Showing posts with label Tropes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tropes. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 06, 2019

ISRAEL AGAIN



THE ABSURD TIMES







Israel Continues
By Czar Donic


I really have no idea as to how to really drive home the point that Israel is a real danger to humanity and human values.  I've tried, and of course nothing works.  In fact, their lobbying and activity simply gets increased and more lawmakers live in fear of it.

Now, we are supposed to avoid "tropes" that are harmful to Zionists, who call themselves "persecuted Jews."  Well, the illustration above gives a fairly accurate of what a "trope" is.  Since I've published, peer-reviewed material, on Renaissance Rhetoric, in fact, too much, I am pretty much written out on the subject.  The rhetoric books of the time list over 200 to 300 specific types of tropes, and about as many "schemes" on the topic.  Also, I had to learn to read Latin for the projects.  Fortunately, I did not have to learn conversational Latin and it seldom comes up these days.  I will confess that I did have a bias in favor of Peter Ramus, or Ramism – but I hardly think that is a great offense, although many did.  Such is academia.

I am not sure what sort of trope "dual-allegiance" is, or perhaps some other expression was contemplated.  Now, Congress is voting to condemn Anti-Semitism and, to its credit, possibly Islamophobia.  (I have yet to receive a response from any of the candidates on that issue.) 

Some of you may remember Norm Finklestein, a well-published author and respected teacher, whose mother was a holocaust survivor who was denied pressure due to immense pressure by a trove of pro-Israeli agitators, led by Alan Derschowitz, somewhat affiliated with Faux News.  An interview with Norm follows the report from the United Nations.
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A United Nations inquiry has found Israeli forces may have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity by targeting unarmed children, journalists and the disabled in Gaza. The report, released by the U.N. Human Rights Council on Thursday, looked at Israel's bloody response to weekly Great March of Return demonstrations, launched by Palestinians in Gaza nearly a year ago, targeting Israel's heavily militarized separation barrier. The report found Israeli forces have killed 183 Palestinians—almost all of them with live ammunition. The dead included 35 children. Twenty-three thousand people were injured, including over 6,000 shot by live ammunition. We speak with Sara Hossain, a member of the U.N. independent commission that led the Gaza investigation.


Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: A United Nations inquiry has found Israeli forces may have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity by targeting unarmed children, journalists and the disabled in Gaza. The report, released by the U.N. Human Rights Council Thursday, looked at Israel's bloody response to weekly Great March of Return demonstrations, launched by Palestinians in Gaza nearly a year ago, targeting Israel's heavily militarized separation barrier. The report found Israeli forces have killed 183 Palestinians, almost all of them with live ammunition. The dead included 35 children. Twenty-three thousand people were injured, including over 6,000 shot by live ammunition. Santiago Canton chaired the U.N. commission.
SANTIAGO CANTON: The commission has found reasonable grounds to believe that the Israeli security forces committed serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law. These violations clearly warrant criminal investigation and prosecution, and we call on Israel to conduct meaningful investigations into these serious violations and to provide timely justice and reparations for those killed and injured.
AMY GOODMAN: Another member of the U.N. independent commission, Sara Hossain, described how Israeli forces targeted civilians and journalists in Gaza.
SARA HOSSAIN: We are saying that they have intentionally shot children, they have intentionally shot people with disabilities, they have intentionally shot journalists, knowing them to be children, people with disabilities and journalists. And some of the children—not all of the children are visibly children perhaps, but many of them are. As Commissioner Murungi just said, the journalists were all marked with press vests, that we investigated. And the people with disabilities, as I said, a double amputee in a wheelchair, a person using crutches, they were visibly that. And they've been shot at by snipers, who also have spotters available with them, who have very high-level technology available to see who is out there in the field.
AMY GOODMAN: The U.N. report called on nations to arrest, quote, "persons alleged to have committed, or ordered to have committed, the international crimes," unquote, or to seek their extradition. The U.N. also demanded Israel immediately lift the blockade on Gaza. Israel's acting foreign minister dismissed the report as "theater of the absurd." However, grieving Palestinians welcomed the report, including Raeda Ayoub, whose teenage son Mohammad was killed during the Gaza protests.
RAEDA AYOUB: [translated] We are happy that someone is supporting Gaza's children, and we are happy that they are supporting us to defend Gaza's children and youth in Gaza against the crimes committed by the occupation.
AMY GOODMAN: The U.N. report was issued Thursday, the same day Israel's attorney general announced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing an indictment on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust.
For more, we're joined by two guests. Sara Hossain is a member of the U.N. independent commission that led the Gaza investigation. She's also a barrister practicing in the Supreme Court of Bangladesh. She joins us from Dhaka, Bangladesh. And here in New York, scholar Norman Finkelstein, author of many books, including Gaza: An Inquest into Its Martyrdom.
We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Sara Hossain, let's begin with you. Tell us about the most significant findings of your report and how this report came into being.
SARA HOSSAIN: I'm sorry. I couldn't hear that.
AMY GOODMAN: Please explain the findings of the report.
SARA HOSSAIN: Sure. I mean, this report was commissioned as basis of a resolution by the Human Rights Council. And accordingly, we've conducted investigations for about six months now with trained investigators and a team of experts. I should mention, we haven't been given access to Gaza or to Israel, which obviously has hampered us quite considerably. But nevertheless, we have been able to interview witnesses, and we have been able to interview many victims, as well, some in person and some remotely. We've also been able to gather an extraordinary amount of documentary material, including video and drone footage, social media content, as well as all of the affidavits and other testimonies. So, based on that, we've come to our assessment.
AMY GOODMAN: And talk about the most significant findings.
SARA HOSSAIN: The most significant, I think, is just the number of killings and the numbers of injuries. There are 183 Palestinians who have been killed in the course of the period that we have investigated, which is from the 30th of March to the 31st of December. As you know, the demonstrations are continuing, and killings and injuries have continued to be reported, but we've just covered this particular period. We also found, as you said, over 6,000 injuries to Palestinians caused by live fire. We found that four Israeli soldiers had been injured during this time, and two Israeli soldiers had also been killed, but both of those were outside the particular parameters of the investigation. They weren't in the context of—they weren't at the protest sites, although one of them was within the protest times. And I think, amongst the numbers of killings, what we also found, which was of great concern, was the fact that protected—groups who are protected categories in international law, protected persons, such as children, people with disabilities, and also health workers and journalists, were amongst those who were both killed and injured in large numbers.
AMY GOODMAN: The U.N. report calls on states to arrest "persons alleged to have committed, or ordered to have committed, the international crimes." What exactly does that mean?
SARA HOSSAIN: Well, our investigation is done according to the standard of reasonable grounds to believe. It's not a criminal investigation. We have made some preliminary findings based on the facts as we found them, and applying international human rights law and international humanitarian law where that was relevant, given that we're speaking about the context of an occupation and the context—in certain contexts, the conduct of hostilities. So we've made these findings, but we believe that these need to be taken further. We've called on Israel itself to conduct investigations, and we understand that Israel has opened at least five investigations into the incidents that we've found. But we are not clear why it has not opened a larger number of investigations. We think that's the first thing that should happen. We've also asked for the international community to look into this. We are going to present our findings, hand them over to the high commissioner for human rights of the United Nations. And I think then it's for other bodies to take this further. As—
AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to acting Israeli foreign minister—
SARA HOSSAIN: —you know, there's a process at the International Criminal Court.
Israeli forces have killed 183 Palestinians since weekly Great March of Return demonstrations began in Gaza nearly a year ago targeting Israel's heavily militarized separation barrier. That's according to a new United Nations inquiry that found Israeli forces may have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity by targeting unarmed children, journalists and the disabled in Gaza. The report was released by the U.N. Human Rights Council on Thursday. We speak with Norman Finkelstein, scholar and author of "Gaza: An Inquest into Its Martyrdom," and Sara Hossain, a member of the U.N. independent commission that led the Gaza investigation.


Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to the acting Israeli foreign minister, Yisrael Katz, responding to the U.N. Human Rights Council's report.
YISRAEL KATZ: [translated] This report is another chapter in the theater of the absurd produced occasionally by the United Nations Human Rights Council, another hostile, mendacious and slanted report against the state of Israel. It's a report based on distorted information, in which the facts were not at all checked, whose only purpose is to slander the only democracy in the Middle East and harm our right to self-defense in the face of the terrorism of a murderous organization. The state of Israel outright rejects this report.
AMY GOODMAN: Norm Finkelstein, the significance of Israel saying it rejects the report?
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: Well, Israel has always rejected the reports, whether they come from the United Nations or, more often than not, they come from reputable human rights organizations, like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch or the Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem. So it's not as if—to use the words of the person you just had on, it's not as if it's a typically mendacious U.N. report. It's a report that falls in line with the findings of every reputable human rights organization.
AMY GOODMAN: What most struck you about this report?
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: What most struck me about the report was it was remarkably honest. It was very forthright in its conclusions. And it didn't fake this kind of balance, which most human rights organizations, even reputable ones, attempt between Israel and the United States. So, just to take a couple of examples, it forthrightly stated that Israel targets intentionally children during these demonstrations. It targets reporters. It targets medical personnel. And that's unusual. Allow me just two examples, which you would be familiar with. So, when there was the killings during Operation Protective Edge of the four children who were playing hide-and-seek—
AMY GOODMAN: This was back in 2014.
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: 2014. Recently, The Intercept had an article on those four—killings of the four kids, and had this story that they weren't really intentionally killed, it was an accident, it was a mistake. And same thing with The New York Times when it had the big story on Razan al-Najjar, which was quoted everywhere. The essence of the story was, there was an Israeli sniper's bullet, it hit the ground, ricocheted and then accidentally hit three Israeli medical personnel. It was a magic bullet, because there was a huge crowd of people, but this magic bullet only hit three medical personnel.
But this human rights report by the Human Rights Council, it's very straightforward. It says intentionally targets children, intentionally targets even disabled persons. And that, to me, was a credit to them that there was no fake balance. If you look at the proportions, when it looks at the damages done to the people of Gaza, they devote 10 full pages. And then there's a section called "Impact on Israel." It's three paragraphs. And that's exactly what the reality shows, that overwhelmingly—in fact, virtually entirely—all the infliction of death and destruction is on the Palestinian side. For the period they covered, during the demonstrations, there were no fatalities during the demonstrations, and four Israeli soldiers were lightly injured. These are massacres. They're not conflicts. They're not engagements. They're just outright massacres of overwhelmingly unarmed, nonviolent demonstrators.
AMY GOODMAN: This report comes out as the attorney general of Israel says he's going to indict the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. The significance of this?
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: Well, the Israelis ignore the reports. So, in that context, it's not significant. However, there is a critical significance. Namely, the International Criminal Court has had now two cases referred to it on the situation among the Palestinians. One case is on the Mavi Marmara, the flotilla in 2010 that came under Israeli attack. And the second case is on Israeli war crimes in the West Bank, mostly the settlements, and Operation Protective Edge in Gaza. Now, the chief of staff during Operation Protective Edge during July, August 2014—the Israeli chief of staff is—was Gantz—I guess his first name is Benny, but I could be mistaken—Gantz. And the fact of the matter is, if Netanyahu is out, Gantz will probably be the prime minister, and he will be up for indictment by the International Criminal Court. The chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, is desperately trying not to investigate Israeli war crimes. But within the International Criminal Court, there has been an unprecedented pushback. There are large numbers of members—large numbers of members of the ICC who say it's time to indict Israel. And the pressure—because of this report, the pressure on Bensouda, chief prosecutor Bensouda, is going to be enormous. It's time to indict Israel.
AMY GOODMAN: And just to be clear, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, if indicted, as the attorney general says, is not being indicted for this, but for corruption.
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: That's correct. It's sort of—like I said, it's sort of like Al Capone being indicted for tax evasion. In the great scheme of things, that was the least of Capone's crimes. But that's the way the judicial system works.
AMY GOODMAN: Has the U.S. responded to the report?
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: To my knowledge, the U.S. has not. This is a preliminary report. The full report will come out on March 18th, I think. So this is sort of the—what they call like an executive summary. It was 22 pages. I imagine the full report will be considerably larger.
AMY GOODMAN: And, Sara Hossain, what do you want to see come out of this report?
SARA HOSSAIN: I think we'd definitely like to see some action, action by Israel, action by the Palestinian Authority also and action by the international community.
I just want to mention one thing, though, in terms of the findings. We did also make findings that on two—in two of the incidents we looked at, on the 14th of May and on the 12th of October, there may have been some justification for the shootings. On the 14th of May, we found an incident in which 21 people were killed, but we think there may have been an issue of direct participation in hostilities, possibly justifying the shootings. And that requires further investigation, as well.
But we think that all the findings, we have, and so we're going to take them forward. We think it's critical that with the 30th of March in front of us, the anniversary of the start of the so-called Great March of Return, it's very important that the international community take action to ensure that this death toll and this injuries toll doesn't continue. We're calling for protective monitoring to be put in place. We're calling for action to end—end this terrible death toll and injury toll that has been continuing over the last year and continuing even now.
AMY GOODMAN: Sara Hossain, I want to thank you for being with us, member of the U.N. independent commission that led the Gaza investigation. Norman Finkelstein, author and scholar; his most recent book, Gaza: An Inquest into Its Martyrdom. We'll be back in 30 seconds.
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Thursday, February 14, 2019

