Saturday, January 22, 2011
Torture and 'unjustified homicide' in US run prisons?
Others are thought by the ACLU to be new. In one such case, a detainee was killed by an unnamed sergeant who walked into a room where the detainee was lying wounded "and assaulted him ... then shot him twice thus killing him," one of the investigating documents says. The sergeant than instructed the other soldiers present to lie about the incident. Later, the document says an unnamed corporal then shot the deceased detainee in the head after finding his corpse.
In another example, documents note a soldier "committed the offense of murder when he shot and killed an unarmed Afghan male." But, according to the ACLU, the individual was found not guilty of murder by general court-martial.
Meanwhile, as noted in yesterday's snapshot, Moqtada al-Sadr is back in Iran. For a visit or another two-year-plus stay no one knows. BBC News notes he was only in Iraq for two weeks (and think of all the press he got for what might have been a vacation). Also yesterday, Tony Blair gave testimony to the Iraq Inquiry in London. Jason Beattie (Daily Mirror) notes that when the War Criminal was asked about keeping his own Cabinet in the dark about his plans, his response was, "My frank belief is it wouldn't have made a great deal of difference" if there had been more sunshine on the shadows of illegal war.
As Jomana Karadsheh (CNN) reported earlier this week, Sweden has forcibly deported 26 Iraqis back to Iraq (at least, Sweden's saying they were Iraqis; last year, Sweden forcibly deported an "Iraqi" back to Iraq only to discover the Swedish government didn't know what the hell were doing because he wasn't an Iraqi).The UNHCR tells Karadsheh that 3 of the 26 were Iraqi Christians. Iraqi Christians have been targeted throughout the Iraq War but the latest wave began October 31st with the assault on Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad. DPA notes, "The plans have been criticized by various international agencies - including the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR - citing fears that the refugees would be returned to areas where Christians and other minorities have recently come under attack. Swedish churches, human rights groups, and members of the opposition have also protested the move." Coming under increasing criticism for their move, CNN reports, "Sweden's Minister for Migration and Asylum Policy, Tobias Billstrom, defended the decision by pointing to a recent decision of the European Court of Human Rights, which he said decided that there is no need to stop the return of Iraqis who had unsuccessfully sought asylum in Sweden." They don't come off very humanitarian with their actions. Nor do recent revelations indicate that they've acted out of humanitarian impulses. DPA reports:
While Sweden was prepared to receive asylum seekers there was need for 'a return agreement' with Iraq for refugees whose applications were rejected the ministers said, according to US diplomatic cables leaked by whistle-blower site WikiLeaks and quoted by the daily Svenska Dagbladet.
During a September 2007 visit to Iraq, Foreign Minister Carl Bildt and Tobias Billstrom, minister for migration and asylum policy, met with Iraqi officials and US embassy officials in Baghdad.
According to the US cable, Bildt and Billstrom mentioned concerns that many arrivals after 2003 were 'more difficult to assimilate.'
Contributing factors were that the asylum seekers were destitute, and often had poor education or lacked language or professional skills.
Sweden's The Local reports:
A Green Party member is considering reporting Foreign Minister Carl Bildt and Migration Minister Tobias Billström to a parliamentary committee following a WikiLeak exposing statements that they made in 2007 about Iraqi refugees.
Bildt and Billström are the subject of renewed criticism following the revelation. At the time, Bildt stated Sweden's demands for a tougher immigration policy. The opinions were expressed during a meeting between the two ministers and a US ambassador.
Bildt and Billström attended a breakfast meeting with then-Swedish ambassador to Iraq Niclas Trouvé and then-US ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker, according to the classified documents on Iraqi immigration to Sweden, Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) reported on Friday.
The problem was the Iraqis that Sweden did not want to grant residence permits to. Bildt wanted an agreement with Iraq on the return of these asylum seekers. Without one, it would have been impossible to establish a Swedish embassy in Baghdad, said Bildt, according to the documents.
Please be sure to read Bob Somerby's Thursday Howler and Friday one. There's some very important work being done in both. We'll close with this from David Swanson's "Punishing Bradley Manning for the Crimes of Others" (War Is A Crime):
Bradley Manning, alleged U.S. Army whistleblower, is in two ways -- one likely, the other certain -- being punished for the crimes of others.
