Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Study group update - meeting March 25th

Below is an update on the next study group meeting.  I
suggest a Lenin reading, but it probably doesn't add
to what is said in the other readings and is more of a
summary.  Please let interested people or calendars
know about this.  For more information email
alliance_trianglenc@hotmail.com.

The group was advertised at the Conference of Students
United for a Responsible Global Environment February
25th at NCCU and I plan to table March 18th at the
Fayetteville anti-war protest.

Triangle Marxist Forum March discussion on the
evolution of society (the theory of historical
materialism), Saturday March 25th at 1:30pm at Duke's
Center for Documentary Studies (cds.aas.duke.edu).
For the list of background readings see
durhamspark.blogspot.com.

Readings for the March meeting:

Marx and Engels:  Communist Manifesto, Sections I and
III

Engels:  The Origin of the Family, Private Propety,
and the State, Sections I and II

A Short History of the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union (Bolshevik),  Chapter 4 Section II

A useful overview:  Lenin:  The Teachings of Karl
Marx, Section I:  Marx's Teachings – The Class
Struggle

These readings are also available on the Web.
Marx2Mao is a recommended source, if it is still
available, and the Marxist Internet Archive might have
all of these readings as well.  Email me for help
finding texts.

The discussion won't be completely reading based, so
if you don't read everything you can still participate.  The
format will be a discussion based on what questions/comments
people bring and on general study questions.
 

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Second Rendition Article - How NC Relates to the USA's Global Torture Archipelago

The Guradian/UK published an article March 19th (republished at http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0319-07.htm), Afghanistan: "One Huge US Jail," which was the first article I saw on the Johnston County torture connection. The article alleges that the airplane based here has been used in the kidnapping of foreign citizens for torture and in several cases murder under torture. It also describes the lawless and oppressive occupation of Afghanistan by our country and supposedly more peace loving countries in Europe that later verbally opposed the Iraq War. There are also articles on the global torture network in Alliance!, www.allianceml.com.

Triangle Marxist Forum discussion group update: The next meeting will be March 25th 1:30-3:30 at the Center for Documentary Studies again. Also, I'm going to suggest a Lenin reading that provides a good overview, but the other readings cover the same material, so they are somewhat interchangeable. I'll post more later in the week.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Spotlighting North Carolina's CIA Torture Conection

Below is the first of three useful articles I will post on the current CIA's involvement in torture, especially the connection to activities at an airport in Johnston County, North Carolina. There are protests every second Saturday (but maybe not in March, because of the March 18th anti-war demonstration in Fayetteville) against this near the airport (see the Independent Weely Act Now section for details).

There will probably be an article about this is the spring issue of Alliance! (probably coming out in April), and we have already published at least one article on the government's use of torture.

Another thing to look at is whether Lockheed's RTP offices (there are two listed in the phone book) are involved in supplying civilian interrogators, who might practice torture, for the government.

What Is AERO CONTRACTORS? Here's the rundown.
Saturday, 19 November 2005
by Clayton Hallmark
St. Louis Independent Media Center:http://www.stlimc.org/

BREAKING SCOOP IN NORTH CAROLINA [Smithfield, North Carolina, Nov. 18, 2005] Tarheels won't be put under the boot heel of Big Brother. They were well represented among the 60 protestors of CIA torture flights out of Smithfield, NC. Fourteen protesters were arrested Friday for trespassing at the Johnston County Airport near Smithfield. They gathered to protest the use of the airport by a company that reportedly shuttles prisoners to torture and nonjudicial confinement for the CIA. Channel 5 (WRAL-TV) in Raleigh is doing a good job of covering the story.

The group targeted Aero Contractors Limited, a company located on the airport grounds. News organizations, including Indymediahttp://chapelhill.indymedia.org/news/2005/11/17197.php, have reported that planes for secret CIA rendition (kidnap-torture) flights originate from the airport. Of course the CIA says that it does not conductrenditions.

THE CIA PILOT'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Aero Contractors, Ltd, is one of the real (as opposed to shell) companies tied to the CIA. It owns no planes, according to the FAA's registry database, but its operation in eastern North Carolina is perhaps th emain hub of the CIA airline. Another hub is the Camp Peary Naval Reservation, "the Farm" near Williamsburg, VA, which the CIA uses for training and other purposes. (Is this the "family farm" where the DCIA, Porter Goss, hopes to retire soon?) Still another is the Bob Sikes Field airport in Florida, which Tepper Aviation operates from as discussed later. And then there is Dulles Airport outside Washington, DC, which is a hub of government activity of all kinds.

All of those CIA prison plane flights that are so much in the news lately? Here is the typical flight plan: Johnston County, NC, to Dulles (to pick up CIA personnel), to Sweden (or some other country with a sizable Muslim population), to some destination in theMiddle East or North Africa -- one of the countries that torture as a part of interrogations.

AERO CONTRACTORS HISTORY Aero Contractors, Ltd, was founded in 1979 by the late (he "bought the farm" near Johnston County Airport in 2001), Jim "Peg Leg" Rhyne, who was one of the chief pilots of Air America, the CIA's airline of the Vietnam era [which I think has been tied to illegal drug smuggling up to the present], which has been succeeded by Aero Contractors and about a dozen other companies.

The current proprietor (president) of Aero Contractors is Stormin' Norman Richardson, an old hand at the "hospitality" business. Richardson once operated a truck stop (Stormin' Norman's) and apparently operates a Stormin' Norman's chicken-and-ribs joint in his home town of Kenly, NC. Richardson appears to be a figurehead at the company, more involved in his chicken-and-ribs business, since almost all public contact is with Robert W. Blowers, the assistant general manager, who has actually run the company since about 1994.

Dun and Bradstreet lists Aero Contractors' business as "aircraft rental with pilot." This company probably is the primary supplier of pilots for CIA-owned and-operated planes http://chapelhill.indymedia.org/news/2005/11/17197.php.I t has no planes of its own, but has claimed to lease them from Premier Executive Transport, a well known CIA front company (whose planes have been moved to other holding companies). As a supplier of planes to Aero and the CIA, Premier has been supplanted by the other shell companies shown in the CIA plane-ownership table http://chapelhill.indymedia.org/news/2005/11/17197.php.

Aero Contractors has no website and does no advertising for business, apparently getting all it needs from the CIA, the military, and possibly other government agencies. It is, however, a real company with premises and about 80 employees. The company operates out a blue hangar at the south end of the 5500-ft runway, at the end of Charlie Day St., at Johnston County Airport (identifier code JNX) near Raleigh, NC. This fact makes the Johnston CountyAirport a hub, perhaps the hub, of CIA air operations. Its address is 3463 Swift Creek Rd, Smithfield, NC 27577.

AERO CONTRACTORS PLAYS GAMES WITH THE PLANES Interestingly, although the company has no planes registered, the Kinston (NC) Free Press newspaper reported that the "Smithfield charter plane company" was building a 20,000-square-foot, $2 million hangar at the Kinston Regional Jetport TO STORE *ITS* BOEING 737 BUSINESS JET! This apparently is a reference toTHE *CIA'S* (not Aero's) 737, Boeing serial number 33010, N-number 4476S (currently owned under the cover of the Nevada shell company Keeler and Tate Management, LLC, which shares an address and telephone with former U.S. Senator and Reagan "First Friend" Paul Laxalt).

In an article published on March 9, 2005, Aero's assistant general manager, Robert W. Blowers, told the Raleigh News & Observer that "Aero Contractors, which
leased the jets for about a year, in about 2002 or 2003, from Massachusetts-based Premier Executive Transport Services, Blowers said." The same article reported: "Aero Contractors let its leases with Premier Executive expire about a year ago, Blowers said. Aero Contractors no longer offers jets for its clients and instead leases turboprop planes, he said.

