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"We don't seek empires. We're not imperialistic. We never have been. I
can't imagine why you'd even ask the question." Donald Rumsfeld,
questioned by an al-Jazeera correspondent, April 29, 2003.
"No one can now doubt the word of America," George W. Bush, State of
the Union, January 20, 2004.
November 21,
2004
Yukos: Is Stealing From a
Receiver of Stolen Goods a Crime?
Check out Kim Murphy's article in the LA Times, Russia
Plans to Auction Key Unit of Yukos Oil:
Russian tax authorities Friday scheduled the
equivalent of a fire sale at what was once the nation's largest oil
company, offering the main production facility at Yukos Oil for auction
next month at a fraction of its value.
Company officials called the planned auction terms for Yuganskneftegaz
the crown jewel of Russian oil facilities, producing almost as
much oil as Iraq a "stunning" announcement.
"What we are witnessing is, simply put, a government-organized theft to
settle a political score," Yukos Chief Executive Steven Theede said in
a statement.
The renationalization of Yukos through the sale of its assets to a
state-controlled energy company is now considered one of the most
likely outcomes. Analysts said major foreign players would be unlikely
to bid on a key component of a company that was facing up to $20
billion in tax bills, thanks to the Kremlin's yearlong battle with
Yukos and its former CEO, imprisoned billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky.
"Many believe at this point that the company is going to be destroyed
as a signal to all the other oligarchs to get behind the Kremlin and
don't make trouble," said James Fenker, head of research at Troika
Dialog, a Moscow-based investment firm. "It's a very medieval signal.
You take the criminal and you put his head on a stick outside the
Kremlin."
Yuliya Latynina, an analyst with Echo of Moscow radio, said Yukos
assets would probably go to a Kremlin-friendly company in a controlled
auction an outcome that would support claims the government was
more interested in acquiring Yukos' assets than punishing the company
for alleged tax evasion.
And, as you might imagine, this dovetails perfectly with the analysis
of Putin as moving in a sharply more dictatorial direction, with his
"war on terrorism" crackdown, his elimination
of elections for regional governors (after twice blatantly staging
the elections in Chechnya), and his move to increase
his powers over the judiciary.
And it's all true. There's just one little thing being left out.
Khodorkovsky acquired Yukos from the Russian people by exactly the same kind of
theft that is being practiced now:
What then could be punished with
a death sentence
today is simply considered normal business, including the way these
oligarchs
seized former state assets at what could be considered an obscene
discount. In a
rigged bid, Mikhail Khordorkovky, for example, paid only $300 million
for Yukos
Oil. Today through no fault of Mr. Khodorkovsky, Yukos is worth upward
of $15
billion (a three-fold increase in oil prices sent oil company stock
prices
soaring). That makes Mr. Khodorkovsky, its CEO, worth an estimated $8
billion.
Whatever company acquires Yukanskneftegaz, the proceeds are going to
pay Yukos's back taxes. Putin is a terrible dictator who has done
unforgivable things in Chechnya. This move may well help to consolidate
his position by reining in Russia's Western-oriented capitalist class.
But there does seem to be some chance that this can be redirected from
the aggrandizement of Putin to the reappropriation of what should
always have remained Russian public assets.
Posted
at 1:30 am
November 19,
2004
Utter Contempt for Humanity
As the International Committee of the Red Cross, in an unusually bold
statement, slams the " utter
contempt for the most basic tenet of humanity: the obligation to
protect human life and dignity" shown by U.S. forces and by the
various groups murdering hostages, we learn of yet another example of
this contempt shown by U.S. troops and the new security forces of
U.S.-created strongman Ayad Allawi.
American soldiers and members of the new Iraqi National Guard stormed
the Abu Hanifa mosque either directly after or during prayers (reports
differ), opening fire on worshippers, killing four and wounding nine.
Built on the resting place of Abu Hanifa, the "Imam Aadham" (great
imam), founder of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence, the
mosque is probably the most important Sunni mosque in the country. The
township that grew up around it, Aadhamiyah, takes its name from Abu
Hanifa's appellation. Although mosque authorities have tried hard to be
accommodating with American troops stationed in Aadhamiyah, this is not
the first episode of harassment. I wrote about an
earlier raid in April; that one, at least, while pointless and
destructive, was not done during prayer and had no fatalities.
There could hardly be a more pointed insult to the Sunni population of
Iraq than to kill people there while at prayer, with "Pieces of brain
... splattered on one of the walls inside the mosque
while large blood stains covered carpets in several places" and to
arrest the chief imam of the mosque, Sheikh Muayid al-Aadhami.
Dahr Jamail has written an important
report on the raid, based on eyewitness testimony; please read it
and send it to people you know.
Posted
at 5:39 pm
November 18,
2004
Iraqi Election Boycott
47 Iraqi political parties and related bodies, meeting at the
headquarters of the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars at
Baghdad's Umm al-Qura mosque (in Saddam's time, Umm al-Marek, the
Mother of Battles), have decided to boycott the
alleged elections supposedly scheduled for January (and required under
the terms of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1546). In their
statement, they have said that the election results are a foregone
conclusion, with rewards already lined up for the parties collaborating
in the occupation.
The parties include not just Sunni Islamist ones, but others like the
National Arab Current, the Iraqi-Turkoman Front, the Democratic
Christian Party and the communist People’s Union party, as well as
Shi'a parties. They met under the auspices of the Iraqi National
Founding Conference, a broad, nonsectarian front that includes Sunni,
Shi'a, Arab, Kurd, Islamist, and secular parties within it, with points
of unity as follows: opposition to the occupation and freedom of any
association with either the crimes of the occupation or those of
Saddam's regime.
This initiative was started by Sheikh Jawad al-Khalissi, a Shi'a cleric
descended from one of the leaders of the 1920 revolt against the
British; its initial conference was held last December. I have written
about him and his efforts at greater length
before.
I'm not sure an election boycott is wise; historically, they almost
always backfire (as the anarchists in Spain found out to their regret).
But they are clearly making the point that the destruction of Fallujah,
which they termed an act of genocide in their statement, had nothing to
do with the elections; in fact, it's decreasing participation, not
increasing it.
