Kill Putin!

The Guns of August
Americans do not mind a war. They gained in every war: they had sustainable losses, they preserved their industrial base and they profited by their victories.

by ISRAEL SHAMIR, Counterpunch

(AP)

(AP)

Moscow.

[O]n the Pushkin square in central Moscow, McDonald’s, this symbol of Pax Americana, has been shut down this week. It was opened 23 years ago, as the USSR collapsed, and the unipolar world of One Superpower came into being. Soviet people queued for hours to get in and try this divine foreign food. They were so innocent, so inexperienced, the Russians of yesteryear! For 23 long years, the US has ruled the world alone, while McDonald’s served its burgers. Meanwhile Russia has changed. McDonald’s is no longer an attraction for world-weary Muscovites. Across the Pushkin square, there is now another fashionable eatery, Café Pouchkine, serving the best Russian haute cuisine. In a tit-for-tat, the cheeky Russians had established a new Café Pouchkine in Paris, on Boulevard St Germain, teaching the French the joys of Russian cooking.

The Americans did not accept the challenge lightly. Kill Putin, called American pundits. They proposed to strike against Russian forces from the NATO bases in the Baltics. Pentagon extolled [the] advantages of the first nuclear strike. The Russians gloomily prepared for the worst. In a quiet dacha summer-house to the west of Moscow, my Russian scientist friends discussed Andrey Sakharov’s plan codenamed The Wave to wash away the entire Eastern seaboard of the US by means of a giant tsunami (yes, it is the same Sakharov). They lauded the Perimeter, the Doomsday weapon system Russia inherited from the USSR ensuring total destruction of the US even if Russia were erased.  New and secret weapon systems were mentioned. August 2014 increasingly reminded humanity the August of 1914 or August 1939, the countdown to a Great War. At that time, the conciliatory tone of President Putin’s Crimea speech signalled that the danger of general conflagration abated somewhat. Russia stepped back from abyss.

Russian-watchdog-McDonald’s-claimed-McDonald’s-restaurants-had-breached-numerous-sanitary-laws

Ostensibly this is a duel of nerves between Russia and the US; though many states, great and small, from China to Bolivia, are interested in dismantling US hegemony, Russia is the only one with political will, military clout and economical stamina to mess with the bully.

In order to preserve its place of the ultimate consumer at the top of food chain, the US wants to cut Russia down to size; publicly humiliate Putin and remove him; to assert its superiority; to harm European economies and strengthen their submis

(McDonald's.ru)

(McDonald’s.ru)

sion to Washington; to stop loose talk of its decline, to eliminate opposition; to turn the treatment of Russia into a case study for all possible challengers.

Russia’s aims are not so grand: the country wants to live peacefully its own way and to be respected. This desire has been summed up by its opponents as “challenging the architecture of the post-cold-war order”, and it is probably true, for “the order” denies every country its right to peace and independence.

Americans do not mind a war. They gained in every war: they had sustainable losses, they preserved their industrial base and they profited by their victories. Their world wars and their recent wars: Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria were profitable. A war between Russia and Europe with some American support has attractive sides, for them.

Russians want to avoid war. They had hard and bad experience in world wars: Russia collapsed in the course of the First world war, and suffered a lot in the Second one. In both cases, their development was retarded, a lot of human misery and economical disaster befell them. They did not enjoy their smaller wars: none gave them an advantage or profit of any kind.

Paradoxically, Russian desire to avoid war brings war closer to home. The US military and politicians do not mind to play chicken with Russia, as they are sure: Russians will chicken out. This false certainty makes them more daring and fearless with each round.

Russia is not alone. China usually supports its moves, India under Modi gets closer, Latin America builds its alliance with Russia, Iran looks for friendship in Moscow. Equally important, in every state there are people who are dissatisfied with the existing post-cold-war set-up of diminished sovereignty. They are not too far from power in France, where Marine Le Pen makes gains in elections. Americans who prefer to live their own way, just like the US did before the WWII, a normal country, not the world sheriff are potential Russian allies, as well.

The US is not alone. It has its faithful allies, England the devoted, Saudi Arabia the wealthy, Israel the cunning, – and a plethora of important politicians in all countries on the globe that were supported and promoted by various US agencies. There is probably no country without US agents near [the apex of] power: Karl Bildt of Sweden, Tony Blair of the UK… In Russia they occupy many positions around the pinnacle of power, as they were installed during the Dark Years of Yeltsin’s abject rule. Whoever wants his country to serve the Empire is an American ally.

This is not only the US vs Russia, but Machine vs Man, as well. In plotting its foreign policy, the US increasingly relies upon the computer-driven game theory using its formidable data resources, while Russians prefer manual human control. Modern super-computers and surveillance techniques give the US an edge over Russia’s decision-making. Increasingly, President Obama appears to be a perfect cyborg of right appearance who says the right things in the right time and right place, but whose actions bear no relation to the words. I wouldn’t be amazed if in a length of time we shall learn that Obama has been the first humanoid robot in the helm of power. And if he is human, he is truly wonderful actor at pretending he is a robot. Even his wife Michelle and girls seem to be well-chosen movie props rather than live partner and children.