"http://newsobserver.com/news/story/2192261p-8573362c.html

Though Blowers said that Aero let its jet leases expire about March 2004, the Goldsboro (NC) News Argus reported two months *after* that, quote, "...a 20,000-square-foot hangar is being built by Aero Contractors, an aircraft charter company. It will house a Boeing Business Jet 737-700 aircraft."http://64.233.161.104/search?q\u003dcache:2e6qpm3hidIJ:www.ncdot.org/news/dailyclips/2004-06-24t.html+kinston+jetport+%22aero+contractors%22&hl\u003den

Why build a hangar when you no longer have the plane (the CIA's 737)?

Including the 737 owned by the dummy Keeler and Tate, Aero Contractors operates about 20 planes, probably mostly drawn from the 27-plane roster of CIA planes (one of which is the Boston Red Sox executive jet) shown in the table, plus about 26 of its own, mostly small Cessnas. It also provides avionics modification and repair services as well as pilots.

PLANESPOTTER'S GUIDE TO AERO CONTRACTORS Planespotter hobbyists use high-power binoculars at the end of runways to record the comings and goings of specific planes at airports around the world, and post sightings and photos on websites like http://www.airliners.net/ . For example searching that site for the CIA's 737, tail No. N4476S, you can find that it was in Prague this year and you can see a photo of it during a takeoff in Spain the day after the Madrid terrorist attack last year. The Prague sighting alone belies the claims that the CIA does not conduct prison plane flights to EasternEurope.

Planespotters monitor the radio transmissions to and from these planes around the world and at CIA hubs like the Johnston County Airport near Smithfield ,North Carolina, where they contact the airport on122.8 MHz and the Raleigh approach-and-departure controllers on 125.8 MHz. Sites like http://www.airnav.com/airport/ give the frequencies for the vast majority of the world's airports. Note: Reporting the sighting of airplanes is legal; reporting the*content* of radio transmissions is not. Merely listening to communications using an ordinary receiver that covers the aviation frequencies is legal and helps planespotters get photographs and record activities of desired planes. Of course the CIA says that it does not conduct renditions.

Since the runway at Johnston County is too short to accommodate the CIA 737, Aero Contractors operates that plane out of the Kinston Regional Jetport (identifier code ISO) near Kinston, NC (Lenoir county), which has an 11,500-ft runway. Aero Contractors stored the $50-million-plus aircraft outside at the North Carolina Global TransPark (GTP) site of the jetport, pending completion of the hangar. The GTP is a failed state-run industrial park for aviation-dependent
handful of employees at this location next to MountainAir Cargo, at the end of Jetport Rd (2780 Jetport Rd,Suite A, Kinston, NC 28504-8032), which may be theheadquarters of the management.

If you take a Delta Airlines commuter flight to Kinston (from Atlanta), you might get a glimpse of theCIA's 737 (N33010) on the ground, or of its Gulfstream V, N44982 (serial number 581). You might see any ofthe CIA planes (except the 737) at Johnston County, especially the planes of CIA aircraft holding companies Aviation Specialties and Stevens Express Leasing. This is because Aero Contractors is their main source of pilots. The CIA frequently changes the N-numbers. It also creates new companies as needed to provide cover, and plays a shell game with the shell companies, shifting the planes from one company to another. When the CIA-owned Gulfstream V heads overseas to snatch a victim, it takes off from the Johnston County Airport (JNX) at Smithville, NC, stops at the Dulles International Airport (IAD) in Virginia (near Washington, DC) to pick up the snatch team, and heads overseas. Frequently it stops at the Shannon Airport in Ireland for refueling.

For other jobs and other planes (the 737, forexample), there is sometimes a stop at the CAMP PEARYLANDING STRIP (W94), about 2 miles NE of Queens Lake, Virginia, before heading for Dulles. Camp Peary is just east of the route 143 Williamsburg exit ofInterstate 64. From Queens Drive in Queens Lake, youcan see the planes landing or taking off. If you happened to be "fishing" on the York River, you would pass within a few meters of runway 23 about a mile and a half north of the outlet of the Queen Creek. The landing strip is within the Camp Peary NavalReservation. All of this is in southeastern Virginia, just east of Williamsburg, a town famous for its historical restorations. The coastal plain of Virginia and neighboring North Carolina, a limited area with a width of up to about 100 miles, has most of the main centers of CIA aviation and other activities.

The CIA's Gulfstream, N44982 (ex-N379P), and other Aero Contractors planes except the 737 can operate out of the Johnston County Airport (JNX) in North Carolina. Other frequent visitors to JNX are the planes of CIA aircraft holding companies (see table) AVIATION SPECIALTIES, INC.; STEVENS EXPRESS LEASING, INC.; DEVON HOLDING AND LEASING, INC.; and CIA contractor (plane owner-operator) AVIATION WORLDWIDESERVICES / PRESIDENTIAL AVIATION. The JNX airport uses the following communications channels (frequencies arein megahertz, Mhz). Of course the CIA says that itdoes not conduct renditions.

JOHNSTON COUNTY AIRPORT, NORTH CAROLINA, (JNX) FREQUENCIES (perhttp://www.airnav.com/)CTAF/UNICOM: 122.8RALEIGH APPROACH: 125.3RALEIGH DEPARTURE: 125.3

The CIA airline's flagship, Boeing 737 N4476S, operates out of the Kinston Regional Jetport (KISO).Kinston uses these frequencies (megahertz, MHz):
KINSTON REGIONAL JETPORT, NORTH CAROLINA, (ISO) FREQUENCIESCTAF: 120.6UNICOM: 122.95KINSTON GROUND: 121.9 [0630-2200] KINSTON TOWER: 120.6 335.55 [0630-2200] SEYMOUR JOHNSON APPROACH: 127.3 SEYMOUR JOHNSON DEPARTURE: 127.3

* COMMUNICATIONS PROVIDED BY NEW BERN RADIO ON FREQ122.15R.

* APCH/DEP SVC PRVDD BY WASHINGTON ARTCC (NEW BERNRCAG) ON FREQ135.5/272.75 WHEN APCH CTL CLSD

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Triangle Marxist Forum study group information

The meeting on January 28th was very small, but a number of people said they were interested in this, so there will be a second meeting. What towns, venues, and times work for people who want to come? Unless I hear otherwise (here or by the local Alliance email), I am thinking of having it on a Saturday at the Center for Documentary Studies again, later this month or early in March.

My proposal for group is to start by following the eight thematic classes produced by Bill Bland of Britain's Communist League in the early 70's and some of Alliance's added suggested readings. After this we could either go deeper into some of the readings, look at modern issues like national questions in this country or why the USSR fell (what were the economic and political reasons?), or discuss non-Marxist, but possibly informative books like "What's the Matter With Kansas?" or whatever participants suggest.

The first course is on the evolution of society (the theory of historical materialism). The readings I propose are sections I and III of the Communist Manifesto (pages 482-496 and 506-517) , Sections I and II of Engels' The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State (pages 134-190), and Chapter 4 Section II (pages 105-132) of A Short History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolshevik), a theortical section. I probably haven't read the Engels reading before, so that will be new to me.

Is this too much reading? Unless we focus on the readings, just reading the Manifesto might be enough for the discussion. The courses have a question and answer format focusing on basics, rather than directly focusing on readings. Alliance recommends the Marx2Mao site for readings these works online, which I am told is now available from a European mirror site. The Marxist Internet Archive might also be useful.

