
Current Events @ MindSay 
I chilled with Kara today. It's not until you see her again after so long, the person who you wish to share your life with, that you realize how deeply you care about that person. I'll probably chill with her again tomorrow, and she goes back Wednesday. She is my one, my perfect, the one I can truly be with, without facade, without doubt. This world cannot offer me anything else.
In other news, the pics are of the Asus nForce 780a motherboard that I desire to replace my current one. I know, I know, I just got my current mobo not too long ago, my current one being an Asus nForce 590a, but this new one just dropped in price 50 bucks! I'll decide if I want to get it later, though.
The Lakota Indians have declared sovereignty from the United States, reports quddus . The tribe, whose land includes parts of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana and Wyoming told the State Department: “We are no longer citizens of the United States of America and all those who live in the five-state area that encompasses our country are free to join us.”It's unclear how the US Government will respond to the move, if at all. Should the Native Americans be able to secede completely from the US, or should there be boundaries?
[link]
In honor of Marjorie Cohn, Professor of Law at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, California, and her TruthOut (.org) articles which she has been absent from writing and posting for the past two months, I hereby post the following series of her last five excellent and very important articles leading up to that absence, as her at-least-weekly articles of truth have been very much missed on TruthOut and by this blogger:
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Marjorie Cohn | Big Brother Bush Is Listening
Marjorie Cohn | Bush Mouthpiece Defends Illegal Spying
THE HAYDEN CHARADE
("Big Brother" is Watching
All of Us to See Who is a
"Good Citizen" or "Not")
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday, 22 May 2006
[Copyright (c) 2006 in the
U.S.A. and Internationally
by t r u t h o u t (.org)
and/or Marjorie Cohn.
All rights reserved.]
In his testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday, General Michael Hayden promised to promote autonomy and objectivity in the CIA if confirmed as its new director. Hayden assured the senators he would provide "hard-edged assessments" and be tolerant of dissenting views on intelligence matters. "When it comes to speaking truth to power," Hayden declared, "I will lead CIA analysts by example. I will... always give our nation's leaders the best analytic judgment."
The evidence, however, suggests precisely the opposite. As head of the National Security Agency, this 4-star general walked in lockstep with his commander in chief, George W. Bush. Hayden helped designed the illegal program of spying on our telephone calls and emails and then repeatedly defended it when interrogated by the senators at his hearing, citing "legal" opinions of Bush's hired guns in the Justice Department.
Rather than providing the White House with a neutral assessment of Iran's nuclear capabilities, we can expect Hayden to give Bush the "intelligence" the president seeks to justify his war on Iran. Things did not run as smoothly as Bush would have wished under the last two CIA directors. He had to dispatch Dick Cheney to the CIA several times to furnish the "intelligence" he needed to rationalize his war on Iraq.
Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.) asked Hayden if he was "comfortable" with under secretary of defense for policy Douglas Feith's personal intelligence-analysis cell, which hyped a link between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Hayden said he wasn't comfortable with it and protested that he wasn't aware of a lot of the activity going on leading up to the Iraq war.
But when questioned about Colin Powell's use of false WMD information to support his infamous appearance before the United Nations in the run-up the war, Hayden made a telling admission.
In response to Levin's question about the legal standard for declassifying information in the public interest, Hayden said, "We used that in Powell's speech. George [Tenet] had to call me for three tapes." Hayden was right in the middle of the preparation for Powell's disingenuous presentation.
Hayden, who will be the third director of the CIA in two years, will salute and march to Bush's agenda. The nation's chief spook will shape the "intelligence" to fit Bush's policy of regime change in Iran.
Hayden vowed to "reaffirm CIA's proud culture of risk-taking and excellence." Not one of the senators, from either party, interrogated Hayden about the CIA's checkered past.
There was no mention of the CIA's 1953 coup that ousted Iran's democratically-elected president Mohammed Mosadeq and replaced him with the US-friendly tyrant, the Shah Reza Pahlavi. The 1979 Iranian revolution lead to the overthrow of the Shah's regime and the rise of Islamic fascism under the leadership of the Ayatollah Khomeini, providing a model of theocracy for much of the Muslim world.
Absent was any reference in the hearing to the CIA's support for Osama bin Laden in his fight against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. The defeat of the USSR there, and the rise of the Mujahedin, enabled the Taliban to come to power....
Today we are reaping what the CIA sowed in Iran and Afghanistan.
None of the senators asked Hayden about the CIA's torture manuals, which have been utilized by myriad Latin American dictators to repress their people.
Much of the CIA's risk-taking is nothing to be proud of. There is no indication that Hayden will bring new integrity to the CIA.
Hayden's defense of the NSA's warrantless surveillance program was incredible. When questioned about the Fourth Amendment's standard for searches and seizures, Hayden assured the senators that he had consulted with his relatives who are in law school for legal advice.
The Fourth Amendment says the people shall be secure from unreasonable searches and seizures, and that no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause. For more than a century, the Supreme Court has held that in order to be reasonable, a search or seizure must be supported by a search warrant based on probable cause and issued by a judge. Only when certain narrowly-defined exceptions apply can the government dispense with a warrant.
Hayden and his law student relatives have reversed that presumption. He told the senators that only reasonableness, not a warrant, is necessary to intercept our private communications. Hayden said the NSA uses a probable cause standard. But the Supreme Court has consistently declared that a judge must determine whether probable cause exists.
When confronted with USA Today's report that the NSA is collecting data on tens of millions of Americans, monitoring the calls we make and receive, Hayden refused to confirm or deny it.
Two of the long-distance companies named in that article, Verizon Communications and BellSouth, both facing lawsuits for invasion of privacy, have denied giving the government these records. AT&T has refused comment.
Interestingly, Bush issued an executive order on May 5 that allows Director of Intelligence John Negroponte - Michael Hayden's boss - to authorize a company to conceal activities related to "national security." Thus, we cannot trust the denials by Verizon and BellSouth.
Like Bush's warrantless eavesdropping on calls where one party is abroad, the NSA's massive data collection is illegal.
Both of these programs violate the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, which clearly requires a warrant issued by a FISA court judge.
It is illegal for the NSA to collect phone numbers from phone companies unless the FISA court authorizes it.
Telephone records that show what numbers have called a specific telephone are captured by a "trap and trace" device. A "pen register" shows what number a specific telephone has called.
The law on pen registers and trap and trace devices requires that a court order be obtained either under FISA or Title III, the criminal wiretap law.
In order to intercept communications, the NSA would have to demonstrate to the court that the person whose calls are being targeted is an agent of a foreign power or that the information is relevant to an ongoing terrorism investigation.
The Patriot Act allows the FBI to use a national security letter - a kind of administrative subpoena - to obtain these records. But Congress specifically withheld this subpoena power from the NSA, which must convince the FISA court that the information is relevant.