On Monday a crowd that I was part of staged a protest at Quantico, where Manning has been imprisoned for several months with no trial. At the last minute, the military denied us permission to hold a rally on the base, so we held it in the street blocking the entrance to the base. This visibly enraged at least one of the guards who attempted unsuccessfully to arrest a couple of us.
On Tuesday, for no stated reason whatsoever, Manning's jailers put him on suicide watch. This meant that he was isolated for 24 hours a day instead of 23, the glasses he needs to see were taken away, and other harsh conditions imposed. Two days later, for no stated reason whatsoever, Manning was taken off suicide watch again. It appears likely that he was punished in response to our protest. As a result, we're all going to crawl under our beds and hide, promising never to use the First Amendment again in our lives.
Just kidding! Instead, we're planning larger protests. And Manning's lawyer has, for his part, filed a complaint and threatened to sue over Manning's mistreatment. These colors don't run, as someone might say.
Perhaps it was a coincidence that the Marine Corpse (sic) momentarily believed Manning to be suicidal the day after a protest. And yet we know for certain that Manning is being punished for the crimes of others. When you witness a crime, you are obliged to report it. This is exactly what Manning has allegedly done, for a great many crimes. And it is all Manning has allegedly done.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Progress, Tester, seriously?
Al-Taie's uncle, Entifadh Qanbar, a spokesman for a controversial Iraqi politician, denied that any ransom demand had been made but described for the AP a web of negotiations with a number of intermediaries as he continued to pursue leads through the years. The missing soldier was last seen four months after his abduction, in a video posted on the Internet by a Shiite militant faction called Ahl al-Bayt Brigades.
Meanwhile in the US, Jennifer Hewlett (Lexington Herald-Leader) reports that Iraq War veteran Cameron Anestis' widow is suing the VA for herself and their daughter because she feels the VA did not treat her husband who took his own life "hours after he left the VA medical facilities".
This was also the week that saw the deaths of 4 US soldiers in Iraq and the deaths of approximately 200 people in Iraq (worded that way because some of the pilgrims are not not Iraqis). Somehow, Kimball Bennion (Great Falls Tribune) reports US Senator Jon Tester sees "progress" in Iraq. He does add, "Iraqis still have some work to do to take control of their country." What an idiot. Once was a time we only had to suffer that nonsense from Republican members of Iraq but now the ongoing illegal war is (again -- as it was at its start) "bi-partisan." And, sadly, this now passes for brave statements from elected Dems.
Iraq War veteran and March Forward! member Kevin Baker (Liberation) addresses reality:
“Skills that will serve you for the rest of your life.” This message will greet you if you visit the goarmy.com website.
This is what the Army is projecting to potential recruits: that by joining up you will have a sound foundation from which to launch a career when you leave. Recent findings say the complete opposite is true.
“While their nonmilitary contemporaries were launching careers during the nearly 10 years the nation has been at war, troops were repeatedly deployed to desolate war zones. And on their return to civilian life, these veterans are forced to find their way in a bleak economy where the skills they learned at war have little value,” says Michael A. Fletcher of The Washington Post. Today, veterans actually experience higher unemployment rates than civilians.
Some veterans even want to return to combat simply to have enough money to pay for food and bills, because job opportunities are so rare for returning vets who have spent their days, months and years in war zones.
The following community sites -- plus Military Families Speak Out, Liberal Oasis, Iraq Inquiry Digest and Antiwar.com -- updated last night and tonight:- THIS JUST IN! HE REPEATS HIMSELF!1 hour ago
- We've heard it all before1 hour ago
- Creating the conditions16 hours ago
- Tony Blair19 hours ago
- Media Lens stinks up the Kitchen20 hours ago
- That popular post20 hours ago
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- Tony the War Criminal20 hours ago
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We'll close with this from Tim King's "Terrorism by the Numbers" (Salem-News):
The only Mideast nations that have felt the wrath of western forces in recent years, directly or indirectly, with the exception of Afghanistan, are the countries that refuse to accept the legitimacy of Israel's illegal occupation of Palestine, or endorse Israel's cruel treatment of the Palestinian people, complete with apartheid laws that govern and punish Jewish and non Jewish people in distinctly different ways.
Those countries that objected to this cruelty include Iraq and Iran.
The British occupied country after country in previous centuries; exploiting their people and products. Iran, the classical Persia - a culture thousands of years old, was in the sites of the west over oil for much of the 20th century.
