It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Saturday, April 20, 2024
A man crosses a street as motorists drive past a billboard depicting Iranian ballistic missiles in service in Tehran on April 19, 2024. (AFP)
20 April 2024 AD ـ 11 Shawwal 1445 AH
Israel demonstrated its military dominance over adversary Iran in its apparent precision strikes that hit near military and nuclear targets deep in the heart of the country, meeting little significant challenge from Iran's defenses and providing the world with new insights into both militaries' capabilities.
The international community, Israel and Iran all signaled hopes that Friday's airstrikes would end what has been a dangerous 19-day run of strikes and counterstrikes, a highly public test between two deep rivals that had previously stopped short of most direct confrontation.
The move into open fighting began April 1 with the suspected Israeli killing of Iranian generals at an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria. That prompted Iran's retaliatory barrage last weekend of more than 300 missiles and drones that the US, Israel and regional and international partners helped bat down without significant damage in Israel. And then came Friday's apparent Israeli strike.
As all sides took stock, regional security experts predicted that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government and the country's allies would emerge encouraged by the Israeli military’s superior performance. In response to international appeals, however, both Israel and Iran had appeared to be holding back their full military force throughout the more than two weeks of hostilities, aiming to send messages rather than escalate to a full-scale war.
Crucially, experts also cautioned that Iran had not brought into the main battle its greatest military advantage over Israel — Hezbollah and other Iran-allied armed groups in the region. Hezbollah in particular is capable of straining Israel’s ability to defend itself, especially in any multifront conflict.
Overall, “the big-picture lesson to take away is that unless Iran does absolutely everything at its disposal all at once, it is just the David, and not the Goliath, in this equation,” said Charles Lister, a senior fellow and longtime regional researcher at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.
Aside from those Iranian proxy forces, “the Israelis have every single advantage on every single military level,” Lister said.
In Friday’s attack, Iranian state television said the country's air defense batteries fired in several provinces following reports of drones. Iranian army commander Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi said crews targeted several flying objects.
Lister said it appeared to have been a single mission by a small number of Israeli aircraft. After crossing Syrian airspace, it appears they fired only two or three Blue Sparrow air-to-surface missiles into Iran, most likely from a standoff position in the airspace of Iran's neighbor Iraq, he said.
Iran said its air defenses fired at a major air base near Isfahan. Isfahan also is home to sites associated with Iran’s nuclear program, including its underground Natanz enrichment site, which has been repeatedly targeted by suspected Israeli sabotage attacks.
Israel has not taken responsibility for either the April 1 or Friday strikes.
The Jewish Institute for National Security of America, a Washington-based center that promotes Israeli-US security ties, quickly pointed out that Friday's small strike underscored that Israel could do much more damage “should it decide to launch a larger strike against Iran's nuclear facilities.”
Iran's barrage last weekend, by contrast, appears to have used up most of its 150 long-range ballistic missiles capable of reaching Israel, more than 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) away, said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, former commander of the US military's Central Command.
Especially given the distance involved and how easy it is for the US and others to track missile deployments by overhead space sensors and regional radar, “it is hard for Iran to generate a bolt from the blue against Israel,” McKenzie said.
Israelis, for their part, have “shown that Israel can now hit Iran from its soil with missiles, maybe even drones,” said Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran program at the Middle East Institute.
Iran's performance Friday, meanwhile, may have raised doubts about its ability to defend against such an attack, Vatanka said. Iran is about 80 times the size of Israel and thus has much more territory to defend, he noted.
Plus, Israel demonstrated that it can rally support from powerful regional and international countries to defend against Iran. The US led in helping Israel knock down Iran's missile and drone attack on April 13.
But while the exchange of Israeli-Iran strikes revealed more about Iran's military abilities, Lebanon-based Hezbollah and other Iranian-allied armed groups in Iraq and Syria largely appeared to stay on the sidelines.
Hezbollah is one of the most powerful militias in the region, with tens of thousands of experienced fighters and a massive weapons arsenal.
