Tuesday, April 29, 2025
Blog Page 1836

The War on Terror is far from won

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In the past week the headlines have looked like the stuff of fairy tales: Cinderella has got her Prince, and the bad guy is dead.  Am I the only one who’s uneasy about this?  The reaction to Bin Laden’s assassination has been terrifying.  Thousands of people gathered outside the White House with face paint and flags chanting “USA! USA!”: you’d be forgiven for thinking it was July 4th.

It’s cathartic, sure. It’s been a long time coming. Bin Laden’s evasiveness over the past decade has come to symbolise the many failings of the War on Terror, but I struggle to see how such an overt celebration of an individual’s death will do America any favours.

The failure of Al Qaeda –and indeed, any extremist Islamic group – to gain footholds in the ongoing revolutions across the Middle East was an indication that their influence was fading. This martyrdom, coupled with images of rejoicing Americans, may be the kick start global jihad needs to attract new recruits.

Embassies around the world are now on alert for retaliatory terrorist attacks, and violence in Iraq and Afghanistan is likely to flare up as it usually does in reaction to goings on in the West.  UN staff were beheaded after Terry Jones finally burned a Qur’an just five weeks ago.

Saddam Hussein’s execution was not met with such jubilation. Why? Because we bothered to give him the facade of a trial first?  If grainy mobile phone footage of the death of the woman used as Bin Laden’s shield emerges, I’m sure we’ll tone it down.  For now, it’s too tempting to let symbolic victories overtake grim, bloody reality.

George W Bush said on Sunday that “the fight against terror goes on, but tonight America has sent an unmistakable message: no matter how long it takes, justice will be done.”  Bin Laden’s assassination wasn’t justice, it was revenge. It is insulting to the memory of those who lost their lives on 9/11 and the 900,000 who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan since to claim that any individual’s death is justice.

That said, Obama, who will now breeze into a second term, is right: the world is a better place without him.  Bin Laden’s death may or may not to be a turning point in the War on Terror, but whatever its significance, we should think twice before using anyone’s death as a morale boost.

Interview: Richard Dannatt

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Lord Dannatt has a rather nice house. It’s called the Queen’s House, and it’s in the middle of the Tower of London. Dannatt is the Constable of the Tower, which means he looks after it for the Queen. Who in return gives him her house to live in.

I wait outside the door in trepidation. The Queen might not be in her house at the moment, but she still has a red-jacketed bearskin-hatted rather nifty guardsman walking up and down outside the entrance. Occasionally he walks past me, scaring me. Dannatt, anyway, opens the door himself, and after getting off the phone with a chap called Tim from the Telegraph he ushers me into his monumentally lovely sitting room. Here on comfy sofas we discuss the deaths of thousands.

Dannatt is decidedly keen on the Afghan war. The focus of the army, he says, must be directed at winning that campaign. ‘The focus of the army as a whole is Afghanistan. Yes routine training continues but the whole field army is on a cycle, whereby at some point over two years people will spend time in Afghanistan. So the whole focus of the army is on succeeding in Afghanistan. It is that big a commitment that there really isn’t much scope for major operations elsewhere.’

‘Now, the government of the day will have a problem when the operation in Afghanistan is over, because the army will have equipment by and large that’s optimised for that theatre of operations. If we need to fight in a different environment we may find we’re in the same position we had before of not having adequate equipment.’ Something that might not occur to you or I, but is a major problem for army high commanders. It’s rather like the Roman army buying lots of sandals to conquer Parthia, and then trying to use the same equipment to conquer the Scots.

The General is, in fact, rather uneasy about the prospects of us fighting a major conventional war. ‘We would struggle to do so, because we have under-invested in our conventional warfare. We ought to be upgrading our Challenger II main battle tanks, we ought to be upgrading our Warrior infantry fighting vehicles. We ought to have replaced our armoured reconnaissance vehicles. Now none of those things have we done yet, and they are the bedrock of our conventional armoured manoeuvrable fighting capability. So the government has chosen to make sure the army is properly equipped in Afghanistan, at the expense of our more rounded capability which would enable us to fight a conventional war.’

