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    <pubDate>Mon, 20 May 2013 02:02:15 -0400</pubDate>
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              <item>
      <title>3 New &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;s.</title>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 May 2013 02:05:50 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=77c_1368511373</link>
      <dc:creator>nndmt</dc:creator>
      <description>Three newpieces up on the site.       https://www.etsy.com/shop/AntiMatterGlass?ref=si_shop</description>
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        <media:title>3 New &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;s.</media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">glass pipes, sherlock, octopus, lizard</media:category>
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                    <item>
      <title>Syria: Britain funds rebels overseeing aid inside occupied areas </title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Apr 2013 14:54:45 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=9e2_1366051650</link>
      <dc:creator>Setright</dc:creator>
      <description>THE TELEGRAPH

Britain has stepped directly into the Syrian crisis, funding scores of civilian 
rebels to oversee hundreds of millions of pounds in aid deliveries inside occupied areas.


  

A Syrian man distributes bread to people in the Sheikh 
Maqsud neighbourhood of the northern city of Aleppo By Ruth Sherlock, Gaziantep, 
Turkey
8:00PM BST 14 Apr 2013






The government wants to counter growing fears that militant jihadists are the 
only force capable of establishing a civilian administration in areas no longer 
under regime control - and by extension in any future &quot;free   Syria  &quot;. 

Among the disasters to have struck rebel-held areas and which its 
multi-million pound aid package is trying to counter are outbreaks of typhoid, 
cholera and other diseases in Aleppo, as well as widespread looting. 

In one glaring statistic showing the breakdown of order, aid workers and 
government officials told The Daily Telegraph that up to 60 per cent of earlier 
aid sent by the outside world had been stolen by rebel forces, squandered, or 
sold for weapons. 

Britain is putting its weight behind a special Assistance Co-ordination Unit 
set up by the internationally recognised opposition, the Syrian National 
Coalition, to oversee food, health and other aid supplies in areas notionally 
under its sway. 

It has provided funds and training to establish 90 ACU employees to monitor 
and coordinate the aid. It has also paid for offices and communications 
equipment. 


Related Articles
 

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kidnappers in Syria 13 Apr 2013  

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chemical attack' 12 Apr 2013  

Explosive death toll in Syria increases by a 
quarter 12 Apr 2013  

G8 warns Syria of 'serious international 
response' over chemical weapons 11 Apr 
2013  

Syria could be 'catastrophe of the 21st 
century' 11 Apr 2013  

Hague: Syria is this century's 'greatest 
humanitarian catastrophe' 11 Apr 2013 
  

&quot;Whatever we want, the British are giving it to us,&quot; the ACU's humanitarian 
coordinator, Anwar Banoud, told The Telegraph. 
Turkey has banned international NGOs from using its border to enter Syria, 
leaving them reliant on local activists from the badly divided rebels to 
distribute the means of life to the estimated 3.4 million people now dependent 
on outside support. 
&quot;Many of these groups have used the aid to empower themselves and not the 
people that need it,&quot; said one Turkish official. 
The ACU was set up in a response, but aid workers say that on its own it 
lacks sufficient expertise. 
&quot;We have people on the border counting what is going in,&quot; said Wissam Tariff, 
its executive director. &quot;We have been working silently to build trust with local 
community. Now is the time to announce ourselves.&quot; 
Mr Banoud said: &quot;We are the channel through which aid passes. All the 
international non-governmental organisations need a system to work with. We are 
that system.&quot; 
Diplomats admitted that the international aid, put by one official at 790 
million euros (lb675 million) from the EU alone, had political ends. 
If citizens in rebel-held areas associated aid with the National Coalition, 
it would win &quot;hearts and minds&quot;, buying legitimacy in its bid to become an 
alternative government, despite its notoriously fractious leadership. 
The main obstacle to broader western backing for the opposition is the 
growing strength of Jabhat al-Nusra, a jihadist group which last week announced 
its loyalty to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the leader of al-Qaeda. 
It has begun establishing basic administration and Sharia courts, often in 
conjunction with other Islamist groups. 
Many residents say they do not support the jihadists' ideology but fear their 
lives would become even worse without them. After a year without government, 
towns are becoming overwhelmed by rubbish, and by power and water shortages. 