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Study group meeting and impeachment actions this week

An interest meeting for a Marxism discussion group will be held Saturday, January 28, at 3pm at Duke's Center for Documentary Studies (1317 W. Pettigrew St., near the intersection with Swift Avenue/Broad Street, directions available at cds.aas.duke.edu). The group will combine
classical texts (probably starting with The Communist Manifesto and going on thematically) with modern or non-Marxist works on current issues and situations (possibly Thomas Franks' What's The Matter With Kansas?). It will look at Marxist economic, political, and social theories and practice. Organized by Alliance Marxist-Leninist (www.allianceml.com) but not limited to Alliance's viewpoint and discussion with members of other groups welcome (I asked local FRSO, Ray O. Light, and Solidarity groups if they would like to be involved, and others are welcome). There seems to be at least some individual interest in doing this, so there will probably be at least a handful of people at the first meeting. For more information email alliance_trianglenc at hotmail.com.

Thursday at 7pm there will be a meeting at Internationalist Books (405 W. Franklin St.) in Chapel Hill to plan a group meeting with Representative David Price (D-NC), which will probably be Monday, the 30th at 1:30 at his Chapel Hill office. The meeting is to present a Bush impeachment petition (mainly relating to the Downing Street memos, available at www.afterdowningstreet.org) petition to him. The petition is online at www.petitiononline.com/dsmnc/petition.html. This Friday there will be a Triangle town meeting on impeachment at the Carrboro Town Hall (I think the address is 105 W. Main Street), possibly the first in a series, the next one being February 28th at the Chapel Hill Town Hall. For more information, see downingstreetactionnc.blogspot.com. Things are starting to move more with this locally, and we will know better where we stand next week.

Monday, January 02, 2006

Defending the US Constitution

I believe in socialism and the dictatorship of the proletariat (meaning the dominance of the working class, instead of the current domination of the bourgeoisie), but this doesn't mean I don't respect our Constitution or that I am hypocritical in saying the Bush Administration is unConstitutional.

The Constitution is bourgeois and designed to limit democracy, oppressing the lower classes, as are the constitutions of all capitalist states. For example, the two house Congress, Electoral College, Executive, illusion of an impartial judiciary, original protection of slavery, and other features. Some of these features might be useful in the future, but from what the Founding Fathers wrote, it looks like these were used to safeguard the wealthy classes. There isn't an abstract government system that is always best, it depends on the context of who that government serves.

That said, the Constitution was an improvement over the feudal remnants in Britain during the American Revolution and it makes classical fascism difficult to implement here. The Bill of Rights, which wasn't in the original draft of the Constitution, is democratic in many ways. The separation of powers, which will probably be reduced after a revolution (to combine the executive and legislative bodies in councils like communes and soviets), was designed to prevent change threatening the rich, but today it protects us against Bush's authoritarianism. I say it protects us, but really it is up to the people to safeguard the Constitution, otherwise it is just the scrap of paper Bush thinks it is. For worst case scenarios the Constitution allows citizens to be armed against tyranny (as did the Paris Commune, the original socialist government). A revolution within the Constitution and parliamentary means is unlikely, but the Constitution does allow that possibility.

We can respect the Constitution and demand that the bourgeoisie follow it, but for true democracy and the end of class oppression we must go beyond it. The working class and others, even part of the bourgeoisie, defend the Constitution against those who want to limit democracy to suit the era of monopoly capitalism (see Lenin's Imperialism). But even Jefferson, writing before the existence of a clear proletariat, acknowledged that to defend democracy there might have to be future watering of the "tree of liberty" with blood, which I assume would also mean new government. Following the second American Revolution, the a new constitution will probably be written, following American principles and establishing the rule of law, but not designed to legitimate the oppression of the working class (Capital and other works explain why the existence of wealthy capitalists is oppression and not just the way things are). As socialism develops into communism new constitutions might be needed, to better suit the economic system of the time, this time written without revolution to overthrow vested interests who prevent necessary change.

The Constitution is flawed, but one side wants to ignore or rewrite it to increase oppression and subvert democracy, while progressives want to safeguard the bourgeois democracy it creates and increase the power of the people, which I think will require going outside and beyond the Constitution.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Today is the Anniversary of Stalin's Birth

Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin was born in Gori in the country of Georgia December 21, 1879. Edvard Radzhinsky argues convincingly in his biography of Stalin that Stalin was actually born on that date in 1878, though. The bourgeoisie, especially in the West, views Stalin as being as bad, or worse than, Hitler, a totalitarian dictator who killed millions of Soviet and foreign citizens. Allegations of Stalin's "crimes" are usually based on exaggerations and deliberate lies, spread by dishonest Trotskyists, fascists, revisionists like Khrushchev, and Western secret service agents like Conquest, not that Stalin and the USSR were never wrong. From a working class and intenationalist standpoint what the bourgeoisie call crimes (collectivization, purges, trials of saboteurs and spies, the nonaggression pact with Germany, etc) were instead essentially correct and beneficial policies which helped the majority of people - leading the USSR along Leninist lines towards socialism, defeating Nazi Germany and other fascists, and supporting revolutions and national liberation struggles. At the same time, Alliance Marxist-Leninist argues that within the Soviet Union there was a battle going on between Stalin's true, or revolutionary, Marxist-Leninist faction and revisionists who wanted to restore capitalism. Also Stalin does not deserve credit or blame for everything the USSR did, so it takes analysis to judge the usefulness of policies and whether Stalin deserves credit (or criticism) for a given policy.

The unofficial party line of American and Western historians is against Stalin because he was a revolutionary leader who consolidated Soviet socialism and successfully encouraged indigeneous revolutions worldwide. Compare this to subsequent Soviet leaders who presided over the dismantling of socialism, corrupted the struggles of others (such as the Afghans and unsuccessfully with the Albanians), and in the end encouraged the collapse of the USSR and its allies, who had been reduced to what some call Soviet social-imperialist colonies. It is partly because of counterrevolution in the USSR that the Taliban controlled Afghanistan and then fell to an imperialist occupation, perhaps millions of Iraqis died under the UN sanctions and tens of thousands more in the Iraq War, Haiti is under a brutal UN occupation, and conditions and life spans in the former Soviet Union have fallen while a few get rich off state property almost given away for nothing. For this reason it is obvious that the bourgeoisie should hate Stalin and praise Gorbachev, Deng, and other "communist" leaders. For these reasons I would say that Stalin made a great contribution to the social, economic, and even spiritual progress of humanity (as did the USSR for much of its existence) and to Marxist-Leninist theory and practice.

In the future I will add more details or sources to read for a revolutionary view of Stalin so you can judge this for yourself. The introduction to Bruce Franklin's "The Essential Stalin," an anthology of Stalin's writings, is a useful overview, as are articles at www.allianceml.com, www.plp.org, and www.northstarcompass.org.

Merry winter solstice holidays (today is the shortest day of the year and the beginning of astronomical winter, which is probably why so many holidays mark this time of the year)!

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

The Democrats' Wars

Below is another article (posted at www.counterpunch.org) on Edwards' and the Democratic Party's overall support for the Iraq War. I feel that the Democrats didn't vote for war only out of "ambition" (and the if they did they should see now that they made a terrible political miscalculation and I hope they are called to account for it). They are as pro-monopoly, pro-war as Republicans, and welcomed the chance to topple the Iraqi government on any grounds. If they didn't actually think this (although I think many did), their actions still served an imperialist agenda, yet again. The Afghan War at least had some connection to defense of the nation, but I think bin Laden is only a small part of the reason for it (the rest being geopolitics and Unocal's gas pipeline), and even that has been minimized by the White House now. They also let bin Laden escape before 2001 and after the invasion of Afghanistan, at Tora Bora.

http://www.counterpunch.org/walsh12052005.html
What Did the Democrats Know and When Did they Know It?
The Lies of John Edwards
By JOHN WALSH

The apology of John Edwards, former Senator and 2004 Democratic vice presidential candidate, for voting for the Iraq war in 2002, has been widely praised. But his apology is based on a lie, one that other Democrats are likely to embrace and one which will serve their ambitions but hide the truth. We should have no illusions about this, for to believe otherwise is to set ourselves up for the continuation of Bush's war by a Democrat.

