Friday, March 31, 2006

Friday Garden Blogging

March out like a lamb


One week earlier than last year


I think these garlic shoots are volunteers


Last year's fruit shriveling away

We did plant some garlic bulbs in the fall. But I think the ones emerging now are volunteers from last year, and may be from bulbs we forgot to dig up.

Meanwhile, it's dry--easily the driest spring since we arrived here from Minnesota in March 2002. This is what the weather service says about it:

VERY DRY CONDITIONS CONTINUE ACROSS DOWNEAST MAINE AND SNOW FREE AREAS OF NORTHERN MAINE TODAY...

THE MAINE STATE FOREST SERVICE HAS INDICATED THAT THE GRASS AND WILDLAND FIRE DANGER ACROSS MUCH OF MAINE IS HIGH TO VERY HIGH TODAY. THIS AREA INCLUDES ALL OF DOWNEAST MAINE AND SNOW FREE AREAS OF NORTHERN MAINE...WHERE MINIMUM RELATIVE HUMIDITIES ARE EXPECTED TO FALL BELOW 25 PERCENT THIS AFTERNOON.

YOU SHOULD CHECK WITH YOUR LOCAL FIRE DEPARTMENT OR FORESTRY OFFICE BEFORE DOING ANY BURNING. PLEASE REMEMBER THAT A BURN PERMIT IS REQUIRED FOR ALL BURNING.
The laundry was pretty close to bone dry in an hour, with the temperature at 20°C and low relative humidity. Imagine how explosive the brush is becoming in these conditions...

Propaganda Machine

Pentagon is scrubbing the image of war, even for American troops themselves

It's been known since last fall that, ``As part of an information offensive in Iraq, the U.S. military is secretly paying Iraqi newspapers to publish stories written by American troops in an effort to burnish the image of the U.S. mission in Iraq.''

Now Andrew Buncombe in the UK Independent yesterday--while declaring ``Oh, what a lovely war''--has published an analysis of many of the these stories, laying out a firm refutation of the Pentagon response that their planted psy-ops pieces ``did not constitute propaganda because they were factually correct.''

Buncombe quotes a former employee of the Lincoln Group, the Pentagon contractor paid to generate the stories:

A former employee of the Lincoln Group, who spent last summer in Baghdad acting as a link between US troops who were part of the Information Operations Task Force and Iraqis contracted by the company to establish contact with Iraqi journalists, said his job was to ensure "there were no finger-prints".

"The Iraqis did not know who was writing the stories and the US troops did not know who the Iraqis were," said the former employee, who declined to be named. It is not known whether the stories included here were ever printed or simply prepared for publication, but he said it was normal for around 10 stories a week to be printed. He said US troops routinely fabricated their quotations.
The effort parallels the false strategy projected by Bush domestically, and even directly to US troops, as the president did on a trip through Korea in November:
Our strategy can be summed up this way: As Iraqis stand up, we will stand down, and when our commanders on the ground tell me that Iraqi forces can defend their freedom, our troops will come home with the honor they have earned.
The troops should be very, very skeptical.

Pro-Bush sycophants who inhabit the halls of pro-war wingnuttery should carefully review the Buncombe article. That is, if they ever bother to wonder how all those strange ideas about the utility of war & death that are in their heads get there in the first place. Buncombe paints a pretty good picture of how it works.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

A Cold Warrior dies

Another part of Reagan's brain is gone


June 2004: Not much challenge from Maine Public Television

Caspar Weinberger died today in Bangor, Maine. I'm already a little late to get ahead of the hagiography. But rest assured, no punches will get pulled here. ``Cap the Knife'' was a Cold War, Reagan-era figure I truly despised.

Back in June 2004, Maine Public TV ran an interview with Caspar Weinberger at his fine home along Somes Sound on Mount Desert Island. For the most part, the former Secretary of Defense was allowed to rattle off without balance mythological Reaganisms like ``we had very little military strength'' in the early 1980s as the Republican administration began its reign.

On Saddam Hussein, Weinberger declared in the 2004 interview (hilariously, in my view) that you ``can't deal with people like that, you can't negotiate with liars.'' Of course, one of Weinberger's major Pentagon foreign policy projects in the 1980s was the vigorous armament of Saddam Hussein. The effort included removal of Iraq from the terror-sponsor list and the offerings of envoy Donald Rumsfeld during more than one friendly visit to the palaces in Baghdad.

On war, Weinberger spoke gibberish about Vietnam and Iraq, ``Vietnam was the only war we ever entered that we did not intend to win. We were quite content with a containment philosophy. We did win [in Iraq]. Now you've got the aftermath, which is made up of 1500, maybe 2800 supporters of the old Baathist regime, and they have weapons, and they have ammunition dumps that we're slowly eliminating."

And on torture, he parroted the rotten apple theory, ``The real problem of course is that there were somewhere between six to a dozen extremely rotten apples and they are poisoning and tarnishing the whole barrel. Bear in mind that this is about that ratio, six to ten people committing terrible acts with 135,000 people who aren't.''

I managed to get through about half of the analysis of his remarks that I wanted to do in this post from June 2004.

For the larger picture about Weinberger's relationship to the arming of Saddam and the Iran-Contra affair, the 1992 New Yorker article by Murry Waas and Craig Unger is useful, ```Many of us thought it would be better if Iraq won,' Weinberger has told the Los Angeles Times in an interview,'' said Weinberger in reference to the Iran-Iraq war.

More recently, in the fall of 2003, Weinberger was slated to be the featured speaker at the now-infamous Doing Business in Iraq conference sponsored by the University of Maine. We organized vigorously to draw out the issues of war profiteering the conference represented. It was indefinitely postponed shortly before it was to occur. The conference was a perfect metaphor for Weinberger's career--an effort by capitalists to divvy up the spoils of war.

Caspar's Cold War ghost, consisting of the nuclear arsenal he hysterically promoted while alive will haunt the world for decades to come. Rest in peace, Caspar Weinberger.

Solidarity News / Spring 2006

A new issue of Solidarity News is available from Food AND Medicine. It is notable for its thorough examination of the union organizing campaign at Eastern Maine Medical Center.

Peacecast honored

In case you have not seen it yet, peacecast.us was named the Website of the Weekend at Counterpunch for March 25/26. I am very proud to have received this honor. Thank you Alex & Jeffrey. Peacecast is the podcasting companion to Deep Blade Journal.

Also go there to download the most recent podcast, the Keynote from Saturday's Real Security Hearing in Orono, ME. It's very worthwhile. See this post at peacecast.us for more information.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Friday garden blogging

Windy, cool, little rain


Neighbor's plot, tinder dry

Cautions were up earlier in the week. There is a threat of wildland fires.

Iraq lessons in a podcast

New panel discussion over at peacecast.us: ``The Iraq War: Lessons Three Years after the U.S. Invasion and Occupation''.

Senator Susan Collins: servant to the Masters of War

She's allowed to play Republican as long as she promotes the imperial adventure


This is amazing. The Bangor Daily news has a very conservative history.

I want to wildly thank the Bangor Daily News from the bottom of my heart for covering an action yesterday by 100 peace activists that exposed Susan Collins as a perpetrator of fraud in her justification for war against Iraq.

She purported to deliver a speech on "The Ethics of Conscience: Continuing the Legacy of Margaret Chase Smith" Tuesday afternoon. She was not allowed to forget how her utter lack of skepticism, despite strong protest from the peace community at the time in 2002 and 2003 has led us into the disaster of death and destruction that Iraq is today.

On October 9, 2002, she spun this fabric of lies before her colleagues in the US Senate:

The CIA has concluded all key aspects of Iraq's offensive biological and chemical weapons program, including research and development, production and weaponization, are active and, in some cases, larger and more advanced than before the gulf war.

In addition to the weapons unaccounted for in the post-gulf war inspections, there is significant evidence that since 1998, Saddam has expanded his stockpile of chemical and biological weapons; rebuilt and expanded manufacturing sites, including mobile biological production facilities; developed more effective delivery systems, such as unmanned drones; and sought to procure materials for a nuclear bomb.

The reports demonstrating Iraq's violation of U.N. resolutions are numerous, compelling, and indisputable. They are based on the findings of U.N. weapons inspectors, credible reports from Iraqi defectors, sophisticated surveillance equipment, and other strong evidence.

