Monthly Archive for January, 2006

CNI Delegation Visits Hebron, Meets with Hamas Leader


(from my e-mail)

January 31, 2006

A delegation from the Council for the National Interest met on January 29 with Shaikh Naif Rajoub, a member of Hamas who recently won a seat in the new Palestinian Legislative Council representing Hebron. The CNI delegation, which includes Ambassador Edward Peck, Ambassador Robert Keeley, and Eugene Bird, discussed Hamas and its desire for relations with Israel, Washington, and the European Union.
Continue reading ‘CNI Delegation Visits Hebron, Meets with Hamas Leader’

Terrorist Looking for New Digs

Granma International reports that documentation of Posada Carriles’ acts of torture and murder when captain of the political police (DISIP) in Venezuela is in the possession of his torture victims and relatives of those he assassinated. They are considering using this evidence to file a case against him in the United States.

Eli of Left I on the News flagged it and tied the new information on Joaqun Fernando Chaffardet to other information he’s gathered putting together a very interesting update.

Chaffardet testified at Mr. Posada’s asylum hearing in El Paso, Texas last August that if the U.S. extradited his good friend and crime partner to Venezuela to face the trial he avoided by escaping from prison (with help from friends in the U.S.) then he would be tortured. The judge agreed. Eli also noticed that the U.S. is still shopping for a country where it can quietly unload the guy without attracting too much attention. El Salvador, for one, a country that’s been taking shit from the U.S. for years.

Police, IDF coordinate checkpoint bluffs


(from my e-mail)

Ynet reporter accompanies Machsom Watch women to Hawara checkpoint near Nablus, unravels police, IDF harmonize bluffs to hinder work of organization

Orly Popper

On our way to the Hawara checkpoint near Nablus on Monday, a report on the radio had it that the army reached a compromise with Hebron settlers who agreed to evacuate a cluster of homes as long as they hold the right to return pending a High Court decision on the matter.

We looked at each other and smiled. No one wants to mess with settlers. But we were in for a surprise when we realized where the IDF and the police invest their time and energy.

With your permission I narrate an incident that happened to me yesterday and I leave it for you to decide who the liar is – us or the police.
Continue reading ‘Police, IDF coordinate checkpoint bluffs’

U.S. footprint buried his vision of peace

President Dr. Ibrahim Rugova passed away recently in Kosovo. This is an excerpt from TFF director Jan Oberg’s announcement:

In the early 1990s, it was with Rugova and his LDK party officials TFF’s team worked out the modalities of an independent Kosova – a Kosova with open borders, non-aligned, non-military and neutral. Dr. Rugova was our partner – together with three government leaders in Belgrade – in TFF’s conflict-mitigating endeavour to develop a comprehensive international treaty that would secure a negotiated solution with a civilian UN presence there (UNTANS, 1996).

Regrettably, hardline Kosovo-Albanians, with the support of the German intelligence service, CIA and others created the Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, behind his back. Predictably, a war followed and in 1999 NATO’s bombing which – as can be seen today – effectively prevented the development of the peaceful nonviolent Kosova that he and his colleagues creatively envisioned 15 years ago.

[MORE]

Updated 4 February: See Kosovo: Wiping the Slate Clean for Some Dirty Work Ahead by Christopher Deliso of balkanalysis.com

Also, An Insult to Gandhi by Nebojsa Malic

Cohn follows-up on Karpinski testimony

Latrine facilities for female soldiers serving in both Kuwait and U.S.-run prisons in Iraq were unlit, unlike the men’s, and widely known by both officers and enlisted personnel to be unsafe. Rather than risking attack, some women quit drinking by 3 or 4 p.m., despite temperatures of 120 degrees and higher.

Marjorie Cohn, in her weekly column for truthout, examines the many ways both military and Pentagon officials failed to effectively address an epidemic of rape suffered by women under their command and the mentality that enabled a politically hard-wired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez to cover-up dehydration as the reason a female master sergeant died in 2003 while serving in Iraq.

The actual number of women who died in their sleep from dehydration is still a mystery. Karpinski testified it was several based upon information she heard from “a surgeon for the coalition’s joint task force” during a briefing. In reaction, Sanchez ordered that details and gender no longer be discussed in open briefings. He “directed that the cause of death no longer be listed” after seeing “dehydration” listed as the cause of death on the master sergeant’s death certificate.

In response to Cohn’s questioning at last week’s Commission of Inquiry for Crimes against Humanity Committed by the Bush Administration, Col. (Ret.) Janis Karpinski repeated statements she’d made in September 2004 when interviewed by decorated war hero then crusader for military reform U.S. Army Col. (Ret.) David Hackworth, the founder of Soldiers For The Truth who died last year at the age of 74 while in Mexico seeking treatment for bladder cancer.