Posted
at 2:45 pm
November 17,
2004
Iraqi Voices
My friend and colleague Dahr
Jamail, still reporting from Baghdad, just sent me some of the
interview material that is going into his next dispatch.
It is a vital corrective now that the normally supine media is going
into almost active collaboration with the Bush administration
"information war" in Fallujah. To go by media reports, there's nobody
in Fallujah who is angry that their town was just bombed into rubble,
with, according
to one Red Cross official interviewed by Dahr, at least 800
civilian deaths (I think the number is likely higher).
Then you can take a look at the now-famous footage of
a Marine shooting a wounded person inside a mosque (view it with
Explorer). The original segment at that link has been changed, but both
versions spent far more time explaining why the act was all right than
they did on what actually happened. The original version had the
freelance journalist who caught the scene on camera reading from a
written statement about how the Marines he had seen had acted with
honor, etc. ... Although apparently more than one wounded person may
have been finished off by U.S. forces there. And certainly the other
horrors of the assault are far greater and more disturbing.
Anyway, here are the voices of some Iraqis victimized by U.S. forces:
She lays dazed in the crowded hospital room,
languidly waving her
bruised arm at the flies. Her shins, shattered by bullets from US
soldiers when they fired through the front door of her house, are both
covered by casts. Small plastic drainage backs filled with red fluid
sit upon her abdomen, where she took shrapnel from another bullet.
Fatima Harouz, 12 years old, lives in Latifiya, a city just south of
Baghdad. Just three days ago soldiers attacked her home. Her mother,
standing with us says, “They attacked our home and there weren’t even
any resistance fighters in our area.” Her brother was shot and killed,
and his wife was wounded as their home was ransacked by soldiers.
“Before they left, they killed all of our chickens,” added Fatima’s
mother, her eyes a mixture of fear, shock and rage.
A doctor standing with us, after listening to Fatima’s mother tell
their story, looks at me and sternly asks, “This is the freedom…in
their Disney Land are there kids just like this?”
Another young woman, Rana Obeidy, was walking home with her brother two
nights ago. She assumes the soldiers shot her and her brother because
he was carrying a bottle of soda. This happened in Baghdad. She has a
chest wound where a bullet grazed her, unlike her little brother who is
dead.
Laying in a bed near Rana is Hanna, 14 years old. She has a gash on her
right leg from the bullet of a US soldier. Her family was in a taxi in
Baghdad this morning which was driving near a US patrol when a soldier
opened fire on the car.
Her father’s shirt is spotted with blood from his head which was
wounded when the taxi crashed.
In another room a small boy from Fallujah lays on his stomach. Shrapnel
from a grenade thrown into their home by a US soldier entered his body
through his back, and implanted near his kidney.
An operation successfully removed the shrapnel. His father was killed
by what his mother called, “the haphazard shooting of the Americans.”
The boy, Amin, lies in his bed vacillating between crying with pain and
playing with is toy car.
It’s one case after another of people from Baghdad, Fallujah, Latifiya,
Balad, Ramadi, Samarra, Baquba…from all over Iraq, who have been
injured by the heavy-handed tactics of American soldiers fighting a
no-win guerilla war spawned from an illegal invasion based on lies.
Their barbaric acts of retaliation have become the daily reality for
Iraqis, who continue to take the brunt of the frustration and rage of
the soldiers.
Out in front of the hospital three Humvees pull up as soldiers alert
the hospital staff that some of the wounded from outside of Fallujah
will be brought there. One of the staff begins to yell at the soldier
who is doing the talking, while a soldier manning a machine gun atop a
Humvee with his face completely covered by an olive balaclava and
goggles looks on.
“We don’t need you here! Get the fuck out of here! Bring back Saddam!
Even he was better than you animals! We don’t want to die by your
hands, so get out of here! We can take care of our own people!”
The translator with the soldiers does not translate this. Instead he
watches with a face of stone.
The survivors of those killed and wounded by the US military in Iraq,
as well as those who care for them, are left with feelings of bitter
anguish, grief, rage and vengeance.
This afternoon at a small, but busy supply center set up in Baghdad to
distribute goods to refugees from Fallujah, the stories the haggard
survivors are telling are nearly unimaginable.
“They kicked all the journalists out of Fallujah so they could do
whatever they want,” says Kassem Mohammed Ahmed, who just escaped from
Fallujah three days ago, “The first thing they did is they bombed the
hospitals because that is where the wounded have to go. Now we see that
wounded people are in the street and the soldiers are rolling over them
with tanks. This happened so many times. What you see on the TV is
nothing-that is just one camera. What you cannot see is so much.”
While Kassem speaks of the television footage, there are also stories
of soldiers not discriminating between civilians and resistance
fighters.
Another man, Abdul Razaq Ismail arrived from Fallujah last week.
While distributing supplies to other refugees he says, “There are dead
bodies on the ground and nobody can bury them. The Americans are
dropping some of the bodies into the Euphrates River near Fallujah.
They are pulling the bodies with tanks and leaving them at the soccer
stadium.”
Nearby is another man in tears as he listens, nodding his head. He
can’t stop crying, but after a little while says he wants to talk to us.
“They bombed my neighborhood and we used car jacks to raise the blocks
of concrete to get dead children out from under them.”
Another refugee, Abu Sabah, an older man wearing a torn shirt and dusty
pants tells of how he escaped with his family while soldiers shot
bullets over their heads, but killed his cousin.
“They used these weird bombs that put up smoke like a mushroom cloud,”
he said, having just arrived yesterday, “Then small pieces fell from
the air with long tails of smoke behind them. These exploded on the
ground with large fires that burnt for half an hour. They used these
near the train tracks. You could hear these dropped from a large
airplane and the bombs were the size of a tank. When anyone touched
those fires, their body burned for hours.”
If you want to help Dahr continue his invaluable work, donate here.
Posted
at 12:15 pm
November 16,
2004
Give 'Em Hell Harry
A short break from Fallujah. The Democrats, with their keen attention
to the exigencies of the new situation, have struck a powerful blow by
picking Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada to replace Tom Daschle as Senate
Minority Leader.
Actually, they seem to have found the only person (short of John Kerry
himself) in the Senate with less
charisma and dynamism than the late
unlamented Daschle as his replacement.
