Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Evidence that the U.S. May Be Losing the Global War on Terror 

Ivan Eland

05/25/05 "Independent Institute" - - The Bush administration is attempting to suppress key data showing that its Global War on Terrorism (or GWOT as government bureaucrats have dubbed it) likely has been counterproductive. According to Larry Johnson, a former CIA analyst and State Department terrorism expert who still has many sources within the intelligence community, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s office is suppressing data showing that the number of major terrorist attacks worldwide exploded from 175 in 2003 to 625 in 2004, the highest number since the Cold War began to wane in 1985. 

U.S. officials said that when analysts at the National Counterterrorism Center declined the office of the secretary’s invitation to use a methodology that would reduce the number of terrorist attacks, her office terminated publication of the State Department’s annual “Patterns of Global Terrorism” report.

No matter what else George W. Bush does in office, historians will define his presidency primarily by his GWOT, initiated after the terrorist attacks of September 11. Yet the Bush administration is trying to hide important data that might very well lead historians and the American public to conclude that the GWOT has been disastrous for U.S. and global security.

In the aftermath of 9/11, instead of focusing on a vigorous and effective covert war against the perpetrators of the attacks—al Qaeda—the administration manipulated public opinion to launch the much ballyhooed and excessive GWOT against every “terrorist” group on the planet, whether they had ever attacked the United States or not. (The definition of a “terrorist” group seemed to be any armed non-governmental entity that didn’t agree with U.S. policies.)

For example, under the guise of fighting the group Abu Sayef, the U.S. government used the 9/11 attacks to renew its moribund security relationship with the Philippine government. The tiny group was not a threat to the Philippine government and certainly not to the U.S. superpower.

To make matters worse, as part of the GWOT, the administration then cynically manufactured an operational link between two unlikely allies—al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein—as an excuse to settle old scores with Saddam. Four years later, because of the administration’s distraction, the dangerous top leadership of al Qaeda remains at large. In fact, perhaps the invasion of Iraq was meant, in part, to distract the American public from the administration’s failure to neutralize the worst threat to the continental United States since the British invaded during the War of 1812.

In addition to distracting from the important task of quietly neutralizing al Qaeda, the Iraq invasion has needlessly killed between 26,000 and 108,000 U.S. and allied troops, U.S. contract forces, Iraqi soldiers, and Iraqi civilians and overstretched the U.S. military in a seemingly endless Vietnam-style quagmire.

Critics have claimed that invading and occupying Iraq—a Muslim country—would inflame a radical Islamic jihad against the United States similar to that which afflicted another “infidel” nation—the Soviet Union—when it invaded and occupied Islamic Afghanistan in 1979. Already evidence exists—in the form of signature suicide bombings—that foreign jihadists from all over the world have streamed into Iraq to fight the United States, much as they swarmed into Soviet-occupied Afghanistan during the 1980s.

The Bush administration has always maintained that drawing Islamic jihadists into Iraq is actually good because the United States would be better off fighting them there rather than in the American homeland. The president has called Iraq the “central front” in the GWOT. When fighting nation-states, the military’s usual approach of holding the adversary as far away from the homeland as possible makes sense. Unlike large enemy armies, however, small, agile terrorist groups can stealthily infiltrate all layers of defense and surface in the U.S. homeland.

So we may very well have to fight them both in Iraq and at home. Also, the “fighting them there so that we don’t have to fight them here” logic assumes that the number of terrorists is constant. Critics have alleged that the invasion of Iraq has swelled the ranks of terrorists by converting many more fundamentalist Islamists into active warriors. The Bush administration is now suppressing government data that give credence to just that allegation.

Since the Iraq war went south, mainstream U.S. media feel safe in prominently displaying some of the unpleasant facts about that conflict—for example, allegations that the Bush administration pressured intelligence agencies to exaggerate Iraq’s efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction. Yet the searing effect of 9/11 still makes the press leery of criticizing similar administration pressure on intelligence analysts to hide the apparent failure of the GWOT.

Such media skittishness is reminiscent of their behavior prior to the Iraq invasion, when it was impolitic to question the administration’s march to war. The media buried in its back pages a declassified CIA report indicating that Saddam Hussein was unlikely to use any weapons of mass destruction against the United States or give them to terrorists unless backed against the wall during a U.S. invasion.

Apparently, the nation’s leading intelligence agency destroying the main rationale for its boss’s misguided and aggressive policy wasn’t headline news. Alas, the same is now occurring with data indicating that the administration’s grandiose GWOT may very well be counterproductive.

If the U.S. news media weren’t so timid about covering such explosive facts, perhaps the American public would just say “no” to government policies that endanger Americans and other people everywhere.

[enditem - url.: http://tinyurl.com/c8fwd - 2005 The Independent Institute]

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is Information Clearing House endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)

 

 

 

THIS IS OUR GUERNICA!