A Day for Love



THE ABSURD TIMES




illustration: THE GREAT LATUFF!
[Speaking of AIPAC, once we game special plaudits to him for coming in third in a list of anti-Semites compiled by some wannabe APAIC moron.  We can not remember who came in first and second, but he did beat of number four, which was "European Football Fans".  Now this in an amazing accomplishment.  Do you have and idea of how many European football fans there are?  Well, we've never counted, but there are millions, yes, there are millions.  This is am accomplishment anyone should be proud of.  It is overwhelming.  Our hats are off to the Great Latuff, loved by millions!]  


Has anything really changed? 

Well, about 40 new Democrats were elected and replaced 40 Republicans.  When you realize that this represents not only 40 more Democrat votes, but 40 less (pardon the expression) Republican votes, that amounts to an 80 vote difference.  In almost every case, this was facilitated by disgust at Donald Trump.  The recent income tax returns will add to the realization, finally, that he is not on their side.  Maybe more will wake up.

I understand big Don shut down the government.  He wants his wall.  He's gonna hold his breath until you give him his wall!  It is remarkably like a 3 year old, maybe a four year old?  I'm not all that sure anymore, but he really is acting like a spoiled child who had his lollipop taken away.  Anyway, doing that helped all those Democrats get elected, so that's fine.

This is a time to celebrate Valentine's Day, the anniversary of the Parkland mass shootings staunchly defended by the NRA.  We can also commemorate the Valentine's Day massacre in Chicago.  Also, now the 201st anniversary of the birth of Frederick Douglass of whom big don said "He is doing some great things."  We can remember Abraham Lincoln having to escort him into the slave-built White House because he was black.  Yes, we do know how to remember Black History Month. 

Ilam Omar recently apologized for using anti-Semitic "Tropes."  [There were tropes and schemes, all terminology from Renaissance
Rhetoric, collectively called "figures", numbering between two and three hundred.  Beware of those evil Tropes.]  So, everybody thought that would shut her up, the young representative from Minnesota, but she was immediately introduced to Eliot Abrams, Trump's nominee to oversee Venezuela. 

Now I don't know if he is allowed to vote, this ex-con, as he was sent to prison for his role in Iran Contra, and then pardoned by George Bush the first, ex-CIA Director.  Ollie North, also of that scandal, is now spokesman for the NRA, which we all assume is celebrating Valentine's Day.  Eliot was behind the attempt to stage a coup of Chavez, but failed.  Now he has a head start, still to subvert Venezuela.  She said there is no reason to believe anything he says and Abrams attempted to B.S. her.  She said, "That was not a question."  So, she is still going.  

There is no point in arguing with (pardon the expression) Republicans or other such idiots.  Let us take, for example, the issue of climate change, or global warming which is causing climate change.  The issue is settled so far as fact, data, science, and reason is concerned.  There is no way around it.  However, it is refuted by a Senator, a (pardon the expression) Republican, bringing in a snowball to the Senate chamber.  See?  Or how about this: on February 2019, a remote from the island of Maui showed the streets covered with snow.  See?  No climate change.  There is really no point in discussing anything with this type of person. 

The problem we have had recently with this stupidity and lying is that nobody who is that sort of person (a Trump Supporter) reads this, and those who do have a brain and are reading it, already know it.  So what is the point?  It is much like discussing the second amendment with these idiots.  No, I'm not going to bother. 