Surveying the entire Democratic Party, some of the big liberal bloggers
(Atrios, Kevin Drum, Josh Marshall), and the pundits at large, they
seem to be as out of touch with reality as Kerry used to claim the Bush
administration is.
A typical
example, from Drum:
Will George Bush's second term be different
from his first? Or just more of the same?
I'm part of the "more of the same" camp, myself. Actually, I
guess
I'm really part of the "even worse" camp, but given Bush's first term
record, that's sort of a thin difference, isn't it?
In other words, the debate is over whether Bush will be more
moderate. Pundits are talking about who the Democrats will run in
'08 -- should it be Hillary, should it not, do we need a Southern guy
who will not only kill geese like Kerry but retarded
black men like
Clinton, ...?
In a talk I gave recently in California, a woman, referencing certain
evidence of apocalyptic attitudes in Bush and, of course, some of his
followers, asked me, "Is there even going to be an '08?" I hastened to
assure her that the chance that Bush would terminate the physical
existence of the human race, the earth, or the universe by that time
was vanishingly small.
But this woman is closer to an accurate perception of the situation
than any of those I've mentioned above. The fact of the matter is that
Bush has claimed his mandate and said he's going to spend his political
capital. He's formally suspended the Geneva Convention, declared the
entire adult male population of Fallujah to be the enemy and keeping
aid from going into the city, directed
Porter Goss to purge the CIA of the last elements of the
"reality-based community," had Colin Powell retire, removing said
elements from the State Department, and moved to appoint Alberto
Gonzales, the man who came up with the legal argument for trashing the
Geneva Convention, as Attorney General. Not to mention reining in Arlen
Specter.
What exactly does he have to do, bite off the head of a small child on
national television?
Instead of talking about who should run in '08, the Democrats should be
asking themselves if there will be an '08.
The storm gathering on the horizon is already breaking. And it will get
a lot worse before it gets better. The agenda on which Bush intends to
spend his political capital is not privatization of Social Security or
making the tax cut permanent or even reversing Roe v. Wade. Those are
mere epiphenomena of the true agenda -- the systematic transformation
of American society and culture in a more authoritarian, more
fanatical, more overtly imperialist direction, and the consolidation of
the right wing in power to the point that it cannot be challenged.
Many on the left have already written about what lies ahead and the
purported need for unity with the Democrats in the face of this threat.
They are missing the point. In order to have a chance of facing this,
the left needs to do its job and to make the Democrats do theirs.
Whether it's selecting Harry Reid or rolling over for Alberto Gonzales,
the Democrats have made it clear that they won't do their job, even
though it's their heads on the block, unless they are dragged kicking
and screaming.
Posted
at 7:30 pm
November 13,
2004
Fallujah --
the
Geneva Convention is Out the Window
The way the attack on Fallujah has been conducted makes one
thing crystal clear: the Geneva Convention has been overtly and
specifically abandoned, not just in the treatment of prisoners, but
also in the conduct of military assaults. Of course, the United States
violates it in one way or another frequently and systematically
violates the provisions of the more enlightened 1979 Additional
Protocols (which it has never ratified), but in this case it is
deliberately and systematically violating the basic core conventions
themselves.
I've written earlier about the way that a hospital
was made into a military target. But it goes far beyond that.
From an article
in yesterday's USA Today:
Troops have cut off all roads and bridges
leading out of the city and have turned back hundreds of men who have
tried to flee the city during the assault. Only women, children and the
elderly are being allowed to leave.
The military says keeping men aged 15 to
55 from leaving is key to the mission's success.
"If they're not carrying a weapon, you
can't tell who's who," said one officer with the 1st Cavalry Division.
Of course, keeping noncombatants who wish to flee from a battle area
from fleeing is a war crime. From
the Associated Press,
Human rights experts said Friday that American
soldiers might
have
committed a war crime on Thursday when they sent fleeing Iraqi
civilians back into Fallujah.
Citing several articles of the Geneva Conventions, the experts
said
recognized laws of war require military forces to protect civilians as
refugees and forbid returning them to a combat zone.
"This is highly problematical conduct in terms of exposing
people to
grave danger by returning them to an area where fighting is going on,"
said Jordan Paust, a law professor at the University of Houston and a
former Army prosecutor.
James Ross, senior legal adviser to Human Rights Watch, said,
"If that's what happened, it would be a war crime."
A stream of refugees, about 300 men, women and children, were
detained
by American soldiers as they left southern Fallujah by car and on foot.
The women and children were allowed to proceed. The men were tested for
any residues left by the handling of explosives. All tested negative,
but they were sent back.
This last sentence makes it clear that these men were noncombatants.
It's also, as has
been said before, a very good indication: when you
assume all men are your enemies, are fighting against you, it's a clear
sign that you're in the wrong country and you should get out.
Back to the USA Today article,
An Iraqi journalist in the city reported
seeing
burned U.S. vehicles and bodies in the street, with more buried under
the wreckage. He said two men trying to move a corpse were shot down by
a sniper.
Two of the three small clinics in the city
have
been bombed, and in one case, medical staff and patients were killed,
he said. A U.S. tank was positioned beside the third clinic, and
residents were afraid to go there, he said.
"People are afraid of even looking out the
window because of snipers," he said, asking that he not be named for
his own safety. "The Americans are shooting anything that moves."
Even embedded reporters, like Scott Peterson of the Christian Science
Monitor, reporting
on PBS's News Hour with Jim Lehrer, are saying the same thing:
And in fact, when anyone does poke their head
up, they're almost universally considered to be a target. Those who
have done this in the last couple of days that I've seen have, in fact,
had weapons and been engaged.
But, of course, not all those considered to be targets have been, like
for example the abovementioned men trying to move a corpse.
Reporting on the same show, Jackie Spinner of the Washington Post said,
There was some pretty fierce air power
launched on the city in the days and the hours leading up to the ground
offensive. There are parts of the city that the soldiers are describing
are just, you know, piles of rubble. So it could be that many of these
insurgents were killed in those air strikes before things even kicked
off.
When I was in Fallujah in April, at least along the route we took, I
saw individual buildings damaged and destroyed, but I never saw
neighborhoods that had been reduced to rubble.
