Pine Belt Progressive


Beirut in Flames
10 May, 2008, 2:37 am
Filed under: Iran, Iraq, Mississippi, Politics, war | Tags: , , ,

And ominous signs in other parts of the world as well.

International Herald Tribune — Hezbollah has apparently taken control of West Beirut. More in the SF Chronicle. It’s difficult to tell what’s really going on. Looks to me like a dispute over disarming Hezbollah between pro-government forces (backed by the Sunni states, the U.S., and Israel) and Hezbollah (backed by Iran, Syria, and the Lebanese parliamentary opposition), with the Lebanese army officially neutral.

The Lebanese government is calling the violence “an armed coup.” Syria is blaming U.S. and Israeli “adventurist interferances” for the violence. Condoleeza Rice is discussing how to support the Syrian government “in the face of illegal acts, by the armed gangs” with the secretary general and her French and Saudi counterparts. Hezbollah is handing over pro-government offices to the Lebanese military and says it will maintain roadblocks and control the route to the airport until the crisis is resolved. The White House is talking about “measures which must be taken to hold those responsible for the violence in Beirut accountable.” An unnamed source who supposedly speaks for the opposition says “all issues are linked. Beirut will remain shut until there is a political solution.”

This is oversimplifying just a bit, but this seems like spillover from the ongoing power struggle between the U.S. and Iran. I don’t think U.S. or Israeli bombs dropped from several thousand feet are going to resolve this, and I’d like to know more about where the population stands and how they’re faring.

Bush is headed to the Middle East next week. WaPo is quoting an “unnamed State Department Source” accusing Iran of giving a green light to Hezbollah. That official is probably right, but who can believe what the State Department says at this point? In fact, who can give the Post the benefit of the doubt and believe they’re actually quoting someone, instead of just making stuff up? I’m wondering whether or not the “green light” quote will make the Sunday talk shows. I’m guessing it will.

Elsewhere in the world . . .

Tanks and missile launchers made a return to Red Square for the inauguration of the new Russian president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, who gave a speech:

Medvedev said the history of World War II demonstrated that military conflicts are rooted in “irresponsible ambitions which prevail over interests of nations and entire continents.”

“We must not allow contempt for the norms of international law,” he said, in what sounded like veiled criticism of the United States and its Western allies.

I wouldn’t call that criticism “veiled.”

You’ll want to read this article in the Asia Times from earlier this week about Douglas Feith’s new book (emphasis added):

WASHINGTON – Three weeks after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks, former US defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld established an official military objective of not only removing the Saddam Hussein regime by force but overturning the regime in Iran, as well as in Syria and four other countries in the Middle East, according to a document quoted extensively in then-under secretary of defense for policy Douglas Feith’s recently published account of the Iraq war decisions . . .

. . . Feith’s account further indicates that this aggressive aim of remaking the map of the Middle East by military force and the Feith’s book, War and Decision, released last month, provides excerpts of the paper Rumsfeld sent to President George W Bush on September 30, 2001, calling for the administration to focus not on taking down Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network but on the aim of establishing “new regimes” in a series of states by “aiding local peoples to rid themselves of terrorists and to free themselves of regimes that support terrorism”. . .

. . . General Wesley Clark, who commanded the North Atlantic Treaty Organization bombing campaign in the Kosovo war, recalls in his 2003 book Winning Modern Wars being told by a friend in the Pentagon in November 2001 that the list of states that Rumsfeld and deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz wanted to take down included Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Sudan and Somalia.

So, instead of focusing our efforts on apprehending the person identified as responsible for the attacks on our country, and dismantling the network that carried them out, Rumsfeld and his generals decided to make a list of countries and overturn their governments under the guise of “helping” them. That’s the real war on terror. So I guess at this point we can conclude that Iran and Syria are next, and we can probably expect the administration to take action against one or both before the election. We’ve been warned.

Sorry posting has been so light this week. It probably will be light this weekend, as well. I have lots of irons in the fire right now, and won’t have much time to write on Saturday or Sunday.



Drat!
7 May, 2008, 9:07 pm
Filed under: Iraq, Mississippi, Politics, war

Got tied up at work today and couldn’t get away at noon, so I missed the protest.