&quot;The regime could yet win in Aleppo - not because of air strikes, but because 
of cholera,&quot; said one ACU official. The disease is spreading across the city. 

Later this month trucks, garbage containers and other equipment are being 
delivered to Aleppo to launch an ACU-monitored waste management project. 
A plan is also under way to bring heavy equipment to northern Syria and to 
train firefighters as well as police. 
A spokesman for the Department of International Development said: &quot;UK support 
is helping to increase the capacity of the ACU to work effectively with the UN 
and other aid agencies in identifying needs inside Syria and coordinating 
support from international donors to get aid through.&quot; 
Western leaders hope such projects and the Islamists' own tactical errors 
will see the tide turn against groups like Jabhat al-Nusra. 
&quot;When we in Syria launched our jihad against the sectarian regime, we did not 
do so for the sake of any allegiance to a man here or another there,&quot; read a 
statement by the Syrian Islamic Liberation Front, an umbrella group of other 
Islamist brigades. 
&quot;Pledging allegiance to someone who does not understand our reality does not 
serve our people or nation.&quot;</description>
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        <media:title>Syria: Britain funds rebels overseeing aid inside occupied areas </media:title>
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                    <item>
      <title>Steven &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;, Sex Offender, Listed Children's Park As Home Address In Pennsylvania </title>
      <pubDate>Tue, 21 Aug 2012 19:39:03 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=43a_1345592142</link>
      <dc:creator>Wyseguy67</dc:creator>
      <description>You gotta be kidding me...WTF!!

Local police in Pennsylvania are trying to figure out how the state 
let a violent sexual predator register his address as a community park 
popular with children.

Steven Sherlock, 30, sexually assaulted a 13-year-old girl in 2002 
under a Ferris wheel. The former carnival ride operator was sentenced to
 four years in prison.Upper Darby cops were shocked to learn last week that Sherlock had registered himself as  homeless with his address as Naylor's Run Park , according to the  Philadelphia Daily News . Hundreds of children and families use the sprawling park grounds every day.

&quot;Any type of activity you can imagine kids are doing there, and this 
nut is living there?&quot; said a dumbfounded Upper Darby Police 
Superintendent Michael Chitwood. 

&quot;It's absolutely insane ... The State Police should have asked him what bench he was sleeping on so we could find him.&quot;

State authorities told the paper that they  didn't say Sherlock could live there , but that homeless people can indeed list their living quarters as public places.

&quot;Nobody from the state police told him he could live there, it's just where he lives,&quot; said Lt. Todd Harman, commander of the  Megan's Law division of the state police . &quot;What needs to happen is if there are local ordinances, the local police have to enforce them.&quot;

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/21/steven-sherlock-sex-offender-lists-park-as-address_n_1819472.html?utm_hp_ref=crime



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        <media:title>Steven &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;, Sex Offender, Listed Children's Park As Home Address In Pennsylvania </media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">steven, sherlock, sex, offender, lists, children, park, home, address</media:category>
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    </item>
                    <item>
      <title>A Point of View: The enduring appeal of &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes</title>
      <pubDate>Sun, 19 Aug 2012 05:05:53 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=9a1_1345366587</link>
      <dc:creator>MB-UK</dc:creator>
      <description>

The fictional detective retains his grip on our imaginations, even in an age when we have lost faith in the power of reason to solve problems, says philosopher John Gray.

When the future seems more than usually uncertain and there's something troubling in the present, it's natural to look to the past. Could that be why the figure of Sherlock Holmes is once again in our minds?

Holmes uses the power of his luminous intellect to solve seemingly insoluble riddles. He is described as relying on reason, employing a science of deduction that enables him to explain events that have so far proved baffling.

Yet it's not the methods used by the fictional detective that fascinate us. It's the contradictory figure of Holmes himself.

Nearly 100 years on from the setting of the last of the Sherlock Holmes stories, in August 1914, we've witnessed a succession of failed experiments in using reason.

 

It's not just the collapse of communism followed by upheaval in free market capitalism - both of them systems based on theories that were supposed to be rigorously rational.

