“Yemeni authorities were hunting for 10 of the main suspects in the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole after they escaped from prison Friday, officials said. The fugitives, including chief suspect Jamal al-Badawi, had been jailed in the port city of Aden since shortly after the destroyer was bombed, killing 17 American sailors. Officials at Aden’s governor’s office would not say how the men escaped early Friday. But they quoted intelligence sources as saying security forces were out in force in a major search operation.” Yahoo! News
Author Archives: FmH
Bush’s Eighth Hundred Days:
9. Who commented on Bush’s “almost giddy readiness to kill”?
(a) Senator Chuck Hagel (R Nebraska).
(b) MSNBC’s Chris Matthews.
(c) CBS’s Dan Rather.
(d) General Tommy Franks. The New Yorker
How Public Housing Harms Cities by Howard Husock
“It’s time to phase out housing projects. Whether
old-fashioned or newfangled, they blight surrounding neighborhoods and prevent them from reviving.” — Howard Husock, City Journal
Summer Sun:
Yo La Tengo interviewed: “They remain the proverbial elephant examined by blind men, different things to different people. Which is okay, as far as Ira Kaplan is concerned. I asked him what he’d say if the dictionary people came knocking, wanting a definition. ‘That’s their job, isn’t it? Finding definitions. We’re happy just playing the music.'” 3am Summer Sun is their new recording, and I can’t wait to hear it…
Collective Suicide?
According to Franz Hinkelammert, the West has repeatedly been under the illusion that it should try to save humanity by destroying part of it. This is a salvific and sacrificial destruction, committed in the name of the need to radically materialize all the possibilities opened up by a given social and political reality over which it is supposed to have total power. This is how it was in colonialism, with the genocide of indigenous peoples, and the African slaves. This is how it was in the period of imperialist struggles, which caused millions of deaths in two world wars and many other colonial wars. This is how it was under Stalinism, with the Gulag, and under Nazism, with the Holocaust. And now today, this is how it is in neoliberalism, with the collective sacrifice of the periphery and even the semiperiphery of the world system. With the war against Iraq, it is fitting to ask whether what is in progress is a new genocidal and sacrificial illusion, and what its scope might be. It is above all appropriate to ask if the new illusion will not herald the radicalization and the ultimate perversion of the Western illusion: destroying all of humanity in the illusion of saving it. — Boaventura de Sousa Santos, Bad Subjects
America and the Age of Genocide:
An interview with Samantha Power, author of A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, Executive Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy and Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. identitytheory
Conquest and Neglect
…(T)here is a pattern to the Bush administration’s way of doing business that does not bode well for the future — a pattern of conquest followed by malign neglect…. One has to admit that the Bush people are very good at conquest, military and political. They focus all their attention on an issue; they pull out all the stops; they don’t worry about breaking the rules. This technique brought them victory in the Florida recount battle, the passage of the 2001 tax cut, the fall of Kabul, victory in the midterm elections, and the fall of Baghdad.
But after the triumph, when it comes time to take care of what they’ve won, their attention wanders, and things go to pot. — Paul Krugman, NY Times
Stung by anti-war criticism, Hall cancels `Bull Durham’ festivities:
The baseball Hall of Fame has canceled a 15th anniversary celebration of the film “Bull Durham,” and the shrine’s president said it was because of anti-war criticism by co-stars Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.
Hall president Dale Petroskey sent a letter to Robbins and Sarandon this week, telling them the festivities April 26-27 at Cooperstown, N.Y., had been called off.
Petroskey, a former White House assistant press secretary under Ronald Reagan, said recent comments by the actors “ultimately could put our troops in even more danger.”
Reached Wednesday night, Robbins said he was “dismayed” by the decision. He responded with a letter he planned to send to Petroskey, telling him: “You belong with the cowards and ideologues in a hall of infamy and shame.” SF Chronicle
Is Bush a psychopath?
Are psychopaths running our government? The heart of this essay counterposes, paragraph by paragraph, a recent media portrait of Bush’s personality style and daily behavior with a detailed description of the psychopath in the workplace. Clinically, one would never make a diagnosis from a distance, sight unseen, and the concept of the psychopath is rather diffuse, but it draws a thought-provoking picture. digby [via the null device]
How to post about Nazis and get away with it:
The Godwin’s Law FAQ: One of the most famous pieces of Usenet trivia out there is “if you mention Hitler or Nazis in a post, you’ve automatically ended whatever discussion you were taking part in”. Known as Godwin’s Law, this rule of Usenet has a long and sordid history on the network – and is absolutely wrong. This FAQ is an attempt to set straight as much of the history and meaning of Godwin’s Law as possible, and hopefully encourage users to invoke it a bit more sparingly. Of course, knowing Usenet, it won’t do an ounce of good… Rebecca Blood brought my attention to Godwin’s Law and discusses some of its implications here.
The Most Hated Professor in America?
Nicholas de Genova, a 35-year old assistant professor of anthropology and Latino studies at Columbia, who is upsetting alot of people, is interviewed for the first time since his controversial remarks. Chronicle of Higher Education
"There’s a special place in hell,"
says Rafe Coburn, “reserved for those people who use feigned concern for the injustices heaped upon the Iraqi people to bludgeon those who made arguments against the war in Iraq. To those people, I would ask what makes the Iraqi people special when you make it obvious that you don’t give a crap about the billions of other impoverished, oppressed, and miserable people around the world.”
Annals of Depravity (cont’d.):
The accompanying mugshot captures the essence of someone you wouldn’t want to meet in a dark alley. The Smoking Gun
The victor of the news war has been the internet,
says Independent/UK columnist Natasha Walter.
But: Net Trounced By Cable for War News: “Two separate surveys show the same thing: Americans rely on cable TV for war news vs. the Net. That aside, online news is making gains, and might provide a clearer picture in the fog of war.” Online Journalism Review
In a previous column, Walter cautions us, “Don’t idealise the soldiers fighting this unjust war.”
Do you think that Tony Blair would feel it necessary to state and restate that civilian casualties will be kept to a minimum if he were not conscious of the outrage that would otherwise result? Do you think that officers would keep briefing their soldiers on the need to treat prisoners according to the laws of war, if it were not for the scrutiny of the dissenters back home?
It is all very well to hear about how vulnerable and heroic our troops are, but we should not forget that the truly vulnerable people are not the healthy young men who chose to join one of the best-equipped armies in the world, but ordinary Iraqi people who did not choose to be caught, utterly defenceless, between a tyrant and a destructive army. Independent/UK
Hawks in U.S. Eyeing Syria As Next Target:
With victory in Iraq assured, hawks outside and inside the Bush administration have begun taking a notably aggressive stance toward its neighbor to the west, Syria.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, and their main ideological ally at the State Department, undersecretary John Bolton, have all made menacing public remarks about Syria in recent days. Newsday
Robert Fisk asks:
Is there some element in the US military that wants to take out journalists? Independent/UK Found via an important, if you appreciate his contentious writing, compilation page of Reports by Mr. Robert Fisk.
German professors declare war on English terms:
A group of German university professors, angered by the US-British war against Iraq, have launched a campaign to replace many popular English-language words used in Germany with French terms.
Saying they are appalled by the way the United States and Britain defied the will of the United Nations and attacked Iraq, the four professors declared war on borrowed English terms in German such as “okay”, “T-shirt” and “party”. Sydney Morning Herald
And, while we’re on the topic of words (how’s that for a segue?), this is from Waxy [via Looka!]: Armed with a list of spelling errors and my old friend Google, I decided to see if I could find the most commonly misspelled word on the Web. If you can do better, leave a comment.
Breaking News Photography,
a gallery of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize-winning Works.