Karpinksi’s charge that Sanchez ordered a cover-up appears to be new.

ober wir sanen stark schwanger

At a World Economic Forum debate on issues in the news, the very same people who said Iraq posed an imminent threat agreed Iran should be treated to the same shock and awe when they decide it’s necessary. (via)

Kenneth Pollack, an expert on Iran at the Brookings Institution, a U.S. think-tank, said the military option was ”sub-optimal,” but not impossible.

Although Israel has reserved the option of military force, Pollack said the United States would be the only country with the air power to carry out the “hundreds of sorties a day” required, possibly for weeks, to knock out Iran’s air defenses and destroy anywhere between several dozen and several hundred facilities linked to its nuclear program.

Pollack was wrong about Iraq but his views are respected and these folks are treated like dirt. Sure, that makes sense.

William Blum appearing on C-Span‘s Washington Journal, 28 January.

Harry Belafonte appearing on Democracy NOW!, 30 January.

Restored history, part two.

A Very Special Relationship by Amos Elon, his review of the books Support Any Friend: Kennedy’s Middle East and the Making of the US-Israel Alliance by Warren Bass and Israel and the Bomb by Avner Cohen. [ Volume 51, Number 1, 15 January 2004 The New York Review of Books ].
Continue reading ‘ober wir sanen stark schwanger’

ExxonMobil Makes a Killing

The Institute for Public Accuracy has lined-up some analysts who are available for interviews concerning ExxonMobil’s announcement “that in 2005 it made the biggest annual profit on record for a U.S. corporation – $36.13 billion – up 42 percent from the year before.”

They include Executive Director Steve Kretzmann of Oil Change International, the group that co-published the report Crude Designs: The Rip-Off of Iraq’s Oil Wealth.

The Center for Public Integrity’s Bob Williams who co-authoured with Aron Pilhofer the 2004 report Big Oil Protects its Interests.

Acting director of Public Citizen‘s Energy Program Tyson Slocum.

Also, Antonia Juhasz:
http://www.thebushagenda.net

Author of the forthcoming book:

The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at a Time” and a visiting scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, Juhasz said today: “The Bush administration has coddled the oil industry through direct subsidies, tax breaks, reduced regulation, refusal to force the companies to reduce the price of oil at the pump, refusal to implement a windfall profits tax on oil companies, and by waging a war largely for oil. Since the war, ExxonMobil has earned higher year-end profits than any company in world history, while Chevron has surpassed its own 126-year record two years running. Since the war, both companies have been importing more oil from Iraq to the U.S. than at virtually any point in U.S. history. Between 2003 and 2004, the value of U.S. imports of Iraqi oil increased by 86 percent. Oil company profits therefore owe a great deal to Bush administration policy and the myth of dramatically reduced supply from Iraq.”

More at IPA

U.S. pulls the cover off the democracy hoax

Gareth Porter on how the U.S. has come out of the closet on its efforts to cripple the Shiite gov’t by backing the Sunni resistance.

“We are saying, if you choose the wrong candidates, that will affect U.S. aid,” Khalilzad said.

U.S. military spokesman Rick Lynch declared, “The local insurgents have become part of the solution.”

Shi’ites, kiss democracy goodbye. Say hello to your past.

Restoring History

The sweeping victory of Hamas has led to many thoughtful insights on what lies ahead for Palestinians, none more so than Ali Abunimah‘s, who thoroughly deserved the Press Action Hero of the Week award.

Disgraceful and disappointing no matter how predictable, in defence of its decision to disavow the will of the Palestinian people, the United States is waging a full-blown attack on this development that is so dishonest it has stripped whatever veneer remained on its claim to be an honest broker in the peace process.

In a piece that might fly under the radar of anyone not subscribed to the London Review of Books, Yitzhak Laor reviews Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood by Idith Zertal. While it doesn’t speak to the issue of Hamas directly, by restoring truth in history it gets closer to the nerve center of the Israeli side of this decades-long impasse than any work I’ve read recently. The United States should do the same or get out of the way.

Continue reading ‘Restoring History’

When conservatives spit on soldiers, does anyone care?

BushCommission.org has posted some of the audio from last weekend’s session, including that of Brig. Gen. Colonel (Ret.) Janis Karpinski, who testified during examination by Marjorie Cohn, President-Elect, National Lawyers Guild, that orders to torture and abuse prisoners in U.S. facilities in Iraq came from above and she was purposefully kept in the dark. Providing a specific timeline and keys to evidence of her compartmentalisation, Karpinski cited the sworn testimony of a legal advisor to Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez related to “the meetings held to discuss the progress of interrogations or better techniques to use for certain detainees.” When asked by General Fay if General Karpinski attended any of these meetings, he said, “No sir, she did not. She never attended any of the meetings. In fact, we scheduled them specifically so she would not be able to attend any of the meetings.”