Edwards declared in an op-ed column in the Washington Post on November 13, 2005: “The argument for going to war with Iraq was based on intelligence that we now know was inaccurate. The information the American people were hearing from the president—and that I was being given by our intelligence community—wasn’t the whole story. Had I known this at the time, I never would have voted for this war.” Sounds simple enough. “Had I known then what I know now, etc.” Poor John Edwards was deceived. But was he? How was it that 21 other Democratic Senators and 2 Republicans were not deceived and voted against the war?

Part of the answer arrived in another op-ed the Washington Post one week later, November 20, 2005, by another former Senator, Bob Graham, entitled: “What I knew Before the Invasion.” Like Edwards, Graham was a member, in fact the chair, of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee in the period leading up to the war and on October 11, 2002 when the vote on the war on Iraq was taken. In a nutshell, Graham tells us that everyone on that committee knew that Bush was lying about weapons of mass destruction. Graham begins like a good, loyal Democrat, telling us that his colleagues were deceived, at least “most” of them. But he then tells us that the Senate Select Intelligence Committee knew better. Here are some of Graham’s words:

“At a meeting of the Senate intelligence committee on Sept. 5, 2002, CIA Director George Tenet was asked what the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) provided as the rationale for a preemptive war in Iraq. An NIE is the product of the entire intelligence community, and its most comprehensive assessment. I was stunned when Tenet said that no NIE had been requested by the White House and none had been prepared. Invoking our rarely used Senatorial authority, I directed completion of an NIE.”

“Tenet objected, saying that his people were too committed to other assignments to analyze Saddam Hussein’s capabilities and will to use chemical, biological and possibly nuclear weapons. We insisted, and three weeks later the community produced a classified NIE”.

“There were troubling aspects to this 90-page document. While slanted toward the conclusion that Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction stored or produced at 550 sites, it contained vigorous dissents on key parts of the information, especially by the departments of State and Energy. Particular skepticism was raised about aluminum tubes that were offered as evidence Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear program. As to Hussein’s will to use whatever weapons he might have, the estimate indicated he would not do so unless he was first attacked.”

“Under questioning, Tenet added that the information in the NIE had not been independently verified by an operative responsible to the United States. In fact, no such person was inside Iraq. Most of the alleged intelligence came from Iraqi exiles or third countries, all of which had an interest in the United States’ removing Hussein, by force if necessary.” (Note by jw: Who do you suppose those “third countries” were that were fanning the flames of war?)

“The American people needed to know these reservations, and I requested that an unclassified, public version of the NIE be prepared. On Oct. 4, Tenet presented a 25-page document titled ‘Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs.’ It represented an unqualified case that Hussein possessed them, avoided a discussion of whether he had the will to use them and omitted the dissenting opinions contained in the classified version. Its conclusions, such as “If Baghdad acquired sufficient weapons-grade fissile material from abroad, it could make a nuclear weapon within a year,” underscored the White House’s claim that exactly such material was being provided from Africa to Iraq.”

“From my advantaged position, I had earlier concluded that a war with Iraq would be a distraction from the successful and expeditious completion of our aims in Afghanistan. Now I had come to question whether the White House was telling the truth—or even had an interest in knowing the truth.”

“On Oct. 11, I voted no on the resolution to give the president authority to go to war against Iraq. I was able to apply caveat emptor. Most of my colleagues could not.”

John Edwards was a member of that Senate Select Intelligence Committee, and he voted for the war. Who were the other Democratic senators? They were Senators Bayh, Edwards, DURBIN, Feinstein, LEVIN, MIKULSKI, Rockefeller and WYDEN as well as Tom Daschle, then majority leader, an ex officio member. I have capitalized those who voted against the war resolution and who should be hailed as senators of integrity. But Bayh, Daschle, Edwards, Feinstein and Rockefeller, all of whom with the exception of Feinstein, have presidential ambitions, voted for the war despite the fact that they had good reason to know the administration was Bushies were lying. (And let’s not forget the Republicans on the committee: Dewine, Hatch, Inhoffe, Kyle, Lugar, Roberts, Richard Shelby, Fred Thompson and ex officio, Trent Lott.)

There were 19 members of that committee, all of whom had to know that Bush was lying. Only the four in caps above voted against the war. But if 19, out of what is often called a small and intimate club of 100 Senators, knew that the war was based on a lie, can one believe that the rest did not know? And given the bloodletting that was about to be unleashed, why did none of these 19, including Graham, release the “confidential” NIE report? What sort of men and women are these?

Let us carry this one step further. There were 23 Senate votes against the war, only 4 of whom were on the Senate Select Intelligence Committee. If we add to that 23, the five Democrats (Bayh, Daschle, Edwards, Feinstein and Rockefeller), we have 28. It would have taken only 5 more to sustain a veto against the war. Let’s see who was available among the pro-war votes. There were Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, Max Cleland (Yes, he voted for the war!), Christopher Dodd, Tom Harkin (Yes, he voted for the war!), Ernst Hollings, Harry Reid (now minority leader) and Charles Schumer. (That’s 8, bringing the total to 36.) So those Dems cannot say their votes did not matter. They cannot claim we would have gone to war anyway. If they had been willing to filibuster against the war or filibuster to allow the inspectors to complete their work, there would have been no war. These are Dems on whom progressives rely. They betrayed us, and they have blood on their hands since it was in their power to stop the war. But their ambitions came first. (Chuck Hagel who now professes to be anti-war and John McCain who wears his “integrity” on his sleeve would have made two excellent additions among the Republicans.)

Finally it is worth recalling that the Democrats were in the majority in the Senate at the time the war vote was taken on October, 11, 2002. So this is every bit as much a Democratic war as a Republican one.

And that brings us full circle. Why did Graham write his column which, if read carefully, so implicates Edwards and so many others? Actually Graham set out to do the opposite, to excuse his colleagues. He was trying to explain how he could vote against the war while 99 other Dems voted for it. He was trying to excuse them with his insiders knowledge. As he says in the opening to his op-ed:

“In the past week President Bush has twice attacked Democrats for being hypocrites on the Iraq war. ‘More than 100 Democrats in the House and Senate, who had access to the same intelligence, voted to support removing Saddam Hussein from power,’ he said.”

“The president’s attacks are outrageous. Yes, more than 100 Democrats voted to authorize him to take the nation to war. Most of them, though, like their Republican colleagues, did so in the legitimate belief that the president and his administration were truthful in their statements that Saddam Hussein was a gathering menace—that if Hussein was not disarmed, the smoking gun would become a mushroom cloud.”

Bush is telling a lie, of course, when he says the Dems had “the same intelligence” as he had. But it contains a kernel of truth, which must be scaring the hell out of the Dems as they feel pressure to abandon the war. (Bush and Cheney finally say something with an element of truth!!!) The kernel is that enough Democrats had enough knowledge to know that we were being lied into war in October, 2002. And except for a courageous 21 Senators, along with 2 Republicans, they went along for the ride - with their careers in mind. So in attempting to excuse his colleagues, Graham’s op-ed leaves his fellow members of the Select Intelligence Committee hanging out to dry. (It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of folks. And just perhaps, that very thought occurred to Graham as he penned his piece. ) And he raises suspicions about the rest of the Senate, with the exception of the 23. (And of course how is he to explain the votes of the 23; are they to be labeled traitors to save the reputations of Hillary, Kerry et al? That is a tough sell.)