In everyday life, systems that were designed to be infallible - from the security software we install on our home computers to the mathematical formulae used by hedge funds to trade vast sums of money - have proved to be dangerously unreliable.

From the health service to care homes and prisons, institutions and services have been remodelled to obey principles of rational efficiency, with the result often turning out to be lacking in human sensitivity and at worst a mere shambles.

As a result of these failures, faith in reason has been dented. The idea that the intellect alone can be our guide in life is weaker than it has been for many years.

At the same time, Sherlock Holmes - a symbol of the power of intellect if ever there was one - is as powerful a presence in our imagination as he's ever been. It's a contradiction worth exploring.

It's not the science of deduction that gives Holmes his power over us, since he doesn't in fact use it. In The Sign of Four, Holmes declares: &quot;I never guess. It is a shocking habit - destructive to the logical faculty.&quot; Yet the type of reasoning which Holmes uses in most of Conan Doyle's stories includes a good deal of guesswork.

We tend to think there are two types of reasoning:

deduction, where we move with logical certainty from general principles to a particular conclusion, as in &quot;all swans are white, this is a swan, so this must be white&quot; and induction, where we move from particular observations to general principles, as in &quot;all the swans that have ever been seen are white, so all swans are white

&quot;Deduction is infallible as long as the premises are true, while induction yields probabilities that can always be falsified by events - the black swans that turn up when no one is expecting them.

 

The type of reasoning Holmes uses is of another, more conjectural kind - sometimes called abductive reasoning - that can't offer certainty or any precise assessment of probability, only the best available account of events. Importantly, this kind of reasoning can't be practised simply by following rules.

&quot;When you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.&quot; Here Holmes is describing what he calls reasoning backwards - moving from the facts to an explanation of what has produced them by a process of elimination.

He does this in many of his cases, but it's not applying this rule that accounts for his astonishing feats.

If Holmes can identify an unlikely pattern in events, it's by using what Watson describes as his &quot;extraordinary genius for minutiae&quot;. As Holmes tells Inspector Lestrade, the plodding Scotland Yard officer: &quot;You know my method. It is founded on the observation of trifles.&quot;

Holmes notices things other people don't, and then - using a mental agility that involves creative imagination rather than the mechanical application of any method of reasoning - comes up with hypotheses he tests one by one.

It's not cold logic but a clairvoyant eye for detail that enables him to solve his cases. &quot;I can never bring you to realise the importance of sleeves,&quot; he tells Watson, &quot;the suggestiveness of thumb nails, or the great issues that may hang from a bootlace.&quot;

Holmes has the knack of knowing where to look, asking the right questions and crafting theories to account for what he has found.

What's striking is that Holmes relies on guesswork and imagination, supplemented and corrected by observation, as much as much on reasoning. A physician himself before he became a writer, Doyle tells us that he based the character of the detective on a medical professor he had known.

Like a good doctor, Holmes bases his inferences on evidence, but he reaches his conclusions by using his judgement. And he doesn't rely on his judgement only in the work of detection. He's ready to disregard legal rules when they seem to him unfair or out of place in the circumstances at hand.

As he puts it to Watson, &quot;Once or twice in my career I have done more real harm by my discovery of the criminal than ever he had done by his crime. I have learned caution now, and I had rather play tricks with the law of England than with my own conscience.&quot;

With some of the qualities of a late 19th Century decadent, Holmes turns to detection as he does to his cocaine habit - to stave off boredom.

But he's not just playing at being a detective. He wants justice to prevail, and where necessary he's willing to flout the law in order to ensure that it does. The servant of reason, Holmes is also a romantic hero ready to defy authority in order to stand by his sense of morality.

At this point we're getting close to the contradictory sources of Holmes' power over the imagination. On the one hand he seems devoid of human feeling - &quot;a high-functioning sociopath,&quot; as he describes himself in the new series.

At times he treats Watson - a stand-in for human beings in general - with something not far from contempt. But he also has genuine affection for his friend, and a deep sense of the random cruelty of the human scene.

