Showing posts with label Mainstream Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mainstream Media. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Manufacturing Consent Revisited

About three decades or so ago, Noam Chomsky and George Hermann wrote the book Manufacturing Consent.  It was about how corporate Amerika manages to frame issues so that only a limited amount of information is available.  For today, the book has a few shortcomings.  It is too well-written, has too many facts in it, and the style requires a 12th grade reading level.  In addition, hardly anyone today reads anything unless it is in electronic form.  In addition, things have gotten far worse since then.
This is an attempt to suppliment, er, add to the stuff a bit and refresh the memory.
 You guessed it -- this is all brought about by the stupidity of MSNBC in suspending Kieth Olbermann.  I do not think the issue of a suspension of violating some rules or other was the issue.  Rather it was the possibility that he was going to be removed forever.  That is still a possibility, pending the next election.
First of all, we have to realize the utter stupidity of MSNBC.  It is no wonder that Gore Vidal called us "The United States of Amnesia," as no memory is allowed to exist.  Even the network executives have no memory.  Suffering a bit from what Denny Crane of Boston Legal called "Mad Cow Disease," I still remember things, unfortunately.
So, MSNBC started as a co-operative venture between Microsoft and NBC.  Microsoft's influence was evident from the beginning as the anchors were younger, wore more informal attire, and looked like guys and girls who had just graduated and can't wait to get back to manipulating utilities on their disk drives. 
 Eventually, it matured and its top rated program was run by Phil Donohue in the same time slot as Keith has now.  The problem with that is that Phil was liberal.  He didn't like Bush senior's move to attack Iraq.  The executives then tried making Phil have at least one, then two, then three pro-war loonies on to "balance" the coverage as they didn't want to look unpatriotic.   Phil left.
 The ratings plummeted as they tried Matt Drudge and then Michael Savage in an attempt to compete with Fox.  Both disgraced the network and made it more of a laughing stock than Keith makes Fox a laughing stock. 
So, MSNBC hired Keith, but restricted him to only talking about Monica Lewinski.  Imagine the patience it would take to talk about Monica Lewinski for an hour a day!
 Keith left and joined Fox sports where he was very popular, but discharged by the Australian Murdoch. 

MSNBC hired him back, and he returned under the condition that he cover at least five different stories each day.  The ratings grew.  Rachel Maddow and then Ed Schultz joined.  Along with Chris Matthews, they all became a force to compete with Fox and all this was made possible by Keith (as was ESPN radio, btw.). 

However, Keith became too liberal given the corporate victories in the last election.  When his suspension was announced, 300,000, three hundred thousand, signatures were collected in under 70 hours to get him back on the air.

So what does this all tell us?  It defines the parameters of discussion allowed by corporate Amerika.  Shit, did I say "parameters"?  It lets us know how widely we are allowed to think and speak.  It frames the discussion. There I did it again, "framing" is a term borrowed from Counseling and Clinical Psychology, but here used to mean "limit". 

Unfortunatley, most Americans are limited in what they are allowed to learn.  This is a practice started in the earliest years of schooling and persists right up to the first two years of College, and anyone who has taught students in those first two years spends most of their energy simply teaching their students how to think and read critically, er, not trusting everything.

Now, trying to get a hand on the real news by watching even Keith Olbermann is like reaching through a glass darkly.  He does provide an alternative to the drivel on Fucks News, but his chief value is as an escape valve, he is amusing, impudent, and makes fun of idiots.  That is his real value.  Have you ever heard him really analyze international affairs?

Let's look at this framing more closely.  The debate is limited, but an example might help.  Sometimes we hear a debate on Israel and the media here.  The parameters, er sides, are 1) Is the Media anti-Israel or is it 2) open minded?  The obvious true answer, that it is pro-Israel and anti-Arab is no part of the discussion, nor will it ever be so long as the news is controlled by major corporations, and the fewer the better.

Another issue framed: “Is Jerusalem an international city or is it an Israeli settlement in occupied Palestinian territory?”  This is actually a pretty fair framing of the issue, but you will never see this sort of discussion on commercial media. 

Trying to do this on a basic level is like trying to build pneumonic circuits with stone knives and bearskins (sorry, inside joke, you know who you are), so I am going to use the popular terms "left" and "right", fully aware that they are very misused. 

The terms "liberal" and "conservative" are meaningless.  Today, people who call themselves conservative believe in increasing military spending, more nukes, and when they talk about the constitution they would very much like to eliminate all those pesky amendments.  People who were once correctly called "liberal" have adopted the term "progressive." 

At one time, Richard Nixon had nominated a string mediocre right-wing judges and said he wanted a "strict constructionist".  At that time, Justice William O. Douglas turned to his friend and said, "he means us!"  In other words, a strict constructionist interprets the constitution as literally as possible and Douglass was known for carrying around a copy of the first ten amendments.  "Yep," he said, "it says 'no law' in the first amendment."  Period.  What are commonly called the "conservative" four on the Supreme Court are really the Elitist, Corporatist faction.

So, the terms are fuzzy and hard to pin down, but “right” and “left” seem to help. 

Now, story time.  I was one of those who didn’t even own a television or watch it for a long time.  Today, re-runs of some of these are completely new to me.  When I listened to the radio, it was classical music or jazz, country (pre-Nashville sound, today thought of as “folkish,” and so on).  What news I got was from the Studs Terkel Show or the like.  When things got more serious to me, I listened to shortwave, finding the BBC and Radio Havana a nice balance.  Moscow was difficult to receive, usually.  Eventually, I joined the rest of the country.

So, way later, in the late 90s, I managed an early morning escape from Southern California, past Barstow, through the desert, and passed through easily.  (They only seem to stop you on the way in, but you still don’t need a passport to enter California).  There are places in Nevada and New Mexico along I-44, or at least were, that no radio signals reached.  I found on station in Navaho.  As I moved on, I found Rush Limbaugh.  I had no idea and actually thought he was a comedian.  He was hilarious!  He was ranting about Communists, Flouride, gays, and Saddam Hussein with the fourth largest, most powerful, army in the world.  Absolutely far out.  Now really, USA, Soviet Union, maybe China, France, UK, I mean, really, who was number 3 and who number 5?

Well, in Albuquerque I was able to find out more and actually got the point: not only was he serious, but there were about four million people who depended on him for their safety! 

What’s the point?  Well, he is right-wing.  He makes a lot of noise, is hyped up despite overdosing on downers, and more and more types like him joined.  Where is the left-wing?  Well, who is going to sponsor them?  See, corporate America is all in favor of right-wing nuts, they can bring them into the Republican party and continue on their merry way.  Left wing outlets, on the other hand, have difficulty getting support.  Not only do they wake people up to the truth, which presents a clear and present danger, but the commentators speak English well and write using big words and, worse of all, make facts available.  When mis-education is rampant, a tired worker hardly needs to come home to more facts.  Short, easy, explanations of why he feels oppressed are enough.  The answer is Socialism, Minorities, Atheism, stuff like that.  As one country song put it, “Teen age immigrant welfare mothers on drugs” are the problem.

Now, Keith Olbermann, Ed Schultz, and a few others are lively, have a sense of humor, and actually do reveal some facts.  They do not even touch some of the graver issues, and it would be suicide for them to try.  It took years for the “left” to get this far and they know they have to be careful.  When Keith was suspended, progressives organized immediately in order not to loose ground.  When others such as Rich Sanchez (pretty centrist) and Ottavia Nasr (pretty much followed CNN’s spiel) are tossed out so easily, we can see the problems.  It goes without saying that Helen Thomas was on the hit list for a long, long time.

One source that does touch these graver issues is Democracy Now, with Amy Goodman.  Despite not taking one nickel from corporations, it is on over 900 outlets, both satellight outlets, and provides excellent coverage.  Corporate America still tries to get at her, however.  They tried to take over the entire Pacifica network (not west coast, but peace like) and it was saved by intervention from people like Michael Moore and Dick Gregory (the ex-comedian).  They are still chipping away at the San Francisco outlet right now, money being a key factor.

However, the truth is “depressing,” as one sympathizer put it.  Another said if Keith was committed, he would join Amy for $1 a year.  Well, the show would then have to be two hours long, airtime is hardly available, and Keith relies on a vast staff.  Again, money.

Well, this is an example of what Amy Goodman on Democracy Now does.  It is an interview with someone who knows what really happened in Iraq and is happening in Afghanistan, and you can see why the show is not supported by the corporate class.  BTW: she also has the integrity not to insist on copyright as the purpose is to get the truth out, not to make a buck:
   


Nir Rosen on "Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World"
Nir-aftermath
Independent journalist Nir Rosen has been covering the Middle East since the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. In his new book, Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World, Rosen writes in length about Iraq, the U.S. occupation, the civil war, and how the war affected the broader Middle East, from Jordan to Syria to Lebanon. Rosen also writes about Afghanistan and his time unembedded with the Taliban, as well as the role of independent media and the failures of the U.S. press. [includes rush transcript]
Filed under Iraq, Afghanistan
Guest:
Nir Rosen, independent journalist and author of Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World. He is a fellow at the New York University Center on Law and Security.

Rush Transcript

This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate - $25, $50, $100, More...

