GAZA…. OPERATION ‘WINTER STORM’, PART 2

LIVING IN TENTS IN WINTER!!!???

WE SHOULD MAKE CONGRESS WINTER IN SOME TENTS, TO MAKE THEM UNDERSTAND THE INHUMANITY WE SUPPORT EVERYDAY IN THAT SHITTY LITTLE FASCIST COUNTRY IN THE MIDDLE EAST!

GAZA…. OPERATION ‘WINTER STORM’, PART 2

After ISRAEL demolished their homes

Where are the international human rights organization to see the suffering of Palestinian citizens in Gaza?


It is winter in Gaza and according to the UNITED NATIONS, 50,800 people are now homeless and have no access to the basic necessities of life.

400,000 people are without running water

Most water, sewer, and power facilities have been completely destroyed or rendered inoperable.

Israel has proven to be so completely unaccountable

Heritage Foundation Frets Over Ravelling Alliance, Seeks Renewed World Domination

Brown Thinks Its Time for US/Britain to Begin New World Order

The Subtle Seeds of the Terror War (1986)

Obama buries Reaganomics under $3.6 trillion mountain

The president has killed off the idea of small government with a vast schedule of tax and spend to combat recession













The Obama–Brown White House Talks: The U.S.–U.K. Special Relationship Must Be Maintained

WebMemo #2317
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will be the first European leader to meet with President Barack Obama when he visits the White House on March 3. The two world leaders are expected to discuss a range of issues, including the war in Afghanistan, the Iranian nuclear threat, and the global financial crisis, as well as the upcoming G-20 talks in London and the NATO 60th anniversary summit in Strasbourg/Kehl.

In addition to meeting with the President, Brown will address a joint session of Congress on March 4, making him only the fifth British prime minister to be given the honor.

A Shift Away from Britain?

The Brown–Obama meeting will be overshadowed by growing concerns about a possible weakening of the U.S.–U.K. Special Relationship, tensions over strategy in the war in Afghanistan, and the threat of a renewed American protectionism.

The Anglo-American alliance is being eroded on several fronts, from falling levels of U.K. defense spending and the gutting of Britain’s armed forces by the Labour government to the gradual erosion of British sovereignty in Europe and the rise of a European Union defense identity now being backed by Washington. It is also threatened by the new U.S. Administration’s apathy and indifference toward the U.K.

President Obama’s surprise decision to remove a bust of Sir Winston Churchill from the Oval Office and return it to the British government sent an early signal to London that the new Administration will adopt a far less robust approach toward the historic Anglo-American alliance. The White House is already recalibrating the alliance as a “special partnership,” —not a “special relationship”—a subtle play on words indicating a potential shift away from a decades-long policy of according Britain a unique status as America’s most important ally.

U.S. Overtures to Europe

The Obama White House is keen to significantly strengthen America’s relationship with both France and Germany, continental Europe’s biggest powers, as well as with Brussels, the institutional heart of the European Union. This approach is partly the product of a distinctly pro-European outlook on the part of the new Administration following transatlantic tensions during the Bush Administration. It is also based on a naive belief that major European allies will actually increase defense spending and reduce the burden on America and that the EU will play a more supportive role in world affairs alongside the United States.

Washington is already making major concessions to France in the NATO alliance, with French officers reportedly in line to take two senior NATO command positions: Allied Command Transformation (one of NATO’s two supreme commands, based in Norfolk, Virginia) and Joint Command Lisbon (one of NATO’s three main operations headquarters, which also commands the NATO Rapid Reaction Force).

The White House is also sending clear signals that it supports a greater military and defense role for the European Union. In his speech at the Munich Security Conference in early February, Vice President Joe Biden made it clear that the United States will “support the further strengthening of European defense, an increased role for the European Union in preserving peace and security, [and] a fundamentally stronger NATO–EU partnership.”

Anglo-American Leadership Is NeededSince the Second World War, there has scarcely been a more important period for joint U.S.–British leadership. The Anglo-American Special Relationship would be imperiled if the new U.S. Administration looks to Brussels instead of London for its most important strategic partnership. Jeopardizing this relationship would be a huge mistake. The EU is obsessed with challenging American global leadership rather than working with it, and the European Project is ultimately all about building a counterweight to American power.

The Obama–Brown White House meeting will be an important opportunity for the President and the Prime Minister to establish a stronger framework for Anglo-American cooperation on the world stage, particularly in regard to key issues such as Afghanistan, the future of NATO, and the Iranian nuclear crisis.

The War in AfghanistanDespite all the fashionable rhetoric in European capitals about Iraq being a distraction from the war against the Taliban, on the battlefields of Afghanistan almost two-thirds of the 47,000 troops currently serving as part of the 40-nation NATO-led International Security Assistance Force are from the English-speaking countries of the U.S., the U.K., Canada, and Australia. These nations have also taken roughly 85 percent of the casualties. Britain has nearly as many troops in the country as all the other major European Union powers combined, some of whom, like Germany, cower under dozens of “caveats” aimed at keeping their troops out of harm’s way. The United States has pledged to send an additional 17,000 troops, and the U.K. is also considering the deployment of further forces to boost the nearly 9,000 British soldiers already serving in Helmand province.

President Obama and Prime Minister Brown should directly challenge European complacency and indifference over Afghanistan and issue a strong statement calling on European allies to pull their weight in the conflict by sending more combat troops to the south of the country. NATO is a war-fighting alliance, not a peacekeeping organization. The stakes are extremely high, and there is a danger that the brutal Taliban, backed by al-Qaeda, will reassert control over vast swathes of the country.

Europe’s NATO members must make a no-strings attached commitment to step up to the plate and bear a bigger part of the burden. If this does not happen, the consequences for the future of the alliance will be dire. European apathy over Afghanistan threatens to tear NATO apart, and an institution that has for decades succeeded as the most effective international organization of its time could become irrelevant. It is time for French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and other European leaders to roll up their sleeves and commit their troops and resources to winning the war against the Taliban.

The Future of NATO

In the lead-up to the NATO 60th anniversary summit, both the United States and Great Britain must take a step back and launch a fundamental, wide-ranging review of the long-term implications of French demands for the future of the alliance.

It would be a huge strategic error of judgment by the new U.S. Administration and the British government to support French ambitions for restructuring Europe’s security architecture. This would ultimately weaken the Anglo-American Special Relationship as the engine of the transatlantic alliance and pave the way for the development of a separate European Union defense identity, which will ultimately undermine NATO.

Washington and London must also commit to advancing the expansion of the NATO alliance—specifically the inclusion of Georgia and Ukraine in the Membership Action Plan. The new U.S. Administration, together with Britain, should send a clear signal to Moscow that NATO expansion is an internal matter for the alliance and not open to Russian veto. A firm commitment must also be made by the Obama Administration to establish a third site missile defense system in Eastern and Central Europe, a vital part of a global defense shield that is needed to protect the West from rogue regimes such as Iran.

The Iranian Nuclear Threat

President Obama and Prime Minister Brown should issue a strong statement calling for the strengthening of both U.N. Security Council and European sanctions against Tehran. The U.S. and British leaders must push for European countries to support a complete investment freeze—including a ban on investment in Iranian liquefied natural gas operations—and the possible use of military force as a last resort against Iran’s nuclear facilities. They should reject the idea of direct negotiations with a tyranny that has threatened to wipe a key ally, Israel, off the face of the earth. This is a time for tough resolve in the face of an extremely dangerous foe—a rogue state close to nuclear capability ruled by fanatical Islamists that will have no qualms about using their power to dominate the Middle East or to arm a wide array of proxy international terrorist groups.

The EU has tried to negotiate with Tehran for several years under the guise of “constructive engagement,” an approach that has resulted in an emboldened Iran that grows closer by the day to building a nuclear weapon. The EU’s policy toward Iran has been all carrot and no stick—a futile exercise that has achieved nothing but failure.

Great Britain Is America’s Most Reliable Friend

The Special Relationship is vital to American and British interests on many levels, from military, diplomatic, and intelligence cooperation to transatlantic trading ties. If President Obama does not invest in its preservation, the end result will be a weaker United States that is less able to stand up to terrorism and tyranny, and project power and influence on the world stage.

Whether waging war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda, standing up to the Russian bear, or halting Iran’s nuclear ambitions, President Obama should maintain the Anglo-American Special Relationship as the centerpiece of the transatlantic alliance. As nearly every post-war President has found, when it comes to securing the free world, there is simply no alternative to U.S.–British leadership

Nile Gardiner is the Director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom at the Heritage Foundation. Erica Munkwitz assisted with research for this paper.

To politicians, we’re little more than meaningless blobs on a monitor. Bring on the summer of rage

To politicians, we’re little more than meaningless blobs on a monitor. Bring on the summer of rage

We’re the ants in their garden. The bacteria in their stools. Politicians have nothing but contempt for us

Charlie Brooker

    Any abusive relationship tends to end with a long, slow phase of mounting disappointment followed by a sudden, irreversible snapping point. The descent to rock bottom may take years but when you get there, the force of impact still shocks, and it’s precisely this shock that gives you the strength to walk away. Take smoking, for instance. You can light up for years, hating yourself and the habit a little bit more with each accumulated puff, yet remain hopelessly locked in nicotine’s pointless embrace, until one day you find yourself scrabbling through the kitchen bin, picking potato peelings off a dog end because it’s 11pm and the shops are closed and GOD YOU NEED A FAG . . . when you catch sight of your sorry junkie-arsed reflection in the shiny bin lid and undergo an epiphany of self-disgust, vowing to quit there and then.

    I bring this up because I suspect that across the country, people are undergoing similar epiphanies every day. Not about cigarettes, but politicians. My personal snapping point was reached last week, at the precise moment Jack Straw announced the government was vetoing the Information Tribunal’s order for the release of cabinet minutes relating to that whole invasion-of-Iraq thing. Come on, you remember Iraq: that little foreign policy blip millions of us protested against to absolutely zero avail, because Straw and his pals figured they knew best, even though it turned out they didn’t and – oops! – hundreds of thousands of lives were lost as a result. Remember the footage of that screaming little boy with his limbs blown off? Maybe not. Maybe you felt a shiver of guilt when you saw that; guilt that you hadn’t personally done enough to prevent it; should’ve shouted louder, marched further. Or maybe it stunned you into numbness. Because what was the point in protesting any more? These people do what they want.

    They do what they want, these people, and you and I are cut out of the conversation. I’m sure they’re dimly aware we still exist. They must spot us occasionally, through the window, jumping up and down in the cold with our funny placards . . . although come to think of it, they can’t even see us through the window, since they banned peaceful protest within a mile of Parliament.

    Instead they pick us up on a monitor, courtesy of one of the 15bn CCTV cameras that scrutinise our every move in the name of security. On the screen you’re nothing but a tiny monochrome blob; two-dimensional and faceless. And that’s just how they like it.

    Straw and co blocked the release of the minutes, claiming that to actually let us know what was going on would set a dangerous precedent that would harm good government. Ministers wouldn’t speak frankly at cabinet meetings if they felt their discussions would be subjected to the sort of scrutiny that, say, our every waking move is. In other words, they’d be more worried about the press coverage they’d get than the strength of their arguments.

    Well, boo hoo. Surely craven pussies like that shouldn’t be governing anyway?

    Having pissed in the public’s face, Straw went on to shake the final drips down its nose, writing a defence of the government’s civil liberties record in this paper in which he claimed “talk of Britain sliding into a police state is daft scaremongering, but even were it true there is a mechanism to prevent it – democratic elections . . .

    People have the power to vote out administrations which they believe are heavy-handed.” Thanks, Jacksy – can I call you Jacksy? – but who the hell are we supposed to vote in? Despite a bit of grumbling, the Tories supported the veto. Because they wouldn’t want cabinet minutes published either.

