Archive for the 'General' Category

Father of beheaded man blames Bush, not Zarqawi

Friday, June 9th, 2006

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – Michael Berg, whose son Nick was beheaded in Iraq in 2004, said on Thursday he felt no sense of relief at the killing of the al Qaeda leader in Iraq and blamed President Bush for his son’s death.

Asked what would give him satisfaction, Berg, an anti-war activist and candidate for U.S. Congress, said, “The end of the war and getting rid of George Bush.”

The United States said its aircraft killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the insurgent leader who masterminded the death of hundreds in suicide bombings and was blamed for the videotaped beheading of Nick Berg, a U.S. contractor, and other captives.

“I don’t think that Zarqawi is himself responsible for the killings of hundreds of thousands of people in Iraq,” Berg said in a combative television interview with the U.S. Fox News network. “I think George Bush is.”
reuters.com

Hubub in Hibhib: The Timely Death of al-Zarqawi
…Zarqawi, the notorious shape-shifter who, according to grainy video evidence, was able to regenerate lost limbs, speak in completely different accents, alter the contours of his bone structure and also suffered an unfortunate binge-and-purge weight problem which caused him to change sizes with almost every appearance, was head of an organization that quite fortuitously dubbed itself “Al Qaeda in Iraq” just around the time that the Bush Administration began changing its pretext for the conquest from “eliminating Iraq’s [non-existent] weapons of mass destruction” to “fighting terrorists over there so we don’t have to fight them over here.”

The name change of the Zarqawi gang from its cumbersome original Ð “The Monotheism and Holy War Group” Ð to the more media-sexy “Qaeda” brand was thus a PR godsend for the Bush Administration, which was then able to associate the widespread native uprising against the Coalition occupation with the cave-dwelling dastards of the bin Laden organization. This proved an invaluable tool for the Pentagon’s massive “psy-op” campaign against the American people, which was successful in sufficiently obscuring reality and defusing rising public concerns about what many experts have termed “the full-blown FUBAR” in Iraq until after the 2004 elections.

However, in the last year, even the reputed presence of a big stonking al Qaeda beheader guy roaming at will across the land has not prevented a catastrophic drop in support for President Bush in general and the war in Iraq in particular. Polls show that substantial majorities Ð even those still psy-oped into believing the conquest has something to do with fighting terrorism Ð are now saying that the war “is not worth it” and call for American forces to begin withdrawing.

With the Zarqawi theme thus producing diminishing returns, the Administration has had another stroke of unexpected luck with his reputed sudden demise. Moreover, the fact that Zarqawi was killed in a military action means that Mr. Bush will not have to cough up the $25 million reward placed on the head of the terrorist chieftain. That money will now be given to Mr. Bush’s favorite charity, Upper-Class Twits Against the Inheritance Tax, an Administration spokesman said.

Despite its fortuitousness, the reputed death of the multi-legged brigand came as no real surprise. After all, approximately 376 of his “top lieutenants” had been killed or captured by Coalition forces in the past three years, according to press reports, and some 5,997 lower-ranking “al Qaeda terrorists” have been killed in innumerable operations during that same period, according to Pentagon press releases. With the widespread, on-going, much-publicized decimation of his group, Zarqawi had obviously been rendered isolated and ineffective Ð except of course for the relentless series of high-profile terrorist spectaculars he kept carrying out, according to other Pentagon press releases.

News of the reputed rub-out brought bipartisan praise. “This enormous victory in the War on Terror is due entirely to the courage and wisdom of the president,” squealed Senate Majority Leader Lick Spittle of Tennessee. “He has seen us through when so many of the flag-burning destroyers of marriage wanted to cut and run. I think this president is the best president the world has ever seen, and if I am ever fortunate enough to be chosen as president by the American people Ð minus the three million or so whose votes will be discarded, lost, inadvertently mangled or just ignored, of course Ð I promise I’ll be a president just like him!”

“We must give credit where credit is due,” said Democratic Sen. Joe Biden, in a rare television appearance. “I have my differences with the way the Administration is conducting this war, but the elimination of Zarqawi is, I believe, a turning point, comparable to the capture of Saddam Hussein, the first Iraqi elections, the second Iraqi elections, the formation of the first Iraqi government and the formation of the second Iraqi government. This is not the end, or even the beginning of the end, but it is, I believe, the end of the beginning. And no, I didn’t plagiarize that. I made it up my own self.”

The reputed end of Zarqawi’s reign of terror comes a mere four years after U.S. forces had pinpointed his hideout and were prepared to destroy his entire operation, only to be forestalled by the White House. Before the war, Zarqawi and his band of non-Iraqi Islamic extremists had a camp in northern Iraq, in territory controlled by American-backed Kurdish forces, who had wrested it from the hands of Saddam Hussein. U.S. Special Forces, CIA agents and other American personnel had a free hand to operate there; indeed, anti-Saddam Iraqi exiles held open meetings in the territory, safe from the reach of the dictator.

