Friday, January 12, 2007

a Dead Donkey



A DEAD DONKEY

(Thanks, Hugh)

The war in Iraq has had many casualties, including damage to the English language. I am enclosing a couple articles that I’ll introduce below, but for now let’s look at the words being used. I don’t want to, so to speak, “kick a dead horse.”

FLASH: Bush spoke and said he was sending another 20,000 plus troops to Iraq, asking for billions of more dollars to spend on the war, sending a group of battleships (armed with Tomahawk missiles) to the area near Iran, threatened Syria as well. Some people are calling this an “escalation.” Condellesa Rice corrected them – it is just an “Augmentation.” [Escalation was what we did in Viet Nam, this is the middle east, not southeast Asia.] Now back to our regularly scheduled post:

I was watching some of the commentary both before and after Arbusto’s speech on Wednesday. [Arbusto: Spanish translation of bush, which translates back into English as either shrub or bush. Also the name of an oil company funded by Saudi Arabia for George W.]

The commentary included such language as “Do you think this is the ‘Last Chance Saloon’ for the President?”

Or how about “This might come down to the gunfight at the OK corral.”

Or my favorite, “This is hardly the Alamo” with the answer “people forget that we lost at the Alamo.”

It certainly made me think of old west maxims and truisms, perhaps appropriate when discussing Arbusto.

Now, only 12% of the American public favors this war and certainly a small minority favors an escalation. However, that means that it will continue as this is a “Democracy” as understood these days. I remember when at the start of the war, those countries who followed their citizen’s wishes and voted against it were called “Old Europe” and those who supported it in spite of even greater opposition were called “New Europe.” The fact that the people are irrelevant is thus part of the modern definition of Democracy (except for pesky elections which can be manipulated through technology – if you can call zapping a computer in a non-Republican precinct and thus erasing all it data technology). Turkey opposed it as 95% of its population opposed it, and was hence called “Islamist.”

“Islamist” introduces another word into the language, a word I don’t quite understand. I know that a Physicist works in the area of physics and has a neutral connotation. In the field of literature, a Medievalist specializes in pre-Renaissance and post classical literature.

This word, however, refers to a religion, I think. I have never heard the term “Christist” used for “crusader.” I have never heard the word “Mosesist” used for a modern Zionist occupier and expansionist. Yet the word clearly is intended to have negative connotations.

In this spirit, and the spirit of the old west, I would like to nominate a new word for inclusion in the English language: “HAMARR.” [Transliteration mine] It is Arabic and means “Donkey.” We are all familiar with the phrase “No use beating a dead horse,” and we all agree on the sentiment. But a “Hamarr,” is stupid, stubborn, clumbsy, and all that implies. The only time I’ve heard it used correctly in its English form was in a Nero Wolffe novel when Nero called someone a “Donkey!” Hence, the need for “Hamarr!”

It is needed so that we can say “No use kicking a dead horse, but a dead donkey is another matter. They are so stubborn and stupid they don’t even know it when they are dead” as is the case with Arbusto’s war in Iraq.

Incidentally, he has expanded this now to action against Iran and Syria. Do you remember the rockets shot into Israel by Hezbullah with ranges of 100 to 200 kilometers? We were told these were shipped by Iran through Syria to Lebanon. Haven’t you wondered, then, if Iran is so dangerous why hundreds of rockets have not been lobbed into the Green Zone in Iraq? Actually, I haven’t, but I’m worried about the future.

What else this week? Oh yes, Saddam was executed. Below is an excellent article about the effect of the video released of the event, Saddam becoming a martyr. Keep in mind that this was written BEFORE another cell-phone video, that of the dead Saddam on a gurney, a hole in his neck, some report a bullet in his brain (I have not seen that, but all may be available of u-tube by now.) Our media have not shown the massive pro-Saddam demonstrations that have been covered by Middle Eastern television.

And oh yes, the effect of the neo-con approach to establish hegemony is illustrated by an article, further below, by Noam Chomsky. In other words, if you really want the United States to rule the world, or to freely exploit the world, you have good reason to oppose the neo-con strategy.

Finally, I can’t believe that Biden went to Law School. Congress can put all the strings it wants on military funding, so when Arbusto asks for more billions, congress can clearly say that all funds are for withdrawal of our troops.

So, I’m giving the dead donkey one more kick and here are the articles. (Next week I’ll get off this depressing topic).

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The Whole Bloody Thing Was Obscene

Butchery was supposed to have been presented as a solemn execution

by Robert Fisk; Independent/UK; January 08, 2007

The lynching of Saddam Hussein - for that is what we are talking about - will turn out to be one of the determining moments in the whole shameful crusade upon which the West embarked in March of 2003. Only the president-governor George Bush and Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara could have devised a militia administration in Iraq so murderous and so immoral that the most ruthless mass murderer in the Middle East could end his days on the gallows as a figure of nobility, scalding his hooded killers for their lack of manhood and - in his last seconds - reminding the thug who told him to "go to hell" that the hell was now Iraq.

"Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it," Malcolm reported of the execution of the treacherous Thane of Cawdor in Macbeth. Or, as a good friend of mine in Ballymena said to me on the phone a few hours later, "The whole bloody thing was obscene." Quite so. On this occasion, I'll go along with the voice of Protestant Ulster.

Of course, Saddam gave his victims no trial; his enemies had no opportunity to hear the evidence against them; they were mown down into mass graves, not handed a black scarf to prevent the hangman's noose from burning their neck as it broke their spine. Justice was "done", even if a trifle cruelly. But this is not the point. Regime change was done in our name and Saddam's execution was a direct result of our crusade for a "new" Middle East. To watch a uniformed American general - despite the indiscipline of more and more US troops in Iraq - wheedling and whining at a press conference that his men were very courteous to Saddam until the very moment of handover to Muqtada al-Sadr's killers could only be appreciated with the blackest of humour.

