Showing posts with label fisk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fisk. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Egypt, Cognitive Dissonance, Keith, and Fisk

Illustration:  Rather nicely explains what is going on in Egypt.  From www.whatnowtoons.com.





Egypt and Cognitive Dissonance

For about three weeks now, media has been focused on Tahrir (Liberation) Square in Cairo as hundreds of thousands of Egyptians gather to protest Hosni Mubarak's rule.  We can add those in Alexandria, Suez, and a dozen other cities and get a total of over a million average and up to three million on specific days.

Hosni has dealt with the situation by naming a Vice president, Mr. Suleiman, our contact in Egypt in charge of extraordinary rendition and other fine democratic services.  One might say he has serviced us, to use a term from animal husbandry. 

A great many disparate elements are at work here.  First, Hosni says he is "fed up" with being President which puts him in agreement with the people of the country.  Second, the VEEP has announced that the demonstrations are supported and inspired from outside Egypt, that the people themselves have little to do with it.  Why they couldn't think of it on their own, don't you see. 

Some of those accused include a troika of Israel, Hamas, and Anderson Cooper of CNN.  Anderson Cooper, as you know, has long been involved with such uprisings, even to the extent of being in New Orleans a few years ago.  Another possible co-conspirator is KFC, attempting to expand its market.  No, I'm not making any of this up.

Early on, Mubarak sent thugs into the square to try to break this up, something we are told would never happen here.  I believe some Egyptians pointed out that "you Americans don't know what it's like to be attacked by the police." 

Oh no?  You might look up accounts of the 1968 Democratic Party convention in Chicago when mayor Daley gave the order to "shoot to kill or main" any demonstrators to his police.  He then pointed out that "the police are not there to create disorder.  The police are there to preserve disorder." 

There were also the Kent state killings.  Before this last series of war, millions of US citizens marched against it, but it went on anyway.  So, if the Egyptans are trying to emulate our system, wherein we vote, good luck to them.

I should mention that 300 were killed in the police riot in Cairo.

Some were detained, kept blindfolded for 12 days.  On the other hand, we keep Bradley Manning's eyes open.  At any rate, those in Liberation square make it clear that they do not need help from Americans.  Not even KFC?

A short time ago, I was stuck in a waiting room and Fox TV was on.  At first, I didn’t even notice it.  In fact, nobody paid the slightest attention to it.  I had the impression that no one would notice unless someone turned it off.  At any rate, some lunatic was explaining how George Bush, both of them, forbade the bombing of Ancient Babylon so as to facilitate the Twelfth Caliphate that would stretch from Japan to England.  The Muslim Brotherhood was part of this conspiracy.  Since this brotherhood is so benign, and the idea of the Bushes behind such a take over, I found this very laughable – until I realized that lots of people actually watch and listen to these guys and believe it!  Such people are running loose in our country!

Still, we are more interested in Julian Assange of Wikileaks.  He is “suspected” of rape, during consensual sexual intercourse, in Sweden.  Say what?  Anyway, we want him extradited to Sweden from England so he can be executed in the United States to make us safe from, uh, the Caliphate?  Hardly anyone noticed that Assange is nominated for a Nobel Prize which might help restore some of that prize’s distinction.  If you wonder how that could be possible, remember that Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize. 

