Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
June 16, 2005
The End of the War on Terror

From yesterdays White House press briefing:

Q Can you define for me the end of the war [on terror]?

MR. McCLELLAN: Terry, the President has talked about this. There are those who espouse an ideology of hatred and oppression. What we are working to do is defeat the ideology of hatred and oppression by spreading freedom and by taking the fight to the enemy. That’s why we’re staying on the offensive and going after those who seek to do us harm. We’re fighting them abroad so we don’t have to fight them here at home. So there’s a comprehensive strategy that we have for winning the war on terrorism, which I think is what you are getting at. But it is a war that continues.

Comments

You can’t get a blank check without endless war.

Posted by: kelley b. | Jun 16 2005 10:30 utc | 1

Recruiting Soldiers To Fight The U.S. Occupation And Disperse To Become Probable Future Terrorists Is Hard Work, But The U.S. Command Presses On …

U.S. raids test Iraqis’ patience
15 June 2005 By Kirsten Scharnberg, The Chicago Tribune, MOSUL, Iraq
In the uncertainty created by Iraq’s insurgency, anyone might be the enemy.
So with weapons drawn, a dozen U.S. soldiers charged down the ramps of their armored Stryker vehicles, roughly yanked three Iraqi students out of a car by their necks and shoved their faces into a nearby wall.
“What’s your name? Where are you going? Don’t lie to me!” Lt. Col. Erik Kurilla shouted at the first teenager.
“To my house to study,” the trembling young man answered. “We have exams next week.”
Kurilla questioned each of the young men separately, twisting their shirt collars around their throats throughout each interrogation.
But the students soon were deemed harmless; everyone had a current university ID and told the same story …

Posted by: Outraged | Jun 16 2005 10:39 utc | 2

What hit me on McCellans words is that they are empty. There is no real meaning, no definition just a lot of nothing.
At the same time these words could have been said by any Bin Laden spokesman. Just as empty, but with probably more plausible justification.

SPOKESMAN: The Sheik has talked about this. There are those who espouse an ideology of hatred and oppression. What we are working to do is defeat the ideology of hatred and oppression by spreading believe and by taking the fight to the enemy. That’s why we’re staying on the offensive and going after those who seek to do us harm. We’re fighting them abroad so we don’t have to fight them at home. So there’s a comprehensive strategy that we have for winning the war, which I think is what you are getting at. But it is a war that continues.

Posted by: b | Jun 16 2005 10:54 utc | 3

McClellan is more pathetic than Baghdad Bob.

Posted by: Lupin | Jun 16 2005 10:56 utc | 4

A good quote from Arthur “Bomber” Harris regarding the firebombing of Germany in WWII:
The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw, and half a dozen other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation. They sowed the wind, and now they are going to reap the whirlwind.

Posted by: Lupin | Jun 16 2005 11:09 utc | 5

@outraged
Not as an apologist for the British empire, but they did afford a certain amount of respect to their “natives” (otherwise, I doubt that they would have been tolerated for 200 years). They were doing not too badly until someone in South Africa threw Gandhi off a train for not giving up his seat for a white guy. The seeds of a revolution were sown.
I’m not sure if the Americans will be inspiring non-violent Gandhis, but trying to defeat the ideology of hatred while simultaneously degrading every Iraqi they meet is just too stupid for words.

Posted by: DM | Jun 16 2005 11:14 utc | 6

@Lupin
Bomber Harris! I’ll go along with the reaping of the whirlwind bit in the context of Iraq, but there are a few revisionist (i.e. setting the record straight) accounts of Harris, Dresden, and WWII in general that I could recommend.

Posted by: DM | Jun 16 2005 11:19 utc | 7

@DM- oh, for sure! What struck me when I read that quote (on Kos as it happens) was the bit about the “childish delusion” that one can behave without reaping consequences for one’s actions. That same “childish delusion” exists full-blown in the US today.

Posted by: Lupin | Jun 16 2005 11:28 utc | 8

The US has ruined the reputation that was its biggest asset in the world. No matter what they do now, they are the new Soviets – no longer a benign force (however misguided that image was), but a perceived threat to everybody. The words ‘democracy’ and ‘freedom’ have taken on a thick veneer of cynicism. Bushco’s doctrine only condenses recent developments: “We will fight terrorists until there are only friends of the US left.” Fine. You go ahead. The next gathering of allies of the US government will be held in a telephone booth.

Posted by: teuton | Jun 16 2005 11:34 utc | 9

War without end for Republican domination without end.
When Americans turn their back on war they will turn their backs on Republicans and Republicanism.
It’s Vietnam part two, will America get it right this time?

