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"THE USE OF CHEMICAL WARFARE IS AUTHORIZED"
America's secret war plans: "The military purpose is to overthrow the present existing Federal Government of Mexico." Floyd Rudmin uncovers the sick dreams of America's generals. Alito says, Constitution okays Bush to set up prison camps here and torture US citizens. Dems praise his "even demeanor" and shirk the filibuster. Cockburn and St Clair on the Alito hearings and the Democrats' collapse.

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Today's Stories

February 8, 2006

Stan Cox
Making and Unmaking History with General Myers

 

February 7, 2006

Edward Lucie-Smith
An Urgent Plea to Save a Small Estonian Museum from Neo-Nazis

Robert Fisk
The Fury: Now Lebanon is Burning

Paul Craig Roberts
Colin Powell's Career as a "Yes Man"

Neve Gordon
Why Hamas Won

Joshua Frank
The Hillary and George Show: Partners in War

Peter Montague
The Problem with Mercury: a History of Regulatory Capitulation

Jackie Corr
The Last Best Choice: Public Power and Montana

Jeffrey St. Clair
Rumsfeld's Enforcer: the Secret World of Stephen Cambone

Website of the Day
Negroes with Guns

 

February 6, 2006

Christopher Brauchli
Spilling Blood: Two Sentences

Robert Fisk
Don't Be Fooled: This Isn't About Islam vs. Secularism

John Chuckman
What Did Stephen Harper Actually Win?

Jenna Orkin
Judge Slams EPA for Lying About 9/11's Toxic Air

Paul Craig Roberts
Who Will Save America: My Epiphany

 

February 4 / 5, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
"Lights Out in Tehran": McCain Starts Bombing Run

Mike Ferner
Pentagon Database Leaves No Kid Alone

James Petras
Evo Morales's Cabinet: a Bizarre Beginning in Bolivia

Alan Maass
Scare of the Union: Dems Collaborate with Bush on Surveillance

Fred Gardner
Annals of Law Enforcement: a Look Inside the San Francisco DA's Office

Ralph Nader
Bush's Energy Escapades

Bill Glahn
RIAA Watch: Speaking in Tongues

Saul Landau
Freedom 2006: Buying Sex on the Net or Those Older Freedoms?

Laura Carlsen
Bad Blood on the Border: Killing Guillermo Martinez

James Brooks
Our Little Shop of Diplomatic Horrors

Mike Roselle
Hippies and Revolutionaries in Carcacas

John Holt
Black Gold, Black Death: Canada's Oil Sands Frenzy

Sarah Ferguson
Cops Suing Cops ... for Spying on Cops

William S. Lind
Beware the Ides of March

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Price of Globalization: Free Trade or Free Speech?

Seth Sandronsky
The Color of Job Cuts in the Auto Industry

Derrick O'Keefe
Rumsfeld's Hitler Analogy

Michael Donnelly
Hop on the Bus

Ron Jacobs
Religion and Political Power

Elisa Salasin
RSVP to Bush

St. Clair / Vest
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Stew Albert
God's Curse: Selected Poems

Poets' Basement
Guthrie, LaMorticella and Engel

Website of the Weekend
Killer Tells All!

 

February 3, 2006

Toufic Haddad
A Parliament of Prisoners

Heather Gray
Working with Coretta Scott King

Tim Wise
Racism, Neo-Confederacy and the Raising of Historical Illiterates

Conn Hallinan
Nuclear Proliferation: the Gathering Storm

Eva Golinger
Rumsfeld and Negroponte Amp Up Hositility Toward Venezuela

Daniel Ellsberg
The World Can't Wait: Invitation to a Demonstration

Dave Zirin
Detroit: Super Bowl City on the Brink

Robert Bryce
The Problem with Cutting US Oil Imports from the Middle East

Website of the Day
The Chavez Code

 

February 2, 2006

Winslow T. Wheeler
Pentagon Pork: How to Eliminate It

Stan Cox
Outsourcing the Golden Years

Rachard Itani
Danes (Finally) Apologize to Muslims (For the Wrong Reasons)

Mike Whitney
Afghanistan Five Years Later: Buildings Down, Heroin Up

Amira Hass
In the Footsteps of Arafat: an Interview with Hamas' Ismail Haniya

Norman Solomon
When Praise is Desecration: Smothering King's Legacy with Kind Words

Michael Simmons
Stew Lives!