Putin is undoubtedly human and manly. One may dislike him, and a lot of people do, but there is no doubt about his belonging to the human race. This makes the chicken game less predictable than the US leadership assumes. After Saddam Hussein and Qaddafi’s horrible executions, much can be said in favour of an all-out nuclear war in comparison with defeat and surrender. And the young Russian generation does not share their fathers’ fear of war, and they do not mind to try some of the better toys their country has. Satan, anyone?

Moreover, the game theory (partly declassified in the last decade) is not perfect yet in cross-cultural conflicts, where antagonists may play different games. For instance, you play chess, but your opponent is kickboxing. This seems to be the case here. The US plays chicken with Russia, while Russia skilfully evades the horns of a charging American bull.

The US considers itself the exceptional city on the hill, the God’s Chosen, predestined to rule the world now and forever. History is over. They want to lecture and impose their rules upon the world.  The Soviets had similar ideas of Communism being predestined to complete History (for much more valid reasons—Eds), so the Cold War between two predestined states was a natural thing. Nowadays Russians do not believe in predestination. Countries rise, and go down, and form alliances, and there is no End of History in sight (the “End of History” was actually an ideological prop, a code used by capitalist ideologues to signify the “end of all class struggle,” and the arrival of a permanent “capitalism now and forever” regime.—Eds). The unipolar world is a fluke, now reverting to its normal multipolar state. The best and most comfortable arrangement is each country lives the way it likes. Leben und leben lassen.

For a long while the US was itching to teach Russia a lesson. Russia was not in full rebellion: it sold its oil and gas for US greenbacks, it kept profits in US Treasury papers, it observed the sanctions on Iran, it did not interfere with the despoiling of Libya. Still it was not sufficiently obedient. Russia blocked the destruction of Syria; it toyed with de-dollarisation of oil trade; it was for Christ and against gay marriages; cunningly it tried to undermine “Western unity” by building pipelines and bridges and bribing Europeans. In short, Russia forgot its collapse of 1991.

The Ukraine was chosen by the US as a suitable place to ignite a war, or at least to put Russia a couple of notches down and to get rid of Putin who had become by far too independent.

Ukraine

The US is winning ground while Russia loses ground in the Ukraine. Putin stubbornly refuses to send his troops in; he strains to come to terms with the US and the West over the future of Ukraine. Russia has been humiliated while proposing humanitarian aid to the besieged cities of the Donbass: its loaded lorries were delayed at the border, waiting for the Kiev regime permission to move forward. Half a million Ukrainian refugees crossed the Russian border, a few thousand civilians, militia and army personnel were killed in the confrontation.

The war for Donbass has not been especially successful for the Russians. Though the military reports are exceedingly obscure and conflicting, it seems the rebels are losing the battle against the Ukrainian army, as they have no external support. While the US claimed that the conflict is caused by Russian intervention, Russia tried to stay out of this conflict. Russia did not interfere in Kiev, when all Western ambassadors and ministers encouraged the revolt against the legitimate president. When Donbass flared up, Russia did not support it.

Putin did not want to take Donbass, in the first place, he did not want to take the Ukraine, secondly, and he did not want to resurrect the USSR, thirdly. He was forced to take the Crimea, the home base of the Russian fleet, an old part of Russia, populated by Russians, willing to join Russia, as otherwise Crimea would become a NATO navy base, but he did not want to proceed anywhere else. It did not help him: Putin is blamed internationally for the conflict and internally, for non-involvement and the subsequent defeat.

The revolt in Novorossia (the Russian-speaking half of the Ukraine) was a popular response to the West-inspired coup in Kiev, as this coup had a strong nationalist anti-Russian flavour. People of Novorossia would not try to secede if their language and culture weren’t persecuted, and if their ties to neighbouring Russia weren’t endangered. But they would not be able to proceed far, unless their revolt attracted some rebels looking for a cause, first of all – the military genius and a great romantic figure, Colonel Igor Strelkov, a “Russian Lawrence”.

russ-igor-strelkov

Igor Strelkov (left) read history in Moscow U, but he decided (like T.E. Lawrence) that it is more fun to make history. He fought in Transnistria, a small sliver of land between Moldova and Ukraine, defending local people from the onslaught of Moldavian nationalists. He volunteered to a Serb militia in Yugoslavia; he forced the indifferent Russian Army command to take him as an officer to the First Chechen war; he served in the Second Chechen war, and as a volunteer, he served in Syria and Dagestan. He writes beautifully, he is a superb tactician, able to lead soldiers by the strength of his charisma. His acquaintances describe him as a daredevil who does not care about money, comfort, family life or pleasures.

For Strelkov, the campaign in Novorossia had a taste of destiny. Like many Russians of his generation, he dreamed of resurrecting Russia as it was, whether the Soviet Union or pre-revolutionary Russian Empire (his preference). Like many Russians of his generation, he considered the Ukraine – a natural part of Russia, and an independent Ukrainian state – a misnomer. Despite his military rank, Strelkov was a free agent; he came to Novorossia without Putin’s blessing and he would come and stay against Putin’s will, too. We shall probably hear more about this remarkable man.