In every way, the rules of engagement in this assault have been
dramatically loosened. Any time troops come under fire, it seems, they
target the appropriate building with an air or artillery
strike from fearsome weapons like the aptly named Paladin (at least
they cancelled the Crusader), which fires rocket-assisted shells that
are wonderfully accurate, and typically land within 5 yards of their
target after travelling 22 miles. Now, it just so happens that they
have a kill radius of 55 yards and their use in crowded residential
areas inevitably risks massive "collateral damage," but why quibble
when such glorious technology is being put to use?
An article from the right-wing British paper, the Daily Telegraph, sheds
much more light on these rules of engagement, as explained to
troops:
Lt-Col Pete Newell told Task Force 2-2's
500 soldiers at a
dusty staging post in the main base outside Fallujah that sparing as
much of the city as possible was second only to that of preserving the
lives of their comrades and the 40,000 or so civilians still left.
"We don't want to rubble the city. Somebody has got to come
in after us. We want Fallujah to understand what democracy's all
about.'' But he added: "That doesn't mean you have to tolerate any shit
from second-floor windows." The battle would be "personal" because of
the losses the unit had already sustained. "That pile of crap has got
to be cleaned out," he said as troops responded with cries of "Hoo-ah".
Maximum aggression had to be used. "Keep hammering targets
and if you see a guy with an AK-47, I expect you to hose him with a
.50-calibre machine-gun.'' If firing was identified from a house, then
artillery fire should be called in to "pancake the building". Moving
vehicles should be destroyed as potential suicide bombs and stationary
ones hit with armour-piercing rounds. "See if it blows up or not. We'll
pay everyone for their cars later." Maj John Reynolds, the task force
operations officer, said money would also be paid out for any civilians
killed.
Note this: any time firing is identified from a house, you call in
artillery to flatten the building. Every moving vehicle should be
destroyed. Fortunately, unlike last time, no ambulances will be
attacked, because U.S. forces grounded
all of Fallujah General's ambulances and even destroyed its only
car.
And it may seem a minor thing, but this quote is important as well: "if
you see a guy with an AK-47, I expect you to hose him with a
.50-calibre machine-gun." Using a .50-caliber machine gun on human
targets is specifically forbidden by the Geneva Convention; it can be
used on equipment. U.S. soldiers are generally instructed either to
call in an airstrike instead of using the .50-caliber (see Jarhead by
Anthony Swofford) or told to claim that they were aiming at the
person's canteen, belt-buckle, or other item of equipment. In saying
openly that they should shoot people with the .50, what they are really
saying is, "The Geneva Convention is out the window."
As it is, of course, with keeping noncombatants from fleeing, making a
hospital a military target, and flattening building that might have one
or two fighters and dozens of civilians.
Expect a new memo from soon-to-be Attorney General Alberto Gonzales on
why all of this is just fine and dandy.
Posted
at 6:25 pm
November 12, 9:20
pm. From Reuters, Iraq
Tells Media to Toe the Line:
Iraq's media regulator warned news
organizations Thursday to stick to
the government line on the U.S.-led offensive in Fallouja or face legal
action.
Invoking a 60-day state of emergency declared by Iraq's
interim government ahead of the assault that began Monday, Iraq's Media
High Commission said media should distinguish between insurgents and
ordinary residents of the Sunni Muslim city.
The commission,
set up by the former U.S. governor of Iraq, was intended to be
independent of the government and to encourage investment in the media
and deter state meddling after decades of strict control under
President Saddam Hussein.
The commission statement bore the letterhead of the Iraqi prime
minister's office.
It said all media organizations operating in Iraq should "differentiate
between the innocent Fallouja residents who are not targeted by
military operations and terrorist groups that infiltrated the city and
held its people hostage under the pretext of resistance and jihad."
It said news organizations should "guide correspondents in Fallouja …
not to promote unrealistic positions or project nationalist tags on
terrorist gangs of criminals and killers."
It also asked media
to "set aside space in your news coverage to make the position of the
Iraqi government, which expresses the aspirations of most Iraqis,
clear."
"We hope you comply … otherwise we regret we will be
forced to take all the legal measures to guarantee higher national
interests," the statement said. It did not elaborate.
This comes on the heels of numerous
other measures against press freedom taken in August. The
liberation is now complete.
Although these measures would do Saddam proud, they of course are
largely implemented in U.S. media coverage of military assaults like
this one -- especially in broadcast media.
The role of the new Allawi government in backing up this U.S. assault
has been profound. One of the most interesting things about the
Fallujah assault in April was the mass, nonviolent citizen action in
breaking the military blockade around Fallujah and in pressuring
members of the Iraqi Governing Council (roughly half of whom threatened
to resign if the U.S. military didn't pull out of Fallujah).
This time, that really hasn't happened. There are several factors
involved in this, but probably the primary one is Allawi's declaration
and enforcement of martial law.
Permalink
November 11, 9:30
pm. Check out Dahr Jamail's latest dispatch
from Iraq (his own website
posts them slightly later, but has a wider variety of material
collected). Despite attempts to portrary this assault on Fallujah as
different from the last one in that Shi'a support the attack
(opposition to the last one was near-universal in Iraq), Jamail
reports,
Sheikh Ahmed al-Misser, a leader at the
office of the Shia
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr in the Sadr City area of Baghdad condemned the
U.S.-led attack. ”I have publicly announced that if the Americans raid
Fallujah and the Fallujah people asked for help of any kind, our
followers are to help them in any way they can,” he told IPS. ”I mean
help them by any means necessary.”
He said Sadr followers living near Fallujah and in Baghdad
have been asked to look after refugees from the city.
Dahr also sent me some private observations to share with readers:
- Residents of the areas of Al-Dora, Abu Ghraib,
and Amiriyah areas of Baghdad are reporting that the resistance have
taken over control of parts of those areas.
- Iraqi Police checkpoints are present in much greater
number throughout the city in enforcement of the
new curfew.
- Petrol lines are now, in some places, stretching for 2-3
miles long.
- Most of Baghdad, which I saw while driving through the
city tonight, is
without electricity and running on generators.
- In the Al-Aadhamiyah district, they have been without
power today since
9am (It's nearly 10pm now) [NOTE: Aadhamiyah is a center of the
resistance in Baghdad and residents frequently assert the power cuts in
the area are due to deliberate policy rather than lack of
power-generation capacity, a charge that I find plausible but
unconfirmable].
