Raisani to meet US envoy over drone attacks

Raisani to meet US envoy over drone attacks

QUETTA: Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani Friday said everything possible will be done in case of drone attacks in the province.

Talking to media after attending Provincial Assembly meeting, he said he would soon meet the US ambassador and express his concerns regarding drone attacks. I have already talked to the President in this regard, he added.

To a question regarding Taliban, Raisani said only peace-loving Taliban are present in the province and no militants.

Peace, For Now: Military Breaks Warring Politicians, Wait For The Next Crisis

Peace, For Now: Military Breaks Warring Politicians, Wait For The Next Crisis

Let’s not pat ourselves on the back too much. The celebration and the sighs of relief must not eclipse a worrisome development: The massive, embarrassing and unprecedented failure of political leadership in Pakistan over the past couple of weeks. That failure was no small event. The original sin of disturbing the Pakistani political process is born by the United States and Britain. The attempts at political manipulation by both countries as far back as 2006 have destabilized Pakistan. Their latest intervention was designed to protect their interests. Let’s celebrate the moment. But let’s also take our politicians to task for their failed leadership. And let’s keep an eye on the next crisis. It is coming.

By Ahmed Quraishi

Wednesday, 18 March 2009.

WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM

ISLAMABAD, PakistanThis is the first time that Pakistan’s military joined middle class Pakistanis in forcing change on the country’s closed club of elite politicians. This may not have been intentional. The recent failures by the political elite and the positive intervention for change by the middle class and the military represent a leap forward in Pakistani politics. This moment in our history must not pass unnoticed.

The events of the last two weeks prove what many of us knew already: that this is a dangerously fragile political system made worse by the inability of its existing players to exhibit the full range of public administration skills and the imagination necessary to run a nation as complex and promising as Pakistan.

The failures of this political class are magnified by the success of the media, the civil society and the lawyers in achieving what was impossible for the politicians. These new players represent a majority of middle and lower class Pakistanis who historically have been prevented from playing their due role in public life by a closed hereditary political system consisting of powerful families and vested interests.

But let’s not pat ourselves on the back too much. The celebration and the sighs of relief must not eclipse a worrisome development: The massive, embarrassing and unprecedented failure of political leadership in Pakistan over the past couple of weeks. That failure was no small event. It made our homeland the butt of international jokes. It forced other countries to intervene. It forced our military to intervene. The political failure ran across the board: an inept, dysfunctional government matched by an equally dysfunctional opposition where politicians led the nation to a dangerous impasse. Apart from paralyzing the nation, politicians pursued a series of vengeful, immature moves that pushed the country dangerously close to mutiny, destruction of public peace and a possible rift across ethnic lines.

We have hopefully resolved one crisis. But this is the lull that precedes the next one. Let’s not fool ourselves. Ours is a flawed political system that will continue to generate crises. The two top political offices of the country, the President and Prime Minister, will continue to be a source of friction and instability even when both belong to the same political party. Our political parties have ceased to be incubators of change and have regressed into ethnic, sectarian and religious politics. And once again, we’ve seen how a political crisis came close to igniting a confrontation between two provinces that could have taken an ugly turn. All of this calls for major changes in the political system before the next crisis results in permanent damage. The frustrating part is that not all of this change may be possible democratically. A failed political system won’t change itself. If the politicians can’t do it, the civil society should. And the military should break out of its traditional support for the feudal elite and help committed Pakistani citizens in bringing change.

Here the Pakistani military has a role. The recent crisis unintentionally proved the reality that the military is a positive force for stability and change in an unstable political system in transition. The military played a role in distorting the system through military coups. But the same military can also help in supporting the middle class Pakistani civil society in reforming the system, pretty much like the military did this time.

Our ultimate goal here should be the type of political system and not how it comes. Pakistan needs a political system where political parties are democratized and party leaderships are rotated through internal ballot, where language- and sectarian-based politics are proscribed, and where the different districts of the country are made to get busy in local development instead of getting busy in mass national politics.

Without this kind of change, the existing system will continue to generate crises and encourage foreign intervention. Here, it must be noted that the original sin of disturbing the Pakistani political process is born by the United States and Britain. The attempts at political manipulation by both countries in Pakistan as far back as 2006 have destabilized Pakistan. Their latest intervention might have turned out to be positive but it was designed to protect their interests inside the Pakistani government.

Let’s celebrate the moment. But let’s also take our politicians to task for their failed leadership. And let’s keep an eye on the next crisis. It is coming.

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

Baloch Spokesman for US and India Spins Predator Story

Baloch nationalists say US drone attacks were expected

* Say they will support drone strikes if they only target terrorists

By Malik Siraj Akbar

QUETTA: A majority of Baloch and Pashtun nationalists in Balochistan on Thursday said the imminent United States-led drone attacks in the province were in fact the expected outcome of the faulty policies of past governments.

Khuda-e-Dad, provincial president of the Awami National Party (ANP), told Daily Times that his party had warned past governments not to support the Taliban and provide them shelter in the province.

“We cannot fool the Americans. They are ruling the whole world. They have the expertise to find out who is hiding where and who their supporters, financers and protectors are,” he said, adding that Washington should, however, engage in talks with democratic forces in Balochistan in order to devise a long-term partnership to defeat extremism.

“Thousands of religious fanatics were supported in the past to take shelter in Balochistan simply to counter the democratic forces. Today, we are paying the price for other people’s wrong policies,” he added.

Abdul Rahim Ziaratwal, former parliamentary leader of the Pashtoonkhawa Milli Awami Party (PkMP), told Daily Times that the entire world opposed the bizarre interpretation of Islam by the Taliban. They cannot be the friends of humanity by destroying schools, colleges and centres of modern learning.

Targets: Asked if the Pashtun nationalists in Balochistan would oppose the expected drone attacks, Ziaratwal said it entirely depended on the damage caused by the attacks. The only reason to back such attacks would be if they result in the killing of the terrorists, he said.

“The American threat of drone attacks is serious. We had warned about it in past but no one took us very seriously. Today, we have become an isolated country that is known to have blatantly supported the Taliban in the past,” he remarked.

Pakistani Taliban Bahudur Threatens to Behead Editor “Jihad Unspun”

Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leaders have renamed their group as Shura Ittehadul Mujahideen

Hafiz Gul Bahadur, who is the Taliban emir in North Waziristan, Baitullah Mehsud, the top Taliban commander in South Waziristan, and Maulvi Nazir, the chief of Taliban in Wana, who said they wanted to “stop the infidels from carrying out acts of barbarism against innocent people”.

Taliban threaten to behead Canadian hostage

Ransom must be paid by end of March, captive says in video

Globe and Mail update

BANNU, PAKISTAN and TORONTO — A Canadian held hostage after she travelled to the lawless tribal belt of northern Pakistan says the Taliban will behead her by the end of the month if a ransom isn’t paid.

In a new video provided to The Globe and Mail, Beverly Giesbrecht expresses fear for her life if her captors aren’t paid.

“I have been advised and asked to make this video. We have very short time now and I am going to be killed, as you can see,” she says, gesturing at the dagger on the wall behind her, pointed at her head.

She alluded to Piotr Stanczak, a kidnapped Polish engineer who was executed by militants last month, the first killing of a Western hostage in Pakistan since U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002.

“I am going to be beheaded just like the Polish engineer, probably by the end of the month. The deadline is by the end of March, and that’s basically, I don’t know, 18 days or 16 days,” she says, closing her eyes.

“I’m not quite sure how long that is but the time is very short and my life is going to end,” she adds in a choked voice.

In the short video, Ms. Giesbrecht, 52, wearing a head scarf and sitting on a wooden chair, says that she is being held by the Taliban “near the Afghan border, either Pakistan or Afghanistan.”

The video opens with a voice reciting from the Koran. Abu Jindal, a moniker adopted by some jihadis, appears in Arabic and Urdu, superimposed over Ms. Giesbrecht’s face.

Ms. Giesbrecht, who is also known as Khadija Abdul Qahaar, has been a captive for four months.

The West Vancouver resident converted to Islam after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and runs a website, Jihad Unspun, that says it provides information “devoid of the constraints of mainstream media.” Her visa application to Pakistan said she was a freelance journalist working on a documentary for the Al-Jazeera television network.

She was captured by gunmen last November, reportedly by the Taliban commander Gul Bahadur, who leads fighters in the volatile North Waziristan region.

“I need some kind, someone to help me, the Pakistani government and my own country and somebody must move now, because my life is going to be over. I want to go home. So, these people are serious. Please help me,” a wavering Ms. Giesbrecht says in her latest video.

North Waziristan residents said the Taliban kidnapped her because they are struggling financially.

“They are in dire need of money. We are sure she will be released as they get the ransom. The demand of the money should be accepted and it is not an expensive deal to save her life,” said Muhammad Noor, sitting in a medical store in North Waziristan’s Miranshah hamlet.

