The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers

The Stories You Missed in 2011

10 events and trends that were overlooked this year, but may be leading the headlines in 2012.

BY JOSHUA E. KEATING | NOVEMBER 28, 2011

India's Military Buildup

China's new aircraft carrier -- actually just a refitted Gorbachev-era Soviet model purchased for $20 million from the Russians -- made international headlines when it began sea trials this year, signaling Beijing's growing military ambitions in East Asia. But it isn't the only Asian giant investing heavily in new military hardware. India has kept pace with its neighbor to the north and, in some areas, is actually exceeding it -- a development that, though much less noted, is a sign of the growing militarization of the region as a new generation of emerging powers with global ambitions jockeys for regional supremacy.

India is now the world's largest weapons importer, according to a 2011 report by arms watchdog SIPRI, accounting for 9 percent of the world's international arms transfers -- most from Russia -- between 2006 and 2010. India will spend an estimated $80 billion on military modernization programs by 2015, according to an estimate from the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

In particular, India is focusing on sea power, a crucial new area of competition. The country is planning to spend almost $45 billion over the next 20 years on 103 new warships, including destroyers and nuclear submarines. By comparison, China's investment over the same period is projected to be around $25 billion for 135 vessels, according to data on both countries from maritime analysis firm AMI International.

On top of long-running tensions with Pakistan and festering insurgencies by Kashmiri separatists and Maoist rebels, India's military planners are increasingly concerned about the prospect of military hostilities with China -- hence the new focus on naval power. For now, the United States seems much more comfortable with India's military ambitions than China's. The Pentagon's 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review welcomed "a more influential role in global affairs" for India, including in the Indian Ocean region. But there are some troubling signs that the area might not be big enough for two rising superpowers.

In August, an unidentified Chinese warship confronted an Indian amphibious assault ship near the coast of Vietnam and demanded that it explain its presence in Chinese waters (the encounter took place in a disputed part of the South China Sea claimed by Vietnam). Thankfully, the situation resulted in nothing more than some testy public statements from officials in all three countries, but it was yet another sign of an increasingly militarized Asian seascape.

SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/Getty Images

'New Europe' Falls Out of Love with the Euro

For all the talk of Greeks and Italians seriously entertaining the thought of dumping Europe's common currency in exchange for good old drachmas and lira, the more troubling indicator for the decade-old euro may be all the Eastern European countries that have pushed for years to be part of the monetary union but are now having second thoughts.

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On Jan. 1, Estonia became the 17th country to adopt the euro, but it might be a while before it has company. Poland was due to join the eurozone in 2012, but that goal has been indefinitely postponed. ("If you base a monetary union on aspirations and being pro-European, you may have problems in 10 years," Jan Filip Stanilko, a Polish analyst, told cnbc.com.) In April, Bulgaria's center-right government pushed back a plan to join in 2013, citing the need for more preparation. Romania's president also suggested its 2015 target date could be pushed back by "one or two years." Latvia and Lithuania had been keen to follow Estonia into the eurozone as well, but both now say their current target dates are unrealistic, and Lithuania's central bank chief has cautioned that membership is "not a must-have-or-die thing."

Only two years ago, eurozone membership was being touted as a solution to Eastern Europe's debt worries. A leaked IMF report even recommended that the process be accelerated, arguing that "euroisation" would not only help with the debt problem but also mean "removing uncertainty and restoring confidence."

But these countries now worry about the straitjacket that being in a currency union has put on troubled European economies as they push to recover.

The shift in opinion in what U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld once defined as new Europe, where countries have long yearned for European integration, has been as rapid as it's surprising. Membership in the EU club isn't what it used to be.

KAY NIETFELD/AFP/Getty Images

Mexico's Drug War Moves South

While the drug violence near Mexico's northern border has become a major political issue in the United States, less noticed has been the disastrous effect the conflict is having on countries to the south. Drug mafias such as the Sinaloa and Zetas cartels, in search of new territory and looking to escape the Mexican government's crackdown, are increasingly setting up shop in the politically fragile states of Central America.

With the addition of Belize and El Salvador this year, all seven countries in Central America are now on the White House's list of major drug-trafficking states. Sixty percent of the cocaine that enters the United States through Mexico first travels through Central America, according to a Congressional Research Service report. Homicide rates in four of the seven countries have increased significantly in the last five years -- in Honduras, they've more than doubled.