There is no evidence that NSA has obtained court orders before obtaining the phone records of millions of Americans.
There is evidence, however, that the FBI is using national security letters to go after journalists critical of the administration. Brian Ross from ABC News told Amy Goodman on Democracy Now! that the government's methods are changing the way he operates. It makes his work "very, very difficult," he said. "And, you know, you sort of have to start thinking, I guess, like some sort of Mafia capo," Ross noted. "You make your phone calls with bags of quarters at pay phones, if you can find them anymore. It's chilling to say the least." So much for a free press.
Last year, the FBI issued a total of 9,254 national security letters, targeting 3,500 citizens and legal residents.
In October 2002, while serving as NSA director, Hayden misled Congress about the extent of the NSA's warrantless domestic surveillance. Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) told Hayden at the hearing, "I now have a difficult time with your credibility."
Earlier this year, Hayden made more misleading statements in an appearance before the National Press Club. He said, "The intrusion into privacy is also limited: only international calls." In fact, the NSA is collecting data on millions of purely domestic calls.
Hayden ducked several questions, deferring his answers to the closed session that followed the public hearing on Thursday. Senators who hear his secret testimony are forbidden to publicize it. Hayden refused to publicly answer seven questions posed by Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) about whether the NSA has sought FISA warrants for pen register and trap and trace devices; whether terror suspects in secret CIA prisons are likely to remain incommunicado until the war on terror ends; whether there is periodic review of what useful intelligence can be gathered by interrogations of terrorists held for years with no contact with Al Qaeda; whether "water boarding," recently classified as torture by the UN, is acceptable; whether the CIA will obey laws and treaties in light of the Detainee Treatment Act; whether Hayden agreed with the CIA inspector general's conclusion that certain interrogation techniques constitute cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment prohibited by the Convention Against Torture; whether Hayden agreed with estimates that Iran is some years away from nuclear weapons capability; and whether the CIA has received new guidance from the Justice Department about acceptable interrogation techniques since the passage of the Detainee Treatment Act.
Although Hayden pledged objectivity in his opening statement, he let slip his real intention under questioning by Levin. Hayden said the war on terror "is fundamentally a war of ideas. And we have to skew our intelligence to support the other elements of national power as well." Hayden admitted he will skew the intelligence to fit Bush's agenda.
During the hearing, Wyden nailed it. He asked Hayden, "Where is the independent check, General, the independent check that can be verified on these programs that the newspapers are reporting on?"
James Madison wrote in 1822: "A popular Government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance. And a people who mean to be their own Governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives."
General Michael Hayden as CIA director will see to it that we continue to be kept in the dark about how our liberties are swiftly vanishing. The future of our democracy is at stake. (Subtitle and/or emphasis added by Wolf Britain.)
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, President-elect of the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists. She writes a weekly column for the great and powerful t r u t h o u t website.
________
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. t r u t h o u t has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is t r u t h o u t endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on TO may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links.
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Marjorie Cohn | Setting the Conditions for War Crimes
THE HADITHA MASSACRE
(The U.S. Government Is Now
Habitually Initiating and
Perpetrating War Crimes)
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Tuesday, 30 May 2006
[Copyright (c) 2006 in the
U.S.A. and Internationally
by t r u t h o u t (.org)
and/or Marjorie Cohn.
All rights reserved.]
They ranged from little babies to adult males and females. I'll never be able to get that out of my head. I can still smell the blood. This left something in my head and heart.
--- Observations of Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones after the Haditha Massacre
On November 19, 2005, Marines from Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division based at Camp Pendleton allegedly killed 24 unarmed civilians in Haditha, Iraq, in a three to five hour rampage. One victim was a 76-year-old amputee in a wheelchair holding a Koran. A mother and child bent over as if in prayer were also among the fallen. "I pretended that I was dead when my brother's body fell on me, and he was bleeding like a faucet," said Safa Younis Salim, a 13-year-old girl who survived by faking her death.
Other victims included girls and boys ages 14, 10, 5, 4, 3 and 1. The Washington Post reported, "Most of the shots ... were fired at such close range that they went through the bodies of the family members and plowed into walls or the floor, doctors at Haditha's hospital said."
The executions of 24 unarmed civilians were conducted in apparent retaliation for the death of Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas when a small Marine convoy hit a roadside bomb earlier that day.
A statement issued by a US Marine Corps spokesman the next day claimed: "A US Marine and 15 civilians were killed yesterday from the blast of a roadside bomb in Haditha. Immediately following the bombing, gunmen attacked the convoy with small-arms fire. Iraqi army soldiers and Marines returned fire, killing eight insurgents and wounding another."
A subsequent Marine version of the events said the victims were killed inadvertently in a running gun battle with insurgents.
Both of these stories were false and the Marines knew it. They were blatant attempts to cover up the atrocity, disguised as "collateral damage."
The Marine Corps paid $38,000 in compensation to relatives of the victims, according to a report in the Denver Post. These types of payments are made only to compensate for accidental deaths inflicted by US troops. This was a relatively large amount, indicating the Marines knew something was not right during that operation, according to Mike Coffman, the Colorado state treasurer who served in Iraq recently as a Marine reservist.
Congressman John Murtha, D-Pa., a former Marine, was briefed on the Haditha investigation by Marine Corps Commandant Michael Hagee. Murtha said Sunday, "The reports I have from the highest level: No firing at all. No interaction. No military action at all in this particular incident. It was an explosive device, which killed a Marine. From then on, it was purely shooting people."
The Haditha massacre did not become public until Time Magazine ran a story about it in March of this year. Time had turned over the results of its investigation, including a videotape, to the US military in January. Only then did the military launch an investigation.
These Marines "suffered a total breakdown in morality and leadership, with tragic results," a US official told the Los Angeles Times.
"Marines over-reacted because of the pressure on them, and they killed innocent civilians in cold blood," Murtha said.
Murtha's statement both indicts and exonerates the Marines of the crime of murder.
Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought. Premeditation and deliberation -- cold-blooded planning -- are required for first degree murder. Complete self-defense can be demonstrated by an honest and reasonable belief in the need to defend oneself against death or great bodily injury. The Marines might be able to show that, in the wake of the killing of their buddy Terrazas by an improvised explosive device, they acted in an honest belief that they might be killed in this hostile area. But the belief that unarmed civilians inside their homes posed a deadly threat to the Marines would be unreasonable. An honest but unreasonable belief in the need to defend constitutes imperfect self-defense, which negates the malice required for murder, and reduces murder to manslaughter.
An honest but unreasonable belief in the need to defend constitutes imperfect self-defense, which negates the malice required for murder, and reduces murder to manslaughter.