U.S. Finally Secures Uranium Warehouses in Iraq
This LA Times piece points out that the uranium stocks, which it says could be enriched to weapons material, lay unguarded after their Iraqi custodians fled. US forces were not even aware of their existence for several days. Garret Vreeland pointed to this, noting how much background on the search for clandestine weapons it contains. As readers know, I’ve remained skeptical about the WMD rationale for the attack on Iraq. The article notes that Saddam may have had any chemical weapons the regime had moved to the Tikrit area, which has not yet fallen to advancing US forces. There’s also speculation on why, if he did indeed have CBW and was backed against the wall as he has been, he did not use them against massing American troops. It has been my point that the restraint he exercised in this regard in the face of US military intimidation, the potential harsh judgment of world opinion and/or the threat of war crimes prosecution, gives the lie to Bush’s “imminent danger” argument.
Debate on Gun Rights In House Turns Racial:
A House debate over gun rights legislation erupted into a racially charged dispute yesterday when a Republican lawmaker from Wyoming seemed to equate African Americans with drug addicts or people undergoing drug treatment. Washington Post
"Iraq is a trial run",
says Noam Chomsky in this April 2nd interview with Frontline India.
Searching the BlogSphere:
“Trusted Blog Search Tool, a search box that lets readers search the web, your site, or blogs you read.”
US tells UN to Butt out:
An extraordinary communication from the United States to UN representatives around the world has been leaked to Greenpeace. In it, the United States warns that the simple act of support for a General Assembly meeting to discuss the war will be considered “unhelpful and directed against the United States.” They further threaten that invoking the Uniting for Peace resolution will be “harmful to the UN.”
Greenpeace has been actively lobbying at the United Nations against the war, and many delegates have expressed both publicly and privately their distaste for what they see as US attempts to “strongarm” the world community to do as it is told. One delegate was so incensed with the memo circulated by the US that he leaked the full document. [via Liberal Arts Mafia]
Sony leads charge to cash in on Iraq
Japanese electronics giant Sony has taken an extraordinary step to cash in on the war in Iraq by patenting the term “Shock and Awe” for a computer game.
It is among a swarm of companies scrambling to commercially exploit the war in Iraq, which has killed more than 5,000 soldiers and civilians in the space of three weeks. Guardian/UK
Somebody Always Cheers:
Mitsu said: The problem with this war (the “war on terror”) is that the connection between actions and consequences are far separated — the outrage expressed by many Arabs over this war in Iraq will likely bear fruit in asymmetrical warfare far down the line — but it will be years, not months, before we truly see the fruit of our actions. This disconnect in time creates a tremendous problem, since one of the chief mistakes people make when evaluating the success of their actions is to assume that there is no time delay. Although military victory in Iraq is likely, the mistakes our leaders made when ascertaining the reaction of the Iraqi people leads to the conclusion that they will similarly misjudge their political reaction in many other ways. Iraqis have not been fleeing the country to refugee camps — they’ve been trying to get back in to fight us. There will certainly be some who cheer our troops as they roll in — but, as one Arab history professor put it the other day, there are always people who cheer troops as they roll in: there were Lebanese who cheered the Israelis when they came in. They stopped cheering pretty quickly. synthetic zero
Opposition leader: ‘Saddam is alive’.
A key Iraqi opposition leader says he has information that Saddam Hussein survived an airstrike in Baghdad and escaped from the capital with at least one of his sons.
However, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said he did not know whether Saddam was dead or alive.“He’s either dead, or he’s incapacitated, or he’s healthy and cowering in some tunnel someplace trying to avoid being caught. What else can one say?” Rumsfeld said. CNN
Rumsfeld has made several comments about Saddam’s cowardice that are about as mature as the schoolyard taunts I remember from childhood. Pretty disingenuous considering this country’s leaders’ lack of military service themselves and how far they are from harm’s way in the prosecution of the attack on Iraq. In fact, Rumsfeld’s gibes could be considered an insult to our own troops’ bravery. (I mean, Jessica Lynch might be able to jeer at Saddam for cowering in hiding, but Donald Rumsfeld??)
Could there be a relationship (could there not??) between the above news item and this? MOAB Bomb Moved to Iraq War Region:
Military officials hoped the MOAB would create such a huge blast that it would rattle Iraqi troops and pressure them into surrendering or not even fighting.
Now that Iraqi troops have surrendered in large numbers, it was unclear what the possible targets might be. CNN
Or is it just that the boys with their toys will be damned if they’ll let this little escapade in Iraq end without the chance of a whizz-bang full-scale ejaculation?
Hollow victory in the war that never was:
The coalition’s hollow victory in Baghdad marks a fittingly surreal climax to a war that was always empty of meaning. Saddam’s regime has simply imploded like the wretched, ruined state that any objective observer of Iraqi affairs knew it to be. The US and UK authorities claim that a powerful regime has been brought down by their well-paced, patient prosecution of the war over the past three weeks. In reality, we can now see that the enfeebled Iraqi state all but collapsed the moment the coalition forces rolled across its borders.
Was there a war at all? There were certainly plenty of bombs dropped, guns fired and Iraqis killed by the American and British forces. But there has not been one single clash with Iraqi forces that could remotely be described as a battle. — Mick Hume, sp!ked
Epilepsy drug may be weight-loss aid:
Results promising, say researchers: An epilepsy drug combined with a reduced-calorie diet may result in significant weight loss for obese adults, according to one of several obesity studies in this week’s Journal of the American Medical Association.
The epilepsy drug research was prompted by reports of unintentional weight loss in epilepsy patients using zonisamide to prevent seizures. CNN As a physician (who prescribes epilepsy drugs as part of my neuropsychiatric practice and also because we use them in the control of impulsive-aggressive-labile behavior disorders), I’ve already been receiving requests from patients to be placed on zonisamide given these news reports. In fact, that is how I heard about this research finding. This is a phenomenon that has repeated itself whenever the media report that a drug shows promise for weight loss. But people should stop hoping for passive weight loss miracles, of course. Stop calling, for three reasons —
- the weight loss effect is not going to turn out to be very robust or very sustained
- the increased activity level is more important to any weight loss than the medication effects
- and the cognitive slowing and other potential side effects of taking most anticonvulsants are not pleasant enough if you do not absolutely need these medications for cause
My reading suggests there may be some promising, specific weight loss agents that work by novel mechanisms on the physiology of appetite and satiation, or on metabolism coming down the pike, but not zonisamide or topiramate or Prozac.
Harbinger of extremist backlash?
Cheering for ‘end of tyrant’ in Baghdad:
U.S.: After Iraq, we’ll deal with other radical Mideast regimes.
A communique received in Jerusalem from the American administration this week says the United States is operating with strong resolution to neutralize the Iraqi threat to Israel. After the war, the message continued, the United States will deal with other radical regimes in the region – not necessarily by military means – to moderate their activities and fight terrorism. Ha’aretz
For Broadcast Media, Patriotism Pays.
Now, apparently, is the time for all good radio and TV stations to come to the aid of their country’s war.
That is the message pushed by broadcast news consultants, who’ve been advising news and talk stations across the nation to wave the flag and downplay protest against the war.
“Get the following production pieces in the studio NOW: . . . Patriotic music that makes you cry, salute, get cold chills! Go for the emotion,” advised McVay Media, a Cleveland-based consultant, in a “War Manual” memo to its station clients. “. . . Air the National Anthem at a specified time each day as long as the USA is at war.”