Remember Keith Olbermann?  He will now become New Director at Current TV.  If he has the power to hire and fire, he might consider recruiting Rick Sanchez, fired by CNN,(who is doing a nice collection of new article on Twitter), Ottavia Nasr, also fired by CNN, and David Schuster, fired by MSNBC.  They would all be great additions.  I doubt if Helen Thomas would be available.
Below is a nice discussion of the situation in the MidEast by Robert Fisk:
Guest:
Robert Fisk, Legendary Middle East correspondent for The Independent of London.
AMY GOODMAN: We turn now to Robert Fisk of The Independent newspaper. He, too, is in Cairo. I asked him about the U.S. role in Egypt and the Middle East.
ROBERT FISK: What they’re calling out for are everything which ordinary Americans would agree with: multi-party democracy; a new constitution which gives equal rights to everyone; an end to fraudulent elections, which have allowed, of course, Mubarak to carry on year after year for three decades until the age of 83, based on elections that gave 97.8, 97.9 percent of the victory; and an end, in fact, to long presidential periods of six years in office, bringing it down to four years; and they want a maximum two terms for a president, rather than indefinite presidency or presidency for life, which is effectively what Mubarak got. These people are therefore asking for nothing less than Americans accept in their own lives.
And the great tragedy is that at this critical moment, Obama chose not to hold out his hand to the democrats and to say, "We support you, and Mubarak must go." He chose to support, effectively, Mubarak by saying orderly transition. You know, he wants another general—he’s already got one, Omar Suleiman, the Vice President—to take over. The army, which receives $1.3 billions of American taxpayers’ money every year, is going to be called upon to try and make this transition, even though Mubarak himself, of course, was the head of the air force. He was a general, too. Omar Suleiman, the Vice President, is a general, head of intelligence, a very ruthless man. His people carried out a lot of tortures in the past against Islamist uprisings in Egypt. And for many of the people on the street, there was deep disappointment that at this critical moment the President of the United States, who came here to Cairo just under 18 months ago to tell the Muslim world—he held up their hand, and he said, "Do not clench your fists in response." When the democrats came onto the streets of Cairo and wanted what Obama had advertised to them, it was Obama who clenched his fist and Hillary Clinton who said that it’s a stable regime.
Only now, when they realize that perhaps Mubarak is going to go, mainly because the army want to get rid of him, not the protesters—and another part of the tragedy—are they beginning to say, "Well, we’ve got to get rid of this old man," but not, of course, to replace him with real democrats but to replace him with an army-backed regime, which is effectively Mubarak part two.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, what about the U.S. relationship with the military? I was talking to someone in a government agency in Washington, and they were deeply concerned, saying, "How do we counter the image that we’ve actually been supporting this despot for 30 years?" And someone else replied, "We can’t, because we have been supporting him."
ROBERT FISK: Yeah, and I think, in a way, you see, what happens is it becomes a sort of osmotic relationship. First of all, the Egyptians are wooed from the Soviet side under Sadat, who basically left the Soviet Union to the American side. Then the Americans arm them, feed them, clothe them, uniform them, after which, however independent they want to be, in order to feed, they’ve got to go to Washington.
It was interesting that when Tantawi, the commander-in-chief of the army, was coping with this crisis here, the Pentagon snapped its fingers, and he flew straight away to Washington for the serious consultations at the Pentagon—in other words, to get his instructions. I mean, he wouldn’t say that. It’ll be "advise," "Where are things going, General? You know, fill this out here. Give us a briefing," etc. But at the end of the day, he’d be left in no doubt that if he wanted to get more Abrams tanks and extra missiles, he’s got to do what America wants, which primarily now is get rid of Mubarak, but don’t make it look as if it’s our fault.
You see, American—the problem with the Americans is that when you—the moral values of the United States become disentangled from the national interest at critical moments like this. You know, we all want democracy, but not if we lose Mubarak, who is Israel’s man, etc., etc. And this, of course, doesn’t come as a great surprise to the Arabs, although, as I wrote in the paper, had Obama decided to say, "Look, I’m with the democrats; they’re doing what I talked about in Cairo 18 months ago, 17 months ago," there would have been American flags all over Cairo, all over Egypt. And indeed, it would have solved, in many Arab minds, all the wounds that the Arab and Muslim world has sustained from the United States, and particularly Britain as well, over the last 10 years.
AMY GOODMAN: In fact, there’s the current U.S. ambassador to Egypt, right? Margaret Scobey.
ROBERT FISK: Yeah. Well, I mean, there is, although she doesn’t seem to move around very much. One of the interesting things is that the one group of people you do not see on the streets of Cairo are American diplomats. Presumably they get their information from Egyptians who come and tell them what’s going on.