In June 2002, American forces had locked in on Zarqawi’s location. They prepared a detailed attack plan that would have destroyed the terrorist band. But their request to strike was turned down not once, but twice by the White House. Administration officials feared that such a strike would have muddied the waters in their public relations effort to foment war fever against Saddam’s regime.

At every turn, the Bush team had painted a picture of Saddam Hussein as a powerful dictator able to threaten the entire world. They had implied, insinuated and sometimes openly declared that he was in league with al Qaeda. But this wildly successful psy-ops campaign would have been undermined by a raid on Zarqawi, which would have exposed the truth: that Saddam was a crippled, toothless despot who had lost control of much of his own land and couldn’t even threaten vast enemy armies within his own borders Ð much less his neighbors or the rest of the world. It would have also exposed the fact that the only Islamic terrorists operating on Iraqi soil were in areas controlled by America and its allies Ð which, now that Mr. Bush’s invasion has opened the whole country to extremist terror, is still the case.

With Zarqawi’s Bush-granted liberty reputedly at an end, the Pentagon moved quickly to confirm the identity of the man killed in Hibhib today. At a joint press conference with Prime Minister Maliki, U.S. Gen. George Casey said Zarqawi’s body had been identified by “fingerprints, facial recognition and known scars” after a painstaking forensic examination by Lt. Col. Gil Grissom and Major Catherine Willows.

In yet another amazing coincidence, the announcement of the death of Zarqawi or somebody just like him came just as Prime Minister Maliki was finally submitting his candidates for the long-disputed posts of defense and interior ministers, which then sailed through parliament after months of deadlock. The fortuitous death also came after perhaps the worst week of bad PR the Bush Administration has endured during the entire war, with an outpouring of stories alleging a number of horrific atrocities committed by U.S. troops in recent months.

Oddly enough, Zarqawi first vaulted into the American consciousness just after the public exposure of earlier U.S. atrocities: the tortures at Abu Ghraib prison in the spring of 2004. With story after story of horrible abuse battering the Administration during an election year, Zarqawi, or someone just like him, suddenly appeared with a Grand Guignol production: the beheading of American civilian Nick Berg. This atrocity was instantly seized upon by supporters of the war to justify the “intensive interrogation” of “terrorists” Ð even though the Red Cross had determined that 70 to 90 percent of American captives at that time had committed no crime whatsoever, much less been involved in terrorism, as the notorious anti-war Wall Street Journal reported. Abu Ghraib largely faded from the public eye Ð indeed, it was not mentioned by a single speaker at the Democratic National Convention a few weeks later or raised as an issue during the presidential campaign that year.

Today’s news has likewise knocked the new atrocity allegations off the front pages, to be replaced with heartening stories of how, as the New York Times reports, Zarqawi’s death “appears to mark a major watershed in the war.” Thus in his reputed end as in his reputed beginning, the Scarlet Pimpernel of Iraq has, by remarkable coincidence, done yeoman service for the immediate publicity needs of his deadly enemy, the Bush Administration.

It is not yet known who will now take Zarqawi’s place as the new all-purpose, all-powerful bogeyman solely responsible for every bad thing in Iraq. There were recent indications that Maliki himself was being measured for the post, after he publicly denounced American atrocities and the occupiers’ propensity for hair-trigger killing of civilians, but he seems to be back with the program now. Administration insiders are reportedly divided over shifting the horns to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s already much-demonized head, or planting them on extremist Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, or elevating some hitherto unknown local talent Ð or maybe just blaming the whole shebang on Fidel Castro, for old times’ sake.

The announcement of the new bogeyman is expected sometime in the coming weeks.

Russian Energy Company Eyes Gas Deal

Friday, June 9th, 2006

A PAZ, Bolivia Ñ Russia’s state-controlled natural gas company Gazprom is considering investing around US$2 billion (euro1.56 billion) in Bolivia’s recently nationalized gas industry, the president of Bolivia’s state energy company Wednesday.

Gazprom is looking to build gas separation plants and pipelines to help export liquefied natural gas as well as explore for gas in new and abandoned fields, said Jorge Alvarado, president of Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos, or YPFB.

“We want … to find hydrocarbons at a greater depth in the fields that are now abandoned,” Alvarado told reporters.

In a few weeks, Gazprom experts will visit Bolivian again to do further investigation and another team will come later to finalize the contract details, Alvarado said.

“In Russia we have the longest pipeline in the world which allows us to supply three neighboring eastern European countries and this experience and length of experience can be applied to Bolivian interests,” said Vladimir Kulikov, Russia’s ambassador to Bolivia at the news conference.
chron.com

Chavez accused of meddling in neighbors’ elections

Friday, June 9th, 2006

WASHINGTON — The United States has praised Latin American countries that accused Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez of meddling in their internal affairs — a sign, U.S. officials say, that his influence in the region is diminishing.
wpherald.com

dream on

U.S. tries to keep seat from Caracas
The United States is urging Latin American nations to deny Venezuela a seat on the U.N. Security Council when the region chooses a replacement for the rotating seat held by Argentina, whose term expires at the end of the year.

Reluctant to campaign openly against Venezuela, the Bush administration instead has been boosting the rival candidacy of Guatemala, a U.S. ally.