Combine the oil with objections to Israel's war crimes, and you have the two reasons Iran is perpetually demonized by western media and politicians, especially by Israel's.
The western theft of Iran's profits was going strong in the early 1950's when the British 'Anglo Iranian Oil Company' - known simply as BP today; refused to pay the Iranians the agreed upon revenues for oil or even open the books to them.
By 1953 Iran's first democratically elected President was talking about nationalizing oil, and that is when the US and UK conspired to take out the Iranian president and ultimately replace him with the Shah who functioned as a western puppet leader for Iran until the Revolution of 1979.
No wonder they were angry by that point; having little or no control of their own nation's wealth and resources for decades.
These were the years when problems between Arab and Israeli people were in full swing. Israeli Zionists believe that 'God gave them the land" (Palestine) that is now called Israel and they use a Biblical interpretation to justify the theft of land from families who have lived in Palestine for endless generations.
It is taking place right this second; Israeli settlers are becoming increasingly violent toward Palestinians and Israel is also seeing the persecution of darker skinned Jews. The place is a mess.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
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ruths report
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oh boy it never ends
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Friday, January 21, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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The Chicken Hawk Chronicles
Chicken Hawk Tony Blair is testifying before the Iraq Inquiry. A friend, an actress in London, noted he was a Chicken Hawk and I immediately apologized because I'd never thought of that. Certainly in the US, we were all aware that George W. Bush did not serve, nor did Dick Cheney, go down the list. These men prepared to send young men and women to their deaths never served in the US military. My friend was pointing out that Blair had ample time to put in some service if he'd wanted to and that watching his pompous face this morning just reminded her all the more of how self-righteous was and how eager to exercise destruction and war when it wouldn't be him on the ground.
Ruth Barnett and Mark Stone (Sky News) note that Chickenhawk Tony is accused of sneaking into the Inquiry this morning to avoid the protest outside and they have video of protesters offering their take on Blair including this one, "Historians will judge him as a War Criminal as somebody who has lied to the public who has now -- He has -- Who tried to redefine the word lie: 'When is a lie not a lie?' And also I think history will judge him very, very harshly -- very harshly." And below the video, you can see Sky News' live blogging of Tony's testimony -- and Gregg Mitchell, that's what live blogging is.
Peter Walker (Guardian) reports on those protesting:
While many were clearly veteran activists – the Socialist Workers party had a notable presence – the crowd was mixed. Jackie, from Essex, had stopped by to wave a "Bliar" placard for 20 minutes before heading to her job at a City law firm.
"I'm not ashamed of it but I don't make a point of publicising it," she said. "I don't think there is much hope anything will come of this. It's all starting to look very much like an establishment cover-up."
More hopeful was the veteran peace campaigner Bruce Kent, who said he believed Chilcot's blocked attempts to release the former prime minister's correspondence with President George Bush, plus doubts about Blair's testimony raised by the former attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, indicated the establishment was starting to turn on Bair.
He said: "I'm not so interested in seeing him in court. I think Blair now knows that the infamy will follow him around forever. I think he's starting to realise that the end is not coming – that lovely smile is not going to see him through this time,
"It's something of a Shakespearean tragedy. He came into power with such possibilities to transform the country. All those things he could have done and he squandered billions of pounds and thousands of lives to be a sort of second lieutenant to Bush"
There are 13-year-olds who were only 5 when the illegal war started. It's been so long ago. So, just to recap, in 2002, the public beating of the war drums began as the US government -- headed by Bully Boy George W. Bush -- and the UK government -- headed by Tony Blair -- prepared to plunge the world into a never-ending, illegal war of choice and to do so via lies of WMD. In England, Tony Blair also claimed that England could be hit in 45 minutes by WMDs from Iraq. That was a lie. It was known to be a lie by his country's intelligence agencies, they had informed him that was incorrect. Largely forgotten now, but, as the Times of London would later expose, before finally starting the illegal war in March of 2003, the US and UK governments attempted to spark the war via their fly overs with the hopes that a plane would be shot down. So never wrongly assume that either leader gave a damn about the lives of anyone serving. Even before the illegal war started, they were more than happy to reduce those enlisted to nothing but cannon fodder.
