CONTENTS / BLOG (16), Just World Campaign

• "Mosul election staff quit en masse," and other newslinks.

Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   Information Clearing House (An alternative independent non-commercial source for news, information and insight), e-mailed January 1, 2005
   WORLDWIDE:
   IRAQ: Mosul election staff quit en masse: The entire staff of the independent electoral commission in the Iraqi northern city of Mosul, amounting to about 700 employees, have resigned amid growing violence in the country. http://english. aljazeera.net/ NR/exeres/74 DCC874-441 A-41DC-9598- 14D149909 BFD.htm , 15:19 Makka Time, 12:19 GMT, Friday 31 December 2004; http://snipurl.com/bp5f
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This series begins at: http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/cont.htm 
   Iraqi National Guardsman Killed Near Falluja: An Iraqi National Guardsman was found shot dead near Falluja Friday with a note on his body warning others against working with U.S.-led forces. - http:// snipurl. com/bp5d
   Humvees linked to 1 in 5 U.S. deaths in Iraq: Throughout the 21-month war, no other piece of military materiel has been associated with so many U.S. fatalities. - http://shns.abc15.com/shns/story.cfm?pk=HUMVEES-12-30-04&cat=II , http:// snipurl. com/bp5g
   Violence Against Troops in Iraq Takes Toll: The number of attacks on U.S. and allied troops grew from an estimated 1,400 attacks in September to 1,600 in October and 1,950 in November. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4702255,00.html , http:// snipurl. com/bp5h
   Profits Clothed in Sadness: A Southern town benefits by supplying the troops in Iraq, but for many with loved ones at risk, the work has its downside. http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/latimes477.html
   Faces of the fallen: These photographs are grouped in solemn rows without statistics to show the extent of U.S. military losses (in Iraq) in one view. - http://www.duckdaotsu.org/valor.html
   Cartoon of the week: http://cristianfleming.org/index.php?d=12/30/04
   Dead Soldier's Dad Finds No Enemy in Iraq: Fernando Suarez del Solar is a busy man. He is busy opening boxes, counting pills, counting bandages; he is busy checking everything in the boxes that come addressed to him from all over the United States. - http://www.ipsnews.net/new_nota.asp?idnews=26852
   Time to leave Iraq: The Bush administration's New Year's resolution should be to pull out of Iraq. Already, the United States has lost 1,300 soldiers, and 10,000 U.S. soldiers have been wounded, at a rate now of almost 1,000 a month. - http://www.madison.com/wsj/opinion/others/index.php?ntid=22647&ntpid=1 , http://snipurl.com/bp5k
   Paul Craig Roberts: Forget Torture; It's the Sex That Matters: What defines conduct unbecoming an officer? - http://www.counterpunch.com/roberts12302004.html
   'Civilization' vs. 'Barbarism': An Interview with Noam Chomsky: "It's not correct that the media haven't reported the war crimes. They often report them and celebrate them. Take for example the invasion of Fallujah.." - http://207.44.245.159/article7580.htm
   Not a good way to start a democracy: Serious questions must be asked about US influence in Ukraine. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1381165,00.html , http://snipurl.com/bowc .
   In case you missed it: Dick Cheney's Song of America: The Plan is for the United States to rule the world. The overt theme is unilateralism, but it is ultimately a story of domination. It calls for the United States to maintain its overwhelming military superiority and prevent new rivals from rising up to challenge it on the world stage. It calls for dominion over friends and enemies alike. It says not that the United States must be more powerful, or most powerful, but that it must be absolutely powerful. - http://207.44.245.159/article1544.htm
   In case you missed it: After Iraq it is Venezuela: While the whole world is focused on America and the Euro zone for the super power challenges, both these powers are looking small when you combine the powers of the new coalition Putin is building with India, China, Russia and Brazil. Add to that Venezuelan oil that supplies America a substantial crude oil, and now you have the actual scenario of confrontation. - http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/11-27b-04.asp
   UN asks Israel to stop violating Lebanese airspace: Israeli warplanes flew over large parts of Lebanon on Thursday, the Lebanese Army said, prompting the United Nations to again urge the Jewish state to stop sending its military aircraft over this Arab country in breach of the UN-drawn Lebanese-Israeli border. - http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1104376739216 ; http://snipurl.com/bp5n .
   Israel in 'Very Difficult Position' Over Chinese Drone Repair, Diplomat Says: Israel is in a "very difficult position" over an American demand that Israel not return Harpy drones to China that were sent here for servicing, an Israeli diplomat said on Thursday following the visit of the Chinese deputy prime minister here this week. - www.cnsnews.com/ ViewForeignBureaus. asp?Page=%5CForeign Bureaus%5Carchive%5C200412% 5CFOR20041230a.html ; http://snipurl.com/bp5o .
   Forgers 'tried to rewrite biblical history': Hundreds of biblical artefacts in museums all over the world could be fakes, it has emerged after Israeli investigators uncovered what they claim is a sophisticated forgery ring. - http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,2763,1381272,00.html .
   Did FBI Use Pentagon Analyst to 'Sting' AIPAC? Jewish newspapers are reporting the FBI used the Pentagon's top Iran analyst in a "sting operation" to pass "foreign policy strategic information to two AIPAC officials." - http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4§ion=0&article=56830&d=31&m=12&y=2004 , http://snipurl.com/bp5p .
   Israeli hubris vs. the US: The latest spy tale in Washington, DC, involving Larry Franklin, an intelligence analyst at the Defense Department, and some of Israel's most important lobbyists in America, is becoming deeper by the week. - http://metimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20041226-040954-7609r .
   The Bush administration is shameless.: $13.6 billion in emergency funding to Florida in response to the four hurricanes and 100 people dead. $35 Million for the victims of the tsunami and over 100,000 dead. - http://www.answercoalition.org/ .
   The stingy U.S./An appalling performance: As the Bush administration is wont to say, actions speak louder than words, and America's actions in recent days have painted the United States as a rich, self-absorbed and uncaring nation that had to be shamed into anything approaching appropriate concern about this catastrophe. - http://www.startribune.com/stories/561/5160305.html
   Private US donations pour in: Americans have given at least $21.5 million to emergency funds for Asian tsunami disaster victims while the Bush administration grapples with accusations that it has been stingy. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E00EB28F-762B-4D0C-992C-E060DA4FA9DF.htm , http://snipurl.com/bp5r
   Global analysts dispute perceived US generosity: On a per capita basis and as a percentage of the nation's wealth, America's emergency relief in Asia and development aid to poor countries actually ranks at the bottom of the list of developed nations, - http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2004/12/31/global_analysts_dispute_perceived_us_generosity?mode=PF ; http://snipurl.com/bp5s .
   UK: $36m in 24 hours: Shocked by the devastation caused by the tsunami, Britons responded yesterday with unprecedented generosity to the appeal for donations. - http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/story.jsp?story=597025
   Canada increases tsunami aid to $40 million. - http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/print/CTVNews/1104355151375_99764351/?hub=Canada&subhub=PrintStory ; http://snipurl.com/bp5t .
   China Increases Tsunami Aid Sharply to $63 Million: At a little over $63 million, Beijing is now the third biggest monetary donor behind Britain and Sweden. The United States has made an initial pledge of $35 million. - http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=7213090 , http://snipurl.com/bp5u .
   Tsunami: How to help: Not sure how to help, but there are people who know what to do and are directly on the scene. These people can make your dollars work in ways most of us have never had to think about. - http://bobharris.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=314&Itemid=2 , http://snipurl.com/bp5v .
   Christian fundamentalist organizations appear to be suffering from a compassion deficit: Organizations which are amazingly quick to organize to fight against same-sex marriage, a woman's right to choose, and embryonic stem cell research are missing in action when it comes to responding to the disaster in southern Asia. None of their web sites are actively soliciting aid for the victims of the earthquake/tsunami. - http://www.workingforchange.com/printitem.cfm?itemid=18309 . [CHECK if this is genuine. Anyway, such bodies as Austcare and Freedom From Hunger in Australia, for example, are actually combined Churches' bodies.]
   Thanks God for the tsunami and 2,000 dead Swedes!!!: Westboro Baptist Church leaders have released the following statement regarding the tsunamis which hit Southeast Asia earlier in the week. - http://rawstory.rawprint.com/1204/westboro_tsunami_statement_1230.php , http://snipurl.com/bp5w . [CHECK if this is genuine: The leaflet showed a URL of an anti-religion group.]
   Intimidation, Politics and Drug Trade Cripple U.S. Medicine: While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is supposed to safeguard the nation's medical products, documentation, interviews and recent drug debacles depict a brutally different reality, with the Vioxx scandal alone estimated to have resulted in 30,000-55,000 U.S. deaths. - http://ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=26874
   Eli Lilly Said to Know of Prozac Risks: A British medical journal said Friday that it had given U.S. regulators confidential drug company documents suggesting a link between the popular anti-depressant Prozac and a heightened risk of suicide attempts and violence. - http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BRITAIN_PROZAC?SITE=VTBUR&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT ; http://snipurl.com/bp5z .
   Thomas tops on high court in acceptance of lavish gifts: Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has accepted tens of thousands of dollars worth of gifts since joining the Supreme Court, from $1,200 worth of tires to valuable historical items and a $5,000 personal check to help pay a relative's education expenses. - http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/2972139 ,
   In case you mised it: Noam Choamsky: Preventive War 'The Supreme Crime': Iraq: The invasion that will live in infamy. - http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4416.htm
   Empty Pew: Why W. Doesn't Go To Church: What most--including many of the president's fiercest supporters--don't know, is that Bush doesn't go to church. - http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=vKO1twmWG2Uvnyi2qoWQfW%3D%3D , http://snipurl.com/b4q0 .
   QUOTATIONS: "Our only political party has two right wings, one called Republican, the other Democratic. But Henry Adams figured all that out back in the 1890s. 'We have a single system,' he wrote, and 'in that system the only question is the price at which the proletariat is to be bought and sold, the bread and circuses'." - Gore Vidal - The Decline and Fall of the American Empire
   " The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to the point where it becomes stronger than the democratic state itself. That in its essence is fascism - ownership of government by an individual, by a group or any controlling private power. " - President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
   "We stand for the maintenance of private property... We shall protect free enterprise as the most expedient, or rather the sole possible economic order." - Adolph Hitler
   "If a baseball player slides into home plate and, right before the umpire rules if he is safe or out, the player says to the umpire - 'Here is $1,000.' What would we call that? We would call that a bribe. If a lawyer was arguing a case before a judge and said, 'Your honor before you decide on the guilt or innocence of my client, here is $1,000.' What would we call that? We would call that a bribe. "But if an industry lobbyist walks into the office of a key legislator and hands her or him a check for $1,000, we call that a campaign contribution. We should call it a bribe." - Janice Fine - Dollars and Sense magazine.
   This web site represents the effort of one person. I need your help to offset the costs associated with site hosting and bandwidth usage. If you find this site informative please help by clicking here http://www. information clearinghouse. info/support.htm
   WEB SITE: http://www. information clearinghouse. info . To help support ICH using PayPal click here. http://tinyurl.com/v1l8 . Or if you prefer to send a check/cheque or money order, Tom, PO Box 365 Imperial Beach, CA 91933. USA. [Jan 1, 2005]

• "A 'Long War' Against Whom?" and other newslinks.


