Monday, June 24, 2013

Why Hezbollah has openly joined the Syrian fight

The face of Abbas Farhat, a combatant with the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah killed recently in Syria, looms down from a banner outside his home in this winding hill village.

He is one of two Hezbollah men from the village to die during fierce fighting last month in the strategic Syrian town of Qusayr, which had been in rebel hands for a year before it was overrun on June 5 after a 17-day Hezbollah-led assault.

A male relative, who asked for anonymity because Hezbollah had instructed the family not to speak to reporters, admits that he and his other kin have been inspired by Abbas? sacrifice.

?I want to talk about Abbas. We are very proud of him,? he says. ?I would go and fight in Syria tomorrow if I could.?

Such comments echo across Shiite-populated areas of Lebanon today, even as dozens of dead Hezbollah men are brought back from the battlefields of Syria for lavish funerals in their towns and villages.

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

The continued support is the result of Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah?s successful efforts to persuade Hezbollah?s core constituency to embrace the party's radical and potentially dangerous new path of intervention in the Syrian civil war.

?The care and time [Sheikh] Nasrallah invested in crafting and marketing this narrative is indicative of Hezbollah?s assessment that their base needs convincing about the party?s involvement in Syria,? says Randa Slim, a scholar with the Middle East Institute in Washington who writes regularly on Hezbollah affairs.

GROWING OPENNESS

Hezbollah?s decision to fully participate in Syria?s bloody two-year war on behalf of the regime of Bashar al-Assad is a dramatic development for an organization that has always been defined as a champion of anti-Israel resistance.

Yet today, Hezbollah finds itself fighting fellow Arab Muslims, albeit Sunnis, who make up the bulk of the Syrian armed opposition. Hezbollah and its patron, Iran, stand to be weakened if their ally, the Assad regime, falls and is replaced by a Sunni-dominated administration that moves closer to the West and Arab Gulf states.

Rumors of Hezbollah involvement in Syria began circulating soon after the uprising broke out in March 2011, but the early claims were generally unconvincing and lacked evidence. In October 2011, Sheikh Nasrallah said in a television interview that accusations that Hezbollah had deployed fighters into Syria were ?absolutely untrue.?

?There are no thousands or a thousand or even half a soldier [in Syria],? he said.

However, by early 2012, it was becoming public knowledge within Lebanese Shiite circles that some Hezbollah fighters were being sent into Syria. That summer there were a flurry of reports in the Lebanese media of funerals for slain Hezbollah fighters. Hezbollah released statements saying that they had died ?while performing their jihadi duty,? a possible allusion to combat-related deaths.

Unusually, there was some quietly muttered dissent in Shiite circles, including within Hezbollah?s support base, about the morality of dispatching fighters to help the Assad regime?s brutal repression of the opposition.

On Oct. 3, 2012, the rebel Free Syrian Army announced that it had killed Ali Nassif, a veteran Hezbollah commander, near Qusayr in Syria. Four days later, Nasrallah called continuing allegations that Hezbollah was fighting in Syria a ?lie.? However, he conceded that Nassif and some other Hezbollah members were voluntarily fighting to defend their homes against rebel attacks in several Shiite-populated villages just inside Syria.

By December 2012, videos allegedly portraying Hezbollah fighters in southern Damascus, home to a shrine revered by Shiites, had emerged.

Meanwhile, any sympathy toward the Syrian opposition was beginning to fade amid increasing evidence of atrocities committed by the armed opposition and the escalation of anti-Shiite rhetoric from groups like the Al-Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra. Meanwhile, Hezbollah leaders emphasized the threat posed to Lebanon?s stability by ?Takfiri? groups in Syria, a reference to extremist Sunnis who view as apostates anyone that does not share their austere interpretation of Islam.

In April, fighting flared near Qusayr as the Assad regime and Hezbollah fighters launched a campaign to drive rebels from nearby villages before staging an assault on the town. At the end of the month, Nasrallah came closer to admitting Hezbollah was in Syria, saying he was especially proud of the ?martyrs who fell in the past few weeks" and warned that the Assad regime had ?real friends? who would not allow Syria to fall into the hands of ?American or Israel or Takfiri groups.?