    It’s all over. The politicians have finally shut us out of their game for good and we have nowhere left to turn. We’re not part of their world any more. We don’t even speak the same language. We’re the ants in their garden. The bacteria in their stools. They have nothing but contempt for us. They snivel and lie and duck questions on torture – on torture, for Christ’s sake – while demanding we respect their authority. They monitor our every belch and fart, and insist it’s all for our own good.

    Straw wrote, “If people were angels there would be no need for government . . . But sadly people are not all angels.” That rather makes it sound as though he believes politicians aren’t mere people. Maybe they’re the gods of Olympus. Maybe that’s why they’re in charge.

    Thing is, they could get away with this bullshit while times were good, while people were comfortable enough to ignore what was happening; when people were focusing on plasma TVs and iPods and celebrity gossip instead of what the politicians were doing – not because they’re stupid, but because they know a closed shop when they see one. But now it looks as if those times are at an end, and more and more of us are pulling the dreampipes from the back of our skulls, undergoing a negative epiphany; blinking into the cold light of day.

    Consequently the police are preparing for a “summer of rage”. To the powers that be, that probably just means more tiny monochrome blobs jumping up and down on the long-distance monitor for their amusement. Should it turn out to be more visceral than that, they’ll have no one to blame but themselves.

    This week Charlie managed to convince himself he was coming down with the winter vomiting bug three times despite a total lack of symptoms: “Apparently, it comes on so fast the first sign you’ve got it is the sight of puke shooting unexpectedly from your own mouth, followed almost immediately by an involuntary trouser-soiling evacuation of the bowels.”

    It’s Obama’s War, Now

    It’s Obama’s War, Now

    Chris Hedges

    obama_lejune_speech300.jpg
    USMC / LCpl Michael J. Ayotte
    President Obama talks to service members and civilians during a visit to Camp Lejeune, N.C., where he elaborated on his exit strategy from Iraq.

    March 2, 2009

    This is the text of a talk by Chris Hedges that will be read at anti-war gatherings to be held by The World Can’t Wait in New York’s Union Square, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Nashville, Louisville, Chicago and Berkeley on March 19 to protest the sixth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    Barack Obama has shown that he is as capable of doublespeak as any other politician when he announced an end to the war in Iraq. Combat troops are to be pulled out of Iraq by August 2010, he said, but some 50,000 occupation troops will remain behind. Someone should let the Iraqis know the distinction. I doubt any soldier or Marine in Iraq will notice much difference in 19 months. Many combat units will simply be relabeled as noncombat units. And what about our small army of well-paid contractors and mercenaries? Will Dyncorp, Bechtel, Blackwater (which recently changed its name to Xe), all of whom have made fortunes off the war, pack up and go home? What about the three large super-bases, dozens of smaller military outposts and our imperial city, the Green Zone? Will American corporations give up their lucrative control of Iraqi oil?

    The occupation of Iraq will not be disrupted. Lies and deception, which launched the war in the first place, are being employed by Democrats to maintain it. This is not a withdrawal. It is occupation lite. And as long as American troops are on Iraqi soil the war will grind on, the death toll on each side will continue to mount and we will remain a lightning rod for hatred and rage in the Middle East. Add to this Obama’s decision to increase troop levels in Afghanistan and even his most purblind supporters will have to admit the new president is as intent on maintaining American empire as the old.

    The occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan has not promoted U.S. security or stability in the Middle East. These occupations have furthered the spread of failed states, increased authoritarianism and unleashed savage violence. They have opened up voids of lawlessness, including in the tribal areas of Pakistan, where our real enemies can operate and plot against us. These occupations have scuttled the art of diplomacy and mocked the rule of law. We have become an outlaw state intent on creating more outlaw states. The occupations have, finally, empowered Iran, as well as Russia and China, which gleefully watch our self-immolation. And, in the end, we cannot win these wars. We will withdraw all our troops in an orderly manner or see these occupations collapse in an orgy of bloodshed.

    Iraq, because of our invasion and occupation, no longer exists as a unified country. The experiment that was Iraq, the cobbling together of disparate and antagonistic patches of the Ottoman Empire by the victorious powers in the wake of World War I, will never come back. The Kurds have set up a de facto state in the north. The Shiites control most of the south. The center of the country is a battleground. There are at least 2 million Iraqis who have fled their homes and are internally displaced. Another 2 million have left the country, most to Syria and Jordan, which now has the largest number of refugees per capita of any country on Earth. And perhaps as many as 1.2 million Iraqis are dead because of what we have done.

    The eight-year war in Afghanistan has seen the Taliban re-emerge from the ashes. An additional 30,000 troops will do little to prop up the detested and corrupt regime of Hamid Karzai. Our attempt to buy off Afghan tribal groups with money and even weapons has collapsed, with most slipping back into the arms of the Taliban insurgents. The U.N. estimates that the Taliban is now raking in $300 million a year from the expanded poppy trade to fund the resistance. The Taliban controlled about 75 percent of Afghan territory when we invaded eight years ago. It has recaptured about half of the country since its initial defeat, and its reach has expanded to the outskirts of major cities such as Kabul and Kandahar. Twenty-nine American troops died in Afghanistan the first two months of 2009, a threefold increase compared with the eight who died during the same period last year. And more Afghan civilians are dying in allied operations than at the hands of the Taliban, according to a count by the Associated Press. In the first two months of the year, American, NATO or Afghan forces have killed 100 civilians, while militants have killed 60.

    Do the cheerleaders for an expanded war in Afghanistan know any history? Have they studied what happened to the Soviets, who lost 15,000 Red Army soldiers between 1979 and 1988, or even the British in the 19th century? Do they remember why we went into Afghanistan? It was, we were told, to hunt down Osama bin Laden, who is now apparently in Pakistan. Has anyone asked what our end goal is in Afghanistan? Is it nation-building? Have we declared war on the Taliban? Or is this simply the forever war on terror?

    Al-Qaida, which we have also inadvertently resurrected, still finds plenty of recruits. It still runs training facilities. It still carries out attacks in London, Madrid, Iraq and now Afghanistan, which did not experience suicide bombings until December 2005. Al-Qaida has moved on. But we remain stuck, confused and lashing about wildly like a wounded and lumbering beast.

    Obama, during the campaign, promised that he would pull out one combat brigade per month over a 16-month period from Iraq. But this promise has been scrapped. Instead, troop levels will remain steady for most of this year and into the first few months of 2010. Troops will only start leaving, we are told, in large numbers in the spring and summer of next year, but even the pace of this downsizing will be left to the discretion of commanders. The troops left in Iraq after the “withdrawal” will, the Obama administration says, train Iraqi soldiers, protect U.S. assets and conduct “anti-terror operations.”

    The U.S. agreement with Iraq, known as SOFA, or status of forces agreement, calls for all U.S. forces to be out of Iraq by the end of December 2011. But this seems very unlikely. The Pentagon has, despite the SOFA agreement, built its long-range planning around the assumption that anywhere from 30,000 to 50,000 troops will be based in Iraq long after 2011. The U.S.-Iraq agreement (which was ratified by the Iraqi parliament but never brought to the U.S. Senate for ratification, as mandated by the Constitution) calls for a national referendum to be held in Iraq during the summer of 2009. Iraqis will supposedly be able to approve or reject the agreement. The some 50 U.S. bases in Iraq are, under the agreement, to be turned over to the Iraqis.

    Will Obama defy the results of a referendum and ram the continued occupation down the throats of Iraqi voters? It certainly looks like it. Of course, all this will be handled, I suspect, by having our client government in Baghdad “request” that we remain, making an even greater farce of our public commitment to democracy.

    There are huge corporations who are making a lot of money off this war. Obama seems intent on not impeding the profits. So much for our anti-war candidate. We should have known better than to trust the Democrats after they rode to power in Congress in 2006 on an anti-war platform and then continued to fund our wars and approve increased troop levels in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    If the delicate cease-fire we have negotiated with the former Sunni insurgents in Iraq breaks down, how will we respond? Suppose the some 100,000 Sunnis, who have been allowed to ethnically cleanse the areas they control and build militias, turn on the central Shiite-led government. Suppose we can no longer buy off these Sunni “Awakening” militias with the $300-a-month salaries we dispense to these fighters. Suppose the war heats up again. This is what happened in Afghanistan when we tried to bribe tribal groups with money and support. A deterioration of the security situation in Iraq could instantly scuttle even a reduction of forces.

    And the military, if some troops do leave Iraq, will have to rely more heavily on airstrikes to control territory and keep insurgents at bay. The airstrikes in Afghanistan have, along with the expanded fighting, driven tens of thousands of Afghan refugees into Iran and Pakistan. Even the Karzai government has vigorously protested these airstrikes, which feed scores of recruits to the Taliban. Expect the same ugly backlash in Iraq.

    I could live with the prolonged injustice of the occupation in Iraq if I thought there would really be peace, that we could then help rebuild the country we destroyed and that we had restored the rule of law by rejecting the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive war, something that under post-Nuremberg laws is defined as a criminal “war of aggression.” I could live with 19 months more of the war if I knew it would really be the end. But the war in Iraq, like Afghanistan, will go on. Our imperial projects and killing will continue under the Obama presidency. Many more, including some of our own, will die.

    The only hope now lies in renewed protests against the war and a reinvigorated anti-war movement. This time the movement should hold fast, as stalwarts like Cindy Sheehan, Cynthia McKinney and Ralph Nader have, to the moral imperative of peace and not the false hopes offered by the Democrats. They cannot be trusted. Politics is a game of pressure. Abandon that pressure and you lose.


    :: Article nr. 52281 sent on 21-nov-2009 16:42 ECT
    www.uruknet.info?p=52281

    Link: www.truthdig.com/report/print/20090302_its_obamas_war_now/

    Wikileaks cracks NATO’s Master Narrative for Afghanistan

    Wikileaks cracks NATO’s Master Narrative for Afghanistan

    WIKILEAKS EDITORIAL

    deadafghani.jpg
    An unrelated leaked photo from the war: a US soldier poses with a dead Afghani man in the hills of Afghanistan

    Feb 27, 2009

    The encrypted document, which is dated October 6, and believed to be current, can be found on the Pentagon Central Command (CENTCOM) website oneteam.centcom.mil. [UPDATE: Fri Feb 27 15:18:38 GMT 2009, the entire Pentagon site is now down--probably in response to this editorial, parts of the site can still be seen in Google's cache ]

    The encryption password is progress, which perhaps reflects the Pentagon’s desire to stay on-message, even to itself.

    Among the revelations, which we encourage the press to review in detail, is Jordan’s presence as secret member of the US lead occupation force, the ISAF.

    Jordan is a middle eastern monarchy, backed by the US, and historically the CIA’s closest partner in its extraordinary rendition program. “the practice of torture is routine” in the country, according to a January 2007 report by UN special investigator for torture, Manfred Nowak.[1]

    The document states NATO spokespersons are to keep Jordan’s involvement secret. Publicly, Jordan withdrew in 2001 and the country does not appear on this month’s public list of ISAF member states.[2]

    Some other notes on matters to treat delicately are:

    • Any decision on the end date/end state will be taken by the respective national and/or Alliance political committee. Under no circumstances should the mission end-date be a topic for speculation in public by any NATO/ISAF spokespeople.
    • The term “compensation” is inappropriate and should not be used because it brings with it legal implications that do not apply.
    • Any talk of stationing or deploying Russian military assets in Afghanistan is out of the question and has never been the subject of any considerations.
    • Only if pressed: ISAF forces are frequently fired at from inside Pakistan, very close to the border. In some cases defensive fire is required, against specific threats. Wherever possible, such fire is pre-coordinated with the Pakistani military.