Though the involvement of local residents could help secure her release, common people and tribal elders in the embattled zone do not dare approach the Taliban. In the last year, decapitations of locals accused of being “spies for U.S. forces” have surged.

Earlier this month, a Taliban fighter who would identify himself only by the name Qari told The Globe and Mail that the Taliban would free Ms. Giesbrecht for $375, 000 (U.S.).

Initial reports had the Taliban asking for cash and a prisoner exchange. But Qari had said money alone could now secure her release.

The Canadian government is aware of the latest video but has no other comments, Lisa Monette, a spokeswoman for the Department of Foreign Affairs, said yesterday.

Glen Cooper, a long-time friend of Ms. Giesbrecht, saw part of the video yesterday and worries about her health.

“My impression is that she’s exhausted, tired and frightened. She was in poor health before this incident, and her pale complexion only confirms to me that the Taliban are holding a very fragile woman.”

In a previous video last month, Ms. Giesbrecht said her health was failing. “I am very sick,” she said. “I need a hospital right away. I’m missing teeth. I have pneumonia and I need this [release] to happen quickly.”

Ms. Giesbrecht was seized at gunpoint while travelling in the Bannu district, a gateway to the North Waziristan tribal belt.

With reports from Mark Hume in Vancouver and Omar El Akkad in Toronto


MILGRAM EXPERIMENT –Obedience Makes People Commit Atrocious Acts

MILGRAM EXPERIMENT

Ordinary people will perform acts that go against their morals and conscious just because an authority figure tells them to do so.

Obedience Makes People Commit Atrocious Acts
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Author

Author
Lajla Mlinarić Blake

Three months after the start of the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, in July 1961, Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram began experiments to see how normal people, living ordinary lives, can commit atrocious acts simply because they are following orders from people -.--.-Stanley Milgramthey perceived as authority figures. The purpose of his experiment was to answer the question: how could seemingly ordinary, decent Germans who ran Nazi death camps turn into vicious, cruel and immoral people committing atrocious acts. Could it be that they were just following orders? Could they be called accomplices?

Milgram, who was 28 at the time, set up the experiment to see how much pain ordinary citizens would inflict on innocent people, going against their morals and conscious, just because the ‘authority figure’ instructs them to do so.

The experiment

Milgram’s volunteers, or “teachers”, as he named them, had the task of teaching “learners” a list of-.--.-Milgram shock-box word pairs. The scientist instructed the teacher to administer to the learner painful electric shocks, starting at 15 volts, by pressing a lever on a machine every time the learner made a mistake on a word-matching question. After every subsequent wrong answer, the teacher had to increase the voltage by another 15 volts, going up to the maximum voltage of 450.

However the ‘learners’ were in fact actors and were not being given electric shocks at all. A tape recorder, located in a separate room where the ‘learner’ was, played pre-recorded sounds of groans and screams for each shock level. As the ‘voltage’ increased, the sounds of screams of pain, moans and banging on the wall grew louder until there was no sound from the ‘learner’ at all, giving the ‘teacher’ the impression that the learner had passed out from the pain or even worse.

-.-wikipedia-.-The Milgram experimentSome of the volunteers wanted to stop the experiment after having administered 135 volts, some questioned the purpose of the experiment and most of them wanted to check on the condition of the ‘learner’. But the ‘authority figure’, the scientist, would give them instructions to continue with the experiment over and over again.

What was stunning was that none of the participants refused to administer shocks lower than the 300-volt level and as many as 65 percent of the participants actually went all the way, giving the maximum 450-volt shocks three times in a row, which was when the experiment was halted.

Only a few people can resist authority

In his 1974 article “The Perils of Obedience”, Milgram wrote:

- The legal and philosophic aspects of obedience are of enormous importance, but they say very little about how most people behave in concrete situations. I set up a simple experiment at Yale University to test how much pain an ordinary citizen would inflict on another person simply because he was ordered to by an experimental scientist. Stark authority was pitted against the subjects’ [participants'] strongest moral imperatives against hurting others, and, with the subjects’ [participants'] ears ringing with the screams of the victims, authority won more often than not. The extreme willingness of adults to go to almost any lengths on the command of an authority constitutes the chief finding of the study and the fact most urgently demanding explanation.

Milgram Experiment Replicated by Other Scientists

Scientists in Australia, South Africa and some European countries replicated the experiment that spanned for 25 years, from 1961 to 1985 and got very similar results to Milgram’s.

In an experiment in Germany, as many as 85 percent of participants had administered the maximum electric shock to the learner.

Ordinary people, simply doing their jobs, and without any particular hostility on their part, can become agents in a terrible destructive process. Moreover, even when the destructive effects of their work become patently clear, and they are asked to carry out actions incompatible with fundamental standards of morality, relatively few people have the resources needed to resist authority.

One of the participants of Milgram’s experiment later said: “While I was a subject in 1964, though I believed that I was hurting someone, I was totally unaware of why I was doing so. Few people ever realise when they are acting according to their own beliefs and when they are meekly submitting to authority”.

Today the Milgram experiment is considered vastly unethical by psychologists because of the emotional trauma many of the volunteers in the experiment suffered afterwards.

Deal With Jundullah, Pakistan

Iran seeks end to infiltration

Staff Reporter

ISLAMABAD: Iranian Ambassador to Pakistan Mashallah Shakeri has asked government of Pakistan to take action against “Jundullah Organization” who is involved in negative activities against Iran by using Pakistan’s land.

While addressing the news conference after visiting national press club, he said, organisation titled “Jundullah” is using Pakistan’s land against Iran and govt of Pakistan should not allow anyone to use its land against Iran. “We have evidence about activities of this organization against Iran. Iran values its relations with Pakistan. Strong and stable Pakistan is in Iran interest,” he said.

“We want to resolve the issue amicably but at same we have concern about activities of Jundullah organization against Iran. The organization is using Pakistan’s land,” he said.

Relations between Pakistan and Iran are promoting and recent visit of President Zardari to Iran would further boost brotherly relations between two countries, he said. Iran intends to enhance economic relations with Pakistan while they are also ready to supply 1155 megawatt electricity to Pakistan but due to unavailability of basic structure in Pakistan there are some obstacles in this respect, Shakeri said. Pakistani nation would soon hear good news about Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline. Practical steps are being taken to promote relations between both countries in fields of banking, railway, air, roads, ports and shipping, he said.

Iran is assisting Pakistan financially to build basic structure in its land, he said. Expressing his views over current situation of Afghanistan, he said, Iran want immediate solution of Afghanistan because stable Afghanistan is not only in interest of the region but also vital for his country’s sovereignty.

America lies at the heart of a worldwide web of organised crime

America lies at the heart of a

worldwide web of organised crime

Friday, March 20, 2009
By Kaleem Omar

An estimated 350 million dollars a year in illegal drug money is laundered through the American banking system. That one figure alone is more than the total receipts of crime in all the other countries in the world put together. This figure also makes America the most corrupt country in the world, because criminal activities on this scale cannot take place without the connivance of thousands of corrupt law enforcement officials – many of whom are drug addicts or drug pushers themselves.

The huge amount of drug money laundered through the US banking system is of a piece with the fact that America is the biggest market for illegal drugs in the world. American is the main market for the heroin produced in Afghanistan (which has shot up many fold since US troops invaded and occupied the country) and the cocaine produced at secret locations in the jungles of the South American country of Colombia (where the drug mafia runs a virtually parallel government of its own, complete with private armies).

If there was no demand for illegal drugs in America, the drug producers in Afghanistan, Colombia, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand and other countries would soon be out of business. Successive US governments have been throwing large sums of money at the supply end of the problem in the form of more money for helicopters for the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), more patrol boats for the US Coast Guard and more weapons for US Border Guards in an effort to reduce the flow of drugs into America – but all to no avail. Instead of going down, the demand for drugs in America has continued to go up, with organised crime syndicates raking in huge profits.

Relatively little money, however, has been spent by successive US governments on the user end of the problem in their own country. It is at this user end of the problem that the answer to reducing the market for drugs in America lies. Yet this is an aspect of the problem that has continued to be mostly ignored ever since the 1980s when then-US President Ronald Reagan launched his so-called “War Against Drugs”. That war was a miserable failure, and has continued to be a failure ever since then.

One of the results of this failure has been the huge rise in the number of prisoners in American jails. This number now exceeds 2.6 million, the highest figure by far for any country in the world. America now has a population of 300 million people. The 27 EU member countries have a combined population of roughly the same number of people. Yert the total number of jail inmates in all the EU countries put together is less than 15 per cent of the number of jail inmates in America.

According to official figures compiled by all the US federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, the number of reported crimes in America now totals over 15 million a tear – far more than the number in any other country. This is yet another illustration of the fact that America is the crime capital of the world. And the story doesn’t end there because numerous crimes go either unreported or undiscovered.

