Archive for February, 2008

Israel reduces power supply in move to ‘disengage’ from Gaza

February 9, 2008

· Olmert hitting back after Hamas rocket attacks
· Cuts break international law, rights groups say

Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem
Saturday February 9, 2008
The Guardian

Israel started cutting the amount of electricity it supplies to Gaza yesterday as part of a new economic campaign targeting Hamas that has drawn sharp criticism from human rights groups.

Power on one of 10 lines into the Palestinian territory was cut to hit back at militants firing rockets into Israel. Although the reduction amounts to less than 1% of the 124 megawatts that Israel sells to Gaza, further cuts are due in the weeks ahead as Israel seeks to “disengage” from Gaza.

There was little immediate sign it would halt the escalating conflict. Militants yesterday fired at least 20 makeshift rockets into Israel, damaging a factory.

The decision to cut electricity has been backed by Israel’s high court, which this month turned down a challenge by Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups. Human Rights Watch said: “The cuts are seriously affecting civilians who have nothing to do with these armed groups and that violates a fundamental principle of the laws of war.”

Continued . . .

Gaza Diary: Not a life for children

February 8, 2008
 Al Jazeera, Feb 7, 2008

By Omar, a humanitarian worker in partnership with Oxfam
 
 

A young Palestinian girl wounded in an Israeli air strike on Gaza [GALLO/GETTY]

“Why us? Why are we cold? What is happening?” my children ask all the time.

They are six and two. When they ask for chocolate and I cannot give it to them, they ask why. I explain to them that it is because of the closure, but this does not explain things any further to them, they still ask: “Why? Why us?”

What they least understand is why their lives are being affected by something which they are not responsible for.

It is hard for me to explain. I am 37-years old and have spent my whole life under occupation. My father was a refugee from Barbara, my original village. He said to me the other day: “Son, we have never lived in a situation like this before. I hope that this will be the last time that we live like this, forever”.

But people live in hope. They believe, even after all this time, that peace will return to us.

Continued . . . 

To Hell With the Chief!

February 8, 2008

by Dave Lindorff

What is all this nonsense about us electing a “commander in chief”?

Okay, I mean we all know it’s President Bush’s favorite title. He thrills to being a “war president,” and loves strutting around in front of guys in uniform and getting saluted. But really, what is this all about?

The Constitution says that the President is the commander in chief of the army and the navy, and of the militia if it is called to national service. But that is really just for the sake of having a civilian at the top of the food chain.

President cum commander in chiefs do not actually run the military. They aren’t trained to do that any more than they run education, or run the weather service or NASA. Running the military, like running any federal agency, is what the head of that agency does, and in the case of the military, that’s what the Joint Chiefs of Staff do. A president certainly makes critical decisions in choosing who heads each agency, and in broad policy matters by discussing options with department leaders. The same is true in the case of the military with regard to the Joint Chiefs. But presidents decidedly do not act as top generals.

Keep reading . . .

Palestinian PM sees no ’08 Israel accord

February 8, 2008

By Ed Stoddard | Reuters, Feb 7, 2008

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) – Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad said on Thursday a lasting peace accord with Israel was unlikely in 2008 despite renewed diplomatic efforts to resolve the long-running conflict.

In an interview with Reuters in the Texas capital, Austin, where he is on a private visit, he highlighted the lack of progress on the issue of Israeli settlements and military incursions into the West Bank as among the chief obstacles in the “road map” to peace and Palestinian statehood.

“I do not believe though that the final resolution … will be complete in the course of this year. I don’t think that is likely,” Fayyad said.

On a trip to the Middle East last month, U.S. President George W. Bush said he believed a peace treaty between Israel and the Palestinians would be signed before he leaves office in January 2009.

Continued . . .

House arrest: judge’s daughter tells of family’s plight

February 8, 2008

· Ex-chief justice, wife and children held in Islamabad
· No school or check-ups for disabled eight-year-old

Declan Walsh in Islamabad
Friday February 8, 2008
The Guardian

Pakistan’s youngest political prisoner lives in a house on a hill just a few hundred metres from President Pervez Musharraf’s soaring presidential palace in Islamabad. Little about him is typical. He is physically disabled, spends his days watching cartoons on TV, and is eight years old.