Note how the best "our" Iraqi government's officials could do by way of reply was to order an "enquiry" to find out how mobile phones were taken into the execution room - not to identify the creatures who bawled abuse at Saddam Hussein in his last moments. How very Blairite of the al-Maliki government to search for the snitches rather than the criminals who abused their power. And somehow, they got away with it; acres of agency copy from the Green Zone reporters were expended on the Iraqi government's consternation, as if al- Maliki did not know what had transpired in the execution chamber. His own officials were present - and did nothing.

That's why the "official" videotape of the hanging was silent - and discreetly faded out - before Saddam was abused. It was cut at this point, not for reasons of good taste but because that democratically elected Iraqi government - whose election was such "great news for the people of Iraq" in the words of Lord Blair - knew all too well what the world would make of the terrible seconds that followed. Like the lies of Bush and Blair - that everything in Iraq was getting better when in fact it was getting worse - butchery was supposed to have been presented as a solemn judicial execution.

Worst of all, perhaps, is that the hanging of Saddam mimicked, in ghostly, miniature form, the manner of his own regime's bestial executions. Saddam's own hangman at Abu Ghraib, a certain Abu Widad, would also taunt his victims before pulling the trap door lever, a last cruelty before extinction. Is this where Saddam's hangmen learned their job? And just who exactly were those leather-jacketed hangmen last week, by the way? No one, it seemed, bothered to ask this salient question. Who chose them? Al-Maliki's militia chums? Or the Americans who managed the whole roadshow from the start, who so organised Saddam's trial that he was never allowed to reveal details of his friendly relations with three US administrations - and thus took the secrets of the murderous, decade-long Baghdad-Washington military alliance to his grave?

I would not ask this question were it not for the sense of profound shock I experienced when touring the Abu Ghraib prison after "Iraq's liberation" and meeting the US-appointed senior Iraqi medical officer at the jail. When his minders were distracted, he admitted to me he had also been the senior "medical officer" at Abu Ghraib when Saddam's prisoners were tortured to death there. No wonder our enemies-become-friends are turning into our enemies again.

But this is not just about Iraq. More than 35 years ago, I was being driven home from school by my Dad when his new-fangled car radio broadcast a report of the dawn hanging of a man at - I think - Wormwood Scrubs. I remember the unpleasant look of sanctity that came over my father's face when I asked him if this was right. "It's the law, Old Boy," he said, as if such cruelties were immutable to the human race. Yet this was the same father who, as a young soldier in the First World War, was threatened with court martial because he refused to command the firing party to execute an equally young Australian soldier.

Maybe only older men, sensing their failing powers, enjoy the prerogatives of execution. More than 10 years ago, the now-dead President Hrawi of Lebanon and the since-murdered prime minister Rafiq Hariri signed the death warrants of two young Muslim men. One of them had panicked during a domestic robbery north of Beirut and shot a Christian man and his sister. Hrawi - in the words of one of his top security officers at the time - "wanted to show he could hang Muslims in a Christian area". He got his way. The two men - one of whom had not even been present in the house during the robbery - were taken to their public execution beside the main Beirut-Jounieh highway, swooning with fear at the sight of their white-hooded executioners, while the Christian glitterati, heading home from night-clubs with their mini-skirted girlfriends, pulled up to watch the fun.

I suggested at the time, much to Hrawi's disgust, that this should become a permanent feature of Beirut's nightlife, that regular public hangings on the Mediterranean Corniche would bring in tens of thousands more tourists, especially from Saudi Arabia where you could catch the odd beheading only at Friday prayers.

No, it's not about the wickedness of the hanged man. Unlike the Thane of Cawdor, Saddam did not "set forth a deep repentance" on the scaffold. We merely shamed ourselves in an utterly predictable way. Either you support the death penalty - whatever the nastiness or innocence of the condemned. Or you don't. C'est tout.

Â(c) 2006 The Independent

Â

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ZNet | Latin America

South America: Toward an Alternative Future

by Noam Chomsky; International Herald Tribune; January 07, 2007

Last month a coincidence of birth and death signaled a transition for South America and indeed for the world.

The former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet died even as leaders of South American nations concluded a two-day summit meeting in Cochabamba, Bolivia, hosted by President Evo Morales, at which the participants and the agenda represented the antithesis of Pinochet and his era.

In the Cochabamba Declaration, the presidents and envoys of 12 countries agreed to study the idea of forming a continent-wide community similar to the European Union.

The declaration marks another stage toward regional integration in South America, 500 years after the European conquests. The subcontinent, from Venezuela to Argentina, may yet present an example to the world on how to create an alternative future from a legacy of empire and terror.

The United States has long dominated the region by two major methods: violence and economic strangulation. Quite generally, international affairs have more than a slight resemblance to the Mafia. The Godfather does not take it lightly when he is crossed, even by a small storekeeper.

Previous attempts at independence have been crushed, partly because of a lack of regional cooperation. Without it, threats can be handled one by one. (Central America, unfortunately, has yet to shake the fear and destruction left over from decades of U.S.-backed terror, especially during the 1980s.)

To the United States, the real enemy has always been independent nationalism, particularly when it threatens to become a "contagious example," to borrow Henry Kissinger's characterization of democratic socialism in Chile.

On Sept. 11, 1973, Pinochet's forces attacked the Chilean presidential palace. Salvador Allende, the democratically elected president, died in the palace, apparently by his own hand, because he was unwilling to surrender to the assault that demolished Latin America's oldest, most vibrant democracy and established a regime of torture and repression.

The official death toll for the coup is 3,200; the actual toll is commonly estimated at double that figure. An official inquiry 30 years after the coup found evidence of approximately 30,000 cases of torture during the Pinochet regime. Among the leaders at Cochabamba was the Chilean president, Michelle Bachelet. Like Allende, she is a socialist and a physician. She also is a former exile and political prisoner. Her father was a general who died in prison after being tortured.

At Cochabamba, Morales and President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela celebrated a new joint venture, a gas separation project in Bolivia. Such cooperation strengthens the region's role as a major player in global energy.

Venezuela is already the only Latin American member of OPEC, with by far the largest proven oil reserves outside the Middle East. Chávez envisions Petroamerica, an integrated energy system of the kind that China is trying to initiate in Asia.