After an intense war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006 that killed more than a thousand Lebanese civilians and dozens of Israeli civilians, both sides have held back from escalating to another full-scale conflict. But Israel and Hezbollah still routinely fire across the Lebanese-Israeli border during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
Hezbollah “is Iran's only remaining potential advantage in this whole broader equation,” Lister said.
Six months of fighting in Gaza have “completely stretched” Israel's military, he said. “If Hezbollah went all out and launched the vast majority of its rocket and missile arsenal at Israel, all at once, the Israelis would seriously struggle to deal with that.”
And in terms of ground forces, if Hezbollah suddenly opened a second front, the Israel Defense Forces “would be incapable at this point” of fighting full-on with both Hezbollah and Hamas, he said.
Kate Nicholson
Fri, 19 April 2024
The leader of Reform UK Richard Tice could not stop digging himself a hole last night on BBC Question Time when discussing climate change.
Responding to an audience question about what the UK is doing to protect the environment amid rising concerns, Tice said: “We all care about the environment but the climate has changed for millions and millions and millions of years.”
At this point, leader of the Green Party in England and Wales, Carla Denyer, rolled her eyes.
Tice said this was the “reality” long before man-made CO2 emissions – triggering a wave of laughter from the audience.
He admitted that 2,000 years of human activity has worsened the climate.
But he claimed: “There’s no evidence at all that if you get to net zero CO2 emissions, that all of a sudden, the power of the sun, the power of the sea, the power of the volcanic activity is going to stop.”
He said: “The better thing to do is to adapt to the change in climate and that is the smart thing to do and it’s a lot less costly than the current route to get to net zero, where there’s no evidence it will stop climate change.”
Presenter Fiona Bruce then jumped in: “And the countries which will be underwater, how will they adapt?”
That triggered further giggles from the audience.
However, Tice doubled down by claiming the Maldives were actually larger than they were 40 years ago.
Denyer cut in and said: “Can I ask Richard a question – what’s your science background?
“What makes you think you understand how climate change better than all of the world’s climate experts combined?”
Tice ignored the ongoing laughter from the crowd, and said there were plenty of scientists who thought net zero would not stop the climate crisis – and that sea level rise will continue for 200 more years.
Denyer said: “Do you understand why that is? It’s because the carbon that’s already going into the atmosphere will continue to have an effect for hundreds of years.
“It’s not that going to net zero doesn’t have a benefit.”
A member of the audience also challenged Tice, noting: “While we still have people such as Richard that even refuse to acknowledge that climate change is happening – due to our own...”
Tice interrupted: “No that’s not what I said, I said it’s been happening for millions of years.”
The man continued: “No, because quite frankly, human activity is a direct reason why climate change is occurring on the level that it is. Because you’re refusing to acknowledge that, we won’t get to the point and we won’t find a solution.
“Until we find a solution, honestly, you can relocate Westminster because London will be under water, as will Liverpool and will most of the cities where people live.”
INDIA
Wipro, TCS, Infosys collectively lost 63,759 workers in FY24
In a first occurrence over the past two decades, leading Indian IT companies Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys, and Wipro have reported a collective annual decrease in their workforce.The final quarter ending March 31, 2024, saw a reduction of 63,759 employees across these firms.This significant decline aligns with the companies' strategies to improve their existing employees' utilization rate, and lower staff turnover to enhance operating margins.
Wipro's employee strength reduction
On April 19, Wipro announced a reduction of 6,180 employees in the fourth quarter.Over the fiscal year, Wipro's workforce decreased by 24,516, marking the second consecutive quarter of workforce reduction.The total employee strength for FY24 was recorded at 2,34,054.Despite these changes, Wipro's attrition rate remained steady at 14.2% on a last-twelve-month (LTM) basis.
