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Abu Ghraib Torture Photos

  • Ag15
    The photos America doesn't want seen MORE photographs have been leaked of Iraqi citizens tortured by US soldiers at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad. Tonight the SBS Dateline program plans to broadcast about 60 previously unpublished photographs that the US Government has been fighting to keep secret in a court case with the American Civil Liberties Union. Although a US judge last year granted the union access to the photographs following a freedom-of-information request, the US Administration has appealed against the decision on the grounds their release would fuel anti-American sentiment. Some of the photos are similar to those published in 2004, others are different. They include photographs of six corpses, although the circumstances of their deaths are not clear. There are also pictures of what appear to be burns and wounds from shotgun pellets. The executive producer of Dateline, Mike Carey, said he was showing the pictures leaked to his program because it was important people understood what had happened at Abu Ghraib. Seven US guards were jailed following publication of the first batch of Abu Ghraib photographs in April 2004. Mr Carey said he could not explain why the photographs had not yet been published, as he thought it was likely that some journalists had them. "It think it's strange, maybe they think its more of the same."
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Wednesday, March 31, 2004

American Mercenaries killed in Fallujah

Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said at a briefing in Baghdad that it was not known what the coalition contractors were doing in Fallujah — apparently without a military escort — when the attack occurred.

U.S. officials, who spoke with NBC News on condition of anonymity, said that all four contractors were Americans who worked for Blackwater USA of Moyock, N.C. The officials did not confirm reports from the scene that a woman was among the dead.

Blackwater USA supplies security guards to the Coalition Provisional Authority and has provided protection for Iraq administrator L. Paul Bremer, among other coalition officials.

That would explain why some Iraqis reported that dog tags were removed from some of the corpses. These people were not "civilians" or "contractors." They were private troops hired by the CPA - mercenaries.

The US is hiring mercenaries in Chile to replace its soldiers on security duty in Iraq. A Pentagon contractor has begun recruiting former commandos, other soldiers and seamen, paying them up to US$4000 a month to guard oil wells. Last month Blackwater USA flew about 60 former commandos from Santiago to a training camp in North Carolina. Many of them had trained under the military government of Augusto Pinochet.

The Guardian March 24, 2004


Global security firms fill in as private armies - 15,000 agents patrol violent streets of Iraq

Mercenaries guard workers in Iraq
March 30, 2004, By Robert Fisk and Severin Carrell

Compassionate Conservatives on the Fallujah Incident

These s.o.b. kids look just like the palestinian animals. We have their pictures, hunt them down and kill them.fallujahcheering.jpg 14 posted on 03/31/2004 7:12:01 AM PST by petercooper (It's obvious, common sense is not prerequisite to voting rights.)

I have a better idea, use a frigging MOAB and dust these bastards once and for all.
16 posted on 03/31/2004 7:13:14 AM PST by Anubus

Doesn't matter, they were people. And this is how those animals react. I'm in favor of the nuke on Fallujah.
I say it again: Damn them, Damn them all.

36 posted on 03/31/2004 7:23:21 AM PST by brownsfan (I didn't leave the democratic party, the democratic party left me.)

I'm with you. These people don't behave like humans, they behave like animals. If you try to contain/train an animal, you don't reason with it. You show it you are the boss, and then you get it to submit. If you don't, it will turn on you. We really have 2 choices, excersize the appropriate force to get these animals to submit, or be their prey. That is the reality of the situation.
52 posted on 03/31/2004 7:32:59 AM PST by brownsfan

I have had my fill of Muslims. They are retarded, hateful, nasty, disgusting individuals. Time to start shooting back and damn those that get in the way. Time to get tough.
255 posted on 03/31/2004 9:48:40 AM PST by Dustbunny

Every troop in Iraq needs to descend upon that ville and kick in every door, toss every home, push, insult and degrade (if such is even possible with that iraqi trash) every man, woman and child. Break every thing of value....cars , eletronics, mechanical etc and demolition power, water and sewage and all roads, bridges and trails into that pile of human crap they call a town and let them understand that such will be met with medevil response from a superior force each and every time they don't police themselves and do such to GI's who "were" there to help them be free from Sad Ass Insane and his killin chillins. Peer pressure will solve that crap when "everyone " suffers from the acts of a few.

Some days ya just have to set the example to get long term result.............They want to act like animals then herd them like animals.

Stay safe !
261 posted on 03/31/2004 9:53:44 AM PST by Squantos (Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.)

To: All
Falluja should be turned into the "Glass Museum of Intolerance". I call for an Anti-Jihad in the name of El Cid. Death to Sunni Muslims everywhere, I call for their deaths to avenge the blood of Americans. They are monkeys with guns, and should be exterminated.
3 posted on 04/01/2004 7:53:05 AM PST by Gnostic_Man

These are the people who cheered Bush for his illegal invasion of Iraq. They can use the term "Operation Iraqi Freedom" without even a twinge of conscience while they discuss nuking people they allegedly "liberated." This is Bush's base. These are ordinary Republican Americans.

Worse than Mogadishu

Iraqis Drag Four Corpses Through Streets

iraqcharredcorpse.jpg

Click picture to enlarge.