The company, which describes itself as the largest radio consultant in the world, also has been counseling talk show stations to “Make sure your hosts aren’t ‘over the top.’ Polarizing discussions are shaky ground. This is not the time to take cheap shots to get reaction . . . not when our young men and women are ‘in harm’s way.’ “ Washington Post
U.S. Marines in Iraq were told to take off their chemical protection suits on Monday
“Whatever intelligence they have is telling us the threat level has been reduced,” U.S. Marine Lieutenant Peter Rummler told Reuters correspondent Matthew Green. Reuters AlertNet
Ebola Spurs Fears of Looming Ape Extinction
…(R)esearchers announced yesterday that numbers of great apes in Gabon have declined by more than half in less than 20 years. Experts fear the decline is even greater outside Gabon and that, unless trends are reversed, great apes could become effectively extinct in as little as two generations. National Geographic
A Disgusting Practice Vanishes With the Token
The NYC Transit Authority eliminates the subway token in a few days, and with it passes out of existence what is dubbed by some “the most disgusting nonviolent crime ever to visit the subway”. You have to have some sympathy, however, for the desperation of the perpetrators… NY Times [vai Richard Homonoff]
Post-Traumatic Bush Syndrome,
A Suggested Addendum for the DSM IV: “Editor’s Note: The following diagnostic regimen has NOT been approved by, or for that matter even submitted to the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) as such, but considering the press of world events and the headlong expansion of the American military presence in the Middle East and elsewhere, we felt it behooved us to help our readers get ahead of the global game…”
" stirring dull roots with spring rain …"
Thank you, Mark, for welcoming me back from my vacation. I have to point to your compilation of pointers to George Lakoff resources, including the “Metaphor” series, essential reading on how to think about the war (scroll down). And, on the same day, Mark observes the sixth anniversary of Allen Ginsberg’s death, reverently.
Cultural Creatives in Action:
Our origin springs from the discovery that we are part of some 50 million socially and environmentally concerned people who value and support a worldview of compassion, peace, and less materialism, and who view nature as sacred — a group identified in the book The Cultural Creatives (Ray and Anderson, 2001).
The Icon and The Raven:
Over the past few decades, iconic musician Lou Reed has worked with a gallery of talented visual and performing artists — Andy Warhol, the Velvet Underground, his girlfriend Laurie Anderson, just to name a few. Now he’s tackled what he says is his toughest challenge yet: dramatizing the works of Edgar Allen Poe in music, sound and spoken voice. NPR
‘I Love My Country But…’
One Woman Enrages War Rally with Her Heartfelt Message. They have come carrying flags, wearing patriotic caps and jackets and sweatshirts — one family in a minivan plastered with praise for President George W. Bush and a bumper sticker that says “If 90% of you are for military strikes, the other 10% should be tried for treason.”
Angelica Amaya carries a simple homemade sign that says “I love my country but . . . ”
She has pasted a photograph of a young Iraqi woman on the sign and written below: “Are you willing to kill her to get to Saddam? “ If it is not already clear, I love the abstraction my country, but there’s much that sickens me about my countrymates, the jingoist boosters of the war, at this point. Dubya’s disingenuousness as to the reasons for the war aside, how is support for the au courant justification, that we are trying to liberate the Iraqi people, compatible with the “kill the gooks” sentiment that has overtaken the population as it does in all American wars? It appears that only the most cursory capacity for discriminating levels of abstraction exists in the common thought process. That Iraq is ‘the enemy’ maps inexorably to demonization of Iraqis.
William Rivers Pitt’s New Book Now Available:
truthout‘s senior writer William Rivers Pitt has just come out with his second book, The Greatest Sedition is Silence. The book details the last four years of politics in America, and delves into topics of discussion that have been left aside by the mainstream media. The mysteries and morality surrounding the 9/11 attacks, Enron and the economic meltdown, the 2000 Election, the media and a myriad of other important issues are discussed. Through it all, Mr. Pitt exhorts his readers to get involved in the workings of their country, and to not remain silent in the face of so many calamities.
Airstrike Targets Hussein, Sons:
The LA Times spins this around the likelihood that Saddam was killed in the airstrike, while the NY Times‘ report on the bombing is more cautious.
Civilization’s Obscene Ghost:
America’s war with Iraq in the tender years of the 21st century comes as a shock to many of us. Like Europeans in 1914, we had come to believe that our country had to a large extent renounced war as an instrument of national policy.
This may be a short and efficient war. But already there has been death, in limited numbers among our own troops, doubtless in far greater numbers among those we call our enemies. Homes, buildings and infrastructure have been destroyed and will continue to be, however precisely aimed our bombs; there will be hunger and disease; there will be the misery of refugee camps and orphanages.
What one misses in most talk about the current war is any sense of its human cost. What is wholly lacking in current political discourse is any recognition of the obscenity of war. It’s as if we’d reverted smoothly to that primitivist thinking about death identified by Freud: We must be heroes, and the death of our enemies is greatly to be wished. I don’t doubt our leaders’ desire to minimize casualties and to control, to the extent possible, “collateral damage” — our nice euphemism for the inevitable killing of civilians by mistake. But it would be more honest if our death-dealing were discussed openly and fully.
War may be a failure of conflict resolution by peaceful means. It is also a kind of failure of civilization.
— Peter Brooks, Sterling professor of comparative literature and French at Yale University and author of several books, including Reading for the Plot and Troubling Confessions, LA Times [via CommonDreams]
Still no WMD:
“Smoking gun” site in Iraq turns out to contain pesticide. A facility near Baghdad that a US officer had claimed might finally be “smoking gun” evidence of Iraqi chemical weapons production turned out to contain pesticide, not sarin gas as originally thought.
A military intelligence officer for the US 101st Airborne Division’s aviation brigade, Captain Adam Mastrianni, told AFP that comprehensive tests Monday determined the presence of the pesticide compounds. Agence France Presse [via Yahoo]
Supreme Court Upholds Ban on Cross Burning —
ruling Monday the history of racial intimidation attached to it outweighs the free speech protection of Ku Klux Klansmen or others who might use it. Washington Post. A good precedent, upholding the sometimes less than obvious principle that particularly odious speech crosses the line to become action (although therein, of course, lies a slippery slope, with discretion in the hands of the wrong people…) Interestingly, the Court voted 6-3 to uphold the ban but only thought that it did not violate constitutional free speech guarantees by a 5-4 margin. The outlier, with some tortured reasoning, was — you guessed it — Clarence Thomas. It is hard to say whether it is better or worse since he started presuming to think on his own in the past few years, rather than silently vote the conservative party line. Certainly more entertaining to watch his foot-in-mouth disease.
US soldiers in Iraq asked to pray for Bush —
I continue to be sickened by the enthusiasm the evangelists are showing for the war and its perpetrators. Here’s one of the latest examples. ABC News
Annals of Depravity (cont’d.):
Jury finds parents guilty of assault, endangerment for baby’s strict diet: …Assistant District Attorney Eric Rosenbaum said the couple treated their daughter, Ice, like a gerbil, feeding her a diet of ground nuts, juice, herbal tea, beans, cod liver oil and flax seed oil and no breast milk or formula. SF Chronicle
Noted War Blogger Cops to Copying —
Sean-Patrick Kelley of the noted Agonist site has been lifting items word-for-word without attribution from Stratfor, says Wired News. Kelley admits it.
So back to reality?
“Rouse yourself! Sit up!
Resolutely train yourself to attain peace.
