June 27, 2005
1. Why economic conversion is essential to ending war
2. troops questioning support for war
3. This illuminates our real vulnerability - oil
4. What price victory
5. Economic analysis and the war in Iraq
 
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1. Using the Iraq war as an example, the case is made for the need for economic conversion from the military/industrial complex, if we ever want to see an end to war.
 http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/062305X.shtml
 
2. Troops in Iraq are questioning the public's support for the war - while their leaders insist it is still winnable.
 http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0624-02.htm
 
3. Forget terrorists - the biggest threat to our security is high priced, scarce oil - and our military won't be able to fix it for us. This is mainstream stuff, not the hysteria of far-out leftists. The financial sector is worried, the petroleum industry talks about it - it's real and the gov't is not going to do anything about it.
 http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/11979395.htm
 
4. This pretty much says it all regarding why we need to get out of Iraq and sooner rather than later.
 http://www.antiwar.com/justin/
 
5.Scroll half-way down to read some pointed analysis of Americans' economic delusions and the empire's war. It isn't flattering but the facts support this writer's views, I think.
 http://www.dailyreckoning.com/Issues/2005/DR062405.html

 

June 21, 2005
1. Heart-wrenching tale from a soldier

2. What to do now to stop the war
3. The pre-war war
4. Bush getting criticized by fellow Republicans
5. Are we already making war on Iran?
 
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1. This is very poignant, but I guess hopeful too in that he has somehow retained his humanity amidst the horror of war. One can only hope he has the strength to deal with the memories once he returns.
 http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0615-08.htm
 
2. Urgings from Stan Goff to put the pressure on Congress, many of whom face mid-term elections.
 http://www.counterpunch.org/goff06182005.html
 
3. Now we hear that the bombing in Iraq started some 6 months before the official start of the war.
 http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/06/19/INGEOD8MJR1.DTL
 
4. Not only is Bush out of touch with reality as far as Iraq goes, but his own party members are the ones pointing this out!
 http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/krwashbureau/20050620/ts_krwashbureau/_bc_usiraq_bush_wa
 
5. Though it seems hardly possible, we may in fact see the war in Iraq extended into it's neighbor. According to Scott Ritter, efforts are already underway.
 http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0620-31.htm

 

June 15, 2005

1. America as our "child" and our "parental" duty
2. The Myths and Realities of War
3. Let's keep pressure on Congress
4. Tipping point on war in Iraq?
 
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1.  I like the way this writer conceptualizes our duty as citizens, to correct our country when it goes astray. He uses an analogy that people might be able to understand!
 http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0610-22.htm
 
2. If you haven't read Chris Hedges' book War is the Force that Gives Us Meaning, this article will give you a taste of his perspective. This is probably a good article to send to anyone you can think of who supports the war but has never seen combat themselves.
 http://www.antiwar.com/orig/hedges.php?articleid=6294
 
3. A bipartisan effort is gathering steam around the issue of an exit plan for Iraq. We need to keep the pressure on our elected officials.
 http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0611-01.htm
 
4. This is hopeful news, and perhaps Congress at least will feel vulnerable enough to do something about it.
 
Polls, and Reports from Iraq, Reveal Pessimism on War

    Editor & Publisher
    Monday 13 June 2005

    New York - A flood of pessimistic articles in major newspapers this weekend, calls by some in Congress for a timetable for withdrawal, and now a new Gallup poll suggest to at least one military historian that the American public has reached a "tipping point" on Iraq.

    The new Gallup survey finds that 59% of Americans say the United States should withdraw some or all of its troops from Iraq, the largest number in that category ever. Nearly half of that number, 28%, want all troops out. And, for the first time, most Americans say they would be "upset" if President Bush sent more troops.

    Accounts from the field in Iraq this weekend and today in The Washington Post, The New York Times, and Knight Ridder newspapers, among others, all painted a picture of an Iraqi army unable (and to some extent, unwilling) to take over the lion's share of military activities for at least two years and perhaps much longer.

    Tom Lasseter, longtime Knight Ridder correspondent in Baghdad, wrote for today's papers: "A growing number of senior American military officers in Iraq have concluded that there is no long-term military solution to an insurgency that has killed thousands of Iraqis and more than 1,300 U.S. service members during the past two years. Instead, officers say, the only way to end the guerrilla war is through Iraqi politics, an arena that so far has been crippled by divisions between Shiite Muslims, whose coalition dominated the January elections, and Sunni Muslims, who are a minority in Iraq but form the base of support for the insurgency."

