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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 Tonight the SBS Dateline program plans to broadcast about 60 previously unpublished photographs that the US Government has been fighting to keep secret in a court case with the American Civil Liberties Union.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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Friday, April 30, 2004

Dubya, racist bigot

Josh Marshall points out an astonishingly stupid, even for Dumbya, statement made by Bush today:

There's a lot of people in the world who don't believe that people whose skin color may not be the same as ours can be free and self-govern. I reject that. I reject that strongly. I believe that people who practice the Muslim faith can self-govern. I believe that people whose skins aren't necessarily -- are a different color than white can self-govern.

people whose skin color may not be the same as ours

Ours? What colour is "our" skin? Who is he talking about? Americans? The Bush Administration? What color is Bush, Rumsfeld, Rice, Cheney and Powell? What is this man saying?

As Josh points out, what Bush wants to do is set up a false dichotomy, implying that the only people who could oppose his Iraq policies are racists. Stupidly, he points to himself as the real racist. Now, watch how he sinks into further bigotry:

I believe that people who practice the Muslim faith can self-govern.

So, Georgie (unlike the people who disagree with his Iraq policy) believes people who's skin colour "may not be the same as ours" can self-govern and Muslims, too. And people who's "skins aren't necessarily -- are a different color than white can self-govern."

This is the statement of a bigot and a racist. He's talking about Iraqis and all he can focus on is skin colour and their religion. He doesn't see them as people, certainly not people like the white, Christian Americans. He's condescending and patronising. He's just insulted everyone but his dim-bulb, Fox news-watching, Limbaugh dittoing base.

British Torture Photos Surface

British military officials confirmed Friday that they are investigating new allegations that their soldiers abused a prisoner in Iraq.

From a Sky News report:
Daily Mirror Cover

Photographs in the Daily Mirror show an Iraqi being battered with rifle butts, threatened with execution, and urinated on by British troops.

During his eight-hour ordeal, the suspected thief had his jaw broken and teeth smashed, the Mirror reported.

The news follows the publication of images showing US troops humiliating and torturing Iraqi prisoners.

The Mirror told how the suspect was later driven away from the Army camp, still hooded, and thrown off the back of a moving wagon.

British soldiers from the Queens Lancashire Regiment handed the photos to the paper to show why Coalition forces were encountering such hostility.

They stressed that the abuse by UK forces has been carried out by rogue elements.

"We are not helping ourselves out there. We are never going to get them on our side. We are fighting a losing war," one of the soldiers told the paper.

Warflogger spin on the Abu Ghraib torture photos

60MinII.US.IraqiTortured.10


Most warflogger sites are maintaining strict silence on the subject of the Abu Ghraib torture photos. At least the voluble Freakers are talking about it, though some of their comments would peel paint off walls.

Freakers (FreeRepublican.com):

Gallery of Torture! (or any Saturday night in San Francisco)

Apparently there are enormous prisons in San Francisco where the US Army trains.

Freak comments:

As we are aware - this is POLITICAL SCANDAL to fuel the frenzy of the Dems here in the U.S. and Blair's antagonists in Britian.

Election year hype.

hehe . . the one female is having just a little too much fun . .


**********

"We had a very high rate with our styles of getting them to talk. They ended up breaking within hours."

Sorry, but I would rather have the information about lethal potential bombs, ambushes and attacks against our own extracted in a timely manner, whilst the info is still of some tactical value, than be too concerned with a loss of dignity on the part of a few enemy combatants. There was no physical harm caused.

It is well understood (although perhaps not by these personnel shown in the photos) that questioning a subject whilst nude is known to be very effective. Given the Arab mindset, questioning by a (clothed!) female interrogator would be particularly effective.

Any serviceman who has undergone even a limited 'Resistance to Interrogation' course will have been on the receiving end of something like this. Exhausted, cold, hungry, hooded, stripped and ridiculed by the 'Reds' for having a spotty a$$ or small tackle. It ain't fun, but it ain't so bad. Lesson 1 - Evade capture in future!

Mind you, some of the Irish terror 'suspects' did kick up a fuss about it in Belfast a few years back. Such 'hard' men!! I think the European Human Rights court got upset and the Brit Government had to pay up a few quid. (But I believe that the info needed was obtained, so it was a small price to pay!!)

It's a whole lot better than having a small plastic charge detonated in your breast pocket, which I understand that SH used to favour!!

Who WAS the cretin with a camera in those circumstances, anyway!


**********

So, the argument that any of this was an "aberration" clearly goes out the window. All it takes is a quick perusal of the Republican and warbot Freaker site to see that.

Interestingly, on FreeRepublican, not one account of this atrocity is on their news sidebar, breaking or otherwise. Even more tellingly, the warbots at Little Green Footballs have not posted even one article on this subject, so no quotes from them. We'll have to guess that they're either too ashamed to post about it or that they think it's not newsworthy. I vote for the former.

Instapundit is silent on the subject of American torture of Iraqis, but he's heavy into trying to drum up enthusiasm for the UN Food-for-Oil scandal.

Total silence on the Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler's rabidly frothing warbot site.

Come on, people, even President Flightsuit has condemned this.

Thursday, April 29, 2004

US Whines to Qatar about Al Jazeera

Bush Administration whines to Qatar about Al Jazeera

"I am not responsible (for) al-Jazeera," Foreign Minister Hamad bin Jassim said of the Qatar-based station funded by the Gulf ally's ruler.

"But we will take this concern back to al Jazeera and they have to review (it), because we need al Jazeera to be professional and we don't want anybody to send lies or to send (the) wrong information," he said after talks at the White House with Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

Hamad said he also discussed plans to sharply increase liquefied natural gas sales to the United States. He told reporters, "There is some agreement to send more gas, around 20 million tons of gas to the United States ... by the year 2010."