Well, yes. But as he hastily adds, that isn’t very likely to happen: ‘I can’t envisage circumstances where we find ourselves having to fight a conventional war’. Although, as he even more hastily adds, making predictions about the future is very hard indeed. ‘One thing I’ve learnt in 40 years in the army is that however hard you try to predict the future you can’t always get it right. In the seventies I would have said I couldn’t see an end to Northern Ireland. Same point absolutely applies as far as the Cold War is concerned. We couldn’t see how the Berlin Wall would fall. The Falklands, 9/11, and now the Arab Spring- no-one predicts that sort of thing. If we’d had this conversation six months ago we would not be talking about what happened in North Africa and the Middle East. The Arab Spring was not on anyone’s agenda. It’s happened. So we can’t predict the future accurately. This is why defence chiefs always try to have a broad range of capabilities. It’s the golf bag analogy- you have clubs for every eventuality. What we’ve done at the present however is to say: Afghanistan is the main effort. Our equipment was not right. A lot of money has been thrown at Afghanistan, so the equipment is now right, but at the expense of being more balanced elsewhere.’ That is basically the big picture for the British army now.

Opponents to war might balk at this. Why bother devoting so many resources to an unwinnable unnecessary war? Dannatt is adamant the war can be won. Although, he says wisely, ‘to say “victory” is the wrong terminology. We’re not trying to win, we’re not trying to beat anybody. We’re trying to provide an environment where the Afghan people can live in a safe and secure environment, make money, go to school, live their lives well. That constitutes success, which is different to victory. Victory implies winning or losing in a battle. Victory is far too military. All the military can do is provide an environment in which the political social and economic solution can be worked out by the people.’

On this, however, his crinkly brow grows a fraction more furrowed. Dannatt faced constant battles with politicians over resources. The job can now be done, he says. But this was not always the case. Manpower was tight. ‘The operational concept that we have in Afghanistan is one of clear, hold and build- clearing areas of Taliban, occupying those areas in sufficient strength so the people have confidence in our ability to protect them, and then in that secure environment to build a better life for them, which is not a military task. This is the formula to win hearts and minds. You need a sufficient density of troops to hold the areas. Previously we didn’t. ’

He points the blame for this mostly at Gordon Brown, for whom he seems to have something coming close to- I was going to say vendetta, more like political disinclination. ‘I made the case to Gordon Brown that the manpower strength of the army should be expanded. Gordon Brown did not commit to fund the defence review of 1997/98; that began to bite when we went into Iraq and Afghanistan. That’s why it took us really until a couple of years ago to get the equipment we need. Gordon Brown didn’t really get it until 2009. When he was Chancellor he really did not want to know defence. That means you’re short changing your military.’ He is rather nice about Labour Defence Secretaries, although ‘they didn’t always see eye-to-eye with our views on troop numbers in Iraq and Afghanistan, or the amount of money that should go on equipment. When the relationships get bad, there are problems, and that’s what happened in the last government’.

And the current government? Better, it seems, though hampered by poverty. ‘The current government understands where the previous government got it wrong. The difficulty the current government has is the financial straitjacket it has, and they are not able to do what their instincts would otherwise want them to do. This is exacerbated by a £38bn black hole legacy left by the previous government, where the Ministry of Defence is committed to projects it can’t afford.’ Though he warns solemnly against cutting with the cuts: ‘asking soldiers to put their lives on the line because of bad equipment is probably verging on the immoral’.

Let’s hope they do. Because if Dannatt is anything to go by, the wars will be on for a good time yet. ‘Well we were 38 years in Northern Ireland. We were 15 years in Bosnia. We were 10 years in Kosovo. We were six years in Iraq. And our main operations in Afghanistan really only started in 2006.’ A pause. ‘These things are not done quickly.’

Teddy Hall drop ball

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Teddy Hall Ball has been cancelled following poor ticket sales.
 
The event, with a Drop Dead Gorgeous theme, was scheduled to take place on the 7th May, but could not compete with the other high profile balls taking place in Oxford this summer.
 
The ball website had promised an evening of “Gothic decadence and desires”, during which guests could expect to “indulge in a gluttonous feast and and explore Teddy Hall’s labyrinth of tricks and fancies, to be captivated by intriguing, intimate performances in the glittering front quad.”
Ticket sales suffered due to a lack of interest both outside and from within the college. One member of the college commented that £85 was too much to pay for what they labelled would be nothing more than “a glorified bop”.
However, Ball Committee President Genevieve Wastie blamed competition from “large balls, like Catz for example, which was much larger than normal non-commemoration balls.”
She told Cherwell that, “a great deal of effort went into planning the event and we are all still sad that in the end a cancellation was necessary.”
Wastie reported that only around half of the tickets had been sold, but that no money had been lost by either the Ball Committee or the JCR.
She also confirmed that everyone who had bought a ticket for the Ball had already been given their money back.
Teddy Hall JCR President Josh Coulson claimed that “for a number of reason the Ball Committee felt a smaller event would be more appropriate.”
The ball will be replaced by a summer barbeque. Coulson commented, “The JCR is very excited about the summer party this week…Everyone seems to be happy about this and we are expecting a good Teddy Hall attendance at what should be a fantastic event this weekend.”