   Information Clearing House (An alternative independent non-commercial source for news, information and insight), e-mailed January 2, 2005
   WORLDWIDE: A 'Long War' Against Whom? By Robert Parry - For the next generation or more, it appears the American people will be asked to sacrifice their children, their tax dollars and possibly the remnants of their democracy to what a top U.S. commander now candidly calls the "Long War." - http://207.44. 245.159/article 7582.htm
   Seven killed in Iraqi suicide attack: A suicide car bomber has killed seven people, five of them Iraqi National Guards. - http://snipurl .com/bpl3
   Zarqawi group says killed five Iraqi National Guard: Militants from a group led by Al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said they had killed five men and warned those who work with the US-backed government they faced the same fate. - http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/focusoniraq/2005/January/focusoniraq_January8.xml§ion=focusoniraq http://snipurl.com/bpl4
   Police find beheaded bodies: IRAQI police found beheaded two bodies in western Baghdad today along with a note that said they were truck drivers killed because they were working with the US military. - http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,11833149%255E401,00.html , http://snipurl.com/bpl5 .
   Marine Killed in Al Anbar (Fallujah) During Operations: One Marine assigned to the I Marine Expeditionary Force was killed in action Friday, Dec. 31 while conducting security and stabilization operations in the Al Anbar Province. - http://www.cjtf7.com/media-information/January/050101c.htm
   Clashes around Baghdad: Fighting between US forces and armed groups has continued in and around the Iraqi capital, intensifying on the road leading to Baghdad airport. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/2969BFDD-CC68-4B9C-BDF5-EFF6075E1B71.htm , http://snipurl.com/bpl8
   Post-9/11 conflicts send 1 million to battle zones: Nearly 1 million members of the U.S. armed forces have been deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan and other danger zones since the September 11 terror attacks, and almost a third of them have been sent more than once, figures released by the Pentagon show. - http://www.washingtontimes.com/functions/print.php?StoryID=20041230-111258-1607r , http://snipurl.com/bplh
   Goodbye to 2004, another year of living stupidly: Never in the memory of the living generation have the errors, falsifications and unreason of policy come in such rapid and overwhelming succession that each buries its predecessor before it's even partially absorbed, much less understood. - http://www.sacbee.com/content/opinion/story/11889222p-12776129c.html , http://snipurl.com/5mw9 .
   US Applying 'Israeli Tactics' in Felluce : It has recently been discovered that US and Iraqi forces have been using a method of demolishing houses in Felluce (Fallujah) that Israelis have also used on Palestinian homes. - http://www.zaman.com/?bl=international&alt=&trh=20041231&hn=15180 , http://snipurl.com/bpl9
   Bungled Israeli killing revealed : Papers released at the National Archives in London have revealed the details of a political murder by Israeli secret services 30 years ago. - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4138021.stm
   Daniel Pipes Favors Concentration Camps: That the Revisionist-Zionist extremist Daniel Pipes has fond visions of rounding up Muslim Americans and putting them in concentration camps isn't a big surprise. That a mainstream American newspaper would publish this David-Dukeian evil is. Of course, this is also a man that President Bush appointed to a temporary vacancy at the United States Institute of Peace. - http://207.44.245.159/article7581.htm
   Wag the dog: Official says Sharon weighed war during probe : Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon considered launching a war in the Middle East to divert attention from a police investigation into allegations that he accepted bribes, an Israeli newspaper reported. - http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/breaking_4.html
   A View from Syria on the Palestinian Right to Return: "What's the use of having international law on our side when it's not upheld by the ruling powers?" - http://www.counterpunch.com/hassen12312004.html
   U.S. Aid To Israel Must Become Conditional. - http://www.theday.com/eng/web/news/re.aspx?re=47857031-4A1D-4EB6-BB31-DA64AF76FCBA , http://snipurl.com/bplb
   Iraq Vs. Tsunami: The Duplicity Of The Media : This is where the western press really excels: in the celebratory atmosphere of human catastrophe. Their penchant for misery is only surpassed by their appetite for profits. Where was this "free press" in Iraq when the death toll was skyrocketing towards 100,000? - http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=21&ItemID=6941 , http://snipurl.com/bplc
   US military aid role a first in Indonesia: In a groundbreaking piece of diplomacy, US soldiers will for the first time touch down on Indonesian soil in an operational capacity. - http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4A0A0C42-C6C4-42A8-8B5D-5BAC00C99BA2.htm , http://snipurl.com/bplk
   US pledges $US 350m in tsunami aid : The pledge was made just before talks between senior US and UN figures on co-ordinating aid efforts. - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4138763.stm
   Regarding the "stinginess" of American aid : Here's the ranking of countries by relief aid per capita per day. - http://www.danieldrezner.com/archives/001805.html
   Western Governments can do more to help tsunami victims : ... If our governments could mobilize resources, the media, and in some cases popular support, like they do for illegal wars of conquest and occupation, tens of thousands more lives could possibly be saved. = http://asiantsunami.blogspot.com/
   China May Be Offered Stake in Yukos Subsidiary: A senior Russian official said on Thursday that China's state oil company could be offered 20 percent of a giant subsidiary of the oil company Yukos that was confiscated and sold 11 days ago. - http://www.wilmingtonstar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041231/ZNYT01/412310345/1004/local ; http://snipurl.com/bpld .
   Does America Get What It Deserves?: "Time" magazine named President George W. Bush "Man of the Year" for 2004, an honor previously bestowed on Adolf Hitler (1938), Josef Stalin (1942) and the Ayatollah Khomeini (1979). Congratulations and good for him. - http://www.niagarafallsreporter.com/editorial183.html
   Paving the way for the bioweapons of the future? A growing number of microbiologists, nonproliferation experts, and former government officials say there may be a dark side to the biodefense push: With poor oversight, government-funded scientists could actually be paving the way for the next generation of killer germs-and given the explosion of research, there is no way to keep track of what is being done. - http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/2004/03/02_400.html
   Bush allies prepare for Social Security battle: With Bush planning to unveil the details of his Social Security plan this month, several GOP groups close to the White House are asking the same donors who helped re-elect Bush to fund an extensive campaign to convince Americans - and skeptical lawmakers - that Social Security is in crisis and that private accounts are the only cure. - http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/news/local/10541236.htm
   Lautenberg Calls on Social Security Administration to Cease Telephone Propaganda Aimed at Scaring Seniors: As President Bush begins to sell his Social Security privatization plan with claims of a looming Social Security "crisis," the Social Security Administration is forcing callers to their 800 number to listen to inaccurate propaganda with a "crisis". - http://lautenberg.senate.gov/~lautenberg/press/2003/01/2004C23848.html , http://snipurl.com/bple
   Lobbyists Descend on Cabinet Picks: Long before they start their new jobs, President Bush's Cabinet picks are getting close attention from lobbyists who follow the smallest moves from start to finish - even urging senators to ask specific questions at confirmation hearings. - http://washingtontimes.com/national/20041230-111258-7999r.htm
   Shame Of The Democrats: Watch the video of the January 6, 2001 refusal of any member of the U.S. Senate to join those members of the House of Representatives who tried to challenge Florida's fraud-obtained electoral votes. - http://makethemaccountable.com/misc/DemocratsShame2001.htm
   I Am Hope: The flame of hope should never go out from your life. Flash presentation. - http://i.euniverse.com/funpages/cms_content/2529/4candles.swf
   QUOTATIONS: I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations of justice and liberality. - George Washington.
   At least two thirds of our miseries spring from human stupidity, human malice and those great motivators and justifiers of malice and stupidity, idealism, dogmatism and proselytizing zeal on behalf of religious or political idols. - Aldous Huxley.
   Justice is conscience, not a personal conscience but the conscience of the whole of humanity. Those who clearly recognize the voice of their own conscience usually recognize also the voice of justice. - Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
   We are reluctant to admit that we owe our liberties to men of a type that today we hate and fear -- unruly men, disturbers of the peace, men who resent and denounce what Whitman called 'the insolence of elected persons' -- in a word, free men. - Gerald W. Johnson.
   Liberty can not be preserved without general knowledge among people." - (August 1765) John Adams.
   Peace & Joy - Tom [Jan 2, 05]

• The "Vietnam jungle" in the Iraq desert; We never learned why we lost the Vietnam War, and now we're losing another Asian War.