Posted by: Scott McArthur | Jun 16 2005 13:05 utc | 10

Lupin : ‘ … that one can behave without reaping consequences for one’s actions. ‘
This has been the Big Lie that the Likud and their organ in NY have been pushing for decades concerning Israeli actions. The attacks on Israelis were not in retaliation for Israel’s prior acts, they were the gratuitous acts of “terrorists” who hated Israeli freedom.
When it all blew back to Israel’s enabler on September 11 the same story was transplanted here to the Homeland.
We must accept the consequences of having supported the Israeli expropriation of Palestine as well as of all of our own prior bad acts in Iran, Central America, Southeast Asia…
We must accept, make amends where possible, and be ever on our guard to prevent the reinstitution of a foreign policy based upon fundamental injustice.
Or we are doomed to repeat.

Posted by: John Francis Lee | Jun 16 2005 13:07 utc | 11

War without end:
It was only a matter of time: US Forces conducting raids into Syrian territory.

Posted by: Cloned Poster | Jun 16 2005 13:14 utc | 12

History seems to be on crack. I give the US 5 years, OK, 10 tops, before entering “perestroimerika.”
My fear is that, before they reach that point, they might use tactical nukes somewhere if provoked badly enough.

Posted by: Lupin | Jun 16 2005 13:22 utc | 13

@ Cloned Nice to see you posting again. Can the Bushites really be crazy enough to be conducting clandestine military operations in both Iran and Syria simultaneously? Alas, quite probably. I would still like
to hope that we have reached the “enough is enough” point,
and that a left-right coalition against the fanatical
Likudnik center will re-establish at least a simulacrum
of rationality and humility to U.S. foreign policy. Whistling while passing the graveyard?

Posted by: Hannah K. O’Luthon | Jun 16 2005 13:38 utc | 14

The Big Lie, of course, was Hitler’s term for the claim that Germany had lost World War I on the battlefield. Hitler said that the truth was that the Jews had betrayed Germany at home and caused it to lose by wrecking its economy.
Oh, well. No matter what the topic, there’s always some anti-Semite who will call Jews Nazis. White is black, up is down, victims are murderers, Jews are Nazis.

Posted by: jr | Jun 16 2005 14:11 utc | 15

“There will of course be an end,” Gonzales said.
“All of us know this war will not end in our lifetime,” Leahy countered.

Posted by: annie | Jun 16 2005 14:26 utc | 16

Class Of 2010: The Next Generation Of Soldiers For the War That Never Ends ?
It Just Has To Stop

From: Ashley Smith
To: GI Special
Sent: June 14, 2005
I received this article from twelve-year-old middle school student, Eliza Leas.
She tells the story of National Guard recruiters coming to her school to try and recruit, yes attempt to recruit, students who are years away from eligibility.
Eliza has asked me to distribute this to your website so that she can tell her story. Please run it.
She also has gotten permission from her parents to include her email address so that other students can contact her. It is swimfin222@msn.com.
Ashley Smith

Class of 2010: The Next Generation Of Soldiers For the War That Never Ends ?
By Eliza Leas
Last Friday, June 10, I entered the cafeteria in FHT Middle School in South Burlington, VT only to be greeted by a strange sight. A large screen had been set up on the stage, and adults were milling around and passing out flyers.
I glanced down at a flyer on the nearest table, and was indignant to find that this invasion of my middle schools cafeteria had been orchestrated by none other than the Police and the Vermont National Guard.
The point of the presentation was to encourage middle school students to attend a camp that is designed to keep kids off the streets. A movie began to play on the screen, and other students and I walked closer, curious.
I was repelled by what I saw: kids my age doing jumping-jacks in army-style pants. It might seem odd that this bothered me, but it wasnt so much what was on the screen as the knowledge that I was forced to endure this if I wanted my school to continue to receive federal funding.
Thats the issue: the government will take away my schools funding if we refuse to let the National Guard in.
I am twelve years old.
I will not be eligible to be in the armed services for another six years. So why do they insist on advertising in my middle school?
I can barely tolerate that they are in my sisters high school lobby every day, but a middle school? Trying to recruit me and other kids, barely out of childhood, and telling us we should go to Iraq and die?
I said something to my friend along the lines of this is so stupid, I dont want to be recruited!, and a policeman standing nearby immediately latched on.
He went crazy trying to convince me and my friend that the presentation wasnt about recruitment and that I shouldnt judge the camp before going and finding out what its really about.
He was rude and actually stooped so low as to insult me personally.
Is the Guard trying to justify their revolting recruiting tactics by saying that they are coming to schools to help prevent crime? If the purpose of the camp is to prevent crime, why are the campers engaging in typical army activities such as security patrol and land navigation training?
Perhaps the answer to all my questions lies in a simple statistic: the army hasnt met its recruitment goals for the fourth month in a row, and its becoming desperate. Now the armed forces are trying to recruit and train younger and younger kids.
You can always tell a wars gone bad when the government starts targeting children in its search for soldiers.
It has to stop, and soon.
It has to stop before one more Iraqi child is killed.
Before one more American dies in a pointless and unjust war that is supposed to be over, while we keep sending troops.
It has to stop before one more human life winks out because cruel war-mongers were put in to power.
It just has to stop.