The new Ecuadorian president, Rafael Correa, proposed a land-and-river trade link from the Brazilian Amazon rain forest to Ecuador's Pacific Coast €" a South American equivalent of the Panama Canal.

Other promising developments include Telesur, a new pan-Latin American TV channel based in Venezuela and an effort to break the Western media monopoly.

The Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, called on fellow leaders to overcome historical differences and unite the continent, however difficult the task.

Integration is a prerequisite for genuine independence. The colonial history €" Spain, Britain, other European powers, the United States €" not only divided countries from one another but also left a sharp internal division within the countries, between a wealthy small elite and a mass of impoverished people.

The main economic controls in recent years have come from the International Monetary Fund, which is virtually a branch of the U.S. Treasury Department. But Argentina, Brazil and now Bolivia have moved to free themselves of IMF strictures.

Because of the new developments in South America, the United States has been forced to adjust policy. The governments that now have U.S. support €" like Brazil under Lula €" might well have been overthrown in the past, as was President João Goulart of Brazil in a U.S.-backed coup in 1964.

To maintain Washington's party line, though, it's necessary to finesse some of the facts. For example, when Lula was re- elected in October, one of his first acts was to fly to Caracas to support Chávez's electoral campaign. Also, Lula dedicated a Brazilian project in Venezuela, a bridge over the Orinoco River, and discussed other joint ventures.

The tempo is picking up. Also last month, Mercosur, the South American trading bloc, continued the dialogue on South American unity at its semiannual meeting in Brazil, where Lula inaugurated the Mercosur Parliament €" another promising sign of deliverance from the demons of the past.

Noam Chomsky is emeritus professor of linguistics and philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His most recent book is "Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy."

(c) 2007 The International Herald Tribune

Thursday, January 04, 2007



Well, If a picture is worth a thousand words, here is one for you.




The ghost-like image is that of Ashcroft, the ex-Attorney General who censured the statue of justice because one of her breasts were showing. The next in Rummy who George W. said would remain Defense Secretary until 2008 and we must believe our leader (next to him). Wolfowitz, next, is now head of the IMF or World Bank but was the “brains” behaind the Iraq invasion. Rice is the one next. She played Brahms in China with her bicycle pants showing and Brahms was crushed by the experience. Cheney, VP, looks perfectly in character. Don’t miss the left side of Bush’s brain, Rowe, an undicted co-conspirator (I think).




Thanks Hugh!

Next post, below, is also new.

The Wizard

Democrats in Congress

Actually, the title is more informative if we take it as A Congress Without Republican Domination. The idea that it will suddenly end the war is one we have to forget about. They don’t have the power. However, they can act as a brake on it and eventually shut it down.

One of the things they can do is raise the minimum wage. It has been flat for a long time, while CEO salaries have become obscene. For the middle class and people who consider themselves professionals, an increase in the minimum wage will increase their salaries eventually and it will also help the social security system. No wonder Bush and Co. have opposed it for so long.

I keep hearing about the need for more “boots on the ground.” If that is really the purpose, I have a solution. Simply fill up a bunch of C-130s and dump boots all over Iraq, especially in the south. Cover Iraq with boots up to about a yard deep. Hell, that’ll slow things down.

I have heard of fasting for peace. It doesn’t work. However, bulemics have a great deal of trouble feeling good about themselves. Now, if we could get a group of about 30 bullemics to stuff themselves and then be rushed to the recruitment office, they could puke all over the place, contribute to the anti-war effort, feel better about their, er, contribution, and new recruits will be scarce until the mess is cleaned up.

I hear that the theme of the new foreign policy speech by Bush will be “surge and sacrifice”. Sounds very kinky to be.

Here are some things about it:

A project of the Nation Institute

compiled and edited by Tom Engelhardt

Tomgram: Dreyfuss on Bush’s Wizard-of-Oz Iraq Plan

This post can be found at http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=153798

Every now and then, you have to take a lesson or two from history. In the case of George Bush’s Iraq, here’s one: No matter what the President announces in his “new way forward” speech on Iraq next week—including belated calls for “sacrifice” from the man whose answer to 9/11 was to urge Americans to surge into Disney World—it won’t work. Nothing our President suggests in relation to Iraq, in fact, will have a ghost of a chance of success. Worse than that, whatever it turns out to be, it is essentially guaranteed to make matters worse.

Repetition, after all, is most of what knowledge adds up to, and the Bush administration has been repetitively consistent in its Iraqi—and larger Middle Eastern—policies. Whatever it touches (or perhaps the better word would be “smashes”) turns to dross. Iraq is now dross—and Saddam Hussein was such a remarkably hard act to follow badly that this is no small accomplishment.

A striking but largely unexplored aspect of Saddam Hussein’s execution is illustrative. His trial was basically run out of the U.S. embassy in Baghdad; Saddam was held at Camp Cropper, the U.S. prison near Baghdad International Airport. He was delivered to the Iraqi government for hanging in a U.S. helicopter (as his body would be flown back to his home village in a U.S. helicopter).

Now, let’s add a few more facts into the mix. Among Iraqi Shiites, no individual has been viewed as more of an enemy by the Bush administration than the radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. American troops fought bloody battles with his Mahdi Army in 2004, destroying significant parts of the old city of Najaf in the process. American forces make periodic, destructive raids into the vast Baghdad slum and Sadrist stronghold of Sadr City to take out his followers and recently killed one of his top aides in a raid in Najaf. The upcoming Presidential “surge” into Baghdad is, reputedly, in part to be aimed at suppressing his militia, which a recent Pentagon report described as “the main threat to stability in Iraq.”

Nonetheless at the crucial moment in the execution what did some of the Interior Ministry guards do? They chanted: “Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada!” In all press reports, this has been described as a “taunting” of Saddam (and assumedly of Iraqi Sunnis more generally). But it could as easily be described as the purest mockery of George W. Bush and everything he’s done in the country. If, in such a relatively controlled setting, the Americans couldn’t stop Saddam’s execution from being “infiltrated” by al-Sadr’s followers—who are also, of course, part of Prime Minister Maliki’s government—what can they possibly do in the chaos of Baghdad? How can a few more thousands of U.S. troops be expected to keep them, or Badr Brigade militiamen out of the streets, no less the police, the military, and various ministries?