Where does that leave us? The crisis that is the war in Iraq has become a crisis of Democracy. Right now it is crystal clear that there is no true opposition party, although there are minor elements (very minor ones) among the Left in the Democratic party and the Libertarians in the Republican party. These could constitute a genuine antiwar opposition. Until that happens, the war will go on, the neocons may drive us into further wars and our democracy will be further imperiled.

It is worthwhile looking back at the Senate membership of the 107th Congress and comparing the list to those Senators voting against the war on Iraq (http://www.democrats.com/node/6890). Pick your own favorite Judas.
John Walsh can be reached at http://us.f540.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=jvwalshmd@gmail.com.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Outrageous Crimes Against Historical Memory in Iraq

Below is one of the more shocking articles I have seen recently about the crimes of the occupiers and their allies in Iraq, posted on UNC's surgelocal listserv. This is like the report that the US military took over Iraqi Olympic facilities and barred Iraqis from using them. This explains why the majority of Iraqis oppose the occupation and 45% support violent resistance (according to a leaked survey commissioned by the UK and conducted by Iraqi researchers). I am surprised that Iraq and the entire Arab world hasn't risen up and overthrown the occupation over this and other atrocities. Do Iraqis not care about this as much as I would expect (or do they not know about it?) or is it harder to fight for national liberation than I realize? It is hard to get a sense of the resistance, with US commercial media downplaying and distorting it, and online sources being hard to follow and verify, and since they make opposite claims. It is also hard to find out about non-violent and quiet, everyday acts of resistance. I have been more supportive of the right of Iraqis to fight back with violence than most activists locally, but it is a difficult position to take, with the support for pacifism in the US left and worry of whether the public is open enough to understand the right to resist.

The article starts by condemning Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge. I don't know enough about it to say I agree or that this is more anti-communist or reactionary propaganda. Either way, while peaceful means are best, violence is not a good reason to condemn what has been called the Cambodian Revolution. I want to know who was repressed and for what purpose, and in what context before I decide for myself whether I would support or condemn the Khmer Rouge. From what little I know about it (the History Channel didn't help much there) I would guess that it was not proletarian or socialist, but it was a Cambodian (or should I say Kampuchean?) issue. Someday I will get to reading about it in more detail, though there seem to be few books on the Khmer Rouge in local libraries.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=ARB20051126&articleId=1330


Iraq’s “Year Zero”

by Felicity Arbuthnot

November 26, 2005

The continuing destruction of Iraq’s history - ancient and modern - of homes, lives and civil society under the watch of and at the hands of US and British troops - in defiance of a swathe of international law - is an uncanny and chilling mirror image of Pol Pot’s Year Zero.

In 1975 : ‘Society was to be purified ... throughout Cambodia, deadly purges were conducted to eliminate remnants of the old society: the educated, the wealthy, the (religious elders) police, doctors, lawyers, teachers, former government officials, soldiers .... Education, health care... was halted; cities forcibly evacuated....The country sealed off from the outside world.’ History, monuments, ancient and modern, world heritage sites … were all erased from the earth. Newspapers, radio and television were banned.

Secret prisons were built, Moslems ‘were forced to eat pork.’ ‘Up to twenty thousand people were tortured into giving false confessions in a school in Phnom Penh, converted into a jail ... elsewhere suspects were often shot before being questioned.’(1) Think Abu Ghraib (and don’t forget Guantanamo) and all those other centers where Iraq’s disappeared are incarcerated, now admitted - but not where. Think the shootings at road blocks, the ‘cleansing’ of Iraq’s towns and cities. Add to Pol Pot’s horrific regime only the killing of nearly eighty journalists in thirty months, the bombing of two television stations - Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya, whose map grid reference had been trustingly given to the Pentagon - so any light falling on the slaughter and destruction of a nation and it’s heritage, becomes impossible - and the all is Iraq, writ with succinct accuracy.

Iraq’s society too is being ‘purified’, with precisely the same categories of humanity targeted by Pol Pot being killed in their hundreds: academics to doctors, scientists to soldiers. Former US Viceroy Paul Bremer called his purification ‘de-Ba’athification’ and sacked just about every strata of society needed to run a civilized one - in Iraq’s Year Zero, as Cambodia, their real sin was their race and its heritage, ancient and modern.

The destruction, looting of the haunting wonders of the National Museum, Mosul Museum, the two million irreplaceable books, manuscripts reduced to ashes, records of the National Library, the University of Endowment with its unique collection of ancient Qurans, the vandalization of Babylon and Ur by the new Barbarians - US soldiers - and desecration of thousands of archeological sites - the very history of mankind - have been heart wrenchingly recorded. Not recorded is the equally illegal and ongoing, planned destruction of every vestige of Iraq’s more modern history, on the orders of the Supreme Committee for de-Ba’athification - Pol Pot couldn’t have bettered that tag.

In Basra, early casualties were the dead heroes of the US-driven Iran-Iraq war, whose great bronze figures lined part of the corniche, arm out, pointing toward Iran. They were controversial and subject of much debate in a nation invaded repeatedly, throughout its history, its people utterly weary of war. But they were Iraq’s sons and died in defence of their country. They are no more.

The museum up the road, commemorating more of the dead of the eight year conflagration, of whom so many on both sides were lost it has been compared to World War 1, was also destroyed and with it, the only memory for so many: their identity cards, with details and photograph, hundred upon hundred, of the silent dead, living, staring from wall after wall. Real people, mostly so young:; the date they celebrated their birthdays, for all to see, occupation, skills learned over student years, engendered by youthful aspirations, never now to be met. The last vestiges of them have now vanished. Imagine if the Imperial War Museum in London, the Vietnam Memorial Wall, Arlington Cemetery, the Holocaust Museum, the Hiroshima Memorial were raised to the ground. Unthinkable - but Iraq’s grief is, it seems, simply inconsequential. That these are ‘grave breaches’ under Additional Protocol 1 of the expanded Geneva Convention of 1977 and happened under watch of the British Army has not been addressed. That the British Army itself looted a vast statue of Iraq’s President and took it back to their Somerset, south of England, base (2) - at British tax payers’ expense - has also not been addressed and Protocol 1 also applies.

The British though, had been told their first duty was to head for the oil terminal and secure it (3). Statues and museums clearly paled against of the significance of Iraq’s oil.

North in Baghdad early violations by the US army, included the statue toppling and squatting in Palaces, ‘using national historic buildings’ as a ‘command centre’ is also a violation. It is incumbent in the region, for each leader to leave behind him something more magnificent than his predecessor, the Palaces are both national assets - not American ones - and tomorrow’s history. National buildings too are protected, not free board and lodging for illegal invaders. Reports too numerous to cite recorded US soldiers returning home with palace ‘souvenirs’ they thieved and also priceless artifacts, prosecutions have been minimal or missing.

Over fifteen hundred modern paintings and sculptures disappeared from the city’s Museum of Fine Arts, where to visit was to gaze in awe at the wondrous imagination which created unique beauty. In June1993 an American missile killed the Museum’s curator, Leila Al Attar in one of numerous illegal bombings. Now her legacy too, is no more. ‘A cultural disaster’, near unmentioned, was how UNESCO’s Mounir Bouchenak described that cultural vandalism.(4) Thank goodness the troops thought to perfectly preserve the Oil Ministry.