Related Links


Related Democracy Now! Stories

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said Tuesday that the United States is "open" to the idea of keeping American troops in Iraq past the 2011 deadline for withdrawal. Speaking in Malaysia, Gates added that the request would have to come from the Iraqi government. He noted that any talks on the issue would have to wait until Iraqi leaders agreed to a power-sharing deal and ended the long stalemate that has followed parliamentary elections in March.
Meanwhile, inside Iraq there’s been little respite from the violence in recent weeks. On Monday, bomb attacks on Shia Muslim targets in three Iraqi cities left at least 19 people dead and many more injured. Last week, a deadly siege by gunmen in a Catholic church in Baghdad left 52 dead. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki visited the Our Lady of Salvation Church on Tuesday.
PRIME MINISTER NOURI AL-MALIKI: [translated] Despite the pain we feel from such a huge attack, we will not be subjected to their will. Yesterday was Karbala, Najaf and Basra. And so, they will continue on with their attacks. Their means are a combination of hatred and political motives to hinder the political process and block the reconstruction of the country.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Here in the United States, former President George W. Bush has defended his decision to attack Iraq in 2003. In his first major interview since leaving office, Bush spoke to NBC’s Matt Lauer as part of a promotional campaign around his memoir Decision Points.
MATT LAUER: So, by the time you gave the order to start military operations in Iraq, did you personally have any doubt, any shred of doubt, about that intelligence?
GEORGE W. BUSH: No, I didn’t. I really didn’t.
MATT LAUER: Not everybody thought you should go to war, though. There were dissenters.
GEORGE W. BUSH: Of course there were.
MATT LAUER: There were—did you filter them out?
GEORGE W. BUSH: I was a dissenting voice. I didn’t want to use force.
MATT LAUER: Your words: "No one was more sickened or angry than I was when we didn’t find weapons of mass destruction." You still have a sickening feeling—
GEORGE W. BUSH: I do.
MATT LAUER:—when you think about it.
GEORGE W. BUSH: I do.
MATT LAUER: Was there ever any consideration of apologizing to the American people?
GEORGE W. BUSH: I mean, apologizing would basically say the decision was a wrong decision, and I don’t believe it was a wrong decision.
MATT LAUER: If you knew then—
GEORGE W. BUSH: Yeah.
MATT LAUER:—what you know now—
GEORGE W. BUSH: That’s right.
MATT LAUER:—you would still go to war in Iraq?
GEORGE W. BUSH: I, first of all, didn’t have that luxury. You just don’t have the luxury when you’re president. I will say, definitely, the world is better off without Saddam Hussein in power, as are 25 million people who now have a chance to live in freedom.
AMY GOODMAN: That was President Bush.
Well, for more on Iraq, as well as Afghanistan and US involvement in other parts of the Middle East, we’re joined here in New York by independent journalist Nir Rosen. His latest book is called Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World. Nir Rosen is also a fellow at New York University’s Center on Law and Security.
Welcome to Democracy Now! Let’s start with President Bush’s words.
NIR ROSEN: Well, what’s he going to say? This is a man whose legacy is Iraq. He said that 25 million Iraqis are better off. Certainly the hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqis are not better off. Their families aren’t better off. The tens of thousands of Iraqi men who languished in American and subsequently Iraqi gulags are not better off. The children who lost their fathers aren’t better off. The millions of Iraqis who lost their homes, hundreds of thousands of refugees in the region, are not better off. So there’s no mathematical calculation you can make to determine who’s better off and who’s not.
AMY GOODMAN: Though he said Saddam Hussein is gone.
NIR ROSEN: Saddam Hussein is gone, that’s true. The regime we’ve put in place is certainly more representative, but it’s brutal and authoritarian. Torture is routine and systematic. Corruption is also routine and systematic. There are no services to speak of, no real electricity or water. Violence remains very high. So, there’s nothing to be proud of in this. The Iraqi people deserve much better, and they’re the real victims of Bush’s war.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And what’s happening right now in Iraq? There’s been a long stalemate following the parliamentary elections in March. You were in Iraq many times since 2003, and you documented very closely, for example, Muqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army. Where does he fit into all of this, and where does the Iraqi government fit into the picture today?
NIR ROSEN: Well, Iraq today, and in the future, I think, will look more and more like Mexico or Pakistan, in that you’re going to have a strong central regime—a little bit authoritarian, certainly corrupt, brutal security forces, but strong. Nobody can overthrow it. Nobody is threatening to overthrow it. No more real militia activity. And terrible violence, which just becomes normal, much as it is in Mexico or Pakistan, a violence which doesn’t threaten the new order, but certainly threatens the lives of many civilians on a regular basis, and people have to adjust to that and live their lives accordingly.
Prime Minister Maliki is going to remain. He was always going to remain. There was never any question. When you’re in power, why would you give up power? And the Americans have been backing him since at least August. And indeed, he’s probably the least worst candidate, in that he has at least the support of some countries in the region and of the majority of the Iraqi people, to some extent. He does have a certain amount of legitimacy. He’s credited, rightly or wrongly, with the reduction of violence that began in 2008, when he went after Shia militias.
So, the Sadrists—the Sadrists are much maligned, but they are the largest, perhaps—they’re the only grassroots movement in Iraq and the largest real movement, real party.
AMY GOODMAN: Explain who they are.
NIR ROSEN: They are a Shia movement which represents the poor, dispossessed, angry and marginalized Shias of Iraq. This is a class of—a sort of revolutionary class, which in the '50s and ’60s supported communism, was anti-establishment. And the voice of that anger in the ’90s, and certainly post-American invasion, has been the Sadrists, a religious movement, which is more or less anti-establishment, anti-federalist, was very much anti-occupation, was part of the resistance, but also played a major role as a Shia self-defense militia that got drawn more and more into the civil war and became more and more implicated in brutality, first against Sunnis and then even against Shia civilians. They were finally crushed by a combination of the Prime Minister Maliki's forces and the American military in 2008. So now they remain a real serious movement, the only one which even talks about improvement of services and social issues. At the same time, they always have that implied threat of the ability to return to their militia activity.
They were associated with Iran. Because they were marginalized, they ended up looking to Iran for support. And certainly, some of their units were trained by the Iranians to be better able to blow up American vehicles, have better aim with their mortars. These days, it’s no longer an issue anymore, because the occupation is sort of mostly a non-issue.
But they’re—it looks like they’re going to be integrated into the government, in the new coalition, which has been controversial. I maintain that it’s a good thing, that you want them in the system. When they were marginalized, they were pushed to violence and acted as spoilers. But when they’re in the establishment, when they’re part of the government, it’s very difficult to be anti-establishment when you’re in the establishment. It’s very difficult to try to undermine the system when you have to deal with mundane things like improving sewage services and electricity and things like that. And you don’t want this group of people who historically have been marginalized from Iraq to continue to feel marginalized.
AMY GOODMAN: You’re saying "they," "they," but Muqtada al-Sadr, explain his—what happened to him.
NIR ROSEN: He was the son of Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr, an ayatollah that was allegedly assassinated in 1999 by Saddam’s agents, though nobody really knows who did it. And he didn’t have—Muqtada—a high level of clerical education. But that wasn’t really the point of his popularity. It was more that he was a son of this important family and that he spoke in this sort of common Iraqi accent and expressed the anger of this sort of revolutionary class of Shias. And when he was angry, he was popular. To the extent that he stopped being angry, he would often lose popularity. He was pushed in 2007 to seek exile in Iran, where he’s allegedly studying to be an ayatollah, which will give him more clerical authority.
But he remains the single most popular individual among most Shias, although he’s reviled by many Sunnis because they blame the Mahdi Army for its sectarianism. Obviously, the Americans have a grudge against him, as well, because his forces were involved in attacking the American occupation. And it appears that he’s biding his time waiting for the right moment to return to Iraq, where he won’t assume a political role, but he’ll be a very important symbolic leader of this movement.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And in a moment we’re going to play a clip of President Bush. He also spoke about the surge. This has been talked about as the great success of the American occupation of Iraq, as ending the civil war. But I wanted to ask you first about the civil war. This is how you start your book, and part one of your book you call "The Lebanonization of Iraq." What do you mean by that term, and how did the civil war really take hold in Iraq?
NIR ROSEN: By "Lebanonization of Iraq," I mean that sectarian identity became more and more important and the key to obtaining power, and sectarian groups were pitted against each other, much as we see in Lebanon. Now, in Lebanon it’s more of a formal structure; in Iraq it was just a sort of—became that way, although the Americans did introduce certain sectarian quotas into the original sort of puppet governing council they established. And this was very disturbing to the Iraqis, because they had never thought of themselves primarily as Sunni or Shia, and that had never been the overt, primary way in which you would attain power. So, in the summer of 2003, when the Americans began to institute this kind of official sectarianism and institutionalize it, you had Iraqis warning the Americans are trying to create a civil war. Now, they weren’t actually trying to create a civil war; they were just incompetent and stupid about the way they went about the occupation.
Now, the civil war did not begin in 2006. There’s a common—there’s a narrative which has become accepted that things were going more or less poorly, thanks to various incorrect decisions, and then in 2006 the Samarra shrine, a Shia shrine north of Baghdad, was blown up, and suddenly the civil war broke out, and we had nothing to do with it. In fact, the civil war started, you could even say, in 2003, when, following the invasion, you had this huge power vacuum, and militias began to form, and scores were being settled. But certainly, by the end of 2004, the civil war started in a very intense way. Americans destroyed Fallujah in late 2004. Hundreds of thousands of refugees from Fallujah poured into western Baghdad. They began to displace Shias from western Baghdad, who fled to East Baghdad and began to displace Sunnis. Now, Shias were still quite weak in those days. But beginning in 2005, after the elections of January 2005, the Shia-dominated government began to be much more aggressive in its pursuit of Sunni militiamen, of Sunni resistance figures, and the al-Qaeda types. And it also began to crush Sunni-dominated neighborhoods.
The balance of power really shifted in 2006. And I met resistance leaders, Sunni resistance leaders, in Baghdad and Anbar, Syria, Jordan, and they all said the same thing: "We lost. We lost." It was a huge shift in how they thought of themselves. They had once thought that they could easily overthrow the Americans and overthrow the Shias. They looked down on the Shias as somehow being inferior to them. In 2006, they realized they had been defeated, not by the Americans, but by Black & Decker: it was power drills. If you found a corpse and it had its head cut off, it was killed by a Sunni militia. If you found a corpse with the marks of power drills in it, you knew it was killed by Shia militiamen. That was just their signature. And you had this brutal Shia counterinsurgency campaign—Shia militiamen in collaboration with Shia-dominated police and army—which just crushed Sunni neighborhoods and the Sunni population and beat them, until they finally realized they had lost. Many were depopulated from Baghdad. Not that Shias didn’t suffer—they suffered terribly, perhaps even more—but just numerically, Shias had the superiority, and they had the Americans backing them in this de facto relationship. And the Sunni population was crushed. And that is what finally pushed Sunni resistance groups to ally with the Americans against al-Qaeda and against the Shia militias. And that was the first huge shift in improving security. And the second big shift was Muqtada al-Sadr’s decision to order his men, the Mahdi Army, to freeze, to go and have a ceasefire. Then you saw—this was in the summer of 2007. That’s about six, seven months, eight months maybe, after the surge began.
In addition to that, the surge, which began in January 2007, this introduction of 30,000 new troops, didn’t reduce violence. I was just in Iraq about a month ago. I visited Diyala province, where I saw villages. There are hundreds of villages in Diyala that in the summer of 2007, six, seven, eight months after the surge began, were totally destroyed by al-Qaeda and various militia warfare. All the houses were blown up. One day al-Qaeda would show up, they attack with mortars, they’d slaughter many of the men, and then they’d blow up all the houses. It looks like Bosnia. And that was seven, eight months into the surge.
The real shift, though, was when the Mahdi Army declared a ceasefire, and then you saw a huge drop in violence. Now, the American role was important, eventually, in sort of holding these gains, but the key factors was the Shia victory in the civil war, the crushing of the Sunni population in this brutal counterinsurgency, which the Americans, brutal as they were, were never going to be that brutal and just slaughter civilians en masse, and the separation of Iraq’s groups. You no longer had really mixed areas. Iraq’s social fabric is destroyed, perhaps forever. Sunnis and Shias were separated. The Americans came in with 30,000 new troops, focusing on Baghdad, surrounding neighborhoods with these vast concrete walls. It was very oppressive. It destroyed the social fabric even more, destroyed local markets. It made life very difficult. But it actually helped, in the sense that now there was only one entry point and one exit point. So the Americans and the Iraqi forces collaborating with them could determine who belonged and who didn’t belong. They could prevent weapons from being smuggled into each neighborhood. They could prevent militiamen from going into the neighborhood. And they could—they were basing themselves in these neighborhoods, which allowed them to, A, improve services—in many cases, Sunni areas weren’t getting any electricity or anything—B, develop sources so they could better go after militias. So the Americans did play a role, but it was primarily Iraqi social and political dynamics.
