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Updated: 6/1/07; 7:51:02 AM.

 

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Iran 'accused of attacks in Iraq to bolster US strategy'. The Bush administration may be highlighting accusations that the Iranian government is behind attacks in Iraq in order to strengthen its hand in preparing for military strikes on Iran, according to a leading British think-tank. [Independent.co.uk/News/World]
9:16:59 PM    comment []

After 'Democrats surrender' to President Bush on the war in Iraq, in what MSNBC's Keith Olbermann calls their "Neville Chamberlain moment" of "shameful ... betrayal," Norman Solomon delivers the eulogy for some 'Deadly Illusions,' and David Sirota warns that "you ain't seen nothing yet." [Cursor.org]
6:13:33 PM    comment []

Bush Names Wolfowitz President of al-Qaeda - Hopes to Undermine Terror Network. In a bold move to undermine the international terror network, President George W. Bush today named former deputy defense secretary and World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz to be the new president of al-Qaeda. By Andy Borowitz . [Borowitz Report]
3:35:55 PM    comment []

The New York Times | Witness for the Prosecutors. The editors of The New York Times write: "Ms. Goodling was an odd witnesses. The only people odder than Ms. Goodling were the House Republicans who rushed to praise her. Even in these partisan times, a Justice Department official who admitted to her level of wrongdoing ought to draw bipartisan condemnation." [t r u t h o u t]
3:34:59 PM    comment []

Hearing Sought Over Linguists’ Discharge. Lawmakers who say the military has kicked out 58 Arabic language experts because they were gay want the Pentagon to explain how it can afford to let the valuable specialists go. Seizing on the latest discharge, involving three specialists, House members wrote the House Armed Services Committee chairman on Wednesday that the continued loss of such [...] [CommonDreams.org]
7:44:38 AM    comment []

Kucinich Claims War Masks the Real Objective: Iraqi Oil. WASHINGTON - It’s all about Iraq’s oil - rich, abundant, and coveted by multinational companies waiting to line their deep pockets. Or so said Rep. Dennis Kucinich Wednesday in an unusual hourlong address on the House floor. He laid out his contention that the White House and Democratic-led Congress are helping oil companies grab a stake [...] [CommonDreams.org]
7:43:17 AM    comment []

Tomgram: Nick Turse, The Air War in Iraq Uncovered.

In a recent inside-the-fold round-up of the previous day's mayhem in Iraq, David S. Cloud, writing for my hometown paper, devoted 729 words to an account of American casualties from IEDs ("Six American soldiers and their interpreter were killed by a roadside bomb in western Baghdad..."), Iraqi Army, police, insurgent, and civilian casualties, and various bombers -- all of whom were on the ground: suicide bombers, car bombers, truck bombers. Nine words in the report were devoted to the American air war: "American troops killed eight suspected insurgents on Sunday, the military said -- six in an airstrike near Garma, in Anbar Province, and two southwest of Baghdad." We have no further information on that air strike in Garma; no idea what kind of aircraft struck, or with what weaponry, or how those in the air were so certain that those dead on the ground were "suspected insurgents," or who exactly suspected them of being insurgents. The equivalent Washington Post round-up did not even mention that the operation involved an air strike.

This has been fairly typical of the last few years of minimalist to nonexistent mainstream media coverage of the air war in Iraq, based almost singularly on similarly minimalist military press handouts or statements. We do, however, know something about an air strike, also "in the Garma area," last December in which the U.S. military announced that it had "destroyed a foreign fighter safe house in a Sunni insurgent stronghold west of Baghdad, killing five insurgents, two women and a child." Local residents later claimed to an Iraqi journalist that the strike had actually "killed nine members of the same family -- three women, three girls and three boys -- and wounding a man." Air power, for all its "precision," remains a remarkably indiscriminate form of warfare, though headlines like this one from the BBC, are seldom seen here: "US attack 'kills Iraqi children.'"

We also know from a recent report that the ill-covered operations of the U.S. Air Force in Iraq and Afghanistan have nonetheless significantly degraded American equipment, in the air as on the ground. According to the Air Combat Command's Gen. Ronald Keys, U.S. planes and helicopters are wearing down (and out) from conducting so many missions "in harsh environments." For instance, the general tell us that the A-10 -- a plane used regularly because "its cannon is particularly effective in strafing" -- is increasingly likely to have "cracked wings."

