In years past, I've used the rabbit hole metaphor [and very early on] -- I've used the word 'surreal' to define our
experience -- I've made reference to any number of fantasy plots, including
The Matrix and The Wizard of Oz. That's because reality is
like an onion, it takes a lifetime to peel away the layers to get to your own
personal core; the outward, decaying and diseased layer that has become our
national identity is even harder to get a good hold on, especially when we're
surrounded by people who think it's the only layer there is. Non-sense. Utter
and complete.
Want an example? Carpetbagger ran a piece about a real
Moron and Idiot, entitled Guess Who's Sponsoring the Federal Marriage
Amendment?
Check
it out:
You just can't make this stuff up: Larry "Wide Stance" Craig and
David "Just a Massage" Vitter are now original co-sponsors of the new Federal
Marriage Amendment (aka Marriage Protection Amendment).
That's the
kind of curiouser and curiouser surrealism that has finally been noted and
legitimized by the federal court, in finding for a detainee [article below] --
and, using Lewis Carroll's work as an illustration to reveal the "nonsense."
Craig and Vitter are standing up for 'fidelity?' That's as laughable as George
Bush standing up for democracy ... and even more obvious.
In terms of
energy shift, we're in another interesting spot, now ... we're being faced with
a parade of characters whose intentions are so grievously transparent that you
can only think of them as morons and idiots, to quote a piece below -- and yet,
believing all their own mythology they speed ahead as if we hadn't noticed. They
seem to be so entrenched in their own power and persona that each inhabits their
own psychic "spider hole" from which they can't escape. This is aided and
abetted by both a Congressional body and a media that still assumes the
corporate position [kiss-ass] and dispenses the Kool Aid without much awareness
that we've stopped drinking; why is it that they're ALWAYS behind public
perception by months and miles? [Warning: let this be a cautionary tale about
believing your own bullshit -- once we begin a narrative about ourselves, it's
hard to change direction.]
Credibility is built upon success. After
Katrina, Bush and his government had a moral bank account of, roughly, zero;
there was a great sucking sound of wind rushing into the void that had been
established in national reality. Dubby's War remains too far away -- too
intellectually sanitized to give us the shocks we required for a wake-up;
Louisiana was just a few red states away. Since then, the curiouser and
curiouser properties of life in the US of A has taken us on a fun-house ride,
rushing ahead with us strapped, hapless and helpless, in our seats. We're
nearing the exit, now ... we're exhausted, we're disturbed, we're pissed off.
And there's little in the way of feather-smoothing on the horizon -- we have to
embrace the process.
Here's the Light at the end of the tunnel,
dearhearts -- peeling the layers IS the business at hand ...
but it's not a rabbit hole; it's the antithesis of delusion.
Below,
articles on three leaders who have failed their people and made themselves into
moronic cartoons; Mugabe, Berlusconi and our very own home-grown tyrant, GWB, as
we examine his actual legacy: allowing Al Qaeda to become more than a band of
thugs and zealots, and position themselves to do more than random harm.
As bonus, three really good reads on the oil issue -- it was always the
oil, wasn't it? Nothing curious there ... now that we've finally
noticed.
Jude
Judges cite nonsense poem
in Guantanamo case
MATT APUZZO, AP
Mon Jun 30
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080630/ap_on_go_ot/guantanamo_chinese_detainee
WASHINGTON - A federal appeals court reviewing evidence at Guantanamo
Bay compared a Bush administration legal argument to one made by a hapless,
dimwitted character in a 19th century nonsense poem by Lewis Carroll.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit cited the
1876 poem, "The Hunting of the Snark," in ruling that the military improperly
labeled a Chinese Muslim as an enemy combatant. The ruling was issued last week
but an unclassified version of the opinion was released only Monday.
It
was the first time a court has reviewed the military's decision-making and
considered whether a detainee should be held. The ruling provides guidance to
federal district judges, who are about to begin reviewing dozens of such cases
now that the Supreme Court says detainees can challenge their detention in
federal court.
The appeals court said military review panels, known as
Combatant Status Review Tribunals, were unable to assess much of the evidence
against the detainee, Huzaifa Parhat, and at times treated accusations as
evidence.
"The big issue now is, can any CSRT decision survive this kind
of scrutiny?" Parhat's lawyer, Susan Baker Manning said.
Parhat is one of
a group of Chinese Muslims, known as Uighurs, being held at Guantanamo Bay.
Their case has become a diplomatic and legal headache for the U.S., which has
tried to find a country willing to accept the Uighurs (pronounced WEE'-gurs)
even as it defended its decision to hold them as enemy combatants.
The
Justice Department concedes that Parhat never fought against the U.S. and says
it has no evidence he was planning to do so. The case hinges on Parhat's
connection to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a militant group that demands
separation from China. Parhat says he considers China, not the United States,
the enemy.
The U.S. says it has classified intelligence that ETIM is
affiliated with al-Qaida, though officials have not identified the source of
that intelligence. The judges said there's credible evidence that the source is
the Chinese government, "which may be less than objective with respect to the
Uighurs."