On May 19, Hezbollah fighters spearheaded an attack on the rebel-held town of Qusayr. Six days later, Nasrallah finally admitted what by now was common knowledge that Hezbollah was operating in Syria. He said that ?by taking this position, we believe we are defending Lebanon, Palestine, and Syria.?

FRACTURES

While Lebanon?s Shiites have generally accepted Hezbollah?s rationale for intervening in Syria, reactions have ranged from dismay to fury elsewhere in Lebanon and the region. Brief clashes have broken out in several areas of Lebanon between Shiite and Sunni gunmen. Michel Suleiman, the Lebanese president, has urged Hezbollah to withdraw its forces from Syria.

The Lebanese government, presently operating in a limited caretaker capacity, follows a policy of neutrality toward the conflict in Syria, but lacks the heft to force the powerful Hezbollah to retreat.

Still, not all Shiites back Hezbollah?s intervention. A minority of Shiites openly oppose Hezbollah?s dominance of the community. One of them, Hashem Salman, a 27-year-old company manager from Adloun in south Lebanon, was among a group of anti-Hezbollah Shiites who attempted to hold a demonstration outside the Iranian embassy in Beirut two weeks ago. The demonstrators were attacked by suspected Hezbollah men wielding batons. Salman was shot three times in the scuffles and bled to death on the road.

?Hashem died for freedom,? says his brother Hassan during a condolence session at the family home in Adloun. ?They [Hezbollah] don?t fear weapons in the hands of their opponents, they fear open minds and freedom.?

Hezbollah?s popularity within the Shiite community is unlikely to be seriously challenged in the foreseeable future. But loyalists may balk at a lengthy intervention in Syria, especially if the casualty toll remains high, anti-Shiite sentiment continues to flare across the region, and former supporters turn away from the party.

Three weeks ago, Sheikh Youssef Qaradawi, an influential Sunni cleric who once defended Hezbollah, called for jihad against the party which he dubbed the ?Party of Satan.? Hezbollah means the Party of God in Arabic.

There could be economic considerations too. Arab Gulf states have said they will expel Hezbollah members living in their countries.

Hezbollah has given no indication that it intends to pull out of Syria soon. Since Qusayr fell on June 5, Hezbollah fighters reportedly have been engaged in battles around Damascus and are being sent to Aleppo ahead of an anticipated offensive against rebel forces in the northern city.

?I do not think there is a consensus inside Hezbollah?s constituency around a protracted never-ending involvement in Syria,? says Slim, the Hezbollah scholar. ?The higher the death toll, especially as the party moves toward northern Syria, will raise concerns about the costs of this involvement.?

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-hezbollah-openly-joined-syrian-fight-121835008.html

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Socialists ahead in Albanian election count

TIRANA, Albania (AP) ? The Socialists appeared to hold an early lead as counting in Albania's election got under way Monday, a day after a deadly shooting outside a polling station.

Despite the shooting, international election monitors noted overall improvements ? seen as key test for the country's aspirations to forge closer ties with the European Union.

With less than a quarter of Sunday's votes counted, the Central Election Commission said the Socialists' coalition was taking 52 percent of the vote, while the Democrats had 37 percent. The Democrats, who are led by Prime Minister Sali Berisha, won 48 percent of the popular vote in 2009.

In Albania, parliamentary seats are awarded on a party's share of the vote in each of 12 districts. For example, a party which won 50 percent of the vote in a 12-seat district could expect to win six seats. There are 140 seats in parliament.

Turnout was 54 percent of some 3.3 million registered voters, according to CEC estimates. Sunday's election was the eighth since the fall of communism in 1990.

Election observers from the Vienna, Austria-based Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe said an overhaul of voting procedures last year had helped improve the country's election standards, but expressed disappointment at a pre-election dispute over the make-up of the election commission.

"Voting proceeded well, but with technical irregularities, and counting was delayed in many areas," said Roberto Battelli, head of the monitoring mission.

Confident of winning, the Socialist leader Edi Rama said his opponent had a role to play in Albania's future.

"This is the moment in politics when losers should take part in the victory of their country ... Albania should hold its head high after these elections," Rama said.