Strelkov was not alone: quite a few brave fighters from Ukraine and Russia came to join the rebels. Their initial success was a surprise for Putin’s administration. But the rebellion has failed to take over other provinces. In Odessa, the private army of Kolomoysky the ruthless oligarch burned some fifty unarmed rebel sympathisers alive in a grisly autodafe, and this cruel act scared the timid and jovial Odessites. In Kharkov, the governor made a deal with the Kiev regime and the uprising miscarried. It seems that Strelkov, though a military prodigy, was less than a wonderful demagogue. His dream of Great Russia did not make sense to the people of Novorossia. Yes, they spoke Russian, yes, they hated the Kiev and Lvov neo-nazi gangs, but they did not understand Strelkov’s Russian nationalism.

Without direct Russian involvement, a separatist movement in Novorossia was doomed to fail. There was a way to win: to conquer the whole of Ukraine, perhaps barring its far-west, and afterwards to make arrangements for federalisation or even for break-up. It could be done by using an inclusive ideology, acceptable for Donetsk, Odessa, Kiev, Poltava. Perhaps some neo-Soviet ideas could be employed; dissatisfaction with the oligarchs could be used. But Strelkov and other rebels with their firm rejection of Ukraine per se could not sweep the masses, and they did not even try to move towards Kiev or Kharkov.

Putin minimised Russia’s involvement in the Donbass war. He supported it much less than the United States supported the Texas revolution of 1835. His government tried to patch things up with the Kiev regime, but its ‘president’ steadfastly refused, under American orders. In Kiev, far-right radicals attacked the Russian embassy; and the regime’s armed forces began indiscriminate shelling and bombing of rebel cities. This was a great humiliation for Putin who promised to defend the Russians in failing Ukraine. His advisers, notably Sergey Glazyev, an expert on Ukraine, called to take a leaf from the Western book on Libya and impose a no-fly zone over Donbass. (In March 2011, as a rebellion flared up in Benghazi, the US and its allies imposed a no-fly zone over parts of Libya professing horror of Qaddafi’s ruthless shelling of the rebels. Russia and China abstained, and the French-British draft became the Security Council resolution authorising not only no-fly zone but “all necessary measures” to protect civilians from harm.) Kiev’s regime certainly killed more civilians than Qaddafi did; but Putin did not declare a no-fly zone, he did not use his firepower to suppress Kievan artillery shelling civilians.

Russia did very little for Donbass. Now, the Russians try to negotiate a conclusion to the Donbass war. The reports predict some autonomy for Donbass within Ukraine.

Many Russians are likely to be greatly disappointed. But some enterprises – worthy and unworthy – fail. Life is full of disappointments. I remember Ibo separatists of Biafra, who were eventually defeated by the central government. Separatists of Iranian Azerbaijan were defeated, though Josef Stalin supported them. The US failed to re-conquer Cuba. Argentines failed to liberate the Malvinas. This list is endless. Perhaps Russians have to wait for a better opportunity.

Did Putin chicken out?

Why did Putin give up on Novorossia? There is no doubt, Novorossia is extremely important for Russia. NATO troops and US missiles in Donetsk and Lugansk would endanger Russia. Its loss would threaten Russian defence industry as this part of Ukraine was fully integrated with Russia since the Tsar’s days. Was it fear of an all-out war? Did President Putin consider intervention in R2P mode a too dangerous step for his country?

The Western media machine is as powerful as nuclear weapons; when in full blast, it incapacitates leaders and countries.

In Putin’s view, Europe is more important than Ukraine. He is willing to sacrifice Donbass in the hope of gaining Berlin. For years, he courted old Europe. Even his Olympic games with its expensive show aimed at Europe: he wanted to tell the Europeans that Russia is part and parcel of Europe. Putin speaks German, he served in Germany as KGB operative in the last years of the USSR, and he has a soft spot for Germany.

The US propaganda machine called upon Europeans to defend Ukraine from the Russian bear, claiming the Russians will not stop in the Ukraine but continue to the Atlantic. This claim was quite successful; especially as it came after the very long anti-Russian media campaign (gays, orphans, toilets in Sochi etc.). Putin was afraid that by taking Ukraine he will alienate European public opinion. So he procrastinated, until the Malaysian liner disaster struck.

The liner

The Malaysian liner crash was a terrible disaster in many ways. Not so much per se: three hundred people are being killed each day in Gaza, Iraq, Donbass. Europeans and Americans forgot the Cuban air liner flight 455, or Iranian liner flight 655, or Libyan liner flight 114, as these liners were downed by “our side”. But this was a chance for the Western media machine to unleash its dreadful might. This machine is as powerful as nuclear weapons; when in full blast, it incapacitates leaders and countries. Thousands of TV channels, newspapers, radio programs, bloggers, internet sites, experts, ministers, presidents united in one single message, terrifying as vox Dei, though it’s not even a vox populi, just a device of the Masters of Discourse (mouthpieces for the “Masters of the Universe”—the finance capitalists‚), akin to big trumpets used by Romans to scare the barbarians.

All British newspapers ran photos of dead children with captions like “He was murdered by Putin”. Russians were overwhelmed by the furious blast of propaganda. People wept; some weak and emotional personalities admitted their guilt and lit candles in front of the Netherlands embassy in Moscow. Why Netherlands, if the liner was Malaysian? (Because Netherlands is a European “white” country, while Malays are not?) Why guilt, if nothing was known yet? Why did not we see pictures of slaughtered Gaza kids with caption “murdered by Netanyahu”, killed Iraqi kids “murdered by Blair”, murdered Afghani babies “murdered by Obama”? This is the incredible power of the Masters of Discourse: when they go full blast, people lose their minds and panic.

