Foreigners must frequently look at the United States and shake their heads, wondering how such a great nation could have sunk so low due to a disproportionate and essentially misguided response to a terrorist attack eight years ago. The attackers who carried out 9/11 succeeded through a lot of luck and a mixture of complacency and incompetence on the part of America’s intelligence and law enforcement agencies. Terrorism did not threaten our form of government or our way of life then and does not do so now. An assessment by France’s highly regarded Paris Institute of Political Studies last week suggested that Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda has likely been reduced to a core group of eight to ten terrorists who are on the run more often than not.
Archive for the ‘war’ Category
War Without End
September 17, 2009The Story of My Shoe: My Flower to Bush, the Occupier
September 15, 2009
By Mutadhar al-Zaidi, Counterpunch, Sep 15, 2009
Mutadhar al-Zaidi, the Iraqi who threw his shoe at George Bush gave this speech on his recent release.
In the name of God, the most gracious and most merciful.
Here I am, free. But my country is still a prisoner of war.
Firstly, I give my thanks and my regards to everyone who stood beside me, whether inside my country, in the Islamic world, in the free world. There has been a lot of talk about the action and about the person who took it, and about the hero and the heroic act, and the symbol and the symbolic act.
But, simply, I answer: What compelled me to confront is the injustice that befell my people, and how the occupation wanted to humiliate my homeland by putting it under its boot.
And how it wanted to crush the skulls of (the homeland’s) sons under its boots, whether sheikhs, women, children or men. And during the past few years, more than a million martyrs fell by the bullets of the occupation and the country is now filled with more than 5 million orphans, a million widows and hundreds of thousands of maimed. And many millions of homeless because of displacement inside and outside the country.
Victims’ families tell their stories following Nato airstrike in Afghanistan
September 15, 2009‘I took some flesh home and called it my son.’ The Guardian interviews 11 villagers
- Ghaith Abdul-Ahad in Kunduz
- guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 September 2009 20.05 BST
Fazel Muhamad, 48, holding pictures of family members who were killed in the attack. Photograph: Ghaith Abdul-AhadAt first light last Friday, in the Chardarah district of Kunduz province in northern Afghanistan, the villagers gathered around the twisted wreckage of two fuel tankers that had been hit by a Nato airstrike. They picked their way through a heap of almost a hundred charred bodies and mangled limbs which were mixed with ash, mud and the melted plastic of jerry cans, looking for their brothers, sons and cousins. They called out their names but received no answers. By this time, everyone was dead.
General McChrystal: No Sign of al-Qaeda Presence in Afghanistan
September 12, 2009Also Guesses Ongoing War Might’ve Prevented Terror Attacks
Speaking on the eight-year anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attack, top US commander in Afghanistan General Stanley McChrystal says that he sees no indication of any large al-Qaeda presence in Afghanistan.
Gen. McChrystal’s comments come at a time when the Obama Administration is facing an increasing revolt over the ongoing war in Afghanistan, and officials have used the “threat” posed by al-Qaeda as their primary justification for continuing the conflict.
Seemingly oblivious to having already dismissed the conflict’s ostensible raison d’etre, the general continued to defend the war, maintaining that it was winnable given increased effort and insisting that, while he had no evidence to back it up, he “strongly believes” the war has prevented other terrorist attacks.
Gen. McChrystal has recently presented a “new” strategy for the war, roughly five months after the Obama Administration’s previous “new” strategy involved a massive increase in the number of troops in the nation. It is widely expected that McChrystal will soon request another 20,000 troops for the war, on top of the previous escalation.
Guerillas occupy most of Afghanistan
September 12, 2009
Taliban bomb attacks hit occupation targets each day
Islamist guerillas now have a “permanent presence” in 80 per cent of Afghanistan, according to a top think tank.
The London-based International Council on Security and Development (ICOS) highlighted the “dramatic increase in the rate of insurgent attacks against international, Afghan government and civilian targets” in the north of Afghanistan, which was previously one of the most stable parts of the country.
ICOS policy analyst Alexander Jackson said: “The change in the last few months has been the deterioration of the situation in the north.”
ICOS released a map showing the spread of Taliban influence to Balkh and Kunduz provinces, which lie on the Uzbek and Tajik borders.
It said that another 17 per cent of Afghanistan is experiencing “substantial” Taliban activity.
ICOS defined “permanent” presence as an average of one or more attacks a week and “substantial” as one or more attacks in an average month.
This rewriting of history is spreading Europe’s poison
September 12, 2009Blaming the USSR for the second world war is not only absurd – it boosts the heirs of the Nazis’ wartime collaborators
Seumas Milne, The Guardian/ UK, Sep 9, 2009
Through decades of British commemorations and coverage of the second world war – from Dunkirk to D-day – there has never been any doubt about who started it. However dishonestly the story of 1939 has been abused to justify new wars against quite different kinds of enemies, the responsibility for the greatest conflagration in human history has always been laid at the door of Hitler and his genocidal Nazi regime.
That is until now. Fed by the revival of the nationalist right in eastern Europe and a creeping historical revisionism that tries to equate nazism and communism, some western historians and commentators have seized on the 70th anniversary of Hitler’s invasion of Poland this month to claim the Soviet Union was equally to blame for the outbreak of war. Stalin was “Hitler’s accomplice”, the Economist insisted, after Russian and Polish politicians traded accusations over the events of the late 1930s.

How Gordon Brown can cease being a warmonger and nuclear maniac
September 17, 2009Dr George Barnsby, The Barnsby Blog, Sep 16, 2009
Critics of the war in Iraq continue to proliferate. The Daily Telegraph
claims that the cost of the war in Iraq has now reached 5 billion pounds with another 1 billion in Afghanistan. Tony Blair has recently confessed to Al Jazeera that the war in Iraq was a total disaster, and Kissinger one of the greatest war criminals of all times responsible for the genocides of Indo-China condemns the war in Iraq.
If Brown could be persuaded to abandon the Barbarians who support war and join the Civilised part of humanity who oppose war then he might just save the Labour Party. But if he did this Cuts would no longer be necessary because the economic crisis would end and the vast savings made would even be enough to finance our social services adequately.
Then if only Brown could be persuaded to renounce his Nuclear Lunacy he would become a national hero and the Labour Party would certainly win the next general election because we could all sleep safely in our beds certain that our planet would continue to exist.
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Tags:cost of the wars, George Barnsby, Henry Kissinger, Labour Party, PM Gordon Brown, war in Iraq
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