Do not let the king of death, seeing you are careless,
lead you astray and dominate you. “Sutta Nipata II, 10
I was privileged to be incommunicado on a tropical island for a week, not following the war news until I devoured a New York Times when we got to the airport yesterday afternoon. Unsurprisingly, no WMD have yet been found in the advance to Baghdad (Reuters/Yahoo!), and the “nerve gas antidote” of last week turns out not to be (Ananova). According to Al Jazeera, Britain may be admitting there may in fact be no WMD to be found in Iraq. The civilian death toll continues to mount horrifyingly (CTV.ca). Areas “pacified” and “secured” by US-UK forces remain unwelcoming and chaotic (Le Monde) and humanitarian crisis is looming if not already upon the people of Iraq (Al Jazeera). The hardliners in the dysadministration seem to be winning the internal battle (Independent/UK [via Commondreams]) over whether we will ‘rebuild’ or ‘annex’ Iraq (NY Times) and whether we will continue to undermine the UN as facilitator of any of the higher aspirations of the world’s nations toward peace, cooperation or prosperity. Tony Blair by some accounts (Sydney Morning Herald) isn’t faring so well politically; price to pay for allowing one’s best intentions to be co-opted by American rapacity. Unsurprisingly, the Arab world sees through the US propaganda line (NY Times)
More surprising to find in taking the pulse of the war after a week’s absence is the seemingly rapid and wholesale drift in American public opinion, how malleable to the propaganda effort the public’s mind and will appear to be. When US forces were bogged down halfway to Baghdad, even generals on active duty were brimming with contempt (Guardian/UK) for Rumsfeld, calling him another McNamara and denouncing him for prosecuting this war “on the cheap.” The dysadministration spin has been an ever-shifting crafty attempt to soften the public underbelly (Washington Post) about how the war might take much longer than anyone had been promised and to obfuscate its purpose enough that the public will no longer recognize how it is being lied to.
It seems to have worked. Just a week later, as the invading forces encircle Baghdad, , things are little different than what was expected — US forces are still taking heavy casualties (Al Jazeera), with accumulating friendly fire incidents (Al Jazeera)
(and who killed those fleeing Russian envoys?) not to mention the many thousands of Iraqi soldiers slaughtered (Boston Globe: “…to send a message to both the Iraqi leadership and civilians that coalition forces could move into the city at will…”) and inestimable civilian deaths — and yet, while there is little rejoicing in Iraq, Americans are swept up in the euphoria of ‘winning’… Meanwhile, outside the US, doubts about US pie-in-the-sky claims to have the situation nearly licked and disdain for US ‘liberation’ rhetoric (Pacific News Service) accumulate… with the worst yet to come, street-by-street and house-by-house through the Iraqi capital.
The War’s Dirty Secret: It’s About Changing United States, Not Iraq.
The effort to turn Iraq into a democracy, in other words, is making the U.S. less of one. Our opposition party has disappeared, corporate interests dictate public policy, and the feds may be rummaging through your e-mail.
There’s a dirty secret no one has told you, and here it is: This war is not about changing Iraq, it’s about changing America. LA Times
Tech Heads Drop Trou for a Friend;
Technology is sexy again.: A San Francisco art and technology group’s latest production is a calendar featuring naked babes posing with machines. It’s the perfect gift for your favorite technology fetishist.
“It’s just the right amount dirty and the right amount cute,” said Violet Blue, who appears in white panties and motor oil (actually maple syrup) in the calendar.
The Survival Research Labs calendar release is a part of a benefit being held Tuesday for kinetic artist and musician Tim North, who was diagnosed with cancer early this year. Wired News
More on ‘Conscientious Objection’ in the ‘Volunteer Army’,
via American Samizdat: Marine who said no to killing on his conscience:
The first American conscientious objector from the Iraq war will give himself up at a marine base in California this morning. He said he believed the war was “immoral because of the deception involved by our leaders”. [thanks, brooke]
Fighting not to fight:
Of 2.7 million men and women in the active and reserve forces in the US, 29 were discharged as conscientious objectors in 2002.
The Center on Conscience and War in Washington, which counsels prospective COs, reported 3,500 calls for advice in January, twice the normal rate.
U.N. to Set Standards on Use of the Term ‘Elite’:
“Every time any media outlet mentions the Iraqi Republican Guard they always preface it by calling it elite. However, there is no internationally accepted definition for ‘elite.’ I think we face the real possibility of cheapening the use of the word if standards aren’t set,” said United States Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Powell continued, “I think it’s sad that we’ve degenerated into some sort of elite relativism where you only have to be better than the next guy to be considered elite even if that next guy sucks. Any person that goes through two weeks of training shouldn’t be called elite.”
As part of the standard settings procedure the U.N. plans to send in an elite team of inspectors to measure the Iraqi troops’ eliteness level. BBSpot
Wacky Voices of Dissent:
Who ever said that impassioned political discourse can’t be zany fun?!! SpazOut NY [thanks to Thomas Schmidt]
Army chaplain offers baths for baptisms:
In this dry desert world near Najaf, where the Army V Corps combat support system sprawls across miles of scabrous dust, there’s an oasis of sorts: a 500-gallon pool of pristine, cool water.
It belongs to Army chaplain Josh Llano of Houston, who sees the water shortage, which has kept thousands of filthy soldiers from bathing for weeks, as an opportunity.
”It’s simple. They want water. I have it, as long as they agree to get baptized,” he said. The Miami Herald
Related: Are Christian evangelists eyeing Iraq? Dedicated workers of the Southern Baptist Convention and the Samaritan’s Purse — two of the biggest evangelical Christian missions in the US — are reportedly waiting on the Jordanian border for the signal to enter the battle-scarred country.
Baghdad under attack: attempts to preach Christianity in Iraq is bound to set off alarms
Both organisations insist that their priority will be to provide food, shelter and other needs to the victims of the war. But they don’t deny that if the situation presents itself, they will preach their Christian faith in a country that is predominantly Muslim. Al Jazeera
[O]peration [I]raqi [L]iberation —
Visualizing the Costs: A lot of people don’t really understand how much money is at stake with the Iraq “crusade”. This diagram could help you to understand what the USA is doing, and what are its main goals. [via walker]
Tech Heads Drop Trou for a Friend;
Technology is sexy again.: A San Francisco art and technology group’s latest production is a calendar featuring naked babes posing with machines. It’s the perfect gift for your favorite technology fetishist.
“It’s just the right amount dirty and the right amount cute,” said Violet Blue, who appears in white panties and motor oil (actually maple syrup) in the calendar.
The Survival Research Labs calendar release is a part of a benefit being held Tuesday for kinetic artist and musician Tim North, who was diagnosed with cancer early this year. Wired News
Vacation beckons…
My family and I will be away, and I will not be adding anything here, for a week. Please follow me back here on the 5th or the 6th. My best to all my readers until then.
A Role for the U.N. in Iraq’s Future:
“The best — and perhaps only — hope of leaving Iraq with a democratic political structure is by making its rebuilding an international effort.” NY Times editorial
And: Hearts and Minds: “Americans should be able to find common ground, for all sides dream of an Iraq that is democratic and an America that is again admired around the world.” — Nicholas Kristof, NY Times op-ed
Delusions of Power:
“In the last two years Dick Cheney and other top officials have gotten it wrong on energy, on the economy — and their mistakes keep getting bigger.” — Paul Krugman, NY Times op-ed
Smallpox Vaccination Is Linked to 2nd Death:
“A second health care worker has died of a heart attack after receiving a smallpox vaccination, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported yesterday…
She was among seven health workers to suffer heart problems 4 to 18 days after receiving the vaccine voluntarily, as part of the United States’ effort to prepare medical teams to cope with bioterror attacks. Three volunteers had heart attacks, including another woman who died; two had chest pain; and two had heart inflammation.
In addition, 10 military recruits had heart inflammation after being vaccinated for the first time; all recovered, said Col. John D. Grabenstein, the Army’s deputy director for vaccines…” NY Times
Shades of grey:
Could Hans Blix have done anything to stop the war? An interview with The Guardian:
His office, on the 31st floor of the United Nations, with a striking view of the Chrysler building, is decorated with aerial pictures of Baghdad. “A lot of these buildings have probably been bombed now,” says his press spokesman, dashing his pen across vast swathes of the city, pointing out the government ministries.
Blix believes there was nothing he could have said that would have convinced the Americans not to go to war at this time. “They would have wanted a clear-cut guarantee that [the Iraqis] did not have weapons of mass destruction,” he says. “I could not have given them a guarantee that if they had waited a few months more there would have been results.”
Could anyone have given them a guarantee?