In May, Guatemala saw its worst massacre since the 1996 end of its civil war, when 27 people were decapitated by drug gangs in the country's north. Entire regions are now effectively under the control of the Zetas, Mexico's second-largest drug cartel, which has access to machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades and has even built its own airstrips in the jungle. The Guatemalan government launched a major military offensive against the Mexican cartels in the first few months of this year, but failed to expel them. There are widespread reports that a number of Guatemalan politicians are receiving kickbacks from the gangs or otherwise tied up in cartel activity.

Until now, the cocaine itself has been processed almost exclusively where coca is grown in the Andean region of South America. But in March, the first cocaine-processing lab ever discovered in Central America was found in Honduras. In El Salvador, which has also seen its crime rate skyrocket, Sinaloa and the Zetas are believed to have established alliances with local gangs such as the infamous Mara Salvatrucha.

This isn't just Mexico's drug war anymore.

JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images

Peak Camel?

Shortly before his death in 1960, English explorer and Arabist St. John Philby predicted that the camel would disappear from Arabia within 30 years. At the time, he was laughed at, but today, ultramodern Saudi Arabia is increasingly relying on camel imports, a shift that has had the largely overlooked effect of putting a strain on herds around the world.

The stock of meat-producing camels in the kingdom decreased from a high of 426,000 in 1997 to just 260,000 today, a drop of 39 percent, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Thousands of camels are slaughtered every year during the hajj pilgrimage -- hence the need for imports.

But where to get them? The animals were once as common as squirrels in Pakistan, but the country's camel population is now down to about 700,000 thanks largely to demand from the camel-racing industry in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. Overall, the Asian camel population decreased nearly 20 percent between 1994 and 2004.

The biggest winner has been Australia, which boasts the world's largest remaining population of wild camels -- descendants of the animals brought by British settlers from India in the 19th century -- and has profited from the demand by shipping the animals to Saudi Arabia to be slaughtered for food.

In famine-plagued Somalia, there has been a reported mass die-off of camels -- a source of transportation, livelihood, and sustenance for many families. Some tribesmen report losing more than half of their herds. In previous famines in Africa, camels have been considered an early warning system for human deaths. "Camels are the last animals to die, and once they start dying, it is only a matter of time before people start dying," a Somali elder told the U.N.'s IRIN news service in 2009. Sadly, his observation has proved prophetic.

MICHAEL WITTE FOR FP

The U.S. Immigration Crackdown

As the 2012 Republican presidential candidates fight it out over who would best secure the U.S.-Mexico border and blast states for providing services to illegal immigrants, the White House has been quietly waging the toughest-ever campaign on undocumented immigrants. Despite U.S. President Barack Obama's pledge to pass comprehensive immigration reform -- a goal repeatedly stymied in Congress -- deportations have reached all-time highs.

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A record 392,000 undocumented aliens were deported in fiscal 2010, and this past fiscal year that number was nearly 400,000. As of October, almost 1.2 million people had been deported under the Obama administration, compared with about 1.5 million over the eight years of George W. Bush's presidency. The administration has also been cracking down on the employers of illegal immigrants. Twice as many businesses were investigated in the first year of the Obama administration as in the last year of Bush's term.

In August, under pressure from Hispanic groups, the administration announced new guidelines under which pending deportations will be reviewed and those who pose no threat to public safety and haven't flagrantly violated laws will have their cases deferred. (These constitute about 50 percent of recent deportations, according to Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano.) The guidelines, however, still allow significant "prosecutorial discretion" to immigration officials to determine which immigrants are dangerous.

The administration's strategy may have been to shore up Obama's right flank before undertaking a sweeping overhaul of immigration law. As Napolitano put it, "Smart, resolute enforcement by the department can keep Americans safe, foster legal immigration to America, protect legitimate commerce, and lay the groundwork for a more comprehensive reform." But with progress on an immigration bill in Congress looking unlikely anytime soon, for now it's more stick than carrot.

Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images

Pakistan's Other War

Baluchistan may be Pakistan's largest province, covering nearly half the country's land area, but the raging separatist violence in the region -- sometimes called Pakistan's secret war -- gets only a fraction of the attention that the country's other crises receive. Separatist groups, the largest of which is the Baluchistan Liberation Army, have been waging an insurgency since 2007 in the resource-rich province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan. It's the fifth Baluchi uprising since Pakistan's independence in 1947, and even by the country's standards, the province appears increasingly out of control.