I'm sure this deal has NUTHINK to do with al Jazeera....
The Bush administration has warned Qatar its relations with the United States were clouded by what it called "inflammatory" coverage of Iraq by Jazeera, whose satellite broadcasts have a wide Arab audience.

The Bush administration says its Middle East policies promote freedom.

The freedom to be liberated from your property and life....

Here's the Bush Administration desperately needing a shred of credibility with the Arab world and everything they do alienates them further.

Sinclair Broadcast Group boycotts Koppel's Nightline

Via Atrios, we learn that Sinclair TV has announced a boycott of Ted Koppel's Nightline show in which he intends to read the names and show a picture of all the Americans killed in combat in Iraq.

Apparently, Sinclair is only interested in good news from Iraq. This is from a story in the Baltimore Sun dated February 18, 2004:

Sinclair Broadcast Group's Jon Leiberman and Mark Hyman are in Iraq to report the positive, "untold stories" that we're not getting from the liberal media. Hyman tells David Folkenflik: "Hopefully, what we've done is given our viewers more of a sense of what's happening, beyond 'There was a car-bombing today.' ...What's really fascinating to me is the optimism that so many Iraqis have."

Mmmmkay. Oddly, googling either "Jon Lieberman" or "Mark Hyman" produces no stories with their byline. Maybe they're still tracking down that good news.

Via Poynter Online:

STATEMENT OF THE SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP The ABC Television network announced on Tuesday that the Friday, April 30th edition of “Nightline” will consist entirely of Ted Koppel reading aloud the names of U.S. servicemen and women killed in action in Iraq. Despite the denials by a spokeswoman for the show the action appears to be motivated by a political agenda designed to undermine the efforts of the United States in Iraq.

While the Sinclair Broadcast Group honors the memory of the brave members of the military who have sacrificed their lives in the service of our country, we do not believe such political statements should be disguised as news content. As a result, we have decided to preempt the broadcast of “Nightline” this Friday on each of our stations which air ABC programming.

We understand that our decision in this matter may be questioned by some. Before you judge our decision, however, we would ask that you first question Mr. Koppel as to why he chose to read the names of the 523 troops killed in combat in Iraq, rather than the names of the thousands of private citizens killed in terrorists attacks since and including the events of September 11, 2001. In his answer, you will find the real motivation behind his action scheduled for this Friday.

ABC NEWS STATEMENT IN RESPONSE TO SINCLAIR

We respectfully disagree with Sinclair's decision to pre-empt "Nightline's" tribute to America's fallen soldiers which will air this Friday, April 30. The Nightline broadcast is an expression of respect which simply seeks to honor those who have laid down their lives for this country. ABC News is dedicated to thoughtful and balanced coverage and reports on the events shaping our world with neither fear nor favor -- as our audience expects, deserves, and rightly demands. Contrary to the statement issued by Sinclair, which takes issue with our level of coverage of the effects of terrorism on our citizens, ABC News and all of our broadcasts, including "Nightline," have reported hundreds of stories on 9-11. Indeed, on the first anniversary of 9-11, ABC News broadcast the names of the victims of that horrific attack.

In sum, we are particularly proud of the journalism and award winning coverage ABC News has produced since September 11, 2001. ABC News will continue to report on all facets of the war in Iraq and the War on Terrorism in a manner consistent with the standards which ABC News has set for decades.

US Says "Still better than Saddam."

torture2

The general in charge of the US-run prison system in Iraq has been suspended and put under investigation over the alleged abuse of Iraqi detainees by US soldiers.

A senior US military spokesman says Brigadier General Janis Karpinski was suspended from her duties in late January after six US soldiers were indicted for mistreating prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison.

Gen Karpinski and another six officers are under administrative investigation that could result in letters of reprimand.
430_hoodedman0
The US Army confirmed the suspension after American network CBS broadcast images of US troops mistreating Iraqi prisoners.

Photographs aired by the network on 60 Minutes II include one showing a prisoner standing on a box with a hood over his head and wires coming from his hands.

The network says he was told he would be electrocuted if he fell off.

View a video. [Win Broadband] [Real Broadband] [Win Dialup] [Real Dialup]

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Another Mutiny Over Fallujah

The Independent is reporting that the 36th battalion, composed of Iraqi Arab and Kurdish peshmerga militia , has mutinied. The battalion has been fighting alongside the Marines in the siege of Fallujah. The Independent reports that the Marines separated out those who would fight from those who wouldn't.

The battalion may have split along ethnic lines. Its soldiers were recruited from the militiamen of the Iraqi political parties which belong to the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council, and about half were Kurdish soldiers, known as peshmerga. The Kurds were prepared to fight but Iraqi Arab soldiers said they had had enough. Those who refused to fight were withdrawn from the battlefield for retraining.

The speculation about the peshmerga fighting against the Arabs alongside the Americans is confirmed repeatedly.

Wanted: Rumsfeld, Kimmitt, Sanchez

Al Jazeera reports that the "Islamic resistance in Iraq" is offering a bounty for Rumsfeld, Sanchez and Kimmitt. This flyer is reported to have been distributed in Fallujah:

wantedinfallujah

It says 15 000 000 $ as a reward who bring one of these three heads. It doesn't say anything about the body being attached.

Pockets of Resistance in Fallujah

pocketofresistance
Pocket of Resistance


"Our military commanders will take whatever actions necessary to secure Falluja," Bush said as U.S. Marines launched a fresh air and ground assault in the city.

Bush said there were "pockets of resistance" in the Iraqi city, but insisted that "most of Falluja is returning to normal."

NewsFlash! Corruption in government program!

Instastatist wants people to get outraged over the UN Oil-for-Food scandal, further soiling his faux-libertarian credentials by being shocked that a government program is corrupt.

Oh, and guess what? Other states were on the take! At this rate, he'll probably end up tracking down the 2.3 trillion dollars the Pentagon "lost."

UPDATE: More statists on the trail of government malfeasance! Can you guys do the Pentagon next?