Christopher Reed
Japan's Dirty Secret: One Million Korean Slaves

Website of the Day
State of Nature

 

February 1, 2006

Sharon Smith
The Bluff and Bluster Dems: Alito and the Faux Filibuster

Jason Leopold
Enron and the Bush Administration

Cindy Sheehan
Getting Busted at the State of the Union: What Really Happened

Joseph Grosso
Oprah and Elie Wiesel: a Match Made in "Neutrality"

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Coretta Scott King was More Than Just Dr. King's Wife

Steven Higgs
Life After Roe. v. Wade

Robert Robideau
"God Given Rights": Palestine and Native America

R. Siddharth
Tales of Power: When Gandhi Rejected a Faustian Bargain with Henry Ford

Jim Retherford
Remembering Stew Albert: the Quiet Genius

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
The Legacy of Coretta Scott King

Paul Craig Roberts
The True State of the Union

Website of the Day
Candide's Notebooks

 

January 31, 2006

Jeffrey St. Clair
Revolutionary for the Hell of It: the Good Life of Stew Albert

Clancy Chassay
US Prods Lebanon Towards Civil War

Dave Lindorff
The Democrats' Alito Debacle

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Alito: Harry-Kerry in the Senate

Oren Ben-Dor
Hamas' Victory: a New Hope?

Winslow Wheeler
Pentagon Pork: What is It? Who Cooks It Up?

John Ryan
Canada: a Chilling Echo of Bush's Republicans

Mike Marqusee
Privatizing Health Care: the Poor Pay the Price

Ron Jacobs
For Stew

Andrew Cockburn
Why Bush Probably Won't Attack Iran

Website of the Day
Celebrating Stew Albert

 

January 30, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush, Fox News and the Coming War on Iran

Winslow Wheeler
Inside the Pork Shop: the Defense Budget and Congressional Earmarks

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Development Interrupted

Marcus Dam
"The Real Threat is from Imperial Fundamentalism": an Interview with Tariq Ali

John Bomar
Message to Democrats: the Case Against Pre-War Lying is a Slam Dunk, Stupid

Ben Beachy
Swindling the Sick: the IMF Debt Relief Sham

Gideon Levy
The Good News About Hamas' Victory

Michael Carmichael
Alito and Opus Dei

Missy Comley Beattie
Of Losses and Lies

Norman Solomon
The Question Journalists Refuse to Ask Bush

Brian Concannon, Jr.
Finally Some Good News From Haiti

Michael Ratner
Tomorrow is Today; the Time for Resistance is Now

Website of the Day
"I'm So Bored with Capitol Hill"

 

January 28 / 29, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
Nicholas Kristof's Brothel Problem

Ralph Nader
The Impeachable Mr. Bush

Col. Dan Smith
Spying and Lying by the Pentagon

Paul Craig Roberts
Blind Ignorance: Polls Show Many Americans Simply Dumber Than Bush

Tammara Rosenleaf
Homefront War Diary: On Monday, My Husband Didn't Call

Ron Jacobs
Google This!

Harry Browne
Irish "Peace" Process at Recriminations Stage

Fred Gardner
Grover Norquist, Drug Policy Reformer?

Christopher Reed
North Korean Forgeries

Bernard Chazelle
France's Colonial Blowback

Daniel Wolff
Radioactive Money, 2005: How Entergy Gets Its Way at Indian Point

Tom Kerr
Small Fry: If You're Not in Power, You'd Better Not Lie

Asad Abu Khalil
The Demise of Fatah

Chris Murphy
The Medicare Disaster

Dr. Susan Block
America Wants a Divorce

Kathy Deacon
Hippocratic Oaf

St. Clair / Walker / Palmer / Shields
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Laymon, Engel, Holt, Davies and Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
Your Child Can Be a NSA Spook!


January 27, 2006

Suren Pillay
Making the World Safe for Nuclear Violence, Again

Lawrence R. Velvel
The NYT and Alito: Journalistic Schizophrenia

J.L. Chestnut, Jr
The Cold Hard Truth: Marching Backwards on Civil Rights

Uri Avnery
To Talk with Hamas

Gary Leupp
Hamas's Victory: "the Power of Democracy"

Samar Assad
A New Political Landscape in Palestine

Jeffrey St. Clair
King of the Hill: Sen. Ted Steven's Empire of Corruption

Website of the Day
Bush Jobs Program: You Too Can Be an FBI Snitch

 

January 26, 2006

Robert Robideau
An AIM Activist's View of Jack Abramoff: Another Racist Out to Defraud Native Tribes

Paul Craig Roberts
Bolton Orders Syria to Do the Impossible

Gilad Atzmon
Hamas' Victory

Jason Leopold
A Vaster Conspiracy?: Fitzgerald Probes Niger Forgeries

Joshua Frank
Iran, Nukes and Oil

Dave Lindorff
Bush Calls Hamas Kettle Black

Susan Lee
An Open Letter to the State Dept. on the Cuban Five

Missy Comley Beattie
A Plea to the Marines: Stop Sending Recruiting Letters to Our House!