Bit by bit, un-noticed, is the destruction of every statue, every landmark, which was the vibrant beauty, history’s hallmarks, which enchanted Baghdadis and visitors, marked the passing of a personality, commemorated Gilgamesh, the Thousand and One Nights, probably the earliest great epic story; Sinbad the Sailor, Iraq’s triumphs and tears.

Ironically,’ international guidelines protecting cultural property against damage and theft, date back to the American Civil War.’ That carnage ‘led to the 1863 Lieber Code, protecting libraries, scientific collections and works of art’ and was strengthened by the ‘1954 Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property.’ The Nuremburg Trials after World War 11, sentenced Nazi officials to death for destruction of cultural property.(5) This did not deter US soldiers from the first truly breath taking act of desecration.

Michel Aflaq was the Syrian born, French educated, Christian ‘Father of Pan Arabism’. A towering intellect, with Salah al-Din al-Bitar, a Moslem - the two met whilst studying in Paris in the 1920’s and 1930’s - ‘... created the political movement which would come to dominate Syria and Iraq in the modern world.’ Thinker, philosopher, student of Nietzsche, Gide, Tolstoy, French theorist Henri Bergson, with Bitar he had founded France’s Arab Student Union. Finally devoting their energies to politics, culminating in the formation of the Arab Ba’ath Party with Jalil Said, in 1947 with ‘.... a secular focus ‘ with Islam’s significance acknowledged, contributing to world wide emancipation, with a central tenet being that there were Arabs before there were Muslims - thus the ideal of the Arab state. For Aflaq, ‘theorist of integrity ....... incorruptible’; a central tenet of the movement was representing ‘… the Arab spirit ... Arab nation, emphasizing culture rather than politics. (6) He survived imprisonment, high office and the region’s turmoils, dying in Paris in 1989 and buried in Baghdad where his tomb, statue in his honor and dome, occupied a ten km square site. In September 2003 the US army ‘leveled the all to earth’, on orders of ‘Viceroy’ Bremer.(7) Think flattening the Lincoln Memorial and you’ll be getting there.

Vandalising religious and historic monuments are also prohibited and illegal acts under the Hague Convention. Desecrating a grave is a criminal act of the lowest order, in any society.

Driving into central Baghdad from the west, in Nasr Square, Sa’doun Street, a small, resolute figure graced a plinth. He was Abdul Muhsin Al-Sa’doun. Born in Nasiriya in 1889, he became Minister of Justice, then in 1922, Minister of the Interior, then Prime Minister four times, a youthful, political shooting star. In his fourth term as Prime Minister, in 1929, he left the Parliamentary chamber, went into a side room and shot himself, rather than give in to British Colonial demands. He died of integrity, aged just forty years. His statue, made by an Italian sculpture in 1933, stands no more, razed shortly after Michel Aflaq’s, and reportedly melted down. Reports differ as to who was responsible, but not disputed is that it happened under US Army’s watch - even if not at their hands. Symbolism is stark: a man who died of integrity has been razed - along with integrity itself.

In January 2004 the US Army 1st Armored Division did the unthinkable. They made a camp beneath the great turquoise dome of the Shaheed (Martyrs) Memorial to the dead of the Iran-Iraq war, where the names of over half a million dead are inscribed in marble, in memoriam, that their names, at least, live on. Graffiti was sprayed on the names, the Division’s motto obliterated others. The Museum where foreign dignitaries and families had brought items in honor of the fallen was, of course, looted. (Agencies, websites.) The dome is split, allowing the souls of the dead to fly heavenward. A great fountain flowed to the courtyard below - representing endless tears, or eternity as represented by the Euphrates river, depending on who one asked. A place of memory is, anyway, in the interpretation of those who visit and the solace found there.

On November 2nd the landmark statue of Abu Ja’afar Al Mansour (713-775AD) founder of Baghdad, was destroyed by a bomb.(8) No Baghdadi, Iraqi or Arab, would, arguably, blow up this revered historical figure, creator of’ the city named over the centuries: ‘The Paris of the Ninth Century’, ‘Mother of the World’, ‘Abode of Peace’, ‘Round City’, ‘Abode of Beauty’, ‘Triumph of the Gods’ ....(9)

Since journalists are shot and Iraqis lucky to return from a domestic outing in one piece and not in a body bag containing their parts and UNESCO has gone awol, comprehensive records of every day destruction of Iraq’s heritage, numerous, haunting, superb statues, sculptures, monuments is impossible. This surely barely scratches the surface. But an important and chilling plea appeared on a website (10). With the benefit of post invasion destruction, it had horrific clarity. From ‘An Iraqi Tear’ (most ‘liberated’ Iraqis are more fearful of revealing their identities now than they ever were under Saddam) is a plea to our place in history: ‘Please help us protect these monuments.’

‘Tear’ asserts that the Supreme Committee for de-Ba’athification has now ordered the razing of the turquoise Shaheed monument to rivers of tears and the Monument to the Unknown Soldier. The Unknown Soldier was completed in 1959, the year after the revolution which ironically, toppled the British imposed royal rule, which had opened the door to foreign monopolies plundering the country’s oil wealth. It was in homage to all those, who over the centuries: ‘fell in defence of the country’s dignity and pride.’

‘Riverbend’ (11) another blogger and insightful, astute chronicler of the Barbarians returned, notes: ‘The occupation has ceased to be American. It is American in face, militarily, but in essence, it has metamorphosed slowly and surely into an Iranian one.’ An astute Middle East watcher remarked recently: ‘Are you aware that the dominant language among those dominant in the puppet parliament is Farsi?’ ( Iran’s main language.)

Has an unholy alliance been formed between religious fundamentalism in Washington and Whitehall and religious fundamentalism from Iran which bans ‘graven images’? ‘Satan lives in Falluja ..’ a priest who gives God a bad name, told US troops before they used banned weapons and vaporized much of its population.

When the Taliban ordered the destruction of the ancient Banyiman statues in Afghanistan - the world, including Britain and American governments, declared outrage. Now, from Ur to the threat to Unknown Soldier, they are guilty of crimes of historic enormity. Quite apart from those, unquantifiable, against humanity.

In June 2005, the World Monument Society named, for the first time, an entire country, Iraq, an endangered site. ‘Every significant cultural site in Iraq is at risk today ....’ It also emphasized: ‘... preserving 20th century structures ...’

A spokesperson for the Iraqi ‘government’, boasted after the illegal invasion in 2003: ‘We came to power on a CIA train.’ By a different route, so did Pol Pot. Spot the difference.

1. Courtesy The History Place, 1999. ‘Pol Pot in Cambodia 1975-1979’.
2. Author interview with British Army spokesman.
3. ‘Last Round’ by Mark Nicol, pub: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 2005.
4. ‘Unesco lengthens list of looted art in Iraq’, International Herald Tribune, 24th May 2003.
5. Crimes of War, Ed: Roy Gutman and David Rieff, Pub: W.W. Norton, 1999.
6. ‘From Sumer to Saddam’, Geoff Simons, Pub: Macmillan, 1994.
7. Iraq-USA Politics 10th September 2003.
8. Mohammed Alwusy, Knight Ridder, 2nd November 2005.
9. ‘They came to Baghdad’, Sinan Antoon, Al Ahram Weekly, April 17-23 2003.
10. http://www.uruknet.info/ 2nd November 2005.
11. http:// riverbend.blogspot.com

Felicity Arbuthnot.
Iraq’s Year Zero - possible ‘box’.