A Worthy Project for the Neocons

Ted Koppel intends to read aloud the list of 530 troops killed in action in Iraq, while showing a photo of each captioned with their hometown and age on Nightline. Koppel claims the inspiration for the program is the famous Life magazine June 1969 issue, which published the pictures of all the Americans killed in one week in Vietnam.

Neocon spokesbot William Kristol has denounced the program, calling it a "stupid statement." Kristol claims to be offended because reading the names of the Iraq invasion dead neglects those killed in Afghanistan.

I agree with Kristol that it is unfair to leave any of the dead in Afghanistan and Iraq unnamed. I propose that Kristol and whatever other neocon warfloggers he can get to help him should be allowed to read the names of all the Afghanis and Iraqis killed in the WOT so far. Surely we can get someone to donate a few hundred hours of airtime for such a worthy project.

Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Horrible Trauma Cases in Iraq

Atrios links the Washington Post story everyone's talking about today about the horrific injuries that the military hospitals in Iraq are dealing with and the trauma it is causing for the doctors and surgical teams. Atrios says:

This stuff is just so horrible. I really hope Kerry gets out in front of this and proposes massive increases in VA funds. You can have my goddamn tax cut back. I'd rather pay out the money that way and get some quality care for these people than throw it into their change cups a few years from now.

I hate what these bastards have done, and I hate that they'd rather bankrupt the government than take care of the mess they've made. Assholes.

Which I think rather misses the point of the article. The problem isn't lack of funds, it's that these guys are surviving hideous injuries that would have killed them just a few years ago.
More and more in Iraq, combat surgeons say, the wounds involve severe damage to the head and eyes -- injuries that leave soldiers brain damaged or blind, or both, and the doctors who see them first struggling against despair.

For months the gravest wounds have been caused by roadside bombs -- improvised explosives that negate the protection of Kevlar helmets by blowing shrapnel and dirt upward into the face. In addition, firefights with guerrillas have surged recently, causing a sharp rise in gunshot wounds to the only vital area not protected by body armor.

The neurosurgeons at the 31st Combat Support Hospital measure the damage in the number of skulls they remove to get to the injured brain inside, a procedure known as a craniotomy. "We've done more in eight weeks than the previous neurosurgery team did in eight months," Poffenbarger said. "So there's been a change in the intensity level of the war."

With advanced surgical techniques and the military's capability for moving casualties from the field to the hospital in record quick times, they are saving people with devastating brain injuries and people who are blinded and disfigured and paralyzed. There is nothing more money can do for injuries like this, which is what the doctors in the article point out.
"See all that dark stuff? That's dead brain," he said. "That ain't gonna regenerate. And that's not uncommon. That's really not uncommon. We do craniotomies on average, lately, of one a day."

"We can save you," the surgeon said. "You might not be what you were."

Accurate statistics are not yet available on recovery from this new round of battlefield brain injuries, an obstacle that frustrates combat surgeons. But judging by medical literature and surgeons' experience with their own patients "three or four months from now 50 to 60 percent will be functional and doing things," said Maj. Richard Gullick.

"Functional," he said, means "up and around, but with pretty significant disabilities," including paralysis.

'Broken soldiers'

The remaining 40 percent to 50 percent of patients include those whom the surgeons send to Europe, and on to the United States, with no prospect of regaining consciousness. The practice, subject to review after gathering feedback from families, assumes that loved ones will find value in holding the soldier's hand before confronting the decision to remove life support.

"I'm actually glad I'm here and not at home, tending to all the social issues with all these broken soldiers," Carroll said.

But the toll on the combat medical staff is itself acute, and unrelenting.

In a comprehensive Army survey of troop morale across Iraq, taken in September, the unit with the lowest spirits was the one that ran the combat hospitals until the 31st arrived in late January. The three months since then have been substantially more intense.

"We've all reached our saturation for drama trauma," said Maj. Greg Kidwell, head nurse in the emergency room.

The real solution to this problem is to get those Americans out of Iraq, not to throw money at yet another government program. Besides, if you want the best of care for these broken people why would you send them to a shabby hospital system like the VA anyway? Why throw money at the VA when there are thousands of state of the art hospitals all over the US? Let them go to real doctors at real hospitals, not government facilities which are all run as efficiently as Amtrak. Better yet, bring them home before any more get hurt.

Anyway, the point is, even if you gave the VA billions, it won't help. The cases that are demoralizing the doctors are the hopeless ones like brain injuries and missing eyes. These are permanent disabilities. No amount of money will replace eyes or fix an injured brain or spine. A significant number of these soldiers are making the return trip only so their families can see them one last time before they pull the plug.

A Sham Flag for a Sham Sovereignty

Eli at Left I asks:

The most unbelievable thing about this flag isn't it's resemblance to the Israeli flag and the offense that has already caused to Iraqis. It's that, in just over two months, the U.S. is going to pretend to hand over "sovereignty" to (some unknown group of) Iraqis. Since the "sovereign" Iraqi government isn't going to be in control of the military, or able to write laws, or much of anything as far as one can tell, couldn't the U.S. at least have saved this one meaningless gesture (approving a new flag) for them? Apparently not.

I think the answer to that question is in this Dubya quote Billmon just put up:
"
On June 30th, when the flag of free Iraq is raised, Iraqi officials will assume full responsibility for the ministries of government."

George W. Bush Press Conference April 13, 2004

You see, the Bushies need to have a "new" flag to run up the pole for their campaign photo-ops of the Sham Sovereignty Ceremony.

Coalition of the Bailing Out

All Spanish troops are out of Iraq, and Poland is said to be planning the withdrawal of their troops.

Blair has announced that there will be no more British troops sent to Iraq.

Meanwhile, what Iraqi would be insane enough to lead a Marine patrol into Fallujah?

The Poisonous Policies of Israel

Will Fallujah and Najaf be the Americans' Jenin?

The similarities are eery.