Posted by: Outraged | Jun 16 2005 14:42 utc | 17

Is this what Scottie means by “spreading freedom and by taking the fight to the enemy.”?
Hostile Incidents Increasing Between US Military and Private Military Contractors in Iraq
Wayne Madsen – Wayne Madsen Report June 13, 2005
Reports about armed confrontations between active duty U.S. and coalition military forces and coalition armed private military contractors in Iraq have gone from a trickle to a steady flow. While fragging incidents between U.S. enlisted and officers were more commonplace in Vietnam than ever admitted by the Pentagon, the violence between active military and quasi-mercenaries in Iraq is a fairly new phenomenon, according to U.S. military experts. What is occurring in Iraq is not friendly fire but willful fighting between occupation forces.

Posted by: John | Jun 16 2005 14:49 utc | 18

“The British in Mesopotamia” PDF BOOK While doing archival work recently I came across an extremely rare memoir by General Aylmer Haldane of his time as commander-in-chief of British forces in Iraq responsible for putting down the Iraqi insurrection against the British in 1920. He’s made the entire book available in a series of public-domain PDFs. It is quite detailed ethnographically, and includes appendices with information on troop strengths, casualty figures, and so forth. This is not my area of specialty but I’m told is of genuine and important documentary value, and of course it’s relevant to our own situation today

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Jun 16 2005 14:50 utc | 19

These WH briefings remind me more and more of those refrigerator magnet poetry kits. They just paste up the same words and phrases in ever-so-slightly different order, the same tropes recycled endlessly.

Posted by: DeAnander | Jun 16 2005 16:15 utc | 20

Thanks for this post. Nothing better illustrates the lack of comprehensive thinking and no strategic plan for victory by the Bush Administration. The GOP cannot define who the enemy is or how to defeat them. The reason. The enemy, Muslim religious fanatics, are no different than their base, White Evangelistic Christians or Likud Party Jews. Thus, their GWOT continues on into Perpetuity.

Posted by: Jim S | Jun 16 2005 16:39 utc | 21

re: Haldane, The British in Mesopotamia
An excellent book on the history of the European powers and the U.S. in the Middle East immediately after WWI is Fromkin, David, A peace to end all peace : creating the modern Middle East, 1914-1922 (1989). It was reprinted in 2001 as A peace to end all peace : the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of the modern Middle East .
Fromkin is a Professor of History and International Relations at Boston University. I read the book when BushCo began the propaganda build-up prior to the invasion. It was clear from this reading that whatever Bush was planning for Iraq, it wasn’t going to work.

Posted by: tee | Jun 16 2005 17:08 utc | 22

Outraged- The things I’ve read (and experienced with my child) concerning recruitment of kids is going to come back and smack BushCo in the face.
I want to make a sticker with a flag (the image is available online) that says, “Draft Young Republicans.” I will happily wear it…making sure it is big enough to be easily read…that’s what all those yellow ribbon magnets, etc. should be saying, too.
Today I printed, just on a piece of paper, “Ask Me About the Downing Street Memo,” that I then taped to my work/school bag. I also taped one on the back windshield of my car, and I was parked in a lot where all these parents are bringing their children into town for freshman orientation for the U. Americablog has a tee for sale, but this was a last minute thing since Conyers is delivering the petition today (with half a million signatures…did you sign?) I can’t get c-span 3, but I can at least a dozen totally worthless stations on my tv.
Anyway, I made sure I went to places where parents and children would be hanging out between events.
No one asked me (surprise…LOL) but it was OUT THERE. I wanted to say, “you cannot escape your responsibility as citizens to know if your president lied to you and Congress” …about WMD and all the rest.
I want to make denial harder. I want to make people who are not aware ask themselves what the Downing Street Memo is. And I really wish I’d had the time to do the “draft young republicans” thing.
I can believe that our troops are trying to provoke both Iran and Syria because the strength that the US has, militarily, is in hardware and fancy weapons that allow us to kill from a distance.
You don’t need lots of boots on the ground to do airstrikes because you were attacked (after trying to provoke it.) That was Rummie’s entire strategy for war.
Now BushCo is trying to make it The Children’s Crusade, of course.
I have to find out if this has gone on at the middle school level here. I know people who protest outside the new local Nat’l Guard recruiting “shop” that’s one block from the main entrance to the U. and a place I have to pass by nearly everyday. They’ve cooked hamburgers, had a mascot dog or something, like a Disney character, outside the storefont, and other things.
The local radio interviewed both the protestors and the guard. The guardsman who spoke said, “We allow them to protest,” as though he was saying a good thing…i.e. it’s only because the guard is recruiting people to fight an illegal war that the people who disagree are allowed to protest. I was at the station to work on a radio program later in the evening when interview came on. A guy called the station. I answered.
He said, “Did you hear that?”
“What?”
“Did you hear what he said?”
“Who?”
“The guardsman. He said “We allow them to protest. Do you get it? They can protest because of our soldiers.”
And so I said, “No, free speech is a right in this country. The soldiers aren’t “allowing” anyone to do anything. It’s their right.”
The guy hung up on me.
He was probably from the nat’l guard office.