And there was, by the way, slightly to tangent, a very odd episode on the 28th of January, when a vehicle identified by the crowds as a U.S. armored limousine crashed through anti-Mubarak demonstrators, running many of them down, and went out the end of the street. They identified it as an American embassy vehicle. And the embassy then came out, unattributably, as saying, "Our diplomats don’t go out in the streets in such circumstances," which is clearly true. And then they suddenly said, "Several of our vehicles were stolen that day." They didn’t tell us that on the 28th of January; they waited until February to tell us. Well, how did they get those vehicles stolen? Did they lend them to the Mubarak government, perhaps? Or did they know the police had taken them and therefore chose to keep silent about it? There are many things like that.
I mean, another example is when the first M1 Abrams tanks came into the square on the Friday. I’m talking about when they were ordered to attack the crowds. I noticed that the coding on the front of the vehicle—it had Egyptian codings for the brigades and parachute units on the side, in Arabic and Arabic numerals. But on the front of the vehicle was a coding, which began MFR and then a series of numbers of each vehicle. And I actually took it down, and a parachute officer started shouting at me and told two soldiers to arrest me. And I actually ran away into the crowd to get away from them. And they chased me and then stopped, and obviously, confronted by about 10,000 demonstrators, decided better of it. And it seems that MFR stands for Mobile Force Reserve. And these are American-owned vehicles. These are American tactical deployment matériel, which is stored in Egypt, as it is also stored of course in Kuwait and now in Iraq for use in emergencies in the Gulf. Now, these vehicles, these tanks, which were threatening at that point the demonstrators, appear to have been vehicles that actually belong to the American military, not to the Egyptian military, but which were obviously used by the Egyptians in this instance. The Egyptians do make the Abrams tank and also have some of their own, but these vehicles appear to be vehicles that effectively belong to you or the Pentagon or whatever. The question is, did the Americans know they were being taken? Did they give permission for this? But none of the soldiers minded pictures being taken of their vehicles or the coding on the side in Arabic, but the moment I took down letters in the Roman letters and the Roman numeral, or rather, modern numerals, they didn’t like it at all. So I have a feeling these were actually reserve vehicles belonging to your country which were being used by Mubarak’s government.
So there’s a whole series of unanswered questions that we don’t really know the answer to, and I don’t suppose we’ll find out yet. But like the tortures in police stations, which are now coming to light, I think that if this regime does crumble—and I think it is steadily crumbling; I mean, the whole National Democratic Party is now just a cardboard facade, especially since the burning of its headquarters—we’re going to learn a lot more of what went on behind the scenes. And it won’t be nice, and it won’t be something that U.S. governments will want to associate themselves with.
AMY GOODMAN: The implications of this for other countries, for a kind of pan-Arab rebellion? Of course, Tunisia, then Egypt. What do you see happening in Israel, Palestine, in Jordan?
ROBERT FISK: Clearly, we have maintained—first the British and the French, and then after the Second World War, with the Americans—we have maintained a system of patronage for ruthless, anti-democratic dictators across the region. We’ve called them kings, we’ve called them emirs, we’ve called them princes, we’ve called them generals, we’ve called them all kinds of presidents, and in Bahrain, for example, you’ve got His Supreme Majesty the King, who rules over an island about half the size of, I suppose, Detroit, if that. But because of this, you know, inevitably, when you have one country suddenly breaking through to freedom, through watching Al Jazeera, for example, the other people in the region, in Syria, Jordan, Yemen, Morocco, Mauritania, then begin—Algeria, especially—then begin to say, "Well, you know, we demand the same rights. We have a right to live. We have a right to oxygen."
But, you know, I think that in some ways the uprising here has more in common with the revolt of Iranians against the results of the Iranian elections in 2009, which, remember, the opposition was crushed after, than it does with sort of the Iranian Revolution or something on a bigger scale. And I’m not entirely certain—you know, these may be tribes with flags, as a Crusader historian or historian of the Crusades once described the Arab world, but these are not all the same people. For example, the opposition to King Abdullah in Jordan actually really comes from elements of the army who feel the Palestinians have become too strong in Jordan. The opposition in Syria would be Sunnis who object to the Alawite minority leadership of the country, where it becomes a more sectarian issue rather than an issue of democracy, which is the case in Egypt, because [inaudible] virtually everybody here is a Sunni Muslim, including of course our dear President Mubarak—or their dear President Mubarak. So I think that, you know, I’m a bit suspicious of the idea that just because the Tunisians have a revolution and it spreads to Egypt, therefore, you know—true, there are food demonstrations or high-price demonstrations and protests against the economy in Jordan and certainly protests against Saleh, the president of Yemen, but I’m not sure it’s all the same.