Many of our troops suffer from post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones, a Marine in Kilo Company, did not participate in the Haditha massacre. TJ Terrazas was his best friend. Briones, who was 20 years old at the time, saw Terrazas after he was killed. "He had a giant hole in his chin. His eyes were rolled back up in his skull," Briones said of his buddy.
"A lot of people were mad," Briones said. "Everyone had just a [terrible] feeling about what had happened to TJ."
After the massacre, Briones was ordered to take photographs of the victims and help carry their bodies out of their homes. He is still haunted by what he had to do that day. Briones picked up a young girl who was shot in the head. "I held her out like this," he said, extending his arms, "but her head was bobbing up and down and the insides fell on my legs."
"I used to be one of those Marines who said that post-traumatic stress is a bunch of bull," said Briones, who has gotten into serious trouble since he returned home. "But all this stuff that keeps going through my head is eating me up. I need immediate help."
A key quote from a Marine officer could be used to show premeditation -- and thus malice -- in support of a possible murder charge against the shooters. An article in yesterday's San Diego Union-Tribune which is reprinted from the New York Times News Service, cites a report by "one Marine officer" that "inspectors suspected at least part of the motive for the killings was to send a message to local residents that they would 'pay a price' for failing to warn the Marines about insurgent activity in the area."
Curiously, that paragraph is missing from the same story in both the print and online editions of yesterday's New York Times. For some reason, the Times had second thoughts about that paragraph, and removed it, after the copy had been sent to other papers over the wire.
Regardless of how those who may ultimately be charged with murder fare in court, a more significant question is whether George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld will be charged with war crimes on a theory of command responsibility.
Willful killing is considered a war crime under the US War Crimes Act. People who commit war crimes can be punished by life in prison, or even the death penalty if the victim dies. Under the doctrine of command responsibility, a commander can be held liable if he knew or should have known his inferiors were committing war crimes and he failed to stop or prevent it.
Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld are knowingly prosecuting a war of aggression in Iraq. Under the United Nations Charter, a country cannot invade another country unless it is acting in self-defense or it has permission from the Security Council. Iraq had invaded no country for 11 years before "Operation Iraqi Freedom," and the council never authorized the invasion.
A war that violates the UN Charter is a war of aggression.
Under the Nuremberg Tribunal, aggressive war is the supreme international crime.
Hagee flew from Washington to Iraq last week to brief US forces on the Geneva Conventions, the international laws of armed conflict and the US military's own rules of engagement. He is reportedly telling the troops they should use deadly force "only when justified, proportional and, most importantly, lawful." This creates a strong inference that our leaders had not adequately briefed our troops on how to behave in this war.
This, combined with the evidence that US forces are committing torture based on policies from the highest levels of government, as well as reports of war crimes committed in places such as Fallujah, served to put Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld on notice that Marines would likely commit war crimes in places such as Haditha. Our highest leaders thus should have known this would happen, and they should be prosecuted under the War Crimes Act.
Murtha told ABC there was "no question" the US military tried to "cover up" the Haditha incident, which Murtha called "worse than Abu Ghraib." Murtha's high-level briefings indicated, "There was an investigation right afterward, but then it was stifled," he said.
"Who covered it up, why did they cover it up, why did they wait so long?" Murtha asked on "This Week" on ABC. "We don't know how far it goes. It goes right up the chain of command."
Murtha said the decision to pay compensation to families of the victims is strong evidence that officers up the chain of command knew what had happened in Haditha. "That doesn't happen at the lowest level. That happens at the highest level before they make a decision to make payments to the families."
Haditha is likely the tip of the iceberg in Bush's illegal war of aggression in Iraq.
"We have a Haditha every day," declared Muhanned Jasim, an Iraqi merchant. "Were [those killed in Haditha] the first ... Iraqis to be killed for no reason?" asked pharmacist Ghasan Jayih. "We're used to being killed. It's normal now to hear 25 Iraqis are killed in one day."
"We have a Fallujah and Karbala every day," Jasim added, referring to the 2004 slaughter by US forces in Fallujah and bombings by resistance fighters in the Shiite city of Karbala.
In Fallujah, US soldiers opened fire on houses, and US helicopters fired on and killed women, old men and young children, according to Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein.
"What we're seeing more of now, and these incidents will increase monthly, is the end result of fuzzy, imprecise national direction combined with situational ethics at the highest levels of this government," said retired Air Force Col. Mike Turner, a former planner at the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Senator John Warner, R-Va., head of the Armed Services Committee, pledged to hold hearings on the Haditha killings at the conclusion of the military investigation. "I'll do exactly what we did with Abu Ghraib," he told ABC News.
Warner's pledge provides little solace to those who seek justice. Congress has yet to hold our leaders to account for the torture by US forces at Abu Ghraib prison. Only a few low-ranking soldiers have been prosecuted. The Bush administration has swept the scandal under the rug.
During the Vietnam War, the US military spoke of winning the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people. But in 1968, US soldiers massacred about 400 unarmed elderly men, women and children in the small village of My Lai. A cover-up ensued, and it wasn't until Seymour Hersh broke the story that it became public.
"America in the view of many Iraqis has no credibility. We do not believe what they say is correct," said Sheik Sattar al-Aasaaf, a tribal leader in Anbar province, which includes Haditha. "US troops are very well-trained and when they shoot, it isn't random but due to an order to kill Iraqis. People say they are the killers."
Graffiti on one of the Haditha victims' houses reads, "Democracy assassinated the family that was here."
So much for winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people.
We must pull our troops out of Iraq immediately, and insist that our leaders be held to account for the war crimes committed there. (Subtitle and/or emphasis added by Wolf Britain.)
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, President-elect of the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists. She writes a weekly column for the great and powerful t r u t h o u t website.
________
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. t r u t h o u t has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is t r u t h o u t endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on TO may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links.
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For background, see:
Marjorie Cohn | Bush Setting Up Attack on Iran
Marjorie Cohn | Aggressive War: Supreme International Crime
STOP THE BEAST(!)
(The U.S. Government's Military-
Industrial "Death Machine" is
Completely Out of Control ! )
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday, 5 June 2006
[Copyright (c) 2006 in the
U.S.A. and Internationally
by t r u t h o u t (.org)
and/or Marjorie Cohn.
All rights reserved.]
To date, the Iraq War represents the fullest and most relentless application of the Bush Agenda. The "freer and safer world" envisioned by Bush and his administration is ultimately one of an ever-expanding American empire driven forward by the growing powers of the nation's largest multinational corporations and unrivaled military.
--- Antonia Juhasz, The Bu$h Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at a Time
In an annual security conference on Saturday, Donald Rumsfeld assured the audience, "We don't intend to occupy [Iraq] for any period of time. Our troops would like to go home and they will go home."