Update:Chanting “Fallujah is the graveyard of Americans,” residents cheered after the grisly assault on two civilian vehicles, which left both in flames. Others chanted: “We sacrifice our blood and souls for Islam.”

TV footage showed one man beating a charred corpse with a metal pole. Others tied a yellow rope to a body, hooked it to a car and dragged it down the main street.

Two blackened and mangled corpses were hung from a green iron bridge across the Euphrates.

“The people of Fallujah hanged some of the bodies on the old bridge like slaughtered sheep,” said witness Abdul Aziz Mohammed said. Some of the corpses were dismembered, he said.

Beneath the bodies, a man held a printed sign with a skull and crossbones and the phrase “Fallujah is the cemetery for Americans.”

Television news showed the charred remains of three dead contractors. Some were wearing flak jackets, said resident Safa Mohammedi.

One resident displayed what appeared to be dog tags taken from one body. Residents also said there were weapons in the targeted cars.

APTN showed one American passport near a body and a US Defence Department identification card belonging to another man.

8 days in Fallujah

Marines Take Over Fallujah

Eyes on Iraqis

Marines seek to pacify Fallujah with show of force

Bomb Kills Five U.S. Soldiers in Iraq

Iraqi rebels mutilate five foreigners in horror attack

Although the Marines have instituted a policy of not providing information on killed US Marines, by my count this makes 12 US Marines killed in Fallujah in the past 8 days. As for civilians, that number is difficult to determine for both Iraqis and foreigners.

Isn't it time to admit that social engineering with armies and bombs doesn't work?

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

UN: Heads roll

How come heads roll over a bombing in Baghdad that claimed 22 lives, but when 3,000 people die in the worst terrorist attack in the history of the US, not one person is fired or held accountable in any way?

What's the difference?

An AntiWar Hawk?

Kevin Drum repeatedly calls Richard Clarke "anti-war" in this post.

"What's more, it's possible that Clarke's anti-war views did indeed grow stronger as Iraq continued month after month to suck resources away from attacking al-Qaeda."

I think that's a serious mistake. One of the reasons Clarke has had so much effect on the Bushies is because he's a hawk, not a dove. He actually out-hawks the neocons. His argument against the Iraq war isn't an antiwar argument at all - Clarke was convinced that the Bushies were embarking on the wrong war.

What's Up In Uzbekistan?

Sean-Paul at the Agonist and Nathan at Argus are having an interesting exchange of speculation on the situation in Uzbekistan. Nathan's posts are crammed full of links, excerpts and knowledgeable commentary.

Sean-Paul discusses the possibility of an al Qaida connection to the bombings here- L'Affaire d'Ouzbeq and here - L'affaire d'Ouzbeq, Part II. His analysis strikes me as correct, considering that everyone is working with a minimum of hard information and the situation is very volatile.

Crossposted at AntiWar.com

WH conditions for Rice Testimony:

Here's the letter setting forth the conditions under which the White House agreed to let Condoleezza Rice testify publicly, under oath to the 9/11 commission.

A couple of interesting passages:

It starts off with a little joke to break the ice, "The president has consistently stated a policy of strong support for the commission and instructed the executive branch to provide unprecedented and extraordinary access to the commission. Ok, now to the meat of the thing.


  1. The commission must agree in writing that Dr. Rice's testimony before the commission does not set any precedent for future commission requests, or requests in any other context, for testimony by a national security adviser or any other White House official.
  2. The commission must agree in writing that it will not request additional public testimony from any White House official, including Dr. Rice


So, the main point is that they get Rice and NO ONE ELSE.

Here's the deal on Georgie and BackSeat:

I am authorized to advise you that the president and vice president have agreed to one joint private session with all 10 commissioners, with one commission staff member present to take notes of the session.

No time limit, apparently.

Condi is going to swear to tell the truth.

Pass the popcorn!

madmarv.gifcondimad.jpg

Rice is going to testify under oath to the 9/11 commission after all.

Monday, March 29, 2004

What's so Funny?

Killer lies.

soldiersiraq.jpg
Laugh 'til you cry


Link via skippy.

A Reporter Apologizes!

No, it wasn't Judith "Kneepads" Miller, receptacle for the likes of Chalabi the crook and Mylroie the crank who owes us all an apology that we're apparently not going to get.

This is a real journalist.

This is inexcusable

The U.S. military acknowledged on Monday it was responsible for killing two journalists working for Dubai-based satellite channel Al Arabiya who were shot close to a checkpoint in the Iraqi capital earlier this month. Arabiya cameraman Ali Abdelaziz died on March 18 from a gunshot wound to the head. Correspondent Ali al-Khatib died from his wounds in hospital the next day. Both were Iraqis.

Colleagues said U.S. troops fired on their car near a checkpoint in central Baghdad. The U.S. military initially said it was unlikely its bullets had killed them.

On Monday, a U.S. military official said an investigation into the deaths showed troops were responsible, but had acted within the rules of engagement.

U.S. soldiers were aiming at a different car, a white Volvo that had driven through the checkpoint at high speed, the investigation said. Arabiya's gray Kia car was 50 to 150 meters down the road, trying to turn when it was accidentally hit, the military said.

"The investigation concluded that no soldiers fired intentionally at the Kia," the U.S. military said in a statement.