Even more troubling is the evidence compiled by the American and British intelligence agencies that Iraq has converted its L-29 jet trainers to allow them to be used as unmanned aerial vehicles, capable of delivering chemical and biological agents over a large area.

While the evidence of Iraq's pursuit of biological and chemical weapons is overwhelming, it is more difficult to determine the state of Iraq's development of nuclear weapons. Numerous reports suggest, however, a renewed determination by Saddam Hussein to obtain the materials for a nuclear bomb.

A September report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies paints a chilling picture of Saddam's quest for nuclear weapons. Had the gulf war not intervened, Iraq ``could have accumulated a nuclear stockpile of a dozen or so weapons by the end of the decade,'' according to the report.

It further concludes that the scientific and technical expertise of Iraq's nuclear program remains intact, and the British Government has revealed that Iraqi nuclear personnel were ordered to resume work on nuclear projects in 1998.

According to British intelligence, Iraq has also attempted to obtain uranium from Africa. This is extraordinarily troubling. Since Iraq has no active civil nuclear power program or nuclear powerplants, it simply has no peaceful reason to attempt to secure uranium.

In addition, the Iraqi Government has attempted to procure tens of thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes that could be used in centrifuges designed to enrich uranium to produce the fissile material necessary for a nuclear bomb.

How soon could Iraq acquire nuclear weapons? The International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates that Iraq is probably years away from producing nuclear weapons if it has to rely on indigenously produced material. It points out if Iraq were to acquire nuclear material from a foreign source, the timeframe could be reduced to a matter of months....
Her weak defense is that this is what ``everyone thought.'' Wrong. She misstates what the UN inspectors said then, and what they later reported was a picture of Iraq pretty much disarmed, even before the war. And we know how fraudulent the ``defectors'' turned out to be, with severe doubts on record at the time.

Her ongoing cheering for the destruction of Falluja and her failure to stand against torture (preferring it to be viewed through a ``blurry'' lens) piles on to an already despicable record.

Thank you, Scott, for pulling this off. You are a true peacemaker.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

NPR/Fox Republican wanker

Mara Liasson bats from the right



Last Sunday I let go of my urge to post after I heard Liasson talk on Fox about how overjoyed her Republican sources were that Senator Russ Feingold had presented a censure resolution. A ``gift'' to the Republicans, I believe was the astute Fox analysis. Of course, this is bullshit.

Now Media Matters has this:

On the March 21 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume, Mara Liasson, the national political correspondent for National Public Radio and a member of Special Report's "All-Star Panel," again asserted, in defiance of NPR ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin, that "whenever there's any kind of a contest or a contrast between the person at the podium in the White House briefing room and the press corps, the press corps generally loses. ... I think that happened in this case, too." Liasson was referring to the testy exchange between President Bush and Hearst Newspapers columnist Helen Thomas at Bush's March 21 news conference. Liasson offered this opinion despite repeated criticism by Dvorkin, who recently admonished NPR reporters for going on programs "that are looking to appear fair and balanced" and expressing their opinions rather than simply recounting what their reporting shows.
Translation: Liasson is too much a cheerleader for Bush's team than even her National Pentagon Radio in-house watcher can stand.

More on the softball press conference
I'm beginning to really appreciate Media Matters. This is just some terrific analysis of how the press corps ``gave Bush a pass'' at the Tuesday press conference.

Here's just a sample of the questions they should have been asking to back up the lonely voice of Helen Thomas:
  • Earlier you said that you decided to take military action against Iraq only after Saddam "chose to deny inspectors." But Saddam accepted U.N. inspectors in November 2002, and on March 7, U.N. chief weapons inspector Hans Blix requested more time for inspections, describing Iraq's cooperation as "proactive." In light of Blix's assessment, the U.N. Security Council refused to authorize an invasion. Is it not true that by threatening to launch war, you forced the inspectors to leave Iraq in March 2003?

  • You have repeatedly said that you made the decision to invade Iraq only after exhausting diplomatic efforts. Earlier in the press conference, you said that you didn't want war and that you "worked with world" to "solve this problem diplomatically." But did you not make clear to British Prime Minister Tony Blair in a January 31, 2003, meeting that the United States intended to invade Iraq even if the U.N. inspections turned up no banned weapons and you failed to get a U.N. resolution authorizing war?
  • Wednesday, March 22, 2006

    The Long War

    Airman in MSNBC story: ``I think we’ll be here forever''


    Balad air base, 44 miles north of Baghdad, Iraq: 2 million cubic feet of concrete in ``a mile-long slab that’s now the home of up to 120 U.S. helicopters''.

    Now the president confirms at the Tuesday press conference:

    REPORTER: Will there come a day, and I’m not asking you when — I’m not asking for a timetable — will there come a day when there will be no more American forces in Iraq?

    BUSH: That, of course, is an objective, and that will be decided by future presidents and future governments of Iraq.
    According to the cited story, the US base-building budget for Iraq is $1 billion. At Balad, the two 12,000-ft runways already installed have become ``the logistics hub for all U.S. military operations in Iraq, and major upgrades began last year.''

    Strange, the frenetic base-building in which the US is engaged is not given by the president as ``a concrete example of progress in Iraq.''

    Somebody to ask him why

    Helen Thomas presses for the real reasons behind the war


    Facing The Beard about the Bush press conference


    Will a tribunal in the distant future try him for Aggression? Will a day ever arrive when the world gathers enough power to bring the president to justice?

    Helen Thomas has pushed the envelope for years. Now we should all thank her for her strength in trying to get answers from the president about why Iraq was attacked, given the stated arguments for doing so always were false. A pretty simple consequence if the basis for the war was false is the war is illegal. Helen's the only one with enough courage and force to bring this out in the open in a press conference.

    Here's a short version in an exchange between Helen and Wolf Blitzer:

    BLITZER: But you can't forget 9/11, 3,000 people were killed.

    THOMAS: But the Iraqis didn't do it. I mean -- why don't you go bomb some other country? If you have no reason. This is -- I don't believe in preemptive war and it certainly is against international law. It's against the U.N. Charter. It's against Geneva and it's against Nuremberg.
    I should note here, as Rodger Payne pointed out in comments a few posts back, that Helen is wrong on the semantics of international law with the often-misused term ``preemptive war'', which might be legal when attack is imminent. But I don't think Helen was referring to Article-51-based preemption under ``...the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations''. She's really talking about preventive war, or what is sometimes called ``anticipatory self-defense''.

    Bush doctrine says that international law is basically inoperative when the biggest bully on the block throws its weight around, crushing self-identified ``threats'' before they ``materialize.'' But if this doctrine were to be enshrined with legality, what would stop, say, Iran or N. Korea from attacking US missile silos or aircraft carriers arguably poised to ``materialize'' into a threat to these countries. Desire not to commit suicide, I suppose is the simple answer.

    President Bush, for his part, as Josh Marshall points out, just can't get his facts straight about events three years ago:
    I also saw a threat in Iraq. I was hoping to solve this problem diplomatically. That's why I went to the Security Council; that's why it was important to pass 1441, which was unanimously passed. And the world said, disarm, disclose, or face serious consequences ... and therefore, we worked with the world, we worked to make sure that Saddam Hussein heard the message of the world. And when he chose to deny inspectors, when he chose not to disclose, then I had the difficult decision to make to remove him. And we did, and the world is safer for it.
    I don't think he's lying. He's just repeated the wrong information so many times--unlike what the president said, UN inspectors were allowed into Iraq prior to the war--he believes it. Furthermore, UNSCR 1441 did not confer the automatic right for the US to invade. See this post for more...

    911 & Iraq: rhetorical linkage

    The easy path to war through panic & revenge

    How long will our country hum along practically oblivious to the great spasms of incredible cognitive dissonance like those on display in the President's Tuesday news conference? Threat mongering through juxtaposition was always the way 911 and Iraq have been linked. This presidential agitprop is clever, but it is becoming a very stale case to make. I hope people are beginning to realize that all the times he says "Iraq" and "Saddam Hussein" within a few sentence radius of "al Qaeda" or "September the 11th" is not automatic proof of Iraqi involvement in the attacks and that war was ``the right thing to do.'' It seems to have been easy to panic America and whip up flames of reprisal, even though the main target of the president's choice had zero to do with the attack.