In The Adventure of the Cardboard Box, published in 1892, he asks, &quot;What is the object of this circle of misery and violence and fear? It must have a purpose, or else our universe has no meaning and that is unthinkable. But what purpose? That is humanity's great problem, to which reason, so far, has no answer.&quot;

Here Holmes is voicing an anxiety felt by many at the end of the 19th Century. With the advance of science, religion seemed to have been discredited. But the human needs to which religion answered - above all, the need for meaning in life - hadn't gone away. If anything, the need for meaning was felt more acutely than before.

Along with others at the time, Doyle found consolation in spiritualism - a movement with many of the functions of religion, but which claimed to be based on scientific evidence. That particular rationalist creed was followed by others, more militant and political in nature. All of them claimed to have solved &quot;humanity's great problem&quot; and to have done so by the use of reason.

Aside from a few relics of Victorian rationalism who find a curious comfort in Darwinism, most of us now accept that reason can't give meaning or purpose to life. If we're not content with the process of living itself, we need myths and myths very often contain contradictions.

Holmes is one such myth. Seeming to find order in the chaos of events by using purely rational methods, he actually demonstrates the enduring power of magic.

An exemplar of logic who lives by guesswork, a man who stands apart from other human beings but who is moved by a sense of human decency, Holmes embodies the modern romance of reason - a myth we no longer believe in, but find it hard to live without.

Can we learn to be reasonable without expecting too much of reason? Or will we blunder on, trying to remodel the world on rational principles that in practice produce chaos?----

Source:  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-19268563 
</description>
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        <media:title>A Point of View: The enduring appeal of &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes</media:title>
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                    <item>
      <title>Fourty Minutes - The Case of &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes (1987) (Docu 1/3)</title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2011 10:47:48 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=4e6_1324914006</link>
      <dc:creator>TractorTom</dc:creator>
      <description>Tim Piggot-Smith investigates the famous sleuth of 221b Baker Street.  
The Case of Sherlock Holmes was a feature in the BBC's well-respected 40 Minutes strand (despite lasting nearly twice that length) described by its makers as &quot;a documentary entertainment&quot;. It's a detailed look at the whole, sometimes bizarre, world that's grown up around the character: everything from Old Foggy London Town package tours for wealthy Americans to serious literary scholars, from historical and social analysts to the dedicated group who make a yearly pilgrimage to the tiny US town of Moriarty to heap abuse on the head of Holmes's greatest enemy and sing &quot;Happy Unbirthday, You Bastard&quot; in his memory. 


The many film and TV extracts include some real rarities, including a brief clip of Leonard Nimoy in the role. The programme is presented by Tim Pigott-Smith, who has played both Holmes and Watson. Oh - keep watching afterthe closing credits for a couple of tiny but nice codas. Written by Brian Thompson &amp;amp; David Pearson and produced by David Pearson. Orginally aired on BBC2 the 10th December 1987.</description>
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                    <item>
      <title>Fourty Minutes - The Case of &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes (1987) (Docu 2/3)</title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2011 10:39:54 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=d5a_1324913532</link>
      <dc:creator>TractorTom</dc:creator>
      <description>Tim Piggot-Smith investigates the famous sleuth of 221b Baker Street.  
The Case of Sherlock Holmes was a feature in the BBC's well-respected 40 Minutes strand (despite lasting nearly twice that length) described by its makers as &quot;a documentary entertainment&quot;. It's a detailed look at the whole, sometimes bizarre, world that's grown up around the character: everything from Old Foggy London Town package tours for wealthy Americans to serious literary scholars, from historical and social analysts to the dedicated group who make a yearly pilgrimage to the tiny US town of Moriarty to heap abuse on the head of Holmes's greatest enemy and sing &quot;Happy Unbirthday, You Bastard&quot; in his memory. 
The many film and TV extracts include some real rarities, including a brief clip of Leonard Nimoy in the role. The programme is presented by Tim Pigott-Smith, who has played both Holmes and Watson. Oh - keep watching afterthe closing credits for a couple of tiny but nice codas. Written by Brian Thompson &amp;amp; David Pearson and produced by David Pearson. Orginally aired on BBC2 the 10th December 1987.</description>
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                    <item>
      <title>Fourty Minutes - The Case of &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes (1987) (Docu 3/3)</title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2011 10:31:46 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=c93_1324913053</link>
      <dc:creator>TractorTom</dc:creator>
      <description>Tim Piggot-Smith investigates the famous sleuth of 221b Baker Street.  