And remember that Tunisia, the famous Jasmine Revolution—this, I gather, is going to be called the Papyrus Revolution, heaven help us, in Egypt—in Tunisia, the revolution has actually only replaced so far Ben Ali with his mates. I mean, Ghannouchi is a friend of Ben Ali. He was one of his schoolmates, I believe. And here, you’ve got to remember that Omar Suleiman, the new savior of Egypt, with whom all these people are supposed to negotiate, he is a very close, personal, lifelong friend of Mubarak, and he was a general. So, while at the same time on the surface you’ve got this democratic uprising, and suddenly we’re going to have all these new countries, and they’re all going to be lovely and believe in our secular values, at the end of the day, the fear is not the Muslim Brotherhood Islamicism; it’s the fear that more generals will be appointed to work for the West. And that is basically what is happening. And, you know, if, say, King Abdullah were in some way persuaded to leave his country, the Jordanian army will be persuaded to find another member of the royal family to take over the job, but perhaps more constitutionally. So the idea that there’s going to be this massive sort of overthrow of dictators, yes, there might be, but there will be more dictators ready to take the role, but playing a sort of softer role and then gently introducing more emergency laws and restrictions on crowds gathering, and so on and so forth, and you’re back to square one.
Corruption has become so much part of the economy, the oil that makes the economy work—and corruption, of course, is the way in which dictators control their people—that the whole system, the whole functioning of society in the Middle East, has been almost irreparably damaged over the decades by the way in which we in the West have encouraged it to function and which the dictators are very happy to function, either on our behalf and of course financially on their own.
AMY GOODMAN: What do you think President Obama should do?
ROBERT FISK: Well, it’s always the same case when you or anyone else asks me about U.S. policy. The question is what he should have done.
You know, I never really believed quite in Obama. I was very struck by his reference in the Cairo speech, the famous reach-out-my-hand-to-the-Muslims speech, when he referred to the relocation of the Palestinians in 1948, as if the Palestinians suddenly got up and said, "Oh, let’s all go skiing in Lebanon today and never quite go home again," rather than being driven from their homes or fleeing in terror from the new Israeli army at the time. And I think that, you know, because of his weakness vis-à-vis the Republicans and of course the recent midterm elections and because of his vanity—I mean, Obama should never have taken the Nobel Prize; Nobel Prize of Public Speaking, maybe, but, I mean, he should have said, "Look, I’m not worthy of it, but thank you"—he’s missed so many steps he could have taken to show that the moral values which he claimed to espouse in that famous Cairo speech, which I attended at Cairo University a few—just about a mile from where I’m talking to you now, and only two miles from Tahrir Square, actually. You know, if only he had stuck to those moral values in the Arab world, the warmth of the Arab world towards America, which was there in the '50s and ’60s even after the establishment of Israel and was certainly there in the ’20s and ’30s, might have been reestablished. But it was a critical moment. And because of Israel's wishes—you know, the Israelis have made it fairly clear they don’t think, you know, these Arabs really should have these elections; I mean, keep Mubarak, you know? or keep some version of Mubarak—and because of his domestic critics—you know, "Are you going to lose Egypt now, Mr. President?"—I know that’s already coming up in editorials—he did blew it. He blinked. He was weak. He was vain. He chose not to support the good guys.
People say, well, you know—someone said to me on a radio show in Ireland yesterday, "Oh, come on, Robert, you’re always saying America should keep its nose out of other countries. Now you want it to interfere." But the fact is, it does interfere. It’s paying $1.3 billion to the regime every year. Therefore, it is time for it to take the right side in Egypt, and it failed to do so. And that failure will cost America yet again. It’s a tragedy in many ways. You know, here was an opportunity suddenly to get it right, and he flunked it. And he’s seen as being a very weak man in the Arab world. You know, Bush was seen as—in a sense, people preferred Bush, because they saw him as an intemperate bully, which is pretty much what he was out here, whereas Obama came forward with—you know, as a man who seemed to have something to offer of moral value. And at the end of the day, the moral values have gone out of the window, and we’re back with "Oh, the Egyptian people must decide, but it must be an orderly transition," where "orderly" can mean another six or seven months of Mubarak.
And, of course, the nightmare here is that if the demonstrators go home—whether they get arrested or not, and beaten and tortured afterwards is not the point—then there will be more stability, tourists will come back, the army will be happy, and then Mubarak will suddenly discover that, for the good of Egypt, he would like another six-year term starting in September this year. That, I think, is probably the nightmare scenario and not one that’s entirely, you know, without credibility.
AMY GOODMAN: Robert Fisk, speaking to us from Cairo, the longtime Middle East correspondent for The Independent newspaper of London, author of a number of books, including The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East.