And finally, there was the evolution of Prime Minister Maliki, which is key to understand. He came into power with the blessing and support of the Sadrists. But as he matured as a leader and actually began to take his position as prime minister more seriously, he realized that the Mahdi Army and the Shia militiamen were competition for power and were undermining his control over the state. So, in a surprise move in 2008, he went to war with the Mahdi Army. Even the Americans didn’t know about it, actually. They were caught by surprise and had to quickly catch up. He called it "Charge of the Knights." The Americans ended up rescuing his forces, who were suffering setbacks in their battle against the Mahdi Army. But the Mahdi Army was subsequently destroyed. And it was Maliki, not the Americans, who was credited by the Iraqis, Sunnis and Shias alike, with destroying the Mahdi Army and with this improvement in security. So you finally had a government which had a certain amount of legitimacy, as well, thanks to the precipitous drop in violence.
Now, it’s an improvement only by the horrible standard of 2006 and 2007, when you had a brutal civil war with thousands of people being killed every month. So you have the Iraq of today. I was there a month ago. Every day there are bombings and assassinations with silenced pistols. You’re sitting in traffic. Somebody could walk by with a magnetic sticky bomb, put it in your car. It blows up. Nobody knows why. It might be an al-Qaeda thing. It might be political parties fighting with each other. It might be mafias. A director-general of a hospital was killed. Was she killed because of that position? Is it al-Qaeda trying to undermine a system? Or was she killed because of some sexual affair? Or because maybe her deputy wanted her job and he hired a militia to kill her? Which happens a lot. That thing is a true story, actually. It’s a constant, sort of, but normal pace of violence.
AMY GOODMAN: Nir Rosen, we’re going to come back to this discussion. And then after that, on this eve of Veterans Day, we’ll talk about PTSD. Nir Rosen has written the book Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World. Back in a minute.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest is Nir Rosen. His book is just out. It’s called Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World. As we turn now to another comment by President Bush. President Bush’s memoir is just out, and he talked with Matt Lauer of NBC about that period of heightened sectarian violence in Iraq in 2006 as being "the worst time" of his presidency.
GEORGE W. BUSH: That was the worst of my presidency, period. And the reason why is because I thought we were about to lose in Iraq.
MATT LAUER: So, in terms of decision points, how hard a decision was the surge for you? Where does it rank?
GEORGE W. BUSH: Oh, it was a very difficult decision.
MATT LAUER: But the surge did succeed in reducing, if not eliminating sectarian violence.
Have you been given enough credit, sir, for the success of the surge?
GEORGE W. BUSH: I don’t—I don’t seek it. And—
MATT LAUER: Do you think you deserve it?
GEORGE W. BUSH: I think it’s an interesting decision, that when people analyze it, will say, "Well, it’s an interesting decision he made." The verdict is still out.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: So that’s President Bush talking about the surge with Matt Lauer. And, of course, General Petraeus is the one who headed up that surge in Iraq. He’s now the head commander of NATO and U.S. forces in Afghanistan. President Obama has, in effect, done his own surge in Afghanistan, sending in 30,000 additional troops. What’s your take on what’s happening there?
NIR ROSEN: As we see, 2010 is the worst year on record, and violence is getting worse and worse. The Taliban control maybe 80 percent of the country, and they’re spreading in the north. And they’re spreading in non-Pashtun groups—Tajiks, Uzbeks, Turkmen. So it’s not working.
Now, the surge didn’t work in Iraq. As I said, it was primarily Sunni and Shia developments, Iraqi developments. But even if the surge worked in Iraq, none of the factors which existed in Iraq exist in Afghanistan. So, in Iraq, you had Sunni militias realizing they had lost and that they were being defeated and that there was a potential Rwanda of Sunnis that could have happened, and it pushed them to ally with the Americans. Sunnis in Iraq are 20 percent of the population, a minority. In Afghanistan, the Taliban are dominated by Pashtuns. It’s not a Pashtun movement, but it’s dominated by Pashtuns, who are maybe 40 percent of the population, the largest group. And the Taliban feel like they’re winning. The Pashtuns have not been punished at all.
Maybe if you were the Russians or the Israelis, you could really massively bombard Pashtun areas and defeat them, if you were genocidal. The only successful counterinsurgency in history, really, is Malaya, where the British took half-a-million ethnic Chinese Malayans, moved them from their homes, and put them in concentration camps. And that sort of worked. So, if you are insanely brutal, you could do that to the Taliban, just move all the Pashtuns. Short of that, you don’t really have any sign that’s going to work.
In addition to that, Prime Minister Maliki developed some kind of legitimacy. A key principle of counterinsurgency is that you want to build the capacity of the government, strengthen it, and spread it throughout the country so it can take over. In Afghanistan, that’s the last thing you want to do. The government is predatory, is corrupt. It’s not a beast you want to feed; it’s a beast you want to starve.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And this is Petraeus’s key strategy. He literally wrote the book on counterinsurgency.
NIR ROSEN: Well, he signed his name at the bottom of it. It was really written by hundreds of other guys, all kinds of experts, and maybe he, you know, dotted a few T’s and crossed a few I’s. But yeah, he’s credited with writing the book, certainly. Although these days, in Kandahar, we don’t even see them engaged in counterinsurgency. It’s just a massive kind of military sweep.
Now, in Iraq, they called it "population-centric counterinsurgency." The theory is you’re going to protect the population. But in Iraq during the surge, the Americans killed at least three times as many civilians as they did before the surge, with air strikes, with kill-and-capture operations, with terrain denial using artillery in populated areas sometimes. So the population did not feel protected.
Likewise, in Afghanistan, we see civilian casualties continue to be going up. And we’re fighting a local movement. We’re fighting the Taliban. Al-Qaeda is not in Afghanistan. Al-Qaeda is in Pakistan. It’s in Yemen. It’s in internet cafes, in slums around the world. So it makes no sense that we have this massive military footprint in Afghanistan, where al-Qaeda isn’t, as opposed to Pakistan or Yemen or elsewhere, where they are. Not that we should invade Pakistan or Yemen, obviously. But even by our own military logic, what the hell are we doing in Afghanistan, fighting a local indigenous movement, which is maybe not loved by many people, but is the only grassroots movement with any legitimacy in much of the country and is spreading? And we’re backing a regime which is hated, illegitimate, lacking credibility, oppressing people. The police, when they’re not doing drugs, are ripping people off at checkpoints, are stealing from people, are switching sides to the Taliban. We talk about reconciliation, trying to get the Taliban on our side? So there was a reconciliation last week in Ghazni province, I think. You had the police switching sides to the Taliban. And we’re setting up militias now, creating new militias, which historically has been a terrible problem in Afghanistan. There’s no sign of progress.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: You spent time with the Taliban in Afghanistan. You write about that in the book.
NIR ROSEN: Yeah, some of it was against my will.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Well, explain what happened.
NIR ROSEN: Well, what I found, with the Taliban I met, in general, they seem to be—and accounts of other people who have met them—are very local: farmers, villagers, people from the villages where you’re meeting them. And they’re fighting for very local reasons, not for al-Qaeda, not for jihad against the Jews and Christians around the world or any kind of battle until Judgment Day. They’re fighting for Afghanistan, for Islam, for revenge, because maybe somebody from that village was killed. They’re fighting for local grievances. Perhaps one tribe or one clan is being backed by the Americans in a rivalry with another clan, but they’re primarily locals, with local leadership.
Now, what we are seeing, though, in a shift, Petraeus has had some success in his kill-and-capture operations targeting mid-level commanders. What that’s doing, though, is actually having perhaps a negative effect. These older, more experienced commanders were part of the community, had a relationship with the community. The community could pressure them. Likewise, they dated back to the days of Mullah Omar, and they were responding to a real sort of chain of command. These guys are being killed or arrested. A younger generation has taken over, a generation with less ties to the community. They’re beginning to kill or alienate traditional elders and leaders. They’re much more radical. And they’re also less likely to obey commands of Mullah Omar and the old Taliban leadership. So you’re going to have an even harder time trying to negotiate with these people.
And you’re actually—you are pushing them into the hands of al-Qaeda. It’s going to be a self-fulfilling prophecy. The Taliban are not al-Qaeda. That’s insane. The Taliban have their own hierarchy. It’s Afghans in the senior levels. Al-Qaeda, to the extent that it even exists as any kind of movement, has Arabs at the top, not Afghans, or maybe some Pakistanis. They’re two separate movements. But by killing more and more of the traditional Taliban leadership, we are going to push them eventually into the hands of al-Qaeda.
AMY GOODMAN: AP has reported scribbled notes from Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar have surfaced in mosques all over Afghanistan’s ethnic Pashtun heartland, threatening death to anyone who takes up a government offer to negotiate for peace, according to a longtime Taliban member. Your response, Nir Rosen?
NIR ROSEN: It’s certainly possible. I mean, in Afghanistan, you never know what’s true and what isn’t, thanks to the war. I think the Taliban would like to negotiate. I think Petraeus has sort of nixed any possibility of negotiation. He really takes this war very seriously. He’s increased the offensive and increased kill-and-capture operations, going against their own doctrine that he’s associated with from Iraq. Whether it’s true or false, it doesn’t matter. But it seems as if they’ve abandoned counterinsurgency now and are just pushing massively with these clear sweep operations, arresting large numbers of men. I think the Taliban would like to negotiate, but they’re going to negotiate from a position of power. And I think the Americans would like to somehow weaken the Taliban momentum, so that the Americans feel like they’re negotiating from a position of power.
But the Taliban are there to stay. And our attention span is going to be limited—a year, five years. People talk about 2011 or 2014. We’re not going to stay indefinitely. And why are we even there? We’re investing so much money in this country, and what’s the return for it? To fight the Taliban? The Taliban are going to attack the U.S. with pickup trucks and AK-47s? It just doesn’t seem likely. And if the Taliban take over and al-Qaeda wants to return and set up training bases, even better. You can find them, and you can blow them up, as opposed to Pakistan, where they have much—there’s a much better infrastructure, much more dense urban areas, it’s easier for them to integrate. One thing that we’re doing, actually, we’re pushing Afghanistan’s problems into Pakistan, which seems like a terrible idea. So you have insurgents who are pushing—who are fleeing into Pakistan, drug networks. And the Taliban, al-Qaeda, that used to be at the border area, now are fleeing, thanks to the drone strikes, into Karachi, into Sindh and Punjab. So we’re further destabilizing Pakistan, and that’s where the real threat might be.
SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Nir, we have to go, but I wanted to ask you a last question. You write about, in the book, how you started reporting. You were working here in New York as a bouncer, and you decided to go to Iraq, and you’ve been one of the premier independent journalists, unembedded in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, across the Middle East. Why did you become—decide to become a journalist? And you end the book with a punchy critique of the U.S. media. Your assessment, as well, of that?
NIR ROSEN: I was a bouncer in Washington, yeah, but that wasn’t like it was a career without a promise. It was just something temporary. My aspiration had been to be a journalist for quite a long time. And I was increasingly frustrated with the reporting of the buildup to the war in Iraq, where it seemed obvious to me, and to friends who were academics and students who knew the region, that it was just impossible that there were weapons of mass destruction. And we knew that the war was going to go horribly wrong. We could see that the media was very much parroting the American line and was very subservient to the American establishment. And I felt very passionate about it. I had some basic knowledge of the language. I had missed my opportunity in Afghanistan, but I knew Iraq would be my opportunity. And indeed, that proved to be the case.
I remain deeply emotionally involved in the country. Friends I’ve made there in 2003 are the ones who help me now, although every time I go back, I have to erase a few names from my cell phone because they’ve been killed. And that happened just this last trip a few weeks ago.
But I also remain frustrated with the American media, at least the establishment, with few exceptions. You have some very brave and independent journalists. But too often, they seem to return to sort of being the handmaids of power, instead of challenging power, instead of having this adversarial relationship with people in power, realizing that people in power lie. And I think that’s been the fundamental principle guiding my work, is anybody in power is going to lie to maintain their power. It should be obvious, whether they’re a leader of a militia in Baghdad, whether they’re the leader of the free world. And our job is to undermine that power and undermine those lies.
AMY GOODMAN: We want to thank you, Nir Rosen, for your work and for this latest book, Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America’s Wars in the Muslim World. He’s a fellow at NYU Center on Law and Security.
This is Democracy Now! When we come back from break, we’ll be joined by filmmakers Jon Alpert and Matt O’Neill, talking about their latest film, Wartorn. It’ll air on Veterans Day on Thursday. It’s about post-traumatic stress. Stay with us.