    This pattern continued when Helen Thomas asked Mr. Bush on Tuesday to explain why he went to war, given that all of his pre-war claims about Iraqi weapons turned out to be false. Here is how the president answered:

    Excuse me, excuse me. No President wants war. Everything you may have heard is that, but it's just simply not true. My attitude about the defense of this country changed on September the 11th. We -- when we got attacked, I vowed then and there to use every asset at my disposal to protect the American people. Our foreign policy changed on that day, Helen. You know, we used to think we were secure because of oceans and previous diplomacy. But we realized on September the 11th, 2001, that killers could destroy innocent life. And I'm never going to forget it. And I'm never going to forget the vow I made to the American people that we will do everything in our power to protect our people.

    Part of that meant to make sure that we didn't allow people to provide safe haven to an enemy. And that's why I went into Iraq -- hold on for a second -- [emphasis added]
    Okay, the radius between ``September the 11th, 2001'' and ``That's why I went into Iraq'' is about four sentences with sixty words. The clauses clearly are linked. And that's how Bush and other administration figures have always peddled the war--so much so that 4 out of 5 US troops in Iraq thinks of the war as some sort of vengeance for 911.

    Helen tried to point out the clear truth that Iraq had nothing to do with terrorism in the US, especially not 911. Just like the 911 Commission reported:
    Bin Ladin also explored possible cooperation with Iraq during his time in Sudan, despite his opposition to Hussein’s secular regime. Bin Ladin had in fact at one time sponsored anti-Saddam Islamists in Iraqi Kurdistan. The Sudanese, to protect their own ties with Iraq, reportedly persuaded Bin Ladin to cease this support and arranged for contacts between Iraq and al Qaeda. A senior Iraqi intelligence officer reportedly made three visits to Sudan, finally meeting Bin Ladin in 1994. Bin Ladin is said to have requested space to establish training camps, as well as assistance in procuring weapons, but Iraq apparently never responded. There have been reports that contacts between Iraq and al Qaeda also occurred after Bin Ladin had returned to Afghanistan, but they do not appear to have resulted in a collaborative relationship. Two senior Bin Ladin associates have adamantly denied that any ties existed between al Qaeda and Iraq. We have no credible evidence that Iraq and al Qaeda cooperated on attacks against the United States.


    A ways back, I assembled a few more quotes that illustrate the rhetorical device of proximity Mr. Bush and other figures almost always use to link Saddam's Iraq to 911. If they never said directly this was so, they implied it so often and so effectively that at one point they had 2 out of 3 Americans believing it. Here are some of the examples I dug up.

    Mr. Bush directly responded on June 17, 2004 after a Cabinet meeting to the 911 Commission finding quoted above:
    The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq and Saddam and al Qaeda, because there was a relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda. This administration never said that the 9/11 attacks were orchestrated between Saddam and al Qaeda. We did say there were numerous contacts between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda. For example, Iraqi intelligence officers met with bin Laden, the head of al Qaeda, in the Sudan. There's numerous contacts between the two.

    I always said that Saddam Hussein was a threat. He was a threat because he had used weapons of mass destruction against his own people. He was a threat because he was a sworn enemy to the United States of America, just like al Qaeda. He was a threat because he had terrorist connections — not only al Qaeda connections, but other connections to terrorist organizations; Abu Nidal was one. He was a threat because he provided safe-haven for a terrorist like Zarqawi, who is still killing innocent inside of Iraq.

    No, he was a threat, and the world is better off and America is more secure without Saddam Hussein in power.

    But how about these? Setting aside the meaningless nonsense images of intelligence officers meeting, do you think any of the following quotes make it look like this administration said "the 9/11 attacks were orchestrated between Saddam and al Qaeda"??
    As former Secretary of State Kissinger recently stated: 'The imminence of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, the huge dangers it involves, the rejection of a viable inspection system, and the demonstrated hostility of Saddam Hussein combine to produce an imperative for preemptive action.' If the United States could have preempted 9/11, we would have, no question. Should we be able to prevent another, much more devastating attack, we will, no question. This nation will not live at the mercy of terrorists or terror regimes.

    Vice President Cheney, August 26, 2002

    Iraq's government openly praised the attacks of September the 11th. And al Qaeda terrorists escaped from Afghanistan and are known to be in Iraq.... With every step the Iraqi regime takes toward gaining and deploying the most terrible weapons, our own options to confront that regime will narrow. And if an emboldened regime were to supply these weapons to terrorist allies, then the attacks of September the 11th would be a prelude to far greater horrors.

    President Bush, September 12, 2002

    The danger to our country is grave and it is growing. The Iraqi regime possesses biological and chemical weapons, is rebuilding the facilities to make more and, according to the British government, could launch a biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes after the order is given. The regime has long-standing and continuing ties to terrorist groups, and there are al Qaeda terrorists inside Iraq. This regime is seeking a nuclear bomb, and with fissile material could build one within a year.

    President Bush, Radio address, September 28, 2002

    We will break up terror networks, hold to account nations that harbor terrorists, and confront aggressive tyrants holding or seeking nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons that might be passed to terrorist allies. These are different faces of the same evil. Terrorists need a place to plot, train, and organize. Tyrants allied with terrorists can greatly extend the reach of their deadly mischief. Terrorists allied with tyrants can acquire technologies allowing them to murder on an ever more massive scale. Each threat magnifies the danger of the other. And the only path to safety is to effectively confront both terrorists and tyrants.

    For these reasons, President Bush is committed to confronting the Iraqi regime, which has defied the just demands of the world for over a decade. We are on notice. The danger from Saddam Hussein's arsenal is far more clear than anything we could have foreseen prior to September 11th. And history will judge harshly any leader or nation that saw this dark cloud and sat by in complacency or indecision.

    Dr. Condoleeza Rice, October 1, 2002

    The president's October 7, 2002 speech in Cincinnati was so loaded I'll just refer you there.

    Oh, and here's what Mr. Bush's 2004 presidential campaign sounded like:
    September the 11th taught a lesson I will never forget and America must never forget: America must confront threats before they full materialize. My administration looked at the facts and the history and looked at the intelligence in Iraq, and we saw a threat. Members of the United States Congress from both political parties looked at the same intelligence, and they saw a threat. The United Nations Security Council looked at the intelligence and it saw a threat. The previous administration and the previous Congress looked at the intelligence and made regime change in Iraq the policy of our country.

    In 2002, the United Nations Security Council -- yet again -- demanded a full accounting of Saddam Hussein's weapons programs. They did so because they saw a threat. And as he had for over a decade, Saddam Hussein refused to comply. He deceived the inspectors. He did everything he can to deny access to the truth. And so I had a choice to make: Either take the word of a madman, or defend the United States of America. And given that choice, I will defend America every time. (Applause, USA! USA! USA!)

    Although we have not found stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, we were right to go into Iraq. And America is safer today because we did. (Applause.) We removed a declared enemy of America who had the capability of producing weapons of mass destruction and could have passed that capability to terrorists bent on acquiring them. In the world after September the 11th, that was a risk we could not afford to take.

    President Bush, July 13, 2004

    Congress is far from off the hook for this. In the October 2002 war resolution, there is this:
    Whereas members of al Qaida, an organization bearing responsibility for attacks on the United States, its citizens, and interests, including the attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, are known to be in Iraq;...

    In connection with the exercise of the authority granted in subsection (a) to use force the President shall, prior to such exercise or as soon there after as may be feasible, but no later than 48 hours after exercising such authority, make available to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President pro tempore of the Senate his determination that

    (1) reliance by the United States on further diplomatic or other peaceful means alone either (A) will not adequately protect the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq or (B) is not likely to lead to enforcement of all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq, and

    (2) acting pursuant to this resolution is consistent with the United States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations or persons who planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorists attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.

    Then, bloody hell, this reads like a well-edited version of the same answer Mr. Bush gave Helen on Tuesday:
    President Signs Iraq Resolution
    I hope the good people of Iraq will remember our history, and not pay attention to the hateful propaganda of their government. America has never sought to dominate, has never sought to conquer. We've always sought to liberate and to free. Our desire is to help Iraqi citizens find the blessings of liberty within their own culture and their own traditions. The Iraqi people cannot flourish under a dictator that oppresses them and threatens them. Gifted people of Iraq will flourish if and when oppression is lifted.

