Archive for March, 2005

Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged TV News

Sunday, March 13th, 2005

It is the kind of TV news coverage every president covets.

“Thank you, Bush. Thank you, U.S.A.,” a jubilant Iraqi-American told a camera crew in Kansas City for a segment about reaction to the fall of Baghdad. A second report told of “another success” in the Bush administration’s “drive to strengthen aviation security”; the reporter called it “one of the most remarkable campaigns in aviation history.” A third segment, broadcast in January, described the administration’s determination to open markets for American farmers.

To a viewer, each report looked like any other 90-second segment on the local news. In fact, the federal government produced all three. The report from Kansas City was made by the State Department. The “reporter” covering airport safety was actually a public relations professional working under a false name for the Transportation Security Administration. The farming segment was done by the Agriculture Department’s office of communications.

Under the Bush administration, the federal government has aggressively used a well-established tool of public relations: the prepackaged, ready-to-serve news report that major corporations have long distributed to TV stations to pitch everything from headache remedies to auto insurance. In all, at least 20 federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years, records and interviews show. Many were subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government’s role in their production.
Full Article: nytimes.com

Now there’s some democracy for you…

Blair challenges world to end ‘obscenity’ of African poverty

Friday, March 11th, 2005

The prime minister, Tony Blair, today challenged the world to help end the poverty, conflict and disease plaguing Africa, as he launched a major international report on how to ease the continent’s problems.

“There can be no excuse, no defence, no justification for the plight of millions of our fellow beings in Africa today. There should be nothing that stands in our way of changing it. That is the simple message from the report published today,” said Mr Blair, unveiling the findings of his Commission for Africa at the British Museum in central London.

The 400-page report calls on the international community to immediately double foreign aid to Africa to $50bn (£26bn) and make fighting Aids a priority. It sets 100% debt cancellation as a goal and urges rich nations to drop trade barriers that hurt poor countries. It also says African leaders must move faster toward democracy, stamp out corruption and take other steps to improve how their countries are run.

Mr Blair said he hoped the report would be embraced worldwide as a blueprint for an African renaissance. He has made helping Africa a key priority for Britain’s presidencies of both the European Union and the G8 group of wealthiest nations this year.

“In a world where prosperity is increasing and more people are sharing each year in this growing wealth, it is an obscenity that should haunt our daily thoughts that 4 million children in Africa will die this year before their fifth birthday,” Mr Blair said, calling for a new partnership between the developing world and Africa “that goes beyond the old donor and recipient relationship”. ” If we fail to act we will betray the future not only of hundreds, millions of children in Africa but of our own children too. It is unthinkable that we should do so.”
Full Article: guardian.co.uk

Bob Geldof: Africa has become a living wound. Now we have the chance to heal it
Eat your dinner, they told me as a boy, think about the poor starving children in India.

In those far-off days the concern of the adult world was for Asia. It had a huge population and gloomy prospects in the eyes of economists.

The people of Africa were poor, too, but they had riches in the form of gold, diamonds and copper – and ground so fertile that plants grew overnight wherever you dropped a seed the day before. Africans earned double what Asians did. Africa would be all right.

Forty years on and things are not all right. Africa has stagnated while Asia has seen an astonishing turnaround. First the tiger economies of east Asia leapt ahead. Now India and Bangladesh have followed. Today Asians earn double what Africans do. And life expectancy in Africa is now 17 years less than in India. Why has Africa fallen so far behind?

What we have done on the Commission for Africa – as our declaration in The Independent today tells the world – is analyse the situation, define the real problem and come up with a plan for change.
Full Article: independent.co.uk

Wow. Bob Geldof formulating policy for Africa, and Bono a candidate to head the World Bank! It all lends a certain hallucinatory aspect to the farcical quality of all this chest-beating, conscience-stricken concern for the plight of Africa.

Now the Great White Hope is going to charge forward to ‘fix’ Africa, without a whisper of the 500 years it has ravaged her, and in fact what it is here proposing is merely a 3rd millenium ‘kinder, gentler’ form
of ravaging. The West takes more resources out of the continent than it did under colonialism, and nobody is proposing changing that.

And due to the corruption of governments that these sudden saviors in every respect set the scene for, ‘Africa’ will go right along.

As Chancellor Brown proclaimed, it is time for Europe to ‘stop apologising’ for colonialism, as if ‘sorry’ were sufficient, as if it ever even said ‘sorry’ in the first place.

Blair turns the idea of ‘conscience’ into a universal moral gesture, sidestepping the particular reasons why the Brits might have good cause to lose a bit of sleep over 400 years of wicked behavior.

They think they can avoid a reconcilement with history. They can’t. They use straegies of amnesia and silence to cushion this festering wound, and like every supremacist white, believe they will be remembered as the great heroes of this tawdry old story. Blair is looking to his legacy, and that is about all this report of his amounts to, an empty ceremony, devoid of substance, just another arrogant testimony for the ages, put forward by small people for their own narrow purposes.