The three-member court, which was made up of two Republican
judges and one Democrat, was particularly pointed in its criticism of the
argument that evidence is reliable because it appears on multiple
documents.
"The government insists that the statements made in the
documents are reliable because the State and Defense Departments would not have
put them in intelligence documents were that not the case," the court wrote.
"This comes perilously close to suggesting that whatever the government says
must be treated as true."
The judges compared the argument to the logic
in Carroll's nonsense poem, in which a hapless crew hunts for a creature that is
never quite defined. The Bellman, the ship's leader, led his men across the
ocean, guided by a map that was just a blank piece of paper. He rallied and
reassured his crew simply by repeating himself.
"I have said it thrice:
What I tell you three times is true," the Bellman says in the
poem.
"Lewis Carroll notwithstanding, the fact that the government has
'said it thrice' does not make an allegation true," the court wrote.
The
court said Parhat deserved a new hearing or should be released — though it
didn't say to where he would be released. The U.S. does not want to send him to
China for fear he will be tortured. Justice Department spokesman Erik Ablin said
the agency is evaluating its options. ++
CRY ZIMBABWE
My
Father Was Loyal to Mugabe. It Didn't Matter.
Anonymous,
WaPo
Sunday, June 29, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/27/AR2008062701268.html
HARARE, Zimbabwe - My father, who lives in Zimbabwe's countryside, sent
me a letter the other day. The 74-year-old man wrote that he had not had soap,
cooking oil, sugar or tea leaves -- virtually anything -- for a very long time.
Could I help? And if I had any old shoes that I was no longer using, could I
send them to him?
I felt castrated as I read his words. Like many
Zimbabweans, I am in no position to aid my loved ones; I had been out of a job
for a whole year when I got the letter. My father might have forgotten that, or
simply been so desperate that he had to let me know about his plight. The
company where I used to work closed down without any fanfare, and severance
packages were not paid. In an eerie way, the demise of our business mirrored the
demise of our country: The bosses at the top had proven adept at ruining the
company, not at running it efficiently with the welfare of the people at heart.
So we paid the price.
Now here was my father, asking for help I was
honor-bound to give but simply could not provide. I was filled with impotent
rage -- the same feeling my fellow citizens get as we watch Zimbabwe spiral out
of control, caught in the turbulence of bad, self-serving decisions by the
powers that be, ostensibly on our behalf but always at our expense.
In
particular, my father's case fills me with simmering fury because he has been a
staunch supporter of President Robert Mugabe's party, the Zimbabwe African
National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) since the 1960s, when he had served the
liberation fighters in any way he could in their struggle against
then-Rhodesia's British overlords. Back in the 1990s, when Mugabe's rule was
turning sour, I was amazed to find in my father's house -- even then -- an
official portrait of the president. When my father was in his early 60s, he
wrote to inform me that he had taken a job in a different district as a
secretary for his beloved party. He was eventually forced to retire, and he has
been trying to eke out a living as a peasant farmer ever since. My father has
been devoted to the party that he says has nurtured him over the years. What
does he have to show for it? The very people to whom he pledged his loyalty over
the decades are the ones responsible for his plight.
It is not only my
father who is writing letters of lamentation; almost every one of us has plumbed
the bottoms of our hearts every day. We may never write those thoughts down, but
each moment we spend agonizing about how we are going to make ends meet is, in
essence, the sending of a plea -- one that no one, sadly, seems to be able to
answer. The hope of change offered by the March 29 presidential election has
been ruthlessly and systematically crushed, and all that remains is the stain of
our butchered dreams. Like my father, we have all been betrayed, mistreated and
victimized for daring to speak our minds. In Zimbabwe, if you question a wrong
or criticize an injustice, you are labeled a member of the opposition Movement
for Democratic Change. Since the regime rabidly calls the opposition puppets of
the West, that label can have dire consequences.
One relative, a tobacco
seller in his early 40s, was particularly bitter about the youth militia that is
carrying out most of the regime's dirty work: boys and girls barely out of their
teens who are ordering elderly men and women about with impunity. "Tisu
tirikutonga," they declare: We are the ones in power and control. And so they
are.
"What hurts me the most," one of my relatives said, "is that at my
age, I have to live in constant fear. To come here to Harare, we had to ask for
permission, and on our return, we have to go and report that we are back. . . .
I am not a politician. I just want to earn a decent living and get by."
"The problem is that there are people who did not tell Mugabe the
truth," another relative pointed out. "They lied to him that he was still
popular. When he came to address rallies, they bused people from all over the
province, and it was the same crowds that were ferried to the different venues,
most of them forced. When Mugabe saw them teeming in their multitudes, dutifully
cheering and applauding him, he thought they truly loved him."
No
longer. If anything, our trials and tribulations deepened when the elections of
March 29 failed to materialize into meaningful change -- a stillborn hope that
haunts us.