   Intervention Magazine, "The Jungle in the Desert," www.intervention mag.com/cms/ modules.php? op=modload&name= News&file= article& sid=964 ; By Stewart Nusbaumer, Posted Tuesday, January 4, 2005
   Stewart Nusbaumer is editor of Intervention Magazine. He served with the U.S. Marine Corps in Vietnam on the DMZ. You can email him at Stewart@interventionmag.com
   UNITED STATES: With the proliferation of the Internet and the spread of political polarization, there has been an explosion of know-it-alls in America. Those who know what America should and shouldn't do, what will happen tomorrow and what won't happen next year. They know everything.
   Yet, those who claim the greatest certainty often possess the least knowledge. In full hubristic certainty, the Neocons and others in the Bush Administration guaranteed the Iraq War would be "quick and easy." That was two years ago. That was before 1,300 Americans and 100,000 Iraqis were dead.
   First we were told that when Saddam Hussein was overthrown, the fighting would stop. That was twenty-one months ago. Then, when Saddam Hussein the fugitive was captured, the insurgency would collapse. He was captured over twelve months ago. Then, when authority was transferred to the Iraqi government, the Iraqi military would take over the fighting. That was nearly ten months ago. Then, when Fallujah was occupied, the resistance would be defeated. The city was destroyed over two months ago.
   From defeating the Iraqi military to capturing Saddam Hussein to Iraqi control of the country to destroying a city, each promise has disappeared in fresh pools of American and Iraqi blood.
   Desperate, the U.S. is still pinning its hope on the Iraqi troops becoming the security forces and on the upcoming elections creating a credible local government. But Iraqization has shown itself to be an utter failure, as Vietnamization was an utter failure, and elections under the control of foreign occupiers never deter exploding resistance movements.
   The United States does have its accomplishments in Iraq. It has fueled a vicious insurgency, where none existed, and it has greatly expanded the number of corpses throughout the country. This is not, however, what the advocates of the "quick and easy" so confidently predicted.
   "There was no adequate operational plan for stability operations and support operations," writes Major Isaiah Wilson, a former researcher for the Army's Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group and later the chief war planner for the 101st Airborne Division in Iraq.
   At Cornell University, discussing the Iraq War, Major Wilson said: "U.S. military planners, practitioners and the civilian leadership conceived of the war far too narrowly." Scheduled to teach at the U.S. Military Academy next year, the historian and strategist believes that the top war-planners suffered from "stunted learning and a reluctance to adapt."
   "Similar criticism has been made before," writes Thomas Ricks in the Washington Post, "but until now [has] not been stated so authoritatively and publicly by a military insider positioned to be familiar with top-secret planning."
The Roots of the Mistake
   "There was too much of an analogy with the occupation of Germany and Japan," former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger complained to Wolf Blitzer on CNN. What Henry Kissinger did not complain about was that there was too much of an analogy with the Vietnam War, and how that past quagmire could be reproduced in Iraq. For Henry Kissinger and the Neocons, the Vietnam War is forgotten history.
   "Sir," an email to me began:
   As a Canadian I am totally puzzled why Americans never learn from their past mistakes, unless Americans cannot admit their mistakes. Has anyone in Washington come out publicly and said the Vietnam War was a mistake, beside the mothers who lost their sons and those soldiers who came home minus an arm or leg? What was that war all about anyway? To this day I still have not heard a satisfactory answer.
   More than 58,000 Americans killed in a losing war against "a rag-tag 3rd rate military force" (as the Vietnamese resistance was described by self-confident U.S. officials), and the post-war discussion during the 1970s and 1980s in America was obscurant, distorted, and terribly short. Instead of a dialogue to understand why 58,000 Americans died in vain in Vietnam, Americans had a vicious blame-game to obscure the reasons why 58,000 Americans died in vain in Vietnam. Instead of the truth, it was obfuscation; instead of accountability, scapegoats.
   It was claimed that those long-haired antiwar demonstrations, "the war at home," brought about our defeat in Vietnam. That the press was complicit: the liberal press was defeatist, and this defeated our noble effort in Southeast Asia. And the politicians, those back-stabbing Washington politicians, refused to allow our military to win the war.
   Not blamed were those who advocated the failed U.S. intervention in that far-off civil war; those who designed the bankrupt U.S. strategy that was mostly fantasy; those who ignored the great power of Vietnamese nationalism, which in the end defeated our internationalism, or if you prefer our imperialism.
   It was their country and they outlasted us in their country. Never underestimate the power of nationalism, even in this global world, to ignite the "rag-tag armies."
   George Santayana once wrote, "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." It is an old adage, yet has contemporary meaning for an arrogant nation that continues to overestimate its own power and underestimate the power of the "rag-tag armies."
   Santayana, however, was too kind for German philosopher George Wilhelm Hegel: "What experience and history teach is this--that people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles."
   As we look at the unfolding disaster in Iraq, we see that America never learned from the Vietnam War. Americans never even learned that you never commit your troops to a war that has not been thought through. This is more than not acting on principle, Hegel would say this is a crime. And he is correct.
Back to Vietnam
   The U.S. war planners underestimated the Iraqis' will to resist and they underestimated the insurgents' ability to develop a wartime strategy. After "shock and awe," the resistance would surely be reduced to a "rag-tag resistance," right? The planners overestimated the U.S. military's technology and firepower, which they always do. Twenty-one months into this war, the world's most powerful military is stymied, unable to halt the expanding Iraqis insurgency and the rising number of American dead.
   Those who planned this war knew as much about Iraq as those who planned the Vietnam War knew about Vietnam, which is why Iraq will end as Vietnam ended. In America's defeat.
   For those of us who fought in Vietnam and reflected on that disastrous war, we knew America could not win in Iraq. Many Americans came to that conclusion without having served in Vietnam. But not the Bush Administration and the Neocons, and not most Americans, who went along with the invasion and occupation of Iraq. For these Americans, the Vietnam War never happened and Iraq would be "fast and easy."
   The Canadian asked, in reference to the Vietnam War, "What was that war all about anyway?"
   Major Wilson said, the Iraq War planners had "stunted learning."
   And now retired Army General Donald Shepperd, speaking on CNN, says: "It doesn't look like there is light at the end of the tunnel."
   Yes, the Iraq tunnel is dark. Very dark. As dark as the Vietnam tunnel was dark. [By courtesy of Michael P, Jan 10, 05]
   [COMMENT: The author writes "The U.S. war planners underestimated the Iraqis' will to resist" - he forgets to mention the foreign fighters. COMMENT ENDS.]
   [DOCTRINE: 002.191 - And kill them wherever you find them, and drive them out from whence they drove you out, and persecution is severer than slaughter, and do not fight with them at the Sacred Mosque until they fight with you in it, but if they do fight you, then slay them; such is the recompense of the unbelievers. http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/002.qmt.html#002.191 .
   005.033 - The punishment of those who wage war against Allah and His apostle and strive to make mischief in the land is only this, that they should be murdered or crucified or their hands and their feet should be cut off on opposite sides ... http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/005.qmt.html#005.033 . DOCTRINE ENDS.] [Jan 4, 05]

• A new era for land tax.


   The Australian Financial Review, by Alan Mitchell, Economics editor, Wednesday, January 5, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: As hundreds of horrified NSW residents face their first land tax liability, Howard government backbenchers are calling on the Prime Minister to use his majority in the Senate to embark on a new round of tax reform.
   In Australia, one of the least heavily taxed of the high-income OECD economies, tax reform is never far from the surface of the political debate. [...]
   But what direction should future tax reform take? In recent years, key themes of the tax debate have been the complexity of the taxation law, Australia's heavy dependence on taxes on internationally mobile capital, our relatively high top marginal income tax rate, and, more recently, the heavy emphasis on the taxation of current income rather than assets.
   Unfortunately, fixing one perceived problem with the taxation system often comes at the cost of making other problems worse. Everybody's favourite example of complexity is the Income Tax Assessment Act, which has grown from 120 pages in 1936 to about 7000 pages today. [...]
   A major reason for the complexity of the tax law is the tax avoidance industry.
   Discriminating in favour of internationally mobile capital, as advocated by business, would also add to the complexity of the taxation system. ***
   The failure to tax assets and capital gains comprehensively contributed to the property price bubble. And that bubble, in turn, has further distorted the distribution of wealth. [...]
   Of course, suggestions that Australian governments should reintroduce general wealth taxation will raise fears that people will react by investing their savings overseas.
   For that reason, it is likely that governments will turn back to one of the oldest forms of revenue raising: the taxation of the unimproved capital value of land.
   The Carr government's decision last year to broaden its land tax base could be the start of something very big.# [Read more below]
[Jan 5, 05]
• Current land tax is only redistribution, not reform.
   E-mail letter to The Australian Financial Review, from John Poulter, January 5, 2005
   PORTARLINGTON (Victoria) Australia:
   With reference to Alan Mitchell's article in the AFR 5 Jan 2005 "A new era for land tax," the current system of Land Tax used by the states is purely a socialistic form of wealth redistribution and should be abolished in favour of a unilateral system of Site Rent based on the value of land owned.
   I trust that by advocating the raising of the Federal Governments total revenue through a Tax on the Unimproved Capital Value of Land you are in reality referring to the collection of the Site Rent.
   Such a system will allow all sections of the economy including Labour to work at their optimum efficiency and not be penalised by a tax on their efforts.
   Industry will be unshackled from this current regressive tax regime and allowed to get on with their role as the co-producer of goods and delivery of services.
   The collection of the Site Rent will also bring into production land currently held vacant, thus lowering its price and making the Australian dream of home ownership possible for all. Australia will truly then become the lucky country. [Slightly modified] [Jan 5, 05]
• We Are All Torturers Now.

We Are All Torturers Now

   The New York Times, www.nytimes. com/2005/01/06/ opinion/06 danner.html? oref=login , By MARK DANNER, OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR, January 6, 2005
   NEW YORK: *Mark Danner is the author of Torture and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib and the War on Terror."
AT least since Watergate, Americans have come to take for granted a certain story line of scandal, in which revelation is followed by investigation, adjudication and expiation. Together, Congress and the courts investigate high-level wrongdoing and place it in a carefully constructed narrative, in which crimes are charted, malfeasance is explicated and punishment is apportioned as the final step in the journey back to order, justice and propriety.
   When Alberto Gonzales takes his seat before the Senate Judiciary Committee today for hearings to confirm whether he will become attorney general of the United States, Americans will bid farewell to that comforting story line. The senators are likely to give full legitimacy to a path that the Bush administration set the country on more than three years ago, a path that has transformed the United States from a country that condemned torture and forbade its use to one that practices torture routinely. Through a process of redefinition largely overseen by Mr. Gonzales himself, a practice that was once a clear and abhorrent violation of the law has become in effect the law of the land.
   Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Americans began torturing prisoners, and they have never really stopped. However much these words have about them the ring of accusation, they must by now be accepted as fact. From Red Cross reports, Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba's inquiry, James R. Schlesinger's Pentagon-sanctioned commission and other government and independent investigations, we have in our possession hundreds of accounts of "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment - to use a phrase of the Red Cross - "tantamount to torture."
   So far as we know, American intelligence officers, determined after Sept. 11 to "take the gloves off," began by torturing Qaeda prisoners. They used a number of techniques: "water-boarding," in which a prisoner is stripped, shackled and submerged in water until he begins to lose consciousness, and other forms of near suffocation; sleep and sensory deprivation; heat and light and dietary manipulation; and "stress positions."
   Eventually, these practices "migrated," in the words of the Schlesinger report, to Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where for a time last spring the marvel of digital technology allowed Americans to see what their soldiers were doing to prisoners in their name.
   Though the revelations of Abu Ghraib transfixed Americans for a time, in the matter of torture not much changed. After those in Congress had offered condemnations and a few hearings distinguished by their lack of seriousness; after the administration had commenced the requisite half-dozen investigations, none of them empowered to touch those who devised the policies; and after the low-level soldiers were placed firmly on the road to punishment - after all this, the issue of torture slipped back beneath the surface. Every few weeks now, a word or two reaches us from that dark, subterranean place. Take, for example, this account, offered by an unnamed F.B.I. counterterrorism official reporting in August, more than three months after the Abu Ghraib images appeared, on what he saw during a visit to Guantánamo:
   "On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water. Most times they had urinated or defecated on themselves, and had been left there for 18-24 hours or more...When I asked the M.P.'s what was going on, I was told that interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment, and the detainee was not to be moved. On another occasion...the detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been literally pulling his own hair out throughout the night."
   This is a fairly mild example when judged against the accounts of the "abuses" that have entered the public record. I put quotation marks around the word "abuses" because most of these acts - as the F.B.I. agent acknowledged ("the interrogators from the day prior had ordered this treatment") - were in fact procedures, which would not have been possible without policies that had been approved by administration officials.
   In the next few days we are likely to hear how Mr. Gonzales recommended strongly, against the arguments of the secretary of state and military lawyers, that prisoners in Afghanistan be denied the protection of the Geneva Conventions. We are also likely to hear how, under Mr. Gonzales's urging, lawyers in the Department of Justice contrived - when confronted with the obstacle that the United States had undertaken, by treaty and statute, to make torture illegal - simply to redefine the word to mean procedures that would produce pain "of an intensity akin to that which accompanies serious physical injury such as death or organ failure." By this act of verbal legerdemain, interrogation techniques like water-boarding that plainly constituted torture suddenly became something less than that.
   But what we are unlikely to hear, given the balance of votes in the Senate, are many voices making the obvious argument that with this record, Mr. Gonzales is unfit to serve as attorney general. So let me make it: Mr. Gonzales is unfit because the slow river of litigation is certain to bring before the next attorney general a raft of torture cases that challenge the very policies that he personally helped devise and put into practice. He is unfit because, while the attorney general is charged with upholding the law, the documents show that as White House counsel, Mr. Gonzales, in the matter of torture, helped his client to concoct strategies to circumvent it. And he is unfit, finally, because he has rightly become the symbol of the United States' fateful departure from a body of settled international law and human rights practice for which the country claims to stand.
   On the other hand, perhaps it is fitting that Mr. Gonzales be confirmed. The system of torture has, after all, survived its disclosure. We have entered a new era; the traditional story line in which scandal leads to investigation and investigation leads to punishment has been supplanted by something else. Wrongdoing is still exposed; we gaze at the photographs and read the documents, and then we listen to the president's spokesman "reiterate," as he did last week, "the president's determination that the United States never engage in torture." And there the story ends.
   At present, our government, controlled largely by one party only intermittently harried by a timorous opposition, is unable to mete out punishment or change policy, let alone adequately investigate its own war crimes. And, as administration officials clearly expect, and senators of both parties well understand, most Americans - the Americans who will not read the reports, who will soon forget the photographs and who will be loath to dwell on a repellent subject - are generally content to take the president at his word.
   But reality has a way of asserting itself. In the end, as Gen. Joseph P. Hoar pointed out this week, the administration's decision on the Geneva Conventions "puts all American servicemen and women at risk that are serving in combat regions." For General Hoar - a retired commander of American forces in the Middle East and one of a dozen prominent retired generals and admirals to oppose Mr. Gonzales - torture has a way of undermining the forces using it, as it did with the French Army in Algeria.
   The general's concerns are understandable. The war in Iraq and the war on terrorism are ultimately political in character. Victory depends in the end not on technology or on overwhelming force but on political persuasion. By using torture, the country relinquishes the very ideological advantage - the promotion of democracy, freedom and human rights - that the president has so persistently claimed is America's most powerful weapon in defeating Islamic extremism. One does not reach democracy, or freedom, through torture.
   By using torture, we Americans transform ourselves into the very caricature our enemies have sought to make of us. True, that miserable man who pulled out his hair as he lay on the floor at Guantánamo may eventually tell his interrogators what he knows, or what they want to hear. But for America, torture is self-defeating; for a strong country it is in the end a strategy of weakness. After Mr. Gonzales is confirmed, the road back - to justice, order and propriety - will be very long. Torture will belong to us all. # Special Offer: Home Delivery of The Times from $2.90/week. [Subject to U.S. conditions]
   [RECAPITULATE: "By using torture, the country relinquishes the very ideological advantage - the promotion of democracy, freedom and human rights - that the president has so persistently claimed is America's most powerful weapon in defeating Islamic extremism. One does not reach democracy, or freedom, through torture." ENDS.]
   NOTE: This article is also at Submit / Chronology 3, Torturers, and is listed towards the foot of Contents 7. [Jan 6, 05]