"Only one soldier saw the Kia leave the scene and was unaware that the Kia had been struck by gunfire or that its occupants had been killed or injured. We regret the accidental shooting of the Al Arabiya employees."

The driver of the Volvo was also killed in the incident.

A senior military official said troops fired at the Volvo in self-defense. He said it was driving at high speed, and rammed a U.S. Humvee hard enough to push it back 15 meters.

He said eight soldiers, worried about car bombs, had fired up to 10 bullets each at that car. Its driver was killed. Several bullets accidentally struck the Arabiya car.

"The soldiers were acting within the rules of engagement," he said. "At this point this is seen as an accident. At this point the soldiers were working within the rules of engagement."

He said the investigation was finished.

Before the March 18 incident, at least four journalists had been killed by U.S. forces in Iraq.

Last week, an Iraqi cameraman working for U.S. network ABC was shot and killed while covering clashes west of Baghdad. Witnesses said he was shot by U.S. troops.

A senior military official said on Monday that the U.S. military was considering whether to investigate the incident.

journalists-al-arabiya-19-3-2004.jpgHere's what the Iraqis say happened, from Middle East Online:
Ali al-Khatib, Ali Abdul Aziz killed by US soldiers while filming Burj al-Hayat hotel in central Baghdad.

BAGHDAD - A second Iraqi journalist for al-Arabiya television died from wounds Friday after being shot by US soldiers late Thursday, a correspondent from the Dubai-based satellite news channel said.

"Ali al-Khatib died 30 minutes ago" in hospital, said Ahmad Salah, an al-Arabiyah correspondent, at around 9:30 am (0630 GMT).

Khatib was shot in the head, Salah said, his voice choked with tears.

His colleague Ali Abdul Aziz, a cameraman with the same station, was shot dead in the incident, which occurred near the Burj al-Hayat hotel in central Baghdad, the target of a rocket attack Thursday night.

"My brother had asked US forces if they could film the Burj al-Hayat hotel and they told him it was fine. Moments later, a Volvo did not stop at the checkpoint and the soldiers opened fire," said the cameraman's brother Haidar Abdel Aziz.

"My brother and his colleague wanted to leave, they ran to their car and an armoured vehicle opened fire on them."

Both Abdul Aziz and Khatib were Iraqi nationals.

I'm really sick of the way US soldiers always "follow the rules of engagement" and Iraqis always end up dead because of it. Oh, and in case you're wondering what the rules of engagement are, well, that's a secret you are not entitled to know.
The US military does not have to pay out money when a relative is wounded or killed in a situation that is defined as combat, the report says.

A combat situation can include anything from the conducting of a raid to manning a checkpoint.

Paola Gasparoli, deputy director of the Occupation Watch Center, said her group believed most civilian deaths happened during events classified as combat operations.

"The US military's definition of a 'combat situation' is elastic and ephemeral. The secrecy of the rules of engagement makes it difficult to understand what legal space exists for people to have their cases heard and potentially receive compensation," the report says.

Oh, I see. When an Iraqi is killed in a "combat situation" their family doesn't get compensation. And no one knows whether they were in a combat situation until the military investigates itself.

Howard Stern's Anthem

Chicago Sun-Times:

The video to ''Y'All Want a Single,'' which Stern hails as ''the most inspirational, the most spectacular understanding of what's going on in this country right now,'' was shot at an out-of-business L.A. record store. In it, Korn, joined by fans, storms through the aisles smashing display cases and CDs with crowbars. While the store is being destroyed, statements taking the music industry to task cross the screen, including: ''One corporation owns the 5 major video channels in the U.S.''; ''98 percent of the bands signed to a major don't make a profit''; ''Two radio conglomerates control 42 percent of listeners.''

''The stuff we said in the video [is the stuff] the music industry doesn't want kids to know about,'' Davis says. ''Everyone is in bed with everyone in the industry. One corporation owns all the video channels, one corporation owns all the radio stations, and all the venues we play at are also the promoters. It's a whole monopoly. They deem what kids are going to hear.''

Davis says getting the band's label, Sony, to approve the video was a battle, but Korn won. ''They let it go under artistic freedom,'' Davis says.

The video has been put into regular rotation on Fuse Network. In fact, Fuse president Marc Juris calls the video ''the true rebellious spirit of rock 'n' roll as a vehicle for change.''

The FCC's crackdown on indecency hit the fast track following the Super Bowl halftime incident. Davis in part blames the FCC's actions on the religious right and the fact that it's an election year.stern.jpg

''People are too uptight,'' he says. ''It's the God squad. They have a chance just to turn the knob off. If it's a radio station, if it's a CD, they don't have to listen to it. It's ridiculous.''

KORN have posted a remixed version of their song "Y'All Want a Single", featuring a guest appearance by embattled shock jock Howard Stern, at their official web site. Download it here.

Rice: Liar, Liar

Rice, in a prime-time television interview, reiterated the White House argument that the president's top advisers should not be forced to testify in public.
rice-inside.jpg In other words, testifying in public, Rice says that the president's top advisers should not be forced to testify in public.