Baluchistan saw the highest number of militant attacks of any Pakistani province in 2010, and the trend has continued in 2011, with multiple bombings of key gas pipelines, the murder of Punjab settlers who have moved to the region, and the assassinations of several prominent politicians and oil-company employees.

The Pakistani state's response has also been brutal. A Human Rights Watch report documented the killings of 150 people between January and June -- mostly young men active in Baluchi separatist politics -- in "kill and dump" operations that were likely carried out by Pakistani security forces. Brad Adams, Human Rights Watch's Asia director, described the crackdown as an "abusive free-for-all" that calls into question the Pakistani government's "willingness or ability to control the military and intelligence agencies."

Baluchistan's instability has international consequences. The Taliban, headquartered in the provincial capital of Quetta, use Baluchistan's 800-mile-long border to slip in and out of Afghanistan. The sparsely populated region also provides safe haven for drug smugglers and Iranian rebel groups. The CIA is believed to launch drone strikes from bases in Baluchistan. And then, of course, there's India, which Pakistan has repeatedly accused of funding the rebels, a charge India vehemently denies. The mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, is an ethnic Baluchi, as is his nephew Ramzi Yousef, who plotted the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

For now, the Pakistani government is benefiting from the scant media attention given to the region and its problems. But it can't be swept under the rug forever.

BANARAS KHAN/AFP/Getty Images

Piracy Goes Global

Somalia's pirates are on pace for another record year in 2011, with 199 attacks as of October versus 126 over the same period in 2010. And unfortunately, modern piracy, thought to have been successfully contained elsewhere in recent years, is not a phenomenon confined to Somali privateers in the Gulf of Aden. Global piracy is back in a big way.

The hottest new zone for pirates is West Africa, whose oil-rich Gulf of Guinea has seen a spike in attacks this year. Nineteen attacks were reported off the coast of Benin in 2011, after none in 2010. There were also six off the Nigerian coast and three off the coast of Ghana. Many more likely go unreported. In October, the presidents of Nigeria and Benin held the region's first ever head-of-state summit devoted to piracy.

West African pirates are a bit more traditional than their Somali counterparts -- they tend to go after a ship's cargo rather than kidnapping for ransom money. Sailors have been tied up, beaten with rifle butts, and whipped with electrical cables. In some cases, entire crews have been shot. Whereas Somalia's piracy is often seen as a function of the country's on-land instability, the same can hardly be said of Ghana, one of Africa's most stable and peaceful democracies, with a projected growth rate of 13.5 percent in 2011. It's thought that the region's oil boom is proving a draw for modern-day pirates.

And it's not just Africa. Indonesia's International Chamber of Commerce reported this year that pirate attacks are at their highest level since 2007. Even Peru, where piracy is virtually unheard of, saw an attack this year on a Japanese fishing trawler by a gang of criminals calling itself the "pirates of the sea." Overall, the first nine months of this year saw 352 attacks -- a record level. In the past two years, the United States, Europe, and even China have launched military initiatives to battle piracy. But as the numbers show, the potential riches of high-seas crime make it very hard to stop the rise of new-age buccaneers.

Asia's New DMZ

While the world was transfixed by events in the Middle East this February, a century-old territorial conflict in Southeast Asia briefly became a shooting war when Cambodia and Thailand came to blows over a long-disputed religious site, a clash that may foreshadow growing instability in an increasingly volatile region.

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The two neighbors have long argued over ownership of the 11th-century Preah Vihear Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage site, in a quarrel dating back to the drawing of the border between Siam and then-French Cambodia in the early 20th century. In 1962, the U.N.'s International Court of Justice awarded ownership of the temple -- originally Hindu, now Buddhist -- to Cambodia, but Thailand has never completely accepted the judgment. In recent years, Abhisit Vejjajiva, who was prime minister from 2008 until last August, upped his aggressive rhetoric under pressure from the Thai nationalist "Yellow Shirt" movement and sent troops into the region.

From Feb. 4 to 16, the two sides continually exchanged artillery fire in the disputed area -- each country claims the other started it -- with as many as 28 people killed and thousands of civilians displaced. "This is a real war. It is not a clash," proclaimed Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Thankfully, if it was a war, it was a very short and limited one. In July, the United Nations imposed a demilitarized zone around the temple and ordered both countries to withdraw their forces. The truce is being monitored by Indonesian observers, but the dispute has led some to argue that Southeast Asia's regional body -- ASEAN -- needs its own peacekeeping force. Tensions have eased somewhat since Abhisit was voted out of office in favor of "Red Shirt" -- backed Yingluck Shinawatra.

