James van Luik
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Saturday, September 30th,
2006
Volume 5, No. 16
6 Articles, 12 Pages
1. The
Deafening silence About Franco's Genocide
2. The
American Military's Cult of Cruelty
3. Clearing
The Air With The Truth
4. Lebanon:
The US, Israel and Accountability
5. Politics
Influence Bloomberg Aides on 2004 Permits For Protests Documents
Suggest
6. US Army Contemplates Redrawing Middle East Map To Stave-Off Looming Global Meltdown
(Editor's Note: In
1932 Einstein attended an international disarmament meeting in
Geneva. He was so upset by what these governmental
representatives were negotiating that he called a news
conference. The reason he called the news conference was because
these representatives were discussing which weapons would be
acceptable in war and which wouldn't. Calling a news conference
was not something that Einstein had done before. During the news
conference this is the statement he made about War: "War
can not be humanized. War can only be abolished." )
(Editor's second note: The
UN's nuclear watchdog has criticised the US government over a
report by Congress which suggests that Iran's nuclear programme
was more advanced than determined by UN inspectors. The
International Atomic Energy Agency branded Congress' report as
"dishonest" and "outrageous." In a protest
letter to the US government, UN officials say US intelligence
authorities were wrong to say that Iran had enriched uranium to
weapons-grade level when in fact the IAEA had only found small
quantities at very low levels. UN inspectors have been monitoring
Iran's nuclear programme since 2003 and have so far found no
evidence to suggest that Teheran is building nuclear weapons.
Also it should be realized that the uranium with which Iran has
to work is contaminated by the element molybdinum. To eliminate
this contaminent, and to produce the needed amount of weapons
grade uranium, is complicated and beyond most modest to high
level technologies' capabilities, and for atomic weapons grade
uranium the elimination of the molybdinum would be an absolute
necessity.)
BY VINCENT NAVARRO |
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The
Spanish Civil War, which began 70 years ago, was the
first chapter of World War II. It was a fight by the
progressive and democratic forces of Spain against the
axis of evil of that time: Nazism, fascism, and
right-wing forces that opposed the much-needed reforms
established by the Second Republic (1931-1939). These
reforms included womens suffrage, land reform,
expansion of labor union rights, establishment of the
public school system, and many others. The powerful
groups affected by those reforms the Church, large
landowners, banking interests, and large employers
encouraged a military coup against the democratically
elected government, which took place in July of 1936. The coup, led by General
Francisco Franco, was actively supported by Hitler and
Mussolini, who provided military assistance. But the
western democracies did not provide any military
assistance whatsoever to those fighting for democracy. Despite being extremely poorly
armed on some fronts, the Republican Army had one
rifle for every two soldiers the majority of the
Spanish population resisted the fascist coup, which is
why it took three years and enormous costs for Franco,
Hitler, and Mussolini to win the war. Their victory and the
establishment of the dictatorship started a campaign of
terror and mass killings that, as British historian Paul
Preston has noted, reached genocidal proportions.
According to figures provided by the Spanish dictatorship
itself, nearly 200,000 people were assassinated (by
executions and deaths in concentration camps) in just
five years, 1939-1945. These assassinations continued
throughout the dictatorship. Just a couple of months
before his death in 1975, Franco signed execution orders
for five political opponents. The Franco regime was one
of the most brutal dictatorships in Europe. For every
political assassination that Mussolini ordered, Franco
carried out 10,000. After World War II, the U.S.
government and the Vatican became the major supporters of
the dictatorship. This genocidal history has been
silenced nationally and internationally, in part because
of the Amnesty Pact signed in 1977. In this pact, all
killings, robberies, and other violations of human rights
by the dictatorship were forgotten, and the perpetrators
remained immune from prosecution. Such a pact is in
violation of international laws that challenge whether
such immunities can be granted. Besides the Amnesty Pact,
during the transition from dictatorship to democracy
there was also an agreement between the winners and
losers of the Civil War to remain silent about what had
occurred, not only during the War, but during the
dictatorship. But this pact was respected only by the
losers, not by the winners. Across Spain there are monuments
to Franco and other generals responsible for the
genocide. As recently as four months ago, homage was paid
to the general of the Moorish troops who supported Franco
and were known for their extreme cruelty. As British
historian Helen Graham comments, it is paradoxical that
the Crusade to save Christian Civilization
(as the fascists defined their cause) was led by Muslim
mercenaries, who invaded southern Spain along with the
Foreign Legion led by General Franco. The Spanish
Ambassador in Morocco and two Spanish generals attended
the recent homage, and none has been sanctioned by the
Spanish Socialist government. Even today, a statue of
Franco stands at the entrance to the Spanish Military
Academy. And not one major newspaper has yet published an
article calling for the annulment of the Amnesty Pact.
There is still a fear of the Francoist forces and the
right in Spain. The Army has refused to welcome
back the military personnel who supported democracy
during the dictatorship, and the judicial system has
opposed condemning the military courts that ordered the
assassinations of democratic leaders who opposed fascism.