Consider the “new way forward,” then, just another part of the Bush administration’s endless bubbleworld. And check out exactly what madness to look forward to in next week’s presidential address via Robert Dreyfuss, a shrewd reporter and the author of the indispensable Devil’s Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam. Tom

The Surge to Nowhere

Traveling the Planet Neocon Road to Baghdad (Again)

Like some neocon Wizard of Oz, in building expectations for the 2007 version of his “Strategy for Victory” in Iraq, President Bush is promising far more than he can deliver. It is now nearly two months since he fired Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, installing Robert Gates in his place, and the White House revealed that a full-scale review of America’s failed policy in Iraq was underway. Last week, having spent months—if, in fact, the New York Times is correct that the review began late in the summer—consulting with generals, politicians, State Department and CIA bureaucrats, and Pentagon planners, Bush emerged from yet another powwow to tell waiting reporters: “We’ve got more consultation to do until I talk to the country about the plan.”

As John Lennon sang in Revolution: “We’d all love to see the plan.”

Unfortunately for Bush, most of the American public may have already checked out. By and large, Americans have given up on the war in Iraq. The November election, largely a referendum on the war, was a repudiation of the entire effort, and the vote itself was a marker along a continuing path of rapidly declining approval ratings both for President Bush personally and for his handling of the war. It’s entirely possible that when Bush does present us with “the plan” next week, few will be listening. Until he makes it clear that he has returned from Planet Neocon by announcing concrete steps to end the war in Iraq, it’s unlikely that American voters will tune in. As of January 1, every American could find at least 3,000 reasons not to believe that President Bush has suddenly found a way to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

What’s astonishing about the debate over Iraq is that the President—or anyone else, for that matter, including the media—is paying the slightest attention to the neoconservative strategists who got us into this mess in the first place. Having been egregiously wrong about every single Iraqi thing for five consecutive years, by all rights the neocons ought to be consigned to some dusty basement exhibit hall in the American Museum of Natural History, where, like so many triceratops, their reassembled bones would stand mutely by to send a chill of fear through touring schoolchildren. Indeed, the neocons are the dodos of Washington, simply too dumb to know when they are extinct.

Yet here is Tom Donnelly, an American Enterprise Institute neocon, a co-chairman of the Project for a New American Century, telling a reporter sagely that the surge is in. “I think the debate is really coming down to: Surge large. Surge small. Surge short. Surge longer. I think the smart money would say that the range of options is fairly narrow.” (Donnelly, of course, forgot: Surge out.) His colleague, Frederick Kagan of AEI, the chief architect of the Surge Theory for Iraq, has made it clear that the only kind of surge that would work is a big, fat one.

Nearly pornographic in his fondling of the surge, Kagan, another of the neocon crew of armchair strategists and militarists, makes it clear that size does matter. “Of all the ‘surge’ options out there, short ones are the most dangerous,” he wrote in the Washington Post last week, adding lasciviously, “The size of the surge matters as much as the length. ... The only ‘surge’ option that makes sense is both long and large.”

Ooh—that is, indeed, a manly surge. For Kagan, a man-sized surge must involve at least 30,000 more troops funneled into the killing grounds of Baghdad and al-Anbar Province for at least 18 months.

President Bush, perhaps dizzy from the oedipal frenzy created by the emergence of Daddy’s best friend James Baker and his Iraq Study Group, seems all too willing to prove his manhood by the size of the surge. According to a stunning front-page piece in the Times last Tuesday, Bush has all but dismissed the advice of his generals, including Centcom Commander John Abizaid, and George Casey, the top U.S. general in Iraq, because they are “more fixated on withdrawal than victory.” At a recent Pentagon session, according to General James T. Conway, the commandant of the U.S. Marines, Bush told the assembled brass: “What I want to hear from you now is how we are going to win, not how we are going to leave.” As a result, Abizaid and Casey are, it appears, getting the same hurry-up-and-retire treatment that swept away other generals who questioned the wisdom on Iraq transmitted from Planet Neocon.

That’s scary, if it means that Bush—presumably on the advice of the Neocon-in-Chief, Vice President Dick Cheney—has decided to launch a major push, Kagan-style, for victory in Iraq. Not that such an escalation has a chance of working, but there’s no question that, in addition to bankrupting the United States, breaking the army and the Marines, and unleashing all-out political warfare at home, it would kill perhaps tens of thousands more Iraqis.

Personally, I’m not convinced that Bush could get away with it politically. Not only is the public dead-set against escalating the war, but there are hints that Congress might not stand for it, and the leadership of the U.S. Armed Forces is opposed.

Over the past few days, a swarm of Republican senators has come out against the surge, including at least three Republican senators up for reelection in 2008 in states that make them vulnerable: Gordon Smith of Oregon, whose remarkable speech calling the war “criminal” went far beyond the normal bland rhetoric of discourse in the U.S. capital, along with John Sununu of New Hampshire and Norm Coleman of Minnesota. In addition, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, less vulnerable but still facing voters in 2008, has questioned the surge idea. And a host of Republican moderates—Chuck Hagel (NE), Dick Lugar (IN), Susan Collins (ME) -- have lambasted it. (Hagel told Robert Novak: “It’s Alice in Wonderland. I’m absolutely opposed to the idea of sending any more troops to Iraq. It is folly.”) Even Sam Brownback, one of the Senate godfathers of the neocon-backed Iraqi National Congress, has expressed skepticism, saying: “We can’t impose a military solution.” According to Novak, only 12 of the 49 Republican senators are now willing to back Sen. John McCain’s blood-curdling cries for sending in more troops.

Meanwhile, says Novak, the Democrats would not only criticize the idea of a surge but, led by Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, might use their crucial power over the purse. “Biden,” writes Novak, “will lead the rest of the Democrats not only to oppose a surge but to block it.” Reports the Financial Times of London: “Democrats have hinted that they could use their control over the budget process to make life difficult for the Bush administration if it chooses to step up the military presence in Iraq.” A Kagan-style surge would require a vast new commitment of funds, and with their ability to scrutinize, put conditions on, and even strike out entire line items in the military budget and the Pentagon’s supplemental requests, the Democrats could find ways to stall or halt the “surge,” if not the war itself.