- I'm in central Baghdad, one of the best areas for
electricity, and
since I've been here this past week, we are averaging 10 hours of
electricity per 24 hours [NOTE: the Iraqi Minister of Electricity,
Aiham al-Samarra'i, was on PBS's News Hour with Jim Lehrer yesterday
and he claimed that the average provision of power was something like
16 hours per day, in a segment that was riddled with claims that are in
sharp contrast with all other sources of information I've seen].
- Many shops are now staying closed, even in Baghdad as the
fighting
continues to spread.
- The "Green Zone" continues to be bombed by mortars every
day, sometimes
for extended periods of time.
- The US base in the old Saddam Palace in Aadhamiyah has
been mortared
every single night now for at least a week straight.
Permalink
November 11, 9:40
am. Ghaith Abdul-Ahad's article for the Washington Post, Seeking
Salvation in City of Insurgents, is an absolute must-read. It is a
genuinely balanced treatment both of what has happened in Fallujah
since April and of the story of one foreign jihadi, who came into Iraq
to fight because of the Abu Ghraib atrocities.
The man who Abdul-Ahad interviewed is probably dead by now in the
rubble of Fallujah. But shortly before he crossed the border into Iraq,
his wife called him to tell him that he had a newborn son, whom she had
named Shahid -- which means martyr.
Permalink
November 11, 7:57
am. Yasir Arafat is dead. I fell asleep late last night watching
news coverage of this. There can be few people in recent history who
left behind so complex a historical legacy, for good and bad, and I
won't try to sum it up right now.
Left critics of Oslo, and I am one, have long attacked Arafat for his
agreement to a plan reminiscent of the 1960's-era South African plan
for the creation of "autonomous" bantustans; for his serving as an
Israeli client, policing the Palestinians so they wouldn't have to; for
his childlike faith in the United States as a guarantor of the
interests of the Palestinian people; and for much more.
But this is a one-sided characterization of an extraordinary man. In
1969, Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said,
"It was not as if there was a
Palestinian people in Palestine and we came and threw them out and took
their country away from them. They did not exist."
Well, as Eqbal Ahmed once said, "They damn well exist now." Yasir
Arafat, more than any other person, is responsible for this existence,
against all odds -- at least until the coming of what Syrian poet Nizar
Qabbani called the "children of the stones."
Ramzy Baroud, a Palestinian journalist for al-Jazeera, has written a
powerful piece on Life Without
Arafat. Here's an excerpt:
As a child I often witnessed
Israeli soldiers forcing young Palestinians to their knees in my
refugee camp in Gaza, threatening to beat them if they did not spit
upon a photo of Yasser Arafat. "Say Arafat is a jackass," the soldiers
would scream. No one would exchange his safety for insulting an image
of Arafat. They would endure pain and injury, but would say nothing.
It was not the character of Arafat
that induced such resilience but what the man represented.
He
is to be buried in Ramallah, at the Muqata'a, where the Israelis
effectively entombed him for the last few years. It is my hope that one
day he will be buried in a Jerusalem that is the capital of a unified
nation at peace, in which civil and other rights are not defined by
racial, religious, or ethnic identification, and in which citizens are
judged, as Martin Luther King said, on the content of their character.
Permalink
November 10, 8:50
pm. The assault on Fallujah has delayed me in writing about what
we can expect from Bush's second term. It amazes me to see Democrats
talking about who to run for president in '08, as if they don't realize
that there is a storm gathering on the horizon like none we've seen in
this country for a long time.
More on this next week, but anyway in this context I've heard
progressives speculating that Bush will rule more moderately in his
second term, and adducing the rumors (now of course confirmed) that
Ashcroft would step down as Attorney General as evidence of this.
My response, of course, was that Ashcroft is too moderate for the
extremists and that they would come up with someone worse. It turns out
I
was right.
Permalink
November 10, 10:15
am. Dahr Jamail has several new dispatches from
Baghdad. In one of his dispatches
issued yesterday, he quotes one Iraqi on the question of who is
still in Fallujah:
“So many people in Falluja are poor and
cannot
leave. Land and houses
in Baghdad are both very expensive, and so many people in Falluja are
too poor to leave,” Aziz said with resignation, “The Americans are
doing what they did last time-taking control of the main hospital and
not letting the hospitals and clinics and ambulances function. They are
killing civilians, just like before.”
Also check out a post from Riverbend, an Iraqi woman from Baghdad,
called Rule
of Iraq Assassins Must End (a phrase recently uttered by Donald
Rumsfeld).
Permalink
November 8, 3:28
pm. The New York Times article I cited earlier, G.I.'s
Open Attack to Take Fallujah from Iraq Rebels, has been expanded in
today's print edition and on the Web.
Here's the key excerpt:
It was the second time in six months that a battle had raged
in
Falluja. In April, American troops were closing in on the city center
when popular uprisings broke out in cities across Iraq. The outrage,
fed by mostly unconfirmed reports of large civilian casualties, forced
the Americans to withdraw.
American commanders regarded the reports as inflated, but
it
was
impossible to determine independently how many civilians had been
killed. The hospital was selected as an early target because the
American military believed that it was the source of rumors about heavy
casualties.
"It's a center of propaganda," a senior American officer
said
Sunday.
This time around, the American military intends to fight
its
own
information war, countering or squelching what has been one of the
insurgents' most potent weapons. The military hopes that if it can hold
its own in that war, then the armed invasion - involving as many as
25,000 American and Iraqi troops, all told - will smash what has become
the largest remaining insurgent stronghold in Iraq.
And with only three months to go until the country's first
democratic elections, American and Iraqi officials are grasping for any
tool at their command to bring the insurgency under control.
The hospital was one of the primary
initial targets of the assault, occupied by U.S. soldiers, with
patients and doctors initially handcuffed. Later, doctors were allowed
to resume treating patients, but it's for damn sure that few if any of
Fallujah's wounded will be brought there -- and, in fact, with both
bridges seized, it will be nearly impossible (Fallujah General is
across the Euphrates from most of the city), as it was during the last
assault.
It was selected as a target because it was the source of "rumors" that
were "unconfirmed" about civilian casualties -- i.e., doctors who
treated the patients and communicated with other doctors treating
patients compiled estimates and gave them to those few journalists who
wanted to know.