Did anyone go, and if so, got pics?

Thinking I might just start scheduling this as a day off.



A Few Words In Defense of Our Country
6 May, 2008, 9:11 pm
Filed under: music, Politics, war | Tags:

Because we can never have too much Randy Newman



Monthly Protest
6 May, 2008, 9:06 pm
Filed under: Iraq, Mississippi, Politics, war

Tomorrow in Hattiesburg. 49 and Hardy Street, Noon. Bring yer signs! I’m hoping to make it there  with my camera.

Sorry, not much time for blogging at the moment. Hopefully, things will ease up for me later in the week.



The Next War?
4 May, 2008, 11:57 pm
Filed under: Iran, Iraq, Militarism, Politics, war

Andrew Cockburn has what could be a big-time scoop at Counterpunch:

Six weeks ago, President Bush signed a secret finding authorizing a covert offensive against the Iranian regime that, according to those familiar with its contents, “unprecedented in its scope.”

Bush’s secret directive covers actions across a huge geographic area – from Lebanon to Afghanistan – but is also far more sweeping in the type of actions permitted under its guidelines – up to and including the assassination of targeted officials.

(h/t Elaine Meinel Supkis)

Cockburn reports that $300 million for this covert offensive was approved quickly with bipartisan support from Congress. He also includes this detail about the naval incident between U.S. and Iranian forces in the Persian Gulf last January:

Until recently, the administration faced a serious obstacle to action against Iran in the form of Centcom commander Admiral William Fallon, who made no secret of his contempt for official determination to take us to war. In a widely publicized incident last January, Iranian patrol boats approached a U.S. ship in what the Pentagon described as a “taunting” manner. According to Centcom staff officers, the American commander on the spot was about to open fire. At that point, the U.S. was close to war. He desisted only when Fallon personally and explicitly ordered him not to shoot. The White House, according to the staff officers, was “absolutely furious” with Fallon for defusing the incident.

Fallon’s resignation cleared the way for Petraeus to be promoted to head Centcom. Cockburn appears to believe we’re planning to attack Iran before Petraeus officially moves to his new job, and says we’ve changed deployment schedules in preparation for the attack:

Though Petraeus is not due to take formal command at Centcom until late summer, there are abundant signs that something may happen before then. A Marine amphibious force, originally due to leave San Diego for the Persian Gulf in mid June, has had its sailing date abruptly moved up to May 4. A scheduled meeting in Europe between French diplomats acting as intermediaries for the U.S. and Iranian representatives has been abruptly cancelled in the last two weeks. Petraeus is said to be at work on a master briefing for congress to demonstrate conclusively that the Iranians are the source of our current troubles in Iraq, thanks to their support for the Shia militia currently under attack by U.S. forces in Baghdad.

The article is worth a read, but it isn’t well-sourced enough for me, so I thought I would check and see if anyone else is writing about this. As far as I can tell, no one is. I couldn’t find anything at all about the president authorizing a big covert operation. I did find a couple of stories from April 13 about a meeting between Iran and IAEA officials in Vienna being canceled, and it was not at all clear whether Iran or IAEA were actually responsible for the meeting being canceled.

The 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit did leave San Diego today on two amphibious assault ships, along with various helicopter units and beach assault forces, a guided missile cruiser, and two destroyers. I read several reports of this and did lots of searching, but I didn’t find anyone admitting that this is an early deployment.

Over the weekend, a delegation from the Iraq government went to Iran to discuss allegations made by the U.S. that Iran is arming militias in Iraq. Supposedly the U.S. has evidence in the form of captured weapons. Today, representatives of the Iraqi government distanced themselves from the U.S. allegations and announced they are forming their own committee to investigate the activities of foreign countries in Iraq. A little while later, the government changed their story and announced (in an interview arranged by U.S. officials) that they have “‘concrete evidence’ Iran is fomenting violence” and the purpose of the new Iraqi committee is actually to document the evidence.

Press in the U.K. is reporting that those Iranian nuclear facilities our government has been screeching about for the past few weeks are actually on the back burner, as far as military operations are concerned, and that plans are in the works to strike a “training camp” inside Iran.