• Clamping Down on Freedom of the Press; What lessons does Watergate offer for today's beleaguered media?


   The Centre for Public Integrity, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, www.public integrity.org/ report.aspx? aid=426&sid= 100 , Commentary By Charles Lewis (re-run of November 22, 2004 article), January 08, 2005
   The clamp-down on the freedom of the press by the executive and judicial branches of the U.S. government, begun in the wake of September 11 attacks, is getting worse, as the legal troubles of Jim Taricani, Judith Miller and Matthew Cooper indicate. On November 18, Taricani, a veteran investigative reporter of NBC affiliate WJAR, was convicted of criminal contempt for refusing to name the source that leaked to him an F.B.I. videotape linked to a high-profile Providence corruption probe involving Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. Taricani, a long-time heart patient, will be sentenced on December 9, and he faces up to 6 months in prison. A couple of reporters from two of the nation's best-known publications, Miller of The New York Times and Cooper of Time magazine, are facing jail time for their refusal to disclose confidential source information to the grand jury searching for the White House official who leaked the name of a CIA operative. At least eight journalists have been found in contempt of court for refusing to identify sources. Center for Public Integrity Executive Director Charles Lewis explores the eerie similarity between today's suppression of press freedom and Watergate.
   WASHINGTON, November 22, 2004 -- The tension between power and the press, between spinning and searching for truth, between disinformation and information, is of course endemic to the human condition itself. And in trying times like these, when it occasionally looks like things are going to hell, it is strangely consoling to recall that actually others before us also have traveled on what must have seemed to be the road to perdition.
   For example, 33 years ago, a President and his administration were prosecuting a difficult, unpopular war thousands of miles away on foreign soil, keenly attempting without great success to control the media's access to information, particularly of the unfavorable kind. Two newspapers, the New York Times and the Washington Post, each began publishing a leaked, secret Defense Department history of the Vietnam War that dramatically revealed government deception and incompetence. The Nixon administration went into federal court against the two news organizations, separately, and, citing national security and charging treason, managed to halt publication of the "Pentagon Papers" until the U.S. Supreme Court, on June 30, 1971, sided with the First Amendment by a vote of 6-3.
   While Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee was, among others, understandably exultant and relieved, he also recognized, as Bradlee later recalled in his memoir, A Good Life, that he had just stared into the abyss, "For the first time in the history of the American republic, newspapers had been restrained by the government from publishing a story -- a black mark in the history of democracy --- What the hell was going on in this country that this could happen?"
   Certainly a common refrain among many journalists these days as well, but to finish the flashback, the Pentagon Papers episode obviously was just the beginning. Bradlee at the time did not know the answer to his own question, except that "the Cold War dominated our society,--- and the Nixon-Agnew administration was playing hardball." While Vietnam wore on for a few more years, Richard Nixon seethed and the White House siege mentality worsened.
   Two days before the historic Supreme Court case, the whistleblower who had leaked the Pentagon Papers, Daniel Ellsberg, was indicted on federal charges of conspiracy, espionage, theft of government property and the unauthorized possession of "documents and writing related to the national defense." The day after the high court decision, White House Special Counsel Charles Colson asked former CIA operative E. Howard Hunt whether "we should go down the line to nail the guy [Ellsberg] cold."
   The Pentagon Papers obsession spawned the White House Special Investigations Unit, the infamous "Plumbers" unit, who, among other misadventures, weeks later broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, looking for dirt. And the poisonous paranoia didn't stop there but extended to other burglaries, including the Democratic Party national headquarters at the Watergate complex, electronic surveillance, misuse of confidential tax return information against perceived political enemies, mail fraud, obstruction of justice and an astonishing array of other illegal government abuses of power, ultimately exposed, prosecuted and culminating in the only resignation of a sitting U.S. president.
   The Pentagon Papers case and the Watergate scandal still represent U.S. history's high-water mark in the longstanding struggle between raw political power and democratic values, poignantly affirming the public's right to know about its government. They still represent the bleakest moments and the loftiest triumphs of journalism in contemporary America, an invaluable perspective today as we ponder the future and assess the tectonic damage to our long-cherished freedoms of speech and information in the past three, disquieting years in the wake of the devastating, unimaginable carnage of September 11, 2001.
   Suddenly, despite living in the most powerful nation on earth, we all faced a shattering if all-too-familiar realization of our own human vulnerabilities, including the quite palpable fear for our own personal safety, indelibly seared into our collective consciousness. While the Vietnam and Watergate era was quite extraordinary, most Americans, including journalists, never had the sense that their physical wellbeing was potentially at risk. Juxtapose our pervasive sense of insecurity and the patriotic and visceral, survival-related instinct to do anything to thwart "terrorism," with a President and administration which assumed power with a well-documented predisposition to tightly manage and control information, and it is not difficult to understand the current, wholesale assault on openness and government accountability today.
   Indeed, let us not forget the hard-wiring, lifelong sensibility that Watergate and the Nixonian animosity and adversarial culture toward the news media unavoidably had to have on three rising Republicans: George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, was personally close to Nixon and was chairman of the Republican National Committee at the time of the resignation. Rumsfeld and Cheney not only served in the Nixon administration, but the two men were also in President Gerald R. Ford's White House, as successive chiefs of staff.
   As defense secretary in the first Bush administration, Cheney was one of the architects of the controversial Persian Gulf War media restrictions, as Jacqueline Sharkey documented in the 1992 Center for Public Integrity report, Under Fire: US Military Restrictions on the Media from Grenada to the Persian Gulf. From the military and public relations debacle of Vietnam, Cheney and others in the Pentagon and White House recognized the usefulness of trying "to hide the true face of war by controlling the images of the conflict," including caskets at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. In the U.S. military conflicts in Grenada, Panama and the Persian Gulf during the 1980s and early 1990s, the media thus was constrained from the actual field of action, thereby substantially preventing those Vietnam-reminiscent pictures of body bags in American TV living rooms.
   In the weeks and months prior to September 11, 2001, the secrecy obsession and aggressive control tactics by the new Bush administration had already become apparent. For example, instead of turning his gubernatorial papers over to the Texas State Library and Archives, as tradition would have it, Gov. Bush, in his last hours, tried to shelter his official records inside his father's presidential library at Texas A&M University, outside the jurisdiction of the strong Texas public information law. He was overruled by the state attorney general and they fortunately are accessible to the public.
   In the summer of 2001, Vice President Cheney refused to release basic information about meetings he and other administration officials had held -- on government time and property -- with energy company executives to help formulate federal policies, a position on which he remains steadfastly adamant.
   And a month before September 11, the Justice Department secretly subpoenaed Associated Press reporter John Solomon's home telephone records. As Solomon, the AP deputy Washington bureau chief, told me, "The Justice Department has indicated to us that they were actually trying to stop the publication of a story that I was working on and tried to find out who I was talking to and cut off the flow of information. So it does get into the issue of prior restraint, along with First and Fourth Amendment issues."
   As we all know too well, in the weeks immediately following September 11th, the Bush administration obtained passage of the USA Patriot Act, with no public debate or amendments, among other things, giving federal authorities more power to access email and telephone communications. The federal government detained hundreds of people indefinitely without releasing the most basic information about them. Attorney General John Ashcroft described the news blackout in Orwellian fashion, "It would be a violation of the privacy rights of individuals for me to create some kind of list." Usually open U.S. immigration proceedings were closed to the public, and separately, the Attorney General sent a chilling, unprecedented directive throughout the government, "When you carefully consider FOIA requests and decide to withhold records, in whole or in part, you can be assured that the Department of Justice will defend your decisions" --- And President Bush quietly signed Executive Order 13233, overriding the post-Watergate 1978 Presidential Records Act and sharply reducing public access to the papers of former presidents, including his father's.
   In the war in Afghanistan, journalists were severely limited in their access to field of action. As the Reporters Committee on Freedom of the Press noted in its excellent report, Homeland Confidential, "In effect, most American broadcasters and newspaper reporters scratched out coverage from Pentagon briefings, a rare interview on a U.S. aircraft carrier or a humanitarian aid airlift, or from carefully selected military videos or from leaks . . . The truth is, the American media's vantage point for the war has never been at the frontlines with American troops."
   Indeed, who can forget December 6, 2001, when Marines locked reporters and photographers in a warehouse to prevent them from covering American troops killed or injured north of Kandahar, Afghanistan? And while embedded reporters enjoyed far greater access -- and danger -- in Iraq, many news organizations, including the New York Times and the Washington Post, have recently been introspective or even mildly apologetic for their over-reliance on official statements in the lead-up to the war.
   But, meanwhile, it is hard to overstate the fear and paranoia of an entire, terrorized nation. Within six months of September 11th, in 300 separate instances, federal, state and local officials restricted access to government records by executive order, or proposed new laws to sharply curtail their availability, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. More recently, sunshine activists are most alarmed about the Homeland Security Act, especially its Protected Critical Infrastructure Information (PCII) section. Former Miami Herald managing editor Pete Weitzel recently described it in The American Editor as a "black hole" for almost boundless censorship. The ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Patrick Leahy, called the move -- which would create an entirely new level of secrecy and a system of binding nondisclosure agreements effectively muzzling millions of state and local officials and private contractors -- "the single greatest rollback of FOIA in history."
   The American people unfortunately are not as informed, concerned, or supportive about this deepening crisis as they ought to be. A national poll sponsored by the Chicago Tribune on First Amendment issues in late June found that roughly half of the public believe there should have been some kind of "press restraint" on coverage of the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal in Iraq -- somewhat ironic considering that the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, personally had implored CBS's 60 Minutes II to keep its expose off the air in the name of national security, which the network actually did voluntarily until learning that investigative reporter Seymour Hersh would be publishing the story in The New Yorker. In general, according to Charles Madigan, editor of the Tribune's Perspective section, fifty or sixty percent of the public "would embrace government controls of some kind on free speech, particularly when it has sexual content or is heard as unpatriotic."
   This ambivalence in which at least half of the country equates draconian security and secrecy measures with their own safety is quite serious and very possibly insurmountable. Tom Blanton, executive director of the National Security Archive in Washington wrote in National Security and Open Government, "The government has successfully framed the debate after 9/11 as terrorism fighters versus civil libertarians, as soldiers versus reporters, as hawks versus doves. In wartime, the poundage of the former will always outweigh the latter. --- We need to place openness where it belongs, not only at the center of our values, but also at the center of our strategy for security."
   Both the Congressional September 11th investigation and the 9/11 Commission appointed by President Bush separately documented extensive "intelligence hoarding" and petty bureaucratic turf wars inside the government, excessive secrecy for all the wrong reasons and the dire consequences of not sharing information. But beyond that, the ignorance of the body politic was anything but blissful. The 9/11 Commission concluded, "We believe American and international public opinion might have been different -- and so might the range of options for a president -- had they [the American people] been informed of [the growing al Qaeda danger]."
   It is a powerful message still substantially untold but essential to understanding and preserving freedom of the press as we know it. Indeed, the situation is so foreboding that the Associated Press has taken the unusual step of proposing an industry-wide lobby to "identify and oppose legislation that puts unreasonable restrictions on public information." AP stepped forward after seven national journalism groups and the National Freedom of Information Coalition had already joined to form the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government.
   At the Center for Public Integrity, we have found that nothing resonates more with the American people than the straight skinny itself about the powers that be. When we obtained a secret draft of the Domestic Enhancement Security Act of 2003, better known as "Patriot II," we posted it in its 100-plus page entirety on our Web site, www.publicintegrity.org , over the objections of the Justice Department. Because of the public furor over some of its controversial provisions -- including internal GOP frustration on Capitol Hill that the secretive Attorney General and his staff had kept them in the dark for nearly half a year -- the draft bill was dead within months (although the Bush administration has been trying to push a few provisions separately).
   Or, noticing that no one was terribly helpful or definitive about the awarding of billions of dollars in government contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan, we decided to go to work, filing 73 FOIAs and, when necessary, successfully suing the State Department and the Army for the contracts. Six months later, our report, Windfalls of War, revealed all of the major known contractors and contracts, and the fact that Vice President Cheney's former company, Halliburton, and its subsidiaries had gotten by far the most taxpayer money, some of them with no other bidders. Our approach now on any issue is to push back and appeal on any stonewalling that elevates our blood pressure. In other words, appeal early and often -- it's the principle of the thing, and you just might win.
   Besides educating the American people about the Vietnam War, the greatest result of courageous publication of the Pentagon Papers was the confidence it imbued in newsrooms all across America. Inside the Washington Post, years later Bradlee recalled, "a sense of mission and agreement on new goals, and how to attain them. --- After the Pentagon Papers, there would be no decision too difficult for us to overcome together."
   And Solicitor General Erwin Griswold, who argued the government's case against the Post and the Times before the Supreme Court, later acknowledged in an op-ed what many had suspected all along, "I have never seen any trace of a threat to the national security from the Pentagon Papers' publication."
   As Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart wrote in the Pentagon Papers case, words we should all remember, "In the absence of governmental checks and balances present in other areas of our national life, the only effective restraint upon executive policy and power in the areas of national defense and international affairs may lie in an enlightened citizenry -- in an informed and critical public opinion which alone can here protect the values of democratic government." # [Jan 8, 05]