    When Iraq has a government committed to the freedom and well-being of its people, America, along with many other nations, will share a responsibility to help Iraq reform and prosper. And we will meet our responsibilities. That's our pledge to the Iraqi people.

    Like the members of Congress here today, I've carefully weighed the human cost of every option before us. If we go into battle, as a last resort, we will confront an enemy capable of irrational miscalculations, capable of terrible deeds. As the Commander-in-Chief, I know the risks to our country. I'm fully responsible to the young men and women in uniform who may face these risks. Yet those risks only increase with time. And the costs could be immeasurably higher in years to come.

    To shrink from this threat would bring a false sense of temporary peace, leading to a future in which millions live or die at the discretion of a brutal dictator. That's not true peace, and we won't accept it.

    The terrorist attacks of last year put our country on notice. We're not immune from the dangers and hatreds of the world. In the events of September the 11th, we resolved as a nation to oppose every threat from any source that could bring sudden tragedy to the American people. This nation will not live at the mercy of any foreign power or plot. Confronting grave dangers is the surest path to peace and security. This is the expectation of the American people, and the decision of their elected representatives. [emphasis added]
    Of course, what the war has really done is create a predictable spiral of violence that has a great probabilty of coming home to roost in the worst way, not to mention the devastation of Iraq.

    Tuesday, March 21, 2006

    Killing and maiming

    Women and children were not spared

    Among the grisly tales President Bush spun in Cleveland Monday was one of a child murdered by terrorists who then used his body as a booby trap bomb. Beyond just general skepticism, at this point I have no information leading me to believe the incidents in Tal Afar, Iraq the president spoke of are not true. I just have a problem with the example the US itself is setting in Iraq. In many, many cases, our own military and its allies seem to be no better than the kind of atrocities the president rightly decries.

    On Friday, I noted the slaughter at the hands of US forces of at least 11 members of a family 16 kilometers north of Balad, Iraq. Thanks to Knight-Ridder, more information has become available:

    The villagers were killed after American troops herded them into a single room of the house, according to a police document obtained by Knight Ridder Newspapers. The soldiers also burned three vehicles, killed the villagers' animals and blew up the house, the document said.
    The whole document is reproduced in the Knight-Ridder story.

    Highly organized death squads
    The US is behaving as if it is powerless to stop brutality by Iranian-trained Badr corps militias. In fact, the US military is enabling and assisting them.

    Christopher Allbritton writes for Time Magazine this week that following ``...the distinct and disturbing possibility that the U.S. is in fact training and arming one side in a conflict seeming to grow worse by the day,'' outrageous atrocities are being committed by the Badrs that are controlled by the ostensible US allies:
    The most gruesome discovery was an 18-by-24-foot mass grave in the Shi’ite slum of Kamaliyah in east Baghdad containing the bodies of 29 men, clad only in their underwear with their hands bound and their mouths covered with tape. Local residents only found it because the ground was oozing blood. In all, 87 bodies were found over two days in Baghdad.
    Marines in al Anbar
    Also in Time Magazine comes this disturbing story by Aparisim Ghosh, chief international correspondent for Time magazine:
    On the morning of Nov. 19, 2005, a roadside bomb struck a humvee carrying Marines from Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines, on a road near Haditha, a restive town in western Iraq. The bomb killed Lance Corporal Miguel (T.J.) Terrazas, 20, from El Paso, Texas. The next day a Marine communique from Camp Blue Diamond in Ramadi reported that Terrazas and 15 Iraqi civilians were killed by the blast and that "gunmen attacked the convoy with small-arms fire," prompting the Marines to return fire, killing eight insurgents and wounding one other...
    But,
    According to eyewitnesses and local officials interviewed over the past 10 weeks, the civilians who died in Haditha on Nov. 19 were killed not by a roadside bomb but by the Marines themselves, who went on a rampage in the village after the attack, killing 15 unarmed Iraqis in their homes, including seven women and three children.
    The latter seems just about right for Haditha, in light of the hard-to-uncover truth about the al Anbar offensives the US has conducted over the last several months. Back in October, I posted this from deep within a Washington Post story:
    Mohammed Hadithi, the head of the Iraqi Red Crescent Society in Haditha, charged the U.S. troops violated the rights of residents during the assault. The Marines ``neglected the humanitarian standards,'' he said. ``If the American people come and see the army they are proud of doing that to unarmed women and children, they would have disowned the army because those they are looking for have escaped hours before they came and attacked.''
    Looking back over that post, I see that the US ``rampage'' actually extended to the bridges and entire infrastructure of the region.

    Speaking of Tal Afar, President Bush made a big point yesterday of how the ``terrorists and the insurgents'' controlled ``the only hospital in town''. Why? I think that the since US destroyed Falluja in November 2004, it has had to create rhetorical cover for the blatant war crime of attacking and destroying those very hospitals itself--not because terrorists use them, but rather because hospitals have been a source of truth about the heavy civilian casualties the US is causing.

    We hurt 'em, we heal 'em
    Finally, America has a generous, concerned spirit outside of its War Party. Here is an exchange with a father whose daughter was hit in the face with shrapnel in a US attack from a heartbreaking story on Democracy Now!:
    Amy: Are you afraid to return to al Qaim now?

    Translator for Khalid Hamdan Abd: It is kind of scary to go back, because even if you're just driving your car peacefully in the streets, you might be shot by the American troops for no reason. So it is not easy to live there...

    ...

    Amy: How do you feel that it's an American bomb that killed your children, and an American ... doctors that're helping your surviving child heal?

    Translator for Khalid Hamdan Abd: When he was first told by this Iraqi doctor that he's gonna, they're gonna try and get him out of the country for treatment, he thought it's going to be an Arab country, so it's okay, but when they told him it's America, he refused. They told him again for three times, he told them he doesn't want to go, until somebody told him the people--the population--are different from the Army, they're not the same. So, on that basis, he accepted to come here...
    The whole extensive segment should be required viewing in the White House, the Congress, and on the mainstream media.

    When President Bush talks about the ``killers’’ who attack innocents, painting America as needed in Iraq as some sort of chivalrous knight on a white horse against them, its a delusion of the worst order. Iraq clearly, most certainly, would be better off without us.

    Sunday, March 19, 2006

    US has ``Black'' torture chamber in Iraq

    President's serial hypocrisy revealed again

    News today in the New York Times:

    [An] elite Special Operations forces unit converted one of Saddam Hussein's former military bases near Baghdad into a top-secret detention center. There, American soldiers made one of the former Iraqi government's torture chambers into their own interrogation cell. They named it the Black Room.
    George W. Bush has been naked for years on these atrocities, preaching serial hypocrisy on torture with extrordinary balls, since he claimed back in 2003 that Iraq under his fatherly love would be ``free of assassins, and torturers, and secret police'' and that -- like he claimed three years ago this week -- that Iraqis no longer would have to fear the tyrant Saddam's ``torture chambers and rape rooms''. Seems those same torture chambers have instead been built up and enhanced, continuing to be scenes of torture under Bush to this day, two years after the Abu Ghraib story broke.

    Deep Blade has covered serial hypocrisy on torture and rape in Iraq for years now. See entries here, here, and here among other places. A couple of years ago, William Saletan published a timeline called Rape Rooms: A Chronology What Bush said as the Iraq prison scandal unfolded -- damning indictments.

    These are war crimes, for which Bush as Commander-in-Chief is ultimately responsible.

    Saturday, March 18, 2006

    Three-year Chain of Concern

    Cascade Park, Bangor, Maine







    It was the very best Chain of Concern we've ever had. Over 150 people stretched about 300 meters along US Rt. 2 in Bangor at Cascade Park from 11am to noon this morning. Traffic is quite heavy there on a Saturday. Hundreds of drivers honked for peace as they went by.

    Delusions
    Meanwhile, President Bush peddled in his radio address today incredible delusions about how ``the reaction to the recent violence by Iraq's leaders is a clear sign'' that ``progress is being made'' and of ``Iraq's commitment to democracy''.

    Well, Bush is telling us the truth about just one aspect of his forcing us to hang on to his despicable Iraq policy. That is, ``More fighting and sacrifice will be required to achieve this victory.''