“Not at this stage. Now we’ll see if occupation does it. If we had come out and said on the basis of what we had and said, ‘We can solve this in three months,’ they would have said, ‘You’re not credible.’ “
Two Movements:
The new alliance between anti-war protesters and foreign-policy realists: “What does an antiwar movement do with a war likely to be over in a matter of weeks? Plenty, it turns out.
The antiwar movement is actually two rather different movements that partly overlap. One movement is in the streets and on the internet — often led by radicals, sometimes joined uneasily by liberals. The other is pragmatic and mainstream. Both were nonplussed but only temporarily by the outbreak of war, and neither has gone away.” — Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect
Perle Out.
Rumsfeld Adviser Resigns as Head of Pentagon Panel: Richard N. Perle has resigned as chairman of an influential Pentagon advisory board following disclosures of business dealings that included his meeting with a Saudi arms dealer and a contract with a bankrupt telecommunications company seeking Defense Department permission to be sold to Chinese investors. NY Times Is this another news event driven by webloggers’ revelations and hounding?
War game was fixed to ensure American victory, claims general:
The biggest war game in US military history, staged this month at a cost of £165m with 13,000 troops, was rigged to ensure that the Americans beat their “Middle Eastern” adversaries, according to one of the main participants. General Paul Van Riper, a retired marine lieutenant-general, told the Army Times that the sprawling three-week millennium challenge exercises, were “almost entirely scripted to ensure a [US] win”. Guardian/UK I was pointed back to this August, 2002 article by someone who speculates that this might have something to do with the hard time the invading forces are having this week. The current war is scripted too, only they failed to persuade the majority of the players.
US defeat in Iraq ‘inevitable’ — Ritter
The United States does not have the military means to take over Baghdad and will lose the war against Iraq, former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter said.
“The United States is going to leave Iraq with its tail between its legs, defeated. It is a war we can not win,” he told private radio TSF in an interview broadcast here on Tuesday evening.
(..)
“Every time we confront Iraqi troops we may win some tactical battles, as we did for ten years in Vietnam, but we will not be able to win this war, which in my opinion is already lost,” Ritter added. News24.com (South Africa)
To clarify:
Rebecca Blood wrote in response to my ‘conscientious objector’ post below to point out, quite rightly, that ‘conscientious objector’ status requires a military draft, and doubted the appropriateness of the word in an all-volunteer military. To which I would reply that this is true legalistically, but I was using the term conscientious objector more figuratively — no, really more literally — to indicate any who come to have objections as a matter of conscience. It is also worth pointing out that a volunteer army does not necessarily fill up with people in ethical agreement with their country’s military policy. More typically, enlistees, especially in peacetime, have not troubled themselves about the morality of joining the military in the face of the opportunity it represents. Rebecca comments, “But I have difficulty seeing military enlistees as unwilling victims in a terribly unfair scheme: a willingness to fight when called is an important–and obvious–part of the deal, not a hidden clause in the contract.” I beg to differ. Recruitment ads emphasize all sorts of fun and exciting things one will experience as a member of the military, and none of them are warfighting. And, even without conscription, many joining the military do not experience themselves as having much choice in the matter. Lives are being wasted tragically for misguided and devious reasons, and it is a comforting illusion to tell ourselves that dying soldiers knowingly assumed the risk. In that sense, developing and acting on conscientious objections is an opportunity waiting to happen. Rebecca: “…if you are in the military and have suddenly come to the conclusion that killing other people isn’t the career you had hoped for, objector.org is interested in helping you.” (And don’t forget, parents, while we’re on the topic, that the ‘No Child Left Behind’ Act requires schools to give military recruiters and the Selective Service access to the names of all students unless the parents specifically notify the school that sharing their child’s name is prohibited.)
As Rebecca points out, the Selective Service has always recognized the moral validity of objecting to war on the grounds that it is wrong — with several important constraints. It is fairly easy if you are a devout member of an established religious church or sect with well-defined pacifist doctrine. But if you come by your war objection through a less conventional route, the burden is upon you to justify it. During the Vietnam era, when I registered as a C.O., I had to jump through hoops to make the argument on the basis of my homegrown and eclectic theology, not exactly Jewish, not exactly Christian, Buddhist or animistic, nor secular humanist… (These days, as a mental health professional, I might also construct an objector’s position based on my familiarity with the core tenet of post-traumatic stress disorder, that something unutterable is done to the essence of being human by exposure to experiences outside the bounds of what it is equipped to endure, but that’s for a different conversation…) . And the Selective Service has always been inflexible about the requirement of absolute pacifism, i.e. objection to all war rather than a specific war. To make an intellectually honest assertion that one deserved C.O. status, one would have to search one’s soul for a position of conscience on challenging but predictable questions like the one about intervening against Hitler. Again, in asking here where the conscientious objectors are, I am broadening the term to encompass the plausible position of objecting specifically to this illegitimate ill-intentioned ill-advised morally compromised dirty little war. But, Rebecca, you’re right, it is probably more confusing than it is worth to have called them ‘conscientious objectors.’
Ill Logic?
“I have complete faith that the US military, along with the help our allies are providing, will wind up dislodging Saddam Hussein from power, hopefully sooner rather than later. When that happens, the aspirants to American empire who have sunk their claws into the current administration will no doubt crow about their general brilliance. Before it’s too late, let’s be sure to remember that they’re the same people who thought that no ground invasion was needed to overthrow Iraq’s government — that we could just send a few guns over and provide air support and the Iraqi opposition would take care of these things themselves. It was the military that demanded that the invasion be an all out effort involving lots of troops on the ground. Of all the things the Bush administration has gotten wrong, listening to the military on this one is one thing they got right.” rc3
Colburn, whose levelheaded clarity I usually appreciate, goes on to make a ‘lesser of evils’ argument I find insidious. Bringing down the Iraqi regime with a proxy war or airstrikes would be far worse for the Iraqi people than the status quo invasion scenario, he suggests, since the ground forces are taking such measures to prevent civilian casualties. Is this war a lesser of evils? Only if you buy into many questionable assumptions about inevitability or necessity. And then there’s the one about how long we are going to be able to afford the luxury of preventing civilian casualties. Although we’re denying that we targeted them (which isn’t really the point, is it?) and suggesting that it might have been an Iraqi missile rather than one of ours (will we go on to say they did it deliberately to frame the US and reap the propaganda benefits?), at least fifteen were killed in an errant missile strike today on a Baghdad marketplace. CNN
It also may be a fiction to assume that the efforts to avoid civilian casualties come from our commanders’ humanitarian scruples. I think the policy is more likely to be a function of our efforts to preserve the last tattered vestiges of the goodwill of the civilized world we used to have as our allies. In other words, a function of the Bush administration’s utter failure at diplomacy leaving the military in the untenable position of not being able to defend themselves adequately because of stringent PR restraints. As such, our calculation of the profit-risk balance of maintaining that effort may be very volatile. Prepare yourself to see the Pentagon quietly ignoring such constraints when it is expedient or necessary; and, of course, taking no responsibility for the consequences to the Iraqi populace.
Not Our Fight: William Saletan enters a plea that we continue to fight a different war than the Iraqis in this sense. This would be a morally determinative choice to differentiate us from the terrorists, he feels. He is not so naive as to believe the unsubstantiated (and ludicrous) claims of direct links between the Iraqi regime and al Qaeda, but follow his logic. I’m not sure, however, we haven’t definitively lost the battle to be any better than the terrorists we claim to oppose already.
(I)n 1991 we and the Iraqis were waging the same war: They were trying to destroy us, and we were trying to destroy them. Now we’re waging two different wars: Saddam Hussein wants a war of destruction while we want a war of decapitation that leaves Iraq intact. The current “war” is really a struggle between those two wars. If we fight a war of destruction — even if we “win” it — we lose.