Although the crisis seems to have abated for now, it's just one episode of a period of intense political turmoil for Thailand, a key U.S. ally in counterterrorism and counternarcotics campaigns. The country has seen large-scale and often violent demonstrations by the largely rural Red Shirts and the royalist Yellow Shirts, and is facing an insurgency in the south by Islamist militants who were accused by Amnesty International this year of perpetrating war crimes against civilians. The possible return of Yingluck's brother Thaksin, the exiled former prime minister and business tycoon who is still wanted on corruption charges in his home country, is another potential flashpoint.

MAK REMISSA/EPA

The War on Nukes Stalls

Speaking in Prague near the beginning of his presidency, Barack Obama promised a renewed U.S. "commitment to seek the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons." At the end of last year, the administration achieved two of the planned steps toward that goal with the ratification of the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia and the hosting of a 47-nation conference on nuclear security. But progress on Obama's other major pledge, a "new international effort to secure all vulnerable nuclear material around the world within four years," has been much slower going.

The United States can't account for 5,900 pounds of "weapon-usable" nuclear material that it once shipped overseas to help other countries' civilian nuclear programs, according to a Government Accountability Office report issued in September. "Theoretically, we know [where the nuclear material is kept]. But we don't have a good accounting of where it all is," one source familiar with the report told Wired.

Budget-cutting in Congress may also be hampering the U.S. effort to secure dangerous nuclear materials, according to analysis by the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. A House bill this year would have slashed the White House funding request for the Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRI), a program to secure nuclear facilities in the former Soviet Union, by $85 million. The GTRI funding was preserved in the Senate version of the bill, but Congress already cut $123 million from GTRI in 2011.

The threats in question are quite real. In June, six men were arrested in Moldova for trying to sell a kilogram of stolen uranium worth at least $20 million. There have been 500 cases of attempted cross-border smuggling of nuclear materials in the last 15 years, according to U.N. data. Many more likely go undetected. Meanwhile, a bill introduced in both the House and Senate in 2009 that would strengthen penalties for nuclear smuggling is still stuck in committee. Congress also shows no sign of endorsing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), an agreement signed 15 years ago by President Bill Clinton but never ratified. The administration has promised a renewed push to get CTBT passed but hasn't set a date for bringing it before the closely divided Senate.

New START may have been progress, but the finish line of a world without nuclear weapons is still a long way off.

Thomas Niedermueller/Getty Images

Rwanda's Wrong Turn

In September, the U.S. Senate unanimously approved a bilateral investment treaty with Rwanda, the first such agreement with a sub-Saharan African country since 1998. The State Department praised the deal, calling it a demonstration of "Rwanda's commitment to the economic reforms that will help enable sustainable economic development and opportunity." Foggy Bottom hopes the agreement can be a model for similar treaties with other countries in the future.

Rwanda's economic reforms have been widely touted as a rare African success story, with growth around 7 percent per year over the last five years. President Paul Kagame has also earned plaudits for his environmental initiatives and efforts to include women in government (they now make up more than 50 percent of the lower house of parliament). He visits the United States frequently and has become a fixture on the tony-conference circuit.

But disturbing signs have emerged about Kagame's commitment to democracy. During the lead-up to last year's presidential election -- which the former Tutsi rebel leader won with 93 percent -- the vice president of a major opposition party and the acting editor of a critical newspaper were murdered, prompting the United Nations to demand an investigation.

Over the last two years, Kagame's regime has shut down critical newspapers, arrested key army officers, and jailed a prominent opposition politician on charges of genocide denial. A former Rwandan army chief living in exile in South Africa survived a second assassination attempt this year, and British police have warned Rwandan dissidents in London that they might be at risk.

The White House "expressed our concerns" about the election, but the U.S. administration has continued to stand up for Kagame, even pushing for the dismissal of a federal lawsuit against him. Washington has evidently chosen to throw in its lot with Kagame, who, for better or worse, has brought stability and steady economic growth to his country. But if political trends in Rwanda continue, that friendship could soon become a liability.

IAN LANGSDON/EPA

 

Joshua E. Keating is an associate editor at Foreign Policy.