This writer also uses the comparison:

U.S. weighs tactics: NATO carrot or Israeli stick

BAGHDAD -- The U.S. military, coping with powder kegs in two very different cities in Iraq, is reviewing tactics used in other high-stakes episodes of strife to test the will--and ability--of Iraqis in Fallujah and Najaf to root out violence and hand over opponents of the U.S.-led coalition.

In particular, sources familiar with the discussions said that U.S. military leaders have mulled the consequences of the urban warfare that Israeli soldiers waged in April 2002 in the West Bank town of Jenin, a densely populated Palestinian stronghold of resistance, and negotiations employed in Macedonia in August 2001 when NATO troops were used to cool an armed rebellion in the former Yugoslav republic.

Military and coalition sources said, the hope is to avoid confrontations in Fallujah, a Sunni stronghold, and Najaf, a Shiite holy city, that would cause high casualties or more bad feelings inside and beyond Iraq toward the U.S. occupation.

U.S. military leaders, who were advised by the Israeli army about urban warfare before the Iraq invasion, acknowledge privately that open combat in either city now could be create a situation similar to what happened in Jenin.


Undoubtedly the Iraqis have made the linkage already, as they are acutely aware that their occupation parallels the Israeli occupation of the Palestinians in many respects. This is what Lakhdar Brahimi meant when he referred to Israel's policies as being "poison in the region."

Monday, April 26, 2004

Puppets choose New Iraqi Flag

.


Here's the ugly flag the Iraqi Puppet Council today agreed should replace the current Iraqi flag.puppetflag


iraq4_jpgflagboy
..
.
.

Somehow, I don't think the transplant will take.

For one thing, it looks like the hated Israeli flag.

"When I saw it in the newspaper, I felt very sad," said Muthana Khalil, 50, a supermarket owner in Saadoun, a commercial area in central Baghdad. "The flags of other Arab countries are red and green and black. Why did they put in these colors that are the same as Israel? Why was the public opinion not consulted?"

Sunday, April 25, 2004

Ilana Mercer, antisemite?

Marcus Epstein calls our attention to the latest Ilana Mercer word salad. In addition to the point Marcus makes about the way Mercer excuses all neocons and Jews for the war, it seems to me she should be taken to task for her own anti-semitic views.

Mercer: President Bush doesn't readily consult or even take directions from his Cabinet, much less from his neoconservative minions.
This is Ilana's thesis for this article. By proving that Bush went to war all by himself she will prove this conclusion:
Mercer: "Plan of Attack" proves Iraq was Bush's attack and Bush's plan. After Woodward, only the tinfoil-hat crowd can blame the Jews for it.
In order to convince us of this argument, Ilana has to equate "neocons" with The JewsTM, because inconveniently, Woodward doesn't make anything like the point that Ilana wants to make. So we start off with neocon, neocon, neocon, and then suddenly, the neocons turn into....Jews and Israelis!
Those who saw "Jewish machinations" – where there were only officials who happened to be Jewish – accused these Jews of taking Americans to war to "build [a] greater Zion" in the Middle East. In the wonderfully apposite words of Canadian commentator Rex Murphy: "Some of those who most see themselves as critics of the Israeli side of this conflict ... seem to think they have some extra warrant or righteousness in how far they can go to express their detestation of Israel's policies, its government, and then by extension of Jews." These critics tarred as traitors Jewish neoconservatives in and around the administration for a policy directed by the commander in chief with unidirectional, God-inspired gusto.
Woodward does make Bush out to be less of a puppet than he is often considered to be. Ilana highlights everything Woodward says that gives Bush a forceful character or shows him acting at all and uses it to get the neocons, and by extension the Jews and Israelis, off the hook for the invasion. According to neocons like Joel Mowbray, this makes you an antisemite.

Mowbray's angle is that antisemites equate "neocon" with The JewsTM and then slyly use the word "neocon" as a code word to attack Jews. This approach requires one to ignore all evidence that the neocons are a diverse lot and smear anyone who uses the word "neocon" as an "antisemite." Neocon=Jew is practically a canard now, as the neocons beat it to death until it's failure to convince became obvious even to them.

Here's Mowbray, smearing General Anthony Zinni:

Discussing the Iraq war with the Washington Post last week, former General Anthony Zinni took the path chosen by so many anti-Semites: he blamed it on the Jews.

Neither President Bush nor Vice-President Cheney—nor for that matter Zinni’s old friend, Secretary of State Colin Powell—was to blame. It was the Jews. They “captured” both Bush and Cheney, and Powell was merely being a “good soldier.”

Technically, the former head of the Central Command in the Middle East didn’t say “Jews.” He instead used a term that has become a new favorite for anti-Semites: “neoconservatives.” As the name implies, “neoconservative” was originally meant to denote someone who is a newcomer to the right. In the 90’s, many people self-identified themselves as “neocons,” but today that term has become synonymous with “Jews.”


Mowbray's idiotic smearing has been ably refuted by AntiWar.com's Justin Raimondo here: Smearing General Zinni: Joel Mowbray, total as*hole.

Here's part of what Zinni told the Washington post in the interview for which Mowbray smears him:
"The more he listened to [Deputy Defense Secretary Paul] Wolfowitz and other administration officials talk about Iraq, the more Zinni became convinced that interventionist 'neoconservative' ideologues were plunging the nation into a war in a part of the world they didn't understand. 'The more I saw, the more I thought that this was the product of the neocons who didn't understand the region and were going to create havoc there. These were dilettantes from Washington think tanks who never had an idea that worked on the ground.'"

"…The goal of transforming the Middle East by imposing democracy by force reminds him of the 'domino theory' in the 1960s that the United States had to win in Vietnam to prevent the rest of Southeast Asia from falling into communist hands. And that brings him back to Wolfowitz and his neoconservative allies as the root of the problem. 'I don't know where the neocons came from – that wasn't the platform they ran on,' he says. 'Somehow, the neocons captured the president. They captured the vice president.'"