Michael Carmichael
Extraordinary Alito

Michael Neumann
The Core of Zionism

Website of the Day
Who Will Stop the Slaughter of Yellowstone's Bison?

 

January 25, 2006

Saul Landau
Domestic Spying, Now and Then: When Hoover Bugged Phone Calls with My Father

James Petras
Is Chile's Bachelet Washington's Best New Ally?

Lawrence R. Velvel
Alito and Roberts' Self-Gag Rule is a Phony

Vijay Prashad
From Chennai with Love

Kevin Zeese
Gen. William Odom Supports the Empire, But Opposes the War

Alison Weir
When a Mother Gets Killed Does She Make a Sound? Anatomy of a Cover-Up

Bruce K. Gagnon
Bush War Economy: Exporting Jobs and Security

Joan Roelofs
Military Contractor Philanthropy

Website of the Day
Bob Marley Does Dylan

 

January 24, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
The Patriot Police: the Unfathomed Dangers of Patriot Act Reauthorization

Kathy Kelly
Liberation and Deliverance

Jorge Mariscal
Bush's War Viewed from the South

Winslow T. Wheeler
Smoke and Mirrors in the Defense Budget

John Walsh
Why We Picket John Kerry: Join Us Friday in Boston

Youmans / Muaddi
The Growing Israel Divestment Movement

Roger Burbach
Bolivia's Evo Morales: Original Mandate for Social Revolution

Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste
Letter from a Haitian Prison

Noam Chomsky
The Terrorist in the Mirror

Website of the Day
Big Brother Watch


January 23, 2006

Uri Avnery
Pity the Orphan: Israel, Hamas and the Palestinian Elections

Susan Pynchon
Diebold in Florida: "I Saw It Hacked"

William Loren Katz
Harry Belafonte Reaffirms a Proud Tradition

Christopher Brauchli
Bush's IRS: Squeezing the Poor

Chris Floyd
The Goon Show

Joshua Frank
Tre Arrow and ELF: Environmentalism on Death Row

Norman Solomon
The Other Shoe Drops: Classified Leaks and Journalists

Jackie Corr
Working for the Railroad: Racicot and the Burlington Northern

Paul Craig Roberts
Inside Cheney's War Workshop

Website of the Day
Arms Against War

 

January 21/22, 2006

Tim Shorrock
Why the Buses Didn't Come: Bush-Linked Florida Company and the Katrina Evacuation Fiasco

Ralph Nader
Congressional Ethics After Abramoff

Peter Feng
Casualties of War: Neoliberalism, Katrina and the Asian Tsunami

Brian Cloughley
CIA Bombs Pakistan, Hits America

Michael Donnelly
Tapes and Snitches: Feds Hand Down Eco-Sabotage Indictments

Tom Kerr
Crackdown in San Quentin: Why are They Rounding Up Tookie Williams' Friends?

Tim Matson
Best Not Drive While Black on I-91 (But Walk Tall With the Bloody Chainsaw You Just Topped Your Neighbor With)

Dave Lindorff
Rumsfeld: Venezuela "Overspending" on Military

Daniel Wolff
Hour of Reckoning: the Gospel Roots of Wilson Pickett

Fred Gardner
"Metabolic Syndrome" is to "Clinical Depression" as Acomplia is Prozac

Jason Leopold
How Cheney Used the NSA to Spy on Americans Prior to 9/11

Matthew Koehler
Betting on Biscuit: Does Post-Fire Logging Make Ecological (or Economic) Sense?

John Bomar
The Emperor's Clothes: from Bonaparte to Bush

Ron Jacobs
When Miners March: Struggle and Lose, Struggle and Win!

Becky Akers
Debunking Democracy

Joanne Mariner
Security, Terrorism and Human Rights

St. Clair / Walker / Pollack
CounterPunch Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Albert, Holt, Engel and Davies

Website of the Day
Osama's Book Club: Featured Selection


January 20, 2006

Brian J. Foley
What Kind of War Doesn't Allow for a Truce?

Richard Gott
Revolution in the Andes

Joshua Frank
Israel and US Threats Against Iran

Pierre Tristam
Imperial Mongers: From Gladstone to "King George"

Bernstein / Allegretto
Hourly Wages Have Fallen in 18 of the Last 20 Months

Elizabeth Schulte
Abortion Before Roe

Website of the Day
This Dog Bites

 

January 19, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
Political Machines: Was the 2004 Election Stolen?