Bilaj Chaudhry is the son of Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, Pakistan’s former chief justice. Since he was fired by Musharraf three months ago, the judge, his wife and four children have been locked in their house. Barbed wire barricades block the street, armed police and intelligence agents swarm outside, and visitors are forbidden. The phones have been cut, the water supply disrupted, and an employee who delivers food is carefully searched. Even stepping on to the front lawn is forbidden.

Continued . . .

What cut cables can teach

February 7, 2008
Posted: 2008/02/06
From: Mathaba

 
  Mathaba’s Dr Bleher, a logical German, looks at some of the lessons that can be learned from the recent cuts of undersea Internet cables, not least that the public still seem to believe any fairy tales the so-called MSM “Mainstream Media” tell them, no matter how illogical.

By Dr Sahib Mustaqim Bleher

Arguably, the most important, albeit not particularly spectacular, event of last week was the consecutive cutting of four major fibre optic communication cables in the Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf and North of the Egyptian coast. I say, consecutive, because had they all been cut simultaneously, it would be unprecedented but could still be called an accident. As there was a considerable time lapse, however, the probabilities of an accident are slim, more so since the theory that the cables were cut by ship anchors has since been discredited with the confirmation from the Egyptian ministry of communication that no ships were present in the area at the time the cables were cut.

This leaves sabotage or an act of war as the only other option. The fact that there were no immediate American condemnations of this as a terrorist act indicates that it had the tacit approval of the United States, a theory further supported by the fact that Israel and Iraq remained unaffected since their internet traffic is carried via a different route. Without wanting to speculate, however, a number of interesting lessons emerge from these events.

Firstly, the internet has proven surprisingly resilient, managing to compensate for the lost traffic routes without collapsing altogether. It also demonstrated the complicated nature of the worldwide web, with India most heavily affected by a break in communications located in the Middle East, which in turn affected Britain in particular, since most large British companies have outsourced their call centres to India. There is, therefore, no way to disrupt the internet selectively without a knock-on effect elsewhere.

Secondly, the public appears to happily buy any story it is fed by mainstream media. Tell them a ship’s anchor cut through the cables and they believe it. They won’t ask why after such an “unforeseen” event no measures were put in place to prevent the same thing from happening again, or why suddenly so many lethal ship’s anchors are floating around the ocean when previously they never caused a problem. This public lethargy does not bode well for the future.

Thirdly, today’s wars are increasingly related to technology and communications. In a report to Congress, US National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell listed amongst his major concerns besides “Al-Qaeda” that Russia, China and oil producing countries were using their wealth to advance political goals (let’s guess that the USA could never possibly be accused of such a heinous crime!) and that the threats faced by the US were global, complex and dangerous, including the vulnerability of computer systems.

The truth is, that Iran’s nuclear capability has never really worried the White House as they know too well Iran would not be stupid enough to use such destructive technology even if they had it. It is a smoke screen for allowing interference on account of much more conventional capabilities Iran has developed like, for example, the recently announced ability to launch its own rocket and soon send its own satellites into orbit.

In this context, there have been speculations that the cutting of the internet cables was intended to cut off Arab oil producing states from vital communication routes prior to another weapon in Iran’s armoury, the long-awaited and heavily speculated about Iranian oil bourse which, by trading in Euro, would send the already free-falling dollar to depths from which it could never recover.

Unlike the Arab states, for example, Iran and China seem to have understood that economic warfare can be much more effective in bringing down an enemy than military engagement. Of course, they are not alone, the US and the UK have been using economic warfare as part of their arsenal for many decades.

Those opposed to being enslaved by the world hegemony of corporate America under the guise of “globalisation” should take heart in the knowledge that the internet remains one of their most potent weapons to fight back – a weapon which cannot be wrestled from them by the big powers without those powers shooting themselves in the foot. At the same time, they must be even more alert and try to wake up the general public – hitherto sedated by consumerism and entertainment and frightened by purported threats of terrorism as well as the real threat of bankruptcy and economic loss.

The US economy, and with it its political influence, is about to collapse, and we don’t expect it to surrender any more quietly than a fish flapping violently after having been removed from the water.

— Dr Sahib Mustaqim Bleher is a Mathaba Author, visit his page for more articles at:

 
 

Iraq’s Tragic Future

February 7, 2008

Truthdig, Feb 5, 2008

Iraqi
AP photo / Khalid Mohammed
Mohammed Salman sits in the rubble of what used to be a book market in Baghdad. His brother died in the explosion.