Indeed, if President Bush opts to Kaganize the war, he will throw down the gauntlet to the Democrats. Unwilling until now to say that they would even consider blocking appropriations for the Iraq War, the Democrats would have little choice but to up the ante if Bush flouts the electoral mandate in such a full-frontal manner. By escalating the war in the face of near-universal opposition from the public, the military, and the political class, the president would force the Democrats to escalate their own—until now fairly mild-mannered—opposition to the war.

However, it’s possible—just possible—that what the President is planning to announce will be something a bit more Machiavellian than the straightforwardly manly thrust Kagan wants. Perhaps, just perhaps, he will order an increase of something like 20,000 American troops, but put a tight time limit on this surge—say, four months. Perhaps he will announce that he is giving Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki that much time to square the circle in Iraq: crack down on militias and death squads, purge the army and police, develop a plan to fight the Sunni insurgency, find a formula to deal with the Kurds and the explosive, oil-rich city of Kirkuk which they claim as their own, un-de-Baathify Iraq, and create a workable formula for sharing the fracturing country’s oil wealth.

By surging those 20,000 troops into a hopeless military nowhere-land, Bush will say that he is giving Maliki room to accomplish all that—knowing full well that none of it can, in fact, be accomplished by the weak, sectarian, Shiite-run regime inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone. So, sometime in the late spring, the United States could begin to un-surge its troops and start the sort of orderly, phased withdrawal that Jim Baker and the Carl Levin Democrats have called for.

Levin suggested as much as 2006 ended. “A surge which is not part of an overall program of troop reduction that begins in the next four to six months would be a mistake,” said Levin, who will chair the Armed Services Committee. “Even if the president is going to propose to temporarily add troops, he should make that conditional on the Iraqis reaching a political settlement that effectively ends the sectarian violence.”

That may be too much to ask for a Christian-crusader President, still lodged inside a bubble universe and determined to crush all evil-doers. And it may be too clever by half for an administration that has been as utterly inept as this one.

At the same time, it may also be too much to expect that the Democrats will really go to the mat to fight Bush if, Kagan-style, he orders a surge that is “long and large.” Maybe they will merely posture and fulminate and threaten to... well, hold hearings.

If so, it will be the Iraqis who end the war. It will be the Iraqis who eventually kill enough Americans to break the U.S. political will, and it will be the Iraqis who sweep away the ruins of the Maliki government to replace it with an anti-American, anti-U.S.- occupation government in Iraq. That is basically how the war in Vietnam ended, and it wasn’t pretty.

Robert Dreyfuss is the author of Devil’s Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam. He covers national security for Rolling Stone and writes frequently for The American Prospect, Mother Jones, and the Nation. He is also a regular contributor to TomPaine.com, the Huffington Post, Tomdispatch, and other sites, and writes the blog, The Dreyfuss Report, at his website.

Copyright 2007 Robert Dreyfuss

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posted January 4, 2007 at 10:33 am

Monday, January 01, 2007

Adsurd, revised

Try number 2:

The first edition of this was posted a couple of days ago, but the month changed so I imagine it has already been archived. I’m adding a few comments.

Camus?

I have to say it again. I did not make this up.

It seems George Bush was reading The Stranger by Albert Camus (one sitting, I hear) and then had a conversation with his press secretary Tony Snow, late of Fox News, about the origins of existentialism. There are several main issues in existentialism, and one of them is the notion of the Absurd. Words fail me.

The so-called court appeal in Iraq upheld Saddam’s hanging, to be carried out within 30 days. Now in each case, a judge was replaced, one quit because of government interference and the second because the prosecutor didn’t like him, at least three of his attorneys were murdered, as well as several others, the procedural issues are overwhelming, but it was upheld? Not even our court would do that. Perhaps the only other one I can think of is, well, no, you try to think of one. I’m busy. They will probably execute him tomorrow. [They did. How did I know? I didn’t, but I knew they were such vindictive cowards they didn’t want anyone to so stop them.}

Oh, he then wrote a note to supporters not to hate the occupiers. Right. [I’m still looking for an unexpurgated version of that letter. I’ve heard several excerpt all of which seem to contradict each other, but then the excerpts have one bee a clause or two here and there.]

Gerald Ford died so they are going to shoot off a cannon, one shot/per hour, to remember him. I remember him sliding down an airplane stariway. Anyway, he will first have a funeral in southern California near the Mexican border, then flown to D.C. to the rotunda building for a three day lay and a funeral, then to the senate area for a funeral, then to Michigan for a funeral and, when they are good and sure he is actually dead, be buried there. [He is still “Lying in state,” hm. Just after posting this, I found that he had opposed the war in Iraq all along.}

Here is something about the attacks on Carter. Of all people:

This article can be found on the web at

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070108/hedges

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

Get Carter

by CHRIS HEDGES

[from the January 8, 2007 issue]

Jimmy Carter, by publishing his book /Palestine Peace Not Apartheid/,

walked straight into the buzz saw that is the Israel lobby. Among the

vitriolic attacks on the former President was the claim by Abraham

Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, that Carter is

"outrageous" and "bigoted" and that his book raises "the old canard and

conspiracy theory of Jewish control of the media, Congress, and the U.S.

government." Many Democratic Party leaders, anxious to keep the Israel

lobby's money and support, have hotfooted it out the door, with incoming

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announcing that Carter "does not speak for

the Democratic Party on Israel."

Carter's book exposes little about Israel. The enforced segregation,

abject humiliation and spiraling Israeli violence against Palestinians

have been detailed in the Israeli and European press and, with

remarkable consistency, by all the major human rights organizations. The

assault against Carter, rather, says more about the failings of the

American media--which have largely let Israel hawks heap calumny on

Carter's book. It exposes the indifference of the Bush Administration

and the Democratic leadership to the rule of law and basic human rights,

the timidity of our intellectual class and the moral bankruptcy of

institutions that claim to speak for American Jews and the Jewish state.