Remember this as you’re reading the latest news or watching the latest video from Iraq. Many developments that look like gains are really losses, and many that look like losses are really gains. When U.S. or British troops go into Basra, Umm Qasr, or Nasiriyah to finish off Fedayeen fighters, that’s a loss, not a gain. Every shot we fire in a city, and every bomb we drop, increases the probability of civilian casualties, which in turn raise the level of civilian anger against us and make it harder to separate Saddam from his people. Every day we spend hunting snipers in outlying cities, even if we kill them all, is a day in which we’re stalled on the way to Baghdad while U.S.-friendly regimes in the Muslim world grow more unstable
(…)
The killers of Sept. 11 exploited the fact that they were willing to shed the blood of civilians and we weren’t. The killers of Basra, An Nasiriyah, and Baghdad are exploiting the same difference. While ruthlessness in attack is worse than ruthlessness in defense, the logic of asymmetry binds them together. I don’t know whether Saddam’s henchmen should go to The Hague for sponsoring terrorism. But they certainly ought to go there for using human shields.. Slate
Off Target:
“(The charges in) William Safire’s recent two part series “The French Connection” in The New York Times, reprinted in the International Herald Tribune… have been relayed around the globe, in newspapers, magazines and Web sites, fueling the rising storm of outrage against the French.
But Safire’s double broadside is more Francophobia than fact. He is way off beam; his articles are filled with error and innuendo. What makes matters worse is that editors at both The New York Times and the International Herald Tribune knew there were serious questions about Safire’s charges, yet the papers went ahead and published the second part of his series.” TomPaine Are people finding any serious Francophobia out there? Even the most pro-Bush pro-war people I brush elbows with seem disdainful of the ‘Freedom fries’ jingoism, and I’m hearing about all sorts of corporate lobbying on behalf of the preservation of the trans-Atlantic alliance, since European subsidiaries of American firms are usually a significant contributor to their gross.
I’m trying
a commenting system here again, using Enetation. I played around with several of these when they first started appearing several years ago and they seemed to slow down the loading of the weblog page intolerably for me and at least some of FmH’s readers. There was also a question of the intermittent overload of the comments server making the comments system unavailable. Recently, I woke up to the possibility that these systems have matured; they’re being used broadly and I don’t hear any griping. I don’t know how Enetation compares with some of the other tools out there; perhaps, if you have one to recommend, mention it in a comment to this post? I’m particularly interested in knowing if you have found a system to be stable, reliable and perennially accessible. In any case, can at least a few people try to post test comments to this post to be sure that Enetation works for everyone?
I won’t know if this is slowing down page loads for some of you with a slower net connection unless you tell me either. Please do. For now, I’ll keep the little ‘speech balloon’ icon which lets you send me an email comment on a post too, but if Enetation or something similar works out, expect that to go away. I much prefer the potential for cross-conversation among my readers. So please try out the system…
The Saddam Show –
R.I.P. Daniel Patrick Moynihan:
Former Senator dies at 76: “The lanky, pink-faced lawmaker, who preferred bow ties and professorial tweeds to the Senate uniform of lawyer-like pinstripes, reveled in speaking his mind and defying conventional labels.
Known for his ability to spot emerging issues and trends, Moynihan was a leader in welfare reform and transportation initiatives, and an authority on Social Security and foreign policy.” The Nando Times
Urban Warfare:
The Underdog’s First Battlefield Choice: “Since Stalingrad and Berlin in the Second World War, to the American assault on Hue, Vietnam, in 1968 and on to the war zones of Beirut or Nablus, Belfast or Mogadishu, urban warfare has become a central part of the underdog’s arsenal— a fight without scruples for the high ground of propaganda that exploits civilian losses and denies the intruder’s superior might.
And it is precisely that messy, manipulative and murderous kind of fighting between conventional forces and elusive defenders that could beckon Americans as they approach Baghdad.” NY Times In fact, a street-to-street battle negates almost every technological advantage the US brings to asymmetric warfare.
High-Tech Media Go to War:
“The Pentagon might be showing off a lot of cool, high-tech weaponry in the Iraq war, but it’s the journalists who are putting technology to use in ways not imaginable in the 1991 Persian Gulf War.” — Cynthia Webb, Washington Post Links to many other news stories showing off the changing face of battle coverage.
Ex-military say force is too light:
Commanders from the 1991 Gulf War say the Pentagon has deviated from expectations by advancing with fewer troops. With the Pentagon rushing thousands of soldiers from Texas to the Persian Gulf, a number of 1991 Gulf War ground commanders said Monday that the U.S. invasion force moving rapidly to Baghdad is too small and should have included at least one additional heavy Army division.
“In my judgment, there should have been a minimum of two heavy divisions and an armored cavalry regiment on the ground. That’s how our doctrine reads,” said retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who commanded the 24th Mechanized Infantry Division during the 1991 Gulf War.
(…)
McCaffrey’s comments are part of a heated debate among current and former ground commanders and strategists about a war plan built upon the concept of a “rolling start,” in which combat actions begin before the arrival of all ready forces, which are then brought forward or held back, depending upon how the battle proceeds.The Wichita Eagle Every media piece second-guessing the military strategists hastens to add, however, and in almost identical language, that the “ultimate outcome is not in doubt,” only how long it will take. I wonder…
Related: Mark Kleiman raises some interesting “questions from a non-specialist” and, in doing, displays a deeper incertitude similar to my own:
1. To what extent were war plans, and especially the relative economy of ground forces, shaped by overoptimism about the prospects for a coup, mass Iraqi defections/surrenders, and uprisings in support of the liberating forces? I know Barry McCaffrey has been complaining about this. Is he right?
2. Were the troops in the field given overoptimistic views of the likely reaction of the enemy? (There have been several reports of US soldiers surprised that the Iraqis were fighting back.)
3. If there was overoptimism, to what extent was it shaped by a White House intolerant of bearers of bad tidings?
What strikes me as odd is that the very same people who described SH’s rule as “Stalinist” — which seems to be a good description — also expected the regime to fold quickly in the face of an attack. That never really added up. Does the name “Stalingrad” ring a bell?
Phil Carter, an ex-military officer whose weblog, Intel Dump, is attracting a fair bit of attention, answers here. In part:
Mark, you may be eerily prescient. Stalin was undoubtedly a more evil tyrant than Saddam Hussein, but the Soviet people fought for him anyway. Why? Largely because World War II was a war of national survival for the Russian people. This kind of war mobilizes people to fight in a way like no other. America believed after Pearl Harbor that it was fighting WWII as such a war, and thus no cost was too high. We did not feel the same way in Vietnam; our enemies did. Israel’s performance in the Golan Heights in 1973 provides another instructive example of how armies fight in wars of national survival when their back is against the wall. Soldiers and civilians fight hard when they believe in their hearts and minds that their nation, their family, and their way of life is at risk. Whatever atrocities Saddam has inflicted, he has managed to convince his people that they are fighting a war of national survival.
There’s more: “Is the Allied Strategy in Difficulty? The world’s generals give their verdict.” Independent/UK
US general with Iraq role linked to hardline Israelis:
“The retired general named as civilian governor of occupied Iraq has visited Israel on a trip paid for by a right-wing group that strongly backs an American military presence in the Middle East.
Lieutenant-General Jay Garner, the co-ordinator for civilian administration in Iraq, put his name in October 2000 to a statement blaming Palestinians for the outbreak of Israeli-Palestinian violence and saying that a strong Israel was an important security asset to the United States.
The statement was sponsored by the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (Jinsa), which pays for retired US military officers to visit Israel for security briefings by Israeli officials and politicians. Richard Perle, one of the architects of the US invasion of Iraq, is a member of the institute’s board of advisers, as was Vice-President Dick Cheney before he took office in 2001.” Independent/UK [props to One of Four]
Where are the ‘conscientious objectors’?