I welcomed every conspiratorial scheme in this case, as well as in 9/11 case. Not because I believe or even prefer this or other scheme. I see it as a useful device to release minds from the holding power of mass hysteria induced by the mass media. It is necessary to sow doubt in order to release minds and regain sanity.

A successful 9/11 conspiracy theory could have saved the lives of thousands of Muslims killed in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere. Recently Israeli Jews were induced into mass hysteria as three young settlers disappeared. This mass hysteria resulted in the half a million refugees and two thousand dead of Gaza. An attempt to sow doubt regarding the official story (claiming they were stolen by Mossad etc.) was an attempt to save lives. Likewise, every way to sow doubt regarding the Malaysian plane was a way to save lives.

Now, one month later, we know that there was no evidence of Russian involvement in the tragedy. There are strong pieces of evidence suggesting Kiev and US involvement, the best of them is a negative one: if Kiev and Washington would have a proof of Russian and/or the rebels’ guilt we would hear of it day and night. If you are interested in a detailed analysis of the disaster, you can read this one, recommended by our friends. I must admit I am not interested in details, for the reasons similar to those of Noam Chomsky regarding 9/11. While every explanation that differs from one promoted by Masters of Discourse is good because it breaks their hold on minds, the importance of such an event is greatly overblown by media. Anyway, the air liner is out of the news and out of mind by now, and this means it was an accident or a failed provocation by Kiev or Washington, for otherwise we would hear about it.

However, in real time the air liner disaster made a huge impact on Russian minds. For a while, I feared Putin would retire or be retired or removed from power, and Russia would fall apart. The US wanted to get rid of Putin and place a more pliable figure on the Russian throne, preferably an oligarch like Poroshenko.

Their thinking was summed up by Herbert E. Meyer, a spook (“an ex- Special Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence and Vice Chairman of the CIA’s National Intelligence Council”). He wrote:

“Since subtlety doesn’t work with Russians, the president and his European counterparts should also make absolutely clear that we have no interest whatever in how these people solve their Putin problem.  If [the oligarchs] can talk good old Vladimir into leaving the Kremlin with full military honors and a 21-gun salute — that would be fine with us.  If Putin is too stubborn to acknowledge that his career is over, and the only way to get him out of the Kremlin is feet-first, with a bullet hole in the back of his head — that would also be okay with us.”

Tension peaked at the most dramatic night between Sunday, July 20 and Monday, July 21, when Putin delivered a short message to the nation – at 01.40 am. For such an unusual time, it was quite a tame message. Putin said nothing of importance. Next day, he was supposed to make a major speech at his own security cabinet. Again, he said nothing of importance. In my view, President Putin wanted to show he is still alive and well and still in command. Apparently this was not obvious for some persons, in Russia or abroad, at that fateful night.

(To be continued)

Israel Shamir can be reached at adam@israelshamir.net 

 




Kiev’s Junta war crimes – Luhansk 08/13

NKVD Officer

Is it Gaza or is it Eastern Ukraine?

Don’t ask the Western media. They’re too busy preparing Americans for more bloody imperialist interventions. 

cassad_eng  
[W]hile media are concerned with the humanitarian convoy and the public arguments of diplomats, the fascists continue to systematically eliminate civilian population of Novorossia.
Below is a sample of difficult photos 21+ with civilians who became victims of terrorist shelling by the fascist punitive troops. The photos were made already on August 13, but in the light of then very difficult situation on the front lines, they reached the press only now. The impressionable are better off not opening this post.

donbassChild-pavementdonbassChildKilleddonbassChildKilled1donbassElectrician2donbassManByTruck

donbassVictimsElectrician

A perished brigade of electricians in Donetsk. They were killed during the work on re-establishing supply of electricity for the city.

donbassManKilled

donbassTruckDead

Genocide of Donbass population by the fascist junta continues.

UPD: And more.

SELECT COMMENT

Kill the fascists and their running dog mercenaries

Marcus N

2014-08-22 07:24 pm (UTC)

To paraphrase comrade journalist Ehrenburg:

 




Crocodile Tears for Iraq

The Real U.S. Legacy

iraq-war-horizontal-large-gallery

US troopers swarming into Iraq.

by NICK ALEXANDROV, Counterpunch

This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost genocide,” a U.S. military official warned. He was referring to bombings that killed nearly 800 members of the minority Yazidi sect in northern Iraq. “Among the wounded, one in five suffered serious injuries,” while “families of the wounded were so shaken by the attack that they insisted on taking their badly broken relatives back to their villages,” away from the hospitals treating them, the New York Times reported. U.S. officials attributed this atrocity to al-Qaeda. Surely it called for a calibrated intervention—a series of airstrikes, perhaps, to prevent a potential slaughter.

But these bombings happened in August 2007, years after the U.S. invasion. In that phase of the occupation, Bush “doubled the U.S. presence in Iraq” by sending “150,000 to 170,000 private forces to support the mission there, all with little or no congressional or public knowledge—let alone consent,” as two U.S. academics described the type of democracy Washington prefers. And its preferred foreign policies—“invading, occupying, weakening and looting Iraq”—“brought al-Qaeda into the country,” Juan Cole writes, emphasizing that the Islamist organization had zero presence there before March 2003.