    "We have reached a tipping point," Ronald Spector, a military historian at George Washington University, told USA Today's Susan Page. "Even some of those who thought it was a great idea to get rid of Saddam [Hussein] are saying, 'I want our troops home.'"

    The pattern of public opinion on Iraq is reminiscent of the Korean and Vietnam conflicts, he said. A different poll last week found that 42% now liken the Iraq war to the Vietnam experience. Even Rep. Walter Jones, the man behind the "freedom fries" campaign, came out for withdrawal over the weekend.

    Gallup also found that 56% of Americans now feel the war was "not worth it." An ABC News-Washington Post poll last week found that nearly three-quarters called the casualty level unacceptable. The count reached 1,700 over the weekend.

    Of those who say the war wasn't worth it, the top reasons cited were: false claims and no weapons of mass destruction found; the casualty count; and belief that Iraq posed no threat to the United States.

    In today's New York Times, a field report on Iraqi performance by John F. Burns and Sabrina Tavernise concludes: "Despite the Bush administration's insistent optimism, Americans working with the Iraqis in the field believe that it could be several years, at least, before the new Iraqi forces will be ready to stand alone against the insurgents....

    "Earlier this year, the Pentagon suggested that an initial drawdown of the 140,000 American troops in Iraq might begin by the end of this year. Now, American generals are saying it could be two years, perhaps longer."

 

May 31, 2005

1. A very moving piece from a journalist who has spent time in Iraq
2. More bad news for the military vis-a-vis retainment
3. Article about Depleted Uranium
 
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 1. This journalist writes about his experience of coming home after months in Iraq, and why he is drawn to return.
 http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0520-32.htm
 
2. Young lieutenants and captains are getting out, much to the Army's dismay. They aren't excited about the unending war on terror.
 http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0522-05.htm
 
3. This article is long, and very grim. Don't read it if you're already in a blue funk over the state of things. That said, DU is an issue that should be of concern to everyone, and could be a bridging-issue between peace folks and others. I have been leafletting about DU and giving out lots of brochures. If I had a family member in Iraq I'd be worried sick.
 http://www.iconoclast-texas.com/News/19news03.htm

 

May 13, 2005

1. 9/11 and American Empire
2. Sustainability and Community
3. Ridge talks about terror alerts
4. Civil war in Iraq?
5. National ID cards
6. A journalist speaks about her 10 month stint in Iraq
 
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1. This author is a Christian theologian, who lays out some serious accusations related to the 9/11 attacks, then goes on to suggest what people of all moral stripes ought to be doing right now.
 http://www.newtopiamagazine.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=47&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0&POSTNUKESID=3cfdcaa1fb4efbcc82ad0cfb9db09ac9
 
2. Very thought-provoking essay on sustainability and community.
http://www.newtopiamagazine.net/articles/41?POSTNUKESID=3cfdcaa1fb4efbcc82ad0cfb9db09ac9
 
3. I wrote a letter before the Iraq war suggesting the terror alerts were intended to ramp up fear, and served little purpose - turns out Tom Ridge sort of agrees with me.
 http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051105X.shtml
 
4. On the brink or over it - too close to call. The news from Iraq just gets worse and worse.
 http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051205C.shtml
 
5. This is one of the best arguments I've seen about why national ID cards are a joke as far as security goes.
 http://www.alternet.org/rights/21977/
 
6. This journalist from Kentucky speaks very frankly about journalists and the media coverage of the insurgency.
 http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050508/OPINION04/505080346/1054/OPINION
 
May 6, 2005
1. A Tale of Two Demonstrations (Israeli, Palestinian)
2. Iraqi leaders learning well from Bush Admin
3. Scapegoating and Abu Ghraib
4. Insularity and an unholy lack of curiousity
5. Rockridge Institute on-line conference
 
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1. This story is a very good follow-up to our film Peace, Propaganda and the Promised land.
 
A Tale of Two Demonstrations
Uri Avnery
 
April 30, 2005
The day before yesterday, two demonstrations were held, just a few dozen kilometers apart. One took place at the Homesh settlement, not far from Jenin. Tens of thousands of settlers and their sympathizers came to demonstrate against the planned evacuation of this settlement. The demonstrators swore to sabotage the decisions of the government and the Knesset. One of them declared that they could be removed only in coffins draped with the national flag.

