RAND Corporation lobbied Pentagon for major war to reverse US economy
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Xe tăng M1A1 Abrams. Photo courtesy: defpro.news |
Cali Today News - Quân đội Mỹ đã tăng cường hỏa lực trên chiến trường Afghanitan bằng cách tung ra xe tăng hạng nặng, lần đầu tiên sau hơn 9 năm tham chiến ở quốc gia nhiều đồi núi này.
Địa điểm được thí nghiệm là tỉnh Helmand nhiều bạo động và loại xe tăng M1A1 Abrams được đưa sang đầu mùa xuân năm sau, theo lời thiếu tá Gabrielle Chapin, phát ngôn nhân của Thủy Quân Lục Chiến Mỹ cho biết.
Chapin cho hay loại xe tăng này đã được sử dụng khá thành công trong chiến trận Iraq ở tỉnh Anbar. Theo Chapin thì xe tăng này có thế mạnh là “xoay xở nhanh và hỏa lực rất chính xác”
Trên chiến địa Afghanistan, Chapin cho hay xe tăng Abrams sẽ “cô lập địch quân khỏi các thị trấn đông dân và có thể nã trọng pháo chính xác vào địa điểm trú đóng của quân địch”
Các chuyên gia cho là tướng David Petraeus, người nắm quyền chỉ huy ở Afghanistan trong tháng 6 năm nay, đã có kế hoạch tấn công phiến quân Taliban táo bạo.
Đại tá John King, người từng chỉ huy một lữ đoàn thiết giáp ở Iraq năm 2005 và 2006, nhận xét: ‘Xe tăng M1 là cỗ máy đáng sợ. Nó gửi một tính hiệu cho đối phương là chúng tôi đang có quyết tâm lớn’
Đào Nguyên source CNN
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Calitoday
XIZHEN, China — After five months in a rundown ward at the Hepu County Psychiatric Hospital, Yang Jiaqin no longer suffers terrifying hallucinations. Still, his wife dares not mention children, not even their own, for fear of unleashing the demons that possessed him one day last spring.
This is the first of two articles on the inadequacies of mental health treatment in China.
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On a warm, sunny afternoon in April, Mr. Yang burst from his home in this rural village near the Vietnamese border, carrying a kitchen cleaver. He encountered three youngsters headed home from school on the dirt path outside. He hacked two primary schoolers, badly wounding both, and slit a second grader’s throat, leaving him dying on the ground. Then he moved on. By the time police officers caught up and subdued him, he had slashed two more people to death.
The victims’ families have focused their rage on the police. Three days earlier, Mr. Yang had struck a neighbor in the head with an ax, but was not detained.
“They are completely responsible for this,” said Wu Huanglong, the second grader’s father. “They did not protect us.”
But Mr. Yang’s doctors see a bigger failing. Despite clear signs of schizophrenia, Mr. Yang had received medical care for just one month in the previous five years.
“If he had been given medication and treatment, his illness would not have developed,” said Chen Guoqiang, the psychiatric hospital’s chief doctor. “If he had been able to control his hallucinations, he would not have killed anyone.”
It has been nearly 35 years since the end of the Cultural Revolution, when mental illness was declared a bourgeois self-delusion and the sick were treated with readings from Chairman Mao. Psychiatric treatment has returned. But mental health remains a medical backwater, desperately short of financing, practitioners and esteem.
Too often, the official response to mental illness is to look the other way. The government authorities, already shaken by an attack the previous month in which eight schoolchildren were stabbed to death, threw a news blackout over the Xizhen incident lest it inspire copycats or incite further outrage.
At least three of six men whose attacks near schoolyards this year left 21 people dead had earlier appeared deranged or suicidal, according to news reports. But in the highest-level statement on the killings, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao said only that China needed to resolve “social tensions” underlying the attacks.
Yan Jun, director of the mental health division of the Ministry of Health, refused repeated requests for an interview. The ministry said in a written statement that the government was “continuously strengthening” both its resources and professionals to provide mental health care.
A Dearth of Care
It has far to go. Only 1 in 12 Chinese needing psychiatric care ever sees a professional, according to a study last year in The Lancet, a British medical journal. China has no national mental health law, little insurance coverage for psychiatric care, almost no care in rural communities, too few inpatient beds, too few professionals and a weak government mental health bureaucracy, Chinese experts in the field say.
The Health Ministry’s own mental health bureau, established four years ago, consists of three people. Dr. Yan, the director, is a public health specialist, not a psychiatrist.
Every few years, China’s news media declare that a national mental health law is speeding toward adoption. The first draft was written half a century ago. Asked how many revisions it has undergone, Dr. Ma Hong of the Peking University Institute of Mental Health said, “Countless.”
Most psychiatric hospitals are financially unviable, said Yu Xin, who directs the Peking University Institute of Mental Health. One, in Hubei Province, opened a box factory in the 1990s to stay afloat. The fee structure is so absurd, he said, that hospitals can charge patients more for computer-generated diagnoses based on filled-out forms than for sessions with actual psychiatrists.
The Lancet study estimated that roughly 173 million Chinese suffer from a mental disorder. Despite government efforts to expand insurance coverage, a senior Health Ministry official said last June that in recent years, only 45,000 people had been covered for free outpatient treatment and only 7,000 for free inpatient care because they were either dangerous to society or too impoverished to pay.
The dearth of care is most evident when it comes to individuals who commit violent crimes. For example, after Liu Yalin killed and dismembered an elderly couple cutting firewood in a Guangdong Province forest, he was judged to be schizophrenic and released to his brother. Unable to afford treatment, the brother flew Mr. Liu to the island province of Hainan, in the South China Sea, and abandoned him, a Chinese nongovernment organization, Shenzhen Hengping, said in a recent report.
Last year, Mr. Liu killed and dismembered an 8-year-old Hainan girl.
“The government doesn’t want to cough up the money to treat these people, so they just give them back to their families,” said Huang Xuetao, a mental health lawyer and one of the authors of the report.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/world/asia/11psych.html?hp