    To President Bush: We in the Peace Movement totally and completely reject your deluded statements following your call upon others to sacrifice. You offer a false choice between staying the course and presuming that removing our imperial occupation forces would constitute ``abandoning our commitments'', and that ``there is no peace, there's no honor, and there's no security in retreat''.

    No one wants America to ``abandon'' Iraq. What we want is to pull out our military occupation so that Iraq will be allowed to solve its own problems. We owe the people of Iraq nothing less than to take our stranglehold off of their people, politics, and resources. Then we must pay Iraq reparations for the decades of support we gave Saddam, the destruction of infrastructure our bombing and corrupt bumbling of reconstruction have caused, and most importantly, for the hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis our policies have killed or injured.

    Friday, March 17, 2006

    Friday Garden Blogging

    Luck o' the Irish edition



    Four days of 10+°C wiped out the snow. Now we're back to cold and bare.

    Thursday, March 16, 2006

    Dark times

    History: March 2003, not really prescience


    Ready for war: left to right, Prime Minister Blair, President Aznar, President Bush and Prime Minister Barroso - the Azores, Portugal, Sunday, March 16, 2003. White House photo by Eric Draper. President Bush: ``The dictator of Iraq and his weapons of mass destruction are a threat to the security of free nations...He possesses the weapons of mass murder...the Iraqi regime will disarm itself, or the Iraqi regime will be disarmed by force. And the regime has not disarmed itself.''

    It is nothing I ever wished to have been right about. But even in March 2003, it was not hard to foresee resistance to the coming US invasion.

    From the original Deep Blade, March 12, 2003:U.S. taking of Iraq does not appear to be the end of the imperial designs of U.S. planners. An extended, dangerous period of escalation of application of U.S. power in an attempt to hold and control its expanding spoils of war can be expected. Despite their arrogance and hubris, Bush and his team should not have much confidence that the chaos of the post-invasion period can be kept benign. There is great uncertainty about the controllability of forces that could be unleashed as America commits to new global management requirements far beyond its present substantial deployments. Current U.S. planning envisions a three-phase transition of Iraq from American military administration to some form of American-style government led by current Iraqi exiles. This process will be highly problematic and will probably require considerable force to pacify the disparate populations within Iraq. Beyond Iraq, the U.S. intends to insure that the behavior of Saudi Arabia and other countries with strategic resources align with its hegemonic goals, thus inviting a radical anti-american response.
    And here are additional remarks from the same issue of Deep Blade, that I also gave in a public forum held for the Maine Congressional delegation at the Bangor Theological Seminary on March 16, 2003. (Only Congressman Michaud was in attendance):
    This war will perhaps be the worst cynical betrayal of the fighting men and women in the military in U.S. history. The American people need to know that it is only the peace movement that truly supports the troops. The only troop support that means a damn thing is stopping the war in the first place. This is a strong statement given the experience of Vietnam and the first Gulf War, but I believe that this is true. Our troops will be thrown into a battlefield where they will be exposed to deadly toxins. The deleterious effects on our troops and the Iraqi population of extensive use of depleted uranium munitions in the first Gulf War is only now coming to light...

    The imperialism of Bush and his lieutenants is a BETRAYAL of the troops and the American people, while they engender a false image that American troops do not care about human life. This image of our troops as storm troopers enforcing imperial policy, like it or not, will take a quantum leap in currency after an attack on Iraq. We will have lost any remaining legitimacy we have in using our military might against actual terrorists (not that I agree this has been the U.S. aim at any point, but post-9/11 legitimacy in the eyes of the world will have been squandered totally). None of this weight do I want our great country, our troops, and all of our people to have to bear.
    Bear it we must.

    Why they hate us

    Death squad tactics

    US raid slaughters family, including five children--one just six months old

    For any reader skeptical that this is intentional US policy, recall discussion of the ``Salvador Option'' that goes back to a Newsweek story by Michael Hirsh and John Barry from January 2005:

    the Pentagon is intensively debating an option that dates back to a still-secret strategy in the Reagan administration’s battle against the leftist guerrilla insurgency in El Salvador in the early 1980s. Then, faced with a losing war against Salvadoran rebels, the U.S. government funded or supported "nationalist" forces that allegedly included so-called death squads directed to hunt down and kill rebel leaders and sympathizers. Eventually the insurgency was quelled, and many U.S. conservatives consider the policy to have been a success—despite the deaths of innocent civilians and the subsequent Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages scandal...

    He [Maj. Gen.Muhammad Abdallah al-Shahwani, director of Iraq’s National Intelligence Service] said most Iraqi people do not actively support the insurgents or provide them with material or logistical help, but at the same time they won’t turn them in. One military source involved in the Pentagon debate agrees that this is the crux of the problem, and he suggests that new offensive operations are needed that would create a fear of aiding the insurgency. "The Sunni population is paying no price for the support it is giving to the terrorists," he said. "From their point of view, it is cost-free. We have to change that equation."
    Iraqis understand exactly what is happening as the bodies pile up. US media can't bring itself to take a good hard look at who is responsible.

    Now this...

    Operation Swarmer
    The U.S. military and Iraqi forces launched the largest air assault in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion in a bid to root out insurgents hiding around Samarra.

    Operation Swarmer began early today with more than 1,500 U.S. and Iraqi troops, about 200 tactical vehicles, and more than 50 aircraft, the U.S. military said in a statement e-mailed from Baghdad. Samarra is about 80 miles (125 kilometers) north of Baghdad on the Tigris River. ...

    There may also be civilian casualties resulting from the operation, [Ted Galen Carpenter, a defense analyst at the Cato Institute] said, adding: ``That's not going to win hearts and minds.''
    The attack oughta really improve the Iraqi view of American intentions. But does that matter any more? It almost seems like the US military has taken a decision to just smash the place up.

    Update (3/17): Allbritton says this operation is ``overblown'' -- ``There is so far no evidence of bombardment of any kind.'' I say good to that. I'll be happy if I'm totally, completely wrong that the US military is using these kinds of operations to slowly smash up the country. But there is a ``Long War'', and Iraq is a strategic base in that war...

    Also today...

    Endless war under Bush Doctrine of anticipatory self-defense
    This'll keep agitating people all of the world against America--a re-declaration of the Bush Doctrine where the US will
    anticipate and counter threats, using all elements of national power, before the threats can do grave damage. The greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction – and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty remains as to the time and place of the enemy’s attack.
    I can't do a better job tackling the huge faults in this policy than Helen Thomas did today at the White House press briefing:
    Q [Thomas] Does the President know that he's in violation of international law when he advocates preemptive war? The U.N. Charter, Geneva, Nuremberg. We violate international law when we advocate attacking a country that did not attack us.

    MR. McCLELLAN: Helen, I would just disagree with your assessment. First of all, preemption is a longstanding principle of American foreign --

    Q It's not a long-standing principle with us. It's your principle.

    MR. McCLELLAN: Have you asked your question?

    Q It's a violation of international law.

    MR. McCLELLAN: First of all, let me back up, preemption is a longstanding principle of American foreign policy. It is also part --

    Q It's never been.

    MR. McCLELLAN: It is also part of an inherent right to self-defense. But what we seek to do is to address issues diplomatically by working with our friends and allies, and working with regional partners. That's what we're doing when it comes to the threat posed by Iran pursuing nuclear weapons. That's what we're doing when it comes to resolving the nuclear issue with North Korea. So we seek diplomatic solutions to confront threats.

    And it's important what September 11th taught us --

    Q The heavy emphasis of your paper today is war and preemptive war.

    MR. McCLELLAN: Can I finish responding to your question, because I think it's important to answer your question. It's a good question and it's a fair question. But first of all, are we supposed to wait until a threat fully materializes and then respond? September 11th --

    Q Under international law you have to be attacked first.

    MR. McCLELLAN: Helen, you're not letting me respond to your question. You have the opportunity to ask your question, and I would like to be able to provide a response so that the American people can hear what our view is. This is not new in terms of our foreign policy. This has been a longstanding principle, the question that you bring up. But again, I'll put the question back to you. Are we supposed to wait until a threat fully materializes before we respond --

    Q You had no threat from Iraq.

    MR. McCLELLAN: September 11th taught us --

    Q That was not a threat from Iraq.