Iraq developed in line with Washington’s expectations, in other words. “Months before the invasion of Iraq, U.S. intelligence agencies predicted that it would be likely to spark violent sectarian divides and provide al-Qaeda with new opportunities in Iraq and Afghanistan,” the Washington Post disclosed in May 2007. These grim analyses were “widely circulated within the Bush administration before the war,” which proceeded anyway, with shattering effects.

“The most serious sectarian and ethnic tensions in Iraq’s modern history followed the 2003 US-led occupation,” Sami Ramadani noted in the Guardian. “The US had its own divide-and-rule policy, promoting Iraqi organizations founded on religion, ethnicity, nationality or sect rather than politics,” he continued, his observations reinforcing those Iraqi political analyst Firas Al-Atraqchi recently offered: “Since the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, the Christian community [has] found itself under attack and tens of thousands have since fled the country in fear of religious persecution.”

For example, “Mandeans, or Sabians, a sect of people who follow the teachings of John the Baptist and pre-date Christianity and Islam in Iraq, have since 2003 been forced to leave en masse because of a brutal campaign against them.” A 2008 Minority Rights Group International study concluded that “Mandaeans face extinction as a people.” And an Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization report from June 2013—well into the Obama era—determined that “[t]he human rights situation facing minorities in Iraq remains in dire straits on all levels: political, civic, and cultural. Iraq’s ethnic and religious minorities, along with other vulnerable populations, continue to face threats of violence, religious discrimination, exclusion, and denial of their property rights.”

U.S. policy outcomes thus indicate Washington’s contempt for Iraq’s religious minorities. On the other hand, Obama stressed on August 7 that humanitarian concerns drove him to commence airstrikes—and these words were enough to convince the press that the U.S. government cares about persecuted Iraqis. “There have been reports of scores of civilians being killed,” the New York Times wrote, so “it was not surprising to hear President Obama announce” his decision to intervene. “President Obama was right to order military action to prevent a potential genocide,” the Washington Post decided, while the Los Angeles Times had no “doubt that the president was moved by the suffering the Islamic State has inflicted on the Yazidis and other victims.” Coverage was even more credulous, if possible, on websites like Slate, where William Saletan simply transcribed Obama’s remarks. “We’re doing what only we can do” in Iraq, Saletan insisted on August 8. He knew this because “Obama said the U.S. should step in,” given its unparalleled “capabilities to help avert a massacre.” Confronted with an argument this powerful, even a skilled debater will wither in defeat.

True, the U.S. record in Iraq reveals capabilities different from those Saletan identified. After Operation Desert Storm, for instance, UN Under-Secretary-General Martti Ahtisaari led a mission to Baghdad. Its members were familiar with the literature on the bombings, he wrote in March 1991, “fully conversant with media reports regarding the situation in Iraq,” but realized immediately upon arrival “that nothing that we had seen or read had quite prepared us for the particular form of devastation”—“near-apocalyptic”—“which has now befallen the country,” condemning it “to a pre-industrial age” for the foreseeable future. This was the scale of ruin when the UN Security Council imposed sanctions—UN in name only, political philosopher Joy Gordon clarifies, since they “were at every turn shaped by the United States,” whose “consistent policy” was “to inflict the most extreme economic damage possible on Iraq.”

The policy was a ripping success in this respect. The UN estimated in 1995 that the sanctions had murdered over half a million children—“worth it,” in Madeleine Albright’s infamous 60 Minutes assessment—one factor prompting two successive UN Humanitarian Coordinators in Iraq, Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, to resign. Halliday concluded that the sanctions were “criminally flawed and genocidal;” von Sponeck concurred, finding evidence of “conscious violation of human rights and humanitarian law on the part of governments represented in the Security Council, first and foremost those of the United States and the United Kingdom.”

But eliminating hundreds of thousands of starving children was merely the prequel to the occupation—“the biggest cultural disaster since the descendants of Genghis Khan destroyed Baghdad in 1258,” Fernando Báez wrote. Among its achievements were the assaults on Fallujah in April and November 2004: a UN Emergency Working Group estimated that “40% of buildings and homes” there were “significantly damaged” in the end, “while another 20% sustained ‘major damage,’” and “the remainder were ‘completely destroyed,’” political scientist Neta Crawford explains. Crawford, quoting Bing West’s No True Glory,relates how a top U.S. general, arriving in Fallujah after the November 2004 onslaught, “looked up and down the streets, at the drooping telephone poles, gutted storefronts, heaps of concrete, twisted skeletons of burnt-out cars, demolished roofs, and sagging walls. ‘Holy shit,’ he said.”

U.S. efforts to “liberate” Fallujah’s residents—presumably from life’s mortal coil—entailed “a cascade of Geneva Convention violations,”according to scholars Elaine A. Hills and Dahlia S. Wasfi. Not least of these, U.S. Congressman Jim McDermott and Dr. Richard Rapport wrote, were “the targeting of medical facilities and denial of clean water [.]” The level of barbarism calls to mind what the UN described as Israel’s “unprecedented” destruction of Gaza. “Whole neighborhoods and villages have been wiped off the map,” Dr. Mona El-Farra reported from the Strip, where Beit Hanoun’s mayor, Mohammed al-Kafarna, told the Guardian his town had been pummeled to the point of being “unlivable.” Israel’s six-week bombing monsoon has killed over 2,000, with U.S. taxpayers funding the carnage.