TCS and Infosys followed suit
TCS and Infosys also reported a historic first-time annual decrease in their workforce.In FY24, TCS's staff count was reduced by 13,249 while Infosys saw a reduction of 25,994.Sequentially, TCS lost 1,759 employees in the fourth quarter and Infosys lost 5,423.Amid uncertain demand and economic challenges, these IT firms are focusing on enhancing utilization rates and broadening margins by assigning benched employees.
Infosys alters recruitment model
Infosys is significantly changing its hiring model in response to the workforce reduction.According to Jayesh Sanghrajka, CFO of Infosys, "We have changed our hiring model significantly. We no more hire all the freshers from campus. We hire less than half of them from campus and more than half of them off campus."
Wipro yet to onboard freshers hired post-COVID
In addition to lowering headcount, Wipro is yet to complete the onboarding process for freshers who bagged offer letters during its post-COVID hiring surge.Saurabh Govil, Chief Human Resources Officer (CHRO) of Wipro, stated, "We are still to finish with all those offers. We have promised and we will first ensure all those offers are honored before we go and hire somebody else. That's the plan as we move forward."
TCS plans to maintain fresher hiring
Despite the layoffs, TCS CEO K Krithivasan discussed the company's plans to maintain its hiring of freshers.He stated: "We look at the trainees we deploy, we put them through our own internal training mechanisms and maybe after a period of 6 to 8 months, they become productive and billable. So, there will always be a lag."He added that in FY25, TCS plans to hire a similar number of freshers as the previous year, around 40,000.
Hannah Roberts, PA Entertainment Reporter
Fri, 19 April 2024
American painter Ron English, nicknamed the “godfather of street art”, has created two multi-media artworks reimagining Picasso’s Guernica.
English has inserted his own imagery, characters and visual references into Picasso’s template in two separate parodies, one focused around Star Wars and another called Punk Skunk.
The 64-year-old, whose art explores themes of advertising, pop culture and consumerism in a style branded “popaganda”, has collaborated with art retailer Castle Fine Art who will be selling the collection from upwards of £2,950.
Ron English created Star Wars Guernica (Castle Fine Art/PA)
Guernica is a large black and white oil painting, described as Picasso’s “most important political painting”, depicting the German bombing practice on the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War in 1937.
In Star Wars Guernica, Darth Vader, R2-D2 and Yoda are seen in a battle, echoing Picasso’s action-packed composition.
Meanwhile, Punk Skunk Guernica features toy sculptures that belong to his imagined world of Delusionville, which he describes as being like a “fairytale”.
English said: “I recently conceived of Guernica because, the onset of this parallel career in music.
“And I was kind of intrigued by the fact that in music, or traditionally in music, like in folk music, there was a melody and you would just take somebody else’s melody and then you would add new words to it to be relevant to your time.”
Ron English is behind Punk Skunk Guernica (Castle Fine Art/PA)
He added: “And so the Guernica, I used it the same way, like it’s a melody that I can add new words to – to make it more relevant today.
“And the melody’s familiar and also you have the underlying concept of Guernica – everybody understands that, it’s like a universal.”
English added: “With Guernica, it was pretty easy to come up with the first 10 concepts… it was a little harder with number 11 and even harder with 21 and by the time you’re on 90 it becomes a very big challenge to come up with something you can do.”
He went on: “With the Star Wars piece I was using a piece of popular culture, Star Wars, which for a lot of people of my generation, it’s almost like a biblical thing.”
“It means as much as the Bible did to the generation before us because it’s telling these archetypal stories but in a way that’s modern, not only modern, but also kind of forward thinking.”
Managing director of Castle Fine Art Ian Weatherby-Blythe said: “This project is very close to my heart.
“Our creative director, Glyn Washington, and I hold English’s original artwork within our personal collections, and we have aspired to work with him for over a decade.
“Now we are debuting two incredible Guernica works for the first time, offering collectors worldwide the chance to own one of his incredible pieces.”
The limited edition collection, priced from £2,950, is available worldwide from Castle Fine Art online and in their nationwide UK galleries.