Posted by: fauxreal | Jun 16 2005 18:11 utc | 23

who’s live blogging the conyer’s downing street memo hearings. Now live on cspan 3. Ambassador wilson is talking about the phony niger documents right now.
Catch it on the web too.

Posted by: patience | Jun 16 2005 18:34 utc | 24

there was a segment yesterday on free speech radio news on another tactic for building the children’s crusade – inviting busloads of ’em to a birthday party

With recruitment levels down, the U.S. Army used the occasion of its 230th birthday yesterday to host a media-savvy presentation, and invited elected officials and groups of school children to attend. But, as Chuck Rosina reports, many Boston-area residents felt the celebration was
planned to spread pro-war propaganda.

along the same theme, i can’t help but thinking about the scene from peter davis’s hearts & minds where that returned and not yet de-programmed soldier does the school circuit, telling the kids that vietnam would be a pretty country if it weren’t for the people.

Posted by: b real | Jun 16 2005 18:47 utc | 25

@ fauxreal,
A Jesus’ General they are coordinating OPERATION YELLOW ELEPHANT
and at Betty Bowers, you can get a Draft Young Republicans sticker.

Posted by: beq | Jun 16 2005 18:49 utc | 26

…sticker (take II)

Posted by: beq | Jun 16 2005 18:52 utc | 27

Just as I think it criminally overgenerous to assume an innocent naivete in the motives for the neocon championing of Chalabi, I’m convinced concern for spreading democracy and winning “Hearts and Minds”, is low on the neocon wish-list.
In fact, evidence of detainee/Koran abuses and the rising hatred of the U.S., coupled with the fanning of reciprocal hatred at home (see M. Savage), are, from the neocon perspective, just what the doctor ordered.
These evil militarists are gunning for WW III.

Posted by: tired of the elephant | Jun 16 2005 19:09 utc | 28

John Bonfaz has him by the balls. The President’s March 18 2003 letter is an impeachable offense!!! The president has committed high crimes. Team Bush must be impeached!!

Posted by: patience | Jun 16 2005 19:19 utc | 29

Two new bazookas added to the GOP campaign for endless war.

Posted by: Friendly Fire | Jun 16 2005 19:28 utc | 30

tired of the elephant writes: These evil militarists are gunning for WW III.
World War 3? Hardly. Try to remember they regard what we call “The Cold War” as World War 3, and that they really think that war is over.
No, no… they’re way past World War 3 now. They’ve moved on to World War 4.
Need a war? Take a war. Got a war? Leave a war. We got all sizes and styles for your browsing pleasure.

Posted by: s9 | Jun 16 2005 19:29 utc | 31

thanks for the info, beq.
Pence was also one of the sponsors of the Constitution Restoration Act…the bill to allow the leg. to impeach judges who rule against the separation of church/state issues.
He’s also from this lovely state. He makes me puke. I think the guy who won the election in my district (the first time a repuke won in a loooong time…and he only won by 1000 votes) was slimed into office..dirty tricks or whatever.
The rep is totally hostile and rude toward liberals in my town when he does a town hall meeting. A kid got up to ask about Pell Grants and the libertarians/republicans shouted at the kid, “Get a job!”
The kid said, “I’ve got two jobs.” And school.
I wasn’t there…I heard it on my local indie station that selects and broadcasts events (but it’s also available on local cabal access) Anyway, next time he’s in town, I’ll be there too.
I want to ask him about Eli Lilly and thimerosol, and Frist trying to make it impossible for family members to hold them accountable when they knew they were endangering children. I should bring my autistic child with me. He’s read up on his own situation.
ot, but if you know anyone who has a child with autism, Salon has three articles about the issue, including pdfs that are emails about the problems with thimerosal and the “off the books” meeting about the statistical abnormality of the number of autism diagnosis that corresponded to the rise in the vaccination…and the lack of a statistical coorelation in communities who don’t get the vaccine…the themerisol vaccine has been shipped to third world cos., btw.
sorry for goint ot, but I beg forgiveness because I’m southern and we digress…not that that’s any reason, but it sounds good. :/