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Thursday, December 13, 2007

New Books from Tom Dispatch -- Comment by Robert Fisk


Illustration: Tis the Season
****************************************************
First a listing and discussion of some good current events books, then an article by Robert Fisk.
From Tom-Dispatch:
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From: "TomDispatch" <tomdispatch@nationinstitute.org>
To: stanford_charles@yahoo.com
Subject: Tom's Review of Books, A TomDispatch Special
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2007 09:09:59 -0800
TomDispatch
a project of the Nation Institute <http://www.nationinstitute.org/>
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tom's Review of Books
Dear Tomdispatch Reader,
For 30 years, I've been a book editor in -- or at the edge of --
mainstream publishing. I still co-run and co-edit a series I helped
launch back in 2003, The American Empire Project
<http://www.americanempireproject.com/> (out of Henry Holt's
Metropolitan Books). I've often written back to readers who wanted me to
check out their books (or favorite books of theirs) that the saddest
response a long-time book editor is this: I have so desperately little
time to read books these days. And it's true... it really is...
Nonetheless, in those wee hours after I've put Tomdispatch to bed, taken
my bleary eyes off the next still-to-be-edited manuscript page, and
turned off /The Daily Show/ or those interminable late night reruns of
/Scrubs/ and /Seinfeld/, I still pick up a book and paw through a few
pages. These days, I escape into fiction far less often (and miss that
feeling of being swept into another universe); but, when it comes to
nonfiction, I still have that urge to travel the world, peek into other
cultures and universes, plunge into history, and, above all, look for
new ways to frame our own puzzling, unnerving moment. More than
anything, I'm still moved by the generosity of writers willing to travel
where I wouldn't dare go (or couldn't even book passage), who have seen
things I never will, who understand things I haven't grasped -- and want
to take me along.
Anyway, like some old addiction I haven't kicked, it seems that I just
can't keep away from the world of books. Next year, Tomdispatch will be
spinning off books at -- for a tiny website -- a prodigious rate. New
works that first began at the site will include: Nick Turse's The
Complex, How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0805078967/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>
and a book on America's Iraq by Michael Schwartz, based on his running
commentaries at TD. (Both are due in the spring of 2008.) In May, The
World According to Tomdispatch
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1844672573/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
an imperial reader, will be published by Verso Books!
With all that in mind, I thought I'd try my hand at a little Tomdispatch
extra for subscribers -- a /Tom's Review of Books/ newsletter that won't
be posted at the main screen of the site. So, if I don't hear cries of
pain, horror, or outrage from you, perhaps I'll do two to four of these
little book letters a year, recommending works I've liked, some
connected to Tomdispatch, some not. And, of course, the holidays seem
like a reasonable time to begin -- that classic moment when, if you're
like me, you enter a bookstore stocked with a staggering array of titles
and only a faint idea of what in the world you should be picking up for
gifts.
So here goes -- and please excuse the self-interested beginning. Think
of it as dealer's choice.
In an era when an American culture of triumph returned to our world,
only to crash and burn in Iraq, my own book, The End of Victory Culture
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/155849586X/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
might be worth a pit stop. Written in the mid-1990s, it's just been
reissued, updated to the present moment, and offering a perspective not
found elsewhere. Of course, I've written about the book before at the
site (and crib from it regularly for my own pieces). If you want to
learn a little about its more serious side, just click here
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/victory>. In the meantime, let me suggest
its charms as a secret cultural history of our times by offering the
following five trivia questions - and answers - drawn from the book.
(You'll be able to answer hundreds more after reading it!):
*1.* What was the great commercial triumph of cowboy hero Hopalong
Cassidy with his "spine-tingling episodes never before shown on TV!"?
(/Answer: Marketing his signature black shirt to one million children
soon after World War II, at a time when black was still associated with
mourning or Italian fascism./)
*2.* What did Desi Arnaz tell the studio audience of the top-rated TV
comedy /I Love Lucy/ in 1953, after Lucy was accused of being a
communist by gossip columnist Walter Winchell? (/Answer: "And now I want
you to meet my favorite wife -- my favorite redhead -- in fact, that's
the only thing red about her, and even that's not legitimate."/)
*3.* When did the first interracial kiss make it onto television?
(/Answer: November 22, 1968, in outer space. Star Trek's Captain Kirk
had to turn his back to the camera to simulate placing that kiss on
Lieutenant Uhuru./)
*4.* From what movie did junior officers at the Army Command and General
Staff at Fort Leavenworth, responsible for planning some of the ground
campaign in the first Gulf War, choose a nickname -- and what was it?
(/Answer: Star Wars and it was "Jedi Knights."/)
*5.* When, on May 1, 2003, George W. Bush made his carefully timed, late
afternoon landing on, and strut across, the deck of the /USS Abraham
Lincoln/, to announce that "major combat operations" had ended in Iraq
against the backdrop of that infamous "Mission Accomplished" banner,
what term did his advance men use for the photogenic moment chosen?
(/Answer: "Magic hour light."/)
Now, on to those all those other books.
At the top of my 2007 list is the new paperback of Mike Davis' Planet of
Slums
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1844671607/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>.
Talk about a single book taking you on a wild ride across a planet you
hardly knew was there! It's not just a matter of wholesale global
urbanization, which is stunning enough in itself. (After all, since the