    MR. McCLELLAN: -- some important lessons. One important lesson it taught us was that we must confront threats before they fully materialize. That's why we are working to address the threats when it comes to nuclear issues involving Iran and North Korea. That's why we're pursuing diplomatic solutions to those efforts, by working with our friends and allies, by working with regional partners who understand the stakes involved and understand the consequences of failing to confront those threats early, before it's too late.

    Q What are the consequences?

    MR. McCLELLAN: The consequences of a nuclear armed Iran, they are very serious in terms of stability --

    Q Are you warning Iran that it has consequences as you did Iraq?

    MR. McCLELLAN: Well, what has happened with Iran right now is that the matter has been reported to the United Nations Security Council because the regime in Iran has failed to come into compliance with its safeguard obligations, and they continue to engage in enrichment related activity. And we have supported the efforts of the Europeans to resolve this matter diplomatically, but the regime in Iran continues to pursue the wrong course.

    They need to change their behavior. They continue to defy the international community. That's why the matter has been reported to the Security Council. We have now entered a new phase of diplomacy. And there are a lot of discussions going on about how to prevent the regime from developing a nuclear weapon capability, or developing nuclear weapons. And that's why those discussions are ongoing.

    This is an important issue. It outlines in our national security strategy that this is one of the most serious challenges that we face.

    Q Are we threatening Iran with preemptive war?

    MR. McCLELLAN: We're trying to resolve this in a diplomatic manner by working with our friends and allies.
    It is the outrageous US policy of invading to ``confront threats before they fully materialize'' that has materialized what is now reported as a ``sectarian'' conflict bordering on civil war in Iraq. It's incredible that anyone can blame some supposed Iraqi historical animosities for the conditions now existing.

    In fact, it appears the Americans are fanning the flames as hard as they can. The policy reaches back even farther than El Salvador in the 80s--to a Vietnam-style program of smashing a country to pieces so that it will never be a threat to American hegemony.

    In Iraq, this is a far more important strategic goal than it ever was in Vietnam. Unlike Vietnam, Iraq is too important to give up in the end. America appears to be moving towards destroying the country, then keeping it.

    Evidence for that? General John Abizaid said yesterday that the United States may want to keep a long-term military presence in Iraq to bolster moderates against extremists in the region and protect oil supplies!

    Meanwhile, to distract the public from the meltdown resulting from 2003's attack, groundwork for some sort of new war in Iran is being laid.

    Wednesday, March 15, 2006

    The next Cantarell?

    Big Gulf of Mexico oil find announcement

    According to Mexican President Vincente Fox, Mexico has made a deep-water oil discovery in the Gulf of Mexico that could be larger than the country's giant Cantarell offshore field.

    But let's look at the context. Slipped into the cited story is the following:

    Original total reserves at Cantarell, Mexico's largest oil field, stood at 11.5 billion barrels but its output has been steadily falling. Production at Cantarell is expected to decline 6 percent this year, to 1.9 million barrels a day, and decline even more sharply in subsequent years.
    Hmmm, that would seem to be the buried lead--Mexican oil production is on the precipice and ready to fall off the cliff. Then we read:
    The fastest way for Pemex to get the oil out would be by forming alliances with companies that have the deep-water technology. However, current laws forbid private companies from exploration and production activities in Mexico except when they are under contract to Pemex.

    Energy Secretary Fernando Canales told Dow Jones Newswires the ban on Pemex forming alliances for deep-water drilling would slow down the process of developing the reserves, but won't keep Pemex from getting at the oil.

    "We don't need just one, but many wells," Canales said.

    He declined to give further details of the new oil find.

    The Fox administration has been attempting to ease foreign investment restrictions in the state-run energy sector. But all his initiatives have been blocked by the opposition-dominated Congress.
    Is the hype about the size of the ``find'' pretty much dreaming? Are they just trying to push neoliberal policy through reluctant legislators? And check this out. We've heard it all before, back in 2004.

    Also, see this in Deep Blade Journal. An un-named Pemex engineer in an interview posted on oilcast.com in December says flatly that ``the days of the Mexican super giants are over'' and that Pemex is ``in the middle of the Hubbert curve.''

    Deepwater, or tar sands for that matter, are not the panacea that they sometimes are made out to be. And major world fields like Bergun in Kuwait, Cantarell in Mexico, and the North Sea are already in precipitous decline. That's the real story, not the hype of ethereal new oil finds.

    Tuesday, March 14, 2006

    Feingold

    Censure motion against lawbreaker Bush



    The most interesting thing about Wisconsin US Senator Russ Feingold's Censure Resolution against President Bush for illegal warrantless wiretapping is the way it injects a dose of political reality into a media atmosphere smothered by its own nearly unshakable delusions. A large swath of the public has become sensitized and now rejects the criminality of President Bush and his administration. But usually you wouldn't hear that perspective in mainstream reporting.

    Feingold's Censure Resolution would seem to be an anemic move given the colossal transgressions of Bush. Of course I agree totally with impeachment efforts (thanks for links, Francis) Rep. John Conyers and the Center for Constitutional Rights are now promoting. But now with Feingold out there, a pretty good sized spasm of coverage for the case against Bush for lawbreaking is out there. In this environment, even a little thing like censure is such a massive departure from the consensus narrative that it echoes everywhere like an explosion.

    Even so, there is a great deal of work left to do. The explosion will not last long. The push-back coverage is abundant today--``Feingold Draws Little Support for Censure''. While Frist wants to wash Feingold with a bucket of ``we're at war'' nonsense, support for censure even from Feingold's own Democrat Party is ``tepid''. So, yes, this move will probably not stay out front just now. But it is a move in a healthy direction to have it there at all. Thank you, Russ Feingold.

    Follow the story/watch the video:
    1. Initial interview on ABC This Week
    2. Democracy Now! piece, including Senate floor statement
    3. Russ Feingold is a solid guy, can hold his own in a hostile interview.

    Sunday, March 12, 2006

    Diplomatic mythology on Iraq

    President still peddling Saddam disarmament

    While reading through the President's speech from Friday March 10, cited in the last post, I note that he is still promoting the obviously false notion that Saddam Hussein failed to ``disarm'' in late 2002 and early 2003.

    PRESIDENT BUSH (Mar. 10, 2006): First choice of any president ought to be to deal with issues diplomatically. And we dealt with the issue of Iraq diplomatically: Security Council resolution after Security Council resolution after Security Council resolution, until 1441, when the world spoke with a united voice that said to Iraq, "Disarm, disclose or face serious consequences."

    Saddam Hussein chose otherwise. He was removed from power. And there's no doubt in my mind that the United States is more secure and the world is better off without Saddam Hussein in power.
    But Saddam Hussein clearly told the truth in Iraq's December 2002 declaration on weapons of mass destruction--Iraq had none. All subsequent pre-war hype on the subject from the president, Colin Powell, and other officials was hyperbolic pure crap. The president's second hand-picked inspector threw in the towel in December 2004.

    More recently, it has been reported that President Bush knew as early as January 2003 that Iraq was void of weapons of mass destruction. In fact, in a January 31, 2003 White House meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush proposed flying US spy planes painted with UN colors over Iraq in order to provoke war. Bush reportedly told Blair that the ``diplomatic strategy had to be arranged around the military planning''. The case for war over WMD was non-existent and other rationale were sought.

    In the end, the British Parliament authorized military action in Iraq on a bizarre legal theory concerning the post-Gulf-War resolution from 1991, in the absence of genuine authority from the UN Security Council. Contrary to the word of President Bush, UNSCR 1441 did not confer automatic authority for war without further Security Council action. All members' comments at the time on UNSCR 1441, save for some ludicrous unilateralism from then US Ambassador to the UN John Negroponte, ``welcomed the lack of `automaticity' in the final resolution.''

    Of course, there is a good reason President Bush promulgates this mythology--it may one day become his post-office defense in a war crimes trial, against the charge of the supreme crime of Aggression.

    Free trade versus the Terror War

    PRESIDENT BUSH (3/10/2006): ``We're at war. I wish I could report to you we weren't at war. We are. There's an enemy that still lurks, that would like to do serious harm to the United States.''

    There he goes again, laying out familiar ground in the post-911 mode. But the Dubai Ports deal brought out for all to see a fundamental contradiction in Bush doctrine--that the international investor class operates without restriction while this ``new kind'' of post-911 Terror War rages against lurkers seeking harm to the US.