Another aspect of the worldwide web of organised rime has to do with the fact that billions of impoverished people living in developing countries still have no idea what the Internet is and what it does. But some others elsewhere know what it is only too well and are using their knowledge to profit from it illegally in the shape of cyber-crime. Until recently, cyber-crime was largely a sport for lone wolves and teenagers with a twisted mentality, or for small groups with a taste for mischief and danger. Organised-crime groups largely left the Internet alone. But security experts are worried that Net crime across borders will quickly proliferate. The reason: Low risk of apprehension and the potential for big rewards.

Now, however, those worries are finally starting to come true, according to the US’s National Infrastructure Protection Commission (NIPC) – an American federal watchdog that works with the FBI to protect the US national infrastructure.

The NIPC says that Eastern European hackers have now infiltrated Web servers running versions of the Microsoft NT operating system, grabbing millions of credit-card numbers and other personal information from US financial institutions. After lifting this data, the gang has allegedly attempted to extort money from their victims by threatening to post the information on the Internet.

Law enforcement officials say there’s plenty of blame to go around for this crime wave. They say many companies have clearly fallen down in enforcing basic security policies for their Internet operations. Some have never fixed vulnerabilities. Software vendors are also at fault for selling flawed products.

John Gilligan, chief information officer for the US Air Force’s computer networks, says, “The increasing reliance of our economy on information technology requires that we have software systems that have much higher levels of security.”

In August 2000, media mogul Michael Bloomberg (who is currently the Mayor of New York City) helped police apprehend two Kazakhs who had stolen his personal information from his company’s computer networks. And in January 2000, a still-at-large Russian hacker dubbed “Maxus” posted for public consumption on the Internet 25,000 credit-card numbers stolen from online music retailer CD Universe, after the company refused to pay his six-figure extortion money demand.

Malicious hackers have long had easy access to automated tools designed to find flaws in Web servers and other software exposed to the public Internet. But the timing of the NIPC warning came amidst a raft of bad Net-security news. The same week, hackers published a free programme that makes it easy to compromise encrypted passwords on computers running older versions of e-commerce software from IBM, which expressed frustration that customers weren’t applying readily available patches.

A survey released by the US Computer Security Institute (CSI) sows that 65 per cent of the 538 companies and large institutions it polled acknowledged suffering financial losses due to computer breaches in the previous year. The majority of those breaches came over the Internet, according to the CSI survey. Of those entities, the 186 that were willing to tally their losses admitted that the hacking had cost them $ 378 million, up 42 per cent and the highest number since the CSI started these eight years ago.

The CSI study likely downplays the real figure. Many companies are loath to admit to anyone that they’ve been hacked. Likewise, the NIPC is probably understating the number of companies facing extortion threats.” According to Alan Paller, director of research for the US Systems Administration Networking & Security Institute, the actual number of extortion victims could be much higher.

This comes as no surprise. The amount of commerce and financial transactions now passing over the Internet means that it’s now a far more enticing environment for organised hackers in which to operate. And that’s precisely what the Eastern European crime ring appears to be doing.

Allegedly based in Russia and Ukraine, the group appears to use three well-known security holes to ransack systems and then come back with ransom demands. One press report quotes Shawn Henry, the chief of computer crime investigation for the NIPC, as saying, “We began to see a correlation between many investigations that we been conducting. We had victims who had reported that their systems had been compromised, and there had been extortion demands placed against them.”

The question is: What should be done? First of all, software companies that fail to safeguard their products should be subject to legal action for damages. At the same time, they should help create better solutions to the existing systems of applying patches to flawed programmes. Overwhelmed systems administrators often apply a dozen or more of these patches each week – and the patches themselves often conflict with other critical software, says a press report.

The complexities that are inherent in mixing and matching different software systems, provides business revenues for dozens of multibillion-dollar consulting companies. “Every systems administrator is the equivalent of the head of maintenance for an airline. His job is to not only maintain the planes, but create the blueprints for the planes, too. That’s just insane,’ a press report quotes Paller as saying.

The report says that all this cries out for big changes in the system – changes that software and e-commerce companies fear would impose a heavy financial burden on them. But building in safety measures need not be so heavy-handed. The US Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is already testing a system called SafePatch that would automate the patching process and smooth over many of the conflicts inherent in the process.

Quetta: Anchor-point of “Mujahedeen” Arms/Drugs Pipeline

Pakistan seizes arms on Afghan border: police

QUETTA: Pakistani police arrested two suspected arms smugglers and seized a weapons cache Friday in the southwestern province of Balochistan near the Afghan border, an official said.

Police raided an orchard in Nisai village, 400 kilometres (248 miles) east of the provincial capital Quetta. “We seized 41 grenades, four rocket-propelled grenades, one anti-aircraft gun and two machine guns, and arrested two people in Nisai,” senior police official Ghulam Dastgir told. “The weapons were hidden in an orchard and there was no resistance during the raid as the suspects were sleeping,” he said. Police believe the suspects are arms smugglers.

Interpol Opens Door to Ending Saudi Terror Nexus in Pakistan

Interpol seeks Pak help to arrest 84 Saudi ‘terrorists’

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: Interpol has issued red arrest warrants of 84 Saudi nationals and sought Pakistan’s co-operation in their arrest, a private TV channel reported on Thursday.

Quoting its sources, the channel said the Saudis were wanted on charges of involvement in terrorist activities.

In response to Interpol’s request, Pakistan’s Interior Ministry has issued a circular directing the provincial police chiefs to help arrest the wanted Saudis, it said.

Five aides of Baitullah Mehsud arrested in Lahore

Five aides of Baitullah Mehsud arrested in Lahore

LAHORE: Intelligence agencies on Thursday arrested five aides of Baitullah Mehsud and seized detonators and explosive material from their possession. Sources in the agencies said the suspects were identified as Sasta Gul, Sher Ali Gul and Mahar Zad Gul Khan while the other two could not be identified. They said they had been arrested from Sham Nagar in the Lytton Road police precincts. Sources said information gleaned from two other terrorists led to their arrest. The suspects were shifted to an unknown place for further investigation. During the preliminary interrogation, the men confessed to their links with Baitullah Mehsud and conducting terrorist activities in the country, sources said. However, the city police deny any such arrests. staff report

What’s Law Got To Do With It?

What’s Law Got To Do With It?

justiceby Reza Fiyouzat
The Obama administration seems determined to allow George Bush and his cronies and lawyers to get away with eight years of lawless behavior. Perhaps more striking than the impunity likely to be extended to the Bush gang, is the ease with which the former president shredded the Constitution and the very concept of the rule of law. If it’s that easy to lay low the pillars of justice in the United States, the underlying system must be weak, indeed. But of course, that’s what should be expected of a nation “based on the greatest ever land theft, genocide of the Original Peoples of the subcontinent, and slavery.”

What’s Law Got To Do With It?
by Reza Fiyouzat

“If you have enough power and might, and have the will or the wish, you can write any laws you like.”

In an article titled, “Blueprints for a Police State” (Counterpunch, March 4, 2009), Marjorie Cohn, sets out clearly the role of two key figures in the drafting of a set of memoranda that overturned the most basic protections American citizens had against arbitrary state harassment and violence, effectively turning the U.S. into a police state.
Cohn has consistently recorded former administration of George W. Bush’s violations of some of the most fundamental laws protecting civil liberties. She, along with Michael Ratner and the Center for Constitutional Rights and others, have been vocal advocates of bringing key Bush administration officials to justice for their willful violations of the U.S. laws, as well as international laws, for committing war crimes and crimes against humanity, and for their torture policies, as well as illegal spying on American citizens. All of which came about with the helpful signatures on official memoranda from the desks of legal advisors such as John Yoo and Jay Bybee.
As she describes, “In one memo, Yoo said the Justice Department would not enforce U.S. laws against torture, assault, maiming and stalking, in the detention and interrogation of enemy combatants.”
In her opening paragraph, Cohn states, “The memos provide ‘legal’ rationales for the President to suspend freedom of speech and press; order warrantless searches and seizures, including wiretaps of U.S. citizens; lock up U.S. citizens indefinitely in the United States without criminal charges; send suspected terrorists to other countries where they will likely be tortured; and unilaterally abrogate treaties. According to the reasoning in the memos, Congress has no role to check and balance the executive. That is the definition of a police state.”
The track record of the Bush administration in violating the most basic human rights of not only American citizens but citizens around the world is well established, tracked, recorded and tens of books have been written documenting all these crimes and violations. So, the true worth of the American system of justice shall be examined in the years to come, as we find out whether or not any cases are brought against the key people in leadership positions in the Bush administration, as well as their enablers in the lower ranks, for their willful criminal actions.