late 1970s, in China alone, more than 200 million people have moved from
the countryside into cities, with another 250-300 million expected to
follow in the coming decades.) Nor is it just the impoverishment of so
many new city dwellers. It's also the de-linking of the city in whole
regions of the globe from all industrial processes, meaningful jobs, or
well-being of almost any kind. Not the city /with/ slums, in other
words, but the city /as/ slum. And Davis, typically, was there first.
"Instead of cities of light soaring toward heaven," he writes, "much of
the twenty-first century urban world squats in squalor... Indeed, the
one billion city dwellers who inhabit postmodern slums might well look
back with envy at the ruins of the sturdy mud homes of Catal Huyuk in
Anatolia, erected at the very dawn of city life nine thousand years
ago." To wield a phrase from the 1960s, this book is mind-blowing. Davis
is one of a kind. If you haven't met him on the page, start here.
The World Without Us
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0312347294/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20> by
Alan Weisman hardly needs me to recommend it. It was, after all, a
bestseller. But once you accept Weisman's premise -- that, by some
unknown means, in a single historical moment (this one, to be exact),
humans were removed wholesale from the planet, the book is anything but
downbeat. It's a riveting exploration of how the traces of the heavy
hand of humanity would slowly disappear and, everywhere, nature would
return. As a dyed-in-the-wool city boy, I have to admit that there was
something moving about that return of nature -- you can't help rooting
for it -- and gripping about the way Weisman describes the dismantling
of my home town, New York City, starting with those flooded subway
tunnels almost the moment the power -- and so those 753 underground
water pumps goes dead. Imagine! Sooner or later, Second Avenue, on which
I took a bus to school so many mornings as a child, will be a river.
This book is, in fact, an infernally clever way to grapple with climate
change, without claiming to be about it at all.
Even here, by the way, put Mike Davis at the head of the class. In the
final chapter of his 1999 book Dead Cities
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1565848446/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
he began dismantling a great city, London, in what would become the
Weisman-ian manner. Of course, to my mind, the single greatest literary
dismantling of a city (and a civilization) takes place violently in H.
G. Wells' 1898 novel, The War of the Worlds
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0141441038/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>.
With gusto, Wells turned the task of taking London apart over to his
"Martian" invaders. (I first read that book under the covers, after
curfew by flashlight, at about age 12 or 13, and practically scared
myself to death.). After hearing a heartless discussion about the
British extermination of the Tasmanians, Wells reputedly decided to turn
the tables, fictionally at least, on imperial Britain. In the process,
he invented most of the tropes of the invader-from-outer-space sci-fi
novel. Ever since then, we humans have been imagining scenarios in which
implacable aliens with superweapons arrive to devastate our planet. What
if, as Davis and Weisman might both agree, it turned out that the
implacable aliens were us?
Speaking of that, I noticed that one of my favorite (tiny) "travel"
books -- ostensibly by bus deep into Africa, but in fact by research
deep into European colonial history -- was reissued this year by the New
Press: Sven Lindqvist's "Exterminate All the Brutes."
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1565843592/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>
(The title, of course, is taken from Kurtz's mad scrawl in Conrad's
/Heart of Darkness/). What a ride through the planetary past Lindqvist
takes you on as "progress" and "extermination" leave Europe hopelessly
intertwined, cut a swath across four continents, and arrive back home as
the god of slaughter, machine gun in hand, in August 1914. In a sense,
you could think of this book as the story of how the Jews of the
Holocaust were essentially the Africans of Europe. Read it and weep, as
they say. (Or check out my old /Nation/ review of it by clicking here
<http://www.thenation.com/docprint.mhtml?i=20001023&s=engelhardt>.)
And talking about cutting a swath of destruction across a country, don't
miss Dahr Jamail's first book, Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an
Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1931859477/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20> --
and, while you're reading it, think of us as the invading Martians. I
hardly need to extol Jamail to Tomdispatch readers, but his book offers
a remarkably fresh glimpse at what those "Martians" looked like and felt
like through Iraqi eyes. This book should outlast the war it recorded
(even given Washington's urge to remain in Iraq forever).
On more purely American ground, not to say Ground Zero, stands Susan
Faludi's The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in Post-9/11 America
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0805086927/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
which explores the full range of bizarre responses to the 9/11 attacks
-- the set of fantasies that Americans, the media, and especially the
right-wing and the Bush administration conjured up in about 30 seconds.
It offers a genuinely original window into the American psyche, for
those brave enough to peek. Where did all those fantasies of manly men
and women-in-need-of-protection come from anyway in a nation that mainly
watched 9/11 on TV? Faludi is convincing when she argues that they
emerged from an American mythology whose origins are as old as the
Puritans and which has been etched, almost like a genetic code, into our
national consciousness. /The Terror Dream/ has largely been reviewed as
a 9/11 book, but, believe me, it's so much more fascinating and deeper
than that.
Oh, not that I haven't recommended it before, but if you're in that
classic, history-can't-repeat-itself-can-it mood, Juan Cole's Napoleon's
Egypt: Invading the Middle East
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1403964319/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20> is
the book to cure you. Yes, Virginia, it all happened before. The