So, all we're left with are her objections to being "forced" and the one she left out..."under oath." Since the 9/11 commission has said it is reluctant to subpoena Rice and that it probably wouldn't do so, the only objection left standing is the "under oath" objection. I think it's fair to say that Rice will testify whenever and wherever she chooses as long as she can LIE. This is such a transparently disgusting position that even Republicans are urging her to testify for the commission.

The only question left concerning Condoleeza Riace is what is she lying about?


UPDATE: Paul Waldman explains "Why Condoleezza Rice won't raise her right hand and swear to tell the truth."

Pants On Fire


ANOTHER UPDATE: Shark at Blogcritics.org piles on: FRIED RICE: 'Condi' Lies Again

Insightful: Finally, the White House is reportedly moving to declassify congressional testimony then-White House adviser Richard Clarke gave in 2002. By declassifying this testimony, the White House is breaking the very same "principle" of barring White House adviser's testimony from being public that Rice is using to avoid appearing publicly before the 9/11 commission!

Sunday, March 28, 2004

Winnebagos of Death

This could almost be satire, but you can't make stuff this pathetic up. No one would believe you.

David Kay, the postwar weapons inspector whose declaration in January that Iraq had no WMD initiated a series of hammer-blows to the credibility of the Bush administration and the British government, described Mr Powell's use of Curveball's information before the UN as "disingenuous".

He told the LA Times: "If Powell had said to the Security Council: 'It's one source, we never actually talked to him, and we don't know his name', I think people would have laughed us out of court."winnebagosofdeath.jpg

Mr Powell told the world on 5 February last year the administration had "firsthand descriptions of biological weapons factories on wheels and on rails" capable of producing enough anthrax or botulinum toxin to kill "thousands upon thousands of people". He showed "highly detailed and extremely accurate" diagrams of how the trucks were configured. Revealingly, he could only produce artist renditions, not actual blueprints or photographs.

Since the Powell speech, Curveball's reliability has been destroyed. The German foreign intelligence service, the BND, later warned the CIA that it had "various problems with the source". Curveball also lied about his academic credentials and omitted to tell his interlocutors he had been fired as a chemical engineer for the Iraqi army and jailed for embezzlement before fleeing Iraq in the late 1990s.powellun.jpg
The possible existence of mobile labs was touted as a theory by UN weapons inspectors frustrated in 1992 at their failure to find evidence of chemical and biological weapons programmes. (Saddam's son-in-law, Hussein Kamal, later defected and said they had been destroyed in 1991.) The UN inspectors approached Mr Chalabi for help in establishing the existence of the mobile labs in late 1997. Scott Ritter, one of the inspectors, told the LA Times: "We got hand-drawn maps, handwritten statements and other stuff. It looked good. But nothing panned out. Most of it just regurgitated what we'd given them. And the data that was new never checked out."


Colin Powell actually presented this pile of crap at the UN. How humiliating.

Saturday, March 27, 2004

Eyes on Iraqis

eyesfallujah.jpg
"You can't escape and you can't hide ... the coalition will find you and bring you to justice."

This is a leaflet that the Marines have scattered all over Fallujah, according to Iraqis.

In 10 days since the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force relieved the 82nd Airborne in Fallujah, 7 Marines have been killed.

Don't expect to find out how those Marines were killed. Carol Rosenberg reports for Knight Ridder:

Adopting a new tactic, the Marines have stopped giving information about how Marines have been killed or give any details about the latest battles, saying any information helps the enemy. Instead of explaining how Marines were killed, they say only "due to enemy action."

I think this flyer is a good illustration of something Senator Rockefeller said today as he was lamenting his "wrong" vote authorizing the invasion of Iraq:

"We had this feeling we could be welcomed as liberators. Americans don't know history, geography, ethnicity. The administration had no idea of what they were getting into in Iraq. We are not internationalists. We border on being isolationists. We don't know anything about the Middle East."

Indeed.

60 Minutes under oath

Rice, Bush's national security adviser and once Clarke's White House superior, has led furious administration denials of the charges in various televised appearances and wants to appear before the investigative commission in private session.


Kerry, the Massachusetts senator cruising toward his party's White House nomination this summer, joined a chorus of Democrats arguing that that is not good enough.

"We're talking about the security of our country...and the answer is, profoundly, yes, she should (testify)," he told reporters during a campaign stop in Kansas City.

Noting that Rice planned an appearance Sunday night on CBS' "60 Minutes" program, the same forum Clarke used to attack Bush last weekend, Kerry added:rice-inside.jpg

"If Condoleezza Rice can find time to do '60 Minutes' on television before the American people, she ought to find 60 minutes to speak to the commission under oath," Kerry said.


C'mon, Condi, quit hiding.

Say Hello to Raed

Riverbend,in her blog Baghdad Burning, announces that Raed (of Salam Pax's Where is Raed fame) has started his own blog.

Raed in the Middle

Go Iraqi bloggers!

Riverbend says that her phone has been out for days, depriving her of internet access. The Americans sure liberated the telephone system.

Clarke and the White House Slimers

While reading the bloviations of Hastert and Frist this morning, a couple of things occurred to me. First, why is the White House panicking? Why didn't they have their stories straight months ago? They've all seen the book. The White House has had it for months now, giving it a "security review." They knew what Clarke was going to say.