Full results were not expected until Tuesday, and the Democrats insisted the early returns were misleading.

"When all the ballots are counted we shall be the winners," party official Gerti Bogdani said, calling for a "peaceful, calm and regular" vote-counting process.

Although the election campaign was highly acrimonious, it was generally considered peaceful until Sunday's shooting in the north Albanian city of Lac.

A police spokesman said Gjon Gjoni, 49, died after being shot in an exchange of fire that also wounded Mhill Fufi, 49, a candidate for Berisha's governing Democratic Party, and a relative of Fufi.

The violence drew condemnation from an EU official.

"Violence is simply not acceptable and cannot be tolerated," Ettore Sequi, the EU ambassador to Tirana, told Associated Press television." These elections are a crucial test for the democratic maturity of the country a test for the smooth functioning of the Albanian institutions."

In 2009, three people were killed in politically motivated attacks during the campaign. They Socialists boycotted the parliament for a long time in protest to what it called manipulation from the governing Democrats.

Albania, now a NATO member despite a rocky road to democracy, has been denied EU candidate status twice since 2009 because of criticism that it has not done enough to fight corruption and proceed with democratic reforms that include its ability to hold elections that comply with international and European standards.

Last month, parliament held an extraordinary session to pass the last three laws in a series of 12 key recommendations required by the EU as part of the country's quest for eventual membership.

___

Associated Press writer Nebi Qena in Tirana contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/socialists-ahead-albanian-election-count-160651501.html

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Putin Steals Snowden?s Laptop During Moscow Layover (Balloon Juice)

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Jim Bolger confirms Dawn Approach will be out of action ... - Bettor

Jim Bolger confirms Dawn Approach will be out of action ? Horseracing news

Jim Bolger has confirmed that his trainee Dawn Approach will be out of action for quite some time, after failing to make an impression in the Investec Derby.

The three-year-old colt started the all important competition as the outright favourite to succeed, but ended up at the bottom of the table, which was a huge disappointment for his fans.

About the lacklustre showing, Bolger explained, ?Dawn Approach collided with another horse jumping out of the stalls and that seemed to set him alight. You wouldn't expect something like that to happen to a horse who had raced seven times before Saturday, but it did and that's why he refused to settle and didn't run his race.?

Once the result of the race was concluded, everyone was in a state of shock and the bookies failed to understand the reason behind the favourite stallion?s defeat.

However, replays and photographic evidence showed that something had unsettled the Irish runner in the opening phases of the race, thus he failed to deliver. This was the first ever defeat of his career and he will need to work hard in order to regain his confidence.

If Dawn Approach had managed to succeed in the Investec Derby, he would have definitely appeared in the Royal Ascot, which is one of the most prestigious events of the year. His current condition is not good though, so he will not be taking the pressure of that race later this year.

According to Bolger, ?He definitely won't be going to Ascot and we'll wait a while and give him time before running him again. He's in the Sussex Stakes [at Goodwood] but there are no plans as such at this stage other than that he will be dropping back in distance.?

The seasoned trainer is not really enjoying any luck these days, as his stallions have been suffering all sorts of issues. Another one of his trainees Loch Garman sustained an injury in a recently held race, which has ruled him out of action too.

Therefore, Bolger will have to look for some other options in the major events, as two of his most consistent stallions need time to come back strongly.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Jim-Bolger-confirms-Dawn-Approach-will-be-out-of-action-Horseracing-news-a216254

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

88% The Angels' Share

All Critics (83) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (73) | Rotten (10)

The result is a sometimes gritty, occasionally charming Highland hybrid, but the final balance feels slightly off-kilter.

Loach takes us through the mysteries of whisky making, exploring the subtle tastes and scents in ways that will have audiences wishing they had a dram at hand. But a glass also serves more symbolic purposes ...

If you want to look for it, you'll find a layer of metaphor (the distilling process as a symbol of the characters' evolution) and social-realist commentary amid the gentle, life-affirming laughs.

[Ken Loach] and his longtime screenwriter, Paul Laverty, find a good balance between drama and wacky character moments.

A lark, but it's a serious-minded lark, addressing issues of class and culture, the haves and have-nots.

Charming enough to satisfy even the trenchant-commentary crowd.