Keep in mind that, however poorly covered these last years, air power has long been the American way of war. After all, it was no mistake that the Iraq war began with a pure show of air power meant to "shock and awe" not just Iraqis but the world. And yet, in recent years in Iraq, the only "bombers" we hear about are of the suicide car or truck variety. This is strange indeed, because nothing should have stopped American journalists from visiting our air bases in the region, from spending time with pilots, or from simply looking up at the evidently crowded skies over their hotels.

The only good mainstream report on American air power in Iraq in this period has been Seymour Hersh's New Yorker piece, "Up in the Air," in December 2005 -- significantly enough, by a journalist who had never set foot in Iraq. He reminded us then of something forgotten for several decades -- that President Richard Nixon's "Vietnamization" plan to withdraw all American "ground troops" (but not tens of thousands of U.S. advisors) from South Vietnam also involved a massive ratcheting upward of the American air war. Hersh reported that, in late 2005, George W. Bush's Iraqification formula ("Our strategy is straightforward: As Iraqis stand up, Americans will stand down") was but a Vietnamization plan in sheep's clothing. As he wrote at the time: "A key element of the drawdown plans, not mentioned in the President's public statements, is that the departing American troops will be replaced by American airpower. Quick, deadly strikes by U.S. warplanes are seen as a way to improve dramatically the combat capability of even the weakest Iraqi combat units."

In recent months, as the revived Taliban has surged in Afghanistan and U.S. as well as NATO troops have proven in short supply, this is just what has happened. Air power has increasingly been called upon; civilian casualties have been spiking; and Afghans have been growing ever more upset and oppositional. Iraq will undoubtedly be next. There is, as Nick Turse indicates below, already evidence that the use of air power is "surging" in that country.

Here, then, is a post-surge formula to keep in mind: "Withdrawal" equals an increase in air power (as long as the commitment to withdraw isn't a total one). This is no less true of the "withdrawal" plans of the major Democratic presidential candidates and the Democratic congressional mainstream as it is of any administration planning for future draw-downs. All of these plans are largely confined to withdrawing or redeploying American "combat brigades," which add up to only something like half of all American forces in Iraq. None of this will necessarily lessen the American war there. As Patrick Clawson, the deputy director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told Hersh, it may only "change the mix of the forces doing the fighting." A partial withdrawal is actually likely, at least for a time, to increase the destructive brutality of the war on the American side.

[TomDispatch]
7:42:27 AM    comment []

Whatever happened to "Buy American"?

It wasn't just a catchy slogan and not just meant to increase the coffers of American corporations. It was an idea to protect American workers, to increase reliance on our own manufactured goods, and lessen the appetite for cheaper goods from other nations.

I remember feeling that it was protectionIST. And that the competition from other nations was good for America, forcing, for example, American car manufacturers to change their tactics and begin to produce vehicles that were more energy efficient, more compact, better designed than they had been to that point.

But the general concept of buying American was a good one. It's like supporting the small businesses in one's own community. When community members rely on one another, the community thrives. When they don't, the community withers.

America is withering.

Our reliance on cheaper goods from elsewhere is killing off the strong American workforce of which we were once so proud. It is making us vulnerable to foreign policies of aggression for the interests of corporations in the guise of national security.

And it is making us vulnerable to tampering. Look at the problems emanating from Chinese imports. You don't know if your toothpaste or dogfood or your baby's food is safe. Were we secure in the knowledge that these goods were manufactured in the US by US workers and companies, we could at least be secure that there was some regulatory agency monitoring their safety.

At least we could in the past.

Another casualty of this off-shoring of manufacturing is the gutting of regulatory agencies, which seems to be a major - though more surreptitious goal - of the multi-national corporations which originated here. Governmental regulation has taken on the persona of the bogeyman thanks to the propaganda those corporations have successful foist upon the American public.

Regulatory agencies hinder them - big corporations - with all their safety standards for workers and end products. That cuts into profits. Much better to deal with countries who don't have such onerous entitities.

And if pets and babies are killed ... ?

The price of doing business. I wonder what the conversation at the board meeting was like when they determined that a few dead infants were worth the profits, or how many dead babies were an acceptable number. At what point would it become to big a cost - and was that based on some perverse morality, or on the bad publicity it would likely generate.

We can regain our strong labor force, our powerful regulatory agencies, and a strong respected America. It will take a revolution. A peaceful revolution. It starts at the voting booth. And it starts in our own buying habits.

Let's get back to it. Buy American.
7:40:09 AM    comment []


© Copyright 2007 Patricia Thurston.



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