Archive for August, 2004

Europe Sees No Genocide in Sudan Region

Monday, August 9th, 2004

Reuters
BRUSSELS, Aug. 9 (Reuters) – The European Union said Monday that it had found no evidence of genocide in the Sudanese region of Darfur despite widespread killings, but that there were few indications of government efforts to protect civilians.

The conclusion of a fact-finding mission put Europe at odds with the United States Congress, which has pushed for a declaration that the campaign of looting and burning by government-backed Arab militiamen against black village farmers in Darfur is genocide. full article

Rice Says Iran Must Not Be Allowed to Develop Nuclear Arms

Monday, August 9th, 2004

New York Times
KENNEBUNKPORT, Me., Aug. 8 – President Bush’s national security adviser said Sunday that the United States and its allies “cannot allow the Iranians to develop a nuclear weapon” and warned that President Bush would “look at all the tools that are available to him” to stop Iran’s program. full article

The Price of Valor

Sunday, August 8th, 2004

by Dan Baum New Yorker

We train our soldiers to kill for us. Afterward, they’re on their own.

Carl Cranston joined the Army in 1997 when he was still a junior at Sebring McKinley High School, not far from Canton, Ohio. He and his girlfriend, Debbie Stiles, had just had a baby, and the thought the Army offered the easiest path to job security The country was enjoying what President Clinton liked to call “the longest peacetime expansion in history, and Carl’s duties as an infantryman, the thought, would largely be a matter of his getting into shape shooting awesome weapons, and learning skills like rappelling and land navigation. The Army allowed Carl to finish high school and, once he’d completed basic training, sent him to Schofield Barracks outside Honolulu. Debbie gladly accompanied him. “The Army was the best choice we could have made, and I’d do it again,” she says. “Suddenly we were on our own, paying our bills. Eighteen years old, our first time away from home.

The attacks of September 11th changed everything. The Cranstons were moved to Fort Benning, in Columbus, Georgia, so that Carl could join the 3rd Infantry Division’s 3rd Brigade, a mechanized unit known as the Sledgehammer Brigade. He and his men were assigned to accompany Bradley fighting vehicles—the fast, heavily armed personnel carriers that became the backbone of the attack on Iraq. Seven soldiers, or “dismounts,” would squeeze into the Bradley’s stifling rear compartment, and Carl, by now a sergeant, was their team leader. The Sledgehammers were among the first units to cross into Iraq after the war started, in March, 2003, and Carl was involved in eleven firefights, seven of them “major,” by his reckoning. They fought from the Kuwait border to central Baghdad, and finally rotated back to Fort Benning last July.

I met Carl and Debbie in February, at a Red Lobster restaurant in Columbus. He’s a big man of twenty-four, with a high-fade military buzz cut and a well-padded face that relaxes into a wide smile. She is small and blond, with a sharp chin and a quick, alert look honed by rimless glasses. Carl tends to be guileless and cheerful, Debbie more clipped and wary.

Carl still marvels at the lethality of the Sledgehammers. Iraqi soldiers, believing they were concealed by darkness or smoke, would expose themselves to the Bradley’s thermal sights and the devastating rapid fire of its twenty-five-millimetre cannon. Carl and his squad would tumble out the back of the Bradley and attack Iraqi soldiers who had survived. “We killed a lot of people,” he said as we ate. Later, Carl and his men had to establish roadblocks, which was notoriously dangerous duty. “We started out being nice,” Carl said. “We had little talking cards to help us communicate. We’d put up signs in Arabic saying ‘Stop.’ We’d say, ‘Ishta, ishta,’ which means ‘Go away.’” But people would approach with white flags in their hands and then whip out AK-47s or rocket-propelled grenades. So Carl’s group adopted a play-it-safe policy: if a driver ignored the signs and the warnings and came within thirty metres of a roadblock, the Americans opened fire. “That’s why nobody in our whole company got killed,” he said. Debbie stopped eating and stared into her food. “You’re not supposed to fire warning shots, but we did,” Carl said. “And still some people wouldn’t stop.” He went on, “A couple of times—more than a couple—it was women and children in the car. I don’t know why they didn’t stop.” Carl’s squad didn’t tow away the cars containing dead people. “You can’t go near it,” he said. “It might be full of explosives. You just leave it.” He and his men would remain at their posts alongside the carnage. “Nothing else you can do,” he said.

Debbie watched the waitress clear our plates, then she leaned forward to tell about a night in July, after Carl’s return, when they went with some friends to the Afterhours Enlisted Club at Fort Benning. Carl had a few drinks, Debbie said, and started railing at the disk jockey, shouting, “I want to hear music about people blowing people’s brains out, cutting people’s throats!” Debbie continued, “I said, ‘Carl. Shut up.’ He said, ‘No, I want to hear music about shit I’ve seen!’” Carl listened to Debbie’s story with a loving smile, as though she were telling about him losing his car keys. “I don’t remember that,” he said, laughing. Debbie said, “That was the first time I heard him say stuff about seeing people’s brains blown out. Other times, he just has flashbacks—like, he sits still and stares.” Carl laughed again. “Really, though, I’m fine,” he said. Beside him in the booth, Debbie shook her head without taking her eyes from mine and exaggeratedly mouthed, “Not fine. Not fine.” full article

Rwandan Accused in Genocide Wins Suit for U.N. Pay

Sunday, August 8th, 2004

New York Times
fter the killing frenzy in Rwanda a decade ago, a war crimes investigator charged that a United Nations employee delegated to ensure the safety of his colleagues took part in the atrocity. The employee was never prosecuted and continued to hold jobs in the United Nations for years.