Baghdad’s many richly evocative landmarks include:
* The great Liberty Monument in Liberation Square, depicting struggles through the ages; bronze relief figures on marble, by the late Jewad Selim.
* The golden figure of Karamana, Ali Baba’s housekeeper, from the ‘Arabian Nights’, surrounded by the great urns where the forty thieves hid. Water, in place of the boiling oil of the story, flows from a great vessel in her hands.By Mohammed Ghani: ‘the exuberant sculpture’, an object of wonder.
* The Hammurabni Obelisk, in Qhatan Square, honoring the great Babylonian King and lawmaker (1792-1750 BC) by Salen Al-Karaghoulli. The original Obelisk is in the Lovre, Paris.
* Al-Khalil bin Ahmad Al-Faharidi (AD 718-786) statue in Masbah Park, honoring the philologist and grammarian who wrote the first Arab dictionary and works on melody and rhythm.
* Abbas bin Firnas, ninth century philosopher, poet and inventor, is immortalized by Sculpture Badri Al-Sammarra’i, near the Airport. His theories and experiments on the possibility of human flight earned him the name of ‘First Arab Flyer.’
* Hammurabi’s robed statue, by Mohammed Ghani, graces central Haifa Street, utterly evocative, Babylonia’s wonders revisited.
* The Arab horseman in Mansour Square, by Miran Al-Sa’adi celebrates the Arab love of horsemanship and its association with ‘gallantry, courage and generosity’.
* Abu-Nasr Al-Farabi (AD 874-950) created by Ismail Fattah in 1965,one of the Arab world’s greatest ancient philosophers and academics, stands in Zawra Park. He was ‘The Second Teacher’, the First being Aristotle.
* Yahya Al-Wasiti, painter and calligrapher, completed his extraordinary illustrations of Maqamat Al-Hariri,in 1223.An original manuscript is in the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. The statue celebrating him is in Zawra Park, by Ismael Fattah.

This random selection of Baghdad’s celebration of Mesopotamia’s lives, ancient and modern, can only fail to convey the extent of its wondrous cultural wealth. Wealth whose preservation is the duty and responsibility of the occupying forces.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
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Tuesday, November 22, 2005

John Edwards' Apology for Voting for the War

Our illustrious former Senator, and 2004 Democratic Vice Presidential candidate, now says his vote in Congress to authorize the Iraq War was a mistake. But what is he really apologizing for, and what amends does he propose we make for this mistake?

It is good that Edwards is willing to apologize for what he sees as mistakes, unlike Bush, but this apology is not anti-war or anti-occupation. This is obviously a pro-imperialist, and even pro-regime change apology. Edwards apologizes for supporting a war based on intelligence that was "deeply flawed and, in some cases, manipulated to fit a political agenda." I think he could have seen that this was inaccurate information, if he hadn't already supported the idea of overthrowing the Iraqi government. As others have pointed out, he wraps this apology in support for the troops, ignoring the Iraqi cost. And I wonder how much regular soldiers, as opposed to the officers, care about ending "their mission honorably," and honor doesn't mean ending a failed mission by trying to save the imperialist goal. He also makes it sound like all national leaders are at fault, but some people were wise enough to see through the lies and spin before March 2003. I reject the argument that we are all responsible, except that we are all Americans and were not able to stop the War to start with. The idea that we have to fix Iraq is partly a ploy for imperialist objectives, and assumes that we can fix what we destroyed.

Edwards wants to end the occupation by internationalizing the occupation, reducing troop levels, removing unwanted American contractors in favor of local contractors, and "building Iraq's capacity." This is just the Democratic Party version of the occupation. I also wonder if the occupation can survive troop reductions. It would help public relations to reduce the occupation forces, but it would also probably help the Iraqi resistance forces. On the other hand, it might be too unpopular and difficult to add more soldiers in an attempt to detroy the insurgency. This proposal is an attempt to get Iraqi forces to enforce American objectives so the US forces can go home. I'm not sure this would work, and even if it does it is supporting a criminal US policy.

If they really want to end the War, and support Iraqi sovereignty and freedom, it seems to me that the government should negotiate a settlement between the occupiers, the Iraqi government, the resistance (maybe excluding the foreign fundamentalists), and neighboring countries. A national unity government could be created, prior to a new election after the occupation. That way there would be a stable framework so that the occupiers could leave and the Iraqis could peacefully decide their future themselves, and it would isolate the foreign fundamentalists, if they stayed after the occupation ended. There may be flaws with this approach, but I think it is the direction we should pursue. It is probably impossible to restore the Baathist government now, even if it were the most popular political force. I don't think there is yet a unified resistance that could take over and the present Iraqi government seems to have some legitimacy, even though it was created under occupation. We should also not hold the Iraqis to decisions made by Bremer and others, we should not try to control their internal affairs diplomatically, and we should pay reparations for the damage done by the sanctions and war.

It seems more likely that Iraq will be US controlled but seemingly independent or the US and UK will be forced out by the resistance. Maybe I am being too pessimistic (since I think the first option is most likely).

I think it was last year that I wrote to Edwards saying he was a warmonger and that I could not vote for him again. If he runs for the Senate again, and it is a choice between him and Elizabeth Dole, I would consider voting for him. He is still an imperialist though, and I don't think he will change. He might become more opposed to the Iraq War and he is better on some domestic issues. On a progressive listserve at UNC he was generally thought to be cravenly following the political winds, so maybe more people see through him now.


The Right Way in Iraq
By John Edwards
Sunday, November 13, 2005; B07

I was wrong.

Almost three years ago we went into Iraq to remove what we were told -- and what many of us believed and argued -- was a threat to America. But in fact we now know that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction when our forces invaded Iraq in 2003. The intelligence was deeply flawed and, in some cases, manipulated to fit a political agenda.

It was a mistake to vote for this war in 2002. I take responsibility for that mistake. It has been hard to say these words because those who didn't make a mistake -- the men and women of our armed forces and their families -- have performed heroically and paid a dear price.

The world desperately needs moral leadership from America, and the foundation for moral leadership is telling the truth.

While we can't change the past, we need to accept responsibility, because a key part of restoring America's moral leadership is acknowledging when we've made mistakes or been proven wrong -- and showing that we have the creativity and guts to make it right.

The argument for going to war with Iraq was based on intelligence that we now know was inaccurate. The information the American people were hearing from the president -- and that I was being given by our intelligence community -- wasn't the whole story. Had I known this at the time, I never would have voted for this war.

George Bush won't accept responsibility for his mistakes. Along with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, he has made horrible mistakes at almost every step: failed diplomacy; not going in with enough troops; not giving our forces the equipment they need; not having a plan for peace.

Because of these failures, Iraq is a mess and has become a far greater threat than it ever was. It is now a haven for terrorists, and our presence there is draining the goodwill our country once enjoyed, diminishing our global standing. It has made fighting the global war against terrorist organizations more difficult, not less.

The urgent question isn't how we got here but what we do now. We have to give our troops a way to end their mission honorably. That means leaving behind a success, not a failure.

What is success? I don't think it is Iraq as a Jeffersonian democracy. I think it is an Iraq that is relatively stable, largely self-sufficient, comparatively open and free, and in control of its own destiny.

A plan for success needs to focus on three interlocking objectives: reducing the American presence, building Iraq's capacity and getting other countries to meet their responsibilities to help.

First, we need to remove the image of an imperialist America from the landscape of Iraq. American contractors who have taken unfair advantage of the turmoil in Iraq need to leave Iraq. If that means Halliburton subsidiary KBR, then KBR should go. Such departures, and the return of the work to Iraqi businesses, would be a real statement about our hopes for the new nation.

