

De nombreuses voix avaient pourtant mis en garde contre les conséquences d’un retrait militaire unilatéral et sur la faiblesse politique et militaire du gouvernement afghan. Mais Joe Biden, poursuivant la politique de Donald Trump, avait choisi de passer outre, décidé à mettre fin à la présence américaine en Afghanistan. » | Par Adrien Jaulmes, Correspondant à Washington | Publié : dimanche 15 août 2021 ; mis à jour : lundi 16 août 2021

Réservé aux abonnés

Chinas Schadenfreude


MACHTERGREIFUNG DER TALIBAN

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Peking sieht im Scheitern der Militärintervention in Afghanistan einen Beleg für die schwindende Macht Amerikas – und hofft darauf, dass US-Verbündete wie Taiwan das Vertrauen in Washington verlieren.

Der chinesische Propaganda-Apparat konnte sich am Montag die Schadenfreude über den amerikanischen Gesichtsverlust in Afghanistan nicht verkneifen. „Chinesische Internetnutzer machen Witze darüber, dass die Machtübergabe in Afghanistan sogar noch reibungsloser vonstattengeht als die Übergabe der Präsidentschaft in den Vereinigten Staaten“, schrieb der einflussreiche Chefredakteur der Parteizeitung Global Times, Hu Xijin, auf Twitter.

Die Volkszeitung, die offizielle Stimme der Kommunistischen Partei, berief sich ebenfalls auf den angeblichen Volksmund und kommentierte, „die zwanzig Jahre Krieg enden wie ein Witz. Amerikanische Soldaten sind für nichts gestorben. Die Taliban sind zurück und der einzige Unterschied ist, dass viele Menschen gestorben sind und amerikanische Steuerzahler ihr Geld verschwendet haben, indem sie die militärisch-industriellen Tycoons gefüttert haben“. Jene Menschen, die fest an die USA geglaubt hätten, seien „von den Amerikanern wie Müll entsorgt worden“, schrieb die Volkszeitung weiter. Die Global Times nannte die Machtübernahme der Taliban in einem Kommentar „die klarste Demonstration der amerikanischen Kraftlosigkeit“. Das Land sei nicht mehr als ein „Papiertiger“.

Mehr als nur Propaganda?

Die Bilder von der hastigen Evakuierung der amerikanischen Botschaft in Kabul passen ins offizielle chinesische Narrativ, wonach „der Osten aufsteigt und der Westen absteigt“. Sie werden wohl in den Kanon der Bilder und Erzählungen aufgenommen, die von Peking seit Monaten verbreitet werden, um die eigene vermeintliche Stärke zu zelebrieren. Etwa die Bilder vom Sturm auf das Weiße Haus und die Statistik der an Corona verstorbenen Amerikaner. » | Von Friederike Böge, Peking | Montag, 16. August 2021

Kabul’s Sudden Fall to Taliban Ends US Era in Afghanistan

THE NEW YORK TIMES: A takeover of the entire country was all but absolute as the Afghan government collapsed and the U.S. rushed through a frenzied evacuation.

Taliban fighters in Kabul, the capital, on Sunday on a Humvee seized from Afghan forces. The speed of the Taliban’s sweep through the country startled American officials. Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

Taliban fighters poured into the Afghan capital on Sunday amid scenes of panic and chaos, bringing a swift and shocking close to the Afghan government and the 20-year American era in the country.

President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan fled the country, and a council of Afghan officials, including former President Hamid Karzai, said they would open negotiations with the Taliban over the shape of the insurgency’s takeover. By day’s end, the insurgents had all but officially sealed their control of the entire country.

The speed and violence of the Taliban sweep through the countryside and cities the previous week caught the American military and government flat-footed. Hastily arranged American military helicopter flights evacuated the sprawling American Embassy compound in Kabul, ferrying American diplomats and Afghan Embassy workers to the Kabul military airport. At the civilian airport next door, Afghans wept as they begged airline workers to put their families on outbound commercial flights even as most were grounded in favor of military aircraft.

Amid occasional bursts of gunfire, the whump of American Chinook and Black Hawk helicopters overhead drowned out the thrum of traffic as the frenzied evacuation effort unfolded. Below, Kabul’s streets were jammed with vehicles as panic set off a race to leave the city.

Two decades after American troops invaded Afghanistan to root out Qaeda terrorists who attacked on Sept. 11, 2001, the American nation-building experiment was in ruins — undercut by misguided and often contradictory policies and by a relentless insurgency whose staying power had been profoundly underestimated by U.S. military planners. » | By David Zucchino | Sunday, August 15, 2021

Photographs by Jim Huylebroek and Kiana Hayeri

Leer en español.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace in Tears: Some “Won’t Get Back” from Afghanistan | LBC

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace breaks down in tears describing how some “won’t get back” from Afghanistan

The Fall of Kabul: A 20-year Mission Collapses in a Single Day

THE GUARDIAN: President Ashraf Ghani flees Afghanistan as Taliban sweep into city to seize control of country


Kabul falls to the Taliban as thousands of Afghans try to flee – video report

The final collapse of the 20-year western mission to Afghanistan took only a single day as Taliban gunmen entered the capital, Kabul, on Sunday, President Ashraf Ghani fled the country, and America abandoned its embassy in panic.