There is a surreal quality to the crisis unfolding here. For
the many citizens who depend on the state media, it is business as usual, with
robust coverage of Mugabe's campaign appearances. Opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai's withdrawal from the run-off vote held last Friday was treated like
a non-event. One neighbor, a devout soccer fan, observed, "This is like having a
penalty shootout with only one team." But Mugabe seems to see nothing wrong with
banging the ball into an empty net, then sprinting down the field celebrating
his victory. In fact, he does not seem to mind playing the entire match on his
own. As long as he is playing, all is well with him.
But for the rest of
us -- for my father, my relatives and friends, my country -- all is not well.
The other day, a devout Mugabe supporter assured a friend of mine that once
Mugabe had clinched his victory, the terrible inflation wracking the economy
would subside, probably a day or so after his inauguration. Such people seem to
believe that diesel could come out of a rock. We ordinary Zimbabweans do not
deal with inflation by making unrealistic assurances; we deal with it at its
grittiest, in our day-to-day struggle for survival. Last week, Zimbabwe's dollar
fell a staggering 80 percent on the country's illegal currency markets as people
hunkered down before the presidential runoff. In barely a week, the price of a
loaf of bread -- which can be found only on the black market -- has shot up from
$1 billion to more than $6 billion, but even that could have changed by the time
this article appears. In less than two weeks, we have watched the fares for a
commuter omnibus, our common means of public transportation, shoot up from $500
million to a price somewhere in the billions.
In Zimbabwe, we talk about
these billions without batting an eye. A friend from my neighborhood has a
4-year-old son who is in kindergarten. The other day, I saw this boy holding a
wad of $50 million notes; unless they all amounted to a billion of our dollars,
he couldn't even buy a sweet with them. Even our kindergarteners have to be
billionaires these days. Zimbabwean tycoons now talk in terms of quadrillions of
dollars. I still haven't been able to get my artistic mind around nine zeroes,
much less 15. You should see the people frowning, trying to count the bank
notes.
As I count, I think of my father. His needs cannot be met, let
alone my own. The skyrocketing cost of transportation and basic goods, most of
which can be bought only on the black market, means that what one earns is less
than what one must spend to survive. Yet day in and day out, people trek to and
from work. I suppose this means that we have all been turned into criminals of
one kind or another, selling and buying on the black market in order to make
ends meet -- which they barely do. And all we want is a better life for
ourselves and our children -- and an aging father who once believed in Robert
Mugabe. ++
The author is a Zimbabwean writer. The Washington Post is
withholding his name for safety reasons.
Berlusconi is
back and more brash than ever
Italy's bronzed leader is accused of
persecuting Gypsies and evading corruption allegations by granting himself
immunity from prosecution. Still he finds time to solicit roles for favourite
actresses.
Ed Vulliamy, The Observer
Sunday June 29,
2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jun/29/italy
[thanks, Christine]
Brazen, brash, bronzed and breezy, Silvio
Berlusconi has reminded Italy and the world that he is back with a vengeance and
doing what his critics claim he does best: governing the bel paese in his own
interests.
While Jewish and Catholic leaders say that a climate of
hostility towards immigrants and a policy to fingerprint Gypsy children recall
the dark days of fascism, Berlusconi has been caught telephoning state
television executives to ensure that his 'little butterflies' - as he calls his
favourite actresses and female dancers, and one in particular who is annoying
him - get to play the roles they want in TV soaps. 'They're all Marilyn Monroe,'
he promised one producer.
As the people who elected him in March continue
to indicate their priorities in the polls are the same as usual - salaries,
taxes and pensions - Berlusconi is using his office to embark on the final
offensive of his longest-running and most heartfelt battle: the fight against
Italy's judiciary.
'Some of them want me like this,' he scoffed in a
speech at the Renzo Piano theatre in Rome, mimicking himself in handcuffs and
calling the judges 'a cancer in our democracy'.
With Berlusconi, such
provocations come with the territory. Among opposition supporters and in the
media, the events of the past few days have inspired sighing references to a
film of two years ago, Il Caimano (as in the species of reptile), in which Nanni
Moretti plays a fictionalised Berlusconi sentenced to jail, who none the less
walks free from the court while a mob hurls debris and a petrol bomb at the
judges.
Berlusconi's real-life cabinet decided on Friday to make his
office of Prime Minister - and other high offices of state - immune from
prosecution, putting Berlusconi in a battle with the judiciary to avoid being
tried and convicted for corruption.
Another law aims to suspend for a
year trials relating to a range of alleged financial crimes committed before
June 2002, potentially derailing a bribery case against Berlusconi, as has
happened so many times before.
Meanwhile, Berlusconi's government is
pressing ahead with draconian controls over one of the examining judges' main
tools of investigation, wiretapping, and over leaks of wiretaps to the press.