The FPF received this article from Dahr Jamail, one of the few real journalists in Iraq.

From: iraq_dispatches@dahrjamailiraq.com
** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches **
** http://dahrjamailiraq.com **

FPF: Fitting picture: Bush, Zoellick and 'the Black Plague':
War Criminals United - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/7q4kn


This is our Guernica*

Ruined, cordoned Falluja is emerging as
the decade's monument to brutality...

Jonathan Steele and Dahr Jamail
Wednesday April 27, 2005
*The Guardian*

Robert Zoellick* is the archetypal US government insider, a man with a
brilliant technical mind but zero experience of any coalface or war
front. Sliding effortlessly between ivy league academia, the US treasury
and corporate boardrooms (including an advisory post with the scandalous
Enron), his latest position is the number-two slot at the state department.

Yet this ultimate "man of the suites" did something earlier this month
that put the prime minister and the foreign secretary to shame. On their
numerous visits to Iraq, neither has ever dared to go outside the
heavily fortified green zones of Baghdad and Basra to see life as Iraqis
have to live it. They come home after photo opportunities, briefings and
pep talks with British troops and claim to know what is going on in the
country they invaded, when in fact they have seen almost nothing.

Zoellick, by contrast, on his first trip to Iraq, asked to see Falluja.
Remember Falluja? A city of some 300,000, which was alleged to be the
stronghold of armed resistance to the occupation.

Two US attempts were made to destroy this symbol of defiance last year.
The first, in April, fizzled out after Iraqi politicians, including many
who supported the invasion of their country, condemned the use of air
strikes to terrorise an entire city. The Americans called off the
attack, but not before hundreds of families had fled and more than 600
people had been killed.

Six months later the Americans tried again. This time Washington's
allies had been talked to in advance. Consistent US propaganda about the
presence in Falluja of a top al-Qaida figure, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was
used to create a climate of acquiescence in the US-appointed Iraqi
government. Shia leaders were told that bringing Falluja under control
was the only way to prevent a Sunni-inspired civil war.

Blair was invited to share responsibility by sending British troops to
block escape routes from Falluja and prevent supplies entering once the
siege began.

Warnings of the onslaught prompted the vast majority of Falluja's
300,000 people to flee. The city was then declared a free-fire zone on
the grounds that the only people left behind must be "terrorists".

Three weeks after the attack was launched last November, the Americans
claimed victory. They say they killed about 1,300 people; one week into
the siege, a BBC reporter put the unofficial death toll at 2,000. But
details of what happened and who the dead were remain obscure. Were many
unarmed civilians, as Baghdad-based human rights groups report? Even if
they were trying to defend their homes by fighting the Americans, does
that make them "terrorists"?

Journalists "embedded" with US forces filmed atrocities, including the
killing of a wounded prisoner, but no reporter could get anything like a
full picture. Since the siege ended, tight US restric tions - as well as
the danger of hostage-taking that prevents reporters from travelling in
most parts of Iraq - have put the devastated city virtually off limits.

In this context Zoellick's trip, which was covered by a small group of
US journalists, was illuminating. The deputy secretary of state had to
travel to this "liberated" city in a Black Hawk helicopter flying low
over palm trees to avoid being shot down. He wore a flak jacket under
his suit even though Falluja's streets were largely deserted. His convoy
of eight armoured vehicles went "so quickly past an open-air bakery
reopened with a US-provided micro-loan that workers tossing dough could
be glanced only in the blink of an eye," as the Washington Post
reported. "Blasted husks of buildings still line block after block," the
journalist added.

Meeting hand-picked Iraqis in a US base, Zoellick was bombarded with
complaints about the pace of US reconstruction aid and frequent
intimidation of citizens by American soldiers. Although a state
department factsheet claimed 95% of residents had water in their homes,
Falluja's mayor said it was contaminated by sewage and unsafe.

Other glimpses of life in Falluja come from Dr Hafid al-Dulaimi, head of
the city's compensation commission, who reports that 36,000 homes were
destroyed in the US onslaught, along with 8,400 shops. Sixty nurseries
and schools were ruined, along with 65 mosques and religious sanctuaries.

Daud Salman, an Iraqi journalist with the Institute for War and Peace
Reporting, on a visit to Falluja two weeks ago, found that only a
quarter of the city's residents had gone back. Thousands remain in tents
on the outskirts. The Iraqi Red Crescent finds it hard to go in to help
the sick because of the US cordon around the city.

Burhan Fasa'a, a cameraman for the Lebanese Broadcasting Company,
reported during the siege that dead family members were buried in their
gardens because people could not leave their homes. Refugees told one of
us that civilians carrying white flags were gunned down by American
soldiers. Corpses were tied to US tanks and paraded around like trophies.