Creative Commons License The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.


Sunday, August 10, 2008

Let's Really Investigate

The Absurd Times








Illustration: Visit www.whatnowtoons.com

Now for the real issues. The media is really trying its best to cover the burning issues of the day.
Why, I've noticed that all the networks have run Paris Hilton's response to John McCain's silly phallic-ridden ad, and the McCain campaign thanked her for agreeing with McCain's energy policy (it didn't).
The latest big story, no, not the invasion of Gerogia -- well, let's look into that. His Decidership announced that "Georgia is a Sovereign nation" and, I assume, Russia should follow our example towards such nations, such as we showed in Iraq and Venezuela and so forth. Putin was with him at the Olympics and replied diplomatically, "Up yours."
But no, I'm talking about what is really important -- Edwards had an affair two years ago. Over and over, and we even get photos of the blonde photographer he had it with. However, if the story is that important, really, they really should dig into it. I mean, was he on top or was she. Did they do it doggie style? Was oral sex involved? She mentioned his being willing to try "new things" -- did they include equiptment or costumes? Handcuffs? How many orgasms did she have? Comon, media, we want to know how to vote and it is your job to get us the facts, so shape up!!


Thursday, February 22, 2007

War against Iran and the News


In the above illustration, The Decider (aka Arbusto, aka Mr. President, aka Bush, aka G.W. or “Greasy Weasel”) approaches Ahmadinejad from behind, trying hard to decide what to do. A sent B a longish letter (see #3, below) and the Decider sent a reply (see #4, below). British newspapers (see #2, below) point out that the war against Iran has already begun. So what difference does it make? See #1.

Meanwhile, while I have been too busy until today to look through for significance, I did not some items on the mainstream media.

Nancy Grace of CNN sent an e-mail to other employees stating that she was the father of Anne Nichole Smith’s daughter.

For Presidents’ day, the Decider said that he was like George Washington – his revolution is for all the people, not just Americans. [Words that would have me, if I lived in another country, pretty apprehensive].

Brittnany? Spears? Shaved he head and said “Mom won’t like this.” I gather she has been in rehab three times this week.

Some guy in Australia busted open 48 watermelons in 56 seconds. Didn’t anybody think of sending the remains to Africa? Someone said that this is something this guys grandchildren can tell him about.

Besides that, I’ve been to busy with day to day idiocy to organize anything, but Art, our managing editor, said I had better publish this today as I probably have relatives in Germany.

1 Tomgram: McKibben, The Real News about Global Warming

2 *American preparations for invading Iran are complete

Iran - Ready to attack*

*by Dan Plesch; New Statesman

3 Mr George *Bush*,

President of the United States of America

For sometime now I have been thinking, how one can justify the

4 DeadBrain Exclusive: Bush's reply to Ahmadinejad letter

Here are this weeks’ articles as mentioned above.

1.

TomDispatch.com a project of the Nation Institute

compiled and edited by *Tom Engelhardt *

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tomgram: McKibben, The Real News about Global Warming

This post can be found at http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=167460

The world is, it seems, melting

like an ice cream cone in the sun. Let me leave it at that.

As all Tomdispatch readers know, I write the introductions to posts at

this site. This post is undoubtedly the exception that proves the rule.

The editors of The New York Review of Books

have been kind enough to let me put out Bill McKibben's striking essay

on the real news lurking in the latest major report on global warming.

(His piece appears in the March 15 issue of the magazine, now on the

newsstands.) McKibben whose new book, Deep Economy: The Wealth of

Communities and the Durable Future

, is

about to be published (and eagerly awaited by me), has been involved in

important recent organizing efforts re: climate change. So I decided to

give him the first -- and last -- word today. /Tom/

/Bill McKibben/: "This piece is an account of a scientific triumph --

the ongoing effort to understand and warn about climate change in a

timely fashion -- and also, of course, of a political debacle -- the

complete failure of our government over two decades to address the

problem in any fashion whatsoever. But it ends with a paragraph about an

effort now five weeks old and, so far, entirely confined to the Web.

When we launched stepitup07.org in

mid-January, we hoped we might be able to find a couple of hundred

groups and individuals around the country who would agree to hold

rallies on April 14.