AARAV

8:42 AM ET

November 28, 2011

About time India did something...

Well with the kind of muscle flexing that china has been doing against india i guess its high time that India did expand its investment in maritime defenses.
First China tried to build a dam on the bramhaputra and now its trying to prevent indias oil exploration by calling it illegal and part of the "South China" Sea.
Way too ridiculous considering that india has a commerical agreement with vietnam where the said exploration is being undertaken.. ~ Aarav

 

MR FARLY

10:31 AM ET

December 2, 2011

Interesting point

I'd have to agree completely. It's about time India expands its defense. India's oil exploration has nothing to do with China. India needs to start defending themselves..

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NATHANDEAN

11:20 AM ET

December 6, 2011

Interesting Post

Agreed that it isn't surprising the India mans up, particularly with the oil stuff in the SC sea. As they train up their troops complete driving instructor training, form standard military protocols and what not it will be interesting to see if the Indian army rises to a global power

 

JAMESM

11:11 AM ET

November 28, 2011

New Europe Falls Out of Love with the Euro

This is something we shouldn't overlook...

Regards,

James M.

 

GRANT

1:12 PM ET

November 28, 2011

The China-India incident at

The China-India incident at sea has been looked into and many people outside of China have suggested that there never was any Chinese warship in the vicinity.

 

NICK_KINGS

12:40 PM ET

November 30, 2011

Interesting

Very interesting take, particularly number one, which I don't think anybody in the mainstream US really talks about. What about Kim's diamond engagement ring drama? Haha kidding of course.

 

RESEARCH2011

3:53 AM ET

December 14, 2011

Not exactly

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PHILBEST

5:03 PM ET

November 28, 2011

Time to get serious about Piracy again

Last time civilised humanity stamped out piracy, pirates got hung from the yardarm without trial - not dropped back on shore in their homeland to return to piracy the next day.

 

ABSOUL

5:27 PM ET

November 28, 2011

New Europe falls out of love with the Euro

Indeed this is a very intersting topic as its is not over by a long ways. The real story of the Euro is not even close to being finished. I always wondered how so many countries with different economies and policies could successfuly merge economies in a way and apparently there are some holes. Germany is going to be doing a lot of the prop work in my opinion.
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GREGGHUNTSFIELD

10:56 PM ET

November 28, 2011

Scary Times we live in

If you think of this in a matter of trends...
it would seem that we are trending away from peace and prosperity and towards massive conflict and violence. Don't know what exactly will come out of this but there are alot of issues that need to be resolved and current leadership nearly Everywhere is too busy getting rich rather than solving problems.
Feel bad for kids these days

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ANKIT.JAN2011

11:26 PM ET

November 29, 2011

"India is now the world's

"India is now the world's largest weapons importer". Not a good news at all. I think we are moving away from peace and prosperity and towards massive destruction.

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JENNIFER TEAL

12:25 AM ET

November 30, 2011

More upbeat?

Thank you for writing this article but next could you write the ten positive things you might have missed in 2011. fast track cash review

 

UTOPIKA

3:31 PM ET

December 7, 2011

I agree with you too

The thing is. Everybody is looking on the bad things in life. Geldverdieneniminternet Bad things make more money and more people want to read it. It is better to focus on the good things!

 

MAKSYM KHYLKO

5:29 PM ET

November 30, 2011

China's aircraft carrier

China purchased aircraft carrier for $20 million not from the Russians, but from Ukrainians. In late 1990th in Ukraine there were great debates whether to sell this unfinished aircraft carrier, but for the lack of money to finish all necessary works (aircraft carrier was 70% ready) Ukraine had to sell it. If in 1998 any Ukrainian "strategic partner" offered some assistance - now that aircraft carrier would be Ukrainian and participate in joint exercises with NATO.

 

FOMIREX

5:42 PM ET

November 30, 2011

My Indian roommate told me this

Great article. I used be thinking that India is not interested in weapons but this article says extremely the opposite. Actually my Indian roommate has already told me about this that India is planning to get more weapons in near future. It seems he was right!

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RAJMEEJ23

12:17 PM ET

December 1, 2011

India will rocks the world.

i think india has got his new world. support to mr.ANKIT.JAN2011..""India is now the world's"

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THISISME

1:07 PM ET

December 1, 2011

I hope ...