Why, then, would the United States be building an enormous embassy in Baghdad and a base so large it eclipses Kosovo's Camp Bondsteel, which had been the largest foreign US military base built since Vietnam?
The new embassy, which occupies a space two-thirds the area of the national mall in Washington DC, comprises 21 buildings that will house over 8,000 government officials. It has a huge pool, gym, theater, beauty salon, school, and six apartment buildings.
The gargantuan military base, Camp Anaconda, occupies 15 square miles of Iraqi soil near Balad. The base is home to 20,000 soldiers and thousands of "contractors," or mercenaries. The aircraft runway at Anaconda is the second busiest in the world, behind only Chicago's O'Hare airport. And, depending on which report you read, between six and fourteen more US military bases are under construction in Iraq. It doesn't appear we'll be leaving anytime soon -- or anytime, really.
Bush's trumped-up war on Iraq has claimed nearly 2,500 US military lives and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives. Thousands of US soldiers suffer in military hospitals, most with head injuries, many missing limbs. Thousands more have PTSD. Our economy is in shambles from the war and Bush's tax-cuts-for-the-rich. And America's moral standing in the world continues to plummet.
So, with all the construction activity in Iraq, and with an overextended military and an under funded budget, how could the Bush administration possibly consider expanding the fight and attacking Iran? Logic and reason say it couldn't happen and shouldn't happen. But this administration has rarely paid much heed to logic and reason.
The plan to attack Iran has long been in the works. Bush gave us a preview in January 2002 when he inaugurated it into his "axis of evil." His 2006 National Military Strategy says, "We may face no greater challenge from a single country than from Iran." On Saturday, Donald Rumsfeld called Iran the world's leading terrorist nation. Does any of this have a familiar ring to it?
To understand why the US may attack Iran, one must consider the underlying motive of US militarism. The recent US strategy is calculated to maintain economic, political and military hegemony over oil-rich areas of the world. A 1992 draft of the Pentagon Defense Planning Guidance on post Cold War Strategy that was leaked to the New York Times said, "Our overall objective is to remain the predominant outside power in [the Middle East and Southwest Asia to] preserve US and Western access to the region's oil."
Truthout writer Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist who spent eight months in occupied Iraq, told a gathering at Thomas Jefferson School of Law on Friday that the US has been conducting ongoing special operations inside Iran. He cited unmanned surveillance drones flying over Iran. Jamail predicts Bush will invade Iran before the November election.
Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern agrees with Jamail's prediction, but thinks it will happen in June or July. "There is already one carrier task force there in the Gulf, two are steaming toward it at the last report I have at least -- they will be there in another week or so," McGovern said on the Alex Jones Show.
Team Bush is following the same game plan used in the run-up to Iraq -- hyping a threat that doesn't exist and going through the motions of diplomacy.
Bush & Co. are not motivated by rationality. They act in the interests of the huge corporations, at the expense of humanity. During the Bush years, oil companies have earned record profits. Dick Cheney's Halliburton has landed many of the juiciest contracts in Iraq. New Iraqi laws that US ambassador Paul Bremer put in place lock in significant advantages for US corporations in Iraq, including corporate control of Iraq's oil.
Neoconservative Thomas Friedman, in a March 1999 New York Times article illustrated by an American flag on a fist, accurately summed up US foreign policy:
For globalism to work, America can't be afraid to act like the almighty superpower that it is ... The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist -- McDonald's cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the designer of the F-15. And the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley's technologies is called the United States Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.
As long as we allow our government to pursue this strategy, Abu Ghraibs and Hadithas will continue to emerge, our soldiers and thousands of people in other countries will continue to die, and our economy will continue toward bankruptcy. It is up to us to stop the beast -- now! (Subtitle and/or emphasis added by Wolf Britain.)
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, President-elect of the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists. She writes a weekly column for the great and powerful t r u t h o u t website.
________
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. t r u t h o u t has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is t r u t h o u t endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on TO may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links.
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For background, see:
Marjorie Cohn | Navy Judge Finds War Protest Reasonable
FIRST (COMMISSIONED) OFFICER
PUBLICLY RESISTS WAR
(Totally Justified Refusal
to Serve in Illegal Wars
is Growing Very Rapidly)
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Thursday, 8 June 2006
[Copyright (c) 2006 in the
U.S.A. and Internationally
by t r u t h o u t (.org)
and/or Marjorie Cohn.
All rights reserved.]
Yesterday, US Army First Lieutenant Ehren Watada became the first officer to publicly state his refusal to obey an order to deploy to Iraq. Lieutenant Watada said at a press conference in Tacoma, Washington, "The war in Iraq is in fact illegal. It is my obligation and my duty to refuse any orders to participate in this war." He stated, "An order to take part in an illegal war is unlawful in itself. So my obligation is not to follow the order to go to Iraq."
Citing "deception and manipulation ... and willful misconduct by the highest levels of my chain of command," Lt. Watada declared there is "no greater betrayal to the American people" than the Iraq war.
The "turning point" for Lt. Watada came when he "saw the pain and suffering of so many soldiers and their families, and innocent Iraqis." He said, "I best serve my soldiers by speaking out against unlawful orders of the highest levels of my chain of command, and making sure our leaders are held accountable." Lt. Watada felt he "had the obligation to step up and do whatever it takes," even if that means facing court-martial and imprisonment.
Lt. Watada asked me to speak about the legality of the war at his press conference.
I cited the Nuremberg Charter, which set forth the three most serious crimes: crimes against the peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. The US Army Field Manual 27-10, art. 28, incorporates the prohibition against these three crimes. The United States is committing a crime against the peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity in Iraq.
The United States Is Committing a Crime Against the Peace in Iraq
The Nuremberg Tribunal called the waging of aggressive war "essentially an evil thing ... to initiate a war of aggression ... is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole."
A war of aggression, prosecuted in violation of international treaties, is a crime against the peace. The war in Iraq violates the Charter of the United Nations, which prohibits the use of force. There are only two exceptions to that prohibition: self-defense and approval by the Security Council. A pre-emptive or preventive war is not allowed under the Charter.
Bush's war in Iraq was not undertaken in self-defense. Iraq had not attacked the US, or any other country, for 12 years. And Saddam Hussein's military capability had been effectively neutered by the Gulf War, 12 years of punishing sanctions, and nearly daily bombing by the US and UK over the "no-fly-zones."
Bush tried mightily to get the Security Council to sanction his war on Iraq. But the Council refused to give its stamp of approval. Bush then cobbled together prior Council resolutions, none of which, individually or collectively, authorized the use of force in Iraq. Although Bush claimed to be enforcing Security Council resolutions, the Charter empowers only the Council to enforce its resolutions.