"That would have represented by far the largest demonstration against

global warming in U.S. history. By this point, our wildest imaginings

have been long since surpassed -- we're nearing 700 actions scheduled

for April 14, and the sheer genius people have brought to designing some

of them boggles the mind. There will be underwater demonstrations,

rallies on top of mountains, and on and on. All of it makes me think of

the example and the words of Rebecca Solnit

on Tomdispatch.com in

recent years: As far as I can tell, she's absolutely right in her

confidence that people around the country and around the world can,

joyfully and powerfully, rise to the challenges in front of us. People

power is a lovely thing to behold!"

Warning on Warming

By Bill McKibben

[*This piece, which appears in the March 15, 2007 issue of The New

York Review of Books is posted here with

the kind permission of the editors of that magazine.*]

When the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued its

latest report in early February, it was greeted with shock: "World

Wakes to Climate Catastrophe," reported an Australian paper. But

global warming is by now a scientific field with a fairly extensive

history, and that history helps set the new findings in context -- a

context that makes the new report no less terrifying but much more

telling for its unstated political implications.

Although atmospheric scientists had studied the problem for decades,

global warming first emerged as a public issue in 1988 when James

Hansen, a NASA scientist, told Congress that his research, and the

work of a handful of other scientists, indicated that human beings

were dangerously heating the planet, particularly through the use of

fossil fuels. This bold announcement set off a scientific and

political furor: many physicists and chemists played down the

possibility of serious harm, and many governments, though feeling

pressure to react, did little to restrain the use of fossil fuel.

"More research" was the mantra everyone adopted, and funding for it

flowed freely from governments and foundations. Under the auspices

of the United Nations, scientists and governments set up a curious

hybrid, the IPCC, to track and report on the progress of that research.

From roughly 1988 to 1995, the hypothesis that burning coal and gas

and oil in large quantities was releasing carbon dioxide and other

gases that would trap the sun's radiation on Earth and disastrously

heat the planet remained just that: a hypothesis. Scientists used

every means at their disposal to reconstruct the history of the

earth's climate and to track current changes. For example, they

studied the concentration of greenhouse gases in ancient air trapped

in glacial cores, sampled the atmosphere with weather balloons,

examined the relative thickness of tree rings, and observed the

frequency of volcanic eruptions. Most of all, they refined the

supercomputer models of the earth's atmosphere in an effort to

predict the future of the world's weather.

By 1995, the central Herculean tasks of both research and synthesis

were largely complete. The report the IPCC issued that year was able

to assert that "the balance of evidence suggests" that human

activity was increasing the planet's temperature and that it would

be a serious problem. This was perhaps the most significant warning

our species, as a whole, has yet been given. The report declared (in

the pinched language of international science) that humans had grown

so large in numbers and especially in appetite for energy that they

were now damaging the most basic of the earth's systems -- the

balance between incoming and outgoing solar energy. Although huge

amounts of impressive scientific research have continued over the

twelve years since then, their findings have essentially been

complementary to the 1995 report -- a constant strengthening of the

simple basic truth that humans were burning too much fossil fuel.

The 1995 consensus was convincing enough for Europe and Japan: the

report's scientific findings were the basis for the Kyoto

negotiations and the treaty they produced; those same findings also

led most of the developed world to produce ambitious plans for

reductions in carbon emissions. But the consensus didn't extend to

Washington, and hence everyone else's efforts were deeply

compromised by the American unwillingness to increase the price of

energy. Our emissions continued to soar, and the plans of many of

the Kyoto countries in Western Europe to reduce emissions sputtered.

(At the same time, most tragically of all, China and India had just

begun their rapid industrial takeoffs using precisely the

technologies we then knew were wreaking havoc; they did not seek or

find much aid from the Western countries that could have encouraged

them to take a more benign path.) In 2001, the IPCC issued its Third

Assessment Report (TAR), but it coincided with the start of the Bush

administration, which refused even to consider a serious policy for

climate. The IPCC's new Fourth Assessment of this February (known as

AR4) arrives at a more congenial moment, as the new Democratic

Congress takes up a wide variety of legislation designed, finally,

to curb emissions.

The finding of the new report that attracted the most attention in

the press was that scientists were now more confident than ever that

the warming we've seen so far (about one degree Fahrenheit in the

average global temperature) was caused by human beings. Instead of

being merely "likely," the conclusion was now "very likely," which

in the IPCC's lexicon means better than a 90% chance. But it's been

years since any reputable scientist specializing in climate research

doubted that conclusion. More important findings were ignored in

accounts of the report and in some cases were obscured by the

document's very poor prose, which is much more opaque than its

predecessors. Those findings include:

* The amount of carbon in the atmosphere is now increasing at a

faster rate even than before.

* Temperature increases would be considerably higher than they have

been so far were it not for the blanket of soot and other pollution

that is temporarily helping to cool the planet.

* Alternative explanations for some of the warming (for example,

sunspot activity and the "urban heat island effect," the raising of

temperatures in cities caused by high building densities and the use

of heat-retaining materials such as concrete and asphalt) are now

known to be relatively negligible.

* Almost everything frozen on earth is melting. Heavy rainfalls are

becoming more common since the air is warmer and therefore holds

more water than cold air, and "cold days, cold nights and frost have

become less frequent, while hot days, hot nights, and heat waves

have become more frequent."

These facts serve as the prelude to the most important part of the

new document, its predictions for what is to come. Here, too, the

news essentially confirms the previous report, and indeed most of

the predictions about climate change dating back to the start of

research: if we don't take the most aggressive possible measures to

curb fossil fuel emissions immediately, then we will see temperature

increases of -- at the best estimate -- roughly five degrees

Fahrenheit during this century. Technically speaking, that's

enormous, enough to produce what James Hansen has called a "totally

different planet," one much warmer than that known by any of our

human ancestors.

The process by which the IPCC conducts its deliberations --

scientists and national government representatives quibbling at

enormous length over wording and interpretation -- is Byzantine at

best, and makes the group's achievements all the more impressive.

But it sacrifices up-to-the-minute assessment of data in favor of

lowest-common-denominator conclusions that are essentially beyond

argument. That's a reasonable method, but one result is that the

"shocking" conclusions of the new report in fact lag behind the most

recent findings of climate science by several years.

That's most obvious here in the discussion of the rise in sea level.

Researchers know that sea levels will rise fairly quickly this

century, in part because of the melting of mountain glaciers and in

part because warm water takes up more space than cold. The new

assessment refines the calculations of the rise in sea level and

puts the best estimate at a foot or two, which is actually slightly

less than the last assessment in 2001. Though it doesn't sound like

much, a couple of feet is actually a large amount -- enough to

inundate many low-lying areas and drown much of the Earth's coastal

marshes and wetlands. Still, it might be more or less manageable.

During the last eighteen months, however, new research has indicated

that a far more rapid rise in sea level may be possible, because the

great ice sheets of Greenland and the Antarctic appear to have begun

moving more quickly toward the sea. Some of this research appeared

in Al Gore's movie /An Inconvenient Truth/, and James Hansen has

written in The New York Review

about this new information;

it is responsible for much of the recent increase in the level of

alarm. But it is not included in the IPCC report, except as a

caveat: "larger values cannot be excluded, but understanding of

these effects is too limited to assess their likelihood or provide a

best estimate or an upper bound for sea level rise."

In short, the new report is a remarkably conservative document. That

it is still frightening in its predictions simply indicates the huge

magnitude of the changes we're now causing, changes far larger than

most people fully understand. Even using its conservative

projections, the panel states unequivocally that typhoons and

hurricanes will likely become more intense; that sea ice will shrink

and perhaps disappear in the summertime Arctic; that snow cover will

contract. Later this year, a second working group will outline the

effects of these changes on humans, translating inches of sea-level

rise into numbers of refugees, showing the effects of increases in

temperature and humidity on malaria-carrying mosquitoes as well as

the impact of heat waves on crop losses. The language will still be

bloodless, but the findings obviously won't.

The IPCC has always avoided taking political positions -- it doesn't

recommend specific policies -- and it continues this tradition with

its new report. In its discussions of the momentum of climate

change, however, it does introduce one particularly disturbing

statistic. Because of the time lag between carbon emissions and

their effect on air temperature, even if we halted the increase in

coal, oil, and gas burning right now, temperatures would continue to

rise about two tenths of a degree Celsius per decade. But, the

report writes, "if all radiative forcing agents [i.e., greenhouse

gases] are held constant at year 2000 levels, a further warming

trend would occur in the next two decades at a rate of about 0.1ºC

per decade."

Translated into English, this means, to put it simply, that if world

leaders had heeded the early warnings of the first IPCC report, and

by 2000 had done the very hard work to keep greenhouse gas emissions

from growing any higher, the expected temperature increase would be

half as much as is expected now. In the words of the experts at

realclimate.org , where the most useful

analyses of the new assessment can be found, climate change is a

problem with a very high "procrastination penalty": a penalty that

just grows and grows with each passing year of inaction.

This is why the most important news about climate at the moment may

come not from the IPCC but from Washington. After twenty years of

inactivity -- a remarkably successful bipartisan effort to

accomplish nothing -- the first few weeks of the new Congress have

witnessed a flurry of activity. A series of bills have been

introduced by people ranging from California Representative Henry

Waxman and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders to Arizona's John McCain

that would call for more or less aggressive carbon reduction

targets. Some of the bills would set in place a "cap-and-trade"

system that would set overall limits on emissions of carbon dioxide

but would allow companies to freely buy and sell credits permitting

them to emit certain amounts of it; this would produce a market for

carbon-cutting measures.

The IPCC report doesn't call for particular reduction figures. It

does, however, make clear that reduction in emissions must be quick

and deep. There is no more optimistic alternative. Even if we do

everything right, we're still going to see serious increases in

temperature, and all of the physical changes (to one extent or

another) predicted in the report. However, there's reason to hope

that if the US acts /extremely/ aggressively and quickly we might be

able to avoid an increase of two degrees Celsius, the rough

threshold at which runaway polar melting might be stopped. This

means that any useful legislation will have to feature both a very

rapid start to reductions and a long and uncompromising mandate to

continue them. Sanders's bill, also endorsed by California's Barbara

Boxer, who heads the relevant committee, comes closest to that

standard. It calls for an eventual 80% cut in emissions by 2050.