Here are three different versions of the "security review" story, all by Jennifer Loven of the AP. The first two are dated March 23 and the third is dated March 24.

Also, even though the White House argued that Clarke's memoir was released to do the maximum political damage to Bush in a presidential election year, McClellan would not say when the required national security review of the book was completed, allowing its publication to proceed. Publications by administration officials are routinely vetted to make sure that nothing is released that compromises classified information or national security.

Even though the White House argued that Clarke's memoir was released to do the maximum political damage to Bush in a presidential election year, Clarke has said a required national security review of the book delayed the book's publication. McClellan said the review, a routine procedure that makes sure publications by administration officials do not compromise classified information or national security, was begun Nov. 4 and completed in early January.

Even though the White House argued that Clarke's memoir was released to do the maximum political damage to Bush in a presidential election year, Clarke has said a required national security review of the book delayed the book's publication. McClellan said the review, a routine procedure that makes sure publications by administration officials do not compromise classified information or national security, was begun last Nov. 4 and completed in early February.
See the difference?

Now, here's the always charming Scottie McClellan, sweating through a press briefing on March 23:

Q You and others at the White House made a point of saying yesterday that the timing was suspect because it's an election year. You asked why he had waited this long to make his concerns known. He says that the book could have been published in December, but for the White House security review process.

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, let's be clear here. His book went through the normal review process. It went through the normal national security review process to look at classification issues. This is standard practice to make sure that classified information is not inadvertently released. Dick Clarke could have released his book at any time, but the fact is he chose to release it at a time and in a way where he could maximize coverage to sell books, and at a time when he could have the impact to influence the political discourse. That's very clear.

Q He could have released it at any time --

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, his publisher put out that he was going to release it at the end of April, I might point out to you. That's been in the public domain.

Q And could he have released it before the security review?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, certainly if he had such grave concerns, he could have raised those a year ago when he was leaving the administration, or over a year -- more than a year ago.

Q You just shifted the question, though. When did the security review conclude? In other words, when was he free as far as the United States government was concerned to publish this book?

MR. McCLELLAN: Well, first of all, keep in mind that his publisher put out that it would come out at the end of April. There is a normal review process you go through in a situation like this that involves discussing information that's potentially classified for national security reasons. It went through the normal review process.

Q But he says that normal review process ended up delaying the publication of the book.

MR. McCLELLAN: No, look, Terry, he could release this book at any time. It's very clear that he chose to release it at a time --

Q No, he couldn't release it at any time --

MR. McCLELLAN: No, Bill, he chose to release it at a time when he could maximize coverage for promoting and selling his book, and he chose to release it at a time --

Q When was he free to release it?

MR. McCLELLAN: Can I finish? He chose to release it at a time when he could influence the political discourse. I can get you the exact time period of when that --

Q You've made that point, but Terry and I are trying to find out when it could have been released without -- having been reviewed for the security --

MR. McCLELLAN: I can get you the time period when it was given to us, things like that.

So, the White House thought the book would be released at the end of April? Did Richard Clarke pull a fast one on them? Another question. Where does Jennifer Loven get her wide variety of dates for the book being released from the White House's "security review?" I've googled around, but I can't pin this down.

Is it possible that the White House was counting on this book coming out after Clarke's testimony at the 9/11 hearings and that this is why they were caught with their pants down? Or, is it possible that the White House never thought Clarke would testify at the hearings at all? Was that what was behind the bizarre little song and dance Bush and Hastert were doing over the two month extension of the commission?

Friday, March 26, 2004

Joking About The Big Lie

I think Matthew Yglesias has nailed why Bush's joking about WMD was so revolting.

The problem here is that, near as I can tell, this is the only public reflection we've heard from the president on this issue. Leaving all the various allegations of cherry-picking and dishonesty aside, it's clear that, before the war, the president said a large number of things about WMDs in a variety of very public fora (State of the Union addresses, the message immediately before the beginning of combat, the Azores summit, the "end of major combat operations" speech, the pre-war prime time press conference, etc.) that we now know to be false. Surely the president has some thoughts on the meaning of all this beyond the "what's the difference?" that he exhibited in a television interview.

If Bush had apologized, or as David Kay has advised, come clean, he would have been able to do his WMD-hunt routine and it would have been poking fun at himself, as it was supposed to have been, rather than laughing at all of the people he's stonewalled and lied to. The Bushies are still pretending that they're going to find WMD in Iraq, so the skit was like a slap in the face to all thinking people who know WMD is a big lie.

An Outrageous Lie

A former FBI wiretap translator with top-secret security clearance, who has been called "very credible" by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, has told Salon she recently testified to the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States that the FBI had detailed information prior to Sept. 11, 2001, that a terrorist attack involving airplanes was being plotted.rice-inside.jpg

Referring to the Homeland Security Department's color-coded warnings instituted in the wake of 9/11, the former translator, Sibel Edmonds, told Salon, "We should have had orange or red-type of alert in June or July of 2001. There was that much information available." Edmonds is offended by the Bush White House claim that it lacked foreknowledge of the kind of attacks made by al-Qaida on 9/11. "Especially after reading National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice [Washington Post Op-Ed on March 22] where she said, we had no specific information whatsoever of domestic threat or that they might use airplanes. That's an outrageous lie. And documents can prove it's a lie."