The bleakness of life for Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, is

a mystery only to us. In the current Israeli campaign in Gaza, now

sealed off from the outside world, almost 500 Palestinians, most

unarmed, have been killed. Sanctions, demanded by Israel and imposed by

the international community after the Hamas victory last January in what

were universally acknowledged to be free and fair elections, have led to

the collapse of civil society in Gaza and the West Bank, as well as

widespread malnutrition. And Palestinians in the West Bank are being

encased, in open violation of international law, in a series of podlike

militarized ghettos with Israel's massive $2 billion project to build a

"security barrier." This barrier will gobble up at least 10 percent of

the West Bank, including most of the precious aquifers and at least

40,000 acres of Palestinian farmland. The project is being financed in

large part through $9 billion in American loan guarantees, although when

Congress approved the legislation in April 2003, Israel was told that

the loans could be used "only to support activities in the geographic

areas which were subject to the administration of the Government of

Israel prior to June 5, 1967."

But it is in Gaza that conditions are currently reaching a full-blown

humanitarian crisis. "Gaza is in its worst condition ever," Gideon Levy

wrote recently in the Israeli paper /Ha'aretz/. "The Israel Defense

Forces have been rampaging through Gaza--there's no other word to

describe it--killing and demolishing, bombing and shelling,

indiscriminately.... How contemptible all the sublime and nonsensical

talk about 'the end of the occupation' and 'partitioning the land' now

appears. Gaza is occupied, and with greater brutality than before....

This is disgraceful and shocking collective punishment."

And as Gaza descends into civil war, with Hamas and Fatah factions

carrying out gun battles in the streets, /Ha'aretz/ reporter Amira Hass

bitterly notes, "The experiment was a success: The Palestinians are

killing each other. They are behaving as expected at the end of the

extended experiment called 'what happens when you imprison 1.3 million

human beings in an enclosed space like battery hens.'"

In fact, if there is a failing in Carter's stance, it is that he is too

kind to the Israelis, bending over backward to assert that he is only

writing about the occupied territories. Israel itself, he says, is a

democracy. This would come as a surprise to the 1.3 million Israeli

Arabs who live as second-class citizens in the Jewish state. The poverty

rate among Israeli Arabs is more than twice that of the Jewish

population. Those Israeli Arabs who marry Palestinians from Gaza or the

West Bank are not permitted to get Israeli residency for their spouses.

And Israeli Arabs, who do not serve in the military or the country's

intelligence services and thus lack the important personal connections

and job networks available to veterans, are systematically shut out of

good jobs. Any Jew, who may speak no Hebrew or ever been to Israel, can

step off a plane and become an Israeli citizen, while a Palestinian

living abroad whose family's roots in Palestine may go back generations

is denied citizenship.

The Israel lobby in the United States does not serve Israel or the

Jewish community--it serves the interests of the Israeli extreme right

wing. Most Israelis have come to understand that peace will be possible

only when their country complies with international law and permits

Palestinians to build a viable and sustainable state based on the 1967

borders, including, in some configuration, East Jerusalem.

This stark demarcation between Israeli pragmatists and the extreme right

wing was apparent when I was in the Middle East for the /New York Times/

during Yitzhak Rabin's 1992 campaign for prime minister. The majority of

American Jewish organizations and neoconservative intellectuals made no

pretense of neutrality. They had morphed into extensions of the

right-wing Likud Party. These American groups, to Rabin's dismay, had

gone on to build, with Likud, an alliance with right-wing Christian

groups filled with real anti-Semites whose cultural and historical

ignorance of the Middle East was breathtaking. This collection of

messianic Jews and Christians, leavened with rabid American

imperialists, believed they had been handed a divine or moral mandate to

rule the Middle East, whether the Arabs liked it or not.

When Rabin, who had come to despise what the occupation was doing to the

citizenry of his own country, was sworn in as prime minister, the

leaders of these American Jewish organizations, along with their

buffoonish supporters on the Christian right, were conspicuous by their

absence. On one of Rabin's first visits to Washington after he assumed

office, according to one of his aides, he was informed that a group of

American Jewish leaders were available to meet him. The surly old

general, whose gravelly cigarette voice seemed to rise up from below his

feet, curtly refused. He told his entourage he did not have time to

waste on "scumbags."

revised

The first edition of this was posted a couple of days ago, but the month changed so I imagine it has already been archived. I’m adding a few comments.

Camus?

I have to say it again. I did not make this up.

It seems George Bush was reading The Stranger by Albert Camus (one sitting, I hear) and then had a conversation with his press secretary Tony Snow, late of Fox News, about the origins of existentialism. There are several main issues in existentialism, and one of them is the notion of the Absurd. Words fail me.

The so-called court appeal in Iraq upheld Saddam’s hanging, to be carried out within 30 days. Now in each case, a judge was replaced, one quit because of government interference and the second because the prosecutor didn’t like him, at least three of his attorneys were murdered, as well as several others, the procedural issues are overwhelming, but it was upheld? Not even our court would do that. Perhaps the only other one I can think of is, well, no, you try to think of one. I’m busy. They will probably execute him tomorrow. [They did. How did I know? I didn’t, but I knew they were such vindictive cowards they didn’t want anyone to so stop them.}

Oh, he then wrote a note to supporters not to hate the occupiers. Right. [I’m still looking for an unexpurgated version of that letter. I’ve heard several excerpt all of which seem to contradict each other, but then the excerpts have one bee a clause or two here and there.]

Gerald Ford died so they are going to shoot off a cannon, one shot/per hour, to remember him. I remember him sliding down an airplane stariway. Anyway, he will first have a funeral in southern California near the Mexican border, then flown to D.C. to the rotunda building for a three day lay and a funeral, then to the senate area for a funeral, then to Michigan for a funeral and, when they are good and sure he is actually dead, be buried there. [He is still “Lying in state,” hm. Just after posting this, I found that he had opposed the war in Iraq all along.}

Here is something about the attacks on Carter. Of all people:

This article can be found on the web at

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070108/hedges

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

Get Carter

by CHRIS HEDGES

[from the January 8, 2007 issue]

Jimmy Carter, by publishing his book /Palestine Peace Not Apartheid/,

walked straight into the buzz saw that is the Israel lobby. Among the

vitriolic attacks on the former President was the claim by Abraham

Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, that Carter is

"outrageous" and "bigoted" and that his book raises "the old canard and

conspiracy theory of Jewish control of the media, Congress, and the U.S.

government." Many Democratic Party leaders, anxious to keep the Israel

lobby's money and support, have hotfooted it out the door, with incoming

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announcing that Carter "does not speak for

the Democratic Party on Israel."