Justin Alexander, a volunteer for Christian Peacemaker Teams, recently
found hundreds living in tents in the grounds of their homes, or in a
single patched-up room. A strict system of identity cards blocks access
to anyone whose papers give a birthplace outside Falluja, so long-term
residents born elsewhere cannot go home. "Fallujans feel the remnants of
their city have been turned into a giant prison," he reports.

Many complain that soldiers of the Iraqi national guard, the fledgling
new army, loot shops during the night-time curfew and detain people in
order to take a bribe for their release. They are suspected of being
members of the Badr Brigade, a Shia militia that wants revenge against
Sunnis.

One thing is certain: the attack on Falluja has done nothing to still
the insurgency against the US-British occupation nor produced the death
of al-Zarqawi - any more than the invasion of Afghanistan achieved the
capture or death of Osama bin Laden. Thousands of bereaved and homeless
Falluja families have a new reason to hate the US and its allies.

At least Zoellick went to see. He gave no hint of the impression that
the trip left him with, but is too smart not to have understood
something of the reality. The lesson ought not to be lost on Blair and
Straw. Every time the prime minister claims it is time to "move on" from
the issue of the war's legality and rejoice at Iraq's transformation
since Saddam Hussein was toppled, the answer must be: "Remember
Falluja." When the foreign secretary next visits Iraq, he should put on
a flak jacket and tour the city that Britain had a share in destroying.

The government keeps hoping Iraq will go away as an election issue. It
stubbornly refuses to do so. Voters are not only angry that the war was
illegal, illegitimate and unnecessary. The treatment inflicted on Iraqis
since the invasion by the US and Britain is equally important.

In the 1930s the Spanish city of Guernica became a symbol of wanton
murder and destruction. In the 1990s Grozny was cruelly flattened by the
Russians; it still lies in ruins. This decade's unforgettable monument
to brutality and overkill is Falluja, a text-book case of how not to
handle an insurgency, and a reminder that unpopular occupations will
always degenerate into desperation and atrocity.

· Jonathan Steele is the Guardian's senior foreign correspondent;
DahrJamail is a freelance American journalist. [enditem]

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FPF on ''FALLUJA: BLOOD LUST DOMINATES MAINSTREAM MEDIA''
Url.: http://tinyurl.com/96l75

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Viva Venezuela ... without US intervention!

The FPF forwards this, fully agreeing with
the writer, the eminent Mr. Oscar Heck:


VHeadline.com* commentarist Oscar Heck writes: I just read the letter, So Mr. Tellis, take your lies back to Hell where they came from ... and I was wondering why so many USA people might appear to relate to some of the statements made in this letter:

"... So USA is not perfect ... but who does everyone look to when in trouble?"

"We do not hate anyone ... We are the most generous people on the face of the Earth ... there are poor here who suffer BECAUSE we are so busy helping the rest of the World."

I have heard such comments many times ... but have yet to see any verifiable proof.  Most of the time, people who make such statements say them without knowing the truth about what the US government is really doing out there in this volatile world.

Then I saw another headline: Venezuela's Leader Takes Tough Stance Toward US.  Funny enough, I read it as "Venezuela's leader takes a tough stance toward us."  Is it possible that the over-use of the combination of letters "us" is enough to affect people in the manner that they will eventually become more and more egocentric?   

Us, us, us ... we are the best ... us, us, us.

Rah Rah Rah!

Anyway, I wanted to comment on the fact that Chavez has cut off Venezuela's 35-year-old collaboration with the US military.

Finally! 

* It's about time! 

Venezuela has no reason to collaborate with the US military ... much less, have anything to learn from them (especially about how to murder innocent women and children).

The US military is not "the best in the world"...

 When I was in the Gulf War in Kuwait in 1991 ... most US soldiers were 18-19-20 years old ... and many were scared and uncomfortable and sick ... and most of them certainly didn't feel they were the best.  It ain't like what they show in the movies.  I suppose it is easy for people to say "we are the best" when they have no idea of reality.

Being the "best" appears to be like a disease in the USA. 

* "We are the best" yet we have perhaps the highest per capita consumption of drugs in the world.
* "We are the best" yet we have perhaps the highest per capita number of cases of obesity
and diabetes in the world.
* "We are the best" yet we have perhaps the highest number of per capita violent crimes in the world.
* "We are the best" yet we have perhaps the highest per capita number of our own citizens in jail.

(And this is only a short list...)

Additionally ... one thing that many people do not know is that some of the inventions deposited at intellectual property offices in the "western world" are in fact inventions invented by people in different parts of the world where most people either have no access to the intellectual property process or have no idea that such a system exists. 

* For example, some of the pharmaceutical patents "owned" by "western" people or companies are based on traditional medicines used by tribes in different parts of the world. (There is plenty of information on this issue on the web.)

