Writing Truth to Power

July 1, 2007

How can Blair possibly be given this job?

Filed under: Robert Fisk — maidhc @ 4:19 pm

Robert Fisk
The Independent
23 June, 2007

I suppose that astonishment is not the word for it. Stupefaction comes to mind. I simply could not believe my ears in Beirut when a phone call told me that Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara was going to create “Palestine”. I checked the date – no, it was not 1 April – but I remain overwhelmed that this vain, deceitful man, this proven liar, a trumped-up lawyer who has the blood of thousands of Arab men, women and children on his hands is really contemplating being “our” Middle East envoy.

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June 19, 2007

The General’s Report

Filed under: Seymour Hersh — maidhc @ 12:05 pm

Seymour Hersh
The New Yorker
June 25, 2007

On the afternoon of May 6 2004, Army Major General Antonio M. Taguba was summoned to meet, for the first time, with Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in his Pentagon conference room. Rumsfeld and his senior staff were to testify the next day, in televised hearings before the Senate and the House Armed Services Committees, about abuse at Abu Ghraib prison, in Iraq. The previous week, revelations about Abu Ghraib, including photographs showing prisoners stripped, abused and sexually humiliated, had appeared on CBS and in The New Yorker. In response, Administration officials had insisted that only a few low-ranking soldiers were involved and that America did not torture prisoners. They emphasized that the Army itself had uncovered the scandal.

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The American Left’s Silly Victim Complex

Filed under: Matt Taibbi — maidhc @ 6:15 am

Matt Taibbi
Adbusters
May 23, 2007

The biggest problem with modern American liberalism may be the word itself. There’s just something about the word, liberal, something about the way it sounds – it just hits the ear wrong. If it were an animal it would be something squirming and hairless, something that burrows maybe, with no eyes and too many legs. No child would bring home a wounded liberal and ask to keep it as a pet. More likely he would step on it, or maybe tie it to a bottle-rocket and shoot it over the railroad tracks.

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May 30, 2007

What if the Oil Runs Out?

Filed under: George Monbiot — maidhc @ 8:06 am

George Monbiot
The Guardian
May 30, 2007

Motorised transport is a form of time travel. We mine the compressed time of other eras – the infinitisimal rain of plankton onto the ocean floor, the settlement of trees in anoxic swamps – and use it to accelerate through our own. Every tank of fuel contains thousands of years of accretions. Our future depends on the expectation that the past will never be exhausted.

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May 29, 2007

The Redirection

Filed under: Seymour Hersh — maidhc @ 2:42 am

Seymour M. Hersh
The New Yorker
March 5, 2007

In the past few months, as the situation in Iraq has deteriorated the Bush Administration, in both it public diplomacy and its cover operations, has significantly shifted its Middle East strategy. The “redirection,” as some inside the White House have called the new strategy, has brought the United States closer to an open confrontation with Iran and, in part of the region, propelled it into widening sectarian conflict between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.

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May 24, 2007

Pulling the Plug on the Mercenary War

Filed under: Jeremy Scahill — maidhc @ 7:09 am

Jeremy Scahill
The Nation
April 30, 2007

The Democratic leadership in Congress is once again gearing up for a great sell-out on the Iraq war. While the wrangling over the $124 billion Iraq supplemental spending bill is being headlined in the media as a “showdown” or “war” with the White House, it is hardly that. In plain terms, despite the impassioned sentiments of the anti-war electorate that brought the Democrats to power last November, the Congressional leadership has made clear its intention to keep funding the Iraq occupation, even though Sen. Harry Reid has declared that “this war is lost.”

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Evil Empire

Filed under: Chalmers Johnson — maidhc @ 3:20 am

Chalmers Johnson
ZNet
May 18, 2007

In politics, as in medicine, a cure based on a false diagnosis is almost always worthless, often worsening the condition that is supposed to be healed. The United States, today, suffers from a plethora of public ills. Most of them can be traced to the militarism and imperialism that have led to the near-collapse of our Constitutional system of checks and balances. Unfortunately, none of the remedies proposed so far by American politicians or analysts addresses the root causes of the problem.

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May 23, 2007

Words Instead of Actions

Filed under: Amira Hass — maidhc @ 3:22 pm

Amira Hass
Ha’aretz
May 22, 2007

Every few weeks some international body issues a report directly linking the policy of restricted movement imposed by Israel on the occupied territories and the state of economic deterioration there. The report is often accompanied by a warning that the situation cannot persist. Last week it was the turn of the World Bank to issue a cautionary report, entitled “Movement and Access Restrictions in the West Bank: Uncertainty and Inefficiency in the Palestinian Economy.”

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A Front Row Seat for the Bloodbath in Lebanon

Filed under: Robert Fisk — maidhc @ 12:53 pm

Robert Fisk
Counterpunch
May 22, 2007

There is something obscene about watching the siege of Nahr el-Bared. The old Palestinian camp–home to 30,000 lost souls who will never go “home”–basks in the Mediterranean sunlight beyond a cluster of orange orchards. Soldiers of the Lebanese army, having retaken their positions on the main road north, idle their time aboard their old personnel carriers. And we–we representatives of the world’s press–sit equally idly atop a half-built apartment block, basking in the little garden or sipping cups of scalding tea beside the satellite dishes where the titans of television stride by in their blue space suits and helmets.

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U.S. Role in Lebanon Debacle

Filed under: Stephen Zunes — maidhc @ 12:32 pm

Stephen Zunes
Foreign Policy in Focus
May 18, 2007

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert continues to resist pressure that he resign following the publication late last month of the interim report by a special Israeli commission on Israel’s war on Lebanon last summer. Military chief Dan Halutz has already been forced to step down and Defense Minister Amir Peretz has announced he will also be resigning shortly. The report from the Winograd commission concludes that “the decision to respond with an immediate, intensive military strike was not based on a detailed, comprehensive and authorized military plan.” In making the decision to go to war in Lebanon, the Israeli government “did not consider the whole range of options, including that of continuing the policy of ‘containment.’”

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