Somalia must not become a haven for al-Qa’ida militants, Bush warns

Friday, June 9th, 2006

International ramifications over Islamist victories in Somalia continue, with President George Bush declaring he will not allow the country to become an “al-Qa’ida haven” even as the militias themselves vowed to make the Horn of Africa “a land under the Koran”.

Amid concerns that other states in the region may become destablised, Kenya yesterday kicked out a Somali warlord and announced it would ban others involved in the conflict from entering the country.

The developments follow the defeat of a coalition of US-backed warlords by Islamists who have taken control of the capital, Mogadishu, and have followed their enemies to the town of Jowhar, where a battle is thought to be imminent.
independent.co.uk

Nigerian official fired following report in Haaretz

Friday, June 9th, 2006

…The $250 million arms deal between Aeronautics Defense Systems, from Yavneh, and the Nigerian Defense Ministry was reported in Haaretz a month ago. According to the contract, the Israeli company was to deliver unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to the Nigerian armed forces, for use in their efforts against militias and bandits operating in the Niger Delta. These attacks damage the infrastructure of Nigeria’s oil industry, and consequently its production capacity.

According to the reports, Nigeria’s national security adviser and other military officers were involved in the deal.
haaretz.com

Abbas to hold referendum on July 31

Friday, June 9th, 2006

…A referendum, with opinion polls suggesting most Palestinians support the proposal, would be seen as a confidence vote on the Hamas government, whose election led the West and Israel to cut off funds to the Palestinian Authority.

Hamas swept to power in January elections and has been locked in a power struggle with Abbas ever since. It rejects the proposal.

The manifesto implicitly recognizes Israel by calling for a Palestinian state on all of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

Abbas had set a Tuesday deadline for Hamas to embrace the manifesto but delayed a looming showdown after what officials said were appeals by Arab leaders.

Hamas, which seeks to destroy Israel, has said a referendum would be illegal so soon after the parliamentary elections.

Israel rejects the manifesto. It has long insisted on keeping large Jewish settlement blocs in the occupied West Bank.
news.yahoo.com

says who?

South African union joins boycott of Israel
Workers union representing 1.2 million extols CUPE OntarioÕs boycott of Israel, which it calls Ôan apartheid nation.Õ Union President Madisha: Atrocities committed against the Palestinians pale in comparison to those committed by the erstwhile apartheid regime in South Africa.

New rules allow Guantanamo force-feeding, limited medical role

Friday, June 9th, 2006

The guidelines released on Tuesday, which the military said formalise existing rules and policies, drew criticism from a human rights group that said the military should not interfere with detainees who use hunger strikes as a protest and should bar experts in psychology from having any role during interrogations.

“It’s wrong because a doctor’s role is to provide care, to support a person’s health and, as we all know, to do no harm,” said Leonard Rubenstein, executive director of Physicians for Human Rights.
hindustantimes.com

China says US military criticism unacceptable

Friday, June 9th, 2006

BEIJING (AFP) – China said US Secretary Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s criticisms about a lack of transparency in the Chinese military were unacceptable.

“We cannot accept the constant criticism from the country which has the largest military spending in the world,” foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told journalists.
news.yahoo.com

Army has to turn over Halliburton docs

Friday, June 9th, 2006

WASHINGTON, June 7 (UPI) — A U.S. district court judge has ordered the Army to release 14 documents, including six emails, dealing with the Halliburton oil contract in Iraq.

U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo M. Urbina also ordered the Army to give to the court an additional six documents for the court to review to make a further determination.

At issue is a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch, an anti-corruption public interest group. Judicial Watch believes the award of a multi-billion contract to Halliburton subsidiary KBR for the restoration of Iraq’s oil fields may have been unduly influenced by Vice President Dick Cheney, who headed Halliburton for five years prior to joining President George. W. Bush’s campaign.
upi.com

Washington fury over UN attack on Bush ‘hypocrites’

Friday, June 9th, 2006

The deputy secretary-general of the United Nations was last night accused of making “a very, very grave mistake” after calling the Bush administration hypocrites who were feeding a right-wing anti-UN frenzy in middle America.

Washington’s ambassador to the UN responded with undisguised fury to a speech by Mark Malloch Brown, the deputy secretary-general, in which he accused Washington of using the international body “almost by stealth as a diplomatic tool” while failing to defend it at home.

“Much of the public discourse that reaches the US heartland has been largely abandoned to its loudest detractors, such as Rush Limbaugh and Fox News,” Mr Malloch Brown said in a speech in New York on Tuesday. Depending on the UN while tolerating “too much unchecked UN-bashing and stereotyping” was “simply not sustainable”, he said. “You will lose the UN one way or another.”

John Bolton, the US envoy and an outspoken critic of the UN, called the comments “a very, very grave mistake”. He said he told the secretary-general, Kofi Annan, yesterday morning: “I’ve known you since 1989, and I’m telling you, this is the worst mistake by a senior UN official that I have seen in that entire time.” He called on the secretary-general to repudiate the speech.
guardian.co.uk

Not that he’s wrong or anything, just he shouldn’t have said it…