• Mamdouh Habib to be released.

[No trial, but held for three years]
   The Sunday Times On-Line (Western Australia), www.sundaytimes. news.com.au/ common/story_ page/0,7034, 11915771% 255E421, 00.html , By Martin Chulov and Trudy Harris, dated 12jan05 but on website 11.20pm WA time on January 11, 2005
   AUSTRALIA: ACCUSED Australian terrorist Mamdouh Habib will be released from Guantanamo Bay detention centre within days and return to Australia a free man after being held for three years without being charged.
   Attorney-General Philip Ruddock made the dramatic announcement last night [on Jan. 11] after receiving advice from the US that Habib could not be prosecuted, despite the grave allegations against him.
   Mr Ruddock said in Sydney that Australian counter-terrorism laws could not be used to prosecute Habib, despite the Government's conviction that he had trained with al-Qaeda and had prior knowledge of the September 11 attacks.
   The Attorney-General said last night he was disappointed with the Americans' handling of the Habib case, which Canberra had repeatedly asked to be dealt with quickly.
   Habib's alleged activities in Afghanistan from mid to late 2001 occurred prior to the time in which he could be prosecuted under Australian counter-terrorism laws promulgated in July 2002.
   Mr Ruddock last night appeared to rule out any retrospective changes to federal laws, but said Habib would remain under the intense scrutiny of ASIO and the Australian Federal Police.
   "It remains the strong view of the United States that, based on information available to it, Mr Habib had prior knowledge of the terrorist attacks on or before September 11, 2001," Mr Ruddock said. "Mr Habib has acknowledged he spent time in Afghanistan, and others there at that time claim he had trained with al-Qaeda."
   Specific offences of training, funding or associating with a terrorist group did not exist under Australian law at the time Habib was captured.
   Habib's wife, Maha, said last night that she was overwhelmed with the news after a difficult few years for her and their four children.
   She had sat her two youngest children down at their house in southwestern Sydney just before 8pm to tell them the good news, just minutes after the Department of Foreign Affairs told her  their father would be freed from the US naval base in Cuba.
   "They couldn't believe it. The youngest (Hajer) kept saying 'when is he coming? How many sleeps?'," Mrs Habib said. "I just wasn't prepared for this.
   "I rang the two older ones and said 'come home and I will tell you some good news'."
   Habib's Sydney lawyer, Stephen Hopper, said his client's release was long overdue.
   "We think it's about time," Mr Hopper said.
   "It vindicates what we have said all the time, that he is innocent and he has been unlawfully detained in Guantanamo, and since his arrest in Pakistan."
   Mr Hopper said he understood an Australian delegation would travel to the US to work out the logistics of bringing Habib home.
   "We believe he will be brought home soon. I would imagine it would be weeks, not months."
   There was renewed concern late yesterday about Habib's psychological state, with fears raised that he was refusing to co-operate with authorities who had told him of his imminent release.
   The Australian has previously reported that Habib believes his family has been killed and that he will remain in detention until he dies.
   Habib, who was captured in Pakistan in 2001, has alleged he was tortured in the presence of Australian and American officials in Pakistan.
   Mr Ruddock has denied allegations that Habib was tortured in the presence of any Australian official.
   He said last night that the second Australian in Guantanamo Bay, David Hicks, would still be prosecuted. Unlike Habib, the American military has already laid three charges against him.
   Hicks's father, Terry, said last night that Habib's imminent release proved Canberra had the power to secure the release of his son, whose is due to face a trial by a US military commission in early March.
   Mr Hicks said he believed the Government was not doing all it could to bring home his son.
   "I still think it comes down to the fact that the Australian Government, if they asked for David back, they (the US) would probably send him," Mr Hicks said.
   Despite Habib's imminent freedom, Australian officials last night privately held out hope that he might still be prosecuted - pointing to charges recently laid against Melbourne taxi driver Jack Thomas.
   One source described the Thomas prosecution as a test case with potentially serious repercussions for Habib. Both men are alleged to have trained with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan at the same time.
   The announcement of Habib's release follows confirmation early yesterday that the US is negotiating the transfer of prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.
   Since the camp opened three years ago, more than 200 prisoners have been transferred to their home countries to be held or released. The number of "enemy combatants" to be transferred is still "in the realm of speculation", said Pentagon spokesman Major Michael Shavers, adding: "We've moved people out, but I would not characterise it as an acceleration of the process. That said, we aren't looking to hold people at Gitmo indefinitely, which leads to the negotiations we talked about."
   A senior US defence official told Britain's Financial Times that 25 per cent of Guantanamo prisoners were still of intelligence value.
   Britain was early today expected to announce that the last four Britons held in Guantanamo would be released from US detention.
   But it was not immediately clear when the four - Moazzam Begg, Feroz Abbasi, Martin Mubanga and Richard Belmar - would be released. [Jan 11/12, 05]

• Habib free, Hicks next, remainder soon.


   The West Australian, Letter by John C. Massam, Greenwood (WA), p 25, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   PERTH: Habib to be freed is wonderful news. Hicks ought to be next. The whole of the illegal Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib prison system ought to end in trials for all those responsible, including US and Australian officials and politicians. [Jan 13, 05]

• [Habib disgraceful imprisonment against justice, decency and law.]


   The West Australian, "Disgraceful," Letter from Ben Corry, Cottesloe (WA), p 25, Thursday, January 13, 2005
   PERTH: The US Government's decision to release Mamdouh Habib from imprisonment at Guantanamo Bay highlights a disgraceful period of US and Australian history.
   It is a disgrace that someone can be detained for nearly three years without charge, all the more so because his innocence appears to have been proved by the inability of the US to concoct even a charge during that time. It goes against every principle of justice, decency ad law.
   It has also been a disgrace that the Australian Government did not put pressure on the US either to charge or release Mr Habib. The Howard Government was willing to stand aside and watch the US flagrantly ignore international law while an Australian citizen was abandoned to suffer the consequences. [Jan 13, 05]

• Abu Ghraib abuse 'creative'; strongest defence witness barred.