Carter's book exposes little about Israel. The enforced segregation,

abject humiliation and spiraling Israeli violence against Palestinians

have been detailed in the Israeli and European press and, with

remarkable consistency, by all the major human rights organizations. The

assault against Carter, rather, says more about the failings of the

American media--which have largely let Israel hawks heap calumny on

Carter's book. It exposes the indifference of the Bush Administration

and the Democratic leadership to the rule of law and basic human rights,

the timidity of our intellectual class and the moral bankruptcy of

institutions that claim to speak for American Jews and the Jewish state.

The bleakness of life for Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, is

a mystery only to us. In the current Israeli campaign in Gaza, now

sealed off from the outside world, almost 500 Palestinians, most

unarmed, have been killed. Sanctions, demanded by Israel and imposed by

the international community after the Hamas victory last January in what

were universally acknowledged to be free and fair elections, have led to

the collapse of civil society in Gaza and the West Bank, as well as

widespread malnutrition. And Palestinians in the West Bank are being

encased, in open violation of international law, in a series of podlike

militarized ghettos with Israel's massive $2 billion project to build a

"security barrier." This barrier will gobble up at least 10 percent of

the West Bank, including most of the precious aquifers and at least

40,000 acres of Palestinian farmland. The project is being financed in

large part through $9 billion in American loan guarantees, although when

Congress approved the legislation in April 2003, Israel was told that

the loans could be used "only to support activities in the geographic

areas which were subject to the administration of the Government of

Israel prior to June 5, 1967."

But it is in Gaza that conditions are currently reaching a full-blown

humanitarian crisis. "Gaza is in its worst condition ever," Gideon Levy

wrote recently in the Israeli paper /Ha'aretz/. "The Israel Defense

Forces have been rampaging through Gaza--there's no other word to

describe it--killing and demolishing, bombing and shelling,

indiscriminately.... How contemptible all the sublime and nonsensical

talk about 'the end of the occupation' and 'partitioning the land' now

appears. Gaza is occupied, and with greater brutality than before....

This is disgraceful and shocking collective punishment."

And as Gaza descends into civil war, with Hamas and Fatah factions

carrying out gun battles in the streets, /Ha'aretz/ reporter Amira Hass

bitterly notes, "The experiment was a success: The Palestinians are

killing each other. They are behaving as expected at the end of the

extended experiment called 'what happens when you imprison 1.3 million

human beings in an enclosed space like battery hens.'"

In fact, if there is a failing in Carter's stance, it is that he is too

kind to the Israelis, bending over backward to assert that he is only

writing about the occupied territories. Israel itself, he says, is a

democracy. This would come as a surprise to the 1.3 million Israeli

Arabs who live as second-class citizens in the Jewish state. The poverty

rate among Israeli Arabs is more than twice that of the Jewish

population. Those Israeli Arabs who marry Palestinians from Gaza or the

West Bank are not permitted to get Israeli residency for their spouses.

And Israeli Arabs, who do not serve in the military or the country's

intelligence services and thus lack the important personal connections

and job networks available to veterans, are systematically shut out of

good jobs. Any Jew, who may speak no Hebrew or ever been to Israel, can

step off a plane and become an Israeli citizen, while a Palestinian

living abroad whose family's roots in Palestine may go back generations

is denied citizenship.

The Israel lobby in the United States does not serve Israel or the

Jewish community--it serves the interests of the Israeli extreme right

wing. Most Israelis have come to understand that peace will be possible

only when their country complies with international law and permits

Palestinians to build a viable and sustainable state based on the 1967

borders, including, in some configuration, East Jerusalem.

This stark demarcation between Israeli pragmatists and the extreme right

wing was apparent when I was in the Middle East for the /New York Times/

during Yitzhak Rabin's 1992 campaign for prime minister. The majority of

American Jewish organizations and neoconservative intellectuals made no

pretense of neutrality. They had morphed into extensions of the

right-wing Likud Party. These American groups, to Rabin's dismay, had

gone on to build, with Likud, an alliance with right-wing Christian

groups filled with real anti-Semites whose cultural and historical

ignorance of the Middle East was breathtaking. This collection of

messianic Jews and Christians, leavened with rabid American

imperialists, believed they had been handed a divine or moral mandate to

rule the Middle East, whether the Arabs liked it or not.

When Rabin, who had come to despise what the occupation was doing to the

citizenry of his own country, was sworn in as prime minister, the

leaders of these American Jewish organizations, along with their

buffoonish supporters on the Christian right, were conspicuous by their

absence. On one of Rabin's first visits to Washington after he assumed

office, according to one of his aides, he was informed that a group of

American Jewish leaders were available to meet him. The surly old

general, whose gravelly cigarette voice seemed to rise up from below his

feet, curtly refused. He told his entourage he did not have time to

waste on "scumbags."

Friday, December 29, 2006

Camus and Arbusto

Camus?

I have to say it again. I did not make this up.

It seems George Bush was reading The Stranger by Albert Camus (one sitting, I hear) and then had a conversation with his press secretary Tony Snow, late of Fox News, about the origins of existentialism. There are several main issues in existentialism, and one of them is the notion of the Absurd. Words fail me.

The so-called court appeal in Iraq upheld Saddam’s hanging, to be carried out within 30 days. Now in each case, a judge was replaced, one quit because of government interference and the second because the prosecutor didn’t like him, at least three of his attorneys were murdered, as well as several others, the procedural issues are overwhelming, but it was upheld? Not even our court would do that. Perhaps the only other one I can think of is, well, no, you try to think of one. I’m busy. They will probably execute him tomorrow.