Feeling the deja vu yet?

Just a couple of points here. First, I have no idea what’s really going on. The more news I read about this, the more mystified I become. Second, It’s likely that Iran is arming some Iraqis. But, I do not think the fact that a given group possesses weapons manufactured in Iran is sufficient to prove that the Iranian government armed that group. Iraq and Iran share a border. Weapons have been traveling back and forth across it for decades. And I do not think air strikes on Iran will prevent weapons from continuing to traveling across that border.

I do think attacking Iran is likely to have more negative consequences for U.S. forces in Iraq than positive ones. Especially if the we decide to attack them repeatedly or initiate an actual campaign in their territory. Considering the way we have our forces scattered out doing counterinsurgency, and their dependence on supplies from Kuwait, I think it could very well lead to a scenario like this one. (via)

And see Tom Engelhardt today on our military thinkers and their preparations for endless war.



May Day
1 May, 2008, 1:01 am
Filed under: Civil Liberties, Human Rights, Iraq, Politics, war | Tags:

All Out.

I’m not spending any money today. How ’bout you?

Today is also Mission Accomplished Day

Photo via Think Progress

More at After Downing Street



Could the October Surprise be an Attack on Iran?
30 April, 2008, 7:03 pm
Filed under: Iran, Iraq, war | Tags: ,

I’ve been careful not to suggest that we’re actually going there up to this point, but recent development are making me think the answer is “yes.” I explain why I think so here.



Whose Face Can You Save?

Here’s BuelahMan’s latest collaboration with the ultimate lefty band, Max and the Marginalized. A great song, and video about the Pentagon’s pedantic, pusillanimous, propaganda pundit-puppets. The sock puppet at the beginning of the video is excellent.

As always, you can find many more music videos at Max’s blog, and all sorts of moving pictures at BuelahMan’s YouTube channel.



War Criminals, etc.
28 April, 2008, 10:10 pm
Filed under: Civil Liberties, Human Rights, Iraq, Politics, war | Tags: , ,

John Quiggin has some technical questions about prosecuting Bush administration officials for war crimes. I don’t have much legal training, but I’ll gladly offer some opinions. I think his analysis is about right, if he’s talking about cabinet officers and higher officials being prosecuted by another state. If prosecutions outside the U.S. happen at all, I think it’s going to be in an international court, and it’s going to be a deputy-assisstant-something or other. And that’s an outside chance.

Since prosecutions don’t seem to be likely, it wouldn’t hurt to file a grievance against John Yoo with the PA or D.C. bar.

Blue Girl has a must-read about the IDF killing a children in Gaza.

It’s alleged that Karl Rove tried to get Patrick Fitzgerald fired during the Plame affair, and guess whose trial this information emerged from?

John Kerry has a long list of questions for the GAO about the Pentagon propaganda pundits.

Hard-Boiled Dreams of the World has video of a former DEA chief admitting on 60 minutes that the CIA imported cocaine into the country. AND a link to a Rolling Stone article from last year about E. Howard Hunt admitting involvement in the Kennedy assassination.



ILWU to Protest on May Day
28 April, 2008, 6:14 pm
Filed under: Civil Liberties, Human Rights, Iraq, Politics, Progressive, war | Tags: , ,

Googlepages has apparently disabled the page where the original ILWU announcement was posted for violating a policy. I snagged their graphic from FDL and blew it up in case anyone wants to take me up on my suggestion. I couldn’t get the small print at the bottom to come out clear. Here it is:




May Day War Protests!
28 April, 2008, 12:01 pm
Filed under: Civil Liberties, Community, Human Rights, Iraq, Progressive, war | Tags: , , ,

The longshore workers are shutting down all the ports on the West Coast for 8 hours on May 1. I’ll have a longer post about this tonight, I hope. Please pass this on!