“The true worth of the American system of justice shall be examined in the years to come, as we find out whether or not any cases are brought against the key people in leadership positions in the Bush administration.”

But the one striking feature that jumps out of this whole affair is the ease with which a series of memos made it ‘legal’ for the U.S. armed forces and security agencies to torture people, spy on citizens, rendition people to third countries to be tortured, and to even suspend freedom of speech and assembly; as tens of thousands of American demonstrators wishing to use their public spaces to assemble and practice their free speech rights can tell you.
So, we must ask: What is law? And is the U.S. a country based on laws?
Clearly, ‘law’ has many aspects, and there are different kinds of laws. There is contract law, property law, trust law, tort law, and criminal law.
On another level, there are laws that define what is right, correct, good, if you like; things that “should be’ and, by deduction, things that ‘should not be.’ Included here are the Ten Commandments kind of laws prohibiting murder, theft, lusting after your neighbor’s wife, and so on. There are also laws that define and protect the rights of people and entities, such as laws protecting people’s freedom from random harassment by police officials, for example.
Then there are larger-structure laws that can be characterized as era-specific. Laws protecting slavery, for example, were such. For hundreds of years, in the colonial era as well as after the founding of the U.S. it was legal to hold slaves. After the Civil War, lynching of black people, though not sanctioned by law, had no legal repercussions for many decades. Another example of era-specific laws is those inaugurated by modernity, or rise of capitalism, protecting the right of expropriation of surplus labor of wage workers.

“Is the U.S. a country based on laws?”

Finally, there are laws that came about as a result of modernity’s requirements for running a complex state, clearly separated from the civil society, and superimposed on it. These are laws mapping the state apparatuses, their authority and jurisdiction, obligations and working mechanisms. In the U.S. these include constitutional law and administrative law, as well as international laws and treaties.
This last category of laws together with the era-specific laws protecting capitalist expropriation of surplus labor, shape, modify and potentially subvert all the other laws. Hence, the Marxists’ formulation that “law” is the formal and institutionalized expression of the balance of class powers, and legal developments correspond to the different stages of the class struggles ongoing in any given society, as well as regionally and internationally.

A Mockery of Law
To get back to the discussion of the Bush administration’s violations of basic civil liberties, it is instructive to pause a little on how easily an entire legal superstructure was overturned, exactly as a direct impact of the ‘laws’ defining state’s rights on all the other laws. This shows that the state, and not the civil society, is the master in the social contract established in the U.S. Not that this is news to anybody on the left.
The fact that the Bush administration could so easily make a mockery of ‘law’ is indicative of, among other things, the fact that the American working classes have been beaten down so severely that all that was required to take away most of people’s legal rights was the signature of, practically, a bunch of higher-degreed, legal bully boys for hire.
But, as historical evidence shows, legality has never been a particular concern of those with great powers to wield. The founding of the U.S. is based on the greatest ever land theft, genocide of the Original Peoples of the subcontinent, and slavery. All three of which were deemed not only ‘legal’ but divinely sanctioned. And to commit all those atrocities, you must have that singular extra-legal element which taints all U.S. laws from the country’s inception: racism.

It is instructive to pause a little on the matter of lynching of the black Americans. As late as seventy years after the ending of the Civil War, according to Wikipedia, “On July 19, 1935, Rubin Stacy, a homeless African-American tenant farmer, knocked on doors begging for food. After resident complaints, Dade County deputies took Stacy into custody. While he was in custody, a lynch mob took Stacy out of the jail and murdered him. Although the faces of his murderers could be seen in a photo taken at the lynching site, the state did not prosecute the murder of Rubin Stacy. Stacy’s murder galvanized anti-lynching activists, but President Franklin Roosevelt did not support [a] federal anti-lynching bill.”

“The founding of the U.S. is based on the greatest ever land theft, genocide of the Original Peoples of the subcontinent, and slavery.”

No comprehensive legislation has ever passed the U.S. Congress against lynching. Wikipedia further chronicles, “On June 13, 2005, the United States Senate formally apologized for its failure in previous decades to enact a Federal anti-lynching law. Earlier attempts to pass such legislation had been defeated by filibusters by powerful Southern senators. Prior to the vote, Louisiana terror fightersSenator Mary Landrieu noted, ‘There may be no other injustice in American history for which the Senate so uniquely bears responsibility.’”
The only thing that had a fundamental impact on a dramatic reduction of the lynching of black Americans, though not its complete elimination, was the rise of the Civil Rights Movement; i.e., when the African American community organized and mobilized against such atrocities.
But, why should a society have a need for a special set of laws banning extrajudicial killings? Extrajudicial killing is still murder under any social system, and therefore already illegal. The fact that it was considered normal and accepted to lynch black people is a deplorable acceptance of racism on the part of the white society. Even more sadistic is the acceptance, nay, encouragement afforded to such acts by the state. Clearly, whether an actual “law” protects or sanctions particular behaviors is beside the point.
If we are to take history as any indication, there had been plenty of willful criminal acts by the United States government prior to the bad, ugly Bush administration, when it was supposedly “illegal” to do such things; we see rampant torture, illegal invasions of other countries that meant no harm against the U.S., and overthrowing of governments, at times at the behest of a singular company peddling fruits.
A lot of liberals are going around these days howling “foul play” by the former Bush administration in overthrowing a beautifully arranged set of laws so well-balanced, and Oh, so worth worshiping to the highest heavens; all the while, praising Obama for ‘restoring’ legality. Yet, when confronted with the logical conclusion that serious criminal actions should therefore be taken to bring about some justice, they cringe, and would be horrified at the further deduction that Obama is currently aiding, abetting and covering former Bush administration’s criminal acts.

“Are we not supposed to expect, in a democracy, a system in which the rule of individuals is replaced by the rule of law?”

It is alarming, then, to hear many commentators on the left wishing to “restore” the legal system that was so easily defeated and restructured by the mere signature of a few individuals. Are we not supposed to expect, in a democracy, a system in which the rule of individuals is replaced by the rule of law? The previous ‘legal system’ could not defend itself against a small group of sadistic sociopaths, and some people wish to restore it! Besides, that system hasn’t gone anywhere! We are still operating in that setup.
This whole historical episode, still ongoing under the Sweet Hope Obama administration (more on this, below), points to the fickleness of the legal system that is supposed to uphold democracy in the U.S.
“Democracy” becomes a meaningless noise in a system in which the personal opinions (based on social interests) of a small clique of fanatical right-wing “official legal advisors” override an intricate and complex set of laws set up laboriously to protect citizens against arbitrary dictates of a dictator king type. Was not the whole point of the project of Modernity (with the capitalization and attendant hoopla) the elimination of the effects of a king’s arbitrary wishes on an entire population’s fate and well being?
So, if anything, we owe a great deal of gratitude to the administration of George W. Bush for laying bare for everybody to see the point: “Law” has nothing to do with it. If you have enough power and might, and have the will or the wish, you can write any laws you like and allow yourself to do anything you want in a class-based society.
We have been living in a dictatorship; period. If the signature of a few individuals is all it takes to overturn an entire legal structure, which was erected to protect individuals and to render everybody “equal before the law,” then that structure is as fickle as any erected by any absolutist monarch of the days long gone.
So, although all the criminals from the two Bush administrations should be pursued and not let off the hook by any means, the larger picture dictates that it does not matter which particular individuals put their signatures on some memos legalizing torture and suspending civil liberties. There will always be such willing individuals as long as we live in class-based structures, and there will never be any lack of enthusiasm on the part of rulers to do as they damned please. The more productive interrogations therefore should be targeted at the social structures that can crumble so easily with a few strokes of so few pens. A ruder person would say, “It’s the system, stupid!”
Liberals like to say the neo-con agenda is dead. Is it, really? Then why are the majority of its most significant achievements still in place and being protected by the new Obama administration? Obama’s administration is using the same legal language, and for the most part is employing roughly the same tactics.
The Obama admininstration is still using the doctrine of preventive war-making in Afghanistan and even Pakistan (“Fight them over there before they bring it here”). They are as hostile to the Palestinian people and their legally elected representatives, as well as hostile to the most basic of their rights under international treaties, which the U.S. is signatory to. They are, in spite of the supposed “draw down” of armed forces in Iraq, expanding the war of terror against the people of the greater Middle East (in Afghanistan and Pakistan); they continue the Bush administration’s double-talk on Iran (“We will pursue diplomacy, but all options are open”); their line, so far, of not pursuing any legal actions against torturers, and in fact blocking key decisions that would really reverse the Bush administration’s illegal activities, indicate that they will pursue the same actions and take the same exact evasions, diversions and deflections; and even their economic “policies” of pouring people’s hard earned tax money into the bankers’ and military contractors’ pockets is basically the same as the former administration’s.

“Obama’s administration is using the same legal language, and for the most part is employing roughly the same tactics.”