Since World War II, “the United States has provided Israel $121 billion (current, or non-inflation-adjusted, dollars) in bilateral assistance,” the Congressional Research Service determined in April. “Almost all U.S. bilateral aid to Israel is in the form of military assistance,” and “President Obama pledged” in March 2013 “that the United States would continue to provide Israel with multi-year commitments of military aid,” or $3.1 billion annually in Foreign Military Financing. So we can, if we choose, take seriously the speeches Obama makes for the cameras. But Washington’s crucifixion of Iraq and support for Israeli sadism show us the real extent to which humanitarian aims propel U.S. policy.

Nick Alexandrov lives in Washington, D.C.




The Pakistan-US state terrorism in North Waziristan and FATA

People fleeing to N Warziristan region. Courtesy Fazal Rahman.

People fleeing to N Warziristan region. Courtesy Fazal Rahman.

OpEds

By Fazal Rahman, Ph.D.

Reprinted with permission from Imperialism and the Third World.

[T]he current ongoing military operation in North Waziristan, by the Pakistan military forces, is the worst form of state terrorism imaginable and crime against humanity. One does not even hear a sparrow’s chirp against it by the western news media or politicians. This is in contrast to the deafening noises that were made against the incomparably limited military actions that were conducted by the Libyan government forces, under the late Moammar Gadhafi, against the rebellion in Benghazi and some other parts of Libya.

These noises have also been continuous in case of Syria, where government forces are fighting against the rebellion that is being funded and supported by the West, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other oil rich dictatorships in the Middle East. The US and the West have a long history of contradictory double standards in these matters. They blatantly support and rationalize or ignore the atrocities committed by their allies and clients, and greatly exaggerate, distort, and pervert the nature of actions taken by governments and states, which they aim to overthrow and replace, against the rebellions that are, in almost all the cases, instigated and fueled by them to begin with. In Pakistan, that history is being repeated with total predictability. The hypocrisy and dishonesty involved in that have devastating effects on one’s remaining faith and expectations in the qualities of human nature, which have already been greatly eroded by such long history. In fact, the absence of hypocrisy and dishonesty in the policies and actions of the US, the West, and their allies and clients would now be truly shocking and surprising. This is the reflection of real nature of international politico-economic reality that has been created by the US and Western capitalism and imperialism throughout this physically and spiritually polluted planet.

The indiscriminate aerial bombings, firings by the helicopter gunships, artillery, and other weapons, on the defenseless villages, in a full scale military assault, is reminiscent of such actions by the US forces in Vietnam, by the French, Belgian, British, and other European colonialists in their various colonies throughout the world, and genocidal wars against the Native Americans in the Americas. Only in this case, the Pakistani government and military are doing that against a part of their own population, just like they had done in East Pakistan during 1971, which had caused the transformation of East Pakistan into an independent country, Bangladesh, and the loss of more than half the population, as well as the most humiliating and disgraceful military defeat by the Indian forces. Equipped with F 16s, helicopter gunships, and other advanced weapons, mostly supplied by the US, the Pakistani military-addicted to being a mercenary force in much of its history-has once again complied with the demands of its real masters and chiefs in Washington, D.C., who have been insisting on such an operation for quite sometime and recently have specifically linked the continued annual “aid” of around $1 billion to the conduct of this operation. Even the hoax of Malala was created, exploited, magnified, and publicized to ridiculous and bizarre levels for this purpose. Pakistan has been selling its soul for so long that nothing is left of it and it has been replaced with an anti-soul. The amounts that it has been selling it for have been rather petty and do not benefit the common people. To the contrary, people have to pay incomparably heavier costs for such aid, both financially and with their lives. However, for the top military, civilian, and capitalist leaders, these are huge personal fortunes, with which they supplement and accumulate enormous personal wealth.

The government and media are bombarding the public with transparent lies about the casualties. They claim that hundreds of those killed were suspected militants, without offering even a shred of evidence! It is very likely that the numbers of those killed are much higher and most of them are innocent non-combatant villagers, including women and children. Large scale destruction of property must also have resulted from this copied-from-the-US state terrorism. More than 450,000 villagers have already been forced to flee their homes, carrying whatever belongings they could with them, in this extremely hot weather and on rugged terrain. Many were forced to do so on foot, because of lack of transportation. For a Muslim tribal family, it is an extremely humiliating dishonor, besides involving extreme discomfort, to be forced to live in the horrible conditions of refugee camps that do not provide even some of the basic necessities and are incompetently and poorly run and managed, in spite of the false and hypocritical claims of various government officials. These problems are multiplied for women whose privacy needs are far greater than those of men in the Muslim societies in general and those of FATA in particular. It is also extremely difficult for people with no means or very meager means to make alternative arrangements in new locations. Some years ago, similar military operations were launched in Swat and South Waziristan, other mountainous parts of  northwestern Pakistan, causing immense losses of life and economic destruction, and a flood of refugees into the cities. Their experience in the refugee camps and other places was extremely humiliating and disgusting. The numbers of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Pakistan is skyrocketing. According to some estimates, it is already more than two million. Adding hundreds of thousands more to them is total insanity, all caused by the same failed military policy and actions, in the service of US and other Western imperialist masters.