‘Tis the merry month of May

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This May Day, Oxford City Council’s security around Magdalen Bridge prevented anyone acting upon the tradition of jumping into the river below as the bridge was reopened to pedestrians for the first time five years.
Traditionally, Oxford’s residents congregate at Magdalen’s Great Tower early on May 2nd concluding revelries from the previous night with hymns sung by Magdelen choir.
 
Since the 1970s a new tradition of students jumping off Magdalen Bridge into the shallow waters of the river has emerged, resulting in serious injuries.
Oxford City Council and the Thames Valley Police “are pleased that people enjoyed May Morning in Oxford and it passed without incident.”
Councillor Bob Price, Leader of the City Council, commented, “We worked closely with the police and other agencies to ensure that people enjoyed the event.
“There was only one person who tried to jump but the security was in place to stop him.”
Several students chose instead to swim in the river. Superintendent of the Thames Valley Police, Amanda Pearson, told Cherwell that her officers spent the night before visiting pubs and clubs, “ensuring that early intervention was taken into potential alcohol-related incidents.” 
“There were a handful of arrests during the night and considering the very large numbers of people out and about enjoying themselves, very little crime and disorder.”
As the morning went on the celebrations moved to Broad Street with folk music from The Hurly Burly Whirly Early-in-the-Morning Band. 

This May Day, Oxford City Council’s security around Magdalen Bridge prevented anyone acting upon the tradition of jumping into the river below as the bridge was reopened to pedestrians for the first time five years.

Traditionally, Oxford’s residents congregate at Magdalen’s Great Tower early on May 2nd concluding revelries from the previous night with hymns sung by Magdelen choir. Since the 1970s a new tradition of students jumping off Magdalen Bridge into the shallow waters of the river has emerged, resulting in serious injuries.

Oxford City Council and the Thames Valley Police “are pleased that people enjoyed May Morning in Oxford and it passed without incident.”

Councillor Bob Price, Leader of the City Council, commented, “We worked closely with the police and other agencies to ensure that people enjoyed the event.

“There was only one person who tried to jump but the security was in place to stop him.”

Several students chose instead to swim in the river. Superintendent of the Thames Valley Police, Amanda Pearson, told Cherwell that her officers spent the night before visiting pubs and clubs, “ensuring that early intervention was taken into potential alcohol-related incidents.” 

“There were a handful of arrests during the night and considering the very large numbers of people out and about enjoying themselves, very little crime and disorder.”

As the morning went on the celebrations moved to Broad Street with folk music from The Hurly Burly Whirly Early-in-the-Morning Band. 

Suspected arson in Headington

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 A woman is in hospital after a suspected arson attack in a residential building in Oxford.

The fire broke out just after 12.05am on Sunday, in the front door area of a second-floor flat in the 14-storey Plowman Tower on Westlands Drive in Headington.
A woman in her thirties was found asleep in the flat and taken to hospital, where she is being treated for smoke inhalation.
The entire building was evacuated. About 100 residents waited outside as 30 firefighters tackled the fire and ventilated the building in a two-hour long operation.
John Nixon, Incident Commander for the Oxfordshire Fire and Rescue Services, said: ‘I would like to praise the residents of the tower block that evacuated the building in a calm and methodical manner.’
Although initially unsure of how the fire started, Thames Valley Police now suspect arson and are appealing for witnesses. According to the latest press release, “Detectives are investigating the motive and whether an accelerant was used to start the fire.”

Win for tiddlywinking Tabs

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On Sunday afternoon, amidst the hymns and hangovers of Mayday, Oxford hosted another less well-known but equally idiosyncratic event, the annual Varsity Tiddlywinks match.

The match, which was held at Balliol College, was won by the Cambidge University Tiddlywinks Club (CUTwC) by a disappointingly impressive 99 to Oxford’s 13.

Cambridge has only lost the Varsity Cup on four occasions since it was first contested in 1964.

John Lees, a Balliol student who represented Oxford in the match, commented “CUTwC came prepared with a selection of squidgers, despite our early attempts to Blitz out we were foiled by the Tabs excellent squopping. Two failed John Lennon memorial shots later, and it felt like every winkhad been subbed at once.”