Whether the Wall Street Journal was correct that Karpinski discussed the Red Cross report on prisoner abuse with others and signed the official response in late November 2003 (Col. Marc Warren testified before the Senate the response is dated 24 December | “Karpinski signed the response, dated 24 December 2003.” Fay Report (pdf), p.100), or as she testifies, was ambushed with it in the first week of December by Col. Marc Warren, JAG officer to Lt. Gen. Sanchez (an office she says kept the October report from her deliberately), when Karpinski boasted to the St. Petersburg Times on 14 December 2003 that prison conditions under her command were so good, “we were concerned they wouldn’t want to leave,” she thought it was true. Only after receiving a classified e-mail from the Commander of the Criminal Investigation Division on 12 January 2004 that abuse charges were credible, severe, and the subject of an ongoing investigation did she begin to put the pieces together of a very different story that “her boss” Sanchez failed to disclose. According to Karpinski, the e-mail was the first time she’d been informed of an ongoing investigation. The first time she saw these photos was on 23 January. That same month Sanchez formally suspended her from all duties.

Karpinski believes she is a victim of the Bush administration’s PR campaign to package and sell torture and abuse as the acts of a “few bad apples.”

When they rolled it out it was met with some of the more bizarre and incomprehensible reasoning of those in the circle-jerk, front-line defence of the War on Terror being a freedom operation, who dared to argue that the U.S. is freeing women in the Middle East from societal shackles and chains while at the same time calling for American women to be put into them.

The “right” blamed the feminist movement of the 1980s and affirmative action for the “incompetent” Karpinski’s rise to power and denied she’d been scapegoated. More than a few cited Karpinski and others like Lynndie England in calls for the removal of all women from the military, a bandwagon the popular Air Force veteran and miliblogger baldilocks seems to have missed even as it paraded down blogstreet with bells and whistles blaring. If she weighed in I can’t find it.

The quotable Barbara Ehrenreich said, “A uterus is no substitute for a conscience,” and pointed out that “the U.S. official ultimately responsible for managing the occupation of Iraq since October was Condoleezza Rice.”

Yet former National Security Advisor Rice is a role model, according to Phyllis Schlafly who wrote, “that the picture of the woman soldier with a noose around the Iraqi man’s neck will soon show up on the bulletin boards of women’s studies centers and feminist college professors. That picture is the radical feminists’ ultimate fantasy of how they dream of treating men. Less radical feminists will quietly cheer the picture as showing career-opportunity proof that women can be just as tough as men in dealing with the enemy.”

Freaks like Schlafly are forever conjuring up vivid sexual images then projecting these fantasies as if not their own. It seems to be a win-win gimmick for releasing pent-up frustrations, whereby they get their jollies off, but pass the buck for their sins onto an unwilling participant. Rape by keyboard, no less.

Phyllis has probably spent many a sleepless night worrying that the ACLU has asked Rice & Co. to release the 1,000 or more pictures and videos the gov’t has appealed to keep from the public, so empty bulletin boards might be filled and the minds of budding feminazis can be shaped. The images, the girls, oh Phyllis.

Ann Coulter, another champion of Rice’s qualifications said, “I’m being a little tongue-in-cheek about how vicious women are, but I do think it is a serious problem having women in the military. Men are used to this sort of thing. I mean, C. S. Lewis himself said, remarking on the differences between men and women, if your dog bit a neighbor’s child, who would you like to go deal with: the woman of the house or the man of the house? Men are much more capable of engaging in combat and still being honorable about it.”

She also said, “Yeah, and, of course, we have affirmative action to get more women generals–girl generals–running the–Come on! Come on! That’s silly. No civilized society allows women in the military–this is separate and apart from the fact that you should not be allowing women to fight.”

So in the interest of keeping America civilised, shouldn’t Ann and Phyllis be baking cookies with Condi? Aren’t there three castrated men roaming the mean streets, begging for their daily bread, entitled to their positions of authority?

Coulter was the rabble-rousers’ “it” girl on the neoconservative National Review Online till they refused to publish her response to critics denouncing her 14 September 2001 recommendation that “we should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity.” Editor Jonah Goldberg claimed NRO was protecting Ann (isn’t that what real men do?) from embarassment due “its sloppiness of expression and thought” and she misrepresented the facts by crying censorship before scurrying off to David Horowitz’s Front Page Magazine site. Justin Raimondo, who has forgotten more about these folks than I’ll ever learn in a lifetime, noticed that when Goldberg explained events on behalf of NRO he told readers he’d just returned from his honeymoon but he didn’t mention that his bride was “chief speechwriter and senior policy advisor to Attorney General John Ashcroft.” Raimondo wondered if Coulter’s ridiculing of “lax airport security measures,” coming “just as Ashcroft was assuring the country that security was being beefed up, while the President was telling us to go on vacation – and be sure to fly,” might have had something to do with NRO‘s refusal to publish her column.