The emotionalist rhetoric tells the whole story. “It’s so ghastly, how can we as decent humans bear it?” Well, we have been bearing it for a long time now, and continue to be more than happy to directly benefit from Africa’s suffering.

In books and speeches and articles, with floods of words, theories are spun about the incomprehensible mystery of the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’ on this planet. It’s their climate, it’s the animals they domesticated or not, their forging of steel weapons, their germs, their naivete, their ignorance. But never never the simple bottom-line fact: the rich are rich because the poor are poor. The Incas were not starving before Pizarro came and sucked the silver out of their mountains: Europeans however, were. The ‘open veins’ of the non-white world hemorrhaged its wealth into Europe. Period.

U.N. Aide Chides Bush on Democracy Campaign

Friday, March 11th, 2005

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s top aide said on Thursday that he slightly resented the suggestion that “somehow democracy is President Bush’s invention.”

“I kind of think there are 42 other American presidents who might resent that as well,” Mark Malloch Brown, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s chief of staff, told a news conference. “Democracy has a lot longer roots and a lot more friends than just the current campaign of President Bush.”

The comments came during a daylong conference on “the state of democracy in the world,” organized by the Community of Democracies, a fledgling group of about 100 nations founded in June 2000 in Warsaw to promote democratic government.

The meeting was also meant to firm up plans for the community’s next meeting, an April 28-30 ministerial-level conference in Santiago.

Malloch Brown, who is also the U.N. Development Program administrator, said he did “slightly resent this question that somehow democracy is President Bush’s invention.”

Chilean officials preparing for the Santiago conference also took what appeared to be a swipe at U.S. policy, although they denied it was aimed at Washington.

They said democracy cannot be imposed from outside and is best promoted by many nations, not one.

“We must also remember that democracy develops from within the people,” Chilean Vice President Jose Miguel Insulza told the gathering.
Full Article:news.yahoo.com

The kind of democracy that ‘develops from within the people’ is just the sort of thing that the US has brutally repressed over the past 60 years. PS: Where has Lebanon gone? It seems to have dropped out of the news.

Lebanon’s Nightmare

Thursday, March 10th, 2005

by Robert Fisk
Lebanon confronts nightmare today. As the Syrian army begins its withdrawal from the country this morning, after mounting pressure from President George Bush–whose anger at the Syrians has been provoked by the insurgency against American troops in Iraq–there are growing signs that the Syrian retreat is reopening the sectarian divisions of the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war.

The first Syrian units are expected to cross the Lebanese-Syrian border at Masnaa before midday and their military redeployment should be completed by Wednesday.

To the outside world, this may seem a victory devoutly to be wished: just two weeks after the murder of the former prime minister Rafik Hariri–a prominent opponent of the Syrian presence in Lebanon–the army of Damascus is pulling out of the country it has dominated for 29 long years. At last, free elections might be held in Lebanon, further proof that–thanks to Mr Bush–democracy is breaking out across the Arab world. Iraq held elections, Saudi Arabia held local elections, President Hosni Mubarak promises a contended election for the presidency of Egypt. So why shouldn’t Lebanon be happy?

Have we forgotten 150,000 dead? Have we forgotten the Western hostages? Have we forgotten the 241 Americans who died in the suicide bombing of 23 October 1983? This democracy, if it comes, will be drenched with blood–but the blood will be that of the Lebanese who live here, not that of the foreigners who wish to bestow freedom upon them.
Full Article: counterpunch.org

Secret FBI Report Questions Al Qaeda Capabilities

Thursday, March 10th, 2005

No ‘True’ Al Qaeda Sleeper Agents Have Been Found in U.S.

For all the worry about Osama bin Laden’s sleeper cells or agents in the United States, a secret FBI assessment concludes it knows of none.  (ABCNEWS.com)

 A secret FBI report obtained by ABC News concludes that while there is no doubt al Qaeda wants to hit the United States, its capability to do so is unclear.

“Al-Qa’ida leadership’s intention to attack the United States is not in question,” the report reads. (All spellings are as rendered in the original report.) “However, their capability to do so is unclear, particularly in regard to ‘spectacular’ operations. We believe al-Qa’ida’s capability to launch attacks within the United States is dependent on its ability to infiltrate and maintain operatives in the United States.”

“Limited reporting since March indicates al-Qa’ida has sought to recruit and train individuals to conduct attacks in the United States, but is inconclusive as to whether they have succeeded in placing operatives in this country,” the report reads. “US Government efforts to date also have not revealed evidence of concealed cells or networks acting in the homeland as sleepers.”

It also differs from testimony given by FBI Director Robert Mueller, who warned in the past that several sleeper cells were probably in place.

“Our greatest threat is from al Qaeda cells in the United States that we have not yet been able to identify,” Mueller said at a Senate Select Intelligence Committee hearing in February 2003. “Finding and rooting out al Qaeda members once they have entered the United States and have had time to establish themselves is our most serious intelligence and law enforcement challenge.”