Famine and the Fed
26 April, 2008, 2:11 pm
Filed under: Economy, Environment, Human Rights, Politics, war | Tags: , , , ,

Just not up for very much blogging today, but here’s a roundup of items related to food, economics, and politics. This is a sort of follow-up to a post I wrote for Left in Alabama yesterday on the threat to food banks posed by food shortages (and see my two long comments to that post, as well). I don’t think we should wait to see how bad things really are before we begin to make preparations for the possible food shortages we could face this year. If we prepare and it turns out that there aren’t significant shortages in the U.S., we haven’t lost very much. I, personally, think we’re about to see a period of rapid transition in our society.

This is just an opinion, and I could be wrong. But soon, I think, the gap between wages on the one hand, and the price of food and fuel on the other, is going to be so great that a lot of people are going to have to find some way of feeding themselves other than going to work. Maybe not this year, but sooner than most people realize.

Here’s a very comprehensive article about the problems we’re seeing with the way captialism organizes food production. It also has some interesting information on the underground food movement. via Sideshow.

The Big Picture says Fed policies may be to blame for the food shortages we’re seeing around the world. I think this is what Spengler was referring to when he wrote that the U.S. is trying to inflate it’s way out of the economic crisis.

Joseph Stiglitz says the recession we’re in is going to end up being our worst since the 1930s.

And here’s an article on the collapse of capitalism I picked up from comments on the Feral Scholar post. I think the article runs the risk of making the collapse seem more certain and more imminent than it actually is. But I find it interesting that it echoes many of the themes from several posts I’ve linked to over the last couple of months:

Natasha at Pacific Views: Global Suicide Pact

Ian Welsh at FDL: The Age of Light

Monkeyfister:

Peak Oil Crisis: Load Shedding . . . (peak oil, climate change, and instability); and

Food Shortages Everywhere . . .(food shortages, mass migrations, famine, and war)

Update: Fuel shortage in Great Britain threatens to become a crisis. This is at the top of Monkeyfister’s blog right now, but I’m adding the permalink for future reference.



And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda
25 April, 2008, 7:20 am
Filed under: Politics, war | Tags: , , , ,

The Australian and New Zealand Army Corps landed at Gallipoli on this date in 1915 to fight the Ottoman Turkish Army as part of an allied effort to capture Istanbul and knock the Ottoman Empire out of the war quickly. The actual outcome of the invasion was a bloody stalemate that lasted until the allies evacuated their troops in January, 1916. The battle is regarded as an Allied military disaster, and rightly so.

Casualty figures are uncertain. Perhaps as many as 500,000 soldiers were killed and wounded on all sides. At least 50,000 allied soldiers died there. More than 8,700 of the 60,000 Australians who were part of the allied force were killed. New Zealanders  lost more than 2,700 out of a force of 8,500. Total Turkish casualties are commonly believed to be more than 250,000, with about 85,000 killed. Massive numbers on both sides died of disease.

To this day Australians, New Zealanders, and Turks meet together at dawn an April 25 in Gallipoli to remember this battle. It is an important event in the development of the national identities of all three nations. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who later became the first president of the Turkish Republic, was a division commander in the battle.

Here is a song, performed by the Pogues about the experience of getting shipped off, fighting in the battle, and coming home disabled. The video is a montage of period photographs, propaganda posters, and related images.



Great Anti-War Song
24 April, 2008, 8:09 am
Filed under: Human Rights, Iraq, music, Politics, war | Tags:

No Man’s Land, aka Green Fields of France.

Written by Eric Bogle. Performed by Dropkick Murphys.

Don’t Forget about that Responsible Plan to end the occupation of Iraq.

Here are some facts about the Iraq war I put togther a couple of weeks ago.



Torture and Torturers
22 April, 2008, 7:59 am
Filed under: Civil Liberties, Human Rights, Militarism, Politics, war | Tags: , , ,

Tristero, for one, is (obviously) tired of dealing with pro-torture arguments that are too silly consider being presented as Very Serious Arguments That Must Be Dealt With. (The ticking bomb, for example). As am I.

Darcy Burner says it’s time to pick a fight over funding for Blackwater (remember, they’ve been involved in torture and other war crimes).

Arms manufacturer Heckler & Koch recently announced that it would end its relationship with Blackwater after an investigation by a German news station caused an uproar in Germany.




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