invasion bringing "liberation" and "democracy," behind which were the
grandiose dreams of a "Greater Middle East." The miscalculations, the
unexpected, bitter guerrilla war that followed, the full fiasco. The
difference? Napoleon's disaster took a mercifully short three years to
unfold and he, at least, brought along a corps of scientists, rather
than private security cops and crony corporations, and some of them
found the Rosetta Stone. Cole, who runs the Informed Comment website
<http://www.juancole.com/> (my daily bread) is just a barrel of energy
and so has set up a separate blog <http://napoleonsegypt.blogspot.com/>
for his book, which is fascinating in its own right.
In Soldier's Heart, Reading Literature Through Peace and War at West
Point
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0374180636/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
Elizabeth Samet takes us into an otherwise no-admission world -- that of
the officer-corps-in-the-making for our all-volunteer Army. As that
force has become ever less a citizen's army, and so ever less connected
to all of American society, it becomes ever more important for the rest
of us to understand it. Samet offers what, on the face of it, might seem
an unlikely vantage point for illuminating military culture. She teaches
literature and poetry to West Point cadets, but she's canny and
eagle-eyed -- and the ways the young almost-officers she deals with
every day grapple with literature (especially war poetry) turn out to be
telling. "Like their teacher," she points out -- like most of us, in
fact -- "most of my students first encountered war and military life
through the stories of their fathers and from the movies... The signal
difference is that they have actually agreed to turn make-believe into
real life." Not surprisingly, "owning war" -- wresting the right to
write about and interpret it from civilians -- "is one of the things for
which they will fight hardest." The book is peppered with insights into
these young men (and women) and what drives (and confuses) them, while
introducing the civilian reader to a culture that is the best and worst
of small town life. Samet even takes time to consider that almost
all-purpose military exclamation -- nobody really knows where it came
from or exactly what it means -- "hooah" (which she finally bans from
her classroom).
Near the top of the must-read stack of books by my bedside, along with
Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0805079831/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>
(my next stop actually) and an account of the great Arab conquests in
the century after Mohammed's death, is Studs Terkel's new autobiography,
Touch and Go
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1595580433/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>.
Our premier oral historian -- and all-around amazing character -- he is
now 95 years old, but don't you dare say that this is his last book! He
continues to defy the odds. Until I read this one, let me recommend two
slightly older Terkel gems, both perfect paperback purchases: Hope Dies
Last, Keeping the Faith in Difficult Times
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/156584937X/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20> is
his oral history of activists, from the 1930s into the twenty-first
century. It's filled with stirring testimony and a reminder that, in bad
times, to dispel the gloom, hoping is not enough. Only acting -- even
taking the smallest step toward change -- engenders actual hope and a
sense of optimism. I'd like to urge on you as well Will the Circle Be
Unbroken? Reflections on Death, Rebirth, and Hunger for a Faith
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/0345451201/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20>,
Stud's oral history of death. For those of us of a certain age, it is, I
guarantee you, a strangely upbeat, genuinely uplifting book. I edited it
once upon a time and I have to admit that some of the interviews moved
me so that I found myself tearing up even as I marked the pages. I'm
unlikely ever to forget the mother who forgave her son's killer (to his
face) or the touching fantasy of the Chicago sanitation worker who
donated part of his liver to a man he didn't know.
Okay, consider the book "review" part of this letter officially over.
Whatever minimal authority or expertise I may have has now fled the
premises. But that won't stop me -- not before I wax enthusiastic about
two plays I've seen recently. If you're not already in New York or not
coming soon, you can stop here and holiday good speed to you. If you
are, or you will be, then rush for the phone (212-352-3101) or onto the
Internet
<http://www.cultureproject.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=61>
and order tickets to Howard Zinn's /Rebel Voices/ at the Culture
Project, which has just added shows through December 18th (and will soon
be adding more for January). In it, six young actresses and actors (and
the odd guest reader) work energetic magic with passages from the
Zinn/Anthony Arnove book Voices of a People's History of the United
States
<http://www.amazon.com/dp/1583226281/ref=nosim/?tag=nationbooks08-20> as
well as stirring songs. I have to say that it's a distinctly feel-good
event.
And, if that isn't enough for you, pick up that phone again
(212-967-7555), you mad fool, or grab that credit card one last time for
David Henry Hwang's fabulous new play, /Yellow Face/, at the Public
Theater <http://www.publictheater.org/> only until December 23rd (unless
extended). It's a very personal, inventive, and superbly acted farce of
mistaken racial casting and identity, of father, sons, and American
dreams (as well as nightmares -- sometimes the two can't be told apart),
of anti-Chinese hysterias and other strange phenomena of our American
world.
And with that, to all a good night and -- let's hope -- a happier New
Year of reading and everything else. /Tom/
*Note:* /If you want your friends to read *Tom's Review of Books* and
don't want to forward the letter, you can always send them to the
Tomdispatch site, where it's posted on a separate page. The url is:
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/book_review_12_11_2007 or just click here.
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/book_review_12_11_2007> /
**************************************************************************************
Independent.co.uk Online Edition: Home <http://www.independent.co.uk/>