Exactly, Brooke! Bravo. I too have been very uncomfortable with the “Support our Troops” mantra. You mention “only following orders”, of course, deliberately evoking Nuremburg, but the better analogy would be Vietnam. It took courage for segments of the peace movement then to demand moral conscience (read: noncollaboration) from the troops, but it was the right thing to do. Rather than the gospel which said that returning Vietnam vets suffered from their nonrecognition and abandonment by the American people, many suffered more from their own ethical misgivings about what they had been forced to do in the name of justice and freedom (just as heads of state and military leaders find the courage, when retired and no longer ’embedded’, to become peacemakers). If there were a way to communicate some pressure of conscience to the ethically unformed and challenged 18- and 19-year-olds who are dying and killing in Iraq, that would be “supporting our troops.”
Here’s more on ‘following orders’, relative to the US POWs shown to the media by Iraq:
Al-Jazeera satellite channel showed a US soldier lying prone on a camp bed in a bare concrete room, his face covered in blood, wounds in his side and arm.
He was propped up for the interview by a reporter from Iraqi television. Asked his name, he replied haltingly: “Edgar, my name is Edgar.” He said he was from Texas.
Another who identified himself as “Private First Class Miller”, was asked why he had gone to Iraq. In a strained voice he said: “I was told to come here.” They were from the 507th Maintenance Company, from Fort Bliss, Texas, rather than a combat outfit. “I just followed orders,” he said. “I came to fix broke things. I don’t want to kill anybody.” Guardian/UK
On the topic of the media display of the POWs, US officials lost no time arguing that it was a violation of the clause in the Geneva Convention proscribing humiliation of prisoners to show them on television (whereas, our televising the long lines of Iraqi POWs the prior day was not?). The indignity to which they were exposed, however, was not by the Iraqis but the indignity of war itself and, moreso, of a war with only the thinnest veneer of a lying rationale, if that is becoming clear to our forces there. (Can you imagine that US infantry forces might start scratching their heads about why the Iraqis are not welcoming us as their liberators? why, if we were in such imminent danger of a CBW attack fro Iraq that we had to preemptively disarm them, there has been no deployment of CBW on the battlefield yet?) I would think US families and authorities would actually want visual confirmation that missing soldiers were captured and alive when that was the case. The ICRC agrees that media display of POWs does not automatically amount to indignity:
Amanda Williamson, a Red Cross spokeswoman, said it would not automatically be a contravention. “There’s an article that prisoners should not be exposed to public curiosity, but this was not envisaged to include the media, so it’s not a violation per se to put them on TV.” Whether they were being exposed to public curiosity would depend on how they appeared on TV’ [via also not found]
Ginsberg’s Howl Heard in Court:
On this day in 1957, U.S. Customs agents seized 520 copies of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl [text here] on the grounds of obscenity…, leading to a trial that October — before a judge who was a Sunday school teacher, and who had recently been in the news for sentencing five shoplifters to a screening of The Ten Commandments. Nonetheless, it was soon clear that the prosecution had little response to the long line of scholars and critics who testified to the literary importance of Howl — many comparing it in importance to Leaves of Grass – and the judge’s ruling was unequivocal:
I do no believe that “Howl” is without even “the slightest redeeming social importance.” The first part of “Howl” presents a picture of a nightmare world; the second part is an indictment of those elements in modern society destructive of the best qualities of human nature; such elements are predominantly identified as materialism, conformity and mechanization leading toward war. . . . It ends in a plea for holy living. . . . In considering material claimed to be obscene it is well to remember the motto: “Honi soit qui mal y pense” [Evil to him who thinks evil]. Today in Literature
I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by
madness, starving hysterical naked,
dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn
looking for an angry fix,
angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly
connection to the starry dynamo in the machin-
ery of night,
who poverty and tatters and hollow-eyed and high sat
up smoking in the supernatural darkness of
cold-water flats floating across the tops of cities
contemplating jazz,
who bared their brains to Heaven under the El and
saw Mohammedan angels staggering on tene-
ment roofs illuminated,
who passed through universities with radiant cool eyes
hallucinating Arkansas and Blake-light tragedy
among the scholars of war,
who were expelled from the academies for crazy &
publishing obscene odes on the windows of the
skull… [more]
Synapse Chip Taps into Brain Chemistry:
The reality of the electroneurological interface is at hand. Jack in! New Scientist
Pot-Calling-Kettle Dept:
Whenever Jeff Jarvis accuses someone else of intellectual snobbery, I have to laugh. Especially when a former TV Guide writer thinks he understands the subtleties of the subliminal effects of the media better than any of a number of psychologically astute types who have made it their life’s work to do so. I’m talking, of course, about Jarvis’ kneejerk rejection of the idea that media coverage of war can desensitize us to its horror. He reduces the argument to a ridiculous caricature (no one but the Doctor can tell the difference between media entertainment and reality) and thinks he’s been profound when he lambasts the caricature.
The Coalition of the Fawning:
In This War, We Report What They Decide — ‘In the unwritten code of media bigfoots, name-brand journalists don’t criticize each other. But there was Breslin, in his column, taking Tom Brokaw to task for a tacky and exploitative interview with the mother of a dead serviceman. For good measure, he threw in the texts of some signs he had seen at a New York peace march: ““U.S. Media – The Coalition of the Fawning”; “TV Networks-Stop Using the War to Up Your Ratings”; and “Networks Don’t Cover Peace.”
No human with an ounce of emotion can watch young kids under fire and not respect them, fear for them, feel for them. That’s the reason we need skeptical journalists on the home front to counterbalance the ‘embeds’ who will, quite naturally, start feeling parental, protective, and proud of the troops they cover. The Administration understands this all too well.’ TomPaine
Kurd-Sellout Watch:
From the incisive Ethel: “The latest installment of Timothy Noah’s Kurd sell-out watch reports something I’ve been predicting for well over a year: the Cabal will not only sell out the Iraqi Kurds (again) but also be *SHOCKED! SHOCKED AND APPALLED!* to discover that the Kurds have really been terrorists all along. The initial trial balloon for this is being floated at – where else – the War Street Journal.”
An Allergic Reaction To The Bush Doctrine —
Why the Dogs of Cyberwar stay leashed:
As the U.S. and U.K. campaign to “shock and awe” the Iraqi leadership and population continues, as “bunker buster” bombs hit the Iraqi Presidential palaces and coalition forces attempt to disrupt the command and control of the Iraqi military, one widely-reported offensive capability is nowhere in sight: the United States has not yet officially used the tools of cyberwarfare.
The U.S. military has reportedly developed impressive offensive cyberwar capabilities, including the ability to use microwave or other electronic impulses to disrupt or destroy electronic components. If this is true, why have we not yet seen an all out cyberwar? The Register
The Al Jazeera images of US P.O.W.s:
There is no suitable measurement for the horror we at truthout.org felt upon viewing these photographs. We have seen a great many wretched things come to pass in the last two years, but little of that – perhaps only 9/11 itself – can rival the woe brought by these images. These are our American children, our sons and daughters, lost in a conflict far from home. The editors and writers of this publication have stood, since the first rumbles of war were heard this past summer, staunchly against an attack on Iraq. Our reasons are myriad, and have been carefully and meticulously detailed on these pages. Manifest among our reasons was a dread that images such at these would become all too common.
There are few areas of service to America more honorable than that of military service. Our sons and daughters step to the line and take their oath because they believe their nation to be the best on earth. Implicit in that oath, however, is a leap of faith on the part of these troops. They trust that they will not be used, that their lives will not be spent, in actions and wars that do not merit the shedding of their blood. They trust their leaders when they put on the uniform. In this matter of war on Iraq, that trust has been betrayed, and these children of ours have paid the highest price for that betrayal.