    Altogether four classified or restricted NATO documents on the Pentagon Central Command (CENTCOM) site were discovered to share the ‘progress’ password. Wikileaks has decrypted the documents and released them in full:

    Notes

    1. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/30/AR2007113002484_pf.html
    2. http://www.nato.int/isaf/docu/epub/pdf/isaf_placemat.pdf


    :: Article nr. 52301 sent on 22-nov-2009 03:49 ECT
    www.uruknet.info?p=52301

    Link: https://secure.wikileaks.org/wiki/Wikileaks_cracks_NATO%27s_Master_Narrative_for
    _Afghanistan

    Wikileaks releases major RAND study into Iraq, Afghan intelligence, counterinsugency: Pentagon Papers II?

    Wikileaks releases major RAND study into Iraq, Afghan intelligence, counterinsugency: Pentagon Papers II?

    Wikileaks

    March 2, 2009

    Major RAND study with 300 interviews: Intelligence Operations and Metrics in Iraq and Afghanistan, Nov 2008

    Download from
    fast site, current site, Sweden, US, Latvia, Slovakia, UK, Finland, Netherlands, Poland, Tonga, Europe, SSL, Tor


    Summary

    This major November, 2008 RAND Corporation study on intelligence operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, conducted 300 interviews at all levels with US, UK and Dutch intelligence officers and diplomats.

    The 318 page document could be described as part of the “Pentagon Papers” for Iraq and Afghanistan. It was confidentially prepared for the Pentagon’s Joint Forces Command and focuses on intelligence and counterinsurgency operations.

    Marked “For Official Use Only” study was distribution restricted to a select group of Coalition war partners and Israel.

    The study is a notable news and policy source, not for its arguments or conclusions, but rather for its wealth of candid and revealing interview quotes which are spread throughout the document, but especially in the 200 page appendix.

    The material has been verified, and we ask readers to go through the document to extract key quotes for their communities. There is a wealth of interview quotes on almost every aspect of the wars. The authors of the quotes, ranging from the UK Ambassador and the former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency to on the ground intelligence officers, can be discovered via the footnote appendix.

    Sample quote:

    [THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBES THE PROCESS OF USING LOCAL GROUPS IN COUNTER-INSURGENCY PSYOPS, TO DIVIDE AND FRACTURE THE LOCAL POPULATION, USING CARROT AND STICK TACTICS, CULTIVATING A FRIENDLY GROUP, WHILE NEUTRALIZING "NON-COMPLIANTS."]


    COIN Shaping Operations Are a Matter of Holding Ground with Some Segments of the
    Population While Altering Attitudes in Others

    If you are able to win over the real loyalty of a small percentage of the population and create
    ambivalence in the large segment of population, then you are going to win.
    —Maj Justin Featherstone, British Army12

    British Army Lt Col Jim Suggit provided the author an interesting and potentially valuable
    expansion of a concept very similar to that previously introduced in the RAND publication
    Street Smart: Intelligence Preparation of the Battleield for Urban Areas.13 he RAND work
    ofered the continuum of relative interests, with which some readers might be familiar, as a
    means of considering populations in a conlict environment (see Figure 4.1).

    Colonel Suggit’s model relies on diferent stratiication, but the more interesting aspect
    is his use of pins, levers, and springs as means of portraying shaping operations. he series of
    images in Figure 4.2 uses imaginary individuals in the habitually noncompliant sector and
    those to its right as an exemplary case. he model consists of
    pins, to keep groups or individuals in place while inluencing
    1. or moving one or more others

    2. levers, to increase separation between selected groups as desired

    3. springs to oust or eliminate those chosen for purging.

    14 The overarching objective is to move members of the population from right to left (toward
    increasing compliance) while neutralizing those unwilling to make such a change. Operations
    in the example provided, start with ixing (pinning) individuals in the rarely compliant group
    and those to their left in place (i.e., maintaining their levels of compliance and forestalling
    deterioration in attitude).

    15 A lever then increases the separation between the rarely compliant
    and habitually noncompliant groups to facilitate eforts to reduce the inluence of the habitually
    noncompliant on individuals to their left. Eforts to improve compliance in the rarely compliant
    group are then undertaken, success being shown by the spread of color from those who
    are sometimes compliant. Further operations seek to purge the fanatical hostile group.
    While the physical representation of the model is helpful, the real value is in the functions
    represented by the pins, levers, and springs. Realizing that all actions and messages
    inluence multiple audiences, the conscious efort of ixing or pinning attitudes in place (e.g.,
    via PSYOP messages, providing civil-afairs aid) is crucial, as is recognition that separating
    some groups from others improves chances of success (e.g., by demonizing the habitually
    noncompliant group while demonstrating the beneits of increased compliance).
    The model
    also relects understanding of an obvious but often-overlooked condition: Some individuals are
    simply incorrigible and must be eliminated. Resources expended to persuade them to become
    more compliant are wasted in all but the most exceptional of cases.

    12 Featherstone (2006).
    13 Medby and Glenn (2002).
    14 Suggit (2007a).
    15 Suggit (2007c).
    UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY//
    REL TO USA/AUS/NZL/ISR/NATO
    UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY//
    REL TO USA/AUS/NZL/ISR/NATO
    General Counterinsurgency Observations 73
    Figure 4.1
    Continuum of Relative Interests
    SOURCE: Medby and Glenn (2002).
    RAND TR605-4.1

    Adversary: A population element with the capability, interest, and intent
    to exploit a friendly vulnerability.

    Obstacle: A population element with an active capability to exploit a
    friendly vulnerability. Current interests may or may not be compatible with
    friendly-force goals, but there is no intention to interfere with friendlyforce
    activities.

    Neutral: A population element whose interests do not conflict with either
    the friendly or adversarial force. Capability to affect the friendly-force
    mission may exist, but it is currently inert.

    Accomplice: A population element with the capability to capitalize on a
    friendly or adversary vulnerability and whose intentions are compatible
    with friendly-force objectives.

    Ally: A population element whose interest and intent is to assist in
    accomplishing friendly-force objectives.

    Context
    United States
    Military or intelligence (ruling)
    RAND Corporation

    Primary language

    File size in bytes

    3576168

    File type information

    PDF document, version 1.3

    Cryptographic identity

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    Link: wikileaks.org/wiki/Major_RAND_study_with_300_interviews:_Intelligence_Operations
    _and_Metrics_in_Iraq_and_Afghanistan%2C_Nov_2008

    New World Order Begins with a Handshake

    Brown arrives in US for talks with Obama

    British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is in the United States for his first meeting with President Barack Obama. Ahead of the visit, Brown said he would press Obama on the need to cooperate globally to counter the economic crisis. The British prime minister, the first European leader to meet President Obama, has called for “bold action” as the Group of 20 major economies prepare to meet in London next month. During his stay in Washington, Brown will also address both chambers of Congress.

    Experimental Animals – ( Why Atomic Vets Nix Nukes )

    MY UNCLE DICK WAS ALSO A VETERAN SURVIVOR OF “OPERATIONS CROSSROADS” ATOMIC TESTS IN 1946–support ship USS Burleson (APA-67)

    more about “Experimental Animals – ( Why Atomic V…“, posted with vodpod

    It’s Time For The Madness To Stop

    By Sheila Samples

    March 03, 2009 “Information Clearing House” — Sometimes it’s hard to come to grips with the truth — especially if that truth is about our own country, and is in direct opposition to everything we’ve been taught since childhood. Patriotism is in our genes, and through the years it has been a national conviction that, if our country needed us, serving in the military to protect our freedom was not only the right thing to do, but the only thing to do. We still believe that. We still leap to our feet at the first beat of a drum at a military parade, clutch our hearts at the sight of the Stars and Stripes, weep at the refrain of the National Anthem. However, far too many of us succumb to the pomp and pageantry of war — of mission accomplished — with little concern for the human beings who made that possible — what they went through, what they’re still going through — so we can maintain our arrogant national pride.

    From the beginning, those in the military have served their country with unswerving loyalty. They continued to march even after Henry Kissinger belched out the truth that Duty–Honor–Country is a one-way street because “Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used” as pawns for foreign policy. And, it has long been a dead-end street for those captured or left behind on foreign soil — for those who return from battlefields maimed both mentally and physically, and for those who are innocent victims of malicious life-destroying experiments who have no chance of the extent of their injuries being recognized and are refused the necessary health care.

    The most ghastly experiment the military ever conducted was Operation Crossroads, a series of “Manhattan Project” tests requested by the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1946 to study the effects of nuclear weapons on ships and equipment. After bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki the year before, US officials knew the effect of massive radiation on human beings and animals. They had to know. So what else were the thousands of navy personnel positioned on ships from five to eight miles from the Bikini Atoll bomb site in the central Pacific if not guinea pigs?

    One young sailor stationed at the Bikini Atoll in 1946 was Anthony Guarisco who, like thousands of others, has suffered horribly for the last 63 years as a result of radiation poisoning and like those others, has been denied the proper health care. Guarisco is the founder of both the National and International Alliance of Atomic Veterans. In 1994, Academy Award-winning team Vivienne Verdon-Roe and Michael Porter produced a documentary, “Experimental Animals,” featuring Guarisco who, very calmly, describes the horrors of that 1946 July. (Note: Ecological Options Network has just re-released “Experimental Animals” on-line and as a DVD, because EON filmmaker/activist Jim Heddle says, “we think it’s as relevant today as it was when it was produced.”)

    The first bomb — Able — was dropped from a B-29 on July 1. As a health precaution, military personnel in the area were told to “cover their eyes.” Guarisco said it was awesome. He said it immediately “came home to me what happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I could see how 55-65 thousand people could die in one-and-a-half seconds.”

    But the second one — Baker — was beyond awesome. Guarisco said it was detonated beneath the ocean from a depth of 90 feet, and “sucked a target array of approximately 100 ships into the air like little toys. I saw the U.S. Arkansas soar into the air about 200 feet and come down in two pieces. I saw aircraft carriers just flinging around as if they were toys.”

    According to the Navy’s historical report, “The inability to complete inspections on much of the target fleet threatened the success of the operation after BAKER. A program of target vessel decontamination was begun in earnest about 1 August. This involved washing the ships’ exteriors using work crews drawn from the target ships’ companies under radiological supervision of monitors equipped with radiation detection and measurement devices. Initially, decontamination was slow as the safe time aboard the target ships was measured only in minutes. As time progressed, the support fleet itself had become contaminated by the low-level radioactivity in marine growth on the ships’ hulls and seawater piping systems.”

    Ironically, although the ships were towed out of the area just 10 days after the blast where the work could be done in uncontaminated water, no warning was given to the human experimental animals, who were allowed to swim in contaminated water, walk barefoot on beaches and breathe poisonous air.

    Guarisco said, “We went back into the ground zero area immediately after each of the detonations, and I spent a total of 67 days in the Bikini lagoon within one mile of the epicenter. And I became ill after the second detonation, approximately four or five days after that…I had symptoms similar to having a bad case of influenza. I had welts on my body — I broke out with welts — and it was scary for me. I was urinating blood, I was very sick.”

    And Guarisco wasn’t the only one who became ill. In a 1998 National Radio Project interview with Michael O’Rourke, who monitors veterans health issues for the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, Guarisco said, “Other people on my ship were also feeling very sick. And for many, many years I thought that, well, certainly if there was anything wrong surely they would let me know. But,” he said, “I found out many years later that’s not how it is. You know, the government and the U.S. military are not about to say anything about anybody who’s exposed to high levels or low levels of radiation. It was hard for me to come out of denial, to understand that I was dealing with people who really were not interested in anything else but waiting for me to die.”