So, did the neocons capture the top two people in the executive branch or not? Let's see what Woodward actually says about the influence of some rather prominent neocons:

Woodward, in the Washington Post, describing the Fall of Baghdad party at Cheney's place:

Vice President Cheney phoned Adelman, who was in Paris with his wife, Carol. What a clever column [referring to Adelmam's "Cakewalk" column], the vice president said. You really demolished them. He said he and his wife, Lynne, were having a small private dinner Sunday night, April 13, to talk and celebrate. The only other guests would be his chief adviser, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and Wolfowitz, now deputy secretary of defense. Adelman realized it was Cheney's way of saying thank you, and he and his wife came back from Paris a day early to attend the dinner.

When Adelman walked into the vice president's residence that Sunday night, he was so happy he broke into tears. He hugged Cheney for the first time in the 30 years he had known him. There had been reports in recent days of mass graves and abundant, graphic evidence of torture by Saddam Hussein's government, so there was a feeling that they had been part of a greater good, liberating 25 million people.

"We're all together. There should be no protocol; let's just talk," Cheney said when they sat down to dinner.
[...]
"Hold it! Hold it!" Adelman interjected. "Let's talk about this Gulf war. It's so wonderful to celebrate." He said he was just an outside adviser, someone who turned up the pressure in the public forum. "It's so easy for me to write an article saying, 'Do this.' It's much tougher for Paul to advocate it. Paul and Scooter, you give advice inside and the president listens. Dick, your advice is the most important, the Cadillac. It's much more serious for you to advocate it. But in the end, all of what we said was still only advice. The president is the one who had to decide. I have been blown away by how determined he is." The war has been awesome, Adelman said. "So I just want to make a toast, without getting too cheesy. To the president of the United States."

They all raised their glasses. Hear! Hear!

Mercer: The 41st president of the United States was hardly the only worthy whose opinion Bush the son failed to solicit. According to Bob Woodward's new book, "Plan of Attack," Bush wanted to invade and that was that. He didn't much discuss the war or its possible aftermath with anybody, with one exception: the holy ghost, Dick Cheney.

The charitable conclusion would be that Mercer didn't read Woodward's book. More likely, she just saw what she wanted to see and wrote this inane column out of her zeal to clear the neocons (and thus the Jews, because remember, Ilana is an antisemite, or more precisely, a "self-hater", according to the Mowbraynian antisemite detection kit) of any involvement with the Iraqi quagmire by pinning it all on the Chimp in Chief, which is ludicrous as any real libertarian would instantly recognize. In launching any government project, a convergence of interests is necessary and the bigger the quagmire or boondoggle, the more likely it is that multitudes of deals have been struck, pressures brought to bear, and chips cashed in. Mercer even acknowledges this (and ruins her argument further) with her bulleted "cast of characters" which carefully avoids mentioning any neocons and illogically pins blame on various Arabs and Muslims, some of them so obscure that I've never heard of them. One bullet is "The "Rock Stars," members of an Iraqi-based Muslim sect hired by the CIA to help topple Saddam." The rock stars? Who is this? I googled several combinations of these terms and come up with nothing. Although I haven't read Woodward's book, I've read practically every thing written about Iraq since the neocons and Bushies started beating the war drums after 9/11 and I've never heard of these "rock stars." Now, Perle, Frum, Wolfowitz, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Abrams, Adelman, Bolton, Shulsky and the OSP, Feith, Wurmser, Rice, Libby, Chalabi,etc., etc., were clearly part of the converging interests that dragged the American people into the Iraqi war, no matter how much smoke Ilana tries to blow. Oh, and let's not even mention the secret intelligence group run out of Ariel Sharon's office that pumped bogus intelligence to the OSP.

Waiting for Phase II of the Iraqi Intifada

Apparently, the Bush administration, in consultations with Abizaid and the military commanders in Iraq, has decided to do something about the stalemates at Najaf and Fallujah. The game plan that they've made public seems vague and it is unclear what they intend to gain by making these moves.

In Fallujah there have been no reports that any weapons have been turned in at all, other than the pick-up load of "junk" that was turned in the first day. That means that none of the varying series of demands that the Americans have made on the people of Fallujah have been met. No one is even talking about the four mercenaries that were killed in Fallujah anymore. The cease-fire fizzled into rebel attacks answered by American bombs and helicopter gunship attacks. Snipers are apparently plying their trade on both sides and mortars are shot at the Americans regularly.

The latest announced plan for Fallujah is for Marines to make a "joint patrol" with "Iraqi security forces" on Tuesday, whatever that means. I suppose that if the patrol is able to make its way into and out of Fallujah uneventfully, the Marines can declare the siege a success. Whatever is supposed to happen after that is unclear.

U.S. troops will begin patrols alongside Iraqi security forces in Fallujah, said Hachim al-Hassani, a top Iraqi negotiator. The move is an apparent attempt to restore control over the insurgent stronghold without a full-scale Marine assault.

But like a previous agreement aimed at reducing the violence in the city, the new step hinged greatly on the response of Sunni guerrillas, who were asked to turn in their heavy weapons.

"We hope the U.S. soldiers will not be attacked when they enter the city. If they are attacked, they will respond and this will lead to problems," al-Hassani told The Associated Press.

The Najaf situation is similar. The Army is saying they're going to move into the "modern" areas of the city, in a quest for Sadr, I suppose, though he isn't in the "modern" part of the city. I'm not sure what looking for him in a place he isn't in is supposed to accomplish, but the Army says it will "tighten" the "clampdown." Mmmkay.

"We probably will go into the central part of the city. Will we interfere in the religious institutions? Absolutely not," said Hertling, a deputy commander of the 1st Armored Division.

He did not say when the move would occur, but it appeared unlikely for several days and was aimed at tightening the clampdown on radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and his militia.