When the secret report was issued last month, on Feb. 16, Mueller testified at a hearing before the same committee that the lack of evidence concerned him. “I am concerned about what we are not seeing,” he said.
Full Article: abcnews.com

Well that leaves an endless number of things to be ‘concerned’ about. How about a preemptive strike against the whole US?

Lebanon May Reinstate Pro-Syria PM

Wednesday, March 9th, 2005

BEIRUT, Lebanon – Bolstered by a massive pro-Syrian demonstration, Lebanese allies of Syria moved Wednesday to reinstate the prime minister, who recently was forced out by anti-Damascus protests. Their action ensures Syria’s continued dominance of Lebanese politics.

Outgoing Prime Minister Omar Karami was virtually assured nomination after 71 legislators put forward his name during consultations with pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud, parliament members said. Under the constitution, the president is obliged to comply with the choice of a majority of the 128-member parliament.
Full Article: yahoo.com/news

Venezuela ’02 anyone?

Buffett deepens dollar worries

Sunday, March 6th, 2005

Warren Buffett has warned that the US trade deficit risks creating a “sharecropper’s society” as his letter to shareholders sounded an increasingly bearish tone about the value of the dollar.

…Mr Buffett stepped up his warning about the US trade deficit and the need to finance it with foreign investment, devoting more than two full pages of the annual report to the topic.

“This force-feeding of American wealth to the rest of the world is now proceeding at the rate of $1.8bn daily, an increase of 20 per cent since I wrote you last year,” he said. “Consequently, other countries and their citizens now own a net of about $3,000bn of the US”

In particular, he warned that this meant a sizeable portion of what US citizens earned in future would have to be paid to foreign landlords.

“A country that is now aspiring to an “Ownership Society” will not find happiness in – and I’ll use hyperbole here for emphasis – a “Sharecropper’s Society,” added Mr Buffett. “But that’s precisely where our trade policies, supported by Republicans and Democrats alike, are taking us.”
Full Article: news.ft.com

Prosecutor Says Probe Will Go On in Case Swirling Near Delay

Sunday, March 6th, 2005

A Texas prosecutor who gained the indictments of three associates of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Tex., says that his investigation of illegal corporate campaign contributions and money laundering will continue and that “We’re following the truth … wherever that leads.”
Full Article: drudgereport.com

Italian Journalist Rejects U.S. Account

Sunday, March 6th, 2005

ROME (AP) – The Italian journalist wounded by American troops in Iraq after her release by insurgents rejected the U.S. military’s account of the shooting and declined Sunday to rule out the possibility she was deliberately targeted. The White House said it was a “horrific accident” and promised a full investigation.

…The U.S. military has said the car Sgrena was riding in was speeding, and Americans used hand and arm signals, flashing white lights and warning shots to get it to stop at the roadblock.

But in an interview with Italian La 7 TV, Sgrena said, “There was no bright light, no signal.” She also said the car was traveling at “regular speed.”

…Suddenly, she said, she remembered her captors’ words, when they warned her “to be careful because the Americans don’t want you to return.”

Sgrena wrote that her captors warned her as she was about to be released not to signal her presence to anyone, because “the Americans might intervene.” She said her captors blindfolded her and drove her to a location where she was turned over to agents and they set off for the airport.
Full Article: apnews.myway.com

The Other Colombia, the One of Hope

Saturday, March 5th, 2005

By Raul Zibechi
“Half of the country is in the hands of the paras,” Paula says by the candlelight in a bar in La Candelaria, the historic old town of Bogotá that has been declared a World Heritage Site. “Wherever they establish their domain, they impose strict rules on daily life and customs: the haircuts of the young people, the closing times of the bars and clubs, and above all, they control and harass the women.” Paula works for an environmental organization and she cannot hide her anguish over a country that she and many other Colombians feel is slipping out of their hands. Daniel, a university professor, more calmly adds, “Here there was a war and the paramilitaries won. The paramilitaries are not only auxiliaries of the state, but they are also the embodiment of a societal project that hopes to wipe out the social advances and conquests of more than a century.”

War is destroying the social fabric of the country: Almost 3 million displaced persons, 8,000 homicides annually for socio-political reasons, 3,500 detentions a year, and hundreds of forced disappearances. These are the tragic results of a conflict that appears interminable. In all, Colombia has one of the highest crime rates in the world, with some 27,000 homicides a year. (1) The state appears incapable of offering security and justice in a situation of deteriorating institutions. This panorama explains the reasons why the population feels fear and chose security in 2002, electing Álvaro Uribe, who was promoted by the paramilitary sector, on a hard-line platform of ending the war. The ruinous situation dates back decades. In 1978, then-President Turbay Ayala (1978-1982) expanded the Statute of Security, which gave the armed forces judicial functions and opened the doors to the systematic violation of human rights. The Constitution of 1991 eliminated the state of siege with which the country had been governed for one century, but it instituted a state of shock.
counterpunch.org