Regardless, there is a soldier out there asking to be heard and these hypocrites continue to enjoy the nation’s undivided attention. That should be wrong by anyone’s standards but most especially by those who claim to support the troops.

The Cost of Denial

Dr. Sabah Sadik, the Iraq Ministry of Health’s National Advisor for Mental Health and Baghdad University, appeared on C-Span this morning and said survey after survey shows that Iraqis overwhelmingly support the invasion and occupation.

This is earth shaking news and eager to hear more about the surveys (pdf), I searched for “Iraqi Mental Health“, a 27 January National Press Club panel on which Dr. Sadik appeared. But apparently it’s available only to members.

These same words introduce him on several internet pages:

In 1979, Sabah Sadik, MBCHB, FRCPsych, DPM, a doctor with 3 years of experience in general practice and 1 year in psychiatry, left his native country of Iraq. Twenty-five years later, in December 2003, he returned to visit relatives in Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad. What he saw saddened him profoundly, and he resolved to do all he could to assist in restoring mental health and rebuilding the country’s mental health service system.

Three months later, Dr. Sadik was appointed National Advisor for Mental Health to the Iraqi Ministry of Health.

Today on Washington Journal, Dr. Sadik blamed the tyranny of Saddam for the wretched state of Iraq’s health care system. No reputable source, supportive of Operation Iraqi Freedom or not, would dare deny three wars and 12 years of sanctions devastated the once prosperous country.

Iraq surveys show ‘humanitarian emergency’:

“Even if not all suffering in Iraq can be imputed to external factors, especially sanctions, the Iraqi people would not be undergoing such deprivations in the absence of the prolonged measures imposed by the Security Council and the effects of war.” -UNICEF, 1999

“Since the war in Iraq started in early 2003 the situation for much of the countrys population has deteriorated significantly due to the ongoing insecurity in many parts of the country. This has had a severe impact on the economy, with increased unemployment, and a disproportionate impact on vulnerable groups. There is a strong feeling among different groups of the Iraqi population and international observers that the vicious circle of violence will continue to strongly affect all aspects and spheres of life during 2006.” – International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, 2005

“So many kids have bed-wetting, nightmares, panic attacks, many kinds of psychological disturbances and disorders.” – Child psychiatrist Dr. Ali Hameed, Iraq’s Children In Shadow Of War, 11 March 2005, CBS News

“Living conditions for the people of Iraq, already poor before the war, have deteriorated significantly since the US invasion. This is confirmed in a new report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Iraqi Ministry of Planning and Development Cooperation. Based on a survey of 21,000 households conducted in 2004, the study shows that the Iraqi people are suffering widespread death and war-related injury, high rates of infant and child mortality, chronic malnutrition and illness among children, low rates of life expectancy and significant setbacks with regard to the role of women in society.” – Iraq: The Human Toll, 24 July 2005, The Nation

Audit Describes Misuse of Funds in Iraq Projects
25 January 2006, James Glanz, New York Times

A new audit of American financial practices in Iraq has uncovered irregularities including millions of reconstruction dollars stuffed casually into footlockers and filing cabinets, an American soldier in the Philippines who gambled away cash belonging to Iraq, and three Iraqis who plunged to their deaths in a rebuilt hospital elevator that had been improperly certified as safe.

The audit, released yesterday by the office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, expands on its previous findings of fraud, incompetence and confusion as the American occupation poured money into training and rebuilding programs in 2003 and 2004. The audit uncovers problems in an area that includes half the land mass in Iraq, with new findings in the southern and central provinces of Anbar, Karbala, Najaf, Wasit, Babil, and Qadisiya. The special inspector reports to the secretary of defense and the secretary of state.

Agents from the inspector general’s office found that the living and working quarters of American occupation officials were awash in shrink-wrapped stacks of $100 bills, colloquially known as bricks.

One official kept $2 million in a bathroom safe, another more than half a million dollars in an unlocked footlocker. One contractor received more than $100,000 to completely refurbish an Olympic pool but only polished the pumps; even so, local American officials certified the work as completed. More than 2,000 contracts ranging in value from a few thousand dollars to more than half a million, some $88 million in all, were examined by agents from the inspector general’s office. The report says that in some cases the agents found clear indications of potential fraud and that investigations into those cases are continuing.

So violence, poverty and corruption have all escalated since the U.S. “liberation” but the majority of Iraqis love the U.S., according to Dr. Sadik. Does he charge by the hour for his services?