"It's not going to be large-scale fighting, the likes of other places, but it's going to be critical," he said. "We're going to drive this guy into the dirt."

"Either he tells his militia to put down their arms, form a political party and fight with ideas not guns - or he's going to find a lot of them killed," he said.

Every Muslim in Iraq and across the entire Middle East is saying that if the Americans go into Najaf, they will Fallujah-ize the entire region, but I guess the Americans think they have to do something, after all their macho rhetoric. Whether the Iraqis allow them to save face and then back out while declaring victory or launch an all out attack is anyone's guess. My guess is that the second phase of the Iraqi Intifada is about to begin.

Friday, April 23, 2004

Fallujah Watch

Here's the latest on how the "heavy weapon" turn-in is going in Fallujah.

Marine Lt. Gen. Jim Conway, in Fallujah, said only about "a pick-up full" of weapons have been turned in.

He agreed with a characterization that the weapons collected so far have been "junk," saying the weapons are "things I wouldn't ask my Marines to fire."

A Marine news release listed weaponry handed over so far: Six machine guns and two SA-7 missile launchers -- all broken beyond repair; one sniper rifle and a flamethrower -- neither in usable condition; seven rocket-propelled grenade launchers -- some inoperable; 21 RPG projectiles that were not explosive and 113 corroded and rusted mortar rounds.


I think part of the problem is that the good General is confusing the Fallujah rebels with statements like this:
Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, an Army spokesman, said the handover so far "is not a serious expression of intent" and said the minimum required is "a large field full of the heavy weapons that have been used against the people in Fallujah and been used against the coalition forces."
So, they don't actually have weapons that were used "against the people of Fallujah," because they are the people of Fallujah so what should they turn in? Very confusing.

Finally, we get a reporter asking the CPA spokesman Senor what on earth they're babbling about when they say stuff like this:

Senor said Fallujans must oust "foreign fighters, drug users, former Mukhabarat, Special Republican Guard, former Fedayeen Saddam, and other serious, dangerous, violent criminals operating out of Fallujah."

Drug users?
Asked by reporters about the drug remark, Senor said city leaders said "that many of the individuals involved with the violence are on various drugs. It is part of what they're using to keep them up to engage in this violence at all hours."
Oh, so that's why the Fallujah rebels have fought the Marines to a standstill! Those cheaters are using drugs!

This stuff would be funny if it weren't so deadly.

Hey, Democrats! Where are your ads about Iraq?

This article by Jim Lobe makes it quite clear that support for Bush and Kerry pivots on the Iraq issue and whether people are stupid Fox-watching types or educated readers. I mean, who can read this and not draw the obvious conclusion that Kerry needs to hammer this subject incessantly.

Among the 57 percent of respondents who said they believed Iraq was either "directly involved" in carrying out the 9/11 attacks on New York and the Pentagon or had provided "substantial support" to al-Qaeda, 57 percent said they intended to vote for Bush and 39 percent said they would choose his Democratic foe, John Kerry.

Among the 40 percent of respondents, who said they believed there was no connection at all between Saddam and al-Qaeda or that ties consisted only of minor contacts or visits, on the other hand, only 28 percent said they intended to vote for Bush, while 68 percent said their ballots would go to Kerry.

And

The poll found a high correlation between beliefs about prewar Iraq with support for going to war with Iraq and for the intentions to vote for Bush in November.

Among those who perceived experts as saying Iraq had WMD, 72 percent said they would vote for Bush, and 23 percent said they would vote for Kerry, while among those who perceived the experts as concluding that Iraq did not have WMD, 23 percent said they would vote for Bush and 74 percent for Kerry.

The opinion of experts was found to be very important in predicting support for Bush or Kerry, as well as support for the war itself, according to Kull. While 38 percent of a discrete sample within the survey said they believed that Iraq had WMD before the war, the percentage dropped to 21 percent after they were informed later in the questionnaire that Kay had concluded that Baghdad was engaged only in minor activities for developing WMD.

Hello? Anyone home out there in Democrat World? Can you guys please get your candidate to can the Bush Lite act and get out there and make a difference?

Thursday, April 22, 2004

The Memory Hole's FOIA Photos from Dover AFB

Russ Kick of the Memory Hole says:

>>> Since March 2003, a newly-enforced military regulation has forbidden taking or distributing images of caskets or body tubes containing the remains of soldiers who died overseas. [read more]

Immediately after hearing about this, I filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the following:

All photographs showing caskets (or other devices) containing the remains of US military personnel at Dover AFB. This would include, but not be limited to, caskets arriving, caskets departing, and any funerary rites/rituals being performed. The timeframe for these photos is from 01 February 2003 to the present.

I specified Dover because they process the remains of most, if not all, US military personnel killed overseas. Not surpisingly, my request was completely rejected. Not taking 'no' for an answer, I appealed on several grounds, and—to my amazement—the ruling was reversed. The Air Force then sent me a CD containing 361 photographs of flag-draped coffins and the services welcoming the deceased soldiers.casket05.jpg

Score one for freedom of information and the public's right to know.

Further info:

"Curtains Ordered for Media Coverage of Returning Coffins"

The first three photographs to break the embargo

Link via Cursor

Palestinian boy tied to the hood of a jeep as a human shield

According to Maariv International:

Border Police unit used four arrestees, including a 12-year old boy as human shields during the violent break up of an anti-security barrier demonstration on Thursday at Bidu.

The other people arrested and used as human shields include RHR (Rabbis for Human Rights) Executive Director Rabbi Arik Ascherman, another Palestinian, a Swedish ISM activist and a 12 year old Palestinian boy.boy_picture_in_bido.JPG

The event occurred when local Palestinians and Israeli human rights monitors attempted to intervene after a Palestinian woman approached a group of activists and human rights monitors including Rabbi Accherman, to help her 12–year-old son who, she said was being beaten by border police.