Moreover, the Constitution gives only Congress, not the President, the authority to declare war. Congress cannot delegate that authority to the President. Even if Congress could delegate the war power to the President, it cannot authorize the President to execute an aggressive war.
The United States Is Committing War Crimes in Iraq
Violations of the laws of war, memorialized in the Hague and Geneva Conventions, constitute war crimes.
All four Geneva Conventions have the same article 3, frequently referred to as Article 3 Common. Its terms apply to everyone, not just prisoners of war. It prohibits violence to life and person, murder, mutilation, cruel treatment, torture, and outrages upon personal dignity, particularly humiliating and degrading treatment. These prohibitions are memorialized in the Army Field Manual 27-10, art. 506. The Pentagon is trying to remove Article 3 Common from the newly revised instructions that go with the Manual. The implication is that the Defense Department intends to treat prisoners inhumanely.
Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions constitute war crimes, for which individuals can be punished under the US War Crimes Act. Willful killing, torture or inhuman treatment, and willfully causing great suffering or great bodily harm are grave breaches.
The torture and inhuman treatment of prisoners in US custody at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere in Iraq are grave breaches of Geneva, and therefore, war crimes. The execution of unarmed civilians at Haditha and in other Iraqi cities are war crimes.
Commanders in the chain of command, all the way up to the commander in chief, can be prosecuted for war crimes if they knew or should have known their inferiors were committing war crimes and failed to stop or prevent them. However, it is unlikely that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will charge Bush, Cheney or Rumseld with war crimes.
The United States Is Committing Crimes Against Humanity in Iraq
Inhumane acts against a civilian population are crimes against humanity and violate the Fourth Geneva Convention. The targeting of civilians and failure to protect civilians and civilian objects are crimes against humanity.
The dropping of 2,000-pound bombs in residential areas of Baghdad during "Shock and Awe" were crimes against humanity. The indiscriminate US attack on Fallujah, which was collective punishment in retaliation for the killing of four Blackwater mercenaries, was a crime against humanity. The destruction of hospitals in Fallujah by the US military, its refusal to let doctors treat patients, and shooting into ambulances were crimes against humanity. Declaring Fallujah a "weapons-free" zone, with orders to shoot anything that moved, was a crime against humanity.
Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson was the chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Tribunal. He wrote: "No political or economic situation can justify the crime of aggression. If certain acts in violation of treaties are crimes they are crimes whether the United States does them or whether Germany does them, and we are not prepared to lay down a rule of criminal conduct against others which we would not be willing to have invoked against us."
The Uniform Code of Military Justice, in articles 90-92, sets forth the duty of military personnel to obey lawful commands. The Nuremberg Principles, which are part of US law, provide that all military personnel have the obligation not to obey illegal orders. The Army Field Manual 27-10, sec. 609 and UCMJ, art. 92, incorporate this principle. Article 92 says: "A general order or regulation is lawful unless it is contrary to the Constitution, the law of the United States ... "
The Bush administration is committing crimes against the peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity in Iraq. Lieutenant Ehren Watada is correct when he says this is an illegal war. I salute his courage. (Subtitle and/or emphasis added by Wolf Britain.)
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, President-elect of the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists. She writes a weekly column for the great and powerful t r u t h o u t website.
________
Before I go to bed, I just feel the need to acknowledge the tragedy today.
So sad, so unbelievable, and something that is so impossible to understand.
I pray for all the families whose lives have been torn apart, that they will find peace somewhere at the otherside of all the unanswered questions.
I pray that this will never happen again.
This is a reply thread that is ongoing from my previous entry. I put it in notepad then copy pasted it here so it would all fit properly. The writer's screen name appears before his entry (as is normal). :-)
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 24, 2007 at 7:29 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
Iran is and has been provoking war. This instance may be set apart from that. I've heard conflicting reports--some saying that the Iranians mistook the British positions and some saying the British strayed into Iranian territorial waters. And as far as buying into what the media all tells us, the BBC is no better than any of the American news networks.
I haven't been for the Iraq war. I thought it was quite unnecessary and unwarranted. But Iran is well past beginning to push their luck, with not only the US, Britain, and (let's not forget) ISRAEL! But the entire world.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on March 26, 2007 at 12:09 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
First of all, I don't believe you weren't for the war in Iraq. You're falling for the same media tactics now that were used then to justify it which would indicate that you not only didn't learn from the Iraq war, but that the experience somehow made you more gullible. In addition, that I should have to tell you why BBC is more reliable than NBC is ridiculous as it should be common sense but no doubt your opinion is based on one the many right wing shills who accuse every new agency which is not simply rehashing white house talking points without question a liberally biased network. The BBC is reliable because it has no corporate sponsors and no large individual donors ensuring that they are beholden to the British public who as a whole pay their operating costs and not individuals who contribute disproportionately and therefore have more say. NBC, CBS, ABC, FOX, all of those networks are going to avoid any story which will cause them to lose corporate sponsorship. They are beholden to the people that pay their salaries as well, only in this case it is not the American people, but American corporations, making them a media complex for business rather than Americans. Of course, by constantly accusing these networks of having biases, they have not only removed suspicion of how corporate money influences the news, but somehow created this alternate reality where a bunch of hippy lesbians have somehow taken over the news. What Iran did was have the misfortune of being next in line on the regime change hit list and the administration will do whatever they need to do to drum up support whether that be spinning the news, creating false news stories as they did before the first gulf war, or simply staging an event to build support.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 26, 2007 at 10:42 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
You presume far too much about me. I never was, nor have I ever been for the war in Iraq. I have been quite outspoken on the matter. You also presume I am of the right wing persuasion--while I am religiously conservative, I am not by any means a Republican nor do I adhere to any sort of Neo-Con agenda... nor for the matter do I at all like the Bush administration. I agree that some coverage of Iran seems to be preparing people to go to war very similarly that was done before the Iraq war... however, it is a stated fact from Iran's mouth herself that they seek nuclear weapons. Also, they have threatened on numerous occasions close allies of our nation--Israel... and has not at all been friendly toward our nation. Iraq did none of these things after the first Gulf War (which was provoked by the invasion of Kuwait--not false media stories). Hussein was annoyingly ruling his own country, terrorizing his own people, when we butted in with falsehoods about WMDs and cheap crap like that--with no good intelligence to show for it. Iran cannot be given the opportunity to have WMDs. They have proven themselves with their words and their actions (support of terrorist groups like Hezbollah) to be a threat to the unstable "peace" (or rather non-fighting) that exists between the Middle Eastern states. (We won't count Iraq since it's not warring with another Middle Eastern state).
I will agree with you on the counts of news network sponsorships--etc. The news networks do not report all what needs reporting. I tend to carry much of this sentiment with me to all news networks--including the BBC. Because everyone has an agenda--even the BBC. I will grant that perhaps they may be better than other American news networks (certainly Fox "News"!) I mean, I don't think the BBC covered too much on crap like Anna Nicole and Britney Spears' hairdo huh?