Anyone remember this?

bushheadrub.jpg


How did Bush get away with this?

GEORGE W. BUSH RUBS MAN'S HEAD FOR "LUCK" IN DISPLAY OF APPARENT RACIST IGNORANCE

3 reasons why the War Party screwed up by invading Iraq

Thomas Schaller in the Gadflyer has been kind enough to put up a transcript of Richard Clarke's interview by Terry Gross on NPR’s Fresh Air program. Clarke distills his argument for why invading Iraq was increased the problem of terrorism.

  1. First of all, it’s costing us $180 billion in the first two years, and may be even more than that. That money could have been used to reduce our vulnerabilities here at home. In the wake of the Madrid bombing of the trains recently, people have realized what’s been true all along, that our railroads in the United States – our subways, our commuter rails – are not protected. Well, many things in the United States are not protected. There’s a long list of vulnerabilities which we could reduce. It would cost money. We’re not spending that money reducing those vulnerabilities very much. There are some token efforts. There should have been an all-out national effort akin to the Apollo Project, or the Manhattan Project.

    But we didn’t do that. And in large part we didn’t do that because the money that would have been necessary is being spent on Iraq. So that’s the first thing: It’s costing us the alternative of reducing our vulnerabilities.


  2. Second, actual military and intelligence assets that were in Afghanistan – looking for al Qaeda, looking for bin Laden – were removed and sent to Iraq. Now, in the last few weeks, they’ve been returned. But that’s two years too late. Two years during which al Qaeda has morphed into a hydra-headed organization with independent organizations and independent cells, and likely the group in Madrid. So we didn’t go after al Qaeda the way that we should have. And we didn’t secure Afghanistan.

    We went into Afghanistan in a very slow way after September 11th. A few special forces troops were put up north with the Northern Alliance to fight the Taliban. We did not send people into where we thought bin Laden was for almost two months – during which, of course, he escaped. And then, we only deployed 11,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

    Now let’s compare that. There are more police in Manhattan – not the city of New York, but just Manhattan – there are more police in Manhattan than the United States put troops into Afghanistan. And yet we were supposed to secure and stabilize the country so that never again would it be a base for terrorism. We were supposed to be draining the swamp.

    Well, we haven’t. And one of the reasons we haven’t is that we withheld forces that should have been going into Afghanistan. We withheld them for the war in Iraq.


  3. The third way is that, al Qaeda had been saying, bin Laden had been saying, that the United States is the “new crusader,” the new westerner come to occupy an Arab country, an oil-rich Arab country. And we did exactly that. We did exactly what bin Laden said we would do: We invaded and occupied an oil-rich Arab country that had not been threatening us. And the sights on Arab television of American troops fighting in Iraq, and now occupying Iraq, have infuriated Arab opinion.

    The Pew Charitable Trust does opinion polling, very reliable opinion polling in countries such as Morocco and Jordan and Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan. Many of those countries – the government, at least – is our friend. We consider them allies, and we consider them moderates. And yet the opinion polls now show that up to 90 percent of people in those countries either hate the United States or have a very negative opinion of the United States. Osama bin Laden is a very popular figure in some of those countries. The most-often given name to new children in Pakistan after 9/11 was Osama.

    So, we played right into their hands by invading and occupying, without any provocation, a Muslim country, and at the very time when we should have been doing the opposite. We should have been embracing our Islamic friends and saying, “work with us to have a counterweight, an ideological counterweight to al Qaeda.”

    They won’t do that now with us, because many of these governments don’t want to be seen to be working too closely with us now in the Islamic world.

    We can’t just arrest and kill terrorists. Even Donald Rumsfeld figured that out. In his internal memo in the Pentagon, which leaked, he said it may be the case that we’re turning out new terrorists faster than we’re killing and arresting them. He’s right; we are. And we have to win the war for ideas. And we can’t do that so long as we are reviled by occupying a country like Iraq.



Of course, many of us have been trying to point these same things out since 9/11 and have been branded "America-hating peacenik Osama lovers" for our troubles by the War Party cheerleaders.

It was as if Usama bin Laden, hidden in some high mountain redoubt, were engaging in long-range mind control of George Bush, chanting "invade Iraq, invade Iraq."

Richard Clarke, Against All Enemies

Atrios has a post up with more detail about the troops that were pulled out of Afghanistan and sent to Iraq.


Osama picture and Clarke quote from the road to surfdom

Thanks to Swopa at needlenose for the link.

Thursday, March 25, 2004

Clarke's book: Publishing phenomenon

NEW YORK - Sales keep soaring for “Against All Enemies,” the book by former counterterrorism adviser Richard A. Clarke that claims the Bush administration did not do enough to protect the country from attacks.

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Just three days after publication, the book has gone into its fifth printing, with 500,000 copies in print, according to the Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. “Against All Enemies” ranked No. 1 on Amazon.com as of Thursday afternoon, and both superstores and independent retailers have reported nonstop demand.

“It’s the publishing phenomenon of the year,” Gabriel Voiles, a manager at Coliseum Books in New York, said Thursday. “We cannot keep it in stock for more than two hours at a time.”

Iraq Oil Well Blown Up

Here's an interesting new twist in the ongoing Successful Liberation of Iraq.