I hope that we will leave behind the global crisis and not drag it with us in 2012. Also hope a new ipod nano generation will be developed in 2012.... I love listening to music !!! :)

Peace to all

 

VICTORIA72

3:14 PM ET

December 2, 2011

hope for peace as everyone prepares for war

This is worrying but understandable, especially with China making overtures to install military bases into the northern border region of pakistan. India now has china on 2 sides as well as it's fraught relationship with pakistan.

The balance of power in the region is changing and I really hope it doesn't boil over.

 

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1:27 AM ET

December 4, 2011

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December 4, 2011

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UNSOURCER

7:11 AM ET

December 4, 2011

o_O

o_O . How i missed all theese stories? i should read your site more often.
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MILLICENT FOX

8:33 AM ET

December 4, 2011

And what about ?

Here in France we have also great thinks append.
For animals, we have litiere, and that's a great story that you missed also ! ;)
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8:39 AM ET

December 4, 2011

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8:40 AM ET

December 4, 2011

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RNRJVJ

8:45 PM ET

December 4, 2011

very interesting

very interesting follow ups of news..
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RONALDCARTER3451

2:02 AM ET

December 6, 2011

India's Growing Economy Strengthens their Military

It's not new to us how India's economy has advanced over the last few decades. You can compare how their growing econonmy boosted their warfares, with a doctor growing his practice with the use of chiropractic marketing. I just hope that they'll use their military in a good manner, unlike China who's strengtening it's military power to bully its neighboring countries.

 

MANYHOT0

2:36 PM ET

December 6, 2011

Yep, Missed

I missed them all. None of them I know. Keep eyes on Jailbreak iPhone 4S too much. All of those stories worth to read though. Interesting me.

 

LANDSHARK

3:21 PM ET

December 6, 2011

Just what we need

Cold war all over again.

 

JASIEK

5:17 PM ET

December 6, 2011

Missed some

Looks like I missed some of them.
Was quiet busy with my weddingthis month.

 

DITTYGIRL

1:49 AM ET

December 7, 2011

China

China's economy is five times larger than that of India and China's foreign currency reserve is even much more larger than that of India while India is projecting to spend two times more in naval warfare than China-$45 Billion compared to $25 Billion for China. Moreover China is better off in terms of infrastructure, sanitation, traiteur , health care etc than India. Good news for the Indians. China's per capita GDP is perhaps less than these 6 African countries (South Africa, Botswana, Mauritius etc) but it is still five times greater than that of India and India's per capita is not only less than these top African countries but even less than the poorest African countries. Its a shame that in the 20th century a supposedly shining India cannot even organize a regional declining event (CWG) and its population has not decent toilets and living in crumbling infrastructure while it is investing billions in Western and Israeli weapons procurement enriching its corrupt politicians and pouring Billions to the happy few

 

JOHANMALMO

6:22 AM ET

December 7, 2011

Why? One might wonder...

Excellent article, really gets you thinking about the world and how we behave. Well, not we... our elected leaders...

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D J TORRAS

7:13 AM ET

December 7, 2011

Polar Bear Extinction vs Camel Extinction?

I am certainly quite used to reading news about polar bear extinction but I must admit it never crossed my mind that camels were also slowly disappearing. I didn't know about the "early warning system" either. Must be terrifying to see the camels die, knowing that it probably signals the end of your own life ... ~ D J Torras

 

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8:38 AM ET

December 7, 2011

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JOEDANIELS

10:50 AM ET

December 7, 2011

Wow, why on earth are there

Wow, why on earth are there so many spam comments on this post all of a sudden? FP needs to up their crackdown on spam big time.

Comments should be a place to share your views on the article posted...not to spam your website everywhere!

 

RICKY709

10:46 PM ET

December 7, 2011

India is not that strong

From decades or two, many Indians believe that India will be super power in next decade. However, the truth is our (yes, I am an India) nation is full of corrupted people that always thinks of their benefit first. This attitude will take us nowhere. We're not technology leaders anymore. See how other countries are growing. Defense, Technology, Mobile Technology like, Windows Phone, iPhone are almost non-existent.
Hope this will change in upcoming decade. God bless India!!!

 

CRAIG BURROWS

1:26 AM ET

December 8, 2011

Tired of these Power Shows

When will it all end?

Can't the leaders of our world just chill stop the madness and just be.
It's a dream that sadly will never be.

It will take a nuclear war or something worse before we see how pathetic we are in our power struggles.