    Guarisco says that, in one — two — blinding flashes, “we saw what World War III will look like. We have seen the firestorm, we have been witness to the sacrilegious devastation that nuclear weapons put forth, and we have seen our brother and our sister veterans die from being exposed to this terribleness.” He says the bottom line of nuclear weapons is the bottom line of the profit margin — that “deterrent” or “first strike” are fear code words used to keep the population at bay and to pave the way for the nuclear industry to keep building more expensive (profitable) weapons.

    In his March 2008 tribute to both of his parents, Guarisco’s son, Vincent, goes into greater detail about his father’s lifelong battle, not only with the effects of radiation but with the nuclear industry and government itself. For more than 60 years, both Anthony and Mary Guarisco were out there, militant activists armed with the truth, relentlessly attempting to derail the nuclear train before it goes over the cliff, taking human survival with it.

    The United States has more nuclear weapons than any other nation. Although we have avoided the instant, negative repercussions of another Nagasaki or Hiroshima, we have nevertheless managed to contaminate most of the world with Depleted Uranium.

    In 2006, Japanese professor Dr. K. Yagasaki, by using the known amount of uranium used in the Hiroshima bomb — about the size of a two-litre milk container — calculated that a ton of DU used on the battlefield results in the equivalent of 100 Hiroshima bombs worth of radiation released into the atmosphere. So, when it was reported that 2,000 tons of DU were dropped on Iraq from 2003 to 2006, we need to understand that what was released in the Iraqi atmosphere, and then spreading worldwide, was the equivalent of 200,000 Hiroshima bombs.

    The total amount of DU the US has used since 1991 is approximately 4,600 tons (1,000 in the first Gulf War, 800 in Kosovo, 800 in Afghanistan and a further 2,000 tons in the second Iraq war.) This amounts to approximately 460,000 Hiroshima bombs, ten times the amount of radiation released into the atmosphere from all previous nuclear testing worldwide. And, it’s important to note this calculation was three years ago. Since that time, we’ve had three more years of non-stop DU bombing…

    Throughout the ’60s, the US conducted numerous toxic and chemical weapons tests on its military personnel. In July 2008, Nic Maclellan, journalist, researcher and development worker in the Pacific, wrote…

    “Under Project SHAD, the US Navy conducted six tests in the Marshall Islands and off the coast of Hawai’i between 1964-68. Pentagon documents released in 2002 show the US Defense Department sprayed live nerve and biological agents on ships and sailors, and sprayed a germ toxin on Enewetak Atoll in the Marshall Islands.

    “These Cold War-era experiments to test the Navy’s vulnerability to toxic warfare involved about 4,300 US military personnel, mostly from the Navy. Most were never informed that the tests were being conducted, breaching all ethical principles about informed consent for test subjects.”

    It’s time that we, as a nation, not only face the truth — but come to grips with it. Those who serve with such trust and loyalty cannot imagine that they are, at best, “experimental animals” to be used and cast aside by ruthless corporate thugs.

    How many generations of Anthony Guariscos must we lose before we realize that “support the troops” means protect the troops? Like Guarisco said, we must stand up, stand together and demand the abolition of all nuclear weapons if human beings on this planet are to survive.

    It’s time for the madness to stop. Before we are all atomic veterans.

    Sheila Samples http://sheilastuff.blogspot.com/ is an Oklahoma writer and a former civilian US Army Public Information Officer. She is a regular contributor for a variety of Internet sites. Contact her at rsamples@wichitaonline.net

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    Preaching To The Choir?

    Preaching To The Choir?

    By Timothy V. Gatto

    March 03, 2009I “Information Clearing House” — There are so many of my fellow countrymen that wish Barack Obama were really the answer to this nations errant wandering. So far, since World War II, we have seen this nation violate just about every humanitarian principle ever developed by a modern civilization. We have overthrown governments for monetary gain, for the industrialists and the agricultural elite, for resources and markets, defying international law, and succeeding. We have become not a representative republic; the form of government proposed in The Constitution by our forefathers, instead we seem to have opted for a military oligarchy.

    Our military budget is 55% of the total spent on the military for the entire planet. We have bases in over 75% of the world. No citizen knows how many countries our CIA is working in. Our clandestine agencies have infiltrated just about every capitol and every government. We have no way of knowing what they are presently up to; this is classified, like almost everything our government does. We are supposed to take the governments word that they are operating in the peoples best interests.

    We are involved in two wars, even though our economy is strained to the limit. Many Americans in this day are finding it hard to feed their families while we deliver military and economic aid to influence world events. This hasn’t seemed to be important to the new administration, American influence and military power is still the main goal of Washington. Is the paradigm still the same as it was under George Bush? It would seem that the world view of America is the same as it ever was.

    We continue to support Israel, no matter what war crimes they commit. The Arab Middle-East sees us as an enemy and in that they are unfortunately right. We are the enemy of every nation that stands against the war policies of the Jewish state. Why are we surprised when they fire their weapons at us? Will the situation change with President Obama at the helm? If you listened to his speech to AIPAC, the lobby that practically controls our political system, you know nothing will change; in fact it appears that the situation will only get worse. This country will continue to turn a blind eye to the killing of women and children and the destruction of everything Palestinian.

    Of course you could say that Obama is a million times better than Bush. That’s like saying tuberculosis is better than the Ebola virus. Our society is still on life-support when it comes to being “The shining example on the hill” to other nations that George H.W. Bush tried to portray us as. The only people that don’t realize our entire foreign policy is a sham are the American people. Everyone else on the planet understands that America has become a world class tyrant. Still, our people are fed pabulum for news by the tightly controlled American media, controlled by a few corporate entities, all spouting the same propaganda.

    It is up to the American people to stop this military oligarchy from destroying this nation. It is only as a united people that we will have any influence on the course of national and world events. We will not bring this nation back from the abyss until we understand that we are indeed standing on a precipice.

    After spending 20 years in the military I understand that there are those out there that wish America harm. What I am trying to convey to anyone reading this piece is why we are so hell-bent on creating enemies? Why do we attempt to criminalize Hugo Chavez of Venezuela? Is it because he believes in a different economic system for his country so that the poor will have a chance at leading a decent life? Why do we side with the rich in that country that would like to keep all of their wealth regardless of the living conditions in the barrios? Why do we support the succession of the Bolivian States that are rich in natural gas and are the home of those that came from Europe to colonize that country? Is it any wonder that the indigionous people in Bolivia that make of the majority hate us?

    I wish our new president the best of luck. I don’t wish to throw insults at him. I know this and only this; whether you believe in God or Karma, what goes around comes around. I really don’t want to be around when America gets what is coming to it. I sincerely hope that we can change our direction in time to right some of the wrongs that we have perpetrated. It is too bad that anyone with any influence in our government won’t read this. I realize that to many of you, I’m just speaking to the choir. If that is what we are, it’s about time this choir sang so loudly that people can’t help but listen. Whether you believe it or not, we are all part and parcel of this nation. To not raise your voice is to admit defeat. I believe this; it is better to go down fighting than to be part of this nation’s problem.

    timgatto@hotmail.com http://liberalpro.blogspot.com

    Obama Administration and Wall Street Predators Target “Entitlement Reform”

    Obama Administration and Wall Street Predators Target “Entitlement Reform”

    i_want_yours
    When the corporate media, Wall Street predators and their favorite politicians talk of “entitlement reform,” they are not referring to their bonuses, or tax breaks, golden parachutes or consulting fees.  They mean to “reform” your Social Security, your Medicaid, your Medicare, all of which they view as “fiscally irresponsible.”  When President Obama endorses a bipartisan summit on “fiscal responsibility” it’s time to look out.

    Ominously, President Obama is talking about Medicare and Social Security in their language, as places where sacrifices will have to be made

    Not satisfied with its multi-trillion dollar raids on the US Treasury, predatory bankers and the Wall Street investor class have in sight their next target of opportunity. It’s what their bipartisan pundits and politicians call “entitlement reform.” It’s what the rest of us call Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security, and their “reform” is our ruin.

    Wall Street is nothing if not bipartisan on this issue. The 2008 election marked a decisive shift in campaign contributions away from Republican presidential candidates and toward Democrats. Obama’s economic A-Team is composed of former execs of firms like Goldman-Sachs that benefited most from the housing and dot com bubbles, and faces like those of Paul Volcker and Robert Rubin, who helped create it. But now that thieves have cleaned out the Treasury, they are ready to lecture us on “fiscal responsibility.”  The bailouts have blown a gaping hole in the federal budget, a hole that has to be made up for somewhere else.

    Ominously, President Obama is talking about Medicare and Social Security in their language, as places where sacrifices will have to be made, and budgets will have to be cut for the sake of trimming the nation’s multi-trillion dollar deficit.   Words, in the worlds of politics and public policy mean everything, especially when they don’t mean exactly what they say.  Forty years ago public figures who opposed school desgregation wouild define themselves as being “against forced busing.”   Today’s econimic reactionaries, whose aim is the repeal the last remnants of the Great Society and the New Deal, claim to stand for “entitlement reform.”

    Among the nation’s top “entitlement reformers”, and therefore leading contenders for the post of Health and Human Services secretary in the Obama administration is Tennessee’sPhil Bredesen, who as governor authored some of the most savage Medicaid cuts anywhere, depriving 170,000 adults and tens of thousands of children of access to medical care, condemning thousands to needless disabilities and early deaths, and their families to unnecessary impoverishment.

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    Since taking a chainsaw to Medicaid in Tennessee, Harvard alum Phil Bredesen has been hailed as a national model by the bipartisan champions of “entitlement reform.” As President Obama’s HHS Secretary he will have the power to unilaterally change rules and requirements for patients and providers across the board, and will be the presidential point-man for whatever the administration chooses to call “health care reform.”

    What kind of guy is Team Obama considering for HHS Secretary? While governor of Tennessee, Bredesen accepted $150,000 from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee to redecorate the governor’s mansion. He has since told the Wall Street Journal that the voices of insurance companies and health care providers ought to be more important in the process of crafting a national health care plan than those of ordinary people. Only the willfully blind and foolish can suppose Team Obama are ignorant of Bredesen’s record and views, or that they mean nothing because the president makes the policy. The fact that the White House has not ruled out Bredesen, even though late reports indicate that Kansas governor Kathleen Sibelus is also a strong contender, are serious warnings to all who would hear.

    In the same vein, the Wall Street Journal reported Feb. 14 that President Obama has given his blessing to a group of congressional Blue Dogs who will convene a bipartisan February 23 “fiscal responsibility summit” that will produce non-amendable and filibuster-proof legislation to “fix” Medicaid, and possibly Social Security.

    “The president met with 44 fiscally conservative “Blue Dog” Democrats this week and gave a nod to legislation that would set up commissions to deal with long-term deficit strains. The commissions would then present plans to Congress for an up-or-down vote.

    “We feel like we’ve found a partner in the White House,” said Rep. Charlie Melancon (D., La.), a Blue Dog co-chairman.”

    Rolling back Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare have been longstanding goals of America’s bipartisan elite investor class, and these goals have always found supporters among “liberal” corporate Democrats.  President Clinton too, convened a bipartisan commission headed by Democratic senator Daniel Monyhan to “fix” social security, but the fight to impeach him took all the air out of the room and left him unable, fortuantely, to pursue this agenda.  Just as “only Nixon could go to China”, only a popular Democrat, the political calculus goes, has a chance of putting through as enormous betrayal to his or her base as completing the repeals of the New Deal and the Great Society.

    The Brookings Institution is a Democrat-leaning think tank every bit as loyal to the corporate agenda as the right wing Heritage Foundation, but a resting place for Democratic policymakers temporarily out of government.  The definitive “liberal” plan for “fixing” Social Security is a Brookings Institution document from 2003 titled “Saving Social Security:  The Diamond-Orzag Plan.  The good people at FireDogLake.com have offered the following excerpt therefrom, along with a link to the original.

