Good Reads: Model-Plane Bomber, Mass Graves in Kashmir, and Occupy Wall Street
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Good Reads highlights the best reporting and analysis available on the top international stories of the day 鈥 and other key topics you shouldn't miss.
This week brought us news of another terror threat spoiled by American law-enforcement, and this time the threat appears to be a local boy from the Boston suburb of Ashland. Rezwan Ferdaus, a US citizen and graduate of Northeastern University, planned to use small model airplanes packed with explosives to launch attacks against the Pentagon and the US Capitol Building.
As the Monitor鈥檚 Brad Knickerbocker reports, the arrest of Mr. Ferdaus is seen as 鈥渁 textbook case in what to look for and how to respond to 鈥渓one-wolf鈥 jihadis intent on doing their fellow Americans harm.鈥 It is underscores the need, Mr. Knickerbocker quotes Rep. Peter King as saying, that 鈥渢o continue efforts to combat domestic radicalization and the evolving threat of 鈥榣one wolf鈥 extremists.鈥
But as other nations with long struggles with radicalized insurgencies have shown, there is a danger when governments give their security forces full freedom to pursue counterinsurgency efforts without limits. In Foreign Policy, Kashmiri journalist Basharat Peer visits the Indian-held portion of Kashmir 鈥 that mountainous paradise drenched with 20 years of insurgency 鈥 and looks into the .
Just as in the 鈥渄irty wars鈥 of Argentina and Chile, in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica, and apparently in the Sudanese province of South Kordofan today, thousands of young men (militants and otherwise) have disappeared without a trace. With the recent discovery of mass graves, there is now evidence that the Indian government may have been behind the disappearances. As Mr. Peer writes, there is a powerful affirmation that comes to families when they see evidence to back up their worst fears.
But, as Mr. Peer writes鈥
Unearthing the mass graves is one thing; punishing the murderers another. But India cannot rightly claim to be a democratic society that cherishes the rule of law unless it's willing to shine a harsh light on its military's conduct. It's always easy to blame Pakistan. Indeed, an India confident of its economic and political standing in the world might choose to callously ignore the crimes committed in its name in Kashmir, but the embers of dark memories continue to burn, fanning a desire for freedom from Indian rule in Kashmir.
Finally, in this week鈥檚 New Yorker, John Cassidy pays a visit to the The protests began about a month ago, inspired by the mass-occupation strategies of the Arab Spring, and the target of their rage was the class of financiers in America who, they believe, had taken control of decisionmaking in Washington, who had wrecked the American economy during the 2007 economic collapse, and who still enjoy some of the best tax benefits that (lobbying) money can buy.
The protesters appeared to be a motley assortment of slackers, students, environmentalists, socialists, feminists, and hippies. It is easy to lampoon such folks, just as it easy to poke fun at the retirees, gun lovers, and pro-lifers that man the Tea Party information booths. But like the conservative enrag茅s that have taken over parts of the Republican Party, these protesters have a serious issue that motivates them: the purported takeover of the political system by the richest one per cent of the population, as symbolized by Wall Street. 鈥淭he one thing we all have in common,鈥 says the protesters鈥 site, 鈥渋s that We are the 99% that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1%.鈥