In addition to the immense sufferings, deprivation, and degradation of such large numbers of IDPs, it will also cause great problems for the populations in areas where they are relocating, as they will compete for scarce jobs, housing, necessities of life, businesses, and resources. The already exorbitant prices of food and other items, houses, and rents will increase even further. Already very high crime rates are also going to multiply, as poverty, unemployment, and struggle for survival are the root causes of most of the crimes. As usual, it will be the common Pakistanis who will suffer these consequences. The ruling class, the higher echelons of military and security establishments, and the rich are well protected and insulated.

Pakistani Military-State terrorism is inseparable from that of the US Military-State terrorism and is part of the latter. This structural fact is fundamental to objective understanding of what is going on in the North Waziristan and other areas of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The whole problem of terrorism and suicide bombings etc. started after the US invasion of Afghanistan. The internal resistance of Afghans to the invasion was supported most consistently, passionately, and practically by the inhabitants of FATA and various organized groupings that emerged there, including the Tehrik-e-Taliban (TTP) of Pakistan. The TTP’s opposition to the Pakistani government and military resulted from the latter’s collaboration with and subservience to the US and NATO invaders. That was and remains the most fundamental cause of the conflict between the Pakistan government, military, and security forces, on the one hand, and TTP, on the other. The US has been subjecting FATA to drone attacks for years, in which thousands were killed and injured and numerous houses and other properties were destroyed. After reducing these attacks in exchange for the Pakistani military attacks in North Waziristan and FATA, as a result of some secret, but self-evident agreement, it has again increased these, and now these are being coordinated with the Pakistani military operations. Tribal people in Pakistan have always supported the struggles of their brethren in Afghanistan against foreign invaders. They provided crucial help in destroying the whole British invading force during the 1840s. More recently, they perceived the Soviet forces helping the revolutionary government, against the US and Western funded anti-revolutionary forces, in Afghanistan, during the 1980s and 1990s, as invaders, and became an important part of the anti-revolutionary forces, which were then called the epitome of freedom fighters by the Americans, Europeans, and the Pakistanis. Now, that they are fighting against the US and NATO invaders, they are branded as the epitome of terrorism.

All these are historical facts and truths. The modern advanced capitalist-imperialist civilization has killed all such facts and truths, not only in their own centers, but also in their Third World periphery victim countries, like Pakistan. The news media in Pakistan is even much worse than that in the imperialist centers. It is almost totally subservient to the official government and military line and also to the dominant feudal and capitalist interests in such matters. The Dawn newspaper, one of the major papers in Pakistan, is the worst in this regard. Its editorials are lauding the state terrorist military operation in North Waziristan and FATA and the comments sections are saturated with the pro-operation commenters. It is censoring any articles or comments that oppose the operations. Other newspapers and media are practicing similar policies, even though less extreme than that of Dawn.

It is astonishing that there have been no demonstrations against the military operation in Pakistan, not even in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, in which the FATA is located. There were many terrorist acts committed in markets and other places that were blamed on the TTP. The TTP denied having committed such acts. It is likely that many of those were committed by foreign-supported organizations that wanted to expand the conflict between the government and the TTP and also to turn the public against the TTP. Even if the majority of public is against the TTP, its complacency with the wholesale destruction of North Waziristan and other areas of FATA is totally unjustifiable, callous, immoral, and politically self-defeating. Pakistan’s worst enemy, India, must be laughing its head off at such self-destructive stupidity of Pakistani government, military, and the public.

This recent state terrorist military offensive in North Waziristan has created a new horizon, the point of no return for the FATA. The hostilities and conflicts are very likely to be irreconcilable now and in the future. These are likely to multiply and acquire new forms. It is now very likely that the people of FATA will struggle for separation from Pakistan, instead of remaining a part of it. The initial successes of the military are illusory. That should have been learned long time ago from the incomparably more powerful US military invasions of Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq, as well as the invasion of East Pakistan by the Pakistani military in 1971. Their initial successes proved to be mirages, behind which were hidden the great debacles.

The current and past government and military leaders, responsible for state terrorism in the FATA and Swat and for the atrocities committed there and causing the immense suffering and dislocation of millions of people, should be tried in the International Criminal Court, as these are, among other things, crimes against humanity. It is especially repugnant that they committed these crimes against a part of their own population.

Postscript July 8, 2014

The latest official figures show that now there are around 800,000 IDPs from North Waziristan! This is a great diabolical man-made disaster and crime against humanity, by any standards of international law and ethics. However, it is very unlikely that the perpetrators of these will be brought to justice, as the international courts are dominated by and complacent with the US and Western puppeteers of such state terrorisms and the Pakistani courts are totally impotent, gutless, corrupt, and complacent with the military and the government in such matters.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR 

Fazal Rahman, Ph.D. is am an interdisciplinary researcher and writer, with background in biological and social sciences.  He has lived and worked in many countries, as a scientist and head of research and development programs and centers.  He has done in-depth and extensive studies on Marxism, Leninism, phenomenology, existentialism, political economy of capitalism and socialism, technocracy, psychology, and mass psychology.




Crossing Swords in Ferguson, Gaza, Egypt… and the Unifying Principle of Respect

Egyptian dictator Elsisi: Most Americans will never know of his crimes.

Egyptian dictator Elsisi: On the good side of our propaganda machine. Most Americans will never know of his crimes.