Bill Simpich
Those Damn Democrats: To End War, Don't Ask for What You Don't Want

Kevin Alexander Gray
Reclaiming King Day (From the NAACP)

Sam Husseini
Rot at the Top: If the Democrats Really Want to Stop Bush, They Need New Leadership

Sam Smith
The Real Chocolate City

Monica Benderman
Dare to Make a Stand

Winslow T. Wheeler
Just How Big is the Defense Budget?

Website of the Day
Leave My Child Alone

 

January 18, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
Gore's Speech: a Challenge That Cannot be Ignored

Norman Solomon
The Crime of Giving the Orders: Executing Clarence Ray Allen

Jonathan M. Feldman
The System Doesn't Work Anymore

Michael Carmichael
"Extraordinary Circumstances": the Case Against Alito

Paul D'Amato
The Crimes of Jimmy Carter

Cynthia McKinney
King's Mission Endures

Norman Finkelstein
Why an Economic Boycott of Israel is Justified

Website of the Day
The Planetary Movement

 

January 17, 2006

M. Shahid Alam
"Real Men Go to Tehran": Has al-Qaeda's Gambit Paid Off?

John Ross
Latin America's Indians on the Move--in Different Directions

Tariq Ali
God, Blood, Oil and Iraq

Michael Donnelly
Killing Anna Mae Aquash, Smearing John Trudell

Amira Hass
No Child Left Unharassed: the Obstacle Course to School in Palestine

Doug Giebel
Alito's CAP: Either He Lied on His Resumé or There's a Cover-Up

Bill Quigley
MLK Day in a Haitian Prison

Ron Jacobs
Meet the Son of Jim Crow: MLK Day Below the Mason/Dixon Line

Mike Stark
Governor on a Killling Spree

Werther
The Liberties of the Subject


January 16, 2006

John Walsh
Tears of a Neocon: The Good News from Daniel Pipes

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Black Students Under Fire: Racial Profiling in Public Schools

Roger Burbach
Bachelet's Victory: Leftward Drift in Chile?

Norman Solomon
Ted Koppel, NPR and Henry Kissinger: a Natural Fit?

Robert Jensen
Dreams and Nightmares: How Would King Judge America?

Sam Husseini
Martin Luther King and the Deeper Malady

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush Crosses the Rubicon

Website of the Day
MLK: Beyond Vietnam

 

January 14 / 15, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
What the FBI Repairman Wore When He Tried to Bug Edward Said

JoAnn Wypijewski
What is an Antiwar Movement?

James Petras
The State of the Empire, 2006

Ron Jacobs
Fifteen Years of War: Who's Better Off?

Brian Cloughley
Fly Boys and Lie Boys: Smart-Bombing Iraqi Families While They Sleep

Marianne McDonald
The Madness of Ajax: a Play for Our Time

Bruce Tyler Wick
Bush on Torture Echoes Charles I on Arbitrary Imprisonment

Fred Gardner
A Last, Desperate Plea to Stay in Canada

Flavia Alaya
Victory at Passaic County Jail

Gary Leupp
A Neocon Plan to Plant WMDs?

Dr. Susan Block
Peeping Tom in the Bush: Nonconsenual Voyeurism and the NSA

Nicole Colson
The House Jack Built: The Abramoff Giude to Buying Friends and Influencing Politics

Jeffrey Kolakowski
Senator as Illusionist: the Hypocrisies of John McCain

Missy Comley Beattie
The Stepford Hearings of Samuel Alito: The Senator, the Weepy Wife and a Secret Annoiting

Charles Thomson
Is Serota Dead in the Water?: the Ofili Scandal at the Tate

St. Clair / Walker / Vest
Playlsts: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Albert, Engel, Ford and Davies

Website of the Weekend
Historians Against the War

 

January 13, 2006

Ralph Nader
The Two Questions the Senate Should Have Asked Alito

Leonard Weinglass
The Singular Story of the Cuban Five

Amira Hass
Prisoners in Their Own Land: 800,000 Palestinians Sealed Off by IDF in West Bank

Chris Kutalik / Jennifer Biddle
Airline Workers Fight Back

Lawrence R. Velvel
Alito and the Democrats

Dave Lindorff
Eight Who Dared: a (Short) Congressional Honor Roll

Mike Whitney
Countdown to War with Iran?