[Graner] - Naked stack 'cheerleader pyramid'. Claims of brutal beatings.
   Yahoo! News, "Expert tells Abu Ghraib case that alleged abuse was 'creative'," http://sg.news.yahoo.com/050112/1/3ptgx.html , Agence France Presse, 8:55 AM, Thursday January 13, 2005
   UNITED STATES: A witness at the trial of the alleged Abu Ghraib prison abuse ringleader hailed the stacking up of naked detainees as "a creative technique" and said he too would have photographed it.
   But the defense suffered several setbacks as witnesses it called denied that any orders had been given to conduct the kind of brutal beatings and sexual humiliations for which Specialist Charles Graner is being court-martialed at the Fort Worth army base in Texas.
   The strongest testimony in favor of the military policeman was not presented before the jury as the judge ruled after hearing it that it was not relevant.
   Thomas Archambault, a self-styled prisoner restraint expert, said Graner, had "used good foresight" in the way he dealt with the detainees.
   He said piling the naked prisoners on top of each other was "a very creative technique," but admitted it did not appear in any training manual. In questioning the witness, defense lawyer Guy Womack referred to the human stack as "a cheerleader pyramid."
   Archambault, who runs a consultancy, said that given the circumstances, he saw nothing wrong with the fact soldiers took pictures of the naked prisoners.
   "Based on the stress these soldiers had gone through, a filthy stinking environment and the fact these prisoners killed American soldiers, I think I would have done the same thing," the former police officer said.
   The court also heard more claims of brutal beatings of prisoners by Graner and other prison guards.
   In a videotaped deposition played in court, Iraqi detainee Mohanded Juma responded in the affirmative when asked whether Graner had beaten him with a chair until it broke, kicked him unconscious, choked him, thrown pepper into his eyes and forced him to eat food out of his cell's toilet.
   The defense called several military policemen to the witness stand in a bid to demonstrate Graner was just following orders to control prisoners and soften them up for interrogation.
   But several of the soldiers conceded their duty at Abu Ghraib was to protect the detainees and admitted they had never received orders to conduct abuses such as those Graner has been charged with, which include forcing prisoners to masturbate and simulate oral sex.
   The court was also told that around the time of the alleged abuses, in November 2003, Graner was reprimanded by a superior after a prisoner claimed that wounds on his face were the result of a beating by the soldier.
   But the document also showed that Graner was praised for generally doing "a good job"
   Graner, 36, has pleaded not guilty to the five charges, which include maltreatment of prisoners and assault, and which carry a maximum sentence of 17 and a half years' imprisonment.
   The heavyset, bespectacled soldier, who in earlier days smiled and chatted with reporters as he emerged from the courtroom, was far more subdued Wednesday and referred all questions to his lawyer.
   Womack was also less upbeat than he had been in recent days. "When you try enough cases, you know they don't all go the way you want them to," he said after the court adjourned for the day.
   The court-martial is expected to finish by the end of the week.
   It comes amid allegations that prisoner abuses also occurred elsewhere in Iraq, as well as in Afghanistan and at the US detention camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. [Bolding added]
   [DOCTRINE:
   2 - 3 - 4:18 - He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives.
   2 - 3 - 6:31 - Treat others as you would like people to treat you.
   2 - 19 - 13:3 - Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them ...
   4 - 47.4 - Strike off the heads of the disbelievers; then after making a wide slaughter among them, carefully tie up the remaining captives ( www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/047.qmt.html#047.004 ). DOCTRINE ENDS.] [Jan 13, 05]

• Guilty of piling up naked prisoners, etc..


   Electronic news media, January 15, 2005
   UNITED STATES: A US operative, Specialist Charles Graner, shown in photographs as being involved in brutal and degrading treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, Iraq, has been found guilty. [Jan 15, 05]

• US abuse soldier gets 10 years jail.

United States of America flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags 
   The West Australian, p 11, Monday, January 17, 2005
   DALLAS (Tex) USA - The mother of a United States soldier jailed for 10 years says his superiors should be put on trial and claimed President George Bush had convicted her son before his court martial even started.
   Charles Graner was punished "for something he was told to do", his mother said outside the courtroom at the Fort Hood army base in Texas as her son was led away from the courtroom in hand and leg shackles.
   "My son was convicted the day President Bush went on TV and said that seven bad apples disgraced the country," Irma Graner said. "But Bush and (Defence Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld are the ones who disgraced the country."
   Graner is among the seven military police reservists who have been charged in connection with the abuses. A military intelligence soldier also was charged in the scandal.
   The 10-man military jury sentenced Graner to 10 years in prison and a dishonourable discharge from the army, after finding him guilty of beating prisoners, piling them naked on top of each other and forcing them to masturbate.
   The 36-year-old military policeman was seen as the ringleader of the abuses that caused worldwide outrage and tarnished the image of the US.
  
[Picture of man in army dress uniform, smiling, handcuffed and shackled, being led by man in camouflage uniform and beret]

Still smiling: Spc. Charles Graner is led away in hand and leg shackles to begin his 10-year jail term. The military police reservist was featured in many of the photographs of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq. Photo: AP

Asked how he felt about the sentence, Graner simply said: "I was a soldier, if I did anything wrong, here I am."
   Asked about how he would cope with a decade behind bars, he said, "I'll be smiling."
   He answered "no" to journalists who asked if he had any regrets.
  But earlier in the day, as he addressed the jury before sentencing at the court martial, he expressed remorse for the first time.
   "I did what I did," he told the jurors. "A lot of it was wrong, a lot of it was criminal.
   "I did not enjoy it," he said.
   While the prosecution portrayed him as a depraved thug who beat and humiliated detainees for sport, Graner insisted he was merely following orders to soften up prisoners for interrogation.
   He said he thought at the time that those orders were lawful, though he now realised they were not.
   Asked why he was grinning on some of the photographs of naked detainees taken by Graner and other soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison, Graner said: "I'm smiling now; it's a nervous smile." # [Bolding added] [Jan 17, 05]

• Self-styled Christian boasted of beating Iraqis.


   The West Australian, p 11, Monday, January 17, 2005
   DALLAS: The trial of Abu Ghraib abuse ringleader Charles Graner revealed a man who put a "What Would Jesus Do?" sticker on his truck yet boasted that beating Iraqi prisoners was a "good upper-body workout".
   "He was kind of like an overpowering personality," testified Sgt Joseph Darby, a whistleblower who gave investigators photos of the abuses. "Most people wanted to be around him or associated with him."
   He quoted Graner, once a civilian prison guard, saying: "The Christian in me says it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me says I love to make a grown man piss himself."
   Graner, 36, made small talk and jokes throughout the trial, constantly changing his appearance - with hats, haircuts, or a moustache - so that he looked different in court than in the abuse photos.
   Graner had affairs with at least two women soldiers in Iraq. Lynndie England, with whom he later fathered a child, and Megan Ambuhl, were present in a photograph in which England holds a leash around the neck of a naked prisoner.
   He repeatedly beat prisoners and boasted about it in emails home. "Good upper-body workout but hard on the hands," he wrote in an email with a photo from a now notorious night when he stacked seven prisoners into a naked pyramid. They were later forced into sex acts.
   "It is all about their own sexually depraved humour," prosecutor Capt. Chris Graveline said.
   His parents said Graner was a typical American kid, playing baseball and bowling, and a devoted father to his children, 11 and 13.
   But what happened at Abu Ghraib damaged the US image abroad and could take years to undo.# [Jan 17, 05]

• Religious Liberty Advocates Applaud Religious Freedom Victory In Sweden.


   Crosswalk - Religion Today Summaries , http://www. crosswalkmail. com/rnamrz_ igfxxgt.html , by Dan Wooding, Assist News Service, Feb 15, 2005
   UNITED STATES and SWEDEN: Christian Legal Society and Advocates International have applauded a Swedish court's decision reversing Pastor Ake Green's "hate speech" conviction for preaching what he considered to be the biblical view of homosexual conduct.
   The Swedish Court of Appeal held that principles of freedom of expression protected those speaking on controversial topics from criminal prosecution.
   After preaching a sermon about the Bible's condemnation of homosexual conduct and other sexually immoral conduct, Green was accused of inciting hatred and showing contempt in violation of Sweden's hate speech laws.
   Samuel B. Casey, Executive Director and CEO of Christian Legal Society, said, "We are grateful for Pastor Green's resolve and for the Swedish court's sensible decision."
   Casey went on to say, The Christian Legal Society, founded in 1961, is the national membership organization of Christian attorneys, judges, law professors and law students, as well as supportive laypeople in all fifty states.
   They are organized in more than 1100 cities into attorney chapters, law student chapters, and fellowships throughout the United States. Read the latest news here . [Feb 15, 2005]

• Iraq's Perilous Election and the Need for Exit Strategies.