Blair was of the Labour Party and he was replaced with Gordon Brown who led the Labour Party into destruction with his neoliberal policies. Which is why a Conservative is now prime minister, David Cameron. Brown so disgraced the country -- and refused to step down when polling nearly a year before the election demonstrated he was dragging down the party (Barack might want to study up on that) -- that Labour did not win the elections and the Liberal Democrats sides with the Conservative Party in forming a coalition government.
James White (Daily Mail) and Kitty Donaldson (Bloomberg News) report that Blair denies giving Bush "a blank cheque" and apparently hopes his reputation as a World Class Liar will somehow back his statments up. He, however, continues to refuse to release his correspondence with Bush. Rosa Prince (Telegraph of London) reports:
In written evidence submitted ahead of his second appearance before the inquiry, the former prime minister was asked about secret messages he sent to Mr Bush in the build-up to the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.
It emerged this week that the head of the civil service, Cabinet Secretary Sir Gus O'Donnell, refused requests for extracts from the notes to be released after consulting with the ex-premier.
Andrew Sparrow (Guardian) -- who live blogged so much of last year's public hearings by the Iraq Inquiry -- is live blogging Blair's ongoing testimony.
Last night on BBC's Question Time (link has text and video), George Galloway and Alastair Campbell exchanged words -- Campbell was and remains a Blair lackey who, in 2010, really established his credentials as a known liar. Galloway informed him that he looks "forward to the day when Mr. Blair is not in front of establishment stooges but is in The Hague facing war crime charges at the international court." And if Campbell didn't grasp that he (Campbell) was also a War Criminal, Galloway made that clear declaring, "And by the way, Alastair Campbell has the same blood on his hands and ought to be in the dock with him."
On The Diane Rehm Show today (begins airing at 10:00 am EST on most NPR stations and streaming online), her guests for the first hour (domestic news) are Major Garrett (National Journal), Lisa Lerer (Bloomberg News) and Jerry Seib (Wall St. Journal) and, for the second hour (international), Abderrahim Foukara (Al Jazeera), Elise Labott (CNN) and Moises Naim (El Pais).
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Maybe if he had filled his cabinet . . .
If these bombings were as al-Ghanemi describes, then they were planned ahead of time -- well thought out indicating not just a level or precision but a level of rationality -- and since they were done ahead of time, they should have been prevented by extra security measure which should have been taken due to the religious holiday and the knowledge that over a million Shi'ite pilgrims would be taking part in the religious observation. That steps were not taken reflects very poorly on Nouri. John Leland (New York Times) offers, "The annual pilgrimage, banned under Saddam Hussein, is expected to draw as many as 10 million people this year to the city of Karbala over 10 days. It has long been a target of sectarian violence. Until this week, the holiday had been free of major bloodshed, and Iraqi security forces had claimed progress in their ability to protect the populace from violent extremist groups." Those numbers, and the holiday itself, argue for governmental anticipation and preparation.
Tracey Shelton (Asia Times) offers:
Some blame the recent uptick in violence on the nascent administration that has yet to fill its top security slots, namely the ministers of defense, interior and security. There have been allegations that Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is keeping the posts for close confidantes, but others say the same partisan bickering that kept a government from solidifying for 10 months is preventing the appointments of these ministers - and endangering the public.
[. . .]
According to senior Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman, among others who spoke to Asia Times Online, the clear instigator of these crimes is al-Qaeda and its affiliate ISA. However, as Othman pointed out: "They are supported by elements inside the security apparatus."
The claim of collusion within the ranks of the yet unformed government has become a rallying cry for Maliki's opposition - the Iraqiya bloc of mostly secular Iraqis and Sunnis led by former prime minister Ayad Allawi.
Iraqiya's chief security advisor, Hani Ashor, said many Iraqis have already been murdered due to intelligence leaks within their own government. He and other politicians are calling for the fast-tracking of appointments for the security portfolios.
CNN has a photo essay of the post-bombings scene here.
The following community sites -- plus Jane Fonda, Iraq Inquiry Digest, Socialist Worker and World Can't Wait -- updated last night and today:
- THIS JUST IN! U.S. LOVES TORTURE!33 minutes ago
- Who's being kept out, who's let in33 minutes ago
- Tweets on 2011-01-213 hours ago
- Blair at the Inquiry3 hours ago
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- Iraq7 hours ago
- Malaria?7 hours ago
- Bye-bye7 hours ago
- London protest on Friday7 hours ago
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- Today and tomorrow7 hours ago
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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