    “Since Painful Choices Must Be Made, a Key Question Is, Which Ones?

    “The Social Security deficit can be eliminated only through different combinations of politically painful choices: tax increases and benefit reductions. Unfortunately, too many analysts and politicians have ignored this reality, responding to the painful alternatives by embracing “free lunch” approaches.

    “Our plan makes the painful choices that are necessary—selecting a combination of benefit and revenue changes to restore long-term balance. In doing so, it focuses on three areas which contribute to the actuarial imbalance: improvements in life expectancy, increases in earnings inequality, and the burden of the legacy debt from Social Security’s early history.

    “Workers who are 55 or older will experience no change in their benefits from those scheduled under current law. For younger workers with average earnings, our proposal involves a gradual reduction in benefits from those scheduled under current law. For example, the reduction in benefits for a 45-year old average earner is less than 1 percent; for a 35-year-old, less than 5 percent; and for a 25-year-old, less than 9 percent. Reductions are smaller for lower earners, and larger for higher ones.”

    In keeping with the need to present this initiative, when it becomes public, as a howling emergency requiring immediate passage, details are impossible to come by yet. But one thing is for sure – all the economists on this “summit,” all the politicians and other talking heads agree that “long term deficit strains” mean your entitlements, not those of the investor class — Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security. The economists who will be consulted by the “fiscal responsibility summit” will be all those who confused the debt creation of the housing bubble with “wealth creation,” who predicted it would last forever, and who solemnly assured us that handing over a trillion or three, no strings attached, to Wall Street predators for their yearly bonuses would “rescue” and restart the economy.

    Economists who predicted the bubble and the bailout, like Michael Hudson, Dean Baker, Paul Stiglitz, Paul Krugman and John Galbraith will not be invited, consulted or even quoted in the rooms where the Obama-endorsed bipartisan fiscal responsibility summit convenes. Those kind of economists have been effectively banned from the corporate media, exiled to spaces where their voices are not heard by most of the public, and blacklisted by the Obama administration, which prefers to get its economic advice from the same crew that gave us the bubble and its aftermath, and profited massively from both.

    There are also whispers that the discredited former congressman Harold Ford may be in line for an administration appointment, perhaps for Secretary of Commerce or some lesser position. Since leaving Congress, Ford has a cushy job as a VP at Merrill Lynch. Within weeks of receiving billions in federal bailout money via a Bank of America buyout, Merrill Lynch paid out $800 million in bonuses, $696 million of it to its top 100 employees. Ford was doubtless one of those instant millionaires.

    The idea that the man who once claimed his black grandmother was white to get a few extra votes, and who offered himself to Bush as a swing vote to privatize Social Security has anything to offer an Obama administration ought to be laughed out of any unpadded room.  But after appointing a bloodstained Reaganite war criminal to head the Pentagon, with defense lobbyist William Lynn as his assistant, after Obama’s CIA chief affirmed the administration’s intention to continue cross-border kidnappings (called “extraordinary renditions”) to hand victims over to torturers, and its lawyers blocked the attempts of torture and kidnap victims to seek redress in the courts because of state secrecy, the same grounds cited by the Bush Justice Department — after all these things, and after the administration’s defiance of the majority of US public opinion on investigating the crimes of the Bush era, nobody is laughing.

    The newly confirmed deputy chief at the Pentagon was that agency’s chief financial officer for most of the 1990s, when an estimated two or three trillion simply vanished without a trace.  So don’t expect the “fiscal responsibility” summit to even look in that direction.  As the Obama administration and its rapacious economic advisors turn their attention from Wall Street giveaways to lecturing the nation on “fiscal responsibility,” it’s time to beware.

    BAR managing editor Bruce Dixon can be contacted at Bruce.Dixon(at)BlackAgendaReport.com.

    The Language of Looting

    The Language of Looting

    RobberBaronsby Michael Hudson

    In order to steal literally everything, the Lords of Finance must render language incapable of describing the crime. “Society’s basic grammar of thought, the vocabulary to discuss political and economic topics, is being turned inside-out.” The banksters still think they can rule from the center of confusion. “Today’s policy is to ‘rescue’ these giant bank conglomerates by enabling them to ‘earn’ their way out of debt – by selling yet more debt to an already over-indebted U.S. economy. The hope is to re-inflate real estate and other asset prices.”

    This article originally appeared in Counterpunch.org.

    “Banking shares began to plunge Friday morning after Senator Dodd, the Connecticut Democrat who is chairman of the banking committee, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television that he was concerned the government might end up nationalizing some lenders “at least for a short time.” Several other prominent policy makers – including Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, and Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina – have echoed that view recently.” — Eric Dash, “Growing Worry on Rescue Takes a Toll on Banks,” The New York Times, February 20, 2009

    How is it that Alan Greenspan, free-market lobbyist for Wall Street, recently announced that he favored nationalization of America’s banks – and indeed, mainly the biggest and most powerful? Has the old disciple of Ayn Rand gone Red in the night? Surely not.

    The answer is that the rhetoric of “free markets,” “nationalization” and even “socialism” (as in “socializing the losses”) has been turned into the language of deception to help the financial sector mobilize government power to support its own special privileges. Having undermined the economy at large, Wall Street’s public relations think tanks are now dismantling the language itself.

    Exactly what does “a free market” mean? Is it what the classical economists advocated – a market free from monopoly power, business fraud, political insider dealing and special privileges for vested interests – a market protected by the rise in public regulation from the Sherman Anti-Trust law of 1890 to the Glass-Steagall Act and other New Deal legislation? Or is it a market free for predators to exploit victims without public regulation or economic policemen – the kind of free-for-all market that the Federal Reserve and Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) have created over the past decade or so? It seems incredible that people should accept today’s neoliberal idea of “market freedom” in the sense of neutering government watchdogs, Alan Greenspan-style, letting Angelo Mozilo at Countrywide, Hank Greenberg at AIG, Bernie Madoff, Citibank, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers loot without hindrance or sanction, plunge the economy into crisis and then use Treasury bailout money to pay the highest salaries and bonuses in U.S. history.

    “Having undermined the economy at large, Wall Street’s public relations think tanks are now dismantling the language itself.”

    Terms that are the antithesis of “free market” also are being turned into the opposite of what they historically have meant. Take today’s discussions about nationalizing the banks. For over a century nationalization has meant public takeover of monopolies or other sectors to operate them in the public interest rather than leaving them to special interests. But when neoliberals use the word “nationalization” they mean a bailout, a government giveaway to the financial interests.

    Doublethink and doubletalk with regard to “nationalizing” or “socializing” the banks and other sectors is a travesty of political and economic discussion from the 17th through mid-20th centuries. Society’s basic grammar of thought, the vocabulary to discuss political and economic topics, is being turned inside-out in an effort to ward off discussion of the policy solutions posed by the classical economists and political philosophers that made Western civilization “Western.”

    Today’s clash of civilization is not really with the Orient; it is with our own past, with the Enlightenment itself and its evolution into classical political economy and Progressive Era social reforms aimed at freeing society from the surviving trammels of European feudalism. What we are seeing is propaganda designed to deceive, to distract attention from economic reality so as to promote the property and financial interests from whose predatory grasp classical economists set out to free the world. What is being attempted is nothing less than an attempt to destroy the intellectual and moral edifice of what took Western civilization eight centuries to develop, from the 12th century Schoolmen discussing Just Price through 19th and 20th century classical economic value theory.

    “What we are seeing is propaganda designed to deceive, to distract attention from economic reality.”

    Any idea of “socialism from above,” in the sense of “socializing the risk,” is old-fashioned oligarchy – kleptocratic statism from above. Real nationalization occurs when governments act in the public interest to take over private property. The 19th-century program to nationalize the land (it was the first plank of the Communist Manifesto) did not mean anything remotely like the government taking over estates, paying off their mortgages at public expense and then giving it back to the former landlords free and clear of encumbrances and taxes. It meant taking the land and its rental income into the public domain, and leasing it out at a user fee ranging from actual operating cost to a subsidized rate or even freely as in the case of streets and roads.

    Nationalizing the banks along these lines would mean that the government would supply the nation’s credit needs. The Treasury would become the source of new money, replacing commercial bank credit. Presumably this credit would be lent out for economically and socially productive purposes, not merely to inflate asset prices while loading down households and business with debt as has occurred under today’s commercial bank lending policies.

    How neoliberals falsify the West’s political history

    The fact that today’s neoliberals claim to be the intellectual descendants of Adam Smith make it necessary to restore a more accurate historical perspective. Their concept of “free markets” is the antithesis of Smith’s. It is the opposite of that of the classical political economists down through John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx and the Progressive Era reforms that sought to create markets free of extractive rentier claims by special interests whose institutional power can be traced back to medieval Europe and its age of military conquest.

    Economic writers from the 16th through 20th centuries recognized that free markets required government oversight to prevent monopoly pricing and other charges levied by special privilege. By contrast, today’s neoliberal ideologues are public relations advocates for vested interests to depict a “free market” is one free of government regulation, “free” of anti-trust protection, and even of protection against fraud (as evidenced by the SEC’s refusal to move against Madoff, Enron, Citibank et al.). The neoliberal ideal of free markets is thus basically that of a bank robber or embezzler, wishing for a world without police so as to be sufficiently free to siphon off other peoples’ money without constraint.

    The Chicago Boys in Chile realized that markets free for predatory finance and insider privatization could only be imposed at gunpoint. These free-marketers closed down every economics department in Chile, every social science department outside of the Catholic University where the Chicago Boys held sway. Operation Condor arrested, exiled or murdered tens of thousands of academics, intellectuals, labor leaders and artists. Only by totalitarian control over the academic curriculum and public media backed by an active secret police and army could “free markets” neoliberal style be imposed. The resulting privatization at gunpoint became an exercise in what Marx called “primitive accumulation” – seizure of the public domain by political elites backed by force. It is a free market William-the-Conqueror or Yeltsin-kleptocrat style, with property parceled out to the companions of the political or military leader.

    “The neoliberal ideal of free markets is basically that of a bank robber or embezzler, wishing for a world without police.”

    All this was just the opposite of the kind of free markets that Adam Smith had in mind when he warned that businessmen rarely get together but to plot ways to fix markets to their advantage. This is not a problem that troubled Mr. Greenspan or the editorial writers of the New York Times and Washington Post. There really is no kinship between their neoliberal ideals and those of the Enlightenment political philosophers. For them to promote an idea of free markets as ones “free” for political insiders to pry away the public domain for themselves is to lower an intellectual Iron Curtain on the history of economic thought.

    The classical economists and American Progressives envisioned markets free of economic rent and interest – free of rentier overhead charges and monopoly price gouging, free of land-rent, interest paid to bankers and wealthy financial institutions, and free of taxes to support an oligarchy. Governments were to base their tax systems on collecting the “free lunch” of economic rent, headed by that of favorable locations supplied by nature and given market value by public investment in transportation and other infrastructure, not by the efforts of landlords themselves.

    The argument between Progressive Era reformers, socialists, anarchists and individualists thus turned on the political strategy of how best to free markets from debt and rent. Where they differed was on the best political means to achieve it, above all the role of the state. There was broad agreement that the state was controlled by vested interests inherited from feudal Europe’s military conquests and the world that was colonized by European military force. The political question at the turn of the 20th century was whether peaceful democratic reform could overcome the political and even military resistance wielded by the Old Regime using violence to retain its “rights.” The ensuing political revolutions were grounded in the Enlightenment, in the legal philosophy of men such as John Locke, political economists such as Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill and Marx. Power was to be used to free markets from the predatory property and financial systems inherited from feudalism. Markets were to be free of privilege and free lunches, so that people would obtain income and wealth only by their own labor and enterprise. This was the essence of the labor theory of value and its complement, the concept of economic rent as the excess of market price over socially necessary cost-value.

