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When preemptive warnings make sense, and silly season criticism doesn’t

The Obama campaign is running on empty. Empty, when it misrepresents the Clinton gas tax holiday plan as leading to “boost oil industry profits” - when the simple truth is that Obama doesn’t have a straightforward alternative plan himself. Empty, when he misrepresents Clinton’s answer to an ABC journalist’s hypothesis of a nuclear attack on Israel as “language reflective of George Bush” - as he conveniently confuses Bush’s bluster in action with Clinton’s stark warning ahead. I’ll dwell a bit on that now.

I just read Jack Cafferty’s astonishing rendition of the “Iran nuclear attack” issue:

Hillary Clinton sounds too much like President Bush. That’s Barack Obama’s take on Clinton’s threat to “totally obliterate” Iran if it attacks Israel. Clinton initially made the comments a couple weeks ago, saying: “I want the Iranians to know that if I’m the president, we will attack Iran. In the next 10 years, during which they might foolishly consider launching an attack on Israel, we would be able to totally obliterate them.” Obama says this isn’t the language we need right now. He says it’s too similar to the kinds of things President Bush says, what Obama calls “bluster and saber rattling.” Obama says Clinton is changing the rules right before an election. He said she scolded him about Iran before, saying “we shouldn’t speculate about Iran, we’ve got to be cautious when we’re running for president.”

Never mind that what Clinton was commenting on was a question concerning a response to a hypothetical nuclear attack on Israel!

The issue was launched initially during the televised Pennsylvania primary debate, hosted by ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, with the following open question:

STEPHANOPOULOS: Senator Obama, let’s stay in the region. Iran continues to pursue a nuclear option. Those weapons, if they got them, would probably pose the greatest threat to Israel. During the Cold War, it was the United States policy to extend deterrence to our NATO allies. An attack on Great Britain would be treated as if it were an attack on the United States. Should it be U.S. policy now to treat on Iranian attack on Israel as if it were an attack against the United States?

Obama eventually ended his answer to that essential question thus:

[...] that would be an act of aggression that we would — that I would consider an attack that is unacceptable. And the United States would take appropriate action.

And what was Clinton’s answer? She answered with a three-point policy that she’d put in place as soon as possible, to prevent such a situation from happening in the first place:

  • Diplomatic engagement with Iran;
  • Deter other countries from acquiring nuclear weapons;
  • Warning Iran that an attack on Israel would trigger massive retaliation by the US.

I’ll provide the exact quote for that third element:

And we will let the Iranians know, that, yes, an attack on Israel would trigger massive retaliation. But so would an attack on those countries that are willing to go under the security umbrella and forswear their own nuclear ambitions. And finally, we cannot permit Iran to become a nuclear weapons power. And this administration has failed in our efforts to convince the rest of the world that that is a danger, not only to us, and not just to Israel but to the region and beyond. Therefore, we have not to have this process that reaches out beyond even who we would put under the security umbrella, to get the rest of the world on our side to try to impose the kind of sanctions and diplomatic efforts that might prevent this from occurring.

I can’t see anything wrong whatsoever with her answer there.

Then, on Monday, April 21st, Clinton appears on Olbermann’s Countdown, where he presses her to clarify on the nature and context of “massive retaliation” and the “security umbrella” that she also mentioned in the Pennsylvania debate. Because her answer goes more into specifics, I’ve decided to put a copy of that pertinent quote of hers here:

CLINTON: Well, what we were talking about was the potential for a nuclear attack by Iran. If Iran does achieve what appears to be its continuing goal of obtaining nuclear weapons — and I think deterrence has not been effectively used in recent times. We used it very well during the Cold War when we had a bipolar world — and what I think the president should do and what our policy should be is to make it very clear to the Iranians that they would be risking massive retaliation were they to launch a nuclear attack on Israel. In addition, if Iran were to become a nuclear power it could set off an arms race that would be incredibly dangerous and destabilizing because the countries in the region are not going to want Iran to be the only nuclear power so I could imagine that they would be rushing to obtain nuclear weapons themselves. In order to forestall that, creating some kind of a security agreement where we said, no, you do not need to acquire nuclear weapons if you were the subject of an unprovoked nuclear attack by Iran, the United States and hopefully our NATO allies would respond to that as well. It is a theory that some people have been looking at because there is a fear that if Iran, which I hope we can prevent, becoming a nuclear power, but if they were to become one some people worry that they are not deterrable, that they somehow have a different mindset and a worldview that might very well lead the leadership to be willing to become martyrs. I don’t buy that but I think we have to test it and one of the ways of testing it is to make it very clear that we are not going to permit them, if we can prevent them, from becoming a nuclear power. But were they to become one, their use of nuclear weapons against Israel would provoke a nuclear response from the United States, which personally I believe would prevent it from happening and that we would try to help the other countries that might be intimidated and bulled into submission by Iran because they were a nuclear power, avoid that state by creating this new security umbrella.