In other words ... some of the "the best" patents are held at the USA intellectual property office (USPTO) .... but many of these "best" patents are based on the creative works of non-USA people. 

So ... is the USA the "best" in the world ... or is it because they are the "best" at "borrowing" ideas from others?

For example, coca and opium are traditional medicines which have been used for millennia by tribes in the Andes and in the Himalayas. Who holds/held the patents for morphine (a derivative of opium)?  Who holds/held the patent for Novocain (a derivative of coca)?

And ... have you ever wondered where pharmaceuticals get their supplies of coca and opium to make their medicines?

Hmm ... how about Colombia and Afghanistan (?).

To come back to military collaboration, another interesting point about the USA's traditional "military collaboration with other countries" is that such military collaboration is probably the way by which the US "borrows" creative military ideas from other countries (and takes credit for them?). 

It is probably also the way by which the US government keeps up-to-date with the military secrets of other countries ... in other words ... spying. 

* I wonder how many creative Venezuelan military ideas have been "borrowed" by the US military in the last 35 years?

* I wonder how many Venezuelan government and military secrets have been "borrowed" by the US military over the last 35 years?

No wonder the US government thinks that it is so superior!  Supposing that the US government has military collaboration agreements with 150 countries ... then the US government also holds many of the secrets (military and otherwise) of the 150 co-collaborating countries involved.

Hmm ...

Thank the heavens that Chavez has finally taken action against US/Venezuela military collaboration ... and thank heavens that he has had the courage to kick out the US military from Venezuela.

Now ... there is a bit more work to do.  As far as I can see, the following organizations are fronts for the CIA:

* American Center for International Labor Solidarity
* Center for International Private Enterprise
* International Republican Institute
* National Democratic Institute for International Affairs

I have no "proof" of my claims but information at the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) website clearly states that these organizations received money from the US government to use in Venezuela (to support and promote anti-Chavez movements) and that these organizations are directly and/or indirectly linked to the two main anti-Chavez groups in Venezuela which headed the April 2002 coup and the sabotage of Venezuela in 2002 and 2003, Fedecamaras and the CTV.

(Fedecamaras is the traditional Venezuela Chamber of Commerce, whose then-president, Pedro Carmona Estanga, took over as president of Venezuela during the April 2002 coup against Chavez). 

The CTV is the traditional Confederation of Trade Unions, which led, along with Fedecamaras, the April 2002 coup against Chavez and the subsequent sabotage of the Venezuelan economy.  Carlos Ortega, then president of the CTV also publicly called for the death of Chavez. Nice guys, huh?

The CIA has many ways of operating ... and I believe that the four organizations named above are in some way involved with siphoning off information to the US government ... why else would they be financed by the US government (by USA taxpayers)? According to what I can see, they are also involved in assisting anti-Chavez Venezuelans to get organized in finding ways to oust democratically-elected Chavez "by whatever means necessary."

Coincidentally ....

... as I write this, I take a few minutes to check VHeadline.com's latest ... and I find the following: " White House weighing harder line against Venezuela as Rice flies to Brazil."  Part of the report says it clearly, partially confirming my thoughts:


"Measures under consideration include increasing US support to anti-Chavez groups in Venezuela and to urge Venezuela's neighbors to distance themselves from Chavez, who next year could be reelected to another six-year term in office ... US officials have admitted that Venezuela's oil reserves and economic surge has eliminated the need for US loans and other aid Washington could use as leverage to influence or exert pressure on Chavez' government, thus Caracas is pursuing a more independent policy, domestically and internationally."

(Note the statement: " ... increasing US support to anti-Chavez groups ...")

The above clearly gives yet another example of how the USA can be "so great" ... by bullying others.

* Force them, beat them and coerce them into submission ... and that "will ensure our greatness."

It must really aggravate the US government and its greedy followers that Venezuela will no longer bend to US pressure ... that the Venezuelan elite will no longer so easily lick the boots of the "grand" USA and then sell-off Venezuela piece by piece for payment against US-based loan-sharking.

Viva Venezuela ... without US intervention!


Oscar Heck - oscar@vheadline.com

[enditem]

ALSO XINHUA, THE OFFICIAL CHINESE NEWS AGENCY/INFORMATION SERVICE, IS WARNING AGAINST THE US FOREIGN SECRETARY OF DEATH, WHO BY NOW IS CALLED 'BLACK DEATH': Xinhua - Rice's Latin America tour seeks to isolate
Venezuela: - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/8y36u

If the by the people paid 'government' in Brazil does not charge the ousted 'president' of Ecuador, the world knows the present 'power on the surface' in Brazil accepts Gutierrez' crimes, his despicable pro-american behavior, and we all should be warned!

Gutierrez fled Quito for asylum in Brazil:
Url.: http://tinyurl.com/82x9t

Europeans may not support unnecessary USA confrontation with Venezuela: Url.: http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=31882

FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
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