.....the director general of the Northern Iraqi Oil Co said an explosion set an oil well ablaze in northern Iraq.

"The explosion occurred at 3:30 pm (1230 GMT) because of an explosive charge planted by unknown individuals inside the well, located 75 kilometres west of Kirkuk," said Adel Qazzaz.

"It inflicted massive damage in the well, and firefighters are having a hard time extinguishing it because the explosion occurred inside the well and not in the pipelines," he said.


So, the guerillas are actually planting explosives inside oil wells. It is difficult to see how this wouldn't be an inside sabotage job, which indicates that guerillas have infiltrated whatever security exists at the oil fields around Kirkuk.

No WMDS! Ha ha ha ha!

Proving once again that the Bushies are totally disconnected from reality and have no clue how their actions affect people around the world, Bush offers a tasteless and crude presentation in a tin-eared effort to suck up to the American media:

Bush put on a slide show, calling it the "White House Election-Year Album" at the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association 60th annual dinner, showing himself and his staff in some decidedly unflattering poses.

There was Bush looking under furniture in a fruitless, frustrating search. "Those weapons of mass destruction have got to be somewhere," he said.


Ha ha ha! No WMD! No doubt, this girl sees the humor -
daughter.jpg

Woops! Well, at least she isn't hiding WMD in her shoes....

Ha ha ha ha.

Hey, here's a great idea! You should do that presentation at Walter Reed! In the Amputee Ward! Those guys need to be cheered up and I bet they'll really get how funny it is that there are no WMDs in Iraq!


Crossposted at AntiWar.com Blog

Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Zapatero and Chirac fail to pay homage to the Envoy of the SuperPower of the Planet

zapaterosmirk.jpg

So Powell gets all pissed and threatens to stomp out.

Doesn't Powell look like he just sucked on a lemon?

Where Was the War President?

WASHINGTON : Warnings of an imminent terrorist strike "lit up" in the weeks before September 11, CIA director George Tenet said as the official inquiry into the attacks highlighted confusion and missed opportunities to kill Osama bin Laden. [...] "Our collection sources 'lit up' during this period," Tenet said. "They indicated that multiple spectacular attacks were planned and that some of the plots were in their final stages."
Hmmm. So, what was George Bush the War President doing in those weeks before the most devastating terrorist attack on Americans ever?

He was on vacation.

CNN: What does President George W. Bush have planned for his vacation?

KING: Most of all some rest and time on the ranch, but there is also a fair amount of work to be done. He has to make his decision on stem cell funding and the White House is debating a fall agenda: not just strategy in dealing with Congress on the patients' bill of rights and spending issues, but also more presidential travel to promote other issues like education.

CHAT PARTICIPANT: What is the Bush administration's objective for the remainder of the year into next?

KING: Well, the question is fairly broad. Certainly the number one legislative priority right now is education. And HMO reform and probably prescription drugs for Medicare recipients will be major issues. But the Democrats also will have some say over the agenda in Congress. So it will be a give-and-take period not unlike what we saw last week in the debate over the patients' bill of rights.

Hussein on the brain

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Much has been written about the bizarre neocon conspiracy theorist Laurie Mylroie, and the seriousness with which her ludicrous notions were taken amongst the Bushie neocons. With the revelations of Richard Clarke currently in the spotlight, Mylroie's influence with the neocons is once more at least part of the answer to the question "Why did they blame Iraq and not Al Qaida?"

Of particular interest to libertarians is a facet of Mylroie's obsession that digby at Hullaballo is currently researching. Not only was Mylroie fixated on Saddam Hussein as Evil Personified, but foundational to her crackpot theories was the absolute insistence that terrorism must be state sponsored. She dismissed out of hand any suggestion that Al Qaida was what it actually is....a collection of loosely federated cells which share a common ideology and goals. Some interesting quotes digby has posted:

Actually, there's quite a bit more evidence. In a post from last August, in which I wrote about this Wolfowitz/Mylroie connection I linked to Josh Marshall's reporting on the backround controversy surrounding Sam Tannenhaus' article on Wolfowitz in the August 2003 issue of Vanity Fair. Josh said:
As noted here a couple days ago, the Tanenhaus article says that Wolfowitz is "confident" that Saddam played some role in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and that he had "entertained" the notion that Saddam had played some role in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing as well. (Tanenhaus sources Wolfowitz's ideas about Oklahoma City to a "longtime friend" of the Deputy Secretary.)
The exact quotes remain on backround and have never been revealed. But, in an earlier story, Time magazine reported:
One reason so many hawks seemed ready to make the case for retaliating against Saddam as well as bin Laden may have been the influence of Laurie Mylroie, a conservative scholar who had convinced herself and a number of influential conservatives, although not the U.S. intelligence community, that Iraq had been behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and was very likely behind 9/11, too. But as eccentric as her argument was to the U.S. intelligence community, it was hailed by Wolfowitz, who wrote in a blurb to her book that it "argues powerfully that the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing was actually an agent of Iraqi intelligence." And invade-Iraq cheerleader Richard Perle, formerly head of Rumsfeld's Defense Policy Board, wrote in his own blurb: "Laurie Myroie has amassed convincing evidence of Saddam Hussein's involvement in the first attempt to blow up the World Trade Center. If she is right, and there are simple ways to test her hypothesis, we would be justified in concluding that Saddam was probably involved in the September 11, 2001, attacks as well."
Clarke said that after 9/11 Wolfowitz wondered why the government was spending so much time on one apparently irrelevant man. Two days after the attacks, Wolfowitz made his famous Al Haig style comment in which he said (and which was slapped down immediately by Colin Powell):
I think one has to say it's not just simply a matter of capturing people and holding them accountable, but removing the sanctuaries, removing the support systems, ending states who sponsor terrorism. And that's why it has to be a broad and sustained campaign.
It is indisputable that Wolfowitz swallowed whole the ridiculous theory that terrorists are unable to function without state sponsorship, as his comments above illustrate. This theory was set forth again last July by Mylroie testimony before congress in which she said:
Prior to the February 26, 1993, bombing of the World Trade Center, it was assumed that major terrorist attacks against the U.S. were state-sponsored. But that bombing is said to mark the start of a new kind of terrorism that does not involve states.