The next morning, on April 22nd, Clinton appears on ABC’s Good Morning America show, where she rephrases her deterring threat into a more pointed variant, stating the well-known truism that the US can “totally obliterate” Iran, if it ever gets the insane idea of launching a nuclear attack against Israel.

Let’s look at snapshots from Clinton’s answer on those three occasions:

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Seriously, do those statements in answer to questions suggesting a hypothetical future nuclear attack by Iran on Israel really ruffle feathers? Makes one wonder about the moral and emotional constitution of those in a tizzy over them. Me myself, I don’t wonder: Obama’s calculated but still ridiculous comparison with Bush’s bluster and Clinton’s stark warning is little but pandering to the lily-livered crowd that apparently prefers to believe defensive pacts based on mutual assistance simply don’t exist. The poor naive devils; Obama scores well with them.

Anyhow, and clearly, this is weeks old material. It’s also very much a matter of answering to hypotheses, as Iran doesn’t have a nuclear weapon - not yet.

But I also think there’s another angle here, that deserves some thought: Israel isn’t exactly in a defenseless position, right now… As Robert Windrem points out:

All the sturm and drang misses one critical point. Israel does not need the US to counter attack. Israel has the world’s sixth largest arsenal of nuclear weapons, behind only the US, Russia, China, the UK and (maybe) France. It can handle ANY Iranian threat on its own, thank you very much.

True, but the essence of the journalists’ question that sparked off this “issue” was to probe each of the candidates’ stance; now we know what each one is made of: Obama offers lots of meandering words (some believe that’s “soaring”) boiling down to some vague hint at “appropriate action”, while Clinton goes into pithy points of immediate action to avoid such a horrendous scenario from ever happening - while not ignoring an opportunity to send of a stark warning that any nuclear attack on the US allies will bring terrible consequences, so that any such thought had better be parked in the never never land.

That is an angle that the lily-livered hyperventilating crowd apparently loves to miss. They’re probably dreaming of holding Ahmadineyad’s hands and singing Kumbaya while cosponsoring his complaint at the UN for Clinton’s tough truth.

Another reason I’m staunchly supporting Senator Clinton: it’s no time for woolly words, we need instead sensible, tough, well-thought out and determined action to get back on track to the future.

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McAfee rubrica a El País como ‘colorao’ - pero de los malos

Al parecer, los hábitos nefastos tardan lo suyo en desaparecer…

A finales del pasado mes de noviembre, advertí sobre anuncios que aparecieron en los banner de El País, que conducían a sitios de muy, muy mala espina y que promovían la descarga de malware. Efectivamente: ya no volví a ver esos endiablados anuncios de empresas de poca monta y peor reputación que prometen chorradas como ver “TV gratis por internet” (pero que no tiene nada que ver con productos y servicios legítimos como Mogulus).

Sin embargo, acabo de darme cuenta al visitar el sitio de El País (cosa que hago con bastante frecuencia, siendo uno de mis sitios de noticias favoritos) que en la esquina inferior derecha de mi navegador Firefox (cuál si no, jeje) el servicio Siteadvisor de McAfee me estaba alertando: ¡ojo! peligro de malware… Qué raro. Total, me fui a comprobarlo en el sitio de Siteadvisor, y efectivamente va en serio:

Siteadvisor advierte: El País difunde software considerado dañino

El culpable principal de la advertencia es AresGold.exeEn esa misma página dan la clave para su asignación de un aviso de color rojo - el de mayor alerta ante peligro por infección con malware - ya que se trata de un archivo de descarga, al que se enlaza desde el propio sitio de El País. Se trata del infame AresGold.exe (ese enlace lleva a McAfee, evidentemente no al software en sí - clic en la imagen anterior, a la derecha, para ampliar el detalle).