    Although we now know that markets and prices, rent and interest, contractual formalities and nearly all the elements of economic enterprise originated in the “mixed economies” of Mesopotamia in the fourth millennium BC and continued throughout the mixed public/private economies of classical antiquity, the discussion was so politically polarized that the idea of a mixed economy with checks and balances received scant attention a century ago.

    “Power was to be used to free markets from the predatory property and financial systems inherited from feudalism.”

    Individualists believed that shrinking central governments would shrink the control mechanism by which the vested interests extracted wealth without work or enterprise of their own. Socialists saw that a strong government was needed to protect society from the attempts of property and finance to use their gains to monopolize economic and political power. Both ends of the political spectrum aimed at the same objective – to bring prices down to actual costs of production. The common aim was to maximize economic efficiency so as to pass on the fruits of the Industrial and Agricultural Revolutions to the population at large. This required blocking the rentier class of interlopers from grabbing the public domain and controlling the allocation of resources. Socialists did not believe this could be done without taking the state’s political and legal power into their own hands. Marxists believed that a revolution was necessary to reclaim property rent for the public domain, and to enable governments to create their own credit rather than borrow at interest from commercial bankers and wealthy bondholders. The aim was not to create a bureaucracy but to free society from the surviving absentee ownership power of the vested property and financial interests.

    All this history of economic thought has been as thoroughly expunged from today’s academic curriculum as it has from popular discussion. Few people remember the great debate at the turn of the 20th century: Would the world progress fairly quickly from Progressive Era reforms to outright socialism – public ownership of basic economic infrastructure, natural monopolies (including the banking system) and the land itself (and to Marxists, of industrial capital as well)? Or, could the liberal reformers of the day – individualists, land taxers, classical economists in the tradition of Mill, and American institutionalists such as Simon Patten – retain capitalism’s basic structure and private property ownership? If they could do so, they recognized that it would have to be in the context of regulating markets and introducing progressive taxation of wealth and income. This was the alternative to outright “state” ownership. Today’s extreme “free market” idea is a dumbed-down caricature of this position.

    “A ‘free market’ was an active political creation and required regulatory vigilance.”

    All sides viewed the government as society’s “brain,” its forward planning organ. Given the complexity of modern technology, humanity would shape its own evolution. Instead of evolution occurring by “primitive accumulation,” it could be planned deliberately. Individualists countered that no human planner was sufficiently imaginative to manage the complexity of markets, but endorsed the need to strip away all forms of unearned income – economic rent and the rise in land prices that Mill called the “unearned increment.” This involved government regulation to shape markets. A “free market” was an active political creation and required regulatory vigilance.

    As public relations advocates for the vested interests and special rentier privilege, today’s “neoliberal” advocates of “free” markets seek to maximize economic rent – the free lunch of price in excess of cost-value, not to free markets from rentier charges. So misleading a pedigree only could be achieved by outright suppression of knowledge of what Locke, Smith and Mill really wrote. Attempts to regulate “free markets” and limit monopoly pricing and privilege are conflated with “socialism,” even with Soviet-style bureaucracy. The aim is to deter the analysis of what a “free market” really is: a market free of unnecessary costs: monopoly rents, property rents and financial charges for credit that governments can create freely.

    Political reform to bring market prices in line with socially necessary cost-value was the great economic issue of the 19th century. The labor theory of intrinsic cost-value found its counterpart in the theory of economic rent: land rent, monopoly price gouging, interest and other returns to special privilege that increased market prices purely by institutional property claims. The discussion goes all the way back to the medieval churchmen defining Just Price. The doctrine originally was applied to the proper fees that bankers could charge, and later was extended to land rent, then to the monopolies that governments created and sold off to creditors in an attempt to extricate themselves from debt.

    Reformists and more radical socialists alike sought to free capitalism of its egregious inequities, above all its legacy from Europe’s Dark Age of military conquest when invading warlords seized lands and imposed an absentee landlord class to receive the rental income, which was used to finance wars of further land acquisition. As matters turned out, hopes that industrial capitalism could reform itself along progressive lines to purge itself of its legacy from feudalism have come crashing down. World War I hit the global economy like a comet, pushing it into a new trajectory and catalyzing its evolution into an unanticipated form of finance capitalism.

    “Instead of industrial capitalism increasing capital formation we are seeing finance capitalism strip capital.”

    It was unanticipated largely because most reformers spent so much effort advocating progressive policies that they neglected what Thorstein Veblen called the vested interests. Their Counter-Enlightenment is creating a world that would have been deemed a dystopia a century ago – something so pessimistic that no futurist dared depict a world run by venal and corrupt bankers, protecting as their prime customers the monopolies, real estate speculators and hedge funds whose economic rent, financial gambling and asset-price inflation is turned into a flow of interest in today’s rentier economy. Instead of industrial capitalism increasing capital formation we are seeing finance capitalism strip capital, and instead of the promised world of leisure we are being drawn into one of debt peonage.

    The financial travesty of democracy

    The financial sector has redefined democracy by making claims that the Federal Reserve must be “independent” from democratically elected representatives, in order to act as the bank lobbyist in Washington. This makes the financial sector exempt from the democratic political process, despite the fact that today’s economic planning is now centralized in the banking system. The result is a regime of insider dealings and oligarchy – rule by the wealthy few.

    The economic fallacy at work is that bank credit is a veritable factor of production, an almost Physiocratic source of fertility without which growth could not occur. The reality is that the monopoly right to create interest-bearing bank credit is a free transfer from society to a privileged elite. The moral is that when we see a “factor of production” that has no actual labor-cost of production, it is simply an institutional privilege.

    So this brings us to the most recent debate about “nationalizing” or “socializing” the banks. The Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) so far has been used for the following uses that I think can be truly deemed anti-social, not “socialist” in any form.

    By the end of last year, $20 billion was used to pay bonuses and salaries to financial mismanagers, despite the plunge of their banks into negative equity. And to protect their interests, these banks continued to pay lobbying fees to persuade legislators to give them yet more special privileges.

    “Do we really want to let banks ‘pay back taxpayers’ by engaging in yet more predatory financial practices.”

    While Citibank and other major institutions threatened to bring the financial system crashing down by being “too big to fail,” over $100 billion of TARP funds was used to make them even bigger. Already teetering banks bought affiliates that had grown by making irresponsible and outright fraudulent loans. Bank of America bought Angelo Mozilo’s Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch, while JP Morgan Chase bought Bear Stearns and other big banks bought WaMu and Wachovia.

    Today’s policy is to “rescue” these giant bank conglomerates by enabling them to “earn” their way out of debt – by selling yet more debt to an already over-indebted U.S. economy. The hope is to re-inflate real estate and other asset prices. But do we really want to let banks “pay back taxpayers” by engaging in yet more predatory financial practices vis-à-vis the economy at large? It threatens to maximize the margin of market price over direct costs of production, by building in higher financial charges. This is just the opposite policy from trying to bring prices for housing and infrastructure in line with technologically necessary costs. It certainly is not a policy to make the U.S. economy more globally competitive.

    The Treasury’s plan to “socialize” the banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions is simply to step in and take bad loans off their books, shifting the loss onto the public sector. This is the antithesis of true nationalization or “socialization” of the financial system. The banks and insurance companies quickly got over their initial knee-jerk fear that a government bailout would occur on terms that would wipe out their bad management, along with the stockholders and bondholders who backed this bad management. The Treasury has assured these mismanagers that “socialism” for them is a free gift. The primacy of finance over the rest of the economy will be affirmed, leaving management in place and giving stockholders a chance to recover by earning more from the economy at large, with yet more tax favoritism. (This means yet heavier taxes shifted onto consumers, raising their living costs accordingly.)

    “The Treasury has assured these mismanagers that ‘socialism’ for them is a free gift.”

    The bulk of wealth under capitalism – as under feudalism -always has come primarily from the public domain, headed by the land and formerly public utilities, capped most recently by the Treasury’s debt-creating power. In effect, the Treasury creates a new asset ($11 trillion of new Treasury bonds and guarantees, e.g. the  $5.2 trillion to Fannie and Freddie). Interest on these bonds is to be paid by new levies on labor, not on property. This is what is supposed to re-inflate housing, stock and bond prices – the money freed from property and corporate taxes will be available to be capitalized into yet new loans.

    So the revenue hitherto paid as business taxes will still be paid – in the form of interest – while the former taxes will still be collected, but from labor. The fiscal-financial burden thus will be doubled. This is not a program to make the economy more competitive or raise living standards for most people. It is a program to polarize the U.S. economy even further between finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) at the top and labor at the bottom.

    Neoliberal denunciations of public regulation and taxation as “socialism” is really an attack on classical political economy – the “original” liberalism whose ideal was to free society from the parasitic legacy of feudalism. A truly socialized Treasury policy would be for banks to lend for productive purposes that contribute to real economic growth, not merely to increase overhead and inflate asset prices by enough to extract interest charges. Fiscal policy would aim to minimize rather than maximizing the price of home ownership and doing business, by basing the tax system on collecting the rent that is now being paid out as interest. Shifting the tax burden off wages and profits onto rent and interest was the core of classical political economy in the 18th and 19th centuries, as well as the Progressive Era and Social Democratic reform movements in the United States and Europe prior to World War I. But this doctrine and its reform program has been buried by the rhetorical smokescreen organized by financial lobbyists seeking to muddy the ideological waters sufficiently to mute popular opposition to today’s power grab by finance capital and monopoly capital. Their alternative to true nationalization and socialization of finance is debt peonage, oligarchy and neo-feudalism. They have called this program “free markets.”

    Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist. A Distinguished Research Professor at University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), he is the author of many books, including Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (new ed., Pluto Press, 2002) He can be reached via his website,

    ___FCKsi___1mh@michael-hudson.com

    March on Wall Street, 2-day event

    more about “AxisofLogic/ Antiwar Movement“, posted with vodpod

    Gabol hints at Indian hand in Lahore attack

    Gabol hints at Indian hand in Lahore attack

    ISLAMABAD: Minister of state for shipping Nabil Ahmed Gabol said India is behind the attack on Sri Lanka’s cricket team in Lahore on Tuesday, saying the attackers had crossed into Pakistan from India.

    “The evidence which we have got shows that these terrorists entered from across the border from India,” Gabol told Geo News.

    “This was a conspiracy to defame Pakistan internationally.”

    “This incident took place in reaction to 26/11,” he said. It is a declaration of open war on Pakistan by India,” said the minister.

    India Sees Opportunity to Isolate and Dismantle Pakistan in Wake of Latest Attack by International Terror Network

    India slams ‘inadequate’ Pakistan after Lahore attack

    NEW DELHI: India denounced “hopelessly inadequate” Pakistani security after Tuesday’s attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore and cited Islamabad’s failure to crush militant groups on its soil.

    “The security for the Sri Lankan cricket team was hopelessly inadequate,” Home Minister P. Chidambaram said as he condemned the assault by gunmen that left eight people dead and wounded seven team members.

    Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee told reporters. “Unless infrastructure and facilities available to terrorist organisations within Pakistan or territory under its control are completely dismantled… repetition of these incidents will take place,” he said.

    New Delhi has been pressuring Islamabad to crack down on Islamist militant groups and dismantle their training camps since the Mumbai attacks last November.

    The Sri Lankan team was only in Pakistan because a tour by the Indian team had been cancelled in the wake of the Mumbai attacks. “It was not a pleasant decision (to cancel) but we were constrained to take it because the security situation in Pakistan was not safe,” Mukerjee said, calling on Islamabad to “take strict measures” against those responsible. “This menace, which is the biggest menace… in the post Cold War era, should be tackled,” he said

    Indian foreign ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash also piled pressure on Islamabad, saying Pakistan-based “terrorists” were a threat to the entire world. “It is in Pakistan’s own interest to take prompt, meaningful and decisive steps to dismantle the terrorist infrastructure once and for all,” Prakash said.