A huge and loud alarm should therefore be raised regarding the necessity of fighting against superficial legalese when it comes to the U.S. government’s fundamental violations of rights of individuals, U.S. citizens or not. We must especially attack the approach taken by the liberals in letting Obama off the hook already. The insistence by the liberals that “the whole legal nightmare is now over,” with the insinuation that no legal proceedings should be brought against the criminals of the last eight years (at least), is itself a criminal utterance. Letting criminals off the hook means, further, that the policies that allowed some to act illegally are still in effect.
But, then again, “illegality” has never had anything to do with it. And, I for one, doubt very much that the courts and the justice system set up in the U.S., in its current form and substance, will ever bring any meaningful cases against any of the criminals of the past eight years. To do so, I think, would open up a huge can of worms that the current system cannot process or digest. Better keep things under wraps. Hopefully, I am wrong, very wrong.
Let’s close with a different thought. The reason we are awed by and love Joseph K., the main protagonist in Kafka’s The Trial, is mostly because, I think, though he does not start out as a classic hero and is in fact a most ordinary man, when pushed by his bizarre circumstances, he acts heroically. As compared with another accused man in the story, the cowardly Rudi Block, who stays an utter slave to the machinery, Joseph K. defies all authorities by the end of the story, starting with his own uncle (family), through to the lawyer his uncle gets for him (connections and privilege), then the court (authority), and finally church and god; hence, his final fate. By defying all these arbitrarily imposed authorities, he chooses to be human and free, even if only in death. He refuses to live by an insane irrationality. That’s why we love him.
Liberals are like Rudi Block. They can’t see any alternatives to the system, and are forever slavishly waiting for this structurally flawed and contradictory system to correct itself and address the concerns of justice. A true humanist with a realist outlook would follow the path of Joseph K. and defy the entire structure, come what may.
Reza Fiyouzat can be reached at: rfiyouzat@yahoo.com
He keeps a blog at: http://revolutionaryflowerpot.blogspot.com

White Christian Terrorists With Nuclear Materials Ignored?

Freedom Rider: White Christian Terrorists With Nuclear Materials Ignored?

loyal klansmen by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley
“Homeland security” seems to mean keeping the United States secure against threats from everyone except the White Right. In the Maine home of a rich acolyte of Hitler police found all the ingredients to make a “dirty bomb,” including “bomb-grade hydrogen peroxide, uranium, thorium (also radioactive), lithium metal, thermite, aluminum powder, beryllium (radiation booster), boron, black iron oxide and magnesium ribbon.” The possible WMD-maker was especially upset about Barack Obama’s election as president. White terrorists don’t make the news because ”the media and the nation’s political leadership remain committed to keeping quiet about their existence.”

Freedom Rider: White Christian Terrorists With Nuclear Materials Ignored?
by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley

“Cummings had all the ingredients needed to make a ‘dirty bomb.’”

If radioactive material was found in the home of a Muslim from a Middle Eastern nation, you would hear about it, a lot. On the other hand, when a Hitler-admiring white American millionaire purchases radioactive material from an American company, you don’t hear much about it at all.
James G. Cummings was a trust fund baby living in Maine before he was shot to death by his wife in December 2008. After the killing, police discovered containers filled with “bomb-grade hydrogen peroxide, uranium, thorium (also radioactive), lithium metal, thermite, aluminum powder, beryllium (radiation booster), boron, black iron oxide and magnesium ribbon.” In other words, Cummings had all the ingredients needed to make a “dirty bomb,” a conventional explosive containing radioactive materials.
Cummings spoke openly of admiring Hitler and claimed to possess Nazi memorabilia previously owned by his idol. His wife reported that he had been in contact with white supremacist groups, was “very upset about the election of Barrack Osama” and “mixed chemicals in the sink.” Cummings was also in possession of easily obtained literature that explains how to build dirty bombs.
The dearth of news about a man who had the materials and the know-how needed to produce a dirty bomb is outrageous but not at all surprising. In 2003 a white supremacist terror group was apprehended in Tyler, Texas in possession of more than 100 cyanide bombs. The FBI discovered this group only because a package filled with fake identification was mailed to the wrong address. While the Bush re-election effort kept Americans in a state of fear with dubious red, yellow and orange alerts, dumb luck prevented an actual terror plot from being hatched.

“Police discovered containers filled with “bomb-grade material.”

The Tyler group went unmentioned and unnoticed by the national corporate media. There was no analysis, no commentary from “terror expert” pundits on their activities, and no calls for congressional investigation.
The Cummings case is not an isolated one. Last July, a man named James Adkisson walked into a Unitarian Universalist church in Tennessee and shot two congregants to death before being subdued and arrested. He left a letter meant to be a suicide note and made clear that he targeted the denomination because of its political beliefs.
“Liberals are a pest like termites. Millions of them. Each little bite contributes to the downfall of this great nation. The only way we can rid ourselves of this evil is to kill them in the streets. Kill them where they gather. I’d like to encourage other like minded people to do what I’ve done. If life ain’t worth living anymore don’t just kill yourselves, do something for your country before you go. Go kill liberals!”  Adkission also added, “How is a white woman having a niger baby progress” and “I’m protesting the DNC running such a radical leftist candidate. Osama Hussein OBama, yo mama. No experience, no brains, a joke. Dangerous to America. Hell, he looks like Curious George!”
The Adkisson political murders were not the last either.  In February 2009 two Chilean exchange students were shot to death in Florida by Dannie Baker. Baker volunteered for the Bush-Cheney campaigns in 2000 and 2004 but later sent threatening letters to local Republican officials. “The Washington D.C. Dictators have already confessed to rigging elections in our States for their recruiting dictators to overthrow us with foreign illegals here, and have allowed them to kill and run for office in the States to extend their influence into our States.”
In another email Baker complained about plans to “. . . give our homeland to foriegn states and their representatives here in America. Lets exacute them and reinstate a legal government that will do something for us.” The emails were reported to local police but Baker’s threats were never investigated.

“Every day right wing talk radio and television hosts give credence to their belief that they have a right to kill because they are white and angry.”

The Baker and Adkisson cases are usually explained away as isolated cases of untreated mentally ill people that require no further explanation. These individuals are very sick, but they are given permission to hate and to act on their hatred. Every day right wing talk radio and television hosts give credence to their belief that they have a right to kill because they are white and angry. Adkisson specifically mentioned wanting to kill people deemed as enemies in conservative reporter Bernard Goldberg’s book, “100 People Who Are Screwing Up America.”
Glenn Beck, is a right wing talk radio who said who said he wanted to kill Michael Moore and Dennis Kucinich but CNN gave him a television show anyway. After the ascendancy of Barrack Osama and the Democratic party, Beck fell out of favor with CNN but was then given yet another forum for his views on Fox news where he remains unrepentant in promoting his hate speech. After a recent shooting rampage in Alabama resulted in ten deaths, Beck said that he understood the motives of the murderer and blamed feelings of political alienation for the killings.
Glenn Beck: Yada yada yada. And every time they do speak out, they’re shut down by political correctness. How do you not have those people turn into that guy?
Bill O’Reilly: Well, look, nobody, even if they’re frustrated, is going to hurt another human being unless they’re mentally ill. I think.
Beck: I think pushed to the wall, you don’t think people get pushed to the wall?[italics mine]
It isn’t clear if the exchange was a staged good cop/bad cop routine, or if Bill O’Reilly is actually the voice of reason and sanity in comparison to Beck. Beck apparently thinks that feeling “pushed to the wall” by unspecified disenfranchisement is a license to kill. Most importantly, Beck has an audience in the millions and his every utterance encourages would be terrorists.

“Native born white Americans are hatching plots, big and small.”

There are new Timothy McVeighs in development right now. McVeigh was nearly forgotten after the September 11th attacks, but he should be remembered because he had as Adkisson says “like minded” supporters. While foreign born Muslims are under constant suspicion of plotting terror, native born white Americans are hatching plots, big and small, on a regular basis.
The national corporate media ignored the threat posed by the McVeighs of the nation until the attack on the federal building in Oklahoma City. Make no mistake, there are still people in this country who have been taught that being white and disgruntled means that they can do anything, including take the lives of others. The media and the nation’s political leadership also remain committed to keeping quiet about their existence. One day our luck will run out, and another Oklahoma City bombing will take place. When it happens the media will claim ignorance and say that they had no idea such people existed. They already know the answers to their feigned tortured questions, but as is so often the case, they have made a choice to keep us in the dark.

Margaret Kimberley’s Freedom Rider column appears weekly in BAR. Ms. Kimberley lives in New York City, and can be reached via e-Mail at Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgandaReport.Com.

Uzi Arad: “We want to relieve ourselves of the burden of the Palestinian populations – not territories.”

Uzi Arad: “We want to relieve ourselves of the burden of the Palestinian populations – not territories.”