On 18 June, the Senate approved curbs on the use of telephone
interceptions, with prison sentences for journalists who publish leaks. That
gambit was dramatically undercut however, when a magazine, l'Espresso, last week
published a highly comic package of wiretaps in which not only Berlusconi
himself but some of his closest aides and opposition leaders apparently
pressurise state television executives to cast parts for their favourite
actresses.
Judges investigating corruption by an executive of the state
television network RAI uncovered a blizzard of calls by politicians of all
colours mixing with actresses - and even those women who bounce around on
primetime television, a distinctive Italian style pioneered by Berlusconi - and
trying to secure them roles on screen.
Berlusconi's own intervention,
made when he was leader of the opposition, is heartfelt. The Italian Prime
Minister is recorded as seeking a part for a comely blonde called Antonella
Troise, of whom he says to the executive: 'This nutter has taken it into her
head that I hate her, and am blocking her career, so do me this favour because
she's getting dangerous.'
Calling a producer named Guido de Angelis,
Berlusconi says: 'Look, for all these little butterflies I thank you; you've
found places for all I've given you? You want divas? They're all Marilyn
Monroes!' 'Mata Haris more like', replies the producer. 'Guido,' Berlusconi
responds. 'I propose Mother Teresa of Calcutta, that will teach
them.'
It's not only Berlusconi who is involved. His senior adviser,
Gianni Letta, wanted a role for a lady in a series called A Place In the Sun,
and his lifelong ally, Fedele Confalonieri, has also been on the line to RAI -
as has the centre-left champion Francesco Rutelli (trounced at the recent Roman
mayoral elections by a neo-Fascist candidate) who is trying to get a part for an
acquaintance called Maria Scicolone in a series about Sophia Loren's
family.
Rather than wince at the absurdity of the exchanges, and the
networks of influence they appear to expose, Berlusconi and his government have
rounded on the judiciary and its manipulation of wiretapping and the media for
'political purposes', demanding changes to the wiretapping law as a matter of
'extreme urgency'. So the starlets and their putative roles have become yet
another cause célèbre for Berlusconi as he pursues his enemies in the legal
profession.
The reasons for Berlusconi's animosity are many, but the most
urgent is that he is currently accused of 'judicial corruption' along with David
Mills, estranged husband of the British Olympics minister, Tessa Jowell, having
allegedly paid Mills a bribe of $600,000 in return for giving false testimony on
his behalf. Since 1981 Mills, a corporate lawyer, has established an offshore
network of companies on behalf of Berlusconi's Fininvest umbrella company. Both
men deny all charges and wrongdoing.
Examining judges in Milan say they
are nearing the end of gathering testimony and could reach a verdict before the
summer recess (though another charge of money-laundering against Berlusconi and
Mills is running into the sands, once again under the statute of
limitations).
So the battle that began in earnest with Berlusconi's entry
into politics in 1993 continues. Back then Italy was at the end of an
extraordinary period during which an entire political class became the subject
of a judicial investigation known as Mani pulite (Clean Hands). The examining
judges were beginning to close in on Berlusconi's media networks and Fininvest
business empire and their connections to senior politicians. Then, in a move
which transformed the country's politics, Berlusconi formed his Forza Italia
party and filled the vacuum at the top by winning the election of
1994.
The spearhead of Clean Hands, Judge Antonio Di Pietro, said on
Friday, following the wiretap scandal: 'This is not a matter of a Prime Minister
put in the mire by a magazine, but the behaviour of a television proprietor who
happens to be Prime Minister and intervenes to ask favours. If that is not a
conflict of interests, I don't know what is.'
As for the immunity
package, Di Pietro called for the gathering of signatures in the streets and
squares for a referendum over the proposed law, with a view to abolishing it
through plebiscite. 'Berlusconi may be shrewd, but I'm not a dunce,' he said.
Meanwhile, the vice-president of the judiciary, Nicola Mancino, condemned the
suspension of cases as 'an occult amnesty'.
Having elected Berlusconi,
the Italian public does not share his concern about the judiciary. Recent polls
show the usual preoccupations with salaries and pensions, with only 3.4 per cent
interested in the magistrature. His anti-immigration policies are popular, with
large majorities favouring the demolition of gypsy camps around Rome and other
cities.
However, the new climate, and a move to fingerprint gypsy
children, has brought condemnations from the Catholic charity Caritas, Unicef
and Amos Luzzatto, former head of the Union of Jewish Communities, who said that
the move recalled 'days when I could not go to school, and people would point at
me saying: "Look, mummy, it's a Jew". This is a country that has lost its
memory.'
But the sensitivities of Italy's migrant populations are the
last thing on Berlusconi's mind. ++
Bush's plans falter,
al-Qaida establishes new base of operations
Steve Benen,
Salon
Monday, June 30, 2008
http://tinyurl.com/62yqwv
In late 2007, Bush administration officials drafted a secret plan,
giving the Defense Department's Special Operations forces greater ease to go
into the mountains between Pakistan and Afghanistan, with the goal of targeting
al-Qaida's top leaders.