McCain's bill, cosponsored by one of his challengers for the

presidency, Barack Obama, is somewhat weaker in its eventual

targets. But the bargaining has barely begun, and in any event quick

initial implementation of any cuts will be almost as important as

the final numbers.

No one expects President Bush to sign such a bill. In fact, it was

widely considered a minor miracle that he uttered the words "climate

change" in this year's State of the Union address. (His limp

proposal, centering on alternative fuels for some vehicles, was

equally widely considered a dud.) What's happening now has much to

do with positioning for the next presidential election, and the

legislation that will eventually be passed and signed in 2009. What

the IPCC report makes clear by implication is that that legislation

will be our last meaningful chance: anything less than an all-out

assault on carbon in our economy will be rendered meaningless by the

increasing momentum of global warming. And of course by now our

economy is only part of the problem. Though we use more energy per

capita than any other country, the Chinese may pass us in total

carbon emissions by decade's end. Even if we start to get our own

house in order, we'll need to figure out how, with desperate speed,

to lead an equally sweeping international response.

The only really encouraging development is the groundswell of public

concern that has built over the last year, beginning with the

reaction to Hurricane Katrina and Al Gore's movie. In January, a few

of us launched an initiative called stepitup07.org

. It calls for Americans to organize

rallies in their own communities on April 14 asking for

congressional action. In the first few weeks the website was open,

more than six hundred groups in forty-six states registered to hold

demonstrations -- this will clearly be the largest organized

response to global warming yet in this country. The groups range

from environmental outfits to evangelical churches to college

sororities, united only by the visceral sense (fueled in part by

this winter's bizarre weather) that the planet has been knocked out

of whack. The IPCC assessment offers a modest account of just how

far out of whack it is -- and just how hard we're going to have to

work to have even a chance at limiting the damage.

[*Note:* This piece reviews /Climate Change 2007: The Physical

Science Basis: Summary for Policymakers, Contribution of Working

Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental

Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, 18 pp. It can be found by clicking

here .] /

//Bill McKibben is a frequent contributor to The New York Review and

is scholar in residence at Middlebury College and the author of *The

End of Nature* and Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the

Durable Future

.//

/*This article appears in the March 15, 2007 issue of The New York

Review of Books * /

/Copyright 2007 Bill McKibben /

-

Click here to read more Tom Dispatch

2.

*ZNet | Iran*

*American preparations for invading Iran are complete

Iran - Ready to attack*

*by Dan Plesch; New Statesman

; February 20, 2007*

American military operations for a major conventional war with

Iran could be implemented any day. They extend far beyond

targeting suspect WMD facilities and will enable President Bush

to destroy Iran's military, political and economic

infrastructure overnight using conventional weapons.

British military sources told the New Statesman, on condition of

anonymity, that "the US military switched its whole focus to

Iran" as soon as Saddam Hussein was kicked out of Baghdad. It

continued this strategy, even though it had American infantry

bogged down in fighting the insurgency in Iraq.

The US army, navy, air force and marines have all prepared

battle plans and spent four years building bases and training

for "Operation Iranian Freedom". Admiral Fallon, the new head of

US Central Command, has inherited computerised plans under the

name TIRANNT (Theatre Iran Near Term).

The Bush administration has made much of sending a second

aircraft carrier to the Gulf. But it is a tiny part of the

preparations. Post 9/11, the US navy can put six carriers into

battle at a month's notice. Two carriers in the region, the USS

John C Stennis and the USS Dwight D Eisenhower, could quickly be

joined by three more now at sea: USS Ronald Reagan, USS Harry S

Truman and USS Theodore Roosevelt, as well as by USS Nimitz.

Each carrier force includes hundreds of cruise missiles.

Then there are the marines, who are not tied down fighting in

Iraq. Several marine forces are assembling, each with its own

aircraft carrier. These carrier forces can each conduct a

version of the D-Day landings. They come with landing craft,

tanks, jump- jets, thousands of troops and, yes, hundreds more

cruise missiles. Their task is to destroy Iranian forces able to

attack oil tankers and to secure oilfields and installations.

They have trained for this mission since the Iranian revolution

of 1979.

Today, marines have the USS Boxer and USS Bataan carrier forces

in the Gulf and probably also the USS Kearsarge and USS Bonhomme

Richard. Three others, the USS Peleliu, USS Wasp and USS Iwo

Jima, are ready to join them. Earlier this year, HQ staff to

manage these forces were moved from Virginia to Bahrain.

Vice-President Dick Cheney has had something of a love affair

with the US marines, and this may reach its culmination in the

fishing villages along Iran's Gulf coast. Marine generals hold

the top jobs at Nato, in the Pentagon and are in charge of all

nuclear weapons. No marine has held any of these posts before.

Traditionally, the top nuclear job went either to a commander of

the navy's Trident submarines or of the air force's bombers and

missiles. Today, all these forces follow the orders of a marine,

General James Cartwright, and are integrated into a "Global

Strike" plan which places strategic forces on permanent 12-hour

readiness.

The only public discussion of this plan has been by the American

analysts Bill Arkin and Hans Kristensen, who have focused on the

possible use of atomic weapons. These concerns are justified,

but ignore how forces can be used in conventional war.

Any US general planning to attack Iran can now assume that at

least 10,000 targets can be hit in a single raid, with warplanes

flying from the US or Diego Garcia. In the past year, unlimited

funding for military technology has taken "smart bombs" to a new

level.

New "bunker-busting" conventional bombs weigh only 250lb.

According to Boeing, the GBU-39 small-diameter bomb "quadruples"

the firepower of US warplanes, compared to those in use even as

recently as 2003. A single stealth or B-52 bomber can now attack

between 150 and 300 individual points to within a metre of

accuracy using the global positioning system.

With little military effort, the US air force can hit the

last-known position of Iranian military units, political leaders

and supposed sites of weapons of mass destruction. One can be

sure that, if war comes, George Bush will not want to stand

accused of using too little force and allowing Iran to fight back.

"Global Strike" means that, without any obvious signal, what was

done to Serbia and Lebanon can be done overnight to the whole of

Iran. We, and probably the Iranians, would not know about it

until after the bombs fell. Forces that hide will suffer the

fate of Saddam's armies, once their positions are known.

The whole of Iran is now less than an hour's flying time from

some American base or carrier. Sources in the region as well as

trade journals confirm that the US has built three bases in

Azerbaijan that could be transit points for troops and with

facilities equal to its best in Europe.

Most of the Iranian army is positioned along the border with

Iraq, facing US army missiles that can reach 150km over the

border. But it is in the flat, sandy oilfields east and south of

Basra where the temptation will be to launch a tank attack and

hope that a disaffected population will be grateful.

The regime in Tehran has already complained of US- and

UK-inspired terror attacks in several Iranian regions where the

population opposes the ayatollahs' fanatical policies. Such

reports corroborate the American journalist Seymour Hersh's

claim that the US military is already engaged in a low-level war

with Iran. The fighting is most intense in the Kurdish north

where Iran has been firing artillery into Iraq. The US and Iran

are already engaged in a low-level proxy war across the

Iran-Iraq border.

And, once again, the neo-cons at the American Enterprise

Institute have a plan for a peaceful settlement: this time it is

for a federal Iran. Officially, Michael Ledeen, the AEI plan's

sponsor, has been ostracised by the White House. However, two

years ago, the Congress of Iranian Nationalities for a Federal

Iran had its inaugural meeting in London.

We should not underestimate the Bush administration's ability to

convince itself that an "Iran of the regions" will emerge from a

post-rubble Iran.

[Dan Plesch is a research associate at the School of Oriental

and African Studies. He has written for the Guardian, the

Independent, the New York Times, the Observer, Tribune, the

Washington Post and the Washington Times. He has regularly

provided live political and military analysis of evolving news

stories for the BBC, CNN, ITN and other news media.]

****

3.

To link to or bookmark this page, use the following url:

|http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:i_IYyb4kAfYJ:www.cs.unb.ca/profs/ghorbani/AhmadinejadLetterToBush.pdf+ahmadinejad+letter+to+bush&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3&gl=us|

/Google is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor

responsible for its content./

These search terms have been highlighted: *letter * *bush *

These terms only appear in links pointing to this page: *ahmadinejad *

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 1*

Mr George *Bush*,

President of the United States of America

For sometime now I have been thinking, how one can justify the

undeniable contradictions

that exist in the international arena -- which are being constantly

debated, specially in political

forums and amongst university students. Many questions remain

unanswered. These have

prompted me to discuss some of the contradictions and questions, in the

hopes that it might

bring about an opportunity to redress them.

Can one be a follower of Jesus Christ (PBUH), the great Messenger of God,

Feel obliged to respect human rights,

Present liberalism as a civilization model,

Announce one’s opposition to the proliferation of nuclear weapons and WMDs,

Make “War and Terror” his slogan,

And finally,

Work towards the establishment of a unified international community – a

community which

Christ and the virtuous of the Earth will one day govern,

But at the same time,

Have countries attacked; The lives, reputations and possessions of

people destroyed and on

the slight chance of the … of a … criminals in a village city, or convoy

for example the entire

village, city or convey set ablaze.

Or because of the possibility of the existence of WMDs in one country,

it is occupied, around

one hundred thousand people killed, its water sources, agriculture and

industry destroyed,

close to 180,000 foreign troops put on the ground, sanctity of private

homes of citizens

broken, and the country pushed back perhaps fifty years. At what price?