Hundreds of soldiers and policemen were stationed along the route to protect the demonstrators against all eventualities. The official Voice of Israel radio told its listeners that the traffic police were acting on instructions from the leaders of the Settlements Council.

At the same time, another demonstration took place at Bil'in, west of Ramallah. The inhabitants of that and the neighboring villages, together with Israeli peace activists, demonstrated against the "Separation Fence" that is being put up on their land.

This demonstration was savagely attacked by soldiers and policemen, who assaulted them, beat, injured and arrested them, using old and new weapons. The security people, as the Hebrew expression goes, "had murder in their eyes".

In this area, there is not even the pretense that the Separation Fence serves security purposes. The real aim is evident to anyone visiting the place: to rob Bil'in and the other villages of their land, in order to enlarge the settlement of Kiryat Sefer.

I remember that place from some ten years ago. Then, well-kept olive groves were being expropriated and destroyed by bulldozers. At that time, too, the villagers asked us to protest and try to stop this.

Now, a large town of ultra-orthodox Jews has been built there and is growing rapidly. The Separation Fence will pass close to the last houses of Bil'in and cut the village off from the remainder of its lands. On this land new neighborhoods of Kiryat Sefer will be built. Together with the nearby settlements of Modi'in Ilit and Matitiyahu, this is one of the "settlement blocs" that Israeli governments (whether Likud or Labor) want to annex to Israel, with the blessing of President Bush.

The plan of the villagers was to conduct a peaceful demonstration on the path of the Fence and plant some symbolic olive saplings there. But experience in this area has taught us that one must expect the security forces to react violently. Therefore, only activists who know the conditions and are experienced in dealing with them were asked to take part. We were some 200 Israelis, men and women of all ages. The instructions given in the buses, orally and in writing, were to keep the demonstration strictly non-violent.

We expected the buses to be stopped on the way and were prepared for this eventuality. We were, therefore, quite surprised when we reached the village without incident. Only later did we realize that it was a trap.

In the village, we joined some thousand inhabitants of this and the neighboring villages, men, women and children, and set off together towards the path of the Fence. At the head walked the former Palestinian minister Kadura Fares, the Palestinian presidential candidate Dr. Mustafa al-Barghouty, the Arab members of the Knesset Barakeh, Zakhalkeh and Dahamsheh, the village chiefs and I. We were holding olive branches in our hands, to plant along the path of the Fence. The village youngsters also carried a 50-meter long Palestinian flag. Ahead of us a decorated van was driving slowly, and a Palestinian activist on it announced in Hebrew through a powerful loudspeaker: "This is a peaceful and non-violent demonstration!"

About a kilometer before the path of the Fence, a line of security people stopped us. They wore no insignia, and so we did not know whether they were soldiers or border policemen.

Suddenly, without any warning, a salvo of tear gas grenades was launched at us. Within seconds, we were enveloped by a cloud of white gas, with the thump of bursting grenades coming at us from all directions.

The demonstrators, coughing and choking, dispersed to the two sides. Many of them outflanked the soldiers and continued to move forward over the rocky terrain. They were stopped by a second line and also showered with tear gas.

We, at the head of the demonstration, went on and reached a point about 50 meters from the path of the Fence, when a third line of soldiers attacked us. MK Barakeh had a heated exchange with an officer, and while they were arguing passionately a soldier fired a gas grenade at point blank range between Barakeh's legs. He was slightly wounded in the leg. Another, particularly ferocious soldier took hold of the poster I was holding in my hands - the Gush Shalom sign of the flags of Israel and Palestine - and pushed me savagely, knocking me over.

At other places, the rampage was even worse. Muhammad Hatib, one of the village chiefs, noticed a man who, with his face covered, started to throw stones at the soldiers. He ran towards him, shouting: "We decided not to throw stones! If you want to throw stones, do it in your own village, not ours! What village do you come from, anyway?" The man turned towards him and attacked him, at the same time calling out to his associates, tearing the handkerchief from his face and donning a police cap.

Thus the secret came out and was also documented by the cameras: "Arabized" undercover soldiers had been sent into action. These started throwing stones at the security people in order to provide them with a pretext to attack us. The moment they were uncovered, they turned on the demonstrators nearest to them, drew revolvers and started to arrest them. Later on, when it became clear that the events had been recorded by foreign television crews, the police officially confirmed that throwing stones is the method used by "Arabized" undercover soldiers so as to merge with the crowd.