The plan sounded very encouraging on paper -- it
would sidestep turf wars between Washington and Islamabad, and target high-value
targets where we know they are. So what happened? More than six months later,
the plan has not yet been executed, and the Special Operations forces are still
standing by, waiting for orders. Bureaucratic disputes within the administration
have slowed the whole initiative down to a stop.
The New York Times
reports that it's all part of a broader problem with Bush's counterterrorism
strategy.
After the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush committed the
nation to a "war on terrorism" and made the destruction of Mr. bin Laden's
network the top priority of his presidency. But it is increasingly clear that
the Bush administration will leave office with Al Qaeda having successfully
relocated its base from Afghanistan to Pakistan's tribal areas, where it has
rebuilt much of its ability to attack from the region and broadcast its messages
to militants across the world ...
Just as it had on the day before 9/11,
Al Qaeda now has a band of terrorist camps from which to plan and train for
attacks against Western targets, including the United States. Officials say the
new camps are smaller than the ones the group used prior to 2001. However,
despite dozens of American missile strikes in Pakistan since 2002, one retired
C.I.A. officer estimated that the makeshift training compounds now have as many
as 2,000 local and foreign militants, up from several hundred three years ago.
Publicly, senior American and Pakistani officials have said that the
creation of a Qaeda haven in the tribal areas was in many ways inevitable --
that the lawless badlands where ethnic Pashtun tribes have resisted government
control for centuries were a natural place for a dispirited terrorism network to
find refuge. The American and Pakistani officials also blame a disastrous
cease-fire brokered between the Pakistani government and militants in 2006.
But more than four dozen interviews in Washington and Pakistan tell
another story. American intelligence officials say that the Qaeda hunt in
Pakistan, code-named Operation Cannonball by the C.I.A. in 2006, was often
undermined by bitter disagreements within the Bush administration and within the
C.I.A., including about whether American commandos should launch ground raids
inside the tribal areas.
Inside the C.I.A., the fights included clashes
between the agency's outposts in Kabul, Afghanistan, and Islamabad. There were
also battles between field officers and the Counterterrorist Center at C.I.A.
headquarters, whose preference for carrying out raids remotely, via Predator
missile strikes, was derided by officers in the Islamabad station as the work of
"boys with toys."
The article went on to explain that many of the
top, experienced intelligence officers who would have been assigned to the
al-Qaida hunt weren't available. As one official put it, "Those people all went
to Iraq. We were all hurting because of Iraq."
So the war in Iraq
created an opportunity for al-Qaida to recruit more terrorists and, at the same
time, made it harder to go after al-Qaida terrorists.
++
America Is the Rogue Nation
Charley Reese,
AntiWar via ICH
29/06/08 "
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20197.htm
One gets the impression that there are some people in Washington who
believe that Israel or the U.S. can bomb Iran's nuclear reactors, fly home, and
it will be mission complete.
It makes you wonder if perhaps there is a
virus going around that is gradually making people stupid. If we or Israel
attack Iran, we will have a new war on our hands. The Iranians are not going to
shrug off an attack and say, "You naughty boys, you."
Consider how much
trouble Iraq has given us. Some 4,000 dead and 29,000 wounded, a half a trillion
dollars in cost and still climbing, and five years later, we cannot say that the
country is pacified.
Iraq is a small country compared with Iran. Iran has
about 70 million people. Its western mountains border the Persian Gulf. In other
words, its missiles and guns look down on the U.S. ships below it. And it has
lots of missiles, from short-range to intermediate-range (around 2,200
kilometers).
More to the point, it has been equipped by Russia with the
fastest anti-ship missile on the planet. The SS-N-22 Sunburn can travel at Mach
3 at high altitude and at Mach 2.2 at low altitude. That is faster than anything
in our arsenal.
Iran's conventional forces include an army of 540,000 men
and 300,000 reserves, including 120,000 Iranian Guards especially trained in
unconventional warfare. It has more than 1,600 main battle tanks and 21,000
other armored combat vehicles. It has 3,200 artillery pieces, three submarines,
59 surface warships and 10 amphibious ships.
It's been receiving help in
arming itself from China, North Korea and Russia. Unlike Iraq, Iran's forces
have not been worn down with bombing, wars and sanctions. It also has a new
anti-aircraft defense system from Russia that I've heard is pretty
snazzy.
So, if you think we or Israel can attack Iran and not expect
retaliation, I'd have to say with regret that you are a moron. If you think we
could easily handle Iran in an all-out war, I'd have to promote you to
idiot.
Attacking Iran would be folly, but we seem to be living in the Age
of Folly. Morons and idiots took us into an unjustified war against Iraq before
we had finished the job in Afghanistan. Now we have troops tied down in both
countries.
For some years now, I've worried that we seem to be more and
more like Colonial England – arrogant, racist, overestimating our own capacity
and underestimating that of our enemies. As the fate of the British Empire
demonstrates, that is a fatal flaw.