Hundreds of billions

of dollars spent from the treasury of one country and certain other

countries and tens of

thousands of young men and women – as occupation troops – put in harms

way, taken away

from family and love ones, their hands stained with the blood of others,

subjected to so much

psychological pressure that everyday some commit suicide ant those

returning home suffer

depression, become sickly and grapple with all sorts of aliments; while

some are killed and

their bodies handed of their families.

On the pretext of the existence of WMDs, this great tragedy came to

engulf both the peoples

of the occupied and the occupying country. Later it was revealed that no

WMDs existed to

begin with.

Of course Saddam was a murderous dictator. But the war was not waged to

topple him, the

announced goal of the war was to find and destroy weapons of mass

destruction. He was

toppled along the way towards another goal, nevertheless the people of

the region are happy

about it. I point out that throughout the many years of the … war on

Iran Saddam was

supported by the West.

Mr President,

You might know that I am a teacher. My students ask me how can theses

actions be

reconciled with the values outlined at the beginning of this *letter*

and duty to the tradition of

Jesus Christ (PBUH), the Messenger of peace and forgiveness.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 2*

There are prisoners in Guantanamo Bay that have not been tried, have no

legal representation,

their families cannot see them and are obviously kept in a strange land

outside their own

country. There is no international monitoring of their conditions and

fate. No one knows

whether they are prisoners, POWs, accused or criminals.

European investigators have confirmed the existence of secret prisons in

Europe too. I could

not correlate the abduction of a person, and him or her being kept in

secret prisons, with the

provisions of any judicial system. For that matter, I fail to understand

how such actions

correspond to the values outlined in the beginning of this *letter*,

i.e. the teachings of Jesus

Christ (PBUH), human rights and liberal values.

Young people, university students and ordinary people have many

questions about the

phenomenon of Israel. I am sure you are familiar with some of them.

Throughout history many countries have been occupied, but I think the

establishment of a

new country with a new people, is a new phenomenon that is exclusive to

our times.

Students are saying that sixty years ago such a country did no exist.

The show old documents

and globes and say try as we have, we have not been able to find a

country named Israel.

I tell them to study the history of WWI and II. One of my students told

me that during WWII,

which more than tens of millions of people perished in, news about the

war, was quickly

disseminated by the warring parties. Each touted their victories and the

most recent battlefront

defeat of the other party. After the war, they claimed that six million

Jews had been killed. Six

million people that were surely related to at least two million families.

Again let us assume that these events are true. Does that logically

translate into the

establishment of the state of Israel in the Middle East or support for

such a state? How can

this phenomenon be rationalised or explained?

Mr President,

I am sure you know how – and at what cost – Israel was established:

- Many thousands were killed in the process.

- Millions of indigenous people were made refugees.

- Hundred of thousands of hectares of farmland, olive plantations, towns

and villages

were destroyed.

This tragedy is not exclusive to the time of establishment;

unfortunately it has been ongoing

for sixty years now.

A regime has been established which does not show mercy even to kids,

destroys houses

while the occupants are still in them, announces beforehand its list and

plans to assassinate

Palestinian figures and keeps thousands of Palestinians in prison. Such

a phenomenon is

unique – or at the very least extremely rare – in recent memory.

Another big question asked by people is why is this regime being supported?

Is support for this regime in line with the teachings of Jesus Christ

(PBUH) or Moses (PBUH)

or liberal values?

Or are we to understand that allowing the original inhabitants of these

lands – inside and

outside Palestine – whether they are Christian, Muslim or Jew, to

determine their fate, runs

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 3*

contrary to principles of democracy, human rights and the teachings of

prophets? If not, why

is there so much opposition to a referendum?

The newly elected Palestinian administration recently took office. All

independent observes

have confirmed that this government represents the electorate.

Unbelievingly, they have put

the elected government under pressure and have advised it to recognise

the Israeli regime,

abandon the struggle and follow the programs of the previous government.

If the current Palestinian government had run on the above platform,

would the Palestinian

people have voted for it? Again, can such position taken in opposition

to the Palestinian

government be reconciled with the values outlined earlier? The people

are also saying “why

are all UNSC resolutions in condemnation of Israel vetoed?”

Mr President,

As you are well aware, I live amongst the people and am in constant

contact with them --

many people from around the Middle East manage to contact me as well.

They dot not have

faith in these dubious policies either. There is evidence that the

people of the region are

becoming increasingly angry with such policies.

It is not my intention to pose to many questions, but I need to refer to

other points as well.

Why is it that any technological and scientific achievement reached in

the Middle East

regions is translated into and portrayed as a threat to the Zionist

regime? Is not scientific

R&D one of the basic rights of nations.

You are familiar with history. Aside from the Middle Ages, in what other

point in history has

scientific and technical progress been a crime? Can the possibility of

scientific achievements

being utilised for military purposes be reason enough to oppose science

and technology

altogether? If such a supposition is true, then all scientific

disciplines, including physics,

chemistry, mathematics, medicine, engineering, etc. must be opposed.

Lies were told in the Iraqi matter. What was the result? I have no doubt

that telling lies is

reprehensible in any culture, and you do not like to be lied to.

Mr President,

Don’t Latin Americans have the right to ask, why their elected

governments are being

opposed and coup leaders supported? Or, why must they constantly be

threatened and live in

fear?

The people of Africa are hardworking, creative and talented. They can

play an important and

valuable role in providing for the needs of humanity and contribute to

its material and

spiritual progress. Poverty and hardship in large parts of Africa are

preventing this from

happening. Don’t they have the right to ask why their enormous wealth –

including minerals –

is being looted, despite the fact that they need it more than others?

Again, do such actions correspond to the teachings of Christ and the

tenets of human rights?

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 4*

The brave and faithful people of Iran too have many questions and

grievances, including: the

coup d’etat of 1953 and the subsequent toppling of the legal government

of the day,

opposition to the Islamic revolution, transformation of an Embassy into

a headquarters

supporting, the activities of those opposing the Islamic Republic (many

thousands of pages of

documents corroborates this claim), support for Saddam in the war waged

against Iran, the

shooting down of the Iranian passenger plane, freezing the assets of the

Iranian nation,

increasing threats, anger and displeasure vis-à-vis the scientific and

nuclear progress of the

Iranian nation (just when all Iranians are jubilant and collaborating

their country’s progress),

and many other grievances that I will not refer to in this *letter*.

Mr President,

September Eleven was a horrendous incident. The killing of innocents is

deplorable and

appalling in any part of the world. Our government immediately declared

its disgust with the

perpetrators and offered its condolences to the bereaved and expressed

its sympathies.

All governments have a duty to protect the lives, property and good

standing of their citizens.

Reportedly your government employs extensive security, protection and

intelligence systems

– and even hunts its opponents abroad. September eleven was not a simple

operation. Could it

be planned and executed without coordination with intelligence and

security services – or

their extensive infiltration? Of course this is just an educated guess.

Why have the various

aspects of the attacks been kept secret? Why are we not told who botched

their

responsibilities? And, why aren’t those responsible and the guilty

parties identified and put

on trial?

All governments have a duty to provide security and peace of mind for

their citizens. For

some years now, the people of your country and neighbours of world

trouble spots do not

have peace of mind. After 9.11, instead of healing and tending to the

emotional wounds of the

survivors and the American people – who had been immensely traumatised

by the attacks –

some Western media only intensified the climates of fear and insecurity

– some constantly

talked about the possibility of new terror attacks and kept the people

in fear. Is that service to

the American people? Is it possible to calculate the damages incurred

from fear and panic?

American citizen lived in constant fear of fresh attacks that could come

at any moment and in

any place. They felt insecure in the streets, in their place of work and

at home. Who would be

happy with this situation? Why was the media, instead of conveying a

feeling of security and

providing peace of mind, giving rise to a feeling of insecurity?

Some believe that the hype paved the way – and was the justification –

for an attack on

Afghanistan. Again I need to refer to the role of media.

In media charters, correct dissemination of information and honest

reporting of a story are

established tenets. I express my deep regret about the disregard shown

by certain Western

media for these principles. The main pretext for an attack on Iraq was

the existence of

WMDs. This was repeated incessantly – for the public to, finally,

believe – and the ground

set for an attack on Iraq.

Will the truth not be lost in a contrive and deceptive climate?

Again, if the truth is allowed to be lost, how can that be reconciled

with the earlier mentioned

values?

Is the truth known to the Almighty lost as well?

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 5*

Mr President,

In countries around the world, citizens provide for the expenses of

governments so that their

governments in turn are able to serve them.

The question here is “what has the hundreds of billions of dollars,

spent every year to pay for

the Iraqi campaign, produced for the citizens?”

As your Excellency is aware, in some states of your country, people are

living in poverty.

Many thousands are homeless and unemployment is a huge problem. Of

course these

problems exist – to a larger or lesser extent – in other countries as

well. With these conditions

in mind, can the gargantuan expenses of the campaign – paid from the

public treasury – be

explained and be consistent with the aforementioned principles?

What has been said, are some of the grievances of the people around the

world, in our region

and in your country. But my main contention – which I am hoping you will

agree to some of

it – is:

Those in power have specific time in office, and do not rule

indefinitely, but their names will

be recorded in history and will be constantly judged in the immediate

and distant futures.

The people will scrutinize our presidencies.

Did we manage to bring peace, security and prosperity for the people or

insecurity and

unemployment?

Did we intend to establish justice, or just supported especial interest

groups, and by forcing

many people to live in poverty and hardship, made a few people rich and

powerful – thus

trading the approval of the people and the Almighty with theirs’?

Did we defend the rights of the underprivileged or ignore them?

Did we defend the rights of all people around the world or imposed wars

on them, interfered

illegally in their affairs, established hellish prisons and incarcerated

some of them?

Did we bring the world peace and security or raised the specter of

intimidation and threats?

Did we tell the truth to our nation and others around the world or

presented an inverted

version of it?