According to Rabbi Ascherman “as we approached the police unit they tear-gassed us, without any provocation on our part. After the gas had dissipated I approached them, and asked them what was happening to the boy. At that point the commander, Pakad (Superintendent) Shahar Itzhaki told me I was under arrest for violating a military order by entering a closed military zone without permission. When I attempted to protest, he beat me, head butted me and had me handcuffed, together with a Palestinian man and a Swedish human rights activist”.

“The boy, crying, shaking from fear and eventually cold, was sat on the hood of a jeep and tied to the bars protecting the glass. The other three arrestees were bound and placed in front of a second jeep as human shields, to deter protestors from throwing stones at the jeep”.

“I repeatedly requested over the next few hours that we not be used as human shields, and that the boy receive medical attention and that the officers identify themselves. He also asked to lend his coat to the child and to stand in front of the child to protect him from stones. All these requests were met with physical and verbal threats, orders to "shut up," and/or derision”.

The IDF division commander, "Benny," also visited the site during these events. Rabbi Ascherman also directed his requests to him. Rabbi Ascherman was eventually told that the boy had been checked by a medic before Rabbi Ascherman was arrested.

The border police spokesperson, Nava Block, refused to comment until she could see the photograph. They were sent to an e-mail address she gave Maariv International, but bounced. She promised to give Maariv International another e-mail address to send the images, but never did. She refused an offer to have a printed version sent to her by messenger service.

Dr. Haled, head of the clinic at Bido confirmed that the boy, Mohammed Said was suffering from bruises on his arms and back, but had not sustained any fractures or other serious injuries.

Woman fired for taking the photo the Pentagon doesn't want you to see

Tammy Silicio and her husband have been fired for this photo:

BushCoffins.jpg
Tami Silicio and David Landry, a co-worker she recently married, were fired Wednesday by Maytag Aircraft Corp. of Colorado Springs, Colo., for violating federal government and company rules, said William L. Silva, president of Maytag and executive vice president of its corporate parent, Mercury Air Group Inc. of Los Angeles. He would not elaborate.

"I feel like I was hit in the chest with a steel bar and got my wind knocked out," Silicio said. "I have to admit I liked my job and I liked what I did."

Landry wrote in an e-mail to The Times that he was proud of his wife, adding that they would soon return home.

In a policy that has drawn intense debate since it was adopted in 1991, the Pentagon bars news organizations from photographing caskets being returned to the United States, citing the sensitivities of bereaved families.


The company rule she violated was likely something like Whatever The Pentagon Says Goes.

Submit or Die! And hurry up, we're getting hungry.

If you were a rebel in Fallujah, and you knew this:

An armoured column of about 1,000 soldiers from the 1st Battalion 16th Infantry Regiment reached the outskirts of Karma today, a small village six kilometres north of Fallujah.

They were attempting to clear food delivery routes from Baghdad to US bases to the west, said an AFP correspondent at the scene.

An attempt to clear the route last week met with fierce fighting that left 100 insurgents and one US soldier dead, according to the coalition.

US bases west of Baghdad started rationing food from Sunday because of dwindling supplies caused by insurgent attacks.

And you knew their convoys were moving like this, and big reconstruction contractors like this were pulling out, just how much credibility would you give to people who go from rhetoric like this, to whining like this:

A US Marine general warned yesterday that insurgents in the powderkeg Iraqi city of Fallujah had only days to turn in their weapons, and said that had been handed over so far was a load of "junk". [...] Asked how long the insurgents had to hand over their weapons, Conway said: "days, not weeks".

Submit or Die! And you have...um....less than a week to turn in weapons that aren't all rusted pieces of junk. So says the mighty American Marines.

Wednesday, April 21, 2004

War Nerd: Iraq is giving Gary Brecher high blood pressure

warnerd.gif
So then there was another ten minutes of serious lectures about how I need to take care of myself and so on. I was thinking, all I need is for us to get out of this Iraq mess, but I decided it was better not to try explaining that to him again. I took the brochures and the prescriptions and got out.
Now I'm on three medications, one for blood pressure, one for these purines, and one for my back disc. Like an old man. I just turned 38 and I've got little brown bottles all over the sink like my grandma did.

[...]
So could it have been any different, as in "better"? Probably. Starting with disbanding the Iraqi Army. This was one of Bremer's first moves, and like all our biggest screwups it was because they really thought Iraq was going to turn into Minnesota after we invaded. Wolfowitz and the boys figured the old Iraqi army was full of bad elements. Which it was. But those bad guys were for hire, willing to work for anybody who paid them. They had the local street-smarts, the connections and snitches, to keep the streets quiet.

The British begged Bremer to keep the Iraqi army going, give it new uniforms and hire it as local mercenaries. They were thinking smart. They actually know something about colonizing Arabs. But Bush's people weren't listening to the Brits or anybody else. They were too busy lying to themselves that Iraqis were just Ohio Presbyterians in funny clothes, real nice folks under those turbans.

So we shut down the Iraqi army overnight. Boom! Suddenly there were 500,000 armed men out of a job, hanging around the house getting more and more pissed off. First they tried asking for their jobs back, then they staged demonstrations, and finally they just said the Hell with it, I'll dig up the AK-47 and RPG I buried in the back yard and start killing the foreigners who put me out of a job. From what I hear, the Brits are so pissed off with Bush that they've finally started saying we told you so. They're right, too. In fact they come off looking pretty good. One of the stories you probably haven't been seeing is how quiet things seem to be in Basra, where the British troops are in control. Basra's a Shiite city, just like Najaf and Karbala--so how come it hasn't blown up like they have?

As far as I can tell, it's because the Brits are just plain better than us at handling the locals. They let the Shiites live the way they feel comfortable living. And that really ticked off Bremer's people, who started leaking stories about how the Brits were a bunch of Arab-loving weaklings.