    India’s Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma said the attack underscored “the enormity of the threat” emerging from Pakistan, while India’s governing Congress party branded Pakistan “the epicentre and fountainhead of terror.”

    “Every country in the world must unite against this scourge by isolating the country and demanding immediate concrete results,” Congress spokesman Abhishek Singhvi said.

    Balochistan: a broken promise?

    See: Victims of ISI at Dictatorshipwatch.com

    PPP spokesman Farhatullah Babar’s article in these pages, in response to one by former senator Sanaullah Baloch, cleverly skirted the issue of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and missing persons in the country’s largest province of Balochistan.

    It is, in fact, these two unresolved issues that have plagued the PPP-led process of reconciliation in the conflict-ridden province.

    The PPP came to power for the first time in the history of Balochistan after the Feb 2008 polls. The ruling party’s pledge to end the insurgency, restore trust amongst the Baloch and ensure a permanent settlement of the Baloch dispute was heavily hinged on drastic constitutional and institutional changes. The party, despite all its promises, never opted for generous constitutional amendments that could restore the confidence of the Baloch people in Islamabad’s commitment to their cause.

    A handful of measures taken to demonstrate that the so-called process of reconciliation was being initiated were, in fact, individual-specific. Besides Sardar Akhtar Mengal and Shahzain Bugti, a grandson of Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, no commoner among the hundreds of ‘missing persons’ has been released to date. The government has not even acknowledged the case of the missing persons and this compelled a relatively new organisation, the Baloch Liberation United Front, to abduct John Solecki, head of the UN refugee agency in Quetta on Feb 2.

    The question is, was the PPP government waiting for such an ugly development — the kidnapping of a foreign aid worker — to raise the issue of Balochistan’s missing people? If it is not resolved immediately, can we actually afford another disgraceful incident in the future? Are such incidents what it would take to highlight the plight of the ‘disappeared’? Worse still, Rehman Malik, the advisor on interior affairs, brazenly ridiculed the Baloch list of missing persons by billing it ‘unrealistic’ and ‘exaggerated’.

    Similarly, Baloch nationalist demands include de-militarisation of the province; they have called upon the government to withdraw troops from Dera Bugti and Kohlu districts that stand ravaged by the military operation carried out during the Musharraf regime. A year after the general elections, neither has the army been pulled out from the conflict zones as a confidence-building measure (CBM) nor has the media been allowed access to witness and record the extent of excruciating damage caused to human life, property and livelihoods

    Jamil and Talal Akbar Bugti, sons of the late Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, are not permitted to enter their native soil of Dera Bugti to offer fateha at the grave of their slain father — an undoubtedly inhuman and undemocratic act. How can Bugti’s sons and tribesmen believe that democracy has truly returned to Balochistan when they live under such cruel restrictions? The members of the opponent Bugti clans have been pitted against Akbar Bugti’s heirs who have no access to their land and other property. The personal library of the slain nawab, once believed to be one of the best collections in the region, is reported to have been looted by none other than big guns in the security forces.

    Similarly, the PPP government, which clearly lacks the spunk to bypass the security and intelligence agencies, has failed to intervene in the existing humanitarian crisis in Dera Bugti and Kohlu. The five-year long armed conflict in the area has created over 100,000 internal displaced persons; hailing mainly from the Marri and Bugti tribes, IDPs have been forced to take refuge in neighbouring Naseerabad and Jaffarabad districts of Balochistan and are in desperate need of medical assistance, rehabilitation and economic incentives.

    On the other hand, for over two years, security forces — the actual rulers of the area — have kept governmental and non-governmental organisations from not only conducting surveys in the area, but also from dispatching any form of aid to IDPs. How can the Baloch have faith in the PPP-led process of reconciliation when policies initiated by Pervez Musharraf persist? The process of reconciliation can only begin when IDPs receive medical care, food and a promise of a gradual return to their homes.

    Furthermore, instead of ending the cycle of enforced disappearances, the state secret services have, under the PPP administration, allegedly begun whisking away political opponents all over again. Currently, no one knows the whereabouts of Dr Bashir Azeem, the central secretary general of the Baloch Republican Party (BRP), Jalil Rekhi, the party’s information secretary and another central leader of the opposition, Chakar Qambarani. Even a university student, Qambar Malik Baloch, was recently said to have been abducted by government functionaries.

    Islamabad can no longer afford to oversimplify or underestimate the Baloch issue. It is time the centre treated the province in a dignified manner — empowered it politically, administratively and, most importantly, economically. It is crystal clear that the unrest and sense of deprivation in the province cannot be eliminated until Islamabad concedes to its demand of complete constitutional ownership of indigenous natural resources.

    Therefore, the PPP government should seriously induct drastic constitutional reforms before the Balochistan conundrum spirals out of control. A powerless and deprived province poses a greater risk to the integrity of the federation of Pakistan. Democratic governments are expected to confront daunting challenges. If the PPP can defend its recent truce with Islamic extremists in Swat, then, as was rightly argued by Sanaullah Baloch, why can it not come up with a similar bold initiative that guarantees economic and political sovereignty for Balochistan?

    Someone, Claiming to be “Al Qaida,” Threatens Saudi Sponsors, Takes Credit for Islamabad Marriott Attack

    Qaeda threatens to attack Saudi installations in Pakistan

    Daily Times Monitor

    LAHORE: Al Qaeda has claimed the responsibility for the Marriott blast that took place in Islamabad on September 20, 2008, and threatened to attack Saudi Airlines’ offices, and important installations in Pakistan, a private TV channel reported on Monday.

    According to the channel, immediately after Al Qaeda’s threat, the federal government directed the provincial government to beef up security.

    An Interior Ministry source said that the Saudi embassy had received a message through an email in which Al Qaeda had threatened to target Saudi Airlines’ offices and other important installations. The source said the Saudi embassy had written to the Pakistani Interior Ministry about Al Qaeda’s threat. It also said that External Ministry additional secretary Imran Khan Al Sherazi had requested the Interior Ministry to immediately increase security at Saudi installations across the country.

    Western or Homegrown Terror Expanding Front in Balochistan?

    Six killed in Pishin girls’ madrassa suicide blast

    * Witnesses say bomber wanted to target senior JUI-F leader Maulana Sherani
    * Police arrest two suspects

    QUETTA: A suicide bomber killed five and injured 12 people at a girls’ religious school in Pishin district of Balochistan on Monday.

    District Police Officer Akbar Raisani confirmed the incident saying that the blast had occurred at a girls’ madrassa in Kili Karbala, where a senior leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Maulana Sherani, was scheduled to address the school’s convocation.

    Witnesses said the suicide bomber was a teenager who wanted to get close to the JUI-F leader as soon as he ended his speech.

    Three of the victims were identified as Muhammad Nasim, Jalath Khan and Hafiz Abdul Zahir, while the names of the other two could not be ascertained.

    Protest: JUI-F supporters burnt tyres on the Jinnah Road and shouted slogans against the government for being unable to arrest the elements behind the blast.

    JUI-F leader Maulana Abdul Wasay, who is also a senior provincial minister, condemned the incident. He said the JUI would observe a strike across the province today (Tuesday).

    The police said it was investigating the matter.

    According to the witnesses, two men had come to the religious school for the bombing but one of them escaped immediately after the first explosion.

    Quoting police sources, the JUI leaders said two alleged suspects had been arrested in connection with the blast.

    Balochistan Chief Minister Aslam Raisani expressed sorrow over the blast and assured the bereaved families that the government would investigate into the matter to expose those behind the blast.

    Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah and Sindh Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad also condemned the blast and offered condolences to the families of the victims, APP reported. malik siraj akbar/app

    Report: One In 31 In Prison, On Parole Or Probation

    DOES ONE IN THIRTY-ONE ADULTS IN PRISON SYSTEM PROVE THAT AMERICA IS A SOCIETY OF CRIMINALS OR A  POLICE STATE?

    Report: One In 31 In Prison, On Parole Or Probation

    Pew Center Report Validates State Commissioner’s Approach To Rehabilitation

    The year before Theresa C. Lantz became correction commissioner in 2003, the annual increase in the state’s prison population was projected to continue unabated, as it had for 20 years.

    If the estimate had held, the state could have needed up to three more prisons by now, each at a cost of about $150 million. Lantz hasn’t asked for one.

    “I don’t want to build prisons,” Lantz said Monday. “I want to build communities.”

    During the first year of her tenure, the prison population dropped 4.2 percent — the largest decrease in the country — as Lantz retooled the system from one that emphasized incarceration to one that prepared inmates to return to their communities.

    That approach was endorsed by a report released Monday by the nonprofit Pew Center on the States at a time when one in 31 adults in the country is in prison, on parole or on probation.

    Despite the get-tough sentences enacted in the 1980s and ’90s, increasingly high incarceration rates have failed to significantly reduce recidivism. Prisons now cost the country about $47 billion a year, a 303 percent increase over 20 years.

    It costs an average of $79 a day to house an inmate in prison, compared to $3.42 per day to supervise those on probation and $7.47 a day for those on parole.

    “Most states are facing serious budget deficits,” said Susan Urahn, managing director of the Pew Center. “Every single one of them should be making smart investments in community corrections that will help them cut costs and improve outcomes.”

    Parole, probation and other community-based programs have the potential to save taxpayer dollars while improving public safety by reducing recidivism, according to the Pew report. Supporters of such programs are quick to say that there are violent offenders who should be locked up for a long time, but many inmates could return to the community with careful screening, close monitoring and support programs.

    Lantz said the vast majority of inmates will eventually be released. Parole allows her department to continue to work with them as they re-enter the community rather than have them just walk out the door on the last day of their sentence.

    “I really believe there’s a population that is incarcerated that we can transition into the community,” Lantz said.

    Adam Gelb, director of the Pew Center, said some states are using sophisticated systems to sort inmates based on their risk to public safety, then tailoring intervention and monitoring schemes to meet the need. Technology such as GPS systems and rapid drug testing are also increasingly being deployed.

    There are risks in the approach for politicians fearful of appearing soft on criminals.

    “It’s a lot easier to keep throwing money at prisons,” Gelb said.

    Lantz, after reducing the prison population for the first four years of her tenure, saw the landscape change in a flash when two parolees were charged with the brutal murders of Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her two daughters in their Cheshire home in July 2007.

    Another incident a short time later in which a parolee was involved in a carjacking prompted Gov. M. Jodi Rell to temporarily suspend the parole of inmates convicted of violent crimes.

    A task force created by the governor eventually drafted recommendations that Lantz said have improved the system. The parole board, previously hobbled by a lack of detailed information on inmates, now gets police reports, court transcripts and even juvenile records.

    Rell’s parole ban was lifted after four months, but was a factor in the state’s prison population’s hitting an all-time high of 19,894 inmates on Feb. 1, 2008.

    Lantz said Rell and the legislature resisted overreacting and provided the resources necessary to do the job. More parole officers were hired, the number of halfway house beds was increased and additional monitoring technology was purchased.

    The number of inmates is dropping again, hovering at about 19,000.

    “The reforms and systems and programs we’ve put in place are working,” Lantz said.

    Footage of Sri Lankan Cricket Team Attack in Lahore

    Does anyone believe it a coincidence that this group of attackers performed and looked like the same bunch that attacked Mumbai?   The guy on the left wearing the backpack could have been Kasab’s twin!