Even the militants themselves were surprised by the speed of the takeover, co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar admitted in a video statement in the evening. Now the group faces the challenge of ruling, he added. They are expected to proclaim a new Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan soon.

Many in Kabul do not trust promises made by the former insurgents of an amnesty for their old enemies and those, like women’s rights activists, who sought a different future for Afghanistan. The airport was mobbed with thousands of people desperate to escape. In the evening they flooded on to the runway, halting all air traffic.

In deeply humiliating scenes for the Biden administration, less than a month before the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on America, smoke spiralled from the embassy compound as staff hastily destroyed documents, before a final group took down the stars and stripes flag and headed to the airport by military helicopter. It was clear from early Sunday that a second era of Taliban rule had effectively begun. Taliban commanders started the day so confident of victory that after their fighters surrounded the capital, they ordered them to stay outside the city and wait. » | Emma Graham-Harrison and Luke Harding | Sunday, August 15, 2021

Humorous Queer Quotes

“I’m not a lesbian, but my girlfriend is.”

With thanks to The Best Queer & Lesbian Quotes To Inspire You(r Lover) for this funny quote.

Hot and Defiant!

I bet this handsome man doesn’t drink ‘milk’ made from oats or almonds!

Many thanks to Pinterest and misimagenesparatublog, its source, for this great photo.

Vintage Gay: Victorian Lesbian Defiance!


With thanks to Reddit.com for this photo.

La fascination et la sensualité des lèvres !

Die Faszination und Sinnlichkeit der Lippen! / The fascination and sensuality of the lips!

With thanks to Pink News and Google Images for this photo.

Sunday, August 15, 2021

Céline Dion, Andrea Bocelli: The Prayer | Official Audio

Views on YouTube : 3,022,249

The Afghan Government Collapses as the President Flees the Country and the Taliban Enter Kabul


The Afghan government collapsed after the Taliban entered Kabul and took over every other major city in the country. U.S. diplomats were being evacuated and some civilians fled the capital as well. CreditCredit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

Afghanistan’s government collapsed on Sunday with President Ashraf Ghani’s flight from the country and the Taliban’s entry into the capital, effectively sealing the insurgents’ control of the country after dozens of cities fell to their lightning advance.

On Sunday evening, former President Hamid Karzai announced on Twitter that he was forming a coordinating council together with Abdullah Abdullah, chairman of the Afghan delegation to peace talks, and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the leader of the Hesb-i-Islami party, to manage a peaceful transfer of power. Mr. Karzai called on both government and Taliban forces to act with restraint.

Al Jazeera reported that it had interviewed Taliban fighters who were holding a news conference in the presidential palace in Kabul, the capital. The fighters said they were working to secure Kabul so that leaders in Qatar and outside the capital could return safely. Al Jazeera reported that the fighters had taken down the flag of Afghanistan.

As it became clear that Taliban fighters were entering Kabul and meeting no resistance, thousands of Afghans who had sought refuge there after fleeing the insurgents’ brutal military offensive watched with growing alarm as the local police seemed to fade from their usual checkpoints. The U.S. Embassy warned Americans to not head to the airport in Kabul after reports that the facility was taking fire, and said that the situation was “changing quickly.”

Late in Kabul’s evening, Mr. Ghani released a written statement on Facebook saying he had departed the country to save the capital from further bloodshed. » | Carlotta Gall and Ruhullah Khapalwak | Sunday, August 15, 2021

Le retour des talibans à Kaboul scelle la déroute des Occidentaux : Vingt ans après en avoir été chassés, les combattants islamistes ont repris la capitale afghane. Le président Ashraf Ghani a quitté le pays et reconnu la victoire des talibans. »

Taliban nehmen Kabul ein: Jämpfen wäre sinnlos gewesen: Niemand leistet Gegenwehr, als die Taliban nach Kabul zurückkehren. Die Menschen fürchten die Islamisten, zunächst aber die Gesetzlosigkeit – denn die Tore der Gefängnisse stehen weit offen. »

Afghanistan: amers, les habitants de Kaboul se préparent au retour des interdits et des châtiments corporels : TÉMOIGNAGES - L’immense majorité des Afghans sont piégés dans un pays plus instable que jamais depuis deux décennies. »

Tschaikowsky: Konzert für Klavier und Orchester Nr.1 b-moll, op. 23 | Van Cliburn / Kyrill Kondraschin | Académie Charles Cros, Paris : Grand Prix du Disque