By Scott Ritter

Any analysis of the current state of the ongoing U.S. occupation of Iraq that relied solely on the U.S. government, the major candidates for president or the major media outlets in the United States for information would be hard pressed to find any bad news. In a State of the Union address which had everything except a “Mission Accomplished” banner flying in the background, President Bush all but declared victory over the insurgency in Iraq. His recertification of the success of the so-called surge has prompted the Republican candidates to assume a cocky swagger when discussing Iraq. They embrace the occupation and speak, without shame or apparent fear of retribution, of an ongoing presence in that war-torn nation. Their Democratic counterparts have been less than enthusiastic in their criticism of the escalation. And the media, for the most part, continue their macabre role as cheerleaders of death, hiding the reality of Iraq deep inside stories that build upon approving headlines derived from nothing more than political rhetoric. The war in Iraq, we’re told, is virtually over. We only need “stay the course” for 10 more years.

Continued . . .

Barack Obama and the Euphoria of Madness — Keeping It Real

February 7, 2008

Black Commentator, January 31, 2008
By Larry Pinkney,
BC Editorial Board

Those who ignore reality and the lessons of history do so at their own peril. Ignoring reality, whether in a state of euphoria or not, is nonetheless a sure recipe for disaster.

It is both sad and simultaneously horribly fascinating to observe so many euphorically pinning their hopes and dreams on Barack Obama, a chameleon who speaks liberally of “change” but who is, himself, beholden to the very same blood-sucking corporate vampires (including Lockheed and others) who are ravaging the peoples of America, and the entire planet. It seems we have moved euphemistically from Dracula to a corporately repackaged Blackula in the person of Barack Obama. In the very name of “change,” Obama is moving America euphorically backwards.

All of America, but most especially we Black, Brown, and Red peoples, need to pay heed to the unfolding debacle known as the “Obama phenomenon.” This so-called “phenomenon” is propelled by blind euphoria, while being steeped in double-speak and disinformation. The danger in this is self-evident.

Never mind that Barack Obama is a stalwart supporter of apartheid / corporate Zionism and is beholden to the Zionist corporate lobby in the US, which wags the people of America as a whole to the tune of billions upon billions of dollars from the coffers of this nation. It should be noted that Barack Obama made it quite clear in The Jerusalem Post newspaper (Israel) of January 29, 2008, that the Palestinian people whose lands are, and have long been, illegally and militarily occupied by Israel, “do not have the right of return.”

Continued . . .

Israeli forces kill six gunmen and teacher in Gaza

February 7, 2008

swissinfo.ch, Feb 7, 2008

By Nidal al-Mughrabi

GAZA (Reuters) – Israeli troops backed by tanks, helicopter gunships and warplanes killed six Palestinian gunmen and a schoolteacher in a raid in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on Thursday, militant groups and hospital officials said.

Israel has stepped up military action against Hamas since it claimed responsibility for a Palestinian suicide bombing on Monday, the first such attack by the Islamist faction inside the Jewish state since 2004.

Residents said tanks and heavy bulldozers penetrated the border fence near the northern town of Jabalya. Israeli forces also struck in nearby Beit Hanoun, a border community often used by Palestinian militants to fire rockets into Israel.

Hamas, the ruling Islamist group, said five of its gunmen were killed fighting the Israeli troops. Another gunman, from Islamic Jihad, also died in the clashes, it said.

An Israeli missile hit a school in Beit Hanoun, killing a teacher and wounding three pupils, hospital officials said.

Continued . . .

Worries Surround Pakistani Elections

February 7, 2008

Fairness of Process Is Widely Doubted; Violent Reaction by Losers Seen Likely

By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, February 7, 2008; A16

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Feb. 6 — Despite the candidates’ colorful posters papering road signs and storefronts, the political atmosphere two weeks before Pakistan‘s parliamentary elections is as bleak and foreboding as the gray winter sky shrouding much of the country.

Candidates have largely abstained from any meaningful campaigning given their fears of bombings and the government’s decision to discourage large public rallies. The December assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto has left the opposition without its most popular leader and cast a persistent pall over the run-up to the elections.

Many Pakistanis are convinced that the Feb. 18 polling will be systematically rigged by the caretaker government and that, as a result, angry opposition supporters will erupt in violence. While U.S. and European officials have pressed Pakistan to proceed with the vote, some here still expect the elections to be postponed at the last minute. Even if the vote is held, its credibility will be in doubt.

Continued . . .