Ken Loach walks on the lighter side

The title, by the way, refers to the distillation process: the 2% of whisky that evaporates in the barrel is known as "the angel's share." I'm afraid there's more than 2% evaporation going on in Loach's latest.

Much like a stiff drink at the end of a long day, "The Angels' Share" gets the job done, but you're probably not going to remember it in the morning.

Loach's realism lends an easygoing, ramshackle quality to the film that smoothes over any lack of tightness.

Director Ken Loach's latest glimpse of the U.K. underclass is really two rather different movies, either of which I would've enjoyed on their own. But they don't really fit together in any satisfying or even logical way.

A fairy tale with its feet firmly on the ground.

Whether Robbie pulls off his caper should be left for the audience to discover. But Loach's great cinematic switcheroo goes off almost without a hitch.

As heartwarming and uplifting as any tale could be that features vicious beatings and grand larceny.

While it has some likable characters, particularly its charismatic lead, it's impossible to shake the feeling that we've seen this movie before.

Lead actor Paul Brannigan, the product of Glasgow's working-class East End, is a natural.

The usual Loachian elements are all in place, but there is a gentle spirit at work here as well, and not just the alcoholic spirits around which the plot revolves.

The Angels' Share is a stellar bit of activist cinema with a light touch.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_angels_share/

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Judge accepts Holmes' insanity plea

[Updated at 12:15 p.m. ET]

CENTENNIAL, Colo.?A judge on Tuesday accepted suspected gunman James Holmes' plea of not guilty by reason of insanity in the theater shootings case, the Associated Press reports.

Holmes is accused of fatally shooting 12 Aurora, Colo., movie theater patrons last summer during a midnight screening of ?The Dark Knight Rises,? the latest Batman movie. Fifty-eight others were injured. The Arapahoe County district attorney office is seeking the death penalty.

Judge Carlos A. Smour's ruling sets up the possibility that the notebook Holmes sent to his university psychiatrist days before the attacks will no longer be shielded under doctor-patient privilege.

Reportedly containing detailed descriptions and drawings of the shootings, the notebook was thumbed through by law enforcement officials in the University of Colorado?s mail room days after the attack. But because the court ruled last fall that Holmes was under Dr. Lynne Fenton?s psychiatric care at the time, lawyers and witnesses couldn?t discuss or see the notebook?s contents.

In an order last week, Samour denied the defense?s request for more time to prepare to discuss the notebook in court.

?[T]he privilege issue related to the [notebook] has been briefed and discussed before,? Samour wrote. ?It is true, of course, that the defendant?s not guilty by reason of insanity plea, if accepted, may alter the analysis, but the parties have been aware of that for some time.?

Indeed, attorneys have discussed the notebook vis-?-vis Holmes? mental state as far back as August, when prosecutors tried to convince the first judge in the case that Fenton was more akin to a general practitioner than a mental health professional and, thus, the notebook wasn?t privileged. The judge didn?t agree, and the mystery of the notebook?s exact contents has continued.

Courtroom sketch of Dr. Lynne Fenton and shooting suspect James Holmes (Bill Robles)

Also at Tuesday's hearing, Samour will advise Holmes what an insanity plea entails beyond the notebook, including the possibility of state-administered mental health evaluations. The defense lost its bid last week to strike down portions of Colorado state law, arguing that government psych exams could violate Holmes? right to a fair trial in a capital case.

The hearing, originally scheduled for last Thursday, was moved to Tuesday at the defense?s request. The prosecution acquiesced, but only if the hearing would address the notebook privilege issue.

The defense filed its objection to that compromise on Friday, noting that it was pulling ?extremely long hours? to comply with the court?s Monday deadline on non-capital-punishment-related motions as well as work related to Holmes? insanity plea.

?Counsel simply cannot complete all the work that needs to be done on those motions,? the defense wrote in that filing.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/prosecutors-could-soon-look-james-holmes-notebook-094230715.html

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The fierce urgency of $$$: Obama aides cash in

By Walter Shapiro

When Robert Gibbs was preparing to step down as White House press secretary in early 2011, Barack Obama stressed to The New York Times that he understood the life pressures weighing heavily on his loyal aide. After all, the president said in a revealing comment, Gibbs has been ?going 24/7 with relatively modest pay.?