Posted by: fauxreal | Jun 16 2005 19:54 utc | 32

these days & nights are so dark
i know i a someties seem like the character who looks at a carcrash & screams look at what happened – look! look! – but i hope you understand that i do all i can here to stop this war. to make others concious of the gravity of the situation
it is also my work to try to find beauty & reasons to live with populations tht have seens so much darkness & the absence of reason. each day with them i try to construct something that is endurable for them. something that us useful using both their instincts of intimacy & distance
there are days tho when i come back here to write these post where i feel vanquished. vanquished by the scale of this history that is passing through our blood
slothrop says that it is because my marxism was borne in my heart & & then moved to my brain. perhaps he feels i am nostalgic or sentimental. but there is no room in my heart for sentiment
i have to ameliorate the conditions of people concretely through that most fragile of tools, culture & many of my people have been treated with contempt by that culture – so i try to teach them – that it is possible to turn oneself inside out & see the world through different eyes. if one has the courage & if you are prepared to take the risks. & i believe that. i believe it with all my heart. & i have witnessed it in this work
but there are these days when the pure catastrophic nature of what is happening overwhelms me. i cannot find room for optimism. i see a monstrous america devouring the world – really. how to find wonder in a world where it even a momentary lapse of attention or concentration can mean, falling
& that is what i feel. this world falling. each night i look at 10 different journals in 3 different languages from 10 countries & what i read just makes it worse.
here in france – instead of really listening to the people & their very real fear of liberalisation – the opposite is being said – that we need to be more liberal & i know practically through my work & my life how absolutely essential are the social gains of the french working class. & i see thos gains attacked every day – & the left not being there to defend it
i read thing that are happening in american that i really cannot believe. i feel nothing other than horror. at your legislative ‘life’, at the baseness of your ‘judiciary’ & the absolute blindness & muteness of the deadshit media
i read in australia that they are bringing back working practices from the 19th century destroying in one month what it took 100 years to gain
& the bloodbath of the middle east. there are neither enough tears or muscles to react to what is criminal of an order i could never have imagined. never. perhaps in reading those 19th century novels of capital’s neglect – or the hells of either dostoevsky or gogol
& yes slothrop my heart says i am witnessing evil on a scale whose only comparison is the nazis – in the ways the crimes are committed, administered & in the way they are propoganded
what is being done to kill the spirit of the common american is every bit as evil as the bombardment on the syrian iraq border & in any case the evil comes from the same source
& yes i react here principally with my heart & try to tell a slothrop – that this is not going to return to normal. that they have already gone too far & i think even they are surprised at how much they have taken & it is in that space that i feel that they could attack a syria or an iran. without blinking. & because i believe they are that stupid. too stupid to see the fires that are coming in egypt, in pakistan & even in indonesia
& they do not see that they have created 1, 2 3 many al quaeda’s who will trouble even more this most fragile globe
so i do not possess the optimism that is needed & i feel guilty sometimes that i post so much darkness & its elaboration
i have been built as a warrior but i can tell you clearly & without ambivalence that i am genuinely frightened by the times we are living through

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Jun 16 2005 21:16 utc | 33

Bloggers’ ‘victory’ over Iraq war memos. Well maybe it’s a start, kudos to the BBC.

Posted by: Friendly Fire | Jun 16 2005 21:21 utc | 34

Dear remembereringgiap,
I too am very saddened by this relentless spiral downward and backward in time.
Keep up the good fight, both against global stupidity and your illness. I do wish you well.
dan

Posted by: dan of steele | Jun 16 2005 21:36 utc | 35

C’mon. Y’all haven’t been listening.
Endless war? We’re getting ready to wrap things up in Iraq, and the other places we’re going to invade will be a cakewalk.
The Iraqi insurgents are desperate. And if you don’t believe Mr. McC when he says so, surely you will believe our beloved President Bush:
Every sign of progress in Iraq adds to the desperation of the terrorists and the remnants of Saddam’s brutal regime.
— August, 2003