As far as the deal with Iran though--I don't want war with them. A war with Iran would be a great deal worse than what happened with Iraq. Iran has more means--and has shown that they play dirty. Perhaps yes, they may have been on the regime-change hitlist of the Administration... perhaps. But just because they're on the list of a bad administration doesn't mean that they don't deserve to be removed. Besides, didn't we have a hand in setting them up anyway? And didn't we also have a hand in setting up Hussein as well? I guess Bush thinks he's righting old wrongs or something--doesn't make him right... But it certainly doesn't make Iran okay either.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on March 27, 2007 at 12:25 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
You're right, to be fair I don't know you or your views on the war, statistically very few conservatives were anything but in favor of the war. First I want to address the nuclear weapons. If I were Iran, I WOULD be developing nuclear weapons. If you haven't noticed, there's a crazy nation with a madman at it's head trying to conquer the world, the first thing I would look for is protection. Nor am I scared for Iran to have one. We can already blow up the damn world so many times and the redundancy on our nukes is so absurd that I hardly think one in Iran would contribute to the problem.
Israel is not exactly a beacon of peace and is right now an occupying force just as we are. Israel is not my friend, nor does their relationship to Iran have any impact on whether we should invade.
I SAID Iraq went to war over slant drilling if you were actually reading it, the new story was to get US into war.
There are many MANY places where worse things are going on than Iran, a lot of them right here. My real issue is that our nation is falling apart and people are worried about nations they know nothing about. Regardless of the what the news says in any case neither of us has lived in Iran, knows their culture, knows their people, knows their government, or really anything else which is not given to us by the media which we know is frequently inaccurate, serves political and personal goals, and most importantly often fails to do any of the actual reporting or research that used to be a part of news. Iran will never be a threat to us, Iran is not going to attack us, nor is Iran going to provoke us to attack them because regardless of what people think I have no belief whatsoever that they want to commit suicide. Look at what we do to people who do nothing to us.
I love your last point, we did set them up. We play with the governments of other countries like it's a game to us then when that fosters hate and distrust we're told they hate our freedom. We are the bad guys here, and we need to fix this shit at home before we start sticking our noses elsewhere. This crap is just distraction.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 27, 2007 at 2:19 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
from what I gather by your other comments, you appear to be an isolationist... or at least have isolationist tendancies. So it is natural for you to want to be "minding our own business." Nevertheless, isolationist ideas won't fly anymore in the face of globalization.
Concerning Israel, I don't see how you consider them an occupying force... unless you sympathize with the Palestinian agenda. but nevertheless, they are our nations ally... whether or not you like it. They have close ties with both our government and our citizenry (particularly the Jewish population, but Christians and some others also.) Not only that, but they are one of the only true democratic republics to be found in the Middle East--there are some few other states that technically qualify. Israel, no matter how you look at it, is important to American interests in the region--both culturally, and politically.
Iran, therefore, supports action against an American ally, has threatened an American ally... has threatened American interests in the region and has even according to some, threatened America and her people. Iran is a supporter of terrorism--IE: Hezbollah. Iran is garnering the means to make good on threats issued to our allies--and to ourselves. We have a responsibility to prevent her from carrying through with her intended objectives. Now they have captured British soldiers and marines who the British gov't maintains, were in Iraqi waters--not Iranian. If something is not resolved quickly, then a more severe--less peaceful course of action WILL take place. Place blame on the US if you will--we're certainly not an innocent party as the game of world politics goes--but Iran is far worse, far more beligerent, and certainly not a fan of peace, in either her own region, or in the regions beyond her.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on March 27, 2007 at 2:51 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
I've heard the speech about why Israel is our ally, I especially love the democratic nation in the middle east bit, as if we have any idea what Democracy is. As for your views of isolationism, I don't know where you pulled that from. There are plenty of places where we should be giving aid or stepping in, but those places aren't the ones we are involved with.
How is Iran worse? How many countries are they occupying right now? Are they manipulating the governments of the nations of the world to put friendlies in power regardless of their treatment of the people of their nations? I will repeat again, NOTHING is going to happen with Iran except by our interference. As for the British government, well, I said I trusted the BBC as far as any mainstream media organization, not the british government, once the news passes through any government agency it has been washed to produce the effect they want to produce either by manipulating the facts or lying. Point in case the events of 5/5 in Britain were similar to 9/11 in several ways, among which are the training exercises going on in Britain involving hijacked buses in London on the same routes at the same time the actual incident occured. In addition, they claim hijackers with explosives blew up the train cars yet at least one picture shows an explosion from beneath the train ripped the floor up. It's clear additionally that Blair and Bush work closely together and both benefit from the fabricated war of terror. Once any news goes through any government agency I appropriately dismiss it for the likely propagandization it has undergone, especially when the news coincides with their preexisting objectives.
That being said, we have more important things to worry about, far more important things, and until we address those these stories of Iran's provocation are simply a distraction.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 28, 2007 at 12:33 AM
Re: What are they trying to do?
Ahh so you're one who believes that 9/11 and such were governmental conspiracies. I have looked at some of the evidence, and I can say that some of it is indeed most intriguing. But I would challenge any notion that Tony Blair has gained anything from going to war along with Bush--hell he almost lost his office because of it! I will grant that yes, the governments will propagandize news, but I will not grant that it is always so. There are checks and balances, they cannot always lie, nor always tell the truth. If they always lied they would be continually found out by investigative reporters and opposing politicians. The government isn't as unified as we critics of it like to sometimes hope.
I can understand your displeasure with American international policies--I have my own displeasures with them. And I apologize if the isolationist remarks offended you--it appeared to me that's what you arguing for. However, I maintain that Iran is a real threat--unlike Iraq. Iran is a threat to both the United States and to Israel. And even if you do not accept that Israel is important as a democratic nation in the Middle East, it is of no matter. They deserve the right to a peaceful existence without the fear of annihilation by some Islamic zealots with a nuclear weapon. They do not even deserve to live under the looming fear of such a possibility. They are, whether you like it or not, or whether I like it or not, or whether even if the president likes it or not, our nation's ally--with close cultural and social and political ties, and for such a reason, they deserve our support. And since it is a fact that America is a powerful nation, with much sway in world politics, it is our responsibility, as a good neighbor to aid our allies.