Modest pay?

Gibbs was making $172,200 a year on the public payroll in a bad economy, which was an income higher than 92 percent of all American families. But such is the bipartisan sense of martyrdom in Washington that almost no one questioned Gibbs? intention to move to greener pastures while Obama was still in the White House.

So what is Private Citizen Gibbs up to these days?

He was was recently in Baku, Azerbaijan, along with David Plouffe (Obama?s 2008 campaign manager) and Jim Messina (who held the job in 2012). The Washington Post uncovered the reason behind the mid-May reunion in such an exotic locale: The three political operatives were paid five-digit fees to speak at a conference designed to burnish the image of a former Soviet republic with a dicey human rights record.

This is what the self-congratulatory idealism of the 2008 Obama campaign has come to?buckraking in Baku. It illustrates the enduring adage about political aides in D.C.: ?They came to do good and stayed to do well.?

In today?s Washington, personal finances, especially the ethical compromises necessary to maintain them, remain a taboo subject. Small wonder that when Plouffe appeared Sunday as a guest on ABC?s ?The Week,? Azerbaijan was never mentioned.

Plouffe has been down this road before. In late 2010, just a month before he entered the White House as a senior adviser to Obama, Plouffe was paid $100,000 to give two speeches in Lagos, Nigeria, by a South African telecommunications firm. The timing and the outlandish fee retain a fragrant aroma. But the Washington Post also discovered that the South African telecommunications firm has close business ties to Iran?connections that Plouffe denied knowing about.

The former Obama team?s excellent Azerbaijan adventure was revealed last Friday in a Washington Post story by Juliet Eilperin and Tom Hamburger. The article?s larger theme was that Obama alumni are benefitting in lucrative ways from their White House connections. But for all the outrage the story generated, it might as well have been posted on a lamppost in Baku instead of on the Post?s front page.

These days, charter members of the Obama alumni association are making their connections count. As the Post reports, veterans of the Obama White House are being paid by both sides to provide strategic consulting and public relations advice to try to influence the president's upcoming decision whether to approve the Keystone XL pipeline. Given the stakes for the oil industry and the environmental movement in whether the Canada-to-Oklahoma pipeline is built, it is not surprising that Obama-ites have been so ardently recruited in the battle to win over their former boss.?

Pipeline foe Bill Burton, a former White House deputy press secretary who went on to run the leading pro-Obama Super PAC in 2012, carefully explains, ?We?re helping to run a public affairs campaign, which is different than acting as a lobbyist.?

That?s a distinction designed to appeal to an ethics lawyer or a White House press secretary. Obama ran against lobbyists in 2008, so his loyal alumni can?t practice those dark arts. But it is permissible, even laudable, to peddle insider knowledge of the White House in order to craft a PR strategy to win Obama over. In truth, whether they are lobbyists or strategic consultants, former White House officials are prospering from their perceived closeness to a sitting president.

The response from the Obama White House and loyal Democrats is both predictable and accurate?prior administrations, especially Republican ones, have been worse.

But no modern president (with the exception of Jimmy Carter) came to office with anything like the moral sanctimony of Obama and his closest advisers. And unlike other broken promises, from campaign reform to closing Guantanamo, the get-it-while-you-can ethos of Obama's former aides can't be blamed on the Republicans.?

Cashing in on connections has a long political history. Tommy ?The Cork? Corcoran, a leading member of the team of bright young lawyers advising Franklin Roosevelt, shocked his fellow New Dealers in 1941 by becoming a high-priced Washington fixer for business interests. Corcoran?s conduct was so notorious that a Senate committee soon held hearings on his quasi-legal ?influence peddling.?

In the late 1970s, liberals felt betrayed when Fred Dutton, who had been a top adviser to Bobby Kennedy, suddenly went to work for Saudi Arabia as the kingdom?s Washington lawyer and official mouthpiece. Even pro-business Republicans were troubled when Michael Deaver, one of Ronald Reagan?s closest aides during his first term, posed for a 1986 Time cover as he made lobbying phone calls from the back of his limo. (Deaver, as it sadly turned out, was suffering from alcoholism at the time).