    Lahore assault casts long shadow

    Lahore assault casts long shadow

    The Sri Lanka team were evacuated by helicopter after the attack [AFP]

    Six Sri Lankan Test cricketers wounded by gun-wielding attackers, the bodies of five Pakistani policemen who died trying to save them – and an English match referee with his uniform covered in blood.On top of the personal tragedy of those targeted by armed killers on a routine bus trip to an international match, the images paint a picture of this most genteel of sports thrown into chaos by the violence of the modern world.

    On Monday night, Sri Lanka were being clapped off the field after scoring 606 runs in their first innings at the Gaddafi stadium in Lahore.

    By Tuesday they were staring down the barrels of machine guns as 12 attackers opened fire on the bus carrying them to the stadium.

    Sri Lanka are the only Test nation to dare to tour Pakistan amid acute security concerns in the country, and have been severely punished for putting the sport above their own safety.

    In December the England cricket team were applauded for resuming their tour of India following the Mumbai attacks.

    But Tuesday’s assault on the Sri Lanka party raises deep concerns about whether touring sides will now travel to the region.

    Uncertain future

    It seems certain at least that Pakistan – a nation with a proud cricketing history and obsessive fans – will struggle to recover as a serious international force.

    Former England cricketer Dominic Cork was a strong voice against England’s return to India last year, but travelled to Pakistan as a commentator for the Sri Lanka series.

    Speaking to Sky Sports from Lahore, he said he would not be returning – and doubted whether any cricketers would be either.

    “I was badly advised to come out and commentate and will certainly be looking at the decision (in future) no matter what the country is,” Cork said.

    “Sport is second – it has to be second – until this region is sorted out.

    “You have Chris Broad, the match referee, standing with blood all over his ICC (International Cricket Council) shirt.

    “That for me sums it up. A match referee with blood on his hands. It shouldn’t happen.”

    Different view

    But as captain Mahela Jayawardene led his team onto a helicopter out of Lahore, his manager Charlie Austin, 38, told Al Jazeera that the Sri Lankans took a slightly different view.

    “There’s certainly no blank on Sri Lanka touring Pakistan again,” said Austin, who also manages Kumar Sangakkara and four other players.

    “The ground situation will need to change significantly and it will just take a bit of time for the players to feel comfortable.

    “Terrorism is one of those things we have to live with, as a sportsman or anyone living in the modern world.”

    While he pointed out that Sri Lanka are used to bombings in their own country, it is less certain that teams such as England and Australia will take a relaxed view when it comes to travelling to the subcontinent.

    Whatever the security advice for India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka or Bangladesh, the Mumbai attacks sparked genuine fear among England cricketers.

    And having now seen their sporting colleagues come under direct attack, advice to travel is likely to hold less weight for Test nations than it did when England returned for the Chennai match in December.

    The attack in Lahore leaves Pakistan cricket in serious trouble.

    A nation that has boasted stars like Wasim Akram, Inzimam ul-Haq and Imran Khan has seen a serious drain on its resources after Australia and India refused to tour the country.

    Lifeline disappears

    Having been thrown a lifeline by Sri Lanka, the Pakistan Cricket Board has seen realistic prospects of future tours disappear in a cloud of gunsmoke.

    Captain Younis Khan and his team are set to keep their eye in with a tour of Bangladesh next week and a ‘home’ series against Australia in the United Arab Emirates in April and May.

    But no matches on home soil means little revenue to nurture the game and produce future Pakistani stars from a hugely talented pool of aspiring players.

    Speaking to ESPN, ex-captain Akram said the chance of Pakistan hosting the 2011 World Cup was now a “distant dream”.

    “How do you expect a foreign team to come to Pakistan now?” said the former fast bowler.

    “We took pride in hosting our guests. This image has taken a beating. It’s sad for Pakistan.”

    It is not just the Pakistanis who miss out.

    Missing Pakistan

    Test captains like South Africa’s Graeme Smith have spoken of the lack of competition posed by smaller nations like Bangladesh, and the loss of “Pakistan away” as a feasible fixture will be felt by all top cricketers keen to test themselves against the best.

    As for Sri Lanka, they are not due to play again until the ICC World Twenty20 starts in England in June.

    But Austin said he reckoned the injured players – Jayawardene, Sangakkara, Tharanga Paranavitana, Thilan Samaraweera and Ajantha Mendis – would be back playing “in a couple of weeks”.

    “Sri Lankans are very resilient,” he said.

    “It’s a remarkable escape when you consider a rocket launcher went very close to the bus.

    “But I wouldn’t be surprised if they were back playing domestic cricket in a couple of weeks.”

    Pakistan’s Munich: The Enemy’s Fingerprints

    Pakistan’s Munich: The Enemy’s Fingerprints

    The Indian fingerprints in the attack on the Sri Lanksn cannot be ignored. New Delhi has been at war with both Islamabad and Colombo for decades. Hitting both in one place is a masterstroke. Indian military and its agents should brace for retaliation.

    By AHMED QURAISHI

    Tuesday, 3 March 2009.

    WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—You can’t ignore the symbolism: Commando-style trained young men with backpacks, carrying automatic machine guns and armed with grenades and rocket launchers, bearing a shocking resemblance to the video footage released by the Indian government of the Mumbai attackers in November.

    Figure 1: Indian Terrorists have infiltrated India‘s military & government.

    The Indian connection, even if indirect and unintentional, cannot be ignored:

    1. Lahore is the same city where Pakistani antiterrorism police arrested several Indian citizens and their Pakistani accomplices in the past few weeks and paraded them in public with evidence linking them to India’s spy agency Research & Analysis Wing, or RAW. Lahore lies a few kilometers away from the Indian border and has bore the brunt of India’s covert operations in the 1970s and 1980s, mostly randomly planted bombs in public places designed to spread terror.

    1. Pakistani security officials had received a report that at least ten Indian operatives have crossed the border into Lahore 48 hours before the attacks.

    1. India spearheaded a campaign to convince several countries to sever sports relations with Pakistan and put tremendous pressure on Sri Lanka not to send its cricket team to play here.

    1. India has a history of supporting the terrorist LTTE group and arming it with sophisticated weapons to fight the Sri Lankan government and army. Pakistan, on the other hand, has been supporting Sri Lanka against this terrorism. India has long been disturbed by the close relationship between Colombo and Islamabad. In this connection, Sri Lanka’s foreign minister’s statement is important. He said he won’t point fingers but said ‘terrorism has no borders’, an implied suggestion that the Sri Lankans believe the perpetrators came from outside Pakistan.

    1. The timing of the attack shows the professional planning. Lahore administration was in a flux after the change of provincial government. Lahore was also the last Pakistani city that has not yet been affected by the fallout from America’s failed and disastrous war in Afghanistan. This incident effectively brings chaos to Lahore as well. The rest of Pakistan is already being destabilized by foreign intelligence operatives working from the Afghan soil, inserting professional saboteurs and flushing the country with money to recruit criminals and activating them under the guise of religious extremists.

    An important point to note here is that whoever planned this attack made sure that the terrorists look similar to Mumbai attackers. This can be an attempt to spark more conflict between Pakistan and India. In this case, if evidence is found, it might be interesting to probe the possibility of a third party trying to push both countries to war. And it’s not just religious elements in Pakistan that want this. There is an organized terrorist infrastructure inside India, manned by Hindu terrorist groups with recruits from Indian military intelligence. The same Indian elements are also active in Kabul and other Afghan cities, using the Afghan soil to export terrorism inside Pakistan. American reports have also linked these Indian elements to attacks on U.S. and NATO soldiers and blame them on Pakistan.

    There is enough circumstantial and physical evidence that involves India’s intelligence agencies in terrorism inside Pakistan.

    The Pakistani military must realize that this is an organized and not a guerrilla war that is being waged against Pakistan. This terrorism is deceptively hiding itself behind the label of religious extremism, and has links with those countries that are actively destabilizing Pakistan from the inside.

    It is time now that patriotic Pakistanis and the Pakistani military sit up and take notice of the apologetic statements of this U.S.-installed government in Islamabad which, like the Indians, wasted no time in linking the Lahore attack to the Mumbai attacks, which means linking it to Pakistanis (which is not proven except in the minds of India, their American backers and their backers in Pakistan, i.e. President Zardari, Rehman Malik, Sherry Rehman, and the former advisor Mehmud Durrani.) In this case, if the Zardari government is accusing ‘Mumbai attackers’ of this latest attack, then this government is indirectly accusing the Pakistani military and our intelligence of attacking the Sri Lankans in Lahore. This is in continuation of the covert efforts by elements in this government to cause a confrontation between the Pakistani military and the world at large.

    Pakistan’s response must be methodical. This is the time to expose Indian terrorism. There is stunning evidence available with Pakistani authorities about Indian activities in Afghanistan, inside Pakistan’s tribal and border areas and inside the rest of Pakistan. The Zardari government will not bring this evidence forward. It is the responsibility of the Pakistani military and its spy agencies to force this government to unmask the Indian activities. Enough of this apologetic attitude toward India. We urge Pakistan to publicly demand that Indian’s sponsorship of terrorism be curbed.

    The Indians should also brace for retaliation. If Indian military and security forces are using terrorism against Pakistan in multiple places, then Indians from these organizations should be a fair game for retaliation.

    © 2007-2009. All rights reserved. AhmedQuraishi.com. & PakNationalists

    Pakistan, Taliban battle ‘like in Palestine’

    Pakistan, Taliban battle ‘like in Palestine’

    * Army drives international media into Inayat Killay to prove Bajaur safe to visit

    INAYAT KILLAY: Troops guarded the remnants of a war zone as a military convoy crunched past shops blown to pieces and an electricity pylon collapsed on rubble near the Afghan border.

    “Any human being who sees this destruction will cry. There was bombing, there was shelling, we have never seen such fighting,” Haroon Ahmed told AFP by telephone that evening from the village of Inayat Killay. “It looked like we were in Palestine. It was like two countries fighting,” said Ahmed – still too frightened to give his real name so soon after the army declared victory and expunged the Taliban ‘menace’ from his village. Helicopter gunships, artillery, tanks and ground troops fought to recover the area from hundreds of armed Taliban. There was hand-to-hand combat in the street, said Ahmed.

    Safe: Days after the guns fell silent, the army drove the international media into Inayat Killay to prove that one of the most notorious Taliban lairs in the wild, semi-autonomous tribal areas of Bajaur was safe to visit.

    The country is under US pressure to eliminate Al Qaeda and Taliban safe havens in areas such as those along the Afghan border. Fed up with criticism it is not doing enough, the military now wants to boast about places like Bajaur.

    Taliban-free streets – even those reduced to rubble – are the images that Pakistan wants to get on to the world’s television screens.

    Amid the destroyed shops, hanging wires, smashed iron shutters and walls shot up, commanders even announced a “symbolic ceremony of surrender”.

    Smiling tribal elders – who reportedly were opposed to the Taliban – put garlands of tinsel round the neck of a visiting general and formally agreed not to allow the Taliban back. But what they need now is reconstruction, electricity and running water – all likely to cost millions of rupees.

    The civilian chief administrator said he had been asking international donors to provide money he did not expect from a cash-strapped, weakened central government.

    But there was no time for details. The military hustled journalists back to waiting helicopters and the neighbouring Mohmand Agency.

    There commanders seemed more nervous, suggesting that women may be “more comfortable” sitting in one of glass-tinted vehicles, rather than riding on the back of a truck, worried that headscarfs might come unstuck in the wind.

    Racing through a valley, scaling a mountain ridge and down on to a grassy plain, the convoy finally halted outside another heavily-damaged building – a school-turned-Taliban headquarters, according to commanders.

    “Three weeks back it was a planning centre used to attack us. There were 40 to 50 militants here before we cleared it,” said Colonel Saifullah, pointing to tank tracks in the mud. afp