We take no joy from showing these images. We mean absolutely no disrespect to the brave soldiers who have lost their lives, to their families and friends, and to those who continue to fight. We honor them in our souls, and thank them for their sacrifice and trust. At the end of the day, however, we are an information service. These pictures vividly demonstrate the cost of war in Iraq upon our beloved children. If you would know what war is, what this war has become, then you must look and understand.
May God be with these men and women, and with their families, and with us all. truthout
You can click on a link to go on to view the images (which are not only of the captured but of the killed) …or not.
Why I Hate Dr. Sears:
“…I read The Baby Book. And in my sleep-deprived brain, I came to the conviction that Dr. Sears was right about everything–even though I would have preferred it if he weren’t–and that if I really loved my child as much as I was certain I did, I would quit my job and sell my husband’s camera equipment so I could invest in more nursing bras, since I’d be needing them for some years to come. Through Dr. Sears’s eyes, I could see that my frequent desire to escape from my screaming infant meant that I was insufficiently bonded with her. That was a horrible thought. But I also knew the cure prescribed by Dr. Sears: ask those around me to lift some of the burdens of cooking and laundry from my sagging shoulders, so I could spend more time breastfeeding and sleeping with the baby. Then undoubtedly I would begin to love her the way nature intended me to: sublimely, unfailingly, with all my other interests in life falling away like dandruff to leave only the single pure desire to give my daughter everything she needed, everything she wanted, everything that every baby should have.
Oh, I wasn’t completely taken in. I figured out within the first couple of chapters that Dr. Sears’s whole family-bed-sleeping-exclusive-breastfeeding-non-working-mother thing was a little extreme, and that his occasional nods to diversity (“do what works for your family”) were probably inserted at the insistence of his editor. I never took him to be any counterpart to beloved Dr. Benjamin Spock, who assured a generation of mothers that they were doing just fine, that babies were resilient.” Brain.Child
When Teaching the Ethics of War Is Not Academic:
…(I)n the spring of 1998 I developed a new elective course, “The Code of the Warrior,” which in turn inspired my book, The Code of the Warrior: Exploring Warrior Values Past and Present. The aim of both the course and the book is to examine the values that are explicit and implicit within the “warrior ethos” and to try to make sense of those values in a modern American context. My students and I study the warrior’s codes associated (in fiction or in fact) with the ancient Greeks, the Romans, the Vikings, the Celts, medieval knights, Zulus, Native Americans, Chinese monks, and Japanese samurai. We talk about how the purpose of a code is to restrain warriors, for their own good as much as for the good of others. The essential element of a warrior’s code is that it must set definite limits on what warriors can and cannot do if they want to continue to be regarded as warriors, not murderers or cowards. For the warrior who has such a code, certain actions remain unthinkable, even in the most dire or extreme circumstances. Chronicle of Higher Education
Here’s one more reason
to be anti-war. Internet Week
Power tool:
“Perhaps the least surprising thing about the second Gulf war is that it began with a volley of Tomahawk missiles. Since they were first used in the 1991 conflict, they have become the ultimate symbol of US military power. Oliver Burkeman reveals how a hi-tech weapon that promised blood-free combat changed the way America thinks about war.” Guardian/UK
Many opposed to war find the adulation of precision-guided weaponry to be like the worship of Mammon, mollifying — realistically or not — those concerned with civilian casualties and helping to make war more conceivable and thus more likely. The war planners are able to think the unthinkable, and for the American consumers it is treated as little more than a video game. But this is nothing new; those who opposed the Vietnam War frequently cited the impersonality of high-altitude bombing as sanitizing war then too and making it more palatable to the warmongers and the viewing audience. In Gulf War I and as the buildup to Gulf War II mounted, many wsere lulled by the thought that, in addition to higher-and-higher-tech, we might be perfecting lower-and-lower-bodycount war as well. The gospel was that, after Vietnam, the American public would not accept a war with virtually any casualties; and that it was feasible to prosecute a war without losing our own (except from those pesky helicopter crashes that seem to happen so often; we must be skimping horribly on our maintenance budget, or our training for technicians, despite soaring defense expenditures). That turns out to be laughable, arrogant, deluded thinking. But it remains to be seen, as fierce Iraqi resistance persists and US body counts defy all expectations, whether it will turn the tide of popular opinion.
“Be the first one on your block
To have your boy come home in a box…”— Country Joe MacDonald
Operation Anglosphere:
The Sound of Silence?
“I don’t think it will be anything like radio during the Vietnam War, when radio was the voice of the revolution and the voice of the other side. Now you’re not going to get any of that: you’re going to get the voice of the corporate world.” NY Times
US Believes Russians in Baghdad Aiding Iraq: Europe Russia Wires Middle East Columnists Search the World Special Reports
“The United States believes Russian company technicians are in Baghdad helping the Iraqis operate electronic jamming systems that could impair the U.S.-led war against Iraq, a U.S. official said on Monday.” Washington Post
Again, the law of unintended consequences of our overweening rush to unilateral war; could this escalate to a direct US-Russian rupture and unimaginable widening of the conflict? The Russians have investments to protect in Iraq, and if they are jamming GPS signals, this is a big deal; our so-smart bombs are not-so-smart anymore. Of course, however, Russia denies doing this; perhaps a third party diverted Russian technlogy to the Iraqis?
Something Suspicious Is in the Air:
“Little did I know that my inquiry would become a suspicious activity in itself.” — Courtland Milloy, Washington Post
What Windows knows:
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For those who oppose war, what now?
“Are we to ignore our own consciences because he has determined to ignore our protests?” — Peter Gomes (Harvard University Chaplain), Boston Globe
Crimes of War:
Action Alert:
“According to a Drug Policy Alliance action alert, a pair of bills moving through Congress could effectively spell the end of live music and dancing in the United States.” Take measures in three easy steps at this site.
Perle’s Plunder Blunder
Maureen Dowd: “
Experts to hunt for banned Iraqi weapons:
“Teams of technical experts, now preparing enter Iraq, are on a search and destroy mission – to find and secure Saddam Hussein’s alleged chemical and biological weapons. They are likely to follow closely behind the US and UK ground troops who entered Iraq on Thursday.
Former UN weapons inspector Charles Duelfer is preparing for service with the teams. He told New Scientist from Kuwait that “finding the weapons themselves may well take some time – unless of course, some are used”.
The “mobile exploitation teams” are being organised by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), the part of the US Department of Defense that handles weapons inspections under treaties, and helps destroy old Soviet weapons. New Scientist
Related: US Checking Several Possible Chemical Sites:
“U.S. forces pressed to find the first cache of Saddam Hussein’s chemical and biological weapons, seizing a suspected chemical factory in southern Iraq and checking other sites based on leads from captured Iraqis and documents.
Officials cautioned it was premature to conclude any forbidden weapons had been located.” The Star (Malaysia)
Thre’s more: US Interviewing POWs to Find Chemical Sites:
“The U.S. military is moving quickly to interrogate more than 2,000 Iraqi POWs — including two generals — for information about the location of chemical and biological weapons.
But so far, no tips have led U.S. forces to uncover any of Saddam Hussein’s deadliest weapons. ” USA Today
And:
Chemical weapon find report ‘premature’: US
Reports that US troops have found a suspected chemical factory in Iraq were “premature”, the Pentagon said today.
Officials were trying to determine whether the plant, near the city of An Najaf, which US troops reached today on a push to Baghdad, was involved in making chemical weapons, officials said.
(…)Meanwhile, Ewen Buchanan, spokesman for UN weapons inspectors, said the weapons inspectors are not aware of any large-scale chemical sites which could be used to make chemical weapons in An Najaf. However, there are many such dual-use sites in other parts of the country because of Iraq’s petrochemical industry.” Sydney Morning Herald