Moon of Alabama

March 19, 2009

Yesterday Israel arrested ten Palestinian political leaders in the West Bank:

Among those detained were four Hamas lawmakers, a university professor and a former Hamas deputy prime minister.

They are taking hostage to press Hamas for the release of a prisoner of war, Gilad Shalit, Hamas is holding in Gaza. The weekend negotiations about Shalit’s release failed. While Israel agreed to release some of the several thousand of Palestinians it holds without any judicial process in exchange for the release of Shalit, it insisted on deporting those into some foreign country. Hamas could of course not agree with that.

So now Israel increases the pressure by taking more non-militant civilians hostages and a further blockade of the 1.5 million people in Gaza.

Worse is to come. The incoming Netanjahu/Avigor Lieberman government is at the extreme right of the political spectrum. Netanjahu selected as national security adviser Uzi Arad, a former(?) Israeli spy who is currently not allowed to enter the United States for spying against it. Recently Netanjahu snubbed Hillary Clinton when he insisted on Arad’s presence in a meeting with her.

Next to being a spy Arad is also a fascist. I am exaggerating? No. Via War in Context a video of an interview a settler friendly TV station did with him.

Uzi Arad on the two-state solution:

I don’t think that one has to go that far because at the end of the day, I don’t think the majority of Israelis want to see themselves responsible for the Palestinians. We do not want to control the Palestinian population. It’s unnecessary. What we do want is to care for our borders, for the Jewish settlements and for areas which are unpopulated and to have our security interests served well. But also to take under our responsibility these populations which, believe me, are not the most productive on earth, would become a burden. We want to relieve ourselves of the burden of the Palestinian populations – not territories. It is territory we want to preserve, but populations we want to rid ourselves of.

The full interview is below the fold. The above quote is at 8:30, but the rest like his perverse understanding of ‘democracy’ is certainly also of interest.

There was a time when some my ancestors wanted to rid themselves of the “burden” of a certain population they vilified based on race and religion. We know how that ended. Never again? Not if Uzi Arad gets his way.

Sarkozy under pressure as French protests hit streets

Photo

Sarkozy under pressure as French protests hit streets

By James Mackenzie

PARIS (Reuters) – Up to three million people took to the streets of France on Thursday for a second round of protests against President Nicolas Sarkozy’s handling of the economic crisis and to demand more help for struggling workers.

The rallies, which polls say are backed by three-quarters of the French public, reflect growing disillusion with Sarkozy’s reforms as tens of thousands jobs are lost to the downturn.

Several hundred youths clashed briefly with police at the end of the main union rally in Paris, highlighting the tensions in France, which has a long tradition of public demonstrations.

Spring sunshine helped Thursday’s turnout, which unions said easily exceeded the numbers seen on a first day of nationwide protests staged on January 29.

But despite the crowds, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon flatly rejected demands for more state aid, saying there were no plans for further stimulus measures.

Streets in central Paris were packed with protesters waving anti-Sarkozy placards and chanting slogans, with badges reading “Get lost you little jerk!,” a comment made by Sarkozy to a protestor at an agriculture show, much in evidence.

More than two million people are out of

work in France and even many with a job struggle with the high cost of living.

A large public sector payroll and a relatively generous welfare state has kept French people better protected than many in other countries, but there has been deep public anger at a recent wave of plant closures and stories of corporate excess.

LASHING OUT AT BOSSES

Sarkozy, elected in 2007 on a pledge to shake up the French economy, has seen his approval ratings plunge as he has poured billions into bailing out banks and carmakers, but rejected union demands for higher pay and tax hikes for the rich.

“People are in the streets and they are suffering, there are more and more people out of work and something has to be done,” said Sylvie Daenenck, marching in Paris. “We shouldn’t just be giving money to the bosses.”

Fillon told French television that executives should stop receiving “astronomical salaries,” but ruled out throwing more money to kick-start the economy, saying France could not risk adding to its budget deficit, which is set to double this year.

“There is certainly not going to be a new stimulus plan,” he said, adding that earlier measures had not yet kicked in.

The government introduced a 26 billion euro ($36 billion) stimulus plan last year aimed at business investment, and Sarkozy offered 2.65 billion euros of additional aid following the January 29 strike to help households weather the storm.

Union leaders are convinced the government will eventually have to concede more ground and meet their long list of demands, which includes a hike in low salaries and more job protection.

A series of disputes, ranging from strikes by university staff to violent protests by workers at a tire plant in northern France, have underlined a worsening climate of discontent that the government fears could escalate.

The CGT said 3 million people joined Thursday’s protests in Paris and provincial towns and cities. The interior ministry said only 1.2 million took part.

Transport, energy and some government offices were all hit by the strike, although most trains, flights and metro networks were running near normal for much of the day.

French bosses have criticized the protests, saying the flailing economy cannot afford such regular stoppages.

The government is predicting that the economy will contract by 1.5 percent this year, but many analysts believe the figure will be higher and could even exceed 3 percent.

Mindset of Hindu Kush and adjacent peak-dwellers

Mindset of Hindu Kush and adjacent peak-dwellers
Sat, 14 Mar 2009 09:44:12 GMT

The casket-like shape of the historical Hindu Kush is shown on a map.

By Mahmood Pervez Alam

The ebullient youth in the rural stretches and outskirts of urban areas in Afghanistan as well as the tribal belt in the North-Western Frontier Province in Pakistan and even in parts of Balochistan share a common hate-radiating slogan: “Foreign troops get out of our land; we do not want you here.”

The inadmissibility of Western uniforms is so staunchly asserted that not only promises but also the introduction of development plans to uplift their traditional patterns of existence and their living conditions are either flatly rejected or dismissively spurned. Traveling on foot long distances seems to be a natural part of everyday life and a necessary assertive adjunct of the robust male ethos.

Roads are suspiciously judged as paved arteries that facilitate foreign traffic. Bound by a common ancestral language and dialects, the geographic boundaries imposed by the now defunct colonial masters do not very well fit into the tall attitude of that rough and tough culture.

The British, who were in the habit of ruling with roaring guns, were forced to respond more positively to their roar for independence. Whether they controlled the areas as they wanted or willed, they willingly endorsed the independence of Afghanistan in 1919.

Encouraged by their victory in World War I in 1918, the British dispatched two divisions to establish their suzerainty in Afghanistan. Sporting rickety tanks and trucks and other impressive weaponry of that time, they proudly pushed their way into the heartland of Afghanistan. When everything seemed accomplished, the massive shroud that time had woven and history had unfolded from time to time closed in upon them from the peaks.

Every brave soldier was unrelentingly gunned or gutted; 39,999 of the two divisions, except a surgeon, who after being duly incapacitated was neatly tied to a steed and directed back to the area he had driven from to recount the harrowing tale of the proud British army. Only his picture survives the onslaught.

Born with a rugged peak-mentality, efforts to change the socio-cultural and psycho-political framework that history has diligently brewed are deeply resented. Any attempt to change the traditional status-quo is considered an attempt to emasculate their male ethos. The male ego that hovers high, considers such democratic endeavors as a deliberate satanic attempt to undermine the uninterrupted supremacy of the patriarchal dynasty.

“War is to man as maternity is to woman” is the order of the day, and any endeavor to change what centuries have deeply delved in their psyche is considered a deliberate attempt to violate what time itself has legislated. Whirlwinds of modernity that claim to enfranchise women are viewed as rude efforts to imbue the minds of females with dangerous, rebellious, revolutionary tendencies.

The women have to remain obedient to the dictates of the male mentality. Men eat first is the law that time itself seems to have made. In many places, women themselves seem to be content, and if not so, are forced to remain content by a known authority in the air vouchsafed by custom and tradition. Among these people, it is an accepted norm that women can be changed the way shoes are.

He-manship is apparent in the guns they prize. The worth of a man is determined by the gun he carries or owns. Since birth, gun-culture prints on the mind of children the bearing it can have on their social personality. Gun is the symbol of their manhood, freedom and history. The word freedom-fighter reverberates this deep-rooted belief. Gun is not a weapon of defense but a telling reminder of the dominant aggressive male instinct. Boys grow with this elemental pattern of thought into men with this unobtrusive ethos of culture.

Freedom, a gift of history and time, has been guarded by all kinds of weapon ranging from stone, steel and guns. They have their own ordinance factories producing a homemade brand of weapons. The quality of high-tech military hardware produced in the West is countered by strengthening prejudice and even fortifying hatred. The willful male ego readily absorbs the aggressiveness native to this attitude.

Semiotically, their deep interest in pointed projectiles is embedded in their ferocious masculinity. A monkey is shown in paintings, darting from one peak to another and in the middle of the way without having a solid rock to spring back from changes its mind, and instead of falling down in the gaping ravine below, is able to move back to the place it started from. This feat of extraordinary strength is made possible by a habitual intake of a glutinous black substance that oozes out the mountain peaks. Men become super male studs if they make use of that magical product obtained from the stubborn mountain peaks.