    Bush politics have since 911 focused around smashing over the head of its political opponents unbridled national-security fearmongering while creating a state of panic over the ``murderous ideology of the Islamic radicals'', blowing up the threat (which is real) into mythic ogre on par with the Cold-War USSR.

    In a comment about a Nation piece on this by William Greider, Kevin Drum put it succinctly a couple of weeks ago:

    George Bush has used war and terror as a partisan cudgel for the past five years, and the culture of fear he's nurtured so cynically has been the cornerstone of his political success.
    The flip side of the coin of unchallengeble right to wage war at will under a doctrine of anticipatory self-defense is unbrideled freedom of capital investment. In the doctrinal Friday speech to newspaper editors cited above, Bush relayed his new-found ``concern'' about the ``message'' derailment of the ports deal sends to the world capital class
    I'm concerned about a broader message this issue could send to our friends and allies around the world, particularly in the Middle East.

    In order to win the war on terror, we have got to strengthen our relationships and friendships with moderate Arab countries in the Middle East.

    UAE is a committed ally in the war on terror. They are a key partner for our military in a critical region. And outside of our own country, Dubai services more of our military ships than any country in the world.

    They're sharing intelligence so we can hunt down the terrorists. They've helped us shut down a worldwide nuclear proliferation network run by A.Q. Khan.

    UAE is a valued and strategic partner. I'm committed to strengthening our relationship with UAE and explaining why it's important to Congress and the American people.
    And here is how Paula Stern, Former Chair of the International Trade Commission posed these questions on the PBS Newshour last Friday.
    PAULA STERN: Well, I think it's going to make them hesitate. I think it's going to make them look at what they had thought they wanted to buy here in the United States and think again, go and see what their portfolio of future investments are and say is this going to be too sensitive? Is there going to be some political fallout that will embarrass me as it has embarrassed those who invested in the -- from Dubai in the ports here in the U.S.?...

    STERN: We get the goods, but we still owe them. We've got to pay back for that and we have amassed enormous debt. And we are acting, frankly, in this Dubai signal that the president said was such a bad signal to the world, we're acting as if we don't need the rest of the world's money, nor do we need the rest of the world to trade or invest with us. And right now we need it more than ever.
    So there are real worries that interruption of capital flow back into the US could become a bad thing if Terror War concerns begin to impinge.

    A News Hour regular, often-insufferable New York Time columnist David Brooks was just flummoxed on Friday that people may think that the ports deal could have some sort of relationship to the Terror War:
    BROOKS: And a lot of people heard "Arab ports." They're nervous. They think we're in a war. A lot of them think we're in a war against Arabs, apparently. And they were -- they were concerned.... So, I would say there's anxiety about where we are in the war on terror. There's a lot of things blowing up around the world. Iraq is unstable, the Danish cartoons. There's just a sense that we're at war, and that we're at war with a part of the world that -- where a lot of things are going wrong.

    And I think people heard United Arab Emirates, ports, where they know we're vulnerable. The two together didn't seem like a good idea. I think, if you had enough political leaders who would say, listen, I agree with you, if this was the Taliban taking over the ports, but the UAE has done everything we have requested of them. They have risked their lives. They have incurred the wrath of al-Qaida. They're serving 700 ships, where you have UAE citizens, our military ships. And they're taking care of it themselves.
    Frankly, I bristle at the suggestion that genuine concerns over this ports deal is based on some sort of unreasonable lack of faith in the UAE, or even racism. Bull. There is a stack of unanswered questions about 911, many of them centered squack in the UAE. The 911 Commission Monograph on Terrorist Financing reads like a Dubai travel log:
    Upon their arrival in the United States, the hijackers received a total of approximately $130,000 from overseas facilitators via wire or bank-to-bank transfers. Most of the transfers originated from the Persian Gulf financial center of Dubai, UAE, and were sent by plot facilitator Ali. Ali is the nephew of KSM, the plot’s leader, and his sister is married to convicted terrorist Ramzi Yousef. He lived in the UAE for several years before the September 11 attacks, working for a computer wholesaler in a free trade zone in Dubai. According to Ali, KSM gave him the assignment and provided him with some of the necessary funds at a meeting in Pakistan in early 2000. KSM provided the bulk of the money later in 2000 via a courier. Although Ali had two bank accounts in the UAE, he kept most of the funds for the hijackers in a laundry bag at home. Ali transferred a total of $119,500 to the hijackers in the United States in six transactions...
    But, even though I do not concur with the ``xenophobia'' notion promoted, I suppose the level-headed piece in Newsweek by Christopher Dickey explains the real nature of Dubai quite well as
    a place where people from all over the world can come to do business with maximum comfort and minimum hassles.

    To be sure, Al-Maktoum had a useful tradition to build on. Dubai was, is, and ever has been a place for traders, entrepreneurs, moneymen, intriguers, smugglers and spies. In a region of notorious bureaucracy and protectionism, Dubai looked quite lawless because its rulers wanted, well, less law. Even before independence in the 1970s, when the British were supposed to be running the show in what were then called “The Trucial States,” Dubai’s big industry was shipping contraband gold to India so brides there could avoid the heavy taxes on their glittering dowries.
    For President Bush and free traders, it seems the wild-west aspect of the Dubai is a terribly useful feature. Too bad, terrorists feel this way too.

    If you can wade through the anti-liberal snark, Michelle Malkin actually has some useful research on the aspects of the UAE unbridled free-traders like Bush and Brooks would rather ignore, Terror War or not.

    Jury says Custer-Battles liable for fraud

    Iraq war profiteering is wrong? Unbelievable!

    Last spring, Deep Blade Journal had a couple of posts referring to the extensive wrongdoing and theft by Iraq contractors being paid with Iraqi and US-taxpayer funds. See here and here for details.

    Now a federal jury has found that Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) contractor Custer Battles LLC ``committed fraud in 37 instances in connection with a $9 million contract to help distribute new currency in Iraq,'' according to a story published in USA Today's weekend edition.

    The principles in Custer-Battles, Scott Custer and Michael Battles, deny having committed fraud. I am curious about what happens next as the case winds its way through appeals courts. The judgement is based on the Civil-War era False Claims Act in an action brought by former Custer-Battles employees. So far, there is no mention that Executive Order 13303 could be a basis for immunity from fraud on the part of a CPA contractor. And so far, the Bush administration is not a participant in prosecuting fraud against US taxpayers and Iraqis alike. According to USA Today, ``The Justice Department declined to participate. Charles Miller, a department spokesman, declined to comment.''

    Friday, March 10, 2006

    Friday Garden Blogging

    Dreary but warming


    Backyard losing its bit of snow, again


    Tulips have activated along the foundation

    Light rain has moved in and the temperature has shot up to near 10°C, after two weeks of mostly freezing or below. The cover from recent small snows will be gone entirely by this time tomorrow. Is this yet another false spring? Maybe the tulip bulbs that started pushing up shoots along the sunny side of the house this week say differently.

    Thursday, March 09, 2006

    Falling Snowe

    Glenn Greenwald has an excellent piece on the non-action by the Senate Select Commiittee on Intelligence concerning illegal warrantless wiretapping by the Bush administration, and so-called ``moderate'' Republican legislation to legalize it:

    In lieu of fulfilling their pledge to discover the scope of the Administration's warrantless eavesdropping on Americans, Sens. Hagel and Snowe decided instead that they would support legislation which would create a 7-member Subcommittee (4 Republicans and 3 Democrats) to which the Administration is required to report all warrantless eavesdropping activities...The Senate Judiciary Committee's hearings are still ongoing and, when he was last heard from a day or so ago, Sen. Specter was still squawking about being angry that Gonazles lied to the Committee and insisting that the Committee would at least find out whether there were other warrantless eavesdropping programs in place...Sen. Specter is, of course, of the same rancid strain as Sens. Snowe and Hagel -- the group that struts around self-lovingly preening as some sort of "independent Republicans" only invariably to fall in line, meekly and without exception, with White House commands.

    Wednesday, March 08, 2006

    Snowe is a worthless shame on civil liberties

    Snowe on December 21, 2005:

    SNOWE, BIPARTISAN GROUP OF SENATORS SEEK JOINT JUDICIARY-INTELLIGENCE INQUIRY INTO DOMESTIC SPYING

    Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Olympia J. Snowe (R-ME) and a bipartisan group of Senate Intelligence Committee members today called for a joint inquiry by the Senate Judiciary and Intelligence Committees into the President’s authorization of domestic electronic surveillance of U.S. citizens.