David Price
How the FBI Spied on Edward Said

 

January 12, 2006

Jennifer Van Bergen
The Unitary Executive: Why the Bush Doctrine Violates the Constitution

Jeremy Brecher / Brendan Smith
Command Responsibility: Torture and Legal Accountability

Lawrence R. Velvel
Alito Refuses to Answer Fundamental Questions

Ralph Nader / Robert Weissman
Corporations, Originalism and the Bill of Rights: an Open Letter to Justice Scalia

Jackie Corr
Killing the Big Sky's Golden Goose: Marc Racicot and the Deregulation of Montana Power

Jared Bernstein
The Wage Doldrums

Russell D. Hoffman
New Horizons in Space, New Lows in Government

Aubrey Streit
I Was Born in a Small Town: the Fate of Rural America

Clancy Sigal
Hugh Thompson and My Lai: He Broke Ranks; He Did the Right Thing

Website of the Day
Nukes in Space

 

January 11, 2006

Kevin Zeese
NSA Spied on Baltimore Peace Group (And They've Got the Documents That Prove It)

Ray McGovern
The Big Wiretap

Allan Maass / Joe Allen
Schwarzenegger's Hit List: Smearing Mandela, Killing Tookie

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Snatching at King's Legacy: Mythmaking, Profiteering & Outright Distortions

Annie Murphy
Evo Morales' Sweater

Allan Lichtman
Abramoff's Kind of Big Government

Ramzy Baroud
Politics of Chaos: Gaza's Turmoil in Context

Joshua Frank
MoveOn Surrenders to Hillary

Kathleen and Bill Christison
"Eating Palestine for Breakfast": the Real Sharon

Website of the Day
Memoirs of Rummy's Geisha

 

January 10, 2006

Uri Avnery
The Post-Sharon Landscape: Three Fingers, No Fist

Saul Landau
Different Americas

Noam Chomsky
Beyond the Ballot: Iraq, Iran and China

Brian J. Foley
Playing with Fire: Congress and Executive Power

Lenni Brenner
The War Within the Antiwar Movement

Ronan Sheehan
Sheehan to Sheehan: Cindy Sheehan's Irish Interview

Paul Craig Roberts
Bush's Con Jobs

 

January 9, 2006

Behzad Yaghmaian
Who is to Blame for the Deaths of the Sudanese Refugees?

George Bisharat
US Aid to Israel is Out of Hand

Dave Lindorff
How the US Press Squelches Bush Impeachment Drive

Norman Solomon
Smoke a Marlboro, Then an Iraqi: How Media War Images Distort Not Inform

Christopher Brauchli
The Generosity of Credit Card Companies

Aharon Shabtai
A Poet's Letter on the Occupation

Andrew Cockburn
How Many Iraqis Have Died Since the US Invasion in 2003?

 

January 7 / 8, 2006

Lawrence Velvel
The NYT's Unconscionable Decision to Sit on the NSA Story for a Year

James Petras
AIPAC on Trial: Them or US

J.L. Chestnut
Racism and Injustice in Alabama's Courts

Mike Ely
The Dead Miners in Sago

Andrew Wilson
The Dying of Ariel Sharon

Lila Rajiva
Two Moms Go to Capitol Hill

William Cook
The Rape of Palestine

Ramor Ryan
The Sub Motorcycle Diaries: On the Road with the Zapatistas

Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff
An Interview with Michael Scheuer on the CIA's Rendition Program

Peter Montague
Inherit the Wind: the Global Spread of GMO Crops

Ron Jacobs
Would Ethan Allen Pay to Protest?

Neve Gordon
Images of Real Eco-Terrorism in Twaneh

Fred Gardner
Business as Usual in San Diego

Josh Mahon
Idaho Timber Industry Leader Advocates Violence Against Green's Mom

Dr. Susan Block
Abramoff Family Values: the Lobbyist Who Screwed Us All

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Albert and Engel

Website of the Weekend
Bush Crimes Commission

 

January 6, 2006

José Pertierra
Posada Carriles May Soon Hit the Streets

Joe Allen
Gary Freeman's Struggle: a Black Radical from the 1960s Fights Extradition to the US

Winslow T. Wheeler
Huge Defense Budget, Lousy Equipment

John Bomar
A Former NSA Officer on Snoopgate: the Squawkers Should be Congratulated

Jason Leopold
Snoop and Shred

Norman Solomon
Axis of Fanatics: Netanyahu and Ahmadinejad

Robert Pollin
Remembering Harry Magdoff: the Man Who Explained the Empire

 

January 5, 2006

Scott Boehm
Big Profits, Buried Lives: Bulldozing the Dead in New Orleans

Zoltan Grossman
New Challenges for the Antiwar Movement

Heather Gray
Whistling Dixie Yet Again

Haninah Levine
Simple is Dangerous: the Pentagon's Plan for a Manhattan Project on IEDs