The U.S. military, of course, which claims never to count civilian
dead, and distances itself from the people of Fallujah with a wall of
metal, gunfire, artillery fire, and heavy bombs, is in a much better
position to estimate civilian dead than the doctors who treat them.
The military "intends to fight its own information war." Of course,
information about the truth has been a "potent weapon" for those who
oppose the invasion, because Iraqis, Arabs in general, some Western
Europeans, and a handful of Americans have learned that truth and tried
to act on it.
That must be changed. Since hospitals and information itself are the
primary initial targets, the only conclusion can be that the United
States wants to cover up in advance the atrocities it will commit,
atrocities almost certainly on a greater scale than in the last assault.
When the United States bombed Serbian TV during the war on Yugoslavia,
with the same rationale that it spread propaganda and was thus a
military target, Amnesty International determined that the attack was a
war crime. How much greater a war crime it is to occupy a hospital (oh,
and just by the way, the U.S. military is launching attacks on the
resistance from positions near the hospital, thus making it in effect a
military target for the other side as well) because it is reporting on
the victims of this brutal assault.
If you want a symbol of Bush's second term, at home and abroad, there
is no more potent one than this action.
Permalink
November 8, 12:25
pm. All bounds have just been passed. Read this Times article, G.I.'s
Open Attack to Take Falluja From Iraq Rebels. Fallujah's hospital
has just been taken by American soldiers. This is why:
It was the second time in six months that a battle had raged
in
Falluja. In April, American troops were closing in on the city center
when popular uprisings broke out in cities across Iraq. The outrage,
fed by mostly unconfirmed reports of large civilian casualties, forced
the Americans to withdraw.
American commanders regarded the
reports as inflated, but it was impossible to determine independently
how many civilians had been killed. The hospital was selected as an
early target because the American military believed that it was the
source of rumors about heavy casualties.
"It's a center of propaganda," a senior American officer said Sunday
The hospital was shut down because doctors told people how many
innocents were killed by the American assault, thus making it a
military target. Any pretence of civilization is now gone.
Also, read this incredibly powerful post
from Under the Same Sun.
Permalink
November 7, 10:15
pm. U.S. bombing of Fallujah has just demolished
a newly-built, just-opened hospital, the Nazzal Emergency Hospital.
After waiting for "permission" from Ayad Allawi (i.e., after doing
preliminary bombing to soften up their targets), apparently U.S. forces
have begun
ground movements leading to the final offensive.
Allawi declared martial law for 60 days, across the whole country
except for the three northern Kurdish-run governorates, ostensibly to
guarantee security before the elections, now scheduled for January 27.
In truth, of course, security for the elections could have been imposed
a week in advance. There are two reasons for this declaration of
martial law.
First, and most important, the political climated created by the first
assault on Fallujah, and by the defeat (withdrawal of U.S. forces
without gaining their political objective) has meant that resistance
forces can counterattack across much of the country while U.S. forces
are concentrating on Fallujah. The imposition of martial law across
everything but northern Iraq is, and will be necessary, in any such
attack in the future.
Second, there is a call for Iraqis, especially in Baghdad, to engage in
mass civil resistance to help stave off the assault on Fallujah. Under
martial law conditions, this may become impossible.
My friend and colleague Dahr Jamail is, amazingly, back in Baghdad.
He's very restricted in what he can do, but he has posted a dispatch
from Baghdad, called Carnage
and Martial Law. Please go read it. As I understand, Dahr has
enough money to stay for about two-thirds as long as he wants to. If
you can contribute to help him do this important work, please do. And let's hope
he manages to keep himself alive. Unfortunately, as we know, many
people in Fallujah will not.
P.S. When I read about the hospital, I was worried about Makki
al-Nazzal, the man I spoke
with extensively when I was in Fallujah in April. He lives in that
area of the town. Fortunately, I found out from the Post that he was part
of a delegation to Baghdad trying desperate negotiations to head
off the assault.
Permalink
November 6, 1:15
pm. Another quick post before I run off to spend the whole day
speaking. I've been speaking about the elections, about hope and
despair, and about the need to start over ab initio (and, of
course, how the colonial war in Iraq fits into that context). I'm going
to try to get audio and maybe a transcript to put up.
But for now Iraq. A couple of great victories for Iraqi democracy
recently.
First and foremost, the assault on Fallujah has begun. If you remember,
we've seen weeks of escalation, with news articles every day about
"Marines preparing for assault," " G.I.'s
Itch to Prove Their Mettle in Falluja," and more. We also saw a
pattern of strikes in residential neighborhoods on "Zarqawi safe
houses."
Now, the true aerial assault has
begun. All roads to Fallujah and Ramadi have been closed, with only
"families" allowed to leave (i.e, "military-age males" can't leave by
themselves). There is an escalating pattern of strikes on "suspected
rebel targets." Dozens of houses and a medical warehouse have
been destroyed.
All that is lacking is tightening the noose on the ground. The
reporting is low-key, so that people don't notice the war on Fallujah
has started until it's well along. But it has started.
In other news of the farcical progress toward "democracy" in Iraq,
apparently, according
to the Times, the Iraqi government has chosen to allow Iraqi
expatriates to vote in the scheduled January elections.
This is done against the advice of the U.N., and is simply something
that is virtually unheard of. Even in Afghanistan, expatriates were not
allowed to vote. The difficulties with regard to vote fraud are even
greater with expatriates, but most important they don't have to live in
the country they are shaping with their votes. It's an indefensible
move. With a generally estimated four million Iraqis living out of the
country, it's also something that could easily sway the elections.
The Times paints it as something done at the behest of Sistani and the
Shi'a parties, against the objections of the United States, because
Iraqi expatriates are mostly Shi'a. This is, of course, in keeping with
the trend of Americans explaining everything in Iraq as having to do
with internal ethnic and sectarian differences, rather than having to
do with opposition to foreign occupation.
In fact, the U.S. government has shown, the Allawi government has no
independence of action. This was made crystal clear in October, when
the United States nixed
a plan to have Muslim peacekeeping troops sent in to help U.N.
observers in setting up elections, even though the Allawi government
was in favor of it (also read the original Newsday article here).