The Case of Sherlock Holmes was a feature in the BBC's well-respected 40 Minutes strand (despite lasting nearly twice that length) described by its makers as &quot;a documentary entertainment&quot;. It's a detailed look at the whole, sometimes bizarre, world that's grown up around the character: everything from Old Foggy London Town package tours for wealthy Americans to serious literary scholars, from historical and social analysts to the dedicated group who make a yearly pilgrimage to the tiny US town of Moriarty to heap abuse on the head of Holmes's greatest enemy and sing &quot;Happy Unbirthday, You Bastard&quot; in his memory. 


The many film and TV extracts include some real rarities, including a brief clip of Leonard Nimoy in the role. The programme is presented by Tim Pigott-Smith, who has played both Holmes and Watson. Oh - keep watching afterthe closing credits for a couple of tiny but nice codas. Written by Brian Thompson &amp;amp; David Pearson and produced by David Pearson. Orginally aired on BBC2  the 10th December 1987.</description>
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                    <item>
      <title>&lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes explains Aspergers</title>
      <pubDate>Sat, 08 Jan 2011 15:49:05 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=abd_1294519419</link>
      <dc:creator>brazilvideo</dc:creator>
      <description>Sherlock Holmes explains Aspergers</description>
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        <media:category label="Tags">sherlock holmes,aspergers,crime,fraud,scams,puzzle,focus,genius,workaholic,critical,house,skeptical,fearless,arrogant,linguist</media:category>
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    </item>
                    <item>
      <title>Illuminati Movies:Avatar, &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes, 2012 </title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 02:04:44 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b59_1279519248</link>
      <dc:creator>ricintoxin81</dc:creator>
      <description>http://www.HollywoodInsiders.net
Hollywood Insiders: Beneath the surface follows the career of movie writers such as: James Cameron, Roland Emmerich, David Goyer, and Michael Ferris. It also examines Illuminati symbolism in movies like: Avatar, 10000BC, 2012, The men who stare at Goats, Sherlock Holmes, Surrogates, Jumper, and The Crow 2. Further, it analyzes predictive programming, the mayan calender, global warming, the supernatural, mythological retellings in movies.
-
Michael Wynn illuminati new world order conspiracy governent freemasonry freemasonic nwo occult alex hollywood movies films symbolism symbols predictive programming secret secrets society music documentary occultism 2012 mayan calender end michael jackson jay-z ricin lady gaga messages all seeing eye industry insiders exposed revealed hollywood truth alex jones barack obama alien ufo reptilian agenda shapeshifter proof satan devil demon worship florida synchronicity antichrist lucifer magick subliminal 911 9/11 david icke wtc wtc7 trade center bible revelation prophecy tsarion chemtrails jinn jedi george lucas zionism zionist jesus vader lady red babylon whore scarlet fallen angels dajjal 666 jfk haarp star wars islam fall rebublic terrorstorm loose change cia nsi fbi federal reserve bilderberg jewish vatican catholic church jesuit tampa george bush jordan maxwell cooper christopher rense alan watt endgame zeitgeist Aleister Clowley dollar economic collapse martial law pyramids</description>
      <guid>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b59_1279519248</guid>
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        <media:title>Illuminati Movies:Avatar, &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Holmes, 2012 </media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">illuminati,movies,symbolism,symbols,avatar,2012,sherlock,holmes</media:category>
      </media:content>
    </item>
                    <item>
      <title>&lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Home Invasion</title>
      <pubDate>Tue, 08 Jan 2013 23:26:26 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=083_1357705226</link>
      <dc:creator>ProfessorWho</dc:creator>
      <description>Simply because I saw several BBC items today and I thought this was funny.</description>
      <guid>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=083_1357705226</guid>
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        <media:title>&lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt; Home Invasion</media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">Sherlock, restoring balance, window, baker street</media:category>
      </media:content>
    </item>
                    <item>
      <title>US Army wins &amp;quot;No S**t, &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;&amp;quot;  Award This Week (Feb.8,2008)</title>
      <pubDate>Fri, 08 Feb 2008 17:07:19 -0500</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=624_1202508439</link>
      <dc:creator>lasrever</dc:creator>
      <description>&quot;The US army has drafted a new manual which for the first time puts an equal emphasis on winning hearts and minds as it does on defeating enemies by force.