The British never dreamed that the
"little yellow people" could come ashore by land and take Singapore from the
rear or that they would sink the pride of the British fleet, but they did
both.
I suppose no one in Washington can imagine the Iranians sinking one
of our carriers in the Persian Gulf. How'd you like to be the president who has
to tell the American people that we've lost a carrier for the first time since
World War II?
Exactly how the Iranians will respond to an attack, I don't
know, but they will respond. In keeping with our present policy, our attack on
Iran would be illegal, since under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, Iran
has the right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes.
Who would have
thought that we would become the rogue nation committing acts of aggression
around the globe?
++
bonus
'Oh Happy
Day'
BOB HERBERT, NYT
July 1, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/01/opinion/01herbert.html
It's getting harder and harder to remain deluded. With each day comes
new facts to drag our heads out of the sand.
Two weeks ago, The Times
reported that four Western oil giants were on the verge of signing no-bid
contracts that would return them to Iraq, the third-most bountiful petroleum
playground on the planet. The deals, expected to be finalized in the next 30
days, were the kind of news that big oil lives for.
Giddy executives
singing "Oh Happy Day" could be heard in the corporate offices of Exxon Mobil,
Shell, Total and BP, which had been shut out of Iraq for three and a half
decades.
We also learned this week that a group of American advisers, led
by a team from the State Department, played a key role in drawing up the
contracts between the companies and the Iraqi government. Chevron and several
smaller oil companies are also on the verge of signing
contracts.
President Bush and Vice President Cheney, both former
oil-company executives, have long tried to tell us this war was about terrorism,
about weapons of mass destruction, about bringing freedom and democracy to the
Iraqi people, about anything but oil.
Said Mr. Bush: "We cannot wait for
the final proof, the smoking gun that could come in the form of a mushroom
cloud."
He didn't wait. It didn't matter that Saddam Hussein posed no
imminent threat to the U.S. Or that Iraq had nothing to do with the attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001. The troops were sent into battle in early 2003 and there is
still, after more than five years and more than 4,000 American deaths, no end to
the war in sight.
One of the starkest examples of U.S. priorities came
during the eruption of looting that followed the fall of Baghdad. With violence
and chaos all about, American troops were ordered to protect one particularly
treasured target — the Iraqi Oil Ministry. As David Rieff wrote in The Times
Magazine in November 2003:
"This decision to protect only the Oil Ministry — not the National
Museum, not the National Library, not the Health Ministry — probably did more
than anything else to convince Iraqis uneasy with the occupation that the United
States was in Iraq only for the oil."
How convenient that the
peculiar perspective of the oil-obsessed Bush administration can now be put to
use advising the Iraqi government on its contracts with big oil.
The
contracts themselves are not huge. They are like the keys on a coveted ring that
will begin opening the doors to Iraq's vast oil reserves. As The Times reported
Monday, "At a time of spiraling oil prices, the no-bid contracts, in a country
with some of the world's largest untapped fields and potential for vast profits,
are a rare prize to the industry."
A prize, yes. But at what
cost?
In addition to the terrible toll of Americans and Iraqis killed and
wounded, the war in Iraq has diverted attention and resources from critical
problems here in the U.S., where the housing market has been crippled, the stock
market has tanked, gasoline has soared past $4 per gallon, unemployment is
increasing and an extraordinary number of debt-ridden working families are
staring into a financial abyss.
Even as oil companies are enjoying
staggering profits, many Americans — in July! — are already worried sick about
the potentially ruinous cost of heating their homes next winter.
And
then there's the so-called war on terror.
The latest news is that Al
Qaeda, the terror network that actually did attack the U.S., has successfully
regrouped in the tribal areas of Pakistan and has reconstituted its ability to
institute terror attacks from the region.
For an administration joined at
the hip to the oil industry, the lure of Iraq's enormous reserves was stronger
even than the impulse to conquer an enemy that murdered more than 2,700
civilians on Sept. 11, a toll greater than the number of Americans killed by the
Japanese at Pearl Harbor.
Referring to Al Qaeda members who regrouped in
Pakistan, The Times reported on Monday:
"Current and former military
and intelligence officials said that the war in Iraq consistently diverted
resources and high-level attention from the tribal areas. When American military
and intelligence officials requested additional Predator drones to survey the
tribal areas, they were told no drones were available because they had been sent
to Iraq."
Who knows how long it will be before the U.S. disengages
in any significant way from Iraq. What you can take to the bank is that this
country will not make any major advances in energy policy, in health coverage,
in rebuilding its infrastructure, in improving its public schools or in
curtailing runaway public and private debt until our open-ended commitment to
this catastrophic multitrillion-dollar war comes to an end.
How long will
it take before that finally sinks in? ++
It Was Oil, All
Along
Bill Moyers and Michael Winship, BuzzFlash
Fri,
06/27/2008
http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/contributors/1673
Oh, no, they told us, Iraq isn't a war about oil. That's cynical and
simplistic, they said. It's about terror and al Qaeda and toppling a dictator
and spreading democracy and protecting ourselves from weapons of mass
destruction. But one by one, these concocted rationales went up in smoke, fire,
and ashes. And now the bottom line turns out to be....the bottom line. It is
about oil.