So, the unstated factor is clearly that Iraqi expatriates would be much
more likely to ratify a U.S. choice for puppet figurehead than Iraqis
living in Iraq would, so this new policy helps the United States in its
quest to pretend that it has brought democracy to Iraq while fixing the
results in advance. It's very hard to believe that the United States
opposed this.
Permalink
November 5, 7:55
pm. Two quick responses to my recent writing on Fallujah that I'd
like to share with you, one from a current military person and one
apparently from an ex-military person:
how dare you call Americans
ruthless................with the animals that occupy that city
...
However, having killed my own number of ragheads and my strong support
of genocide of the Arab race and Muslim religion, stands. These are a
people who have no business living. None of them. Women, children, old
men and any other filthy pig fucker. We should systematically eliminate
them all.
No, I couldn't make these up. Yes, this is America.
Permalink
November 5, 7:25
pm. Unfortunately, I've had no time to post on the vast number of
things that require posting. Now that it seems the assault on Fallujah
has started, though, here's a piece about it:
Fallujah and the Reality of War
The assault on Fallujah has started. It is being sold as liberation of
the people of Fallujah; it is being sold as a necessary step to
implementing “democracy” in Iraq. These are lies.
I was in Fallujah during the siege in April, and I want to paint for
you a word picture of what such an assault means.
Fallujah is dry and hot; like Southern California, it has been made an
agricultural area only by virtue of extensive irrigation. It has been
known for years as a particularly devout city; people call it the City
of a Thousand Mosques. In the mid-90’s, when Saddam wanted his name to
be added to the call to prayer, the imams of Fallujah refused.
U.S. forces bombed the power plant at the beginning of the assault; for
the next several weeks, Fallujah was a blacked-out town, with light
provided by generators only in critical places like mosques and
clinics. The town was placed under siege; the ban on bringing in food,
medicine, and other basic items was broken only when Iraqis en masse
challenged the roadblocks. The atmosphere was one of pervasive fear,
from bombing and the threat of more bombing. Noncombatants and families
with sick people, the elderly, and children were leaving in droves.
After initial instances in which people were prevented from leaving,
U.S. forces began allowing everyone to leave – except for what they
called “military age males,” men usually between 15 and 60. Keeping
noncombatants from leaving a place under bombardment is a violation of
the laws of war. Of course, if you assume that every military age male
is an enemy, there can be no better sign that you are in the wrong
country, and that, in fact, your war is on the people, not on their
oppressors,, not a war of liberation.
The main hospital in Fallujah is across the Euphrates from the bulk of
the town. Right at the beginning, the Americans shut down the main
bridge, cutting off the hospital from the town. Doctors who wanted to
treat patients had to leave the hospital, with only the equipment they
could carry, and set up in makeshift clinics all over the city; the one
I stayed at had been a neighborhood clinic with one room that had four
beds, and no operating theater; doctors refrigerated blood in a
soft-drink vending machine. Another clinic, I’m told, had been an auto
repair shop. This hospital closing (not the only such that I documented
in Iraq) also violates the Geneva Convention.
In Fallujah, you were rarely free of the sound of artillery booming in
the background, punctuated by the smaller, higher-pitched note of the
mujaheddin’s hand-held mortars. After even a few minutes of it, you
have to stop paying attention to it – and yet, of course, you never
quite stop. Even today, when I hear the roar of thunder, I’m often
transported instantly to April 10 and the dusty streets of Fallujah.
In addition to the artillery and the warplanes dropping 500, 1000, and
2000-pound bombs, and the murderous AC-130 Spectre gunships that can
demolish a whole city block in less than a minute, the Marines had
snipers criss-crossing the whole town. For weeks, Fallujah was a series
of sometimes mutually inaccessible pockets, divided by the
no-man’s-lands of sniper fire paths. Snipers fired indiscriminately,
usually at whatever moved. Of 20 people I saw come into the clinic I
observed in a few hours, only five were “military-age males.” I saw old
women, old men, a child of 10 shot through the head; terminal, the
doctors told me, although in Baghdad they might have been able to save
him.
One thing that snipers were very discriminating about – every single
ambulance I saw had bullet holes in it. Two I inspected bore clear
evidence of specific, deliberate sniping. Friends of mine who went out
to gather in wounded people were shot at. When we first reported this
fact, we came in for near-universal execration. Many just refused to
believe it. Some asked me how I knew that it wasn’t the mujaheddin.
Interesting question. Had, say, Brownsville, Texas, been encircled by
the Vietnamese and bombarded (which, of course, Mr. Bush courageously
protected us from during the Vietnam war era) and Brownsville
ambulances been shot up, the question of whether the residents were
shooting at their own ambulances, I somehow guess, would not have come
up. Later, our reports were confirmed by the Iraqi Ministry of Health
and even by the U.S. military.
The best estimates are that roughly 900-1000 people were killed
directly, blown up, burnt, or shot. Of them, my guess, based on news
reports and personal observation, is that 2/3 to ¾ were
noncombatants.
But the damage goes far beyond that. You can read whenever you like
about the bombing of so-called Zarqawi safe houses in residential areas
in Fallujah, but the reports don’t tell you what that means. You read
about precision strikes, and it’s true that America’s GPS-guided bombs
are very accurate – when they’re not malfunctioning, the 80 or 85% of
the time that they work, their targeting radius is 10 meters, i.e.,
they hit within 10 meters of the target. Even the smallest of them,
however, the 500-pound bomb, has a blast radius of 400 meters; every
single bomb shakes the whole neighborhood, breaking windows and
smashing crockery. A town under bombardment is a town in constant fear.
You read the reports about X killed and Y wounded. And you should
remember those numbers; those numbers are important. But equally
important is to remember that those numbers lie – in a war zone,
everyone is wounded.
The first assault on Fallujah was a military failure. This time, the
resistance is stronger, better-armed, and better-organized; to “win,”
the U.S. military will have to pull out all the stops. Even within
horror and terror, there are degrees, and we – and the people of
Fallujah – ain’t seen nothin’ yet. George W. Bush has just claimed a
new mandate – the world has been delivered into his hands.
There will be international condemnation, as there was the first time;
but our government won’t listen to it; aside from the resistance, all
the people of Fallujah will be able to depend on to try to mitigate the
horror will be us, the antiwar movement. We have a responsibility, that
we didn’t meet in April and we didn’t meet in August when Najaf was
similarly attacked; will we meet it this time?