We must also remember, that even though we may think America butts its nose into politics of nations that should be none of our concern, we do so for both noble and greedy reasons. The greedy reasons you, I'm sure, are well aware of. But do realize that without United States aid, many countries recovering from civil wars, revolution, whathaveyou, would not be stable and would hardly get off the ground without much suffering. But also, without some aid and manipulation, these smaller countries could possibly be swallowed up by a rival nation--who could come to a power that is not particularly safe or desireable for the region. Case in point: the US supported Hussein of Iraq in the war against Iran back in the 1980's. This kept a power-hungry Iran from an imperial-type of expansion that many Middle Eastern countries aspire to do. (There is much pride in the ancient empires of Persia (Iran), Babylon (Iraq), and Assyria... not to mention the more recent Ottoman Empire.) It is a common Muslim ideal that there should be one Islamic State. So you often see expansionistic ideas floating around the Middle East. But not only there, but also in Africa (where not enough US aid gets where it's supposed to go) where the political maps change every two weeks! Even in Asia, the US must step in to protect its allies, like Taiwan, whom China has wanted to reassimilate for quite a while. Yet the Taiwanese government does not want this, and neither does the US--and as their ally, should we stand by with all our wealth and political sway and do nothing? Sure, the US has greedy interests in Taiwan--but there are noble sides to the manipulations of our country as well. That's my point.
And as for not knowing what a democracy is... I agree with you. I was just using the term as is used commonly in political rhetoric for expediency's sake.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on March 28, 2007 at 12:34 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
I'm the ONE? What, I'm the only one that espouses this notion? I certainly wasn't the first to come to that conclusion, nor the first to speak. At the time of the attack Blair was way down in the polls and afterwards he was way up of course as people responding in fear looked to whatever leadership was available. Like Bush however the wild terror ride has lost it's power now.
I don't get what you're having trouble understanding about what I'm saying. I appreciate that you know your history, and that is very relevant here, just not in the way you're presenting it. Whatever we have done before this administration with our foreign policy, the current foreign policy is in the hands of a cabal of thugs who will lie and manipulate information in any way they need to in order to pursue foreign agendas which have nothing to do with either nobility or security. The government does propagandize. The government does want to go to Iran. The government already has bombing plans for Iran, the government regardless of how gullible you are at least lied and falsified evidence to get us into war. So to sum up, the government that lied to get us into a war they had already planned is saying that another country we already planned on going to war with is provoking us conveniently when Iran would have absolutely nothing to gain and it's our governments word against Iran's. Why are you failing to make the logical connection that there is no more value to the word of our government than Iran's? You are clearly intelligent, so from an objective standpoint you can't claim their word has any credibility at this point. Of course Iran could be lying about the sailors, but there's no greater chance of that then that our government is lying and when past evidence is taken into consideration and the larger picture examined it is very clear what's going on here.
And furthermore, let's pursue this fantasy of Iran being a threat, just like Iraq was about to singlehandedly take down America. What if Iran did get a nuclear weapon? What, do you think they're going to launch it at us? If I were Iran I know I would want one, if you haven't noticed there are some crazy bloodthirsty profit hungry countries out there that don't give a shit about anyone else's beliefs, rights, or government. So worst case scenario, Iran builds a nuke, then launches it, kill several million people, and are immediately completely wiped off the face of the earth by our nuclear retaliation. Is this the brilliant plan you think they're pursuing? Or could it be the only reason they want a nuke is it's the only assurance they have that we won't invade them without provocation, and they would be right.
We don't poke our noses in other countries for greedy and noble reasons. We do it for greedy reasons and give the public noble reasons for our actions. I am well aware that we put Saddam in power and that he was our ally. I also know that the real reason we invaded Iraq (this is from Greg Palast's book armed madhouse) was that Saddam was not cooperating with OPEC's price fixing on crude and was flooding the market with cheap product. Just like firing a manager at a chain store for not doing their job properly, we now had to replace Saddam so OPEC could price their crude the way they wanted. This is why rather than the price of oil going down after we invaded as was promised, it instead went up, and stayed there for quite a while. All of the death, destruction, chaos and bad will that has occurred as a result was just the consequences of a poorly planned change of management.
What I am saying is that if the British Sailors incident doesn't spark a war, stories will conveniently keep popping up in the news until one takes hold and we do, and it is only until too late that we'll discover it was a crock of shit, if we ever do at all. And please, if you think I'm a nut job for thinking 9/11 was an inside job, at least try the link to 9/11 truth on my site. It is not some random whack jobs thrown together tribute to the x-files but an organization of some of the many people like me who see the need to have an investigation of the attack independent of the government.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 29, 2007 at 1:14 AM
Re: What are they trying to do?
I didn't say you were the only one who held that 9/11 was an inside job... and said you were one of them, "you're one who believes...." Sorry for the misunderstanding.
I can be swayed toward the idea that the government of our nation moves toward many greedy ends. It certainly is not concerned with the stated goal of serving the people. I do however think, that at very least, through their greedy means, oft comes some part of a noble end... or maybe perhaps the semblance of it. If you'll forgive a Biblical reference, but when Joseph's brothers sold him into slavery--the point of the narrative is to demonstrate that what evil people do for evil purposes--God works for good purposes. In the same way, what the United States government does for the furthrance of its own pocketbook also sometimes has an affect that is for the good of some (of course not for all). And even so, oftentimes the government will use this "good" to cover up their greedy intentions--and don't get me wrong, I don't think that these resulting good things will by any means "cover" the bad. Your arguments are, in part, furthering my previous resolution that our government is indeed corrupt. I fear that it is a fact that I hate so much, that I wish I could defend it rather than resign myself to the fact that it is broken beyond repair. However, this being said, I will hold to my belief that Iran is an evil nation--as far as their leadership is concerned. I can't say any different for our own leadership--but the difference between the two is that, one group is the leadership of an enemy nation (they are an enemy whether we wish it or not) and the the other group is supposed to be on our side (whether they represent us according to our wishes or not). As far as Iran having a nuke--has not the Muslim world proven that they are quite willing to sacrifice themselves in order to achieve their worldview-driven goals? All it would take is the resolution of their president (perhaps maybe the mullahs as well--I admit I am not entirely certain of their checks and balances) to commit nuclear suicide by sending a warhead into Israel--(it is doubtful that one could be sent into the US from Iran according to what little I understand of ICBMs.) And I have explained my views about Israel previously, and it is not likely that any of your arguments will change them. It is supposed that only five nuclear strikes will essentially reduce Israel to nothing. I find it a bit hypocritical to make light of the death of millions of Israelis, as well as hundreds of thousands of Americans (millions? of American ancestry), and others who reside, vacation, or make pilgrimage to that land. It appears to me, that a Muslim so devout to the cause of the destruction of all Jews (and Israel), as the president of Iran has stated publicly he is, would find his own nation a reasonable sacrifice.