 So now one of the new representatives (discussed above) pointed out that AIPAC spends a great deal of money on lobbying.  Of course, that was "anti-Semitic."  The same was said of Norm Finklestein whose mother had been in a concentration camp.  Alan Derschowitz went after him.  Alan now spends time on FOX News.  Really, this is tiring.

Well, recently, Trump said that El Paso was one of the most dangerous cities in the United States.  Actually, it never was.  Furthermore, its crime rate steadily decreased over the years until some border fence or something like that was build.  Then, the rate remained the same with no further declines.  There we go again, talking about facts. 

North Korea is not reducing its nuclear capabilities even though they said they were in favor of "de-nuclearizing" [what a disgusting trope] the Korean Peninsula.  One thing that has been overlooked – they meant the ENTIRE area, which would include all United States nukes as well.  Big Don wants just the North part taken care of.  You know, the Libyan model as the psychopath Bolton proclaimed. 

Sarah Huckabee, the press secretary, announced that "God wants Trump to be President."  If this is really that case, God has a great deal to answer for, especially since the Southern Baptist Church has now been revealed to have dealt in sexual child abuse on a grand scale and forcing abortions in some cases (who says the Catholic Church has the most fun?).  Maybe if we built a wall around the Baptist churches things would be better?  

Let us not forget Venezuela.  It turns out that a group that used to work with the CIA during the Bush administrations, also Reagan, has been flying arms to Venezuela.  It is a bit tiring to repeat the whole Iran Contra episode that eventually led to Ollie North being spokesman from the NRA and it's not worth it here.  Suffice to say that the same shit is going on now.  You may have heard all the major networks weeping over the "humanitarian" aid we sent to aid our puppet, but little about how the United Nations has condemned that action.  People are not hungry in Venezuela because of "Socialism," but because of our blockade of trade and appropriation of funds from the country.  You might as well know that.  It seems that the ex-CEO of Starbucks is also afraid of Socialism.  Too many voters now never lived though all the "socialism" scares our governments used as the USSR no longer exists. 

Anyway, I was going to simply publish this as it is, above, but it turns out by happy coincidence that Amy Goodman has an interview that should redeem the CIA in the minds of many.  Here it follows.

Bye


A North Carolina-based air freight company has halted flights to Venezuela following a report by McClatchy linking it to possible arms smuggling. Last week, Venezuelan authorities claimed they had uncovered 19 assault weapons, 118 ammunition cartridges and 90 military-grade radio antennas on board a U.S.-owned plane that had flown from Miami into Valencia, Venezuela's third-largest city. The Boeing 767 is owned by a company called 21 Air based in Greensboro, North Carolina. The plane had made nearly 40 round-trip flights between Miami and spots in Venezuela and Colombia since January 11, the day after Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was sworn in to a second term. The flights ended after McClatchy first reported on them. Venezuela accused the U.S. government of sending the arms as part of its attempt to topple the Maduro government. While no definitive links between 21 Air and the U.S. government have been established, McClatchy reports the chairman of 21 Air, Adolfo Moreno, as well as another employee at the company have ties to Gemini Air Cargo, which was involved in the CIA's rendition program during the administration of George W. Bush. We speak to McClatchy reporter Tim Johnson, who broke the story. Johnson was part of a team that shared a 2017 Pulitzer Prize for its investigation of the Panama Papers.


Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to Venezuela. A North Carolina-based air freight company has halted flights to that country following a report by McClatchy linking it to possible arms smuggling. Last week, Venezuelan authorities claimed they uncovered 19 assault weapons, 118 ammunition cartridges and 90 military-grade radio antennas on board a U.S.-owned plane that had flown from Miami into Valencia, Venezuela's third-largest city. The Boeing 767 is owned by a company called 21 Air based in Greensboro, North Carolina. The plane had made nearly 40 round-trip flights between Miami and spots in Venezuela and Colombia since January 11th, which is the day after Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro was sworn in to a second term. The flights ended after McClatchy first reported on them. Venezuela accused the U.S. government of sending the arms as part of its attempt to topple the Maduro government. Bolivarian National Guard General Endes Palencia Ortiz said, "This materiel was destined for criminal groups and terrorist actions in the country, financed by the fascist extreme right and the government of the United States."
AMY GOODMAN: 21 Air has denied knowledge of the arms shipment, saying the flight had been chartered by another company called GPS-Air, which also denied sending arms. While no definitive links between 21 Air and the U.S. government have been established, McClatchy reports the chairman of 21 Air, Adolfo Moreno, as well as another employee at the company have ties to Gemini Air Cargo, which was involved in the CIA's rendition program during the administration of George W. Bush. In 2006, Amnesty International identified Gemini as a front company that had authorization to land on U.S. military bases worldwide.
The CIA has a long history of running front companies for covert actions. Most famously, the CIA ran a front airline called Air America, which operated from 1950 to 1976. In the '80s, a CIA front company called Southern Air Transport was used to send arms to the U.S.-backed Contras in Nicaragua.
We're joined now by Tim Johnson, who has been reporting on the storyfor McClatchy, joining us from Pennsylvania.
Welcome to Democracy Now! Tim, would you lay out what you found?
TIM JOHNSON: Well, as you mentioned, this air charter company, 21 Air, went repeatedly to places in Venezuela and Colombia starting January 11th. Prior to that, it had largely operated domestically, and suddenly it began to change its patterns. And often there would be even two flights a day between Miami and places in Colombia or Venezuela.
I actually learned about this from somebody who tweeted about it. A gentleman in Canada who follows ship and plane movements noticed this, and we started looking into the history of the chairman of 21 Air and saw that he has a number of businesses. And two of those businesses used an address in northwest Miami that were previously used by a subsidiary of Gemini Air Cargo, which, as you mentioned, was listed in that Amnesty International report as having participated in renditions.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Now, Tim Johnson, a Boeing 767 is a pretty big plane, and the cache of weapons that the Venezuelan government claims they found, while they're clearly lethal weapons, is not a huge shipment. I'm wondering: Do you have any way of being able to tell what the manifest of this flight, as well as the other 39 or so flights that this airline engaged in—what they were claiming to hold?
TIM JOHNSON: I actually don't know. We've tried to get that, and we haven't been able to get the manifests yet. So, you know, what was aboard the other flights going to South America, we don't know. This is a very puzzling case. If you look on social media and dig into the backgrounds of employees of 21 Air and associated companies, you see that there are many accounts of employees who follow the Venezuelan opposition, and opposition accounts that follow them, as well. So, there's certainly some sympathy from employees within the company to the opposition to Maduro in Venezuela.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk more about the leadership of the company that you investigated, based in North Carolina. And explain what you mean when you talk about the links to rendition under President George W. Bush.
TIM JOHNSON: Well, Adolfo Moreno is a 75 percent owner of 21 Air, and he's got many other companies, but he's been involved out of Miami. I don't know—while the company is registered in North Carolina, the operations really are out of Miami, as far as I can tell. That's where many of the flights have been operated. They have a huge operation center at Miami International Airport.
A curious secondary aspect of this story is that the company that consigned the cargo also has tangential links to, you know, this historical—the Iran-Contra affair. The head of GPS Air is a man named José Manuel Calvo, and he, like Moreno, has many companies. And one of those companies, with the partner that he used to create this company, is a company called Heavylift Air. And that company has a subsidiary out of the UAE that is controlled by in Iranian American named Farhad Azima, who also had a role in Iran-Contra. So there's all these circumstantial things, but there's really no smoking gun, that I could tell. You know, this may be just circumstantial.
AMY GOODMAN: Are you reporting this new now on Iran-Contra, what you're saying? And explain, for people who aren't familiar with the Iran-Contra scandal, this happening under the Reagan-Bush years, the selling of weapons to Iran to take that money to support the Contras in Nicaragua, which violated U.S. law, the Boland Amendment.