Were we on the side of people or the occupiers and oppressors?

Did our administration set out to promote rational behaviour, logic,

ethics, peace, fulfilling

obligations, justice, service to the people, prosperity, progress and

respect for human dignity

or the force of guns.

Intimidation, insecurity, disregard for the people, delaying the

progress and excellence of

other nations, and trample on people’s rights?

And finally, they will judge us on whether we remained true to our oath

of office – to serve

the people, which is our main task, and the traditions of the prophets –

or not?

Mr President,

How much longer can the world tolerate this situation?

Where will this trend lead the world to?

How long must the people of the world pay for the incorrect decisions of

some rulers?

How much longer will the specter of insecurity – raised from the

stockpiles of weapons of

mass destruction – hunt the people of the world?

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 6*

How much longer will the blood of the innocent men, women and children

be spilled on the

streets, and people’s houses destroyed over their heads?

Are you pleased with the current condition of the world?

Do you think present policies can continue?

If billions of dollars spent on security, military campaigns and troop

movement were instead

spent on investment and assistance for poor countries, promotion of

health, combating

different diseases, education and improvement of mental and physical

fitness, assistance to

the victims of natural disasters, creation of employment opportunities

and production,

development projects and poverty alleviation, establishment of peace,

mediation between

disputing states and distinguishing the flames of racial, ethnic and

other conflicts were would

the world be today? Would not your government, and people be justifiably

proud?

Would not your administration’s political and economic standing have

been stronger?

And I am most sorry to say, would there have been an ever increasing

global hatred of the

American governments?

Mr President, it is not my intention to distress anyone.

If prophet Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Ishmael, Joseph or Jesus Christ (PBUH)

were with us

today, how would they have judged such behaviour? Will we be given a

role to play in the

promised world, where justice will become universal and Jesus Christ

(PBUH) will be

present? Will they even accept us?

My basic question is this: Is there no better way to interact with the

rest of the world? Today

there are hundreds of millions of Christians, hundreds of millions of

Moslems and millions of

people who follow the teachings of Moses (PBUH). All divine religions

share and respect on

word and that is “monotheism” or belief in a single God and no other in

the world.

The holy Koran stresses this common word and calls on an followers of

divine religions and

says: [3.64] Say: O followers of the Book! Come to an equitable

proposition between us and

you that we shall not serve any but Allah and (that) we shall not

associate aught. With Him

and (that) some of us shall not take others for lords besides Allah, but

if they turn back, then

say: Bear witness that we are Muslims. (The Family of Imran).

Mr President,

According to divine verses, we have all been called upon to worship one

God and follow the

teachings of divine prophets.

“To worship a God which is above all powers in the world and can do all

He pleases.” “The

Lord which knows that which is hidden and visible, the past and the

future, knows what goes

on in the Hearts of His servants and records their deeds.”

“The Lord who is the possessor of the heavens and the earth and all

universe is His court”

“planning for the universe is done by His hands, and gives His servants

the glad tidings of

mercy and forgiveness of sins”. “He is the companion of the oppressed

and the enemy of

oppressors”. “He is the Compassionate, the Merciful”. “He is the

recourse of the faithful and

guides them towards the light from darkness”. “He is witness to the

actions of His servants”,

“He calls on servants to be faithful and do good deeds, and asks them to

stay on the path of

righteousness and remain steadfast”. “Calls on servants to heed His

prophets and He is a

witness to their deeds.” “A bad ending belongs only to those who have

chosen the life of this

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 7*

world and disobey Him and oppress His servants”. And “A good and eternal

paradise belong

to those servants who fear His majesty and do not follow their

lascivious selves.”

We believe a return to the teachings of the divine prophets is the only

road leading to

salvations. I have been told that Your Excellency follows the teachings

of Jesus (PBUH), and

believes in the divine promise of the rule of the righteous on Earth.

We also believe that Jesus Christ (PBUH) was one of the great prophets

of the Almighty. He

has been repeatedly praised in the Koran. Jesus (PBUH) has been quoted

in Koran as well;

[19,36] And surely Allah is my Lord and your Lord, therefore serves Him;

this is the right

path, Marium.

Service to and obedience of the Almighty is the credo of all divine

messengers.

The God of all people in Europe, Asia, Africa, America, the Pacific and

the rest of the world

is one. He is the Almighty who wants to guide and give dignity to all

His servants. He has

given greatness to Humans.

We again read in the Holy Book: “The Almighty God sent His prophets with

miracles and

clear signs to guide the people and show them divine signs and purity

them from sins and

pollutions. And He sent the Book and the balance so that the people

display justice and avoid

the rebellious.”

All of the above verses can be seen, one way or the other, in the Good

Book as well.

Divine prophets have promised:

The day will come when all humans will congregate before the court of

the Almighty, so that

their deeds are examined. The good will be directed towards Haven and

evildoers will meet

divine retribution. I trust both of us believe in such a day, but it

will not be easy to calculate

the actions of rulers, because we must be answerable to our nations and

all others whose lives

have been directly or indirectly effected by our actions.

All prophets, speak of peace and tranquillity for man – based on

monotheism, justice and

respect for human dignity.

Do you not think that if all of us come to believe in and abide by these

principles, that is,

monotheism, worship of God, justice, respect for the dignity of man,

belief in the Last Day,

we can overcome the present problems of the world – that are the result

of disobedience to the

Almighty and the teachings of prophets – and improve our performance?

Do you not think that belief in these principles promotes and guarantees

peace, friendship and

justice?

Do you not think that the aforementioned written or unwritten principles

are universally

respected?

Will you not accept this invitation? That is, a genuine return to the

teachings of prophets, to

monotheism and justice, to preserve human dignity and obedience to the

Almighty and His

prophets?

Mr President,

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*Page 8*

History tells us that repressive and cruel governments do not survive.

God has entrusted

The fate of man to them. The Almighty has not left the universe and

humanity to their own

devices. Many things have happened contrary to the wishes and plans of

governments. These

tell us that there is a higher power at work and all events are

determined by Him.

Can one deny the signs of change in the world today?

Is this situation of the world today comparable to that of ten years

ago? Changes happen fast

and come at a furious pace.

The people of the world are not happy with the status quo and pay little

heed to the promises

and comments made by a number of influential world leaders. Many people

around the wolrd

feel insecure and oppose the spreading of insecurity and war and do not

approve of and accept

dubious policies.

The people are protesting the increasing gap between the haves and the

have-nots and the rich

and poor countries.

The people are disgusted with increasing corruption.

The people of many countries are angry about the attacks on their

cultural foundations and the

disintegration of families. They are equally dismayed with the fading of

care and compassion.

The people of the world have no faith in international organisations,

because their rights are

not advocated by these organisations.

Liberalism and Western style democracy have not been able to help

realize the ideals of

humanity. Today these two concepts have failed. Those with insight can

already hear the

sounds of the shattering and fall of the ideology and thoughts of the

liberal democratic

systems.

We increasingly see that people around the world are flocking towards a

main focal point –

that is the Almighty God. Undoubtedly through faith in God and the

teachings of the

prophets, the people will conquer their problems. My question for you

is: “Do you not want to

join them?”

Mr President,

Whether we like it or not, the world is gravitating towards faith in the

Almighty and justice

and the will of God will prevail over all things.

Vasalam Ala Man Ataba’al hoda

Mahmood Ahmadi-Najad

President of the Islamic Republic of Iran

***********************

4.

DeadBrain's satire headlines feed

DeadBrain Exclusive: Bush's reply to Ahmadinejad letter

9 May 2006 by Malcolm Drury

In this exclusive scoop DeadBrain is pleased to share with you President

Bush 's reply to the letter he received from

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Mr Bush's reply is in his own

hand, often in joined-up writing.

The White House

US of A

Dear so-called president Jamhead,

Yeah rite, you think your a president, in your dreems, I'm a real

president, the war president even. Anyway I got your letter, sheesh you

don't rite very good, it was all in skwiggles, had to get some of the

guys to rite it out for me in American. It was reel wierd though, I gess

they couldn't read your riting very well, they said one sentence was

"You have the brane of a donkey", I said that must be rong, I'm the

smartest guy I know, maybe you couldn't read the skwiggle propperly, I

bet it ackcherly says genius, not donkey. Then the guys went reel red

and made noises like they was choking and finally one of them said yes

sir that must be it.

OK, number one, you go around riting any more letters saying we was

lying about Saddam's dubya em dees and we'll come in an libberate

Iranistan just like we done in Iraq, I'm down a bit in the poles just

now and a bit of Fox TV news film of American troops in action is a reel

good boost to my popperlarity, at least it was when we went into

Affgannistan and Iraq, so you've been warned, OK, just remember we got

Saddam in jail, there's plenty of room for you too.

Number two, we didn't keep anything secrit about 911, well OK, maybe the

bit about where Dick [Cheney] went into hiding, but that was for a reel

good reason. Not sure exackly what it was, he wouldn't tell me, he said

it was something to do with security. Ackcherly, come to think of it I'm

not sure where it was he went, he wouldn't tell me that either, he just

said it's best not to know just in case for instans you get capchered

and torchered by terrorists. Anyway the point is we didn't keep anything

secrit or tell any lies about 911, well not big ones anyway, so if you

don't want to be saying hello to some cruise missles I'd shut my yap if

I was you, kapeesh.

Number five, I'm just gonna tell you for the last time if you keep on

trying to enrich your harmonium to make nucular bomms my advice is to

stop, I know you probbly think we've run out of cruise missles and stuff

what with Iraq and Affganistan and getting ready for France but Donny

[Rumsfeld] says we still have enough left

to take you out so if you think your man enough bring it on!

Yours sinseerly

George W Bush,

President US of A

PS Sorry, forget what I said about France, that's still supposed to be a

secrit.