    ``Revelations that the U.S. government has conducted domestic electronic surveillance without express legal authority indeed warrants Congressional examination. I believe the Congress – as a coequal branch of government – must immediately and expeditiously review the use of this practice,'' said Snowe.

    Joining Senator Snowe on the letter to Senators Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), chairman and ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, and Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) and John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), the chairman and vice chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence were Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), Carl Levin (D-Mich.), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).

    The following is the text of the letter:

    The Honorable Arlen Specter, Chairman Senate Committee on the Judiciary
    The Honorable Patrick J. Leahy, Ranking Member, Senate Committee on the Judiciary
    The Honorable Pat Roberts, Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
    The Honorable John D. Rockefeller IV, Vice Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence

    Dear Senators,

    We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

    We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

    On Saturday the President stated that he “authorized the National Security Agency, consistent with U.S. law and the Constitution, to intercept the international communications of people with known links to al Qaeda and related terrorist organizations.” It is critical that Congress determine, as quickly as possible, exactly what collection activities were authorized, what were actually undertaken, how many names and numbers were involved over what period, and what was the asserted legal authority for such activities. In sum, we must determine the facts.

    Both the Judiciary and the Intelligence Committee have had numerous hearings and briefings on the authorities provided to the nation’s law enforcement and intelligence agencies in their effort to defend against terrorism. We have extensively debated these issues. At no time, to our knowledge, did any Administration representative ask the Congress to consider amending existing law to permit electronic surveillance of suspected terrorists without a warrant such as outlined in the New York Times article.

    We strongly believe that the Judiciary and Intelligence Committees should immediately seek to answer the factual and legal questions which surround these revelations, and recommend appropriate action to the Senate....
    Snowe today:
    Several moderate Senate Republicans including Olympia Snowe are collecting support for a bill that would give President Bush's domestic surveillance program the force of law.

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The prospects are far from certain for the draft legislation circulated by Snowe, Ohio's Mike DeWine, Nebraska's Chuck Hagel and South Carolina's Lindsey Graham.

    The legislation that has the general approval of the Senate's Republican and intelligence leadership. But Democrats expressed outrage yesterday after the Intelligence Committee voted along party lines to reject an investigation of the surveillance program.

    West Virginia Senator Jay Rockefeller, the committee's top Democrat, complained that the committee is "in the control of the White House."

    Tuesday, March 07, 2006

    Extremely scary nuclear developments

    Cold war in South Asia


    The Alliance? (doctored White House photo)

    The more I look at the White House photo of Cheney before AIPAC with the entwined flags, the more frightened I become. The Chakra is added, signifying last week's developments in India, where Bush and Singh declared the 1967 Non-proliferation Treaty a dead letter.

    Legitimate statecraft


    Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz (AP file photo)

    MOFAZ: If Hamas … presents us with the challenge of having to confront a terror organization, then no one there will be immune. Not just [Hamas leader] Ismail Haniyeh. No one will be immune.


    Vice President before AIPAC on Tuesday
    CHENEY: The Iranian regime needs to know that if it stays on its present course, the international community is prepared to impose meaningful consequences. (Applause.) For our part, the United States is keeping all options on the table in addressing the irresponsible conduct of the regime. (Applause.) And we join other nations in sending that regime a clear message: We will not allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon. (Applause.)
    Funny, I would've thought that reaching across borders to assassinate at will while killing eight-year-olds fell within the definition of terror. And I don't see anything in the veep's speech about the advanced nuclear arsenal Israel has pointed at Iran.

    Saturday, March 04, 2006

    2006 energy outlook

    Peak oil in 2005? 2006?


    Can world oil keep up supply increases of the last 4 years during 2006? (Graphic posted at The Oil Drum, click for complete explanation)

    Jonathan at Past Peak alerts me to the annual 2006 Energy Outlook column by analyst Matthew Simmons in World Oil:

    Also, 2005 will go down in history books as perhaps the poorest year for exploration success for both oil and gas since World War II. This dismal success was not for lack of effort. Record amounts of funds are being plowed into E&P [exploration & production] capital spending, which is why all the world's rigs are now in use.
    So, new oil discovery is petering out worldwide while the industry is utilizing its drilling capacity at nearly 100%. Couple these facts with the important observation at The Oil Drum that May & December 2005 appear to be tied for highest world oil production, with December edging out May because the ``Russians had a very good month''. But the bottom line is that international figures show world oil production roughly at a plateau.

    What happens if neither Russia nor Saudi Arabia can increase production much from this point? Maybe there will be a month in 2006 that makes the all-time high. But going forward, this level is precariously perched and a significant fall cannot be ruled out.

    Friday, March 03, 2006

    Friday Garden Blogging

    Late winter bluster


    Early signs of mud season

    March has been a lion so far. Early in the week it was downright ugly, with windchills feeling a lot more like mid January. Four inches of snow yesterday. Cold remains today, though just a bit better--just warm enough to melt over the tar. But the wind keeps blowing. Good news is a warm-up is on the way...

    Strangulation of Gaza

    Rice's ``all-night negotiations'' back in November proving meaningless


    Israel mercilessly is punishing Gaza farmers but the headline is ``Qaeda Is In Gaza'' (no mention of the farmers in the CBS News story except in the caption)


    Hundreds of stories on ``indications about a presence of al-Qaeda in Gaza'', but only 26 about, ``Agriculture in the Gaza Strip is on the verge of collapse as Israel's economic stranglehold starts to bite''

    The punishment of the Palestinian people for their democratic choice of Hamas as parliamentary majority is in high gear, with the complicity of Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, who is spreading what amounts to a rumor that ``al-Qaida has infiltrated the occupied territories''.

    Now Israel is flexing its domination in order to ensure that Palestinian economic benefits from the settler pull-out during 2005 cannot be realized, especially under the new Hamas government. At a critical time for export of produce to Europe, Israel is keeping the Karni cargo crossing closed, citing terrorism concerns. The BBC reports,

    Israel has kept the crossing closed for nine straight days due to security concerns, officials say.

    Palestinians describe the closure as collective punishment, while the UN says it has caused severe shortages.

    "This is getting to precarious levels," said David Shearer, head of the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs, in an interview with Reuters news agency.

    Stocks of wheat, sugar and cooking oil could begin to run out within days, the UN said on Wednesday.

    "We had already informed the merchants that Karni would open," said the Palestinian official in charge of the border, Salim Abu Safiyeh.

    "The continued closure is causing humanitarian and economic harm," he said.

    Palestinian farmers had been planning to dump hundreds of tonnes of spoiled produce that they would normally have exported through Karni crossing.
    Our liberal media here in America has just about zero interest in looking at the Gaza story as about anything other than terrorism.

    Thursday, March 02, 2006

    President's Katrina briefing

    Our liberal media

    This struck me today, as it did Media Matters, in reporting about the newly released video of the dire briefing President Bush received prior to Hurricane Katrina:

    MEDIA MATTERS: On March 2, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and USA Today reported on newly released video footage and transcripts documenting how, on the day before Hurricane Katrina made landfall, President Bush was warned -- and expressed concern -- about the possibility that the levees in New Orleans would be breached by the storm. But none of these reports mentioned that these new tapes further contradict the claim Bush made on ABC's Good Morning America several days after the storm hit that ``I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees.''
    Heavens, the statement the president made about no anticipation of breach was always obviously untrue. But no attempt to hold him responsible for that is in evidence here, despite the new video evidence proving what was written here and in many other blogs at the time.

    It is almost as if the professional journalists are trying to get us to forget what President Bush and other administration officials say immediately after they say it. Tuesday this week, the day before the video came out, Bush was telling Elizabeth Vargas of ABC News:
    Listen, here's the problem that happened in Katrina. There was no situational awareness, and that means that we weren't getting good, solid information from people who were on the ground, and we need to do a better job.
    Must've been the talking point of the day, ``the media [had] better situational awareness than the government''. But if you look at all the media reaction to the video proving the president should have had great ``situational awareness'' on Katrina, you can't find mention of the contradictory statement Mr. Bush was giving just one day earlier. I think the story should be that Bush was fully briefed about the disaster but just didn't care, as he continued his vacation that week. But the liberal media does not shine its light on that.