 

DEATHBYFIRE23

5:29 PM ET

December 10, 2011

It doesn't surprise me in the

It doesn't surprise me in the least that India is now bumping up there military. The US has been outsourcing jobs to India for quite some time and they also are one of the richest countries with Gold so its not like they can't afford it. The US goes around to these other countries building them up and then after they start building up military forces we all wonder why this country that used to be a 3rd world country is now more advanced then us and wants to kick our butt. But at the same time it reminds me of a old story from Ragnarok where Volund the legendary blacksmith was imprisoned by the king Niohad and the kings sons came were he was imprisoned and Volund killed the three of them and sent goblets from there skulls to the king. Its not all that much different we pretty much have gone into another country used there people as slaves to get cheaper labor then our own country and now they have the resources to make weapons to come take our skulls.

 

JACOB84

7:32 PM ET

December 10, 2011

Is it just me, or does it

Is it just me, or does it seem like 2011 had more potential future-altering events that any other that I can remember? Perhaps they're just reported more than ever before.

Jake

 

HB209

1:52 AM ET

December 11, 2011

2011 was definately a year to

2011 was definately a year to remember. I've missed most of those stories however. Let's see what 2012 will bring. It may get interesting!

- Henry

 

STEFANROES

7:23 PM ET

December 13, 2011

Leaders should think about the people..

India and especially China is increasing their army and that's quite a shock if you consider that their should be anymore war anymore on this earth. Excellent article with a clear theory, really gets me thinking about the world and how we behave. Well, not we the people but our selected leaders... sexshop The leaders in this world should think more about the citizens in their countries then only think about themselves.

 

RICHARD BOOKER

6:02 PM ET

December 14, 2011

Got a point there

i think the point made above by stefanroes is a goog one. Well, not we the people but our selected leaders... Sexshop The leaders in this world should think more about the citizens in their countries then only think about themselves. condooms

 

DONKISSOTES

9:10 AM ET

December 16, 2011

fourth superpower

found out that India is now the world's largest weapons importer. just do not mention from which country India was importing weapons. is very possible if India has ambitions like that, especially if they see a threat from neighboring Pakistan.

 

DONKISSOTES

9:11 AM ET

December 16, 2011

fourth superpower

found out that India is now the world's largest weapons importer. just do not mention from which country India was importing weapons. is very possible if India has ambitions like that, especially if they see a threat from neighboring Pakistan.

 

FAIZAN211

5:56 AM ET

December 18, 2011

Wow incredible

Wow incredible is that india is stronger, not only did their now the tallest busuis people now in the wordl but they begin to include the power now too,

 

ERVINVOCZ

9:15 AM ET

December 19, 2011

China is increasing their power!

Its no surprise that china is increasing their military power. China and Philippines has a conflict now. They fighting for an island. It says that island has a deposit lots of fuels.

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YVONNEBOOGAARD

9:08 PM ET

December 19, 2011

China army

But the Philippines ain't no match for China. If China really wants to get it they can with the army the have got. Golfles golfvaardigheidsbewijs

 

MICHELEJ

8:50 PM ET

December 21, 2011

About Euro ..

In the last 2011, The euro had periods of crisis, as well as dollars. Many expert predict this crisis will continue until 2012. If you worried with your asset , investing into gold could be a save haven for a while. But I hope the crisis in Europe is not for long time and the world economy returns in good condition. majalah gratis.

 

FRICHST854

1:37 PM ET

December 22, 2011

The Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense

Indeed this can be a very interesting topic since it's isn't over with a long ways. The actual story from the Euro isn't even near to being finished. I usually wondered how a lot of countries with various economies and policies could successfully merge economies in ways and apparently there are several holes. Germany will probably be carrying out a large amount of the prop operate in my estimation. China's economy is 5 times bigger than those of India and China's exercise for men is even a lot more bigger than those of India while India is projecting to invest 2 times more in naval warfare than China-$45 Billion when compared with $25 Billion for China. Moreover China is much better off when it comes to infrastructure, sanitation, litterateur, healthcare etc than India. Great news for Indians.

 

HERMANLANK

2:38 AM ET

December 23, 2011

Rid of the Euro

I really hope they get rid of the euro stupid thind to do at the beginning.
We should have stayed with the gulden (dutch currency) sexshop but now it is to late to turn back.

 

JUANSOTO12345

2:02 PM ET

December 25, 2011

forget the euro

Forget the euro the best thing is to go back to gold

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