Pierre Tristam
The Sham of Homeland Security: a West Virginia Parable

Remi Kanazi
Stroke of Luck?: Political Hemorrhage in Israel

Gilad Atzmon
Sharon Meets His Maker

Kathleen and Bill Christison
What Hillary Clinton Doesn't Know About Palestine

 

January 4, 2006

Ron Jacobs
Pity the Miner: A-Diggin' My Bones

Lila Rajiva
Terror Hits Bangalore

Huibin Amee Chew
Why the War is Sexist

Pat Williams
How the West Turned: Biting the Hands That Steal

Linda Milazzo
The House That George and Jack Built: Ownership Society Meets the Entrepreneurial Style

Nick Dearden
The Fantasy of "Even-Handedness": Blair's Cynical Policy on Palestine

James Petras
Evo Morales: All Growl, No Claws?

Website of the Day
Rat Out a Lobbyist for Jesus

 

January 3, 2006

James Ridgeway
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and 9/11: How Much Did the Bush Administration Know?

Laith al-Saud
Iraqi Intellectuals and the Occupation: an Interview with Dr. Saad Jawad

Dick J. Reavis
Border Walls: the View from Mexico

Joshua Frank
Hillary Clinton, AIPAC and Iran

Rochelle Gause
Inside Rafah: Collective Punishment as Normalcy

Missy Comley Beattie
How My Mother Went from a Republican to a Screaming Progressive

Paul de Rooij
A Glossary of Dispossession

 

January 2, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
A Gestapo Administration

Clancy Sigal
A Trip to the Far Side of Madness

Cindy Sheehan
A Tour of Europe: Friends Don't Let Friends Commit War Crimes

Alexander Cockburn
A NYT Editorial Contemplates Iraq

 

 

 

 

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February 8, 2006

The Most Dangerous Professor in America?

Making and Unmaking History with General Myers

By STAN COX

Retired Air Force General Richard B. Myers -- who was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2001 to 2005 -- has joined the faculty of Kansas State University as a professor of military history. According to press reports, Myers will continue to live in Virgina and visit the KSU campus three to four times each semester for visits of three to four days. His salary: $100,000 annually.

I know, $100,000 sounds like a lot of money for someone who'll be in the classroom for six work-weeks per year at the very most, but Myers will have other things to fill his time. The university notes that he'll also be "identifying potential speakers", "attending alumni and Foundation events," and "keeping some of his other options open." Nice work if you can get it.

Retiring to soft, lucrative jobs at colleges or think-tanks is, of course, nothing new for ex-government officials. But most often it seems to be the good people of the Washington, DC area, New York, or New England who shoulder the burden of supporting out-to-pasture, high-profile public servants. I guess it's time for those of us in Kansas to step up, do our part, and pay for the general's upkeep; however, we'd really like to know more about what our students, alumni, and taxpayers will be getting for the money.

KSU's president, to whom Myers will report directly, says, "His knowledge of foreign relations, presidential leadership and other topics as they relate to national security, international relations and military preparedness is invaluable." But if Myers is going to be teaching military history at a rate of several thousands dollars per lecture, we can only hope that his grasp of history and current events has improved since his days as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

Adjusting history to fit the future

General Myers became familiar to TV viewers via his Pentagon press conferences and Congressional hearings, usually playing straight man to the irrepressible defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

In those performances and other situations, Myers displayed a steadfast loyalty to the policies of the Bush Administration, regardless of how wildly they diverged from available facts or how quickly they bogged down and ruptured under the weight of political baggage. Such stout persistance in the face of reality may help an ex-military officer land a good job, but it's not generally regarded as the mark of a good history teacher.

Myers was the nation's top military officer through the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. During that period, his chief interest in history appeared to be in re-writing it.

For example, in December, 2001, with the Afghanistan campaign apparently going well, Myers told American Forces Press Service, "It is not just bin Laden we're after. [He] has handfuls of lieutenants we really want to go after ...We know who they are, they already have rewards on their heads, and we'll follow them wherever they go."

Later that same month, a US-Afghan attack on the Tora Bora region netted not a single al-Qaeda leader. Any who might have been in the area appeared to have escaped through a well-known mountain pass that was left unguarded. The following April, feeling no doubt that his pledge of December lay safely forgotten, Myers reassured Washington Post reporters that Tora Bora need not be considered a failure. "The goal there," he said, "was never after specific individuals."