Posted by: Meteor Blades | Jun 16 2005 21:40 utc | 36

again i apologise for the cut & past. this from counterpunch. a little light – another view of terror
An Appeal
Against Terrorism; In Defense of Humanity
By FRANCOISE HOUTART and ISABEL PARRA, et al.
In view of the recommendations made at the International “Against Terrorism, For Peace and Justice” Symposium, the undersigned, members of the “In Defense of Humanity” network of networks, have reviewed the denunciations, proposals and reports submitted by the 681 participants from 67 countries who met in Havana on 2, 3 and 4 June 2005, and make a call to create a movement against terrorism that will denounce and condemn the age of terror spawned by the United States in our hemisphere, affecting us since the second half of the 20th century.
The moving testimonies of victims and their relatives and the well-documented reports of respected jurists, statespeople, journalists, economists and other intellectuals committed to the defense of human rights, allowed us to reconstruct the history of terrorist actions, committed with impunity, which numerous US administrations perpetrated in Souther Cone countries, Central America and the Caribbean, in complicity with Latin American and Caribbean leaders, armies and police forces.
The people have a right to know the truth. Those who wage a genocidal war in the name of a war on terrorism must not be allowed to cover up their systematic use of the most perverse of terrorist methods against the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean. There is an urgent need to break the silence which shrouds the past, present and forseeable future of this criminal policy.
It is impossible to suppress the intimate, proven and documented ties of international terrorsits to the US White House, State Department and intelligence services. One cannot forget the atrocious consequences of Operation Condor, that International of Terror, as Nobel Prize for Peace recipient Adolfo Pérez Esquivel would call it, nor those of the dirty war waged in Central America and the Caribbean. The crimes of those who have worked for the CIA and of the high officials of successive US administrations cannot go unpunished.
George H. W. Bush, father of the current US leader, must be held accountable, as ex CIA director, for the creation, with Cuban born terrorists, of CORU, an organization responsible for the assassination of ex Chilean Minister of Foreign Affairs Orlando Letelier and the murder of US citizen Ronnie Moffit, the midair bombing of a civilian plane with 73 people on board and other crimes against humanity. The same terrorists collaborated with Pinochet’s DINA, and other repressive bodies of South American military dictatorships, in the planning and execution of Operation Condor. Then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger must also be held accountable for these genocidal crimes.
The close ties of Florida’s current governor, Jeb Bush, to the Cuban American National Foundation and other terrorist groups based in Miami must be denounced. These organizations made a decisive contribution to the fraudulent electoral victory of his brother in the 2000 presidential elections; they financed terrorist actions against Cuban tourist facilities, actions Posada Carriles admitted to in an interview for the New York Times and American television, the latter’s “pardon” in Panama and his stay in the United States the past two months; they organized and financed his escape from a Venezuelan prison and coordinated his work with the White House in Iran-Contra and US-supported state-terrorist and dirty war strategies in Central America. Today more than ever, we must denounce this long-standing network of accomplices which sustains the impunity and the protection illegally granted by US authorities to Luis Posada Carriles, ignoring the well-founded extradition request submitted by the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. It is the same protection they have offered an hope to maintain for Orlando Bosch, securing impunity for his crimes.
We must reveal the terrorist nature of the alliance that, against the interests of the American people, the Bush dynasty has established with the Miami mob and which dishonours the memory of those who perished on 11 September 2001 and in the name of a supposed war on terrorism. The US people, who mobilized against fascism in World War II and contributed to ending the Vietnam war, who supported the civil rights struggle and the return of Elián González to Cuba, must be informed, through all the mass media, about the criminal actions of its government.
The impunity of terrorists cannot continue. No crime can go unpunished.
BECAUSE OF ALL THIS, WE HAVE DECIDED TO INITIATE AN INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT AGAINST TERRORISM BASED ON THE “IN DEFENSE OF HUMANITY’ NETWORK OF NETWORKS, TO UNDERTAKE THE FOLLOWING ACTIONS:
1. Establish an Anti-Terrorist Observatory for the hemisphere.
2. Create a data base which gathers information on these genocidal policies.
3. Prepare and publish an Encyclopedia on Terrorism in the hemisphere, to include the essential concepts and categories, the background of the genocidal agents, repressive bodies and terrorists involved, a chronology of these criminal actions and a description of the national and supra-national components of the terror apparatus.
4. Create a collection of works on historical memory and terrorism.
5. Create the “Against Terrorism, in Defense of Humanity” Hemisphere Court, to be made up of prestigious jurists, intellectuals and human rights activists, to try Henry Kissenger, George Herbert Walker Bush, Jeb Bush, George Walker Bush and the following current or ex State Department or National Security Council officials Oliver North, John Dimitri Negroponte and Otto Reich, for setting in motion and encouraging state terrorism in Latin America, the Caribbean and even the United States, in flagrant violation of international and US law, putting the lives of their own citizens in danger; for recruiting, training and financing terrorist groups and for the protection they have offered and continue to offer Orlando Bosch, Luis Posada Carriles and other renowned perpetrators of criminal actions that have claimed the lives of ten of thousands of innocent people.
The work of this court will be handled by four commissions: a commission for the gathering of testimonies and documentary evidence; for research and analysis; for technical and juridical matters and for information and dissemination.
This is the commitment assumed in Havana: to defend ethical values and dignity, in defiance of brute force and terror, and to carry out law and justice. All voices must be raised against these crimes. We shall not rest until the murderers are tried and convicted. Silence only benefits terrorists and those who protect them. We shall not rest until the path is cleared for truth. As Fidel has said: “Humanity yearns for justice”.
Havana, 10 June 2005
Francois Houtart, Belgium;
Isabel Parra, Chile;
James Cockcroft, USA;
Pablo González Casanova, Victor Flores Olea, Gilberto López y Rivas and Juan Bañuelo, Mexico;
Thiago de Mello, Beto Almeida, Roberto Amaral, Beth Carvalho, María Ciavatta and Marilia Guimaraes, Brazil;
Roberto Fernandez Retamar, Cuba;
Marcos Roitman, Manuel Talens, Jaime Losada, Alicia Hermida and Carlos Tena, Spain; Miguel Bonasso, Stella Calloni, Ana de Skalon, Tristán Bauer, Atilio Borón, Néstor Kohan, Carlos Ruta, Luciano Alzaga and Marcelo Cafiso, Argentina;
Hernando Calvo Ospina, Colombia; Jorge Sanjinés, Bolivia;
Antonio Pecci, Paraguay;
Raúl Pérez Torres, Ecuador;
Gennaro Carotenuto, Italy;
Tarik Souki, Venezuela;
Samuel Blixen, Uruguay.