That notion is dubious. Rather, the claim that a new, stateless terrorism emerged with the 1993 Trade Center bombing was a convenient explanation in that it required no military response. Once promulgated, it was hastily accepted--even before much progress had been made in the investigation of that attack itself.

There isn't time to properly address that issue in this testimony. Study of Revenge: Saddam Hussein's Unfinished War against America contains the fullest account of this author's argument that there is no new source of major terrorist attacks on the U.S. They were state-sponsored--and remain so. That that is not understood is the result of a major intelligence and policy failure that occurred in the 1990s.

In the time allotted here, I want to address three major terrorist plots that have been attributed to so-called "loose networks," including al Qaeda, and illustrate that there is significant evidence to suggest that Iraq was involved: the 1993 Trade Center bombing; the 1995 plot in the Philippines to bomb a dozen US airplanes; and the 9/11 attacks.


According to Tannenhaus, as of August 2003 Wolfowitz still agreed with her about the WTC bombings. Perhaps by then he had accepted that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, but his statements right after the attacks certainly comport with what Richard Clarke reports was his reaction to the information that Al Qaeda was to blame.

Here's Mylroie on a CNN sponsored chat in October 2001 holding forth in the same vein:

Fruitcake soaked in Anthrax.
A little gem from that chat: "....the Clinton administration put out a false and fraudulent explanation for terrorism, saying that terrorism was no longer state-sponsored, but carried out by individuals. That false and fraudulent explanation was accepted and allowed Saddam to continue to attack the U.S."

Knowing the Wolfowitz and the Bush neocons swallowed Mylroie's whoppers whole makes it much easier to understand why, when confronted with Clarke's insistence that bin Laden have priority in counterterrorism efforts, Wolfowitz said, "No, no, no. We don't have to deal with al Qaeda. Why are we talking about that little guy? We have to talk about Iraqi terrorism against the United States."

Of course, Paul, that "little guy" couldn't have done it - it had to be a state, didn't it. Just ask Laurie.

Now, in light of what is known about this fruitloop, imagine how the people in the DIA felt when they were assigned her book.

On the day of the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center,Wolfowitz told senior officials at the Pentagon that he believed Iraq might have been responsible. "I was scratching my head because everyone else thought of al Qaeda," said a former senior defense official who was in one such meeting. Over the following year, "we got taskers to review the link between al Qaeda and Iraq. There was a very aggressive search."

In the winter of 2001-02, officials who worked with Wolfowitz sent the Defense Intelligence Agency a message: Get hold of Laurie Mylroie's book, which claimed Hussein was behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, and see if you can prove it, one former defense official said.

The DIA's Middle East analysts were familiar with the book, "Study of Revenge: The First World Trade Center Attack and Saddam Hussein's War Against America." But they and others in the U.S. intelligence community were convinced that radical Islamic fundamentalists, not Iraq, were involved. "The message was, why can't we prove this is right?" said the official.

Retired Vice Adm. Thomas R. Wilson, then director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, directed his Middle East analysts to go through the book again, check all the allegations and see if they could be substantiated, said one current and one former intelligence official familiar with the request. The staff was unable to make the link.

Crossposted at AntiWar.com Blog

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

Blogging Richard Clarke

Tim Dunlop at the road to surfdom is reading Clarke's book and blogging about it as he goes.


Reading Richard Clarke's new book

Reading Richard Clarke's new book 3

Reading Richard Clarke's new book 4

Richard Clarke 5

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Richard Clarke 7

Decapitation

'Decapitation strike' was aimed at Saddam

The decision to launch a "decapitation strike" aimed at Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was made by President Bush during an urgently called meeting Wednesday evening in which the CIA director voiced concern that a prime opportunity could be lost, U.S. officials said. [...] Bush gave the go-ahead at 6:30 p.m. -- 50 minutes before that meeting broke up, the officials said. In addition to Tenet, those on hand for the meeting included Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice. [...] At the White House, officials said that just before Bush addressed the nation, he pumped his fist, winked, and said "I feel good."

The Jerusalem NewsWire, in an ecstatic, exultant editorial titled Got him! - Israel kills Yassin asks,