Oh, he then wrote a note to supporters not to hate the occupiers. Right.

Gerald Ford died so they are going to shoot off a cannon, one shot/per hour, to remember him. I remember him sliding down an airplane stariway. Anyway, he will first have a funeral in southern California near the Mexican border, then flown to D.C. to the rotunda building for a three day lay and a funeral, then to the senate area for a funeral, then to Michigan for a funeral and, when they are good and sure he is actually dead, be buried there.

Here is something about the attacks on Carter. Of all people:

Click here to return to the browser-optimized

version of this page.

This article can be found on the web at

*http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070108/hedges*

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

Get Carter

by CHRIS HEDGES

[from the January 8, 2007 issue]

Jimmy Carter, by publishing his book /Palestine Peace Not Apartheid/,

walked straight into the buzz saw that is the Israel lobby. Among the

vitriolic attacks on the former President was the claim by Abraham

Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, that Carter is

"outrageous" and "bigoted" and that his book raises "the old canard and

conspiracy theory of Jewish control of the media, Congress, and the U.S.

government." Many Democratic Party leaders, anxious to keep the Israel

lobby's money and support, have hotfooted it out the door, with incoming

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announcing that Carter "does not speak for

the Democratic Party on Israel."

Carter's book exposes little about Israel. The enforced segregation,

abject humiliation and spiraling Israeli violence against Palestinians

have been detailed in the Israeli and European press and, with

remarkable consistency, by all the major human rights organizations. The

assault against Carter, rather, says more about the failings of the

American media--which have largely let Israel hawks heap calumny on

Carter's book. It exposes the indifference of the Bush Administration

and the Democratic leadership to the rule of law and basic human rights,

the timidity of our intellectual class and the moral bankruptcy of

institutions that claim to speak for American Jews and the Jewish state.

The bleakness of life for Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, is

a mystery only to us. In the current Israeli campaign in Gaza, now

sealed off from the outside world, almost 500 Palestinians, most

unarmed, have been killed. Sanctions, demanded by Israel and imposed by

the international community after the Hamas victory last January in what

were universally acknowledged to be free and fair elections, have led to

the collapse of civil society in Gaza and the West Bank, as well as

widespread malnutrition. And Palestinians in the West Bank are being

encased, in open violation of international law, in a series of podlike

militarized ghettos with Israel's massive $2 billion project to build a

"security barrier." This barrier will gobble up at least 10 percent of

the West Bank, including most of the precious aquifers and at least

40,000 acres of Palestinian farmland. The project is being financed in

large part through $9 billion in American loan guarantees, although when

Congress approved the legislation in April 2003, Israel was told that

the loans could be used "only to support activities in the geographic

areas which were subject to the administration of the Government of

Israel prior to June 5, 1967."

But it is in Gaza that conditions are currently reaching a full-blown

humanitarian crisis. "Gaza is in its worst condition ever," Gideon Levy

wrote recently in the Israeli paper /Ha'aretz/. "The Israel Defense

Forces have been rampaging through Gaza--there's no other word to

describe it--killing and demolishing, bombing and shelling,

indiscriminately.... How contemptible all the sublime and nonsensical

talk about 'the end of the occupation' and 'partitioning the land' now

appears. Gaza is occupied, and with greater brutality than before....

This is disgraceful and shocking collective punishment."

And as Gaza descends into civil war, with Hamas and Fatah factions

carrying out gun battles in the streets, /Ha'aretz/ reporter Amira Hass

bitterly notes, "The experiment was a success: The Palestinians are

killing each other. They are behaving as expected at the end of the

extended experiment called 'what happens when you imprison 1.3 million

human beings in an enclosed space like battery hens.'"

In fact, if there is a failing in Carter's stance, it is that he is too

kind to the Israelis, bending over backward to assert that he is only

writing about the occupied territories. Israel itself, he says, is a

democracy. This would come as a surprise to the 1.3 million Israeli

Arabs who live as second-class citizens in the Jewish state. The poverty

rate among Israeli Arabs is more than twice that of the Jewish

population. Those Israeli Arabs who marry Palestinians from Gaza or the

West Bank are not permitted to get Israeli residency for their spouses.

And Israeli Arabs, who do not serve in the military or the country's

intelligence services and thus lack the important personal connections

and job networks available to veterans, are systematically shut out of

good jobs. Any Jew, who may speak no Hebrew or ever been to Israel, can

step off a plane and become an Israeli citizen, while a Palestinian

living abroad whose family's roots in Palestine may go back generations

is denied citizenship.

The Israel lobby in the United States does not serve Israel or the

Jewish community--it serves the interests of the Israeli extreme right

wing. Most Israelis have come to understand that peace will be possible

only when their country complies with international law and permits

Palestinians to build a viable and sustainable state based on the 1967

borders, including, in some configuration, East Jerusalem.

This stark demarcation between Israeli pragmatists and the extreme right

wing was apparent when I was in the Middle East for the /New York Times/

during Yitzhak Rabin's 1992 campaign for prime minister. The majority of

American Jewish organizations and neoconservative intellectuals made no

pretense of neutrality. They had morphed into extensions of the

right-wing Likud Party. These American groups, to Rabin's dismay, had

gone on to build, with Likud, an alliance with right-wing Christian

groups filled with real anti-Semites whose cultural and historical

ignorance of the Middle East was breathtaking. This collection of

messianic Jews and Christians, leavened with rabid American

imperialists, believed they had been handed a divine or moral mandate to

rule the Middle East, whether the Arabs liked it or not.

When Rabin, who had come to despise what the occupation was doing to the

citizenry of his own country, was sworn in as prime minister, the

leaders of these American Jewish organizations, along with their

buffoonish supporters on the Christian right, were conspicuous by their

absence. On one of Rabin's first visits to Washington after he assumed

office, according to one of his aides, he was informed that a group of

American Jewish leaders were available to meet him. The surly old

general, whose gravelly cigarette voice seemed to rise up from below his

feet, curtly refused. He told his entourage he did not have time to

waste on "scumbags."