That, along with his famous claim a few days later that "the goal has never been to get bin Laden," helped adjust history to the needs of the future and the coming invasion of Iraq.

"In history, there has never been a more humane campaign"

The following winter, during the buildup to the Iraq invasion, Myers responded to concerns over expected civilian casualties by providing this undeniable but less-than-enlightening observation about the nature of war: "People are going to die."

Military history students at KSU may want to know more than that about how invading armies should handle the issue of noncombatant deaths. Myers may want to describe for them one interesting preemptive strategy that he and Rumsfeld employed a month before the invasion: to blame the enemy for deaths caused by American weaponry.

In a Feb. 19, 2003 briefing, Myers <http://edition.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0302/19/se.06.html>said, "It is a violation of the law of armed conflict to use noncombatants as a means of shielding potential military targets--even those people who may volunteer for this purpose. Therefore if death or serious injury to a noncombatant resulted from these efforts, the individuals responsible for deploying any innocent civilians as human shields could be guilty of grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions."

In April, 2004, looking back over a year of war and occupation, Myers the historian told reporters, "I don't think there's ever in the history, the history of warfare, and warfare by its nature is not kind, it's cruel, it's very very cruel, make no mistake about it, but in the history of warfare, there has never been a more humane campaign than the one waged by coalition forces starting on March 19th of last year, and through today. And that goes for the operations in Fallujah."

By December 2005, Myers's "humane campaign" (featuring cluster bombs, white phosphorus, and other such gentle weapons) had, even by President Bush's own estimate, directly or indirectly caused a minimum 30,000 Iraqi civilian deaths. Relying on solid statistical analyses, the CounterPunch editors (in the print edition) have shown how the death toll is likely in the six figures, and perhaps as high as 500,000.

WMDs found: in Pentagon plans

Historians will have the task of sorting through the many and varied rationales that were used to justify the rush to war in Iraq. It will be interesting to see how Professor Myers deals with the question. Throughout the period, from the first drumbeats right up to the bitter end, Myers did his best to support the most prominent claim -- that Saddam Hussein had or was developing "weapons of mass destruction".

He even played a minor role in the Niger uranium drama. In February 2002, Marine Gen. Carlton W. Fulford Jr. went to Niger to check out charges that Saddam Hussein had tried to obtain uranium from that country. (This was around the same time that the CIA sent former ambassador Joseph Wilson on his more well-known mission to Niger.) Fulford, who "came away convinced the country's stocks were secure" submitted his report to Myers.

But, when the Niger scandal broke into the headlines in the summer of 2003, the Washington Post found the general to be of little help in sorting out the mess: "A spokesman for Myers said last night that the general has 'no recollection of the information' [i.e., Fulford's report] but did not doubt that it had been forwarded to him."

The Post went on to convey this deft double-negative explanation provided by Myers's spokesman: "Given the time frame of 16 months ago, information concerning Iraq not obtaining uranium from Niger would not have been as pressing as other subjects."

By the time the war got underway, however, Myers's interest in Iraqi weapons had intensified. In May 2003, after the Army's chief team assigned to search for WMDs -- the 75th Exploitation Task Force -- concluded its work without finding anything, Myers wasn't quite ready to give up on what had been the Bush administration's only effective pretext for the war. Seeming to undercut the conclusions drawn by his own team of experts, he asked, "Are they [WMDs] still perhaps out there somewhere in some sort of bunker?" They weren't.

A couple of weeks later, he was still keeping to the administration line: "Given time, given the number of prisoners now that we're interrogating, I'm confident that we're going to find weapons of mass destruction." But Myers turned out to be as poor a predictor of the future as he was an interpreter of the past.

Throughout that period when the White House and Pentagon were sounding the alarm over possible WMDs in Iraq, their officials, including Myers, were pushing the US not only to develop but to use a new generation of especially devastating WMDs -- so-called "bunker busting" nuclear weapons.

Myers told USA Today in July, 2003, "In terms of anthrax, it's said that gamma rays can ... destroy the anthrax spores, which is something we need to look at. And in chemical weapons, of course, the heat [of a nuclear blast] can destroy the chemical compounds and make them not develop that plume that conventional weapons might do, that would then drift and perhaps bring others in harm's way."

But, noted the paper, "Sidney Drell, a Stanford University physicist, determined that destroying a target dug 1,000 feet into rock would require a nuclear weapon with a yield of 100 kilotons--more than six times that of the Hiroshima bomb. The explosion of a nuclear bomb that big would launch enormous amounts of radioactive debris into the air and contaminate a huge area."