TIM JOHNSON: Yes. So, that scandal involved Southern Air Transport, which also was a CIA front company. That really exploded into the news back in 1986 because the Sandinista army shot down a twin-engine plane that was run by Southern Air Transport, that was taking armaments to the Contra rebels fighting in Nicaragua. So, Southern Air Transport was actually heavily involved in all the arms shipments to Iran and from the Middle East to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, I want to ask you about Eugene Hasenfus, who you mention in your article. In 1986, he was aboard a U.S. plane that was shot down in Nicaragua while on a secret mission to bring arms to the Nicaraguan Contras. He the only passenger to survive. I want to turn to a documentary made by Wisconsin Public Television called the The Eugene Hasenfus Story from 1991. It featured an excerpt from the station's initial coverage of what happened to him in 1986.
REPORTER: A Wisconsin man has been the focus of international news this week. Forty-five-year-old Eugene Hasenfus of Marinette was captured in Nicaragua after his cargo plane was shot down. At a press conference Thursday, Hasenfus said his mission was directed by the CIA. But U.S. officials say the flights were privately directed. Mrs. Sally Hasenfus joined her husband in Nicaragua this week. Hasenfus has been jailed and may stand trial.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: The documentary also featured an interview with Eugene Hasenfus's wife, Sally.
SALLY HASENFUS: The next morning, I tried to call President Reagan. I thought, "Well, it's the only place I'm going to get answers." He's—you know, I should be able to trust him. He's the president. And I knew he knew. He put me in touch with a man named Elliott Abrams. He said, "I don't know who you are, and I don't know what you're talking about." I got angry. And before I hung up, he did admit that he knew what I was talking about. And he kept warning me that—you know, "Be careful of the press, and be careful what you say. Be careful what you do."
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And interestingly or coincidentally, Elliott Abrams is now the special envoy of the White House to Venezuela. I'm wondering your assessment of this affair back then, the impact it had on what was going on at the time, in terms of the war on the Contras?
TIM JOHNSON: I'm not sure I can really speak to the historical impact. But, of course, it—you know, I think it helped lead to a negotiated settlement, leading to the elections in Nicaragua in 1990, because it was, you know, clearly a major impact on that. But I really couldn't speak further to that.
AMY GOODMAN: But this whole issue of Eugene Hasenfus, this former marine, a mercenary, shot down over Nicaragua, then held by Nicaragua, eventually released, and his contact with the U.S. government at the time, and now you raising this issue in your current piece around the arms shipment that was found going into Venezuela—not clear exactly if there's a connection to the U.S. government, but clearly the U.S. government is very overtly supporting the attempted overthrow of Maduro, explicitly, and these flights starting a day after Maduro's inauguration on January 10th.
TIM JOHNSON: Well, yes, there's a lot of these coincidental links, and it's worth paying quite close attention to. Again, I use "coincidental" only because we don't really know. You know, other people point out to me that there are many people that could have a vested interest in this, whether the arms were really aboard that plane. Or, is it possible that this was something that was ginned up by the Venezuelan government to rally support for Maduro? I don't know. I just—we haven't been able to determine for a fact that those weapons were loaded aboard that 767 in Miami, that somehow they passed through the normally rigorous screening by TSA for air cargo. These are things that are just yet to be investigated.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And has the company answered in terms of—as you mentioned, they normally were not traveling to Venezuela and Colombia—the 40 flights, what they were actually carrying, or are they saying they just didn't know?
TIM JOHNSON: Both have been very limited in what they've said, other than denying that they knew what the cargo was. Generally, an air charter company would trust the consignee of the freight to handle any declarations, I believe. And for its part, GPS-Air said, well, it was—you know, it doesn't know what was in the cargo.
AMY GOODMAN: And finally, back to that issue of rendition, though you don't know exactly who this company was working for, what you do have a record of is the company being involved with the U.S. government during the President George W. Bush years, being involved with rendition and having clearance to land on any military base in the world. Can you explain what those renditions, so-called, what some called kidnappings, were about?
TIM JOHNSON: Well, basically, the renditions were to take terrorist suspects, following 9/11, for interrogation in black site jails scattered around the world. There were a number of them in Eastern Europe. I know there was one outside of Chiang Mai, Thailand, elsewhere. And these were used to, you know, forcefully interrogate, waterboard even, suspects in the war against terror. So these rendition flights were commonly used in the period after 9/11.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you so much for joining us, Tim Johnson, McClatchy reporter who's been covering national security and technology issues since 2016, his recent article headlined "Venezuela says plane from Miami delivered weapons for use by enemies of Maduro." Tim Johnson was part of a team that shared a 2017 Pulitzer Prize for its investigation of the Panama Papers. Earlier in his career, he spent two decades as a foreign correspondent in Asia and Latin America. We'll link to your piece at democracynow.org.
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