A strange lizard found in the mountains is often sported in the alleys. It gives out an oily substance from its mouth when it is swung from its tail and then dashed to the ground. The magical oil that comes out of the dead creature is fabled to have special potency and is an inalienable part of the male superiority and prowess sustaining culture.

Knives are loved as they depict the fundamental roughness of the frontier brag. The murderous knife that tells tales of cold-blooded brutality is whetted by their unrelenting inborn thirst for revenge. Bitter blood feuds keep vendettas alive for centuries.

Akin to this culture is what existed in the frontier America about a hundred and fifty years ago. The murderous knife of Jim Bowie and gunslingers like Jack Slade are naked references of the rough cruelty and lawlessness that reigned supreme in America at that time.

Smothering life out of a sleeping victim by crushing his head with a big boulder is considered an act of just retribution. The ferocity behind their trigger-happy, gunaholic and knife-thrusting implacable pride is their geographically sustained male ego. The Hindu Kush mountains, which means killer of Hindus, also assert their murderous authority.

The casket-shaped depiction of the historical coffin on the map shows that legions that love to flirt with history dig their own graves when they dare challenge the evil ferocity of the saw-shaped peaks that resemble the jaws of sharks.

History stands witness to the defeat of invincible empires that tried to crush the ego that thrives within the peaks. The Bermuda Triangle is just an imaginary place not shown on any official map but the Hindu Kush is a living monster that has baited superpowers to their death. About twenty years ago, the ex-Soviet Union died after being bitten by the monsters living in the peaks.

The British lost most of their Empire after thirty years of their snobbish thrust into Afghanistan at the end of World War I.

The concept and the definition of freedom as envisaged by the West is the main reason of the widening split between their way of thinking and that of Western countries. According to the peak-dwellers, Western countries try to pull wool over their eyes by talking big of their freedom. To them, the Western culture is sick, and it stinks.

According to them, the West has exploited both the human and the natural resources and has thus caused the destruction of morals and detriment of nature. Gay marriages officially recognized between same sexes both religiously and socially are a shameless violation of the laws of nature.

A man giving birth to a child may be considered a great scientific achievement by some techies but a loathsome opprobrium and insult to the time-venerated concept of woman and especially that of motherhood. The melting ices and the economic-environmental crisis are all due to selfish abuse of human and natural resources.

Freedom when applied to women means liberty to do what they desire. The rough easygoing tomboy mentality in girls is seen as an end of the coy revered beloved for whom chivalry demands a treatment par excellence. The evolvement of a male-militaristic mentality in women is debunked outright as a downright violation of the great values associated with the idealistic concept of womanhood.

The exposure of young girls to unbridled freedom through the courtesy of satellite dishes stiffens male attitude. It is not surprising to see the Taliban purging the Swat Valley of Western cultural influence, and the Pakistani government tacitly accepting and even approving their demands.

Flogging of individuals seems cruel but it is definitely less baneful than the systematic mass encroachment on their ideals of existence leashed out by the propaganda machine on their traditional values and the willful bombardment of civilians by foreign forces. If a lash that punishes an individual for the crime committed is considered barbaric, then what word can be used to describe the slaying of human life on a much greater scale in the name of democracy and the introduction of cheap, ignominious, debasing, immoral rubbish in the name of freedom, which they themselves do not approve of?

The mindset of the peak-dwellers counterbalances the idealistic with the militaristic, the propagandistic with the dogmatic, freedom with thralldom and unleashed democracy with absolute theocracy. The West and especially the new administration in the White House will do well to look at the peaks of the Hindu Kush and gaping the caverns below many times before escalating the conflict with death.

Evidence hurts Israel land grabbing dreams

Evidence hurts Israel land grabbing dreams

Thu, 19 Mar 2009 15:43:15 GMT

Palestinians sit near the site where the al-Kurd family lived (Jerusalem) after police removed a tent built on the site of their demolished house in late 2008. Palestinians have suffered from Israeli land grabs for nearly sixty years.

A document recently uncovered from Ottoman archives in Ankara dispels Israeli misconceptions on the ownership of East al-Quds (Jerusalem).

If an Israeli court rules based on a document provided by Turkey, a 30-year-old dispute over the ownership of around 30 buildings in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood will end and Palestinian families threatened with eviction will be able to save their homes, Israeli daily Ha’aretz reported on Thursday.

Attorneys representing the Palestinians said they were granted access to the archives following the recent strains in Israel-Turkey relations.

“Until half a year ago the Turks didn’t want to spoil their relations with Israel and were unhelpful. They would put us off with all kinds of excuses. Today their attitude has changed. We felt this change especially after the Gaza operation. Now senior Turkish officials are helping us,” said attorney Hatam Abu Ahmed.

In January, lawyer Salah Abu Hussein traveled to Turkey and with the help of local officials found a document proving that the Jews demanding the eviction of the Palestinians were not the rightful owners of the area.

The present Palestinian residents had previously lived in West al-Quds (Jerusalem) until they were forced to go to Sheikh Jarrah as refugees.

In the 1970s, the Sephardic Leadership in al-Quds (Jerusalem) claimed they had purchased the land before the Palestinians were transferred and produced Turkish documents to substantiate their claims.

The courts eventually recognized the Sephardic Leadership’s ownership but granted the Palestinians protected tenants’ status.

However, the Sephardic Leadership and a group of settlers who moved into the nearby compound have been demanding the Palestinians’ eviction, claiming they have violated their rental terms.

Over the years, several Palestinian families were evicted and other families moved into their houses. The last eviction took place in November 2008 when the al-Kurd family became subject to a land grab and moved into a protest tent near their sealed house. Shortly afterward, the father — Mohamed al-Kurd — died of an illness.

Throughout the years, the Palestinians claimed that the ownership documents presented by the Zionists were forged, but due to Turkey’s reluctance to cooperate, they could not prove their ownership and the courts rejected their suits.

Now the attorneys say the Ottoman document proves that the Sephardic Leadership had never even purchased the compound and had only rented it. Another Ottoman document confirms that the document presented by the Jewish party is not authentic.

“There is no trace of the Jewish document in the archive,” said Abu Hussein.

The attorneys on Wednesday asked the court to withhold eviction procedures against two Palestinian families on the basis of the Turkish document.

“Now it will be possible to issue ownership deeds. The Turks are very well organized and helpful,” Abu Ahmed commented.

Sectarianism in Pakistan’s Kurram Tribal Agency

Sectarianism in Pakistan’s Kurram Tribal Agency

Publication: Terrorism Monitor Volume: 7 Issue: 6

A Pakistani soldier killed in Kurram Tribal Agency, 2007

A U.S. drone missile attack on a Taliban training camp on March 12 highlighted the growing importance of Pakistan’s Kurram Tribal Agency in the war along the frontier with Afghanistan. Unlike Pakistan’s other six tribal agencies, the conflict in Kurram is complicated by sectarian divisions that have flared into violent encounters between the region’s Sunni and Shi’a Muslim communities.

Communities in Conflict

Sectarian violence is not a new phenomenon in Kurram, which is the only tribal agency with a significant Shi’a population. Around 40 percent of the region’s 500,000 inhabitants are Shi’a. Upper Kurram is inhabited largely by the Turi (the only Pashtun tribe which is wholly Shi’a) while Lower Kurram is inhabited by Sunnis.

Historically the Turis were under Bangash domination until the 18th century when they attacked the Bangash, turned them into hamsaya (dependants) and pushed them into Lower Kurram. The Bangash clans living in Lower Kurram are all Sunnis, while other Bangash clans are Shi’a, Sunni, or a mix of both. The Afghans renounced their claim over Kurram as a result of the Treaty of Gandamak in 1879 and the Turis requested the British take over the administration of the area. This occurred with the establishment of the Kurram Agency in 1892. The agency headquarters at Parachinar is less than 100 km from Kabul.

There are disputes over land and water resources between Sunni and Shi’a tribes and sporadic incidents of communal violence have taken place since the 1930s, particularly during Muharram or Nowruz (the Iranian New year as celebrated by the Shi’a). The massive influx of Afghan refugees in the 1980s caused a distortion in the demographic balance of the area. Afghan refugees introduced a militant brand of Sunni ideology at a time when the Shi’a of Parachinar under the leadership of cleric Allama Arif Hussain al-Hussaini (trained in the Shi’a theological centers of Najaf and Qom) were being radicalized by the Iranian revolution. As modern weapons became available, clashes grew in frequency and intensity, while the local administration was viewed as indifferent or seen as taking sides (Dawn [Karachi], November 19, 2007). The first large-scale attack took place in 1986 when the Turis prevented Sunni mujahideen from passing through to Afghanistan. General Zia ul-Haq allowed a “purge” of the Turi Shi’a at the hands of the Afghan mujahideen in conjunction with the local Sunni population (Daily Times [Lahore], November 11, 2007). Allama Hussaini was killed in 1988 and the Turis held General Zia responsible. There were major clashes again in 1996, in which over 200 Sunnis and Shi’a were killed after a college principal was murdered by Shi’a activists (Gulf Times, September 7, 2005).