In the course of the day, more details about the events emerged: this was a unit that had never before been used for such an action: the Prison Service unit "Massada", whose normal job is to suppress mutinies in the prisons. This is an especially savage unit, perhaps the most violent in the country, which was supplied with new means of "riot control". Among others: salt bullets that are designed to cause particularly painful wounds. Muhammad Hatib, the man mentioned above, 30 years old and father of two children, got four bullets in his back: large, swollen, black-blue rings the full width of his back.

These salt bullets were brought to Israel from America at the beginning of the 90s, but until now the army has shrunk from using them, fearing a public outcry. They were tried on us for the first time.

It appears that the army prepared the whole action in advance as a trap. The "Massada" unit tried out its tactics and weapons on this peaceful march of civilians.

The shocking difference between the ways the two demonstrations were treated provides food for thought.

The settlers are openly preparing and trying to paralyze the state, prevent the implementation of the government and Knesset decisions, and, in effect, to overthrow Israeli democracy. But Ariel Sharon and his people call publicly to "embrace them", to "love them" and "view their pain with understanding". This is the directive given to the security forces. For peace activists, quite different treatment is indicated.

This throws light on a much more important phenomenon that may determine the future of Israel. Here, people have got so used to it that they accept it as natural. Abroad, people don't know about it.

The fact is that every day, all the Israeli media devote their main news reports to the settlers' propaganda. Every single news program on each of the three TV channels gives exhaustive coverage to the affairs of the settlers, speeches by settlers and interviews with settlers. Often, these reports fill half the news program.

Between the settlers and the media a kind of symbiosis has come into being - they work "with one head". Every day several events are prepared for the media, which scoop them up greedily, to serve as unpaid propaganda organs of the settlers and the extreme right. Once upon a time, it was usual to give the other side the right of response, for the sake of "balance". Not anymore. There is no other side.

In the news programs, not a word - literally not a word - of criticism of the settlers is ever heard. The establishment "leftists" also speak of the need to "embrace them" and "understand them", and so, of course, do all the spokespersons of the government and the big parties. To people who have an opposite opinion, no opportunity is given to speak about the settlers on the main media of the country.

In this way, Israeli democracy puts all its media exclusively at the disposal of the enemies of democracy. Even in the Weimar Republic, stupidity did not go this far.

Absurd? It only seems so. In reality, it reflects the real situation: in spite of all the loud talk about "disengagement", Sharon's heart is with the settlers. He intends to annex to Israel most of the West Bank settlements - if not all of them.

The present controversy about a handful of small settlements in the Gaza Strip is, in his eyes, a kind of family spat, and will pass quickly. Actually, Sharon might be interested in feeding the commotion, so as to convince the Americans that it is unrealistic to expect him to dismantle the West Bank settlements and outposts. Fact: the army and police have never once used tear gas against right-wing demonstrators, even when physically attacked and injured by them (as happens regularly in Hebron, for example) or when the settlers block vital roads and cause huge traffic jams.

On the other hand, the controversy with us, the peace activists, the real opposition to the government, is a genuine struggle for the future of Israel: whether it will be a state within the Green Line borders, a liberal, democratic state that lives in peace with a viable Palestinian state at its side; or an aggressive, nationalist state, that will hold on to practically the whole of the West Bank and keep the Palestinians in some isolated enclaves.

If one sees it that way, the directives given to the army are quite logical: Embrace the settlers, because they are our brothers, and hit the peace activists, because they are the enemy.

2. According to Medea Benjamin, the Iraqi leaders are disregarding the will of their people just like Bush and Co. They are learning well from their masters. http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0430-23.htm

3. As expected, the lowliest get court-martialed and imprisioned while the higher-ups get excused. I understand this is pretty much how it works in the military. Don't you wonder why the soldiers put up with this crap? http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0430-02.htm

4. What's so disturbing about Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka's perception of Americans is the broad brush with which he paints. It's not just "those red-staters" he indicts. http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0429-20.htm

5. The Rockridge Institute is sponsoring an on-line conference on progressives and spirituality - based on George Lakoff's work on frames, etc. No cost to sign up. Conference runs May 9-20 http://forum.rockridgeinstitute.org/?q=dialogue05&aff=1