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Jun 16 2005 21:41 utc | 37

you and me both, r’giap.
the sense I get is of a vise closing, the world being squeezed harder and harder, to suck more immediate profit out of the already-drained fruit, to preserve the Sun King’s party-time while the peasants sicken and starve outside the gates. to preserve the Dogma of More in defiance of the most basic math and physics, let alone the cutting edge of science.
the sense I get is of Rapa Nui, the madness of elites, their divorce from the realities staring them/us in the face.

LESTER R. BROWN, EARTH POLICY – Worldwide, the area in grain expanded from 590 million hectares (1,457 million acres) in 1950 to its historical peak of 730 million hectares in 1981. By 2004, it had fallen to 670 million hectares. Even as the world’s population continues to grow, the area available for producing grain is shrinking.
Expanding world population cut the grain land area per person in half, from 0.23 hectares (0.57 acres) in 1950 to 0.11 hectares in 2000. This area of just over one tenth of a hectare per person is half the size of a building lot in an affluent U.S. suburb. This halving of grain land area per person makes it more difficult for the world’s farmers to feed the 70 million or more people added each year. If current population projections materialize and if the overall grain land area remains constant, the area per person will shrink to 0.07 hectares in 2050, less than two thirds that in 2000.

meanwhile the Europeans with 7 percent of world population use 20 percent of global resources, and the Yanks with 4 percent of world pop use — what is it these days — 30 percent of global resources? if I am remembering those numbers right, 50 percent of the planet’s total output pours into those two hoppers, for 11 percent of the planetary population. meanwhile, a billion-plus Chinese and counting look to the US for the standard of lifestyle to which one should and can aspire, while the Yanks squander their national wealth and destroy their future in a crazy paradoxical attempt to preserve that lifestyle while the ship sinks under them. something has to give, and I fear sooner rather than later.
the vise tightens. the squeeze is on. the human habit: party till you crash. been there, done that — can’t this species ever learn a new tune?
I join you in a moment of despair. let us rest our heads on the scarred table in the darkest corner of the bar; let us stop watching for a moment the ghastly spectacle of our whole world becoming an “economic sacrifice zone”.

Posted by: DeAnander | Jun 16 2005 21:49 utc | 38

Iraq has created a weapon that only a nuke can destroy.
We still don’t have to admit to having nuclear weapons,” crowed Iran’s war game president. “Just issue a statement that we have redeployed our forces to be ‘asymmetric’… to deter any invader.”

Posted by: Friendly Fire | Jun 16 2005 21:51 utc | 39

MB: there is a certain black humour in there pronouncements, isn’t there?
This probably isn’t a good place to point out b’s post earlier on the food situation in Iraq.

Posted by: Colman | Jun 16 2005 21:53 utc | 40

maybe it’s time to go outside and listen to the bees for a while, De.
Mama Earth may be hurtin’, but she’s still beautiful.

Posted by: Anonymous | Jun 16 2005 21:54 utc | 41

dan
thank you
i will
i was conscious of this depravity even as a child – i understood who the enemy was & i have witnessed first hand – the repercussions of that depravity – here & elsewhere i have worked with people who have been tortured – & without exception they were from countries where the american empire assisted practically in thos tortures or trained the tortures – the old school of americas
bur perhaps it was my own supidity. perhaps i saw that at moments that empire could understand man is man
but now – it is so clear – they do not consider the ‘other’ human at all. therefore the blindness to the consequences. & it is not just the empires neglect & contept for other cultures – today they show as they did with the sacking of bagdad – that they hate & will destroy – the culture of the other
& it is that that reminder that they really don’t care that they killed 3,000,000 vietnamese, that they killed nearly a 1,000,000 indonesian & fod know how many matin americans. they really don’t care. & perhaps to understand this finally, breaks a heart that tries even in the darkest moment to see the enemy’s hand has another side
but i don’t
i witness depravity being called higher morality

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Jun 16 2005 21:56 utc | 42

FF: US of A, meet modern warfare.
It’s not as if it’s a new invention: it’s been developing for the last hundred or so years. The crowd of half-assed military theorists around here predicted this all years ago.