Although the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society is used to losing to the Tabs, this defeat was particularly hard for the team as out of a total of 16 games Oxford has only won one. The loss also seems to have caused tension within the team.

Lees commented, “It was widely agreed that [Daniel] Kessler’s tactical ineptitude and poor potting technique led to our 99-13 defeat, and he has now resigned from his post as president due to pressure from the team.”

Despite the upsetting outcome for Oxford, the entire team were awarded quarter blues.

OUSU move over

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 OUSU President David Barclay has told Cherwell that the Student Union’s new premises are a “far more professional set up”.

 Now located at 2 Worcester Street, the new offices provide disabled access and improved meeting spaces for OUSU’s groups and campaigns.
 
The move was carried out over two weeks during the vacation, and was funded through a one-off payment from the university.
According to Barclay, the new offices will be “substantially cheaper” to run than the old ones in Thomas Hull House on Bonn Square.
Figures obtained by Cherwell last year found that the rent for the Bonn Square site accounted for 30% of OUSU’s annual budget.
Barclay stressed that money saved will go towards funding “essential” student activities.
“The move has also saved OUSU and the University money at a time of great financial uncertainty”, he added.

“Not only were the old premises in a pretty poor state of repair and poorly serviced, but the disabled access to the building was not befitting a 21st century Student Union”, Barclay said.
OUSU are still working to inform students across the university about the move.
Despite adverts and notifications distributed by OUSU over the past month, not all students are aware that the Student’s Union has relocated.
“It will take some time to make all students aware of the change”, Barclay admitted, “but I think we’re getting there.
Ugo Okoroafor, OUSU/NUS and Returning Officer at St Hilda’s, said, “I imagine there’s always room for improvement but I think the advertising that was done was adequate”.

Varsity Match 2011 Preview

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This Friday’s Varsity Match sees the conclusion of one of the most successful seasons in the history of OUAFC. After an indifferent start to the campaign, an incredible winning streak after Christmas catapulted the Blues into a promotion play-off position, with the chance to play University football at the highest level next year at stake. The Blues also achieved unrivaled success in the National Cup, eventually defeated at the Quarter-Final stage by an unsurprisingly talented Loughborough outfit. However, as any Oxford sportsman will confirm, a season of competitive success is easily dampened by a failure to succeed in Varsity, and coming up against a Cambridge side going equally strong in their respective league, the Blues will face one of their toughest challenges to date on Friday if they are retain the C.B. Fry Trophy.

A quick look at the stats is all that’s needed to see where the Blues’ strengths lie. Having conceded only 9 league goals all year, a solid back 5 is undoubtedly to thank. Goalkeeper Dwayne Whylly has been consistently spectacular in his shot stopping and handling, and a defence marshalled by skipper Elliot Thomas, ably assisted by the evergreen Timothy Squires, has been at times impregnable. The pressure of full debut seasons seemed not to tell on the other half of the defensive unit either, as both Jason Adebisi and Anthony Beddows have proved to be composed, ball-playing additions to the back line, disciplined when going backwards but confident with the ball on the floor.

In midfield, the seemingly irreplaceable Leon Farr has seen his boots more than adequately filled by silky Blues boxer Alec Ward, whose vision and passing ability has been perfectly complimented by the physical presence of Ben Quigley, another former Blues fighter. Quigley’s strength, energy and eye for goal have seen him transformed from a Half Blue in 2010 to one of the team’s most integral members. On the wings, Players’ Player of the Season and topscorer Ezra Rubenstein has been a constant threat with his quick feet and cultured finishing, as has counterpart Adam Zagajewski. The pint-sized Yorkshireman’s set piece delivery has been nothing short of pinpoint all season, and his pace and trickery will no doubt prove to be one of the Blues’ most damaging weapons on Friday night.

Through the middle, ex-rugby under-21 Adam Healy has proved that a switch of sporting allegiances is not always detrimental for a sportsman. Commanding in the air, Healy has tested the best University centre-backs in the country all season with his dominant physical presence and tireless running. Healy will be supported by relative newcomer Chris Wright, whose late arrival into the Blues set-up was hampered by injury. Still, his sharp movement and clinical finishing has earned him a place in the Varsity squad, and a goal on Friday night will surely ease the frustration of a season on the sidelines.