As a military historian, General Myers will probably know a good bit about what happened when we bombed Hiroshima, so he should be able to help his classes visualize what happens to people "in harm's way" when you drop a six-times-bigger bunker-buster.

Trying to keep torture chambers out of the history books

Seymour Hersh revealed in The New Yorker and his 2004 book Chain of Command that cruel treatment of prisoners by US troops in Afghanistan, Guantanamo, and Iraq had its origins in a secret Special Access Program. He wrote that a former intelligence official told him that "fewer than two hundred operatives and officials, including Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were 'completely read into the program.' The goal was to keep the operation protected. 'We're not going to read more people than necessary into our heart of darkness,' he said. 'The rules are Grab whom you must. Do what you want.' "

There is no evidence that Myers was concerned about the horrific results of that program until graphic evidence of abuse and torture started seeping into the public sphere. Even then, his main concern seemed to be in keeping the crimes under wraps and out of military history books. He tried to convince CBS's "60 Minutes II" not to reveal the infamous Abu Ghraib pictures to the US public, but managed only to delay their broadcast. (At that point, he claimed, he still had not read a " devastating" report by Major General Antonio M. Taguba on conditions at the prison and had not seen the photos.) He later went to court to stop the release of more such pictures.

Outraged last May at charges by Amnesty International that Guantanamo had become "The gulag of our time," Myers looked to another respected organization for cover, saying, "The ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross] has been at Guantanamo since day one. It is essentially a model facility."

He somehow failed to mention that, in the words of a Los Angeles Times columnist, "The ICRC has consistently chastised the U.S. for keeping an unknown number of 'ghost detainees' hidden away from legally mandated monitoring, for its open-ended detentions at Guantanamo Bay, for its 'renditions' of detainees to states using torture and for its use of interrogation techniques that themselves border on torture."

"We're definitely winning"

Myers, more than most other officials, has repeatedly stressed that the war in Iraq will be long and bloody and difficult. Looking at historical precedents, he has warned that insurgencies typically last from 7 to 12 years.

But when optimism is called for, Myers can rise to the occasion.

In April of last year, commenting on an upsurge in insurgent attacks, Myers told reporters, "In terms of the number of incidents, it's right about where it was a year ago." But he added, incongruously, "Almost any indicator you look at, the trends are up. So we're definitely winning."

In July, with the the nation's military actions appearing to be headed in no particular direction and with public support in need of shoring up, Myers and Rumsfeld appeared to decide that a repackaged effort might sell better. Myers told the National Press Club that the term "war on terror" was now out: "If you call it a war, then you think of people in uniform as being the solution." He and Rumsfeld suggested an alternative term: "global struggle against violent extremism".

Being even more vague and clumsy than "war on terror", the appellation "global struggle against violent extremism" has not proven as durable and will likely be lost to history.

Even though the US goal "has never been to get bin Laden", the Pentagon has enthusiastically trumpeted the capture of anyone who could be fingered as one of his high-level associates. In September 2005, Myers's last month as Chairman, US and Iraqi troops killed Abu Azzam, whom Myers identified as the "number two al Qaeda operative in Iraq, next to Zarqawi." Newsweek magazine checked that claim with three US government counterterrorism officials, who said, no, Azzam was in no way Number Two.

Independent counterterrorism consultant Evan Kohlmann told Newsweek, "If I had a nickel for every No. 2 and No. 3 they've arrested or killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, I'd be a millionaire."

That same month, Myers and Rumsfeld emphatically asserted that the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan by US troops did not hamstring the military's efforts to help Hurricane Katrina's victims. But an exhaustive Wall Street Journal investigation showed that just the opposite was true.

As Myers's tenure as Chairman was coming to a close and the occupation of Iraq remained awash in blood, Myers's upbeat assessments and historical rewrites became too much even for Senator John McCain. In Myers's final appearance before a Congressional committee as Chairman, the pro-war Arizona Republican fumed, "General Myers seems to assume that things have gone well in Iraq. General Myers seems to assume that the American people, the support for our conflict there is not eroding."

McCain continued: "General Myers seems to assume that everything has gone fine and our declarations of victory, of which there have been many, have not had an impact on American public opinion. Things have not gone as we had planned or expected, nor as we were told by you, General Myers."

In the academic world, twelve hundred miles from the political pressures of Washington, General Myers may prove to be a good educator. But can he be ten to fifty times as good as other part-time instructors, in keeping with his salary? One thing is clear: Whatever he accomplishes at Kansas State University can never undo the devastation he supervised for four years as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Stan Cox is a plant breeder and writer in Salina, Kansas. He can be reached at t.stan@cox.net.




 

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