Alan Greenspan said so last fall. The former chairman of the
Federal Reserve, safely out of office, confessed in his memoir, "...Everyone
knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil." He elaborated in an interview with
The Washington Post's Bob Woodward, "If Saddam Hussein had been head of Iraq and
there was no oil under those sands, our response to him would not have been as
strong as it was in the first gulf war."
Remember, also, that soon after
the invasion, Donald Rumsfeld's deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, told the press that war
was our only strategic choice.
"...We had virtually no economic options with Iraq," he explained, "because
the country floats on a sea of oil."
Shades of Daniel Plainview, the
monstrous petroleum tycoon in the movie "There Will Be Blood." Half-mad, he
exclaims, "There's a whole ocean of oil under our feet!" then adds, "No one can
get at it except for me!"
No wonder American troops only guarded the
Ministries of Oil and the Interior in Baghdad, even as looters pillaged museums
of their priceless antiquities. They were making sure no one could get at the
oil except... guess who?
Here's a recent headline in The New York Times:
"Deals with Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back." Read on: "Four western
companies are in the final stages of negotiations this month on contracts that
will return them to Iraq, 36 years after losing their oil concession to
nationalization as Saddam Hussein rose to power."
There you have it.
After a long exile, Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total, and BP are back in Iraq. And on
the wings of no-bid contracts -- that's right, sweetheart deals such as those
given Halliburton, KBR, Blackwater. The kind of deals you get only if you have
friends in high places. And these war profiteers have friends in very high
places.
Let's go back a few years to the 1990's, when private citizen
Dick Cheney was running Halliburton, the big energy supplier. That's when he
told the oil industry that, "By 2010 we will need on the order of an additional
50 million barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from? While many
regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East, with
two-thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize
ultimately lies."
Fast forward to Cheney's first heady days in the White
House. The oil industry and other energy conglomerates have been handed backdoor
keys to the White House, and their CEOs and lobbyists were trooping in and out
for meetings with their old pal, now Vice President Cheney. The meetings are
secret, conducted under tight security, but as we reported five years ago, among
the documents that turned up from some of those meetings were maps of oil fields
in Iraq -- and a list of companies who wanted access to them. The conservative
group Judicial Watch and the Sierra Club filed suit to try to find out who
attended the meetings and what was discussed, but the White House fought all the
way to the Supreme Court to keep the press and public from learning the whole
truth.
Think about it. These secret meetings took place six months before
9/11, two years before Bush and Cheney invaded Iraq. We still don't know what
they were about. What we know is that the oil industry is enjoying swollen
profits these days. It would be laughable if it weren't so painful to remember
that their erstwhile cheerleader for invading Iraq -- the press mogul Rupert
Murdoch -- once said that a successful war there would bring us $20 a barrel of
oil. The last time we looked, it was more than $140 a barrel. Where are you,
Rupert, when the facts need checking and the predictions are
revisited?
At a Congressional hearing this week, James Hansen, the NASA
climate scientist who exactly 20 years ago alerted Congress and the world to the
dangers of global warming, compared the chief executives of Big Oil to the
tobacco moguls who denied that nicotine is addictive or that there's a link
between smoking and cancer. Hansen, who the administration has tried again and
again to silence, said these barons of black gold should be tried for committing
crimes against humanity and nature in opposing efforts to deal with global
warming.
Perhaps those sweetheart deals in Iraq should be added to his
proposed indictments. They have been purchased at a very high price. Four
thousand American soldiers dead, tens of thousands permanently wounded for life,
hundreds of thousands of dead and crippled Iraqis plus 5 million displaced, and
a cost that will mount into trillions of dollars. The political analyst Kevin
Phillips says America has become little more than an "energy protection force,"
doing anything to gain access to expensive fuel without regard to the lives of
others or the Earth itself. One thinks again of Daniel Plainview in "There Will
Be Blood." His lust for oil came at the price of his son and his soul.
++
Bill Moyers is managing editor and Michael Winship is senior
writer of the weekly public affairs program Bill Moyers Journal, which airs
Friday night on PBS.
Operation Horse's Head: U.S. Raid
Sends Message on Iraq "Agreement"
Chris Floyd, EmpireBurlesque
Sunday, 29 June 2008
http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/linkframe.php?linkid=62962
As we know from The Godfather -- that seminal work of American
political philosophy which serves as the Bible for policy-making in the Bush
Administration -- a horse's head in the bed can be highly effective tool in
difficult contract negotiations. Last Friday, Bush went his fictional mentors
one better in the "negotiations" over an agreement setting out the public terms
of a de facto permanent American occupation of the conquered land: he laid the
corpse of a kinsman on the doorstep of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki.