All this said, I agree with you that the American government is beginning to make a case for war to the public. Of this there is little doubt... but nevertheless, that case that they're making doesn't mean it is a false case--nor does it mean that Iran is not a threat. I believe that Bush's administration is like the boy who cried "wolf." But is Iran the real wolf or just another false cry? Bush's administration is not the only one crying "wolf" at Iran either. Israel of course has been calling Iran what it is--unless I'm mistaken, they said no such thing about Iraq. We'll even leave Britain out of this one--because I'll assume that Blair and Bush are close enough to consider "in cahoots" if we want to give credence to drumming up a cause for war. But even the UN sees Iran as a big problem--and we shouldn't think that they'd call for war, the UN was made to avoid wars in the first place.
In your opinion, what would make a nation worth going to war with? Under what circumstances should we attempt to hinder our enemies' ability to prepare to strike us or an ally? But most importantly, how should this administration, with its bruised reputation, start preparing the public to go to war with an enemy who appears to meet your criteria to go to war with.
Iran has not yet met my criteria for war. It hasn't met the government's criteria yet either (at least apparently). However, they have met my criteria to hinder them (through economic and political means) from gaining any true nuclear striking ability.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on March 29, 2007 at 12:20 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
"I fear that it is a fact that I hate so much, that I wish I could defend it rather than resign myself to the fact that it is broken beyond repair."
The truth is that the government is not just fucked and broken, but being used by a small group to subjugate us into eventual serfhood. There are people who pull the strings behind the real government using their vast wealth, but there are also some genuinely honest and well meaning representatives as well. The problem is that like everything else in life, it is the ruthless who rise to the top.
However, although it is broken, nothing is ever beyond repair. If humans can do it, humans can undo it. If they fucked up our government so far beyond repair it can't be saved, well, a handful of men created it from scratch and if we have to tear the whole thing down and start over we can. We just need to remember that we are their bosses, not the other way around.
As for Iran, first of all, we wouldn't be going to war now, nor did we before. Iraq was an invasion followed by an occupation, and Iran would be an attack. Wars have rules and standards, conditions for being declared and don't pop into existence because CNN uses it on their graphics. There is no country we should be at war with right now other than our own, and part of the point of perpetual war is to reduce civil liberties and domestic dissent.
However, if you want an example of when we should step in, genocide would be a good one, which we ignore. Realistically we should never have a war unless everyone is fighting, and we have degenerated once again to a serf system where the wealthy elite send the poor to die for their interests. There are 190 countries in the world, and we have bases in 130. When we occupy every country on earth will that be enough to make you feel safe? When we slaughter the civilians of every country that starts a nuclear program will that make you feel secure? Wouldn't it be easier to just wipe them all out now? We've proven we don't need them, why not just kill the whole world. We don't have to do it at once, just one war at a time.
As for muslims, rather than considering that they're willing to die for their cause, did you ever stop to think why? How bad does life have to be before you're willing to end it in that way? If you're referring to them dying for their cause in 9/11, I think first you need to prove they were involved. This is why I keep coming back to it, once you accept that it was done to us by our leaders, it changes the logic that leads to all of these other decisions and opinions. It changes the world. They change the world through death, manipulation, brainwashing, suspicion, and fear but we can change it right back with nothing more than knowledge.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on March 30, 2007 at 11:59 AM
Re: What are they trying to do?
I don't think that civilians are the ones targeted because their government has a nuclear program.
Even barring the 9/11 hijacker business... Muslims have proven themselves to commit suicide to commit murder--not just against the US and Israel, but against anyone whom they deem to be evil. You and I don't see suicide the same way that they do. And they don't see it the same way that the Japanese samurai did, or the way the Norse berserkers did. For them, life doesn't have to be bad--just the enemy.
The government thing---I just think it needs to be torn down and started anew. I don't think however that anything that could be started would be incorruptable. I hold to the idea that men are inherently evil--and so anything we make, or get our hands hold of, while it might start off looking good, will decay into something corrupt.
And I don't agree with your views about war and when it's necessary. Not entirely anyway.
[ Reply | Delete ]redwoodpecker on April 2, 2007 at 2:04 PM
Re: What are they trying to do?
Yes yes, I get it. The mud races aren't really people like us, and they think in completely different ways. That's why white people never blow up federal buildings. Except of course for the ones that do. Whether you want to admit it or not, you are a racist. You don't know any muslims, you've never tried to, you've never looked at their culture, or most likely any culture other than your own. The nation of racism as opposed to bigotry however is that it is state sponsored, so you can rest assured that your racism is intended and approved.
You are right about our government, either we need to start over or break into nation states to prevent this much power being accumulated for evil intentions. As for war, there is a very good reason for war, and especially long drawn out violent wars. They are VERY profitable. Not just for lockheed martin who provides the weapons, nor blackwell which provides over a hundred thousand civilian troops and contractors, but for all the corporations which will benefit from the selling off of Iraqs national assets and resources. It allows the state to reduce civil rights and greatly reduces domestic dissent. In fact it's much harder to find a reason not to find war, unless of course you value human life, and it's relatively easy to dehumanize people.
[ Reply | Delete ]semiomniscient on April 3, 2007 at 12:50 AM
Re: What are they trying to do?
I take offense at your accusation that I am a racist. I am not. I have nothing against Arabs (Iraqis, Syrians, Saudis, Jordanians, Palestians), or Indians (Pakistanis, Indians), or Persians (Iranians). I however do indeed have an extreme hatred for the religion that is Islam. Lets not confuse ethnicity, nationality, and race, for religion. I actually do know Muslims. One of my high school buddies is a Muslim. I would say that most Muslims just want to live their lives in peace and be left alone like everyone else. However, their religion teaches something very different. And I do indeed know what their religion teaches--I make that my business as I am a scholar/student of religion. Your accusations that I don't make any effort to know any Muslims, or attempt to understand their culture, is a complete and total unfounded statement. I fear Islam because I understand what it is about... not because of anything the media or the Bush administration feeds me, but because their accursed book sits on my bookshelf--and because I watch what happens in the world when Muslims are outraged. And I'm not referring to 9/11--or even terrorist attacks in general. It so happens that these "mud races" as you call them are the primary worshippers of Allah (let's not forget the Africans or the Asians either though) but don't call me a racist for it.
As for war: do not presume that the human race is so transcendent that there is never any need for war. War is indeed a terrible thing, and I believe that it should be avoided if reasonably possible. However, when is it no longer reasonable to attempt fruitless politics? Politics enforce nothing. Economics supplies everything. If you cannot politically influence economics--then politics by another means must be achieved. Before we go to war with Persia..ahem... Iran, we should cut off their oil and destroy their one refinery--make them draw to a halt--little to no loss of life. That would be the best alternative I believe.
And back to where this conversation started... the British sailors still haven't been returned. And there is proof with GPS technology that the Tommies were well within Iraqi waters...not Iranian. So I am standing by my position against Iran without any reservations.
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