Lo triste del caso es que McAfee descargó y comprobó la naturaleza de ese pedazo de malware / cramware (software que te mete “mensajes con ofertas interesantes” - lo quieras o no) en el mes de octubre del año pasado. En febrero de este año, desistieron su comprobación del enlace que conducía a ese software. Y yo mismo acabo de comprobar que el enlace sigue vivo. Eso quiere decir, que hasta la fecha se puede descargar ese software, por lo que (a mi juicio, merecidamente) El País se lleva el parche de la deshonra.

Tristísimo. Ya lo dije en noviembre: este tipo de cosas son los que desprestigian, innecesariamente. Lo que El País debe hacer es, primero, cortar de forma tajante tanto los enlace en cuestión de software dañino (para que luego puedan decir que aportan lo suyo a la lucha contra el malware - y contra la piratería, que eso lo explico en ese post del mes de noviembre) y luego, sus enlaces con empresas que distribuyen software dudoso. Por ejemplo:

La empresa Softonic, bajo sospecha de distribuir malware

Que no crean que El País es el único al que le meten goles, sobre todo a cuenta de listillos que les vende la moto de poder ofrecer “software gratuito y útil”, muy probablemente sin informar que acto seguido les meten el brazo hasta la axila al pobre usuario y visitante de El País, no solo extrayendo información sensible, sino hasta exponiéndolo al riesgo de un sistema como poco inservible, si no partícipe en actos delictivos, sin consentimiento o conocimiento del antedicho usuario.

Menudas formas de echar a perder una imagen…

En fin, como dije: El País no es el único - pero sí uno de los poquísimos casos de medios de gran prestigio a los que McAfee decide ponerles una pegatina de advertencia de la máxima categoría de peligro. Ven por ejemplo la calificación dada a The New York Times, editorialmente afiliado a El País:

Calificación del New York Times por McAfee

Referencia de software dudoso encontrado en el sitio del New York TimesY eso, que también tienen en sus secciones de descarga software dudoso, pero al menos no de la calaña del Ares Gold de AdVantage, según demuestra este fragmento de pantallazo (clic para ampliar imagen):

La verdad es que no entiendo cómo, por un lado, toman la molestia de informar sobre el peligro que acarrea no enfrentarse seriamente al peligro del pirateo y otras actividades delictivas relacionadas con el malware (una vez más, véase la entrada del pasado mes de noviembre), aunque quizá no se acierte siempre al presentar dicha información, mientras que se desiste según me sugiere esta incidencia con McAfee (como el Pepito Grillo de El País) de asegurar que la audiencia de un medio de enorme prestigio por lo menos no sea expuesto a peligros innecesarios por el sitio del propio medio.

De verdad, me cuesta mucho morderme la lengua para no decir aquello de que África empieza en los Pireneos…

En fin.

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Umpteenth minor earthquake right at Reno’s doorsteps

April 28th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Nevada, Personal, Seguridad, Varios

Snapshot I grabbed from the (live) Nevada Seismological Lab’s helicorder webcam showing the earlier (approx) Mag 4 shaker that jolted me upright - click for the large version:

Snapshot of a helicorder showing the earlier earthquake here Details of this one can be found here. The listing of recent earthquake activity in Nevada can be found here. And, just because precautions can’t hurt (there’s an increased risk now of a ‘Big One’ coming down the pike, perhaps even as far up as a mag 7 quake which, if the epicenter of that one remains at/near Mogul, close to the Peavine Peak like all the previous ones we’ve had over this past week, would wreak serious havoc here in Reno) there’s valuable earthquake preparedness info right here.

For the incurably curious, a map to the epicenter (which is the point at ground level right above the hypocenter - which is the “real” originating center of a quake’s release of energy) of this one is below:


View Larger Map

Now let’s keep our fingers crossed that this series dies off quickly; as remote as the possibility of a Big One in this neck of the woods is, we’re still in the middle of Earthquake Country. And of course, neighboring California can well do without the unsolicited shake, rattle and roll as well.

Added: the local Reno Gazette-Journal or RGJ has a section with news articles on the series here. And this most recent tremble has its story up now, too right here. After the mag 6 quake hit Wells, late last February, the ground hasn’t stopped shaking… It seems to have been traveling to the West, somewhat.

Added later: I found an AP news item about the Friday night special we had here, two nights ago:

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