Impact of the Collapse of the Taliban State

The Shi’a did not offer shelter to al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban fleeing Tora Bora in 2001. One tribe agreed to shelter the Arabs but another betrayed them to the authorities, who took them to the jail in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) city of Kohat. A gunfight on the way to Kohat left ten Arabs dead.

The nature and the dimension of the sectarian conflict have changed since 2001. Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) have become a sanctuary for Punjabi members of Sunni extremist groups banned in 2002 who took shelter in the tribal areas, particularly in Lower Kurram and Orakzai Agency. These groups included the Sipah-e Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), the Lashkar-e Jhangvi (LJ) and the Jaish-e Mohammad (JeM).  After the earthquake of October 2005, militants belonging to Lashkar-e Taiba and other groups active in Kashmir relocated in FATA and the Kohat area.

Kurram is now in the grip sectarian of violence—in the last two years, more than 1,500 persons have been killed and 5,000 others injured (The News [Islamabad], September 19, 2008). The violence started in April 2007 after a procession in Parachinar was fired on (Dawn, April 9, 2007). In the clashes that followed, mortars and RPGs were used, resulting in heavy casualties that left 215 people dead and over 600 injured (The News, April 6, 2008). The Sunnis accused Iran of providing weapons to Shi’a fighters. Mast Gul of the Harakat-ul-Mujahideen (HuM) alleged in an April 9 press conference in Peshawar that Iran was providing money and weapons to the Shi’a and that if the Pakistan army did not take action, Sunnis would come from other parts of the country to help the local Sunnis.

The storming of Islamabad’s Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) in July 2007 was a turning point. The militants entrenched in the mosque were made to believe that the soldiers who led the assault were all Shi’a. From the summer of 2007, sectarian killings in FATA and the beheading of captured Shi’a members of the Army and the Frontier Corps were revenge for the assault on Lal Masjid.

JeM reorganized under Mufti Abdul Rauf, who established a training camp in Kohat, long a hotbed of sectarian violence and a stronghold of the SSP.  Javed Ibrahim Paracha, a former Member of the National Assembly, has declared openly that he is at war with the Shi’a. After JeM and SSP militants regrouped in Kohat and in Lower Kurram (traditionally a SSP stronghold), there was an upsurge in sectarian attacks both in FATA and in the settled areas, notably Dera Ismaïl Khan and Hangu.

The Latest Round of Violence

A new spell of sectarian violence started in November 2007. Sunnis accused the Shi’a of hurling a hand grenade at the central mosque in Parachinar during Friday prayers, while the Shi’a accused Sunnis of firing rockets at homes and mosques. The army used helicopter gunships to control Parachinar and Sadda (headquarters of Lower Kurram), but the fighting continued in the rural areas. Local Sunnis were joined by al-Qaeda fighters and Taliban from Waziristan who targeted the paramilitary forces (Frontier Post, December 27, 2007). According to the UNHCR, 6,000 Sunnis, mostly women and children, fled to Afghanistan in January 2008 (Daily Times, January 2, 2008). In the following month a suicide attack in front of the election office of the Pakistan Peoples Party candidate (a Shi’a)  killed 47 people and wounded roughly 100 (Daily Times, February 18, 2008).  The clashes intensified during the summer and the government was blamed for doing nothing to stop the influx of militant outsiders from North Waziristan. In June 2008, people from Kurram staged a demonstration in front of Parliament House in Islamabad seeking the intervention of the federal government, but to no avail. Instead of intervening to stop the violence, the government kept claiming that there was no sectarian problem in Kurram, blaming a foreign hand for pitting the tribes against each other (Dawn, September 26, 2008).

As the violence continued, the road from Parachinar to Peshawar was blocked, resulting in a shortage of food and medicines. Shi’a truck drivers were abducted and beheaded. Shi’a communities were besieged as Sunnis controlled the road from Parachinar to Thal. People going to Peshawar were forced to travel via Paktia and Kabul.  Those who took the risk of traveling through Kohat and Dara Adam Khel –where the Taliban have been active since early 2007 – were often abducted: “They stop every vehicle, ask the passengers to remove their shirts [to identify Shi’a by the marks left on their back by Muharram flagellations] and also check their ID cards” (Dawn, September 6, 2008).  Paramilitary troops were frequently abducted – while Sunnis were generally released, Shi’a soldiers were often beheaded.

A unilateral ceasefire was declared by the Turis ahead of Ramadan, but the bloodshed continued (Dawn, September 2, 2008). A peace jirga was later convened in Islamabad under the supervision of the Political Agent of Kurram. An agreement was reached, the road reopened, power restored and dozens of people who had been abducted by rival clans released (The News, December 7, 2008; December 17, 2008). A general perception that the Shi’a had emerged as the winners in the struggle led to retaliatory violence in other parts of Pakistan. A December 5 bomb blast in the Kucha Risaldar district of Peshawar that killed as many as 34 people and wounded over 120 others targeted a local Shi’a community that mostly hailed from Parachinar. There were also clashes in Hangu (NWFP) during Muharram.

Sectarianism Spreads to the Orakzai Agency

The sectarian clashes spilled over to the Orakzai Agency where 10 to 15% of the Orakzai tribe is Shi’a. The agency does not share a border with Afghanistan and was at relative peace until October 2008 (Herald Monthly [Pakistan], October 2008). The conflict in Orakzai is mainly over the ownership of Mir Anwar Shah Shrine at Kalaya. This shrine, which originally belonged to the Shi’a, was given to the Sunnis during British rule. Later the Shi’a were allowed to visit and ensure its maintenance. In 2000 the Taliban declared this agreement un-Islamic and warned the Shi’a not to return. The militants occupied a hilltop and fired RPGs and mortars on neighboring villages (Afghan News Center, January 18, 2001). The Taliban also expelled the Shi’a from fertile land and forced them to pay jiziya (poll tax on non-Muslims). In October 2006, the shrine was reduced to rubble after a seven day battle over its ownership. People from both sects were banned from entering the disputed area.  The trouble in Kalaya continued, with a suicide car-bomb killing six people at a jirga called by the Shi’a to settle a dispute with the Sunnis in December, 2008.
The Taliban based in Lower Orakzai have also been stirring sectarian violence in Kohat and Hangu. (Reuters, December 5, 2008). Moreover, access for Kurram is through Orakzai and by blocking the road, the Taliban are effectively putting the Kurram Shi’a under siege.

Conclusion

Both sects accuse each other of drawing support from outside; the Sunnis are alleged to be backed by the Taliban and the Shi’a by Iran and the Afghan Hazaras. Traditional leaders from both sects have lost control over the situation as very young fighters fill the ranks on both sides of the conflict (The News, September 2, 2008). Jirgas are no longer effective in resolving issues, particularly in the rural areas of Kurram. Even as American drones target sites within the Kurram tribal agency, the continuing struggle between Sunnis and Shi’a shows few signs of abating.

Obama needs Pakistan to Watch his Back While he cuts its Throat

US asks India to pull back troops from Pak border

NDTV has exclusive details of how Foreign Secretary Shivshanker Menon was categorically told by the US that India must lower troop levels on the border with Pakistan as a first step to restarting the peace process.

An outraged India has ruled this out completely though it seems America’s demand was made to encourage Pakistan to transfer soldiers to its Afghanistan border to help the US launch a major thrust against the Taliban.

But India on Thursday also clarified the Mumbai terror attacks had nothing to do with its relationship with Pakistan.

External affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee has said that India still believes terrorists used Pakistani soil and infrastructure in that country to launch the 26/11 attacks.

In his recent visit to Washington, the Indian Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon came under unexpected pressure from the new US administration.

NDTV has learnt that the Foreign Secretary was told in no uncertain terms that India, not Pakistan should make the first moves towards restoring the peace process.

What really took Menon by surprise was that the US State Department wanted India to pull back troops from the border with Pakistan.

India refused saying that it hadn’t deployed extra troops after the Mumbai attacks. Rather it was Pakistan which has sent thousands of troops.

The reason is that President Barack Obama is gearing up to launch a bigger military offensive in Afghanistan.

For this, he needs more Pakistani troops to help along the volatile Afghan-Pakistan border, troops, which Islamabad moved to the Indian border.

The US move to pressurise India has outraged New Delhi, it told Washington that Pakistan is responsible for the tension and the troop build up.

But what India cannot ignore is the sub-text: That it is yet to establish a comfort level with the new Obama administration like it achieved with President George W Bush.