McClatchy Newspapers reports that U.S. Special Forces launched
a deadly raid in al-Maliki's home province -- which has supposedly been returned
to the full control of the Iraqi government. Without any warning to Iraqi
forces, the American unit stormed the rural town of Janaja at dawn on Friday
with 60 troops and in the course of the raid killed Ali Abdulhussein Razak al
Maliki, one of the prime minister's many relatives in the area, where he was
born and where his tribe is based.
No Iraqi authority was notified of
this heavily armed raid -- complete with jets and helicopters -- on supposedly
"sovereign," supposedly Iraqi-controlled territory. Certainly the prime minister
himself knew nothing of the impending attack on his hometown. And once the
operation was over, Iraqi military officers -- trained, funded, armed and
embedded with U.S. forces -- said that "the Americans had acted on faulty
intelligence."
The raid comes at what appears to be a delicate juncture
in the on-going talks to establish a "status of forces agreement" for the
American military presence in Iraq. Iraqi government officials have publicly
balked at some of the most howlingly sinister, moustache-twirling proposals of
the Bush Administration: 5o American bases! Complete legal immunity from Iraqi
law! Right to launch deadly attacks anytime, anywhere in the country! Right to
launch attacks on other nations from Iraq! Total control of Iraqi airspace! and
so on. The Bush Administration has made a show of "recalibrating" some of its
demands and, in the end, will probably modify a few of them: 30 permanent bases,
say, instead of 50, or, as has already been suggested, putting Iraqi guard posts
outside the gargantuan U.S. military plantations and pretending they are
actually Iraqi bases with a few invited guests inside.
But the openly
stated goal of the Bush Faction -- even before they seized power in 2000 -- has
always been to reduce Iraq to a client state with a permanent American military
presence and a kicked-down "open door" for exploitation by Western corporate
interests. This overarching goal of the entire American enterprise in Iraq has
been abundantly clear from the very beginning. That's why the occupation has
seemed so haphazard and chaotic: because the Bushists literally don't care how
the deal gets done -- as long as they get what they want in the end. The details
-- nor the human cost -- of installing and maintaining a pliable "government" in
Baghdad didn't matter: sectarian war, painting schools, rampant terrorism,
passing out candy, mass roundups, civics lessons, the decimation of whole
cities, building a soccer field, surges, ceremonies, a million people dead --
who cares? Try anything and everything, as long as you keep your eyes on the
prize: a client state and forward bastion in the American empire of military
bases -- with the second biggest oil reserves in the world.
In the
al-Maliki government, the Bushists have their best shot at nailing down the
ultimate prize down at last. So it's going to be hardball in the "negotiations"
of the "status of forces agreement" (which even the corporate media recognizes
as a transparent sham to avoid a Congressional vote on America's acquisition of
a new colony. Although given the track record of the Democratic "opposition,"
it's hard to see why the Bushists would be too worried about pushing a formal
treaty down the collective throat of Congress. Can't you hear Barack Obama now,
announcing, in solemn tones, that although he does not agree with every aspect
of the Iraq treaty, "it represents the best hope for bringing this tragic
conflict to a close, ensuring the future of the Iraqi people and honoring the
sacrifices of our fallen soldiers. Therefore I will support this measure.")
As Kurdish legislator Mahmoud Othman noted, the raid was a "big
embarrassment" for al-Maliki, "because he was in that area two days before the
incident, telling his people that we are the masters in our country and the
decisions were ours to make." Clearly, the attack on al-Maliki's hometown and
the killing of his kinsman were intended to send a double message. First, that
any notion of Iraqi "sovereignty" is and always will be a joke, whatever pious
verbiage gets spouted for the rubes back home. And second -- well, it goes
something like this: "Hey, Nouri, see Cousin Ali here? You're next, pal, if you
don't play ball!"
No doubt there will be a passing "political crisis" in
Iraq over this hit job -- as there have been about so many other incidents
before, from Haditha to Ishaqi to the Blackwater killing spree -- but it won't
matter in the end. The cobbled-together conglomeration of collaborators and
corruptocrats in the Baghdad "government" know they cannot survive without
direct and massive American military support. The most they can hope for is to
kick the negotiations down the road a bit, and see if they can get a slightly
better deal from the next administration in Washington. (Obama, being such an
"anti-war" candidate and all, would probably settle for, oh, 25 long-term
"leases" on military bases for the tens of thousands of troops he intends on
keeping in Iraq to carry out "counter-terrorism operations," train Iraqi forces
and provide security for "American interests" throughout the land, including the
bristling, sprawling "Fortress America" embassy in the heart of Baghdad.)
But Friday's operation was a strong indication that the Bushists might
not be willing to let al-Maliki dally too much longer over an agreement. To
avert once more to that seminal work: either al-Maliki's brains or his signature
will be on that sheet of paper before the final credits roll. ++
http://www.politicalwaves.net
"So keep fightin' for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't you
forget to have fun doin' it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous,
ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce.
And when you get through kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy of a good
fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it was."
~
Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007
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