By Gary Corseri

“The heart of love that breaks apart the drone, propelled by a slingshot converted into a peace-making tool, points all of us in a direction, sorely needed, that aims to abolish war.”

—Kathy Kelly

“Be the change that you wish to see in the world.”—Gandhi

Dear Mother Earth,

[I] am writing you directly because I believe only the Great Soul of our Home can understand where we are now—lost among the stars.

This past Saturday, at the Carter Presidential Center in Atlanta, Georgia, I marked the 1-year anniversary of the Rabaa Massacre in Egypt, absorbing some 6 hours of talks by a dozen panelists from Egypt, the U.S., Palestine and other Arab nations. There were also Skype reports from Human Rights Watch. In the lobby of the Center’s Chapel, there were color photos of the dead and dying, taken by a journalist who had himself died in the carnage.

You know the story that so many have now forgotten: 817 (officially!) dead within 12 hours, as military snipers fired away at protestors who had come to reclaim their democracy. The streets had been blocked by the soldiers staging their coup. To this day, the US, Egypt’s principal support for about half a century, has refused to acknowledge that a coup took place. Such acknowledgment would require the immediate cessation of our funding for the regime of General el-Sisi—the regime that replaced the democratically elected Muslim Brotherhood President, Mohamed Morsi.

I’m recapping some of the basics now because most of my fellow Americans have forgotten all or most of this—if they ever bothered to learn it. In this age of 24-7 “news,” it’s easy for info to slip down the Orwellian “memory hole.” (Of course, it’s not so much about “information overload” as it is about bad information overload!) People, and history itself, can get “disappeared.”

One of the panelists, Medea Benjamin, of Code Pink and Global Exchange, told how she had recently asked a class of high school students to raise their hands if they had ever heard of the Rabaa massacre. Not a hand was raised. When she asked these students if they had ever heard of the Tiananmen Square Massacre of 1989, every hand went up. Why?  Because, they had studied that earlier massacre in school! That message had fit: Chinese Communists—bad! Egyptian military suppressing a democracy—they get a pass because that supports our interests in the Middle East.

It’s that kind of world. We’re that kind of creature. (I don’t just mean Americans, of course. It’s just that we’re numero uno now, and, according to the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), we’re planning to keep our show on the road for at least another 100 years!

Except… Except, we’ve got some problems in our own backyard… In our “heartland,” in fact: Right on the New Madrid fault line in the state of Missouri!

You’ve heard of the Missouri Compromise, I suppose? You heard of John Brown in Kansas and Missouri? Seems we’ve had these kinds of problems before—going way back—and they always seem to have something to do with what we call “democracy,” and “representative government”… but really have more to do with basic questions like dignity and accountability; what Job called “integrity” and Solomon called “wisdom.”

As I see it, “democracy” is one of those plastic words that can mean just about anything. Etymologically, it’s “government by the people.” But, that makes about as much sense as that other nettlesome phrase: “the pursuit of happiness.” Which people are we talking about; and what kind of happiness?

“Democracy” is a term that can cover a multitude of sins. Our Supreme Court decided that it was okay for our super-wealthy to buy our elections because we have “free speech” in America, and money equals speech (in their gilded ledgers!).

The people in Israel recently decided that they had the right to kill two thousand people in Gaza because Israel was “the only democracy” in the Middle East! Somehow, questions about proportionality, accountability and balance got lost in the rubble. (I direct these proud participants in “democracy” to the ancient words of Solomon: “A false balance is abomination to the Lord: but a just weight is his delight.”)

Proportionality! How can we have representative government when our wages and assets are so disproportionate? (Note: Typical US household net worth in 2013 was $56,335. For a white household, it was about double that! For a Black household, about 10% of that! BTW, entry level household wealth for our top 5% is about $2,000,000! For our top 1%, about $6,000,000!) Where’s the balance of power? Isn’t politics all about power relationships?

We are a world out of balance. “Democracies” are easily overturned by coups and pseudo interpretations of Constitutional laws. Bombs dropped by “democratic” governments’ drones, aircraft and guided missiles, are no less deadly—and, generally, much more so than IEDs!

I’m wondering how we get past the jargon, and get to the heart of the matter? More than 200 years of American “democracy” still takes us to the tragedy of Ferguson, Missouri, where a black kid can’t walk down the center of a street without getting himself killed in broad daylight!

Suppose the key word was not “democracy,” but respect? “Respect,” the way Aretha Franklin sang it, loud and clear: “R-E-S-P-E-C-T.”

Respect because we are human creatures who have done great things… and have the potential to do great things.

I wonder: had there been the littlest respect for someone else’s child, would the “authorities” have allowed Michael Brown’s body to lie in the street for hours, bleeding, with every drop of blood an indictment?

Used to be, respect was a value we inculcated in our schools. It was a moral value, and some fools said morals had to do with religion and religion had no place in our schools. So, we separated Church and State, but also morals and the State.

And now, dear Mother, your coral reefs are dying! We have failed to respect each other—just as we have failed to respect our heritage, our natural wealth. Your beautiful coral necklaces that shimmered beneath the seas, adorned the necks of the continents—dying from our ignorance and neglect, pollution, lack of respect for the varied gifts of life.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The Greanville Post, Uncommon Thought Journal, Cyrano’s Journal Today, and other leading progressive platforms.