I found this article from March 24, where some reporter from Dow Jones news is whining about how the Brits are taking it too easy on the locals:

"Some Basra residents complain that Britain, whose troops occupy Basra, is turning a blind eye while the religious establishment usurps the running of the city through intimidation and threats against secular residents. Explaining why the British are loath to intervene, Maj. David King, a British spokesman, says: 'We are not here to dictate our way of life,' but merely 'to provide a basic foundation to get Iraqis back on their feet.'"

We weren't going to let the Shiites live their way. Nope, we had to change them every which way at once. We were even letting Baptist missionaries in! How stupid is that? If I saw a foreign army riding shotgun for jerks like the Pentecostals I had to listen to when I was a kid, I'd probably turn Shiite and start spraying the Bible-bashers myself.

You can't mess with people that way and expect them to wait around for you to get smart forever. Especially not hotheads like the Shiites. So at the beginning of April, it boiled over. Riots, sniping, you name it. But there again, the way the Brits handled it was so much smarter. On April 3 the Shiites in Basra challenged the British just like they did the Americans. A bunch of armed Shiites stomped in and took over the governor's office in Basra. But the Brits realized it wasn't the time to get tough. So they made the visiting Jihadis some tea and cakes or whatever, and let them yell and talk big for a while. After a few days, the Shiites got bored and went home. It worked, in other words.

Read it all. The really sad part is that even the War Nerd can't figure out how the US is going to get out of Iraq.

Fallujah Rebels Turn in Junk Weapons

Marine commanders say some rebel fighters are turning in weapons as promised. But most of the weapons don't work.

Did they say they had to turn in their good stuff?

Peace efforts in this besieged city ran into trouble Wednesday as guerrillas mounted a heavy attack on Marines in a battle that killed 20 insurgents, and Marines said almost all the weapons turned in so far in a crucial disarmament were in such bad shape they were already useless.

In response, Marines halted the return of some of the 70,000 residents -- more than a third of Fallujah's population -- who fled during this month's bloody fighting. Crowds massed behind concertina wire, with women and crying children pressing forward demanding to be let in. Nearby trucks were stacked high with the families' belongings.

About 10 families re-entered the city in the morning before Marines announced to some 600 Iraqis waiting at the checkpoint that no more would be allowed in.
[...]
Marine commanders said some weapons were handed over during the day, but 95 percent were in such bad shape they were useless. They would not say how many weapons were turned in.

"These may be early indications that the insurgents may not be living up to the requirements of the agreement," Marine Lt. Col. Brennan Byrne said earlier in the day, when Marines reported no weapons had been surrendered.

I'm so surprised. I thought everyone in Fallujah would rush to disarm themselves.

Say "thank you" to Ariel, boys and girls

This is the actual picture Reuters ran with this story:

sharonreuters.jpg

President Bush on Wednesday rejected international condemnation of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and said world leaders owed him a "thank you" for his plans for the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

Bush blasted the Palestinian leadership as having "failed the people, year after year after year" by not preventing terrorism against the Jewish state.

Bush sparked a backlash in the Arab world last week by endorsing Israel's right to hold on to some West Bank settlements on land captured in the 1967 Middle East War.

He also said a right of return by Palestinian refugees to Israel was unrealistic, while backing a Gaza Strip pullout plan in a historic U.S. policy shift.

"Ariel Sharon came to America, and he stood up with me and he said, 'We are pulling out of Gaza and parts of the West Bank,"' Bush told a newspaper conference in Washington.

In "my judgment, the whole world should have said, 'Thank you, Ariel. Now we have a chance to begin the construction of a peaceful Palestinian state,"' Bush added.

I think it's official, now. Bush is insane.

Basra and the Brits

Three Iraqi police stations and one police academy in Basra have been attacked by five simultaneous car bombs, killing over 60 people and wounding at least 200.


British soldiers attempting to get to the sites of the explosions were reportedly stoned by the crowds.

You might remember that turning on American soldiers and Western journalists was also the response of the crowds after the massive Najaf bombings.

Inevitably, after one of these bombings, journalists will write that the Iraqis were angry at the "lack of security" and blame the occupation for this. It is true that Iraqis blame Americans for a lack of security, but their anger is now directed at the occupation itself for preventing Iraqis from providing their own security. The violence in Iraq today is mostly committed by the Iraqis intent on dislodging the occupation and the occupation's violent responses. I think the occupation had a brief period of time just after the invasion to prove themselves capable of providing security rather than being an impediment, but that time is long past.

It is widely recognized now that the disbanding of the Iraqi army and the overzealous de-Baathification policies of the American-imported exile Iraqis, Chalabi in particular, and the American neocons guaranteed that chaos far too great for the too-few American soldiers to handle would ensue. This chaos created an atmosphere of distrust toward the occupation in ordinary Iraqis and those Iraqis most virulently opposed to the occupation were and are more easily able to use violence to accelerate the process of total estrangement between the Iraqi population and the occupation.

The occupiers have been herded into untenable positions. They must use severe repression and excessive firepower to maintain their tenuous grip on those portions of territory still in their control because they neither understand the culture well enough to craft a suitable political response and because they don't have enough troops to effectively prevent the rebels from operating freely. This situation creates the downward spiral of violence that will spark further bloodbaths like the Marine assault and siege on the town of Fallujah, which only furthers the goals of the rebellion. Fallujah has been sufficient to turn most Iraqis who were neutral about the occupation against the Americans, to the extent that the rebels are now able to cripple and at times completely cut off the occupation supply lines. They will undoubtedly continue and intensify their efforts at this successful project.

The Basra attacks indicate that the rebels are now going to add the last semi-peaceful area to the general rebellion. The British have already acknowledged that it is not possible for them to hold Basra if the locals turn against them. The British generals have also spoken out about their disgust and alarm at the counterproductive and inhumane tactics and racist, arrogant attitudes of the Americans. The British contingent will place the blame for the unrest in Basrah squarely on the Americans for mishandling and