   Power and Interest News Report (PINR), http://www.pinr.com , content@pinr.com , Report Drafted By: Erich Marquardt , January 17, 2005
   IRAQ: Just two weeks from Iraq's general elections that decide who will sit on the 275-member national assembly, Baghdad's course toward that end grows more perilous each day. Attacks on U.S. forces have grown deadlier; ambushes of Iraq's budding security forces are increasingly successful; the marginal stability that presently exists is being further threatened by the lethal insurgent targeting of politicians and government figures; intelligence reports show that the insurgency is growing stronger with each passing day.
   The electoral quest has proven to be so messy that it is difficult to conclude that the elections will bring enough peace and stability to alter significantly the present dynamic in Iraq. Attacks on U.S. Troops and Iraqi Security Forces Since the beginning of the insurgency in 2003, attacks on U.S. forces have swelled, increasing in deadliness and effectiveness. Each day, attacks are initiated throughout the country, highlighting its instability. On January 3, a suicide car bomber drove his vehicle into a checkpoint near the Baghdad offices of Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's political party, the Iraqi National Accord.
   Hours later, another explosion brought casualties at a checkpoint entrance to the Green Zone, the most heavily fortified area of Iraq containing the headquarters of the Iraqi government and the U.S. embassy. Just a few days later, on January 6, a suicide car bomber exploded his vehicle outside a police academy near Baghdad during its graduation ceremony, killing 20; that same day, a suicide attacker killed five policemen, and insurgents also assassinated a police colonel on his way to work.
   The following day, a roadside bomb took the lives of seven American soldiers. On January 10, Baghdad's deputy police chief, General Amer Ali Nayef, was gunned down outside of his home. In the midst of these incidents, executed bodies of Iraqis have been turning up all around the country, with one recent discovery in Mosul where the bodies of 18 civilians were discovered, executed because they sought work at an American military base. That same day, three Jordanian truck drivers were found near Ramadi, executed and left with a note attached to their bodies, warning, "This is the fate of anyone who cooperates with the Americans."
   Without a clear enemy to fight, U.S. forces have been thrust into a situation where they are targeted by unseen enemies who use explosives to strike at U.S. convoys covertly. When these enemies are seen, it is often during a suicide mission where an insurgent drives a car bomb into a U.S. checkpoint. These attacks are not meant to cast serious blows on the U.S. occupation, but are intended to erode slowly the resolve of the Americans.
   Along with the targeting of American soldiers, the killings of Iraqi security forces continue to take a toll on those Iraqis fighting on the side of American troops. According to Iraq's Interior Ministry, more than 1300 policemen were killed during the last four months of 2004. These soldiers have become easy targets for Iraqi guerrilla groups that realize one of Washington's central aims in the country is to create viable, indigenous security forces; when compared with U.S. forces, these units are often easier to kill and to defeat due to their questionable dedication and substandard training.
   Iraqi security forces have fallen prey to many different methods of attack, from suicide car bombings to mass executions by insurgent forces. Just recently, insurgents practiced a modified method of attack and packed a beheaded corpse with explosives, blowing apart the policeman who arrived to investigate the scene. Indeed, in November, insurgents attacked police and national guard units in Mosul, successfully taking control of certain parts of the city. Because of these gains, U.S. forces have now been assigned to every police station in Mosul in order to prevent another situation where Iraqi security forces desert when attacked by insurgents.
Insurgency Creates Heightened Level of Instability
   The surging attacks by guerrillas in the last months are part of a strategy to create massive instability throughout Iraq in an effort to prevent or discredit the January 30 general elections. The other element of the insurgent strategy is the targeting and killing of politicians and government figures participating or working with U.S. forces. A series of assassinations and assassination attempts have made the prospect of participating in the U.S.-fostered political process extremely risky, a reality that grows more and more precarious with each passing day.
   For instance, on January 4, the governor of Baghdad province -- Ali al-Haidari -- while traveling in a three-vehicle convoy in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Hurriyah, was assassinated by insurgents. The murder of al-Haidari is significant since he is the most senior figure to be assassinated by insurgents since the killing of the former president of the Iraqi Governing Council, Abdel-Zahraa Othman, in May 2004.
   The assassination of al-Haidari accentuates the ability of insurgents to launch carefully planned, strategic attacks aimed at crippling the political process. Furthermore, the assassination of such a significant figure speaks to the ability of the insurgency to receive inside information provided by members of the Iraqi security forces. The head of the Baghdad division of the Iraqi National Guard, Major General Mudhir Abood, told reporters that members of his paramilitary police force have leaked classified information to insurgent groups.
   This type of behavior is a trend that is often observed when outside powers attempt to build indigenous security forces in a country facing an insurgency. It was best witnessed during the U.S. intervention in Vietnam, when U.S.-trained members of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (A.R.V.N.) supplied both classified information and military equipment to the insurgent forces that made up the Viet Cong.
   In addition to attacks on Iraqi politicians, insurgents have also attempted to exploit the sectarian rifts within Islam. Attacks against Shi'a power groups participating in the upcoming elections have been pervasive; the motives behind these attacks lie in the interests of the Sunni Arab minority who aim to prevent Iraqi Shi'a from using their majority status in the country to consolidate political power in the upcoming elections.
   Assassination attempts against Shi'a political leaders occur frequently, such as the December 27 Baghdad car bombing directed at the offices of Shi'a leader Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, one of the most prominent Shi'a political parties. More recently, on January 12, gunmen killed Sheik Mahmoud Finjan, a representative of Shi'a leader Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
   All of these attacks by various insurgent groups are meant to create a heightened level of instability to prevent the January elections from occurring, or, if this is not possible, to create conditions where the turnout for the elections is so poor that their results cannot be considered representative of the population.
   While the elections are still scheduled to proceed, the insurgents have been fairly successful in their strategy. On January 6, Lieutenant General Thomas Metz, the commander of American ground forces in Iraq, admitted that vital areas of four of Iraq's 18 provinces are not secure enough for citizens to vote; the provinces -- Al Anbar, Nineva, Salahadin and Baghdad -- are all Sunni-dominated areas and contain 50 percent of the country's population.
   Indeed, the continuing violence and Washington's recognition of its lack of control is leading many Iraqis to question whether the dangers inherent in voting are worth the end result.
Insurgency Steams Ahead
   These developments speak to Washington's failure to quell an insurgency that is rapidly growing in depth and size. In November 2003, U.S. General John Abizaid, commander of U.S. Central Command, estimated that the insurgency "does not exceed 5,000" fighters. Now, in January 2004, new estimates place the insurgency at more than 200,000 fighters and active supporters -- a major increase from Abizaid's previous claims of 5,000.
   General Muhammad Abdullah Shahwani, the director of Iraq's new intelligence services, said on January 3 that "the resistance is bigger than the U.S. military in Iraq. … I think the resistance is more than 200,000 people." The growth within the insurgency's ranks was foreseeable in the months after the initial U.S. invasion ended, when U.S. forces failed to create levels of stability acceptable to the bulk of the Iraqi population.
   Partly due to inadequate troop levels, Washington failed to eliminate the lawlessness that arose immediately after the ouster of Saddam Hussein and the Ba'ath Party. In addition, basic services such as electricity were not restored at a quick enough pace to inspire confidence in the occupying forces. As summarized by Shahwani, explaining the motivations behind many of the insurgents, "People are fed up after two years without improvement. People are fed up with no security, no electricity, people feel they have to do something."
   Another factor that likely contributed to the growth of the insurgency was the Shi'a rebellion led by Moqtada al-Sadr in April 2004. Al-Sadr's Mehdi Army engaged U.S.-led forces and, while greatly outmatched by U.S. firepower, managed to expose the weakness of Iraq's security forces, which were largely unable to repel attacks from al-Sadr's militia.
   Al-Sadr's uprising, which did not even have the active support of a majority of Iraq's Shi'a, dramatically revealed the power that Iraqi Shi'a could choose to exercise should they feel that their interests are being violated. This ominous development, which emboldened the insurgents, accelerated Iraq's instability by raising doubts over Washington's level of control.
   Finally, another important factor explaining Iraq's present instability is one that came into existence in March 2003, when the initial invasion was set in motion. By choosing to invade Iraq, the Bush administration decided to intervene in a country that suffers from broad sectarian rifts that have existed since its creation.
   Iraq's political questions have yet to be answered, for there is still no understanding on how the three main power groups within the country -- Sunni Arabs, Sunni Kurds, and Shi'a Arabs -- will share power. In fact, the only factor that has kept Iraq from falling into some form of serious civil war during the past 84 years is the country's historical legacy of authoritarian governments that suppress all forms of dissent.
   With the elimination of Saddam Hussein and the Ba'ath Party, the failure to immediately construct a new government that was either accepted by the bulk of the population or acted authoritatively to quash dissent resulted in the sectarian violence surfacing today.
   The preceding factors help to explain why insurgents were not immediately marginalized by the bulk of the Iraqi population and have been able to grow in strength and effectiveness. Some insurgents are supported out of Iraqi nationalism and anger over the actions of the U.S. government in invading and occupying Iraq, while others are supported because they are pursuing the interests of their particular religious/ethnic sect.
   These conditions impose an almost impossible hurdle for the United States to jump. As stated by James Dobbins of the Rand Corporation and printed in the January edition of the influential publication Foreign Affairs, "The beginning of wisdom is to recognize that the ongoing war in Iraq is not one that the United States can win. As a result of its initial miscalculations, misdirected planning, and inadequate preparation, Washington has lost the Iraqi people's confidence and consent, and it is unlikely to win them back."
Exit Strategies
   The present conditions in Iraq are turning more and more undesirable for U.S. interests. Troop losses are turning American public opinion away from the conflict, with 50 percent of Americans now saying it was a mistake to send U.S. troops into Iraq; the economic costs involved are skyrocketing, with the war costing thus far $130 billion, well above the Bush administration's initial estimates of $50-$60 billion; and the military is overextended and has therefore inadvertently decreased the potential threat of U.S. military action elsewhere in the world, which works potentially to weaken U.S. power.
   As a result of deteriorating conditions, the Pentagon announced on January 6 that it would be dispatching retired four-star Army General Gary E. Luck to Iraq in order to carry out a review of the military's entire Iraq strategy. In light of all these developments, Washington needs to concentrate on both short-term and long-term exit strategies that will scale back its level of present involvement. Washington will find difficulty in discovering exit strategies that do not damage U.S. interests.
   One potential exit strategy is a mass influx of U.S. troops into the country. This strategy has been pushed by members of Congress, in addition to former presidential candidate John Kerry. Much of the instability that reigns today is a result of the initial Bush administration decision to use as few troops as safely possible to occupy post-Saddam Iraq. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld assured in February 2003, before the invasion, that "The idea that it would take several hundred thousand U.S. forces I think is far from the mark."
   However, in that same month, General Eric K. Shinseki, the former chief of staff of the U.S. Army, advised that "Something on the order of several hundred thousand soldiers, are probably, you know, a figure that would be required. We're talking about post-hostilities control over a piece of geography that's fairly significant with the kinds of ethnic tensions that could lead to other problems."
   But the decision to use as few troops as possible for the occupation created conditions where insurgents were better able to plan and execute scattered attacks on U.S. forces, testing to find weak points in the American military's defenses. Insurgents were also able to execute attacks on politically significant targets, such as oil pipelines and crowded market squares; these attacks weaken confidence in the occupying troops and create heightened levels of instability.
   Nevertheless, while in 2003 more troops on the ground may have prevented the rapid growth of the insurgency -- by giving it less freedom to organize and plan attacks -- it is doubtful that it would have the same effect now. The insurgency has grown so large that an influx of troops could merely mean more targets for the insurgents to attack. Furthermore, present troop levels in Iraq are already straining the U.S. military to a degree where any increase in deployment could damage U.S. interests and defenses elsewhere.
   U.S. Army Reserve and National Guard soldiers already make up 40 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq, soon to be increased to 50 percent. Both of these military divisions have seen a shortfall in recruiting targets during the past few months, as many Americans are hesitant about making a decision that could cause them to be mobilized for two straight years.
   The exhaustive use of the military led Lieutenant General James Helmly, head of the U.S. Army Reserve, to announce that that the reserve was "rapidly degenerating into a 'broken' force." Retired four-star Army General Barry McCaffrey agreed, saying in early January, "The Army's wheels are going to come off in the next 24 months. The data are now beginning to come in to support that."
   The Pentagon has already pulled some of its troops from South Korea to redeploy them to Iraq, and military officials are now mulling over whether to increase permanently the active duty Army force from 482,000 to 512,000 -- an increase that will cost an additional $3 billion a year; on top of these proposed changes, the Pentagon is also debating whether to change its National Guard and Reserve mobilization policy to allow reserve soldiers to be mobilized for more than two years of active service.
   Yet, as stated earlier, even with these changes and an influx of troops to Iraq, the U.S. will have difficulty overcoming the insurgency. Dr. Max Manwaring, a research professor of military strategy at the U.S. Army War College, recently told the Power and Interest News Report that, barring a significant change of events, the insurgents will eventually "take control of the state." Manwaring argues that his studies of post World War II insurgencies show that "the more intense and voluminous the military actions of the intervening Western power, the more likely the incumbent government was to lose to the insurgents," and that "the more the intervening power escalated the numbers of its forces in response to a deteriorating situation, the worse [the situation] got."
   Another exit strategy -- one that is presently being employed by the Bush administration -- is to create viable Iraqi security forces to replace U.S. forces quickly in establishing stability. This policy, already coined "Iraqification," is similar to the failed "Vietnamization" policy of the 1960s and 1970s employed during the U.S. intervention in Vietnam. This strategy is a must in order for the United States -- at some point in the future -- to begin to shift its forces out of Iraq; even if Washington is still set on a long-term commitment in Iraq, it must generate for itself the option of pulling troops out of the country to deploy them elsewhere.
   Furthermore, the cold reception that U.S. troops received by the bulk of the Iraqi population means that a high-profile American presence should be avoided for risk of fueling the insurgency. As explained by Dr. Steven Metz, chairman of the Regional Strategy and Planning Department of the U.S. Army War College, to the Power and Interest News Report, this "argument is based on the assumption that it is the American presence itself that fuels support for the insurgency, so the less that presence, the less support for the insurgency."
   It appears that Washington is coming to terms with this necessity. General George W. Casey, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, is now considering expanding a program where U.S. military personnel act as advisers to Iraqi security forces. As was the case during U.S. involvement in Vietnam, when U.S. advisers are present during engagements between Iraqi security forces and insurgents, the security forces are more effective. The drawback to this expansion, however, is that it takes American troops away from units that could be used to launch offensives on insurgents.
   Nonetheless, enhancing the effectiveness of Iraqi security forces is of utmost necessity for the United States. Speaking to the New York Times, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, Brigadier General Carter Ham, explained that "The development of Iraqi security forces is, in my view, necessarily the main effort." Ham commented on the proposed adviser expansion program, arguing that "It's time to apply it on a larger scale. It seems to me that this is something we want to start doing in the immediate post-election period."
   But, while the "Iraqification" strategy is imperative, there is no guarantee that it will be any more successful than it was during the Vietnam intervention. The success of this policy hinges on whether the United States can marginalize Iraqi guerrilla forces and prevent them from gaining further support among the civilian population.
   Once again, this strategy had a better chance for success early into the intervention, before the rapid growth of the insurgency. Now, the situation somewhat resembles failed U.S. attempts in Vietnam, where U.S.-trained indigenous forces were less resolute and poorly trained when compared to their enemy counterparts; for instance, in Iraq's most violent provinces, desertion rates among U.S.-trained Iraqi security forces is growing. In a December 19 interview with the American television program "Meet the Press," Senator John W. Warner, the Republican head of the Armed Services Committee, warned that the "raw material is lacking in the willpower and commitment after [Iraqi security forces] receive this training to really shoulder the heavy responsibilities." Indeed, the Bush administration's quarterly update to Congress on Iraq stated "While Iraq's security forces have shown considerable progress during this last quarter, the overall performance of these forces has been mixed when put to the test."
   The one major difference between the situation in Vietnam and Iraq -- which is a positive sign for American efforts -- is that in Iraq the only fighters threatening Iraqi security forces are that of guerrilla forces, with limited organizational cooperation between the different militias; unlike Vietnam, there is no organized state military that presently threatens Iraqi security forces comparable to what A.R.V.N. faced from the North Vietnamese Army. Without an organized army to face, the situation in Iraq appears to be less challenging than in Vietnam; Iraqi security forces and the U.S. military can concentrate solely on preventing an internal revolution.
   The final exit strategy is the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq's cities, allowing the different Iraqi factions to work out a power-sharing arrangement themselves. As part of this strategy, a greatly reduced number of American troops would still occupy a small number of fortified bases in order to protect Iraq from attacks by outside states, along with preserving the ability to launch quick strikes against critical targets. Pressure for this strategy is building; Secretary of State Colin Powell is now arguing that American troops will begin leaving Iraq this year, provided that Iraq's security forces are able to take on a larger security role.
   Upon a withdrawal, a number of outcomes could occur. One such outcome could result in the division of Iraq into three separate autonomous regions, with the Sunni Kurds inhabiting northern Iraq, Sunni Arabs controlling central Iraq, and Shi'a Arabs ruling over southern Iraq. This outcome would cause a series of problems: Turkey, and other neighboring states, would be agitated over Kurdish autonomy; central Iraq would crave the rich oil fields to its north and south, and the Shi'a of southern Iraq may gravitate politically toward Iran. Such an outcome could result in tumultuous civil warfare throughout Iraq for years to come.
   Upon an American withdrawal, there is also the possibility that a dominant power group within Iraq would be able to consolidate control over the entire country. While the Kurds have little capability for this, the Sunni and Shi'a Arabs do. A return to Sunni Arab-based rule would result in a major uprising by the Shi'a in light of the country's current power vacuum. And control by the Shi'a, which would be violently resisted by Iraq's Sunnis, would likely seek assistance from Iran.
Conclusion
   The United States is facing an increasingly complicated intervention in Iraq. Washington is presently focused on creating as much stability as possible before the upcoming general elections on January 30. Nonetheless, a heightened level of violence is occurring and there are still doubts over whether the elections will be able to proceed as scheduled. For instance, on January 3, Iraqi Defense Minister Hazim Shalan advised that the elections could still be delayed, provided that such a delay would result in a higher participation rate from Iraq's Sunni Arab population. Until this is decided, or until the elections occur, little will change in regards to the Bush administration's Iraq policy.
   After the elections, however, the administration will have to examine its viable exit strategies critically. While the best case scenario is the creation of a popular democratic government, the odds of this occurring are now highly unlikely. While it would be disadvantageous to U.S. interests for Washington to completely withdraw from Iraq, it may be even more disadvantageous to remain. In the words of former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, "We will have to decide to what extent we want to be involved in what may become a civil war [after the elections]."
   While one potential exit strategy is increasing U.S. troop levels in Iraq to foster conditions of stability, the overarching present strategy is to create viable Iraqi security forces. The failure to create viable Iraqi security forces will mean the failure of the intervention. If Washington's best exit strategies are unsuccessful, then, for the sake of its interests in the Middle East, the United States must withdraw the bulk of its forces and reluctantly offer support to whichever Iraqi powerbroker has the best ability to stabilize Iraq, even if that stabilization takes place violently.
   Report Drafted By Erich Marquardt
   The Power and Interest News Report (PINR) is an analysis-based publication that seeks to, as objectively as possible, provide insight into various conflicts, regions and points of interest around the globe. PINR approaches a subject based upon the powers and interests involved, leaving the moral judgments to the reader. This report may not be reproduced, reprinted or broadcast without the written permission of inquiries@pinr.com . All comments should be directed to content@pinr.com .
   PINR is presently used in courses at Princeton University, Purdue University, Miami of Ohio, and Australian National University.
   [COMMENT: This author can see part of the problem is putting groups that hate each other inside one "pot." Isn't it strange that the Insiders won't consider dividing Iraq into its constituent parts -- Sunni Arabs, Sunni Kurds, and Shi'a Arabs -- and even setting aside an area or some safety system for the Christians, so-called Assyrians? Can you draw any conclusions from this refusal to be sensible?
   Notice the huge amounts of explosives used in the assassinations? It does look like a well-financed operation. And guess who sells the explosives to the insurgents / holy warriors / freedom fighters! The Insiders, of course. They make money supplying the insurgents, AND the Coalition of the Killing! COMMENT ENDS.] [Jan 17, 05]