Robert Fisk: A different venue, but the pious claims and promises are
the same

Published: 29 November 2007
Haven't we been here before? Isn't Annapolis just a repeat of the White
House lawn and the Oslo agreement, a series of pious claims and promises
in which two weak men, Messrs Abbas and Olmert, even use the same words
of Oslo.
"It is time for the cycle of blood, violence and occupation to end," the
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Tuesday. But don't I
remember Yitzhak Rabin saying on the White House lawn that, "it is time
for the cycle of blood... to end"?
Jerusalem and its place as a Palestinian and Israeli capital isn't
there. And if Israel receives acknowledgement that it is indeed an
Israeli state ? and in reality, of course, it is ? there can be no
"right of return" for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled (or
whose families fled) what became Israel in 1948.
And what am I to make of the following quotation from the full text of
the joint document: "The steering committee will develop a joint work
plan and establish and oversee the work of negotiations (/sic/) teams to
address all issues, to be headed by one lead representative from each
party." Come again?
We went through all these steering committees before ? and they never
worked. True we've got a date of 12 December for the first session of
this so-called "steering committee" and we have the faint hope from Mr
Bush, embroidered, of course, with all the usual self-confidence, that
we're going to have an agreement by 2008. But how can the Palestinians
have a state without a capital in Jerusalem? How can they have a state
when their entire territory has been chopped up and divided by Jewish
settlements and the settler roads and, in parts, by a massive war?
Yes of course, we all want an end to bloodshed in the Middle East but
the Americans are going to need Syria and Iran to support this ? or at
least Syrian support to control Hamas ? and what do we get? Bush
continues to threaten Iran and Bush tells Syria in Annapolis that it
must keep clear of Lebanese elections, or else...
Yes, Hizbollah is a surrogate of Iran and is playing a leading role in
the opposition to the government of Lebanon. Do Bush and Condoleezza
Rice (or Abbas or Olmert for that matter) really think they're going to
have a free ride for a year without the full involvement of every party
in the region? More than half of the Palestinians under occupation are
under the control of Hamas.
Reading the speeches ? especially the joint document ? it seems like an
exercise in self-delusion. The Middle East is currently a hell disaster
and the President of the United States thinks he is going to produce the
crown jewels from a cabinet and forget Afghanistan and Iraq and Iran ?
and Pakistan, for that matter. The worst element of the whole Annapolis
shindig is that once again millions of people across the Middle East ?
Muslims, Jews and Christians ? will believe all this and will then turn
? after its failure ? with fury on their antagonists for breaking these
agreements.
For more than two years, the Saudis have been offering Israel security
and recognition by Arab states in return for a total withdrawal of
Israeli forces from the occupied territories. What was wrong with that?
Mr Olmert promised that "negotiations will address all the issues which
thus far has been evaded". Yet the phrase "withdrawal of Israeli forces
from occupied territories" simply doesn't exist in the text.
Like most people who live in the Middle East, I would like to enjoy
these dreams and believe they are true. But they are not. Wait for the
end of 2008.
Interesting? Click here to explore further

Also in this section
* Robert Fisk: Darkness falls on the Middle East
<http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3191532.ece>
* Robert Fisk: Holocaust denial in the White House
<http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3146418.ece>
* Robert Fisk: Warning... this film could make you angry
<http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3124292.ece>
* Robert Fisk: King Abdullah flies in to lecture _us_ on terrorism
<http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3109869.ece>
* Robert Fisk: Executed at dawn. But who was he?
<http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3078962.ece>
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Peace Summit
* Former Nato military chief appointed Middle East envoy
<http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/article3204053.ece>
* Abbas loyalists open fire at funeral march, injuring 26
<http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article3204052.ece>
* Adrian Hamilton: Annapolis's sole purpose is to serve the Bush
agenda
<http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/adrian_hamilton/article3204028.ece>
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