We also need to show Iraq and the world that we will not stay there forever. We've reached the point where the large number of our troops in Iraq hurts, not helps, our goals. Therefore, early next year, after the Iraqi elections, when a new government has been created, we should begin redeployment of a significant number of troops out of Iraq. This should be the beginning of a gradual process to reduce our presence and change the shape of our military's deployment in Iraq. Most of these troops should come from National Guard or Reserve forces.

That will still leave us with enough military capability, combined with better-trained Iraqis, to fight terrorists and continue to help the Iraqis develop a stable country.

Second, this redeployment should work in concert with a more effective training program for Iraqi forces. We should implement a clear plan for training and hard deadlines for certain benchmarks to be met. To increase incentives, we should implement a schedule showing that, as we certify Iraqi troops as trained and equipped, a proportional number of U.S. troops will be withdrawn.

Third, we must launch a serious diplomatic process that brings the world into this effort. We should bring Iraq's neighbors and our key European allies into a diplomatic process to get Iraq on its feet. The president needs to create a unified international front.

Too many mistakes have already been made for this to be easy. Yet we must take these steps to succeed. The American people, the Iraqi people and -- most important -- our troops who have died or been injured there, and those who are fighting there today, deserve nothing less.

America's leaders -- all of us -- need to accept the responsibility we each carry for how we got to this place. More than 2,000 Americans have lost their lives in this war, and more than 150,000 are fighting there today. They and their families deserve honesty from our country's leaders. And they also deserve a clear plan for a way out.

The writer, a former senator from North Carolina, was the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2004.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Korea Peace Day and two anniversaries

Korea Peace Day - November 10th

This is an email I sent to my Congressional representatives for the ASCK's Korea Peace Day, since there was not an event in the Triangle. Since it was written to Congress people, including two very pro-Bush Republican senators, I toned down and didn't say that I would welcome a reunified and socialist Korea, or that I am more worried about the accidental (or intentional) launch of American and Russian ICBMs than about north Korean nuclear weapons.

Perhaps the world would actually be safer if nuclear weapons technology were not limited to the large powers. The DPRK signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and its neighbors want a non-nuclear Korean Peninsula, so it would be a going against its obligations and international pressure for north Korea to develop a nuclear deterrent. It does have a case for pulling out of the Treaty legally though, by showing that the USA is threatening it with nuclear attack. But this would not have much support in the "world community." I just saw a headline online that the ROK expects to have an economic union of Korea by 2020 and earlier there was a headline that there would be a unified Olympic team. Our foreign policy is going against what is right and it is against the logic of events as well.

It is debatable whether the DPRK actually has a socialist economy (Alliance believes it does not and never did) and its leadership years ago replaced Marxism-Leninism with Juche, or self-reliance, and is pro-capitalist.

"The annual Korea Peace Day, started by the Alliance of Scholars Concerned about Korea (www.asck.org) was Thursday, November 10th. I did not hear of any Korea Peace Day events in the Triangle, so I am writing letters to yourself and our two Senators. You should support ending the state of war between north Korea and our country, and normalization. The US could easily solve its disagreements with north Korea by continuing with negotiations, honoring its commitment to supply peaceful nuclear technology to north Korea if they follow their agreements, and ending nuclear (and other) threats against Korea. By threats I mean the past deployment of nuclear weapons in south Korea, plans for their use, and inclusion of these weapons in military exercises, which is a threat against the North and in violation of the Armistice Agreement and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

According to scholar Bruce Cummings (in North Korea: Another Country, which I think is a very useful book), north Korea would give up its missile program, any nuclear weapons program, and even welcome the US presence on the Korean Peninsula in return for normalization. I am surprised the DPRK would trust us so much as to agree to this, but it also makes sense in light of some of its actions. In considering north Korea, you should keep in mind the massive destruction and racist brutality of the Korean War, the North’s isolation during the Cold War, and the nationalist nature of Korea, and especially of the DPRK. Even if this isn’t the case, and north Korean rhetoric notwithstanding, I don’t feel north Korea is a threat to the safety of myself or other American citizens so I would like to see the US work to end this situation. I think it is highly unlikely that north Korea would attack us with nuclear weapons first, and it would risk destruction if it sold the weapons to terrorists. North Korea has committed apparently criminal actions, such as kidnapping Japanese citizens, but dialogue is the way to resolve this situation. The 1994 Agreed Framework sounds like a good model and according to the ASCK it is debatable whether highly enriched uranium processing was a violation. Breach of the agreement then led to the current plutonium and nuclear weapons issue.

The DPRK and ROK are moving towards eventually peaceful reunification on their own terms. There are economic initiatives and I think it was recently it was announced that there would be one Korean Olympic team. We should support these efforts rather than sabotage them, and trade with north Korea would probably benefit us economically as well. Ending the Korean War would save taxpayer money and improve our standing in the world as well.

Korean and American human rights are best served by creating peace, instead of by provocation, such as including north Korea in the supposed “Axis of Evil” and trying to overthrow the DPRK on the pretext of human rights (which I assume is the purpose of the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004). According to an article in Covert Action Quaterly last yeat, the 2004 explosion in north Korea might have been a failed US attempt to kill Kim Jong Il, which I would condemn if it is true. I would oppose any attack on north Korea, including supposed precision strikes, and this would probably result in a second Korean War, with massive Korean and American casualties. The DPRK is also seemingly not such a militarily weak country as Iraq."

Anniversaries

November 7th was the 88th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution. This was the formal birth of the first truly new economic and political system since the bourgeois gained power in the British, American, and French revolutions and the untold prehistoric revolutions (for example the birth of class society, slave economy, etc., which probably occurred gradually over time). The October Revolution in 1917 was the proletarian or socialist second step of the Russian Revolution, following the bourgeois phase which overthrew the Tsar and the remains of feudalism. Putin tried to divert attention from this working class anniversary by creating a new nationalistic holiday, which Russians apparently did not know the meaning of.

November 8th was the anniversary of the death of Molotov, best known as the USSR's foreign minister (I think that was his title) during World War II. He died November 8, 1986 at 12:55 p.m. if I remember correctly. The conversations recorded by Chuev and published in English in part are very useful. Molotov is a controversial figure for Marxist-Leninists though, because he cooperated with Khrushchev's revisionist group after Stalin's death. Was he a true revolutionary communist, or was he unconsciously or consciously for un-revolutionary and ultimately pro-capitalist policies, a revisionist? He was later expelled from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union as part of what I think was called the "Anti-Party Group."

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Durham primary election results

The primary this year didn't seem very well publicized and I didn't know it was this Tuesday until last week. My Dad also voted but my Mom said she didn't have know enough about the candidates to vote this time, and she probably didn't have much time either. My younger brother could vote, but unfortunately he hasn't registered here or where he goes to college. Overall voter turnout was very low. I researched the candidates mainly by reading the questionaires printed in the Herald-Sun. I considered Cora Cole-McFadden (Ward 1), Howard Clement (Ward 2), and Steve Matherly (Ward 3) the most progressive candidates. Cole-McFadden called herself a liberal in the newspaper questionaire and I think she and Clement supported work done by Jobs with Justice and other progressive groups. Counting against Clement are accusations of conflict of interest in a decision involving a relative and his approval of the forced annexation of an area near RTP by the city. I will need to research these more before the November 8th vote. Steve Matherly is involved in progressive politics and is even on some of the same activist listserves as I am on. He ran against candidates I would not vote for. John Best (in Ward 3), along with Jason Maynard, John Holmes, and Victoria Peterson represent conservatism. Whatever class interests they represent are not working class