If, at any point, coach Mickey Lewis looks to the subs’ bench for attacking inspiration, then the talented pairing of Tom Castro and Rob Frost offer superb support to the Blues’ attacking line up. After an impressive season for the Centaurs, fresher full-back Adam Fellows has also gone from strength to strength since his training with the Blues began, recently deputising well at centre half in a tough fixture against the RAF. Similarly coming off the back of a strong season for the Centaurs is sub ‘keeper Tom Haigh, who has trained well and looks ready to step in for Whylly, should the Barbadian find himself in trouble during the game.

With two successful pre-Varsity friendlies under their belt, it looks as if the Blues have managed to maintain the winning habit that saw them find victory against every team in their league, despite their Easter hiatus. But with the added pressure of formidable away support (Cambridge have sold int he region of three hundred tickets) and the cup-final atmosphere that comes with a Varsity Match, it remains to be seen whether the Blues will end their season in the appropriate manner and send their Light Blue rivals home empty handed.

**Support the Varsity Match: tickets available from Elmer Cotton all day, with coaches leaving from Iffley Road at regular intervals to the Kassam Stadium. K.O. at 7:45pm**

Review: Jenny Hval – Viscera

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Amidst whispered chimes and bowed cymbals, Jenny Hval delicately delivers the line ‘I arrived in town with an electric tooth brush pressed against my clitoris’. It is a typically provocative opening gambit from the Norwegian singer, in her first recording released under her own name and her first outing on the Rune Grammofon label. Earlier albums recorded under her Rockettothesky incarnation – 2006’s To Sing You Apple Trees and 2008’s Medea, a fantastical evocation of Euripidean pain – straddled timbral experimentation and potential leanings to the mainstream. Viscera is a very different beast and it does not make for easy listening.

Finding freedom in a more acoustically concerned setting, Hval obsesses about her vocal attack, carefully sculpting the front of notes. Her ability to dart from hushed voicing to open lyricism is astonishing. The fragile haze set up by Hval’s church organ and zither, drifting into periods of more pronounced percussion from drummer Kyrre Laastad, echoes Joanna Newsom’s darkest moments.

Above all, for Hval, it is music that plays with the primitive sensations of the human body. On Blood Fight, she swiftly articulates ‘I carefully rearranged my senses so they could have a conversation’ as guitarist Håvard Volden coaxes pulsating blocks of sound from his instrument. Moments of outstanding beauty come with pure textural manipulation – the electronic waves of sound dashed through with snatched voicing that could open ‘golden locks’.

This is an important record, one that establishes Jenny Hval as a significant force to watch alongside the likes of PJ Harvey and Björk. Viscera is certainly an uncompromising proposition. Its vocabulary runs through the female anatomy, spilling out in Hval’s vivid references to organs and primal senses: clitoris, cunt, pores, erections, blood, itching. It is feminist language that aims at a graphic anti-pornography, finding an erotic backdrop in her meandering night music.

Review: Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues

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Since the rapturous reception received by their eponymous debut album back in 2008, Seattle-based sextet Fleet Foxes have found themselves between something of a rock and a hard place. Garnering both widespread critical acclaim and commercial success, Fleet Foxes was an album so fully realised that it seemed to leave the band with little room for improvement. The remarkable thing about the band’s long awaited sophomore record, Helplessness Blues, is that Fleet Foxes have managed to maintain their musical identity without merely repeating themselves.

 The weightless vocal harmonies that steadily build and recede atop the finger-picked guitar on opener Montezuma would have sat happily alongside White Winter Hymnal or Quiet Houses on the band’s debut album. Indeed, all of the characteristics of Fleet Foxes’ previous music are abundant on Helplessness Blues, the songs unfolding organically like mini suites with warm, almost baroque arrangements of mandolins, acoustic guitars and woodwind. Despite its similarities to the band’s previous work however, listening more closely to Montezuma does reveal a tangible shift of focus from first album Fleet Foxes.

‘I wonder if I’ll see faces above me, or just cracks in the ceiling,’ ponders lead singer Robin Pecknold as he imagines his death bed, the emotionally direct lyrics in stark contrast to the pastoral meanderings that made up the majority of Fleet Foxes. Throughout Helplessness Blues the spotlight is placed firmly on Pecknold as he explores themes of loss and alienation, providing an emotional contact that was lacking from the band’s occasionally clinical debut. Whilst one could argue that many of the melodies on their debut were more instantly memorable than anything here, Helplessness Blues displays a new depth to Fleet Foxes’ music.

This is a welcome addition that keeps the album from sounding like a tired retread and instead transforms it into something entirely new.