The democratic forces of Spain
need help: they need a campaign of international pressure
on the Spanish government to denounce the Francoist state
and to reinstate the rights of its victims, bringing to
justice those responsible for the crimes committed by the
dictatorship. It is an offense to the values of liberty
and freedom that the only country in Europe where the
anniversary of the coup (July 18) is not considered a day
to denounce the Spanish dictatorship, as instructed by
the European Parliament, is Spain itself. 2. THE
AMERICAN MILITARY'S CULT OF CRUELTY ROBERT FISK In the week that George Bush
took to fantasising that his blood-soaked "war on
terror" would lead the 21st century into a
"shining age of human liberty" I went through
my mail bag to find a frightening letter addressed to me
by an American veteran whose son is serving as a
lieutenant colonel and medical doctor with US forces in
Baghdad. Put simply, my American friend believes the
change of military creed under the Bush
administration--from that of "soldier" to that
of "warrior"--is encouraging American troops to
commit atrocities. From Abu Ghraib to Guantanamo to
Bagram, to the battlefields of Iraq and to the
"black" prisons of the CIA, humiliation and
beatings, rape, anal rape and murder have now become so
commonplace that each new outrage is creeping into the
inside pages of our newspapers. My reporting notebooks
are full of Afghan and Iraqi complaints of torture and
beatings from August 2002, and then from 2003 to the
present point. How, I keep asking myself, did this
happen? Obviously, the trail leads to the top. But where
did this cult of cruelty begin? So first, here's the official US
Army "Soldier's Creed", originally drawn up to
prevent anymore Vietnam atrocities: "I am an American soldier. I am a member of the United
States Army--a protector of the greatest nation on earth.
Because I am proud of the uniform I wear, I will always
act in ways creditable to the military service and the
nation that it is sworn to guard ... No matter what situation I am
in, I will never do anything for pleasure, profit or
personal safety, which will disgrace my uniform, my unit
or my country. I will use every means I have,
even beyond the line of duty, to restrain my Army
comrades from actions, disgraceful to themselves and the
uniform. I am proud of my country and it's flag. I will try to make the people of
this nation proud of the service I represent for I am an
American soldier." Now here's the new version of
what is called the "Warrior Ethos": I am an American soldier. I am a warrior and a member of a
team. I serve the people of the Unites States and live
the Army values. I will always place the mission
first. I will never accept defeat. I will never quit. I will never leave a fallen
comrade. I am disciplined, physically and
mentally tough, trained and proficient in my warrior
tasks and drills. I always maintain my arms, my equipment
and myself. I am an expert and I am a
professional. I stand ready to deploy, engage and destroy
the enemies of the United States of America in close
combat. I am a guardian of freedom and the American way
of life. I am an American soldier. Like most Europeans--and an
awful lot of Americans--I was quite unaware of this
ferocious "code" for US armed forces, although
it's not hard to see how it fits in with Bush's rantings.
I'm tempted to point this out in detail, but my American
veteran did so with such eloquence in his letter to me
that the response should come in his words: "The
Warrior Creed," he wrote, "allows no end to any
conflict except total destruction of the 'enemy'. It
allows no defeat ... and does not allow one ever to stop
fighting (lending itself to the idea of the 'long war').
It says nothing about following orders, it says nothing
about obeying laws or showing restraint. It says nothing
about dishonourable actions
". Each day now, I come across new
examples of American military cruelty in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Here, for example, is Army Specialist Tony
Lagouranis, part of an American mobile interrogation team
working with US marines, interviewed by Amy Goodman on
the American Democracy Now! programme describing a 2004
operation in Babel, outside Baghdad: "Every time
Force Recon went on a raid, they would bring back
prisoners who were bruised, with broken bones, sometimes
with burns. They were pretty brutal to these guys. And I
would ask the prisoners what happened, how they received
these wounds. And they would tell me that it was after
their capture, while they were subdued, while they were
handcuffed and they were being questioned by the Force
Recon Marines ... One guy was forced to sit on an exhaust
pipe of a Humvee ... he had a giant blister, third-degree
burns on the back of his leg." Lagouranis, whose story is
powerfully recalled in Goodman's new book, Static,
reported this brutality to a Marine major and a
colonel-lawyer from the US Judge Advocate General's
Office. "But they just wouldn't listen, you know?
They wanted numbers. They wanted numbers of terrorists
apprehended ... so they could brief that to the
general." The stories of barbarity grow by
the week, sometimes by the day. In Canada, an American
military deserter appealed for refugee status and a
serving comrade gave evidence that when US forces saw
babies lying in the road in Fallujah--outrageously, it
appears, insurgents sometimes placed them there to force
the Americans to halt and face ambush--they were under
orders to drive over the children without stopping. Which is what happens when you
always "place the mission first" when you are
going to "destroy"--rather than defeat--your
enemies. As my American vet put it: "the activities
in American military prisons and the hundreds of reported
incidents against civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan and
elsewhere are not aberrations--they are part of what the
US military, according to the ethos, is intended to be.
Many other armies behave in a worse fashion than the US
Army. But those armies don't claim to be the "good
guys" ... I think we need... a military composed of
soldiers, not warriors." Winston Churchill understood
military honour. "In defeat, defiance," he
advised Britons in the Second World War. "In
victory, magnanimity." Not any more. According to
George W Bush this week "the safety of America
depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of
Baghdad" because we are only in the "early
hours of this struggle between tyranny and freedom". I suppose, in the end, we are supposed to lead the 21st century into a shining age of human liberty in the dungeons of "black" prisons, under the fists of US Marines, on the exhaust pipes of Humvees. We are warriors, we are Samurai. We draw the sword. We will destroy. Which is exactly what Osama bin Laden said.
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