• Police face Mickelberg damages.


   The West Australian, by Sean Cowan, p 32, Tuesday, January 18, 2005
   PERTH (WA) Australia: Taxpayers could be forced to foot the legal bill for six former and serving police officers accused of giving tainted evidence against the Mickelberg brothers in the Perth Mint swindle case.
   Ray and Peter Mickelberg are already suing the State of WA, claiming $13.6 million ... over the actions of former CIB chief Don Hancock, self-confessed corrupt former detective Tony Lewandowski and four others who allegedly covered for the pair. ... {Jan 18, 05]

• Diggers injured in embassy blast.

Iraq / Irak flag; Mooney's MiniFlags  Australia flag; Aust. National Flag Assn. 
   The Sunday Times Online, Perth, W. Australia, www.sundaytimes. news.com.au/ common/story_ page/0,7034, 11987676% 255E401,00.html , with AAP, January 19, 2005
   IRAQ: TWO Australian soldiers have been injured after a suicide car bomb exploded close to the Australian embassy in central Baghdad.
   Two people and another seven people were wounded in the blast, witnesses said.
   The defence department said the soldiers received minor injuries in the blast, while a Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) spokeswoman said all embassy and Australian Defence Force staff had been accounted for.
   [To view, visit: Picture]
   "Their injuries are not life threatening and they are personally contacting their next of kin," the defence department said in a statement.
   Australian and coalition soldiers were working with the Iraqi police and had secured the site of the bombing, the department said.
   "The (Australian Defence Force) security detachment is continuing with its task of providing security to the Australian embassy and staff in Iraq,'' it said.
   Witnesses said two dead bodies were taken away, one of them a young sanitation worker who had just stepped outside of his truck when the bomb exploded.
   The bomb exploded at 7:05 am (1505 AEDT) outside the soldiers' barracks, a seven-floor building across the street from the embassy.
   No damage had been done to the Australian embassy, the DFAT spokeswoman said.
   However, the force of the blast had blown out the windows in the residences of the embassy staff.
   US troops sealed off the area after the blast.
   About 30 minutes later, a second suicide car bomb exploded outside a police headquarters in eastern Baghdad.
   Six people died in the second blast, witnesses said.
   A further 30 minutes later, a third suicide car bomb exploded outside an Iraqi army base in the west of the city, killing two people and wounding five, police and hospital sources said.[...] [Jan 19, 05]

• British troops 'abused captured looters'.


   The West Australian, THE TELEGRAPH GROUP, LONDON, p 11, Thursday, January 20, 2005
   BERLIN: British troops abused and sexually humiliated Iraqi prisoners in a series of "shocking and appalling" incidents after the Iraq war, a court martial in Germany has heard.
   One or more soldiers from 1st Battalion, the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, forced two captured Iraqi looters to strip naked and simulate sexual acts, the hearing was told.
   Another soldier, Lance-Cpl Mark Cooley, 25, trussed up an Iraqi man in cargo netting and dangled him from the tines of a fork-lift truck which he then drove about.
   Lance-Cpl Cooley also simulated kicking and punching an Iraqi in order to pose for a photograph he could show friends at home, the court heard.
   This followed orders allegedly given by the officer in charge to deter looters by "working them hard", an order allegedly contravening the Geneva Convention.
   Military police have investigated 160 alleged cases of death, injury or ill-treatment of Iraqis.
   The court martial, at the regiment's German base at Innsbruck, is one of four cases set for trial. Ten others are being considered.
   The panel of seven officers, who make up the jury, was shown 22 photographs of the alleged offences, said to have occurred at a warehouse near Basra on May 15, 2003.
   Evidence emerged after Fusilier Gary Bartlam took a film containing 15 of the photographs to a processor in Britain. He was convicted of unspecified charges at a separate trial.
   Also on trial are Lance-Cpl Darren Larkin, 30, and Cpl Daniel Kenyon, 33.
   British Prime Minister Tony Blair said he was shocked and appalled by the photographs but insisted the majority of troops in Iraq behaved honourably.
   "Whilst we express, in a unified way I know, our disgust at those pictures, I hope we do not allow that to tarnish the good name - fully deserved - of our British armed forces," he told Parliament.#
  [Pictures] One shows a man in shorts standing on a man lying down, seemingly with his right foot on his hip and his left foot on his head. The other picture shows a man in black crouched down, taking a swing at a man lying on his side, with the upper part of his body in a big net. Caption: On trial: Photographs purporting to show Lance-Cpl Larking, left, and Lance-Cpl Cooley abusing Iraqis.  Pictures: Associated Press  
   [COMMENT: This news report might have been a fraud. This newspaper put "abused captured looters" into quotation marks in the headline. I hope it was good journalistic practice by the sub-editor, quoting the words as received. Let us hope also s/he did not remove the quotation marks, because s/he might have remembered the full looting story -- it had been deliberately permitted by the Occupying Powers. AND, the people captured might have been ordinary citizens just going about their business!
   Who could forget the television images of the United States troops standing idly by as the looters sauntered in and out of buildings? Who could forget the weeping of the woman curator of the famous Museum of Antiquities? One US officer told the television reporter that the looting was part of the Iraqis' new-found freedom. An ordinary soldier or officer is unlikely to have said that unless some higher-ups told him how to explain such a breach of law and order. Looters in other wars have been shot on sight by ruthless occupiers, or fired at and/or arrested by more civilised