Posted by: Colman | Jun 16 2005 22:02 utc | 43

Too late to the party of course these timezones play the devil with liscensing hours. But just as last drinks are called I thought I’d point out that I blame George Orwell for all this. The idea for an endless war to keep the population in check was his.
I honestly believe that apart from the obvious sociopaths, anyone who supports the notion of war as a viable way of achieving for any bunch of humans, is at a minimum suffering from faulty thinking. I was going to expound on the extent of their disability but that would be unfair to those the community usually tags with the label intellectual disability.
Right at the moment it seems the ball is in play but has no direction. We can go defensive or shout at the linesmen who have been making a deliberate mess of the game. That won’t get the job done though.
From my perspective the best direction seems to be forward. Remember that the only way the repugs can attack those who abhor this war is if we give them the ‘defensive space’.
In other words if we spend too much time navel gazing, worrying about their next move, or worst of all fighting amongst ourselves; that which we fear most could happen.
Instead lets press on crying out for war crimes trials and shouting that ‘fixing Iraq’ will cost much more than the people have been told. That way the repugs will be too concerned with self preservation to devote much energy to our demise.
If the upshot is just a withdrawal of the invading force well that is not the worst outcome but it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be trying to achieve more.

Posted by: Debs is dead | Jun 16 2005 23:17 utc | 44

@remembereringgiap

UNSEEN BUDS.
UNSEEN buds, infinite, hidden well,
Under the snow and ice, under the darkness, in every square or
cubic inch,
Germinal, exquisite, in delicate lace, microscopic, unborn,
Like babes in wombs, latent, folded, compact, sleeping ;
Billions of billions, and trillions of trillions of them waiting,
(On earth and in the sea — the universe — the stars there in the
heavens,)
Urging slowly, surely forward, forming endless,
And waiting ever more, forever more behind. – Walt Whitman

Health & Still Steel.

Posted by: Outraged | Jun 16 2005 23:42 utc | 45

Something completely different … opening a chink of light through the dark cloud of despair …

Strategists Learn Non-Violent Warfare Tactics
National Defense Magazine
Michael Peck
A pro-democracy group has sponsored a free video game designed to teach political activists how to plan and execute strategic non-violent warfare.
Strategic non-violent warfare sounds like an oxymoron, but its practitioners say it is the most effective way to force regime change.
“It lets them try different things on the computer before they try them in the real world,” said Ivan Marovic, a consultant on the game, and a former Serbian student leader who helped organize the protests that ousted Slobodan Milosevic. “I wish I’d had it.”

Posted by: Outraged | Jun 17 2005 1:21 utc | 46

Political Sims: Interactive Games Do Serious Politics
By Kate Kaye
It may not have assisted in Kyrgyzstan’s so-called Tulip Revolution, but a gaming project underway at BreakAway Games could facilitate future democratic uprisings. A Force More Powerful ain’t your standard violent first-person shooter game. In fact, it’s designed to promote non-violent action. Commissioned by The International Center for Non-Violent Conflict (The Center), the game applies the format and approach behind military strategy games for non-violent resistance training and planning. A Force More Powerful will be distributed to activist groups pushing for democratic change and human rights in their homelands in an effort to help them plot plans for taking real-life, non-violent action to achieve their objectives.

Posted by: Outraged | Jun 17 2005 1:34 utc | 47

More on Operation Yellow Elephant (via Jesus’ General):

Blue Team Special Op
Operation Yellow Elephant — Special Op “First Strike”
Task: Ask the College Republican leadership to pass the following resolution at their convention:
WHEREAS, the College Republican membership has always fully supported the war in Iraq;
WHEREAS, we have encouraged the notion that the degree of one’s patriotism is directly proportional to their support for the war;
WHEREAS, by word, by deed and by support of Ann Coulter, David Horowitz, and Michelle Malkin we have decreed that dissent against the war is the equivalent of treason;
WHEREAS, the military continually falls far short of meeting its recruitment needs resulting in a manpower crisis;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED THAT:
The College Republicans organization is officially disbanded until the end of the war;
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT:
The College Republicans membership immediately volunteer for military service as infantrymen.
Delivery: Mail to the following people:
Corinne Schwarz
Co-Chairman, College Republican National Committee
c/o Crystal Gateway Marriott
1700 Jefferson Davis Highway
Arlington, Virginia 22202
Manny Espinoza
First Vice Chairman, College Republican National Committee
(same address as above)
Kris Hart
Second Vice Chairman, College Republican National Committee
(same address as above)
Secretary Chuck Efstration
Second Vice Chairman, College Republican National Committee
(same address as above)
Paul Gourley
Treasurer, College Republican National Committee
(same address as above)
Timing: Estimate delivery time to arrive June 24-26, 2005.
Alternatives: white feathers, recruitment brochures.

Posted by: beq | Jun 17 2005 13:51 utc | 48

outraged
thank you so much for old walt whitman – i adore him

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Jun 17 2005 19:00 utc | 49