Permalink
November 4, 4:30
am. I'm about to leave on a tour of Southern California, speaking
today, tomorrow, and Saturday. The details of appearances are below:
- November 4th, 8 pm, 33 ⅓ Books at 1200 North
Alvarado Street, Los Angeles, (213) 483-3500
- November 5th, 7 pm, 2000+ Books at 309 Pine
Avenue in Long Beach, (562) 435-1199
- November 6th, 1-2 pm, First Unitarian
Universalist Church of San Diego at 4190 Front Street, San Diego, (619)
298-9978
- November 6th, 7 pm, Casa del Pueblo Cooperative
at 1498 Sunset Blvd. #2 in Echo Park, (213) 481-1986 (with KPFK’s
Sonali Kolhatkar)
If you know people in the area, please let them know.
November 4, 4:29
am. I'm still here. It's just that this result brings up so many
thoughts that I need some time to process them. Very quick thoughts:
This is a huge defeat. Kerry's losing means nothing; Bush's winning
means everything. Tariq Ali and others were right about that (to say
that therefore the antiwar movement should mobilize for Kerry was a
different statement and one that I still disagree with today). This is
shattering. It will be interpreted, rightly, by the world and by many
in this country as a ratification of Bush's imperialistic, dictatorial,
dishonest, and unbelievably destructive policies.
Kerry's concession speech, in which he talked about "healing the
wounds" and all of that garbage that losers, especially Democratic
losers, always say, was a really stupid thing to do. If Bush "reaches
across the aisle," it will be to strangle his opponents. Expect things
to get a lot worse. I wrote a month and a
half ago about Hindenburg not being exactly the greatest bulwark
against Hitler, but electing Hitler? That's a little much to swallow.
All this talk about "did Bush get a mandate" is nonsense. Mandates are
not given, they are taken. Bush has the power, therefore he gets to
decide if he has a mandate.
This election unfortunately was not a referendum on the occupation or
on the "war on terrorism." That would have required some significant,
easily graspable divergence of views between the major candidates. The
country is evenly split on the occupation of Iraq. This is not for
moral reasons; the predominant sentiment against those who oppose the
occupation is that "Iraq is not worth it." This makes a difference in
terms of political opposition, rather than just opposition expressed in
a poll. Still, the country is split.
This election was about the victory, not so much of imperial arrogance
and neocolonialism or of crony-capitalist "free market" fundamentalism,
but of stupidity. Tom Coburn was elected to the Senate in Oklahoma;
while campaigning, at one point he said, "lesbianism
is so rampant in some of the schools in southeast Oklahoma that they'll
only let one girl go to the bathroom. Now think about it. Think about
that issue. How is it that that's happened to us?"
Jim Bunning was re-elected to the Senate in Kentucky. He is senile. He
said his opponent looked like one of Saddam's sons, admitted he hadn't
read a newspaper in six weeks, and reneged on a promise to debate his
opponent in a public forum, instead teleconferencing in from
remote location where he could read from a teleprompter.
Voters who said honesty was their key consideration for a candidate
voted for Bush over Kerry 2 to 1.
The crucial margin in this election came because of gay marriage and
the fact that banning it was on the ballot in at least 11 states. This
enhanced turnout among conservative evangelicals who weren't all that
motivated by Bush, who has not really moved their agenda.
When the United States has launched an imperial crusade that imperils
the world and is likely to suffer a defeat as stunning as that in the
Vietnam War, these people mobilized to vote because letting homosexuals
marry each other "threatens" their marriage.
The victory of stupidity.
This is a time to wallow in the defeat. Let's not shrug it off too
quickly. Let's acknowledge what it means in a world that is in the
process of being torn apart by a new crusade. When we move on to try to
find hope, let's start with a rational core, not one built out of
wishful thinking, fantasies about how the world works, and
self-congratulation.
I'm naturally perverse. In times of hope, I look for sources of
despair; now, I'm looking for signs of hope. Will report when I find
them.
Permalink
November 2, 1:50
pm. Apologies. When I posted my intro to Naomi Klein yesterday, I
mixed things up and replaced the end of the introduction with
duplicated text from higher up. So if you read it you missed the last
four paragraphs. That's been fixed and you can read it here.
Today is Election Day. If you haven't voted yet, go vote. If you don't
believe in voting, do it as an act of postmodern anarchist
culture-jamming or as a sardonic comment on the mundane obsessions of
the hoi-polloi. If you need to fool yourself into believing that voting
is a revolutionary act in order to vote, watch Eminem's remarkable and
disturbing video, then vote.
On the way home yesterday, I passed a homeless man earnestly telling
passersby to be sure to vote. The other 1460 days of the quadrennium, I
react with annoyance that people can still think that voting is the
summum of political engagement; today, however, for an hour or two at
any rate it's nice to feel that spirit of solidarity as voters, of
agreement that we all share at least one basic obligation. It's
a pale echo of the feeling of human solidarity one feels and I felt,
for example, in the Seattle demonstrations, where we all had the same
job to do and we instinctively looked out for each other; but for many
people in this atomized society, it's as close as they get.
But while you're standing in line to vote, be thinking about what you
do tomorrow, because that's more important.
Permalink
November 1, 6:11
am. On Sunday, I introduced Naomi Klein to an audience of about
500 in Austin. Because of the imminent danger of a major assault on
Fallujah after the election (the U.S. hatchet man, Ayad Allawi, has
just said that "the time is closing down" and "we are approaching
the end"), I spoke about Fallujah and what I saw there during the
assault and siege in April, before actually doing the introduction.
What I tried to do was paint a picture, not only of what U.S. forces
did to the town in April, but of what it's like being in a war zone.
I've posted my remarks here.
|
Bush,
Iraq, and Demonstration Elections Notes
on Bush RNC Speech"Report
from Baghdad -- Hospital Closings and U.S. War Crimes "Report
from Baghdad -- Winning Hearts and Minds"Report
from Fallujah -- Destroying a Town in Order to "Save" it"Report
from Baghdad -- Opening the Gates of Hell"War
on Terrorism" Makes Us All Less Safe Bush
-- Is the Tide Turning?Perle and
FrumIntelligence
Failure Kerry
vs. Dean SOU
2004: Myth and
Reality |