Now he has won the right to compensation for pay lost after he was finally dismissed in 2001, a decision that has incensed some United Nations investigators and officials, who say it represents a betrayal of the United Nations’ most basic principles. full article

Huge Caracas Rally Boosts Chavez Referendum Hopes

Sunday, August 8th, 2004

Reuters
CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) – Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s supporters flooded Caracas on Sunday in a huge show of support for the left-wing leader a week before he faces a cliff-hanger referendum.

The outcome of the Aug. 15 recall vote is too close to call. full article

Venezuela’s Opposition Loses Momentum New York Times
A protest demonstration last week in Caracas against President Hugo Chávez drew few people. The opposition has failed to overcome the president’s populist appeal as a recall vote nears next Sunday.

…After the opposition’s failed coup attempt against President Hugo Chávez and its four economically devastating strikes, the old dinosaurs of the two political parties that plundered the country for decades and are now in opposition have lost their influence. full article

Diplomacy Fails to Slow Advance of Nuclear Arms

Sunday, August 8th, 2004

New York Times
KENNEBUNKPORT, Me., Aug. 7 – American intelligence officials and outside nuclear experts have concluded that the Bush administration’s diplomatic efforts with European and Asian allies have barely slowed the nuclear weapons programs in Iran and North Korea over the past year, and that both have made significant progress.

In a tacit acknowledgment that the diplomatic initiatives with European and Asian allies have failed to curtail the programs, senior administration and intelligence officials say they are seeking ways to step up unspecified covert actions intended, in the words of one official, “to disrupt or delay as long as we can” Iran’s efforts to develop a nuclear weapon. full article

And who is looking to the US nuclear threat? Two new weapons are being developed right now.
I know…silly question.

China in Africa: All Trade, With No Political Baggage

Sunday, August 8th, 2004

New York Times
BEIJING – A look of satisfaction played on the trade official’s face as he reeled off statistics recently from a ministry report about China’s booming commerce with Africa.

“Forty African countries have trade agreements with China now,” said the official, Li Xiaobing, deputy director of the West Asian and African Affairs division of the Trade Ministry. “We are doing a railway project in Nigeria, a Sheraton hotel in Algeria and a mobile telephone network in Tunisia. We are all over Africa now.”

For any doubters, a glance at the statistics indicates that the official’s exultation is, if anything, understated. Though starting from a modest base, China’s trade with the African continent reached $18.5 billion in 2003, an increase of 50 percent since 2000, and it is on track for another big increase this year.

China’s push into Africa is all the more remarkable because it comes when that continent has become the virtual stepchild of the international trade system, a mere footnote – or worse, simply unmentioned in discussions of global commerce.

Beijing’s fast-rising involvement with Africa grows out of China’s immense and growing need for natural resources, in particular for imported oil, of which 25 percent now comes from Africa.

Lacking the economic and political ties that Western Europe has with Africa as a legacy of colonialism, and the economic power that the United States wields because of its wealth and influence in international financial institutions, China’s new leadership under President Hu Jintao has pushed to forge stronger ties. Mr. Hu himself traveled to Africa in January and February, visiting Egypt, Gabon and Algeria. full article

All About Eve

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

by Chris Floyd Moscow Times
Look out, ladies! The divinely-appointed duo of George W. Bush and Pope John Paul II are on the prowl again, bringing their patented one-two punch to boudoirs and back alleys everywhere. Last summer, the pious pair launched simultaneous broadsides against the apocalyptic threat of gay marriage; now they’re firing their missiles of moral correction at the ultimate source of the world’s distemper: uppity females.

This week, the pope’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (known as “The Inquisition” back in the glory days) released a “major statement” on the status of women. The Inquisitors declared that women who resist their subordination to men too strongly are “giving rise to harmful confusion” and perverting their “natural characteristics” of “listening, welcoming, humility, faithfulness, praise and waiting.”
(more…)

Why Bush could be a fan of terror

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

Guardian UK
America won’t turn against its President this November, not as long as al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden stay on the front pages

The fattest factor in America’s election year hasn’t flamed, or even singed, yet. But another hot week of orange alerts, white knuckles and scarlet blushes begins to pose the inevitable awful problem. Who exactly will Osama bin Laden be voting for this November? Is he (whisper it gently) a closet Republican?

Take almost any current terror scenario and put it to public opinion. Suppose that the 9/11 commission is right. Suppose that the obvious risk of another al-Qaeda attack turns to bloody reality sometime over the next four months. Who gains? Why, the sitting President, the Commander in Chief. George W Bush declared this ‘war’ and took his country into battle. It would not desert him if true crisis suddenly returned. full article

Stay calm everyone, there’s Prozac in the drinking water

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

Guardian UK
It should make us happy, but environmentalists are deeply alarmed: Prozac, the anti-depression drug, is being taken in such large quantities that it can now be found in Britain’s drinking water.

Environmentalists are calling for an urgent investigation into the revelations, describing the build-up of the antidepressant as ‘hidden mass medication’. The Environment Agency has revealed that Prozac is building up both in river systems and groundwater used for drinking supplies. full article

It’s amazing. My paranoia just cannot keep up with reality.