The manual is expected to be published later this month.

The new guide is seen as a major development that draws on lessons of the wars being fought by US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Initial military successes there have given way to long struggles, with insurgents in both countries.

Winning the peace

The commander of the US army's Combined Arms Centre, Gen William Caldwell, told the BBC that the US army had learned from its experiences since 2001 that stabilising countries and winning over locals required more than just military skills.

Knowledge of foreign languages and local cultures are also important, he said.

The US army might win every battle it fought, he said, without achieving its real goal - winning the peace.

Gen Caldwell described the manual as a blueprint to follow for the next 10 to 15 years, but other officers say it will take time before the advice from the manual is translated into real change on the ground.&quot;
 BBC 

***

Lasrever: Heavy emphasis on &quot;The US army might win every battle it fought, he said, without achieving its real goal - winning the peace.&quot;

Common sense: Hearts and Minds will determine a war's victory. Not body counts. Kill all the enemies you can come across but if you lose the population's support it doesn't matter.</description>
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        <media:title>US Army wins &amp;quot;No S**t, &lt;span class=&quot;highlight&quot;&gt;Sherlock&lt;/span&gt;&amp;quot;  Award This Week (Feb.8,2008)</media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">sherlock,award,US Army,hearts and minds,hearts &amp;amp; minds,pentagon,war strategy,war tactic,propaganda,manual,mission accomplished</media:category>
      </media:content>
    </item>
                    <item>
      <title>Kitten Demonstrates Modern Appliances </title>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Oct 2010 23:13:00 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=46c_1286852780</link>
      <dc:creator>gmccuiston</dc:creator>
      <description>newsdesk@heraldexpress.co.uk

CAT TORTURER: I'M SORRY

A SOUTH Devon man who pleaded guilty to putting a cat in a switched-on microwave, tumble dryer and finally a freezer said it was 'a drunken, stupid drugged-up mistake'.

Colin Sherlock, 44, from Third Avenue, Dawlish, said after the brief hearing at Torquay Magistrates Court yesterday afternoon that he had 'put his hands up' to causing the one-year-old, female, short- haired cat called Roxy 'mental and physical torture' and 'unnecessary suffering'.

But Magistrates warned him he faced jail for his acts of cat cruelty.

&quot;I pleaded guilty. I put my hands up to it. I have made a mistake and I am going to be punished for it,&quot; said tattooed Sherlock as he left the court house in Higher Union Street.

&quot;It was a drunken, stupid, drugged-up mistake and if I have harmed anyone I apologise.&quot;

Earlier the court had heard the Clerk of the Court outline the charge which said: &quot;You caused unnecessary suffering to a female short-haired domestic cat by subjecting her to mental and physical torture through confining her in a microwave oven which was switched on, a tumble dryer which was switched on and by confining her in a freezer.&quot;

Chairman of the bench Rita Hannaford said she would adjourn sentencing Sherlock so an 'all options' report could be prepared by Probation Services.

She said: &quot;In view of your guilty plea, we cannot proceed with the matter today, because we require reports from the Probation Service.

&quot;However you are probably looking at custody for this matter and that is one of the matters that will be considered by the Probation Service.&quot;

Following the hearing John Wyatt, who prosecuted the case on behalf of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said both the police and the animal charity had worked together throughout the entirety of the case.

He added that the allegations were being treated 'seriously' by both parties.

Sherlock was remanded on unconditional bail until November 5 when he will be sentenced at Torquay Magistrates Court.

The cat is currently being cared for by the RSPCA.

A 16-year-old and a 17-year-old youth, both from Teignmouth, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared at Torquay Magistrates Court yesterday afternoon.

They both pleaded not guilty to a charge of causing 'uneccessary suffering' to a protected animal.

Their case has been adjourned until October 20 and they will next appear at Newton Abbot Youth Court.</description>
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        <media:title>Kitten Demonstrates Modern Appliances </media:title>
        <media:category label="Tags">CAT TORTURER,Colin Sherlock</media:category>
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