There is an important difference between the Washington of then and now. There was a sense of odium surrounding string-pullers like Corcoran who operated without any discernable moral compass. Every dubious dollar they earned was accompanied by a withdrawal from an account labeled ?Respect.?

But over the years, Washington has lost any sense of shame. The standard bipartisan pattern has become to work for an important political figure for a few years?and then monetize your Rolodex. No longer is there any stigma or sense of embarrassment to setting up a Washington strategic consulting business and making sure that your clients see your wall of pictures with the president.

A few weeks ago, I attended the annual meeting of the bipartisan alumni association of former White House speechwriters called the Judson Welliver Society after Warren Harding?s pioneering wordsmith. (I wrote speeches for Carter.) In that room of ghostwriters, dating back to the presidency of Dwight Eisenhower, there was a profound and universally shared emotion?our White House years were an exhilarating moment that still shimmers through decades.

Working for a president?any president?should be regarded as a rare honor rather than as a business opportunity that will lead to lucrative connections. It is an enduring truth that the men and women who have prospered because of their close association with Obama should remember the next time they are offered first-class air tickets to Baku.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/buckraking-in-baku--obama-aides-cash-in--162100340.html

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Ex-Apple Exec: Google CEO Larry Page Is A Whiner - Business Insider

Julie Bort/Business Insider

Google CEO Larry Page

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Lots of people really didn't like Apple CEO Tim Cook's keynote at the All Things D conference last week.

Fortune writer Adam Lashinksky wrote:?"It was the second year in a row Cook opened the prestigious AllthingsD conference and the second year in a row he divulged precious little about what is going on at Apple."

Former Apple product boss Jean-Louis Gass?e, on the other hand, came away impressed with Cook's "preternatural calm."

Gass?e said Cook is especially appealing in comparison to Google CEO Larry Page, "who constantly whines about 'negativity'?directed at Google, a conduct unbecoming the leader of a successful company that steamrolls everything in its path."

Here's everything Gass?e had to say about Cook's interview:

Last but not least,?Tim Cook?s interview.?The low point in the Apple CEO?s appearance came during the Q&A section at the end (it?s around the 1:10:35 mark if you want to fast forward). A fund manager (!!) plaintively begged Cook to make him dream, to tell him stories about the future, like Google does. ?Otherwise, we?ll thinkMike Spindler?and?Gil Amelio?? (I?m paraphrasing a bit).

Cook refused to bite. As he?d done many times in the interview, he declined to make announcements, he only allowed TV and wearable devices were areas of ?intense interest?. And, when asked if Apple worked on more ?game changers? like the iPhone or the iPad, he had no choice but promise more breakthroughs. Nothing new here, this has been Apple?s practice for years.

Which raises a question: What was Apple?s CEO doing at D11 less than two weeks before the company?s?Worldwide Developer Conference?where, certainly, announcements will be made? What did the organizers and audience expect, that Tim Cook would lift his skirt prematurely?

Actually, there was a small morsel: Cook, discussing Apple TV, claimed?13 millioncurrent generation devices had been sold to date, half of them in the past year? but that?s food for another Monday Note.

Audience and media reactions to the lack of entertainment were mixed.

For my part, perhaps because of my own thin skin, I find Tim Cook?s preternatural calm admirable.?Taunted with comparisons to Spindler and Amelio, dragged onto the Senate floor, being called a liar by a NYT columnist, constant questioned about his ability to lead Apple to new heights of innovation? nothing?seems?to faze him. More important, nothing extracts a word of complaint from him.

This is much unlike another CEO, Larry Page,?who constantly whines about ?negativity? directed at Google, a conduct unbecoming the leader of a successful company that steamrolls everything in its path.

I have my own ideas about Cook?s well-controlled behavior, they have to do with growing up different in Mobile, Alabama. But since he?s obviously not keen to discuss his personal life, I?ll leave it at that and envy his composure.

New Apple products are supposed to come out later this year. You can already draft the two types of stories: If they?re strong, this will be Tim Cook?s Apple; if not, it?ll beWe Told You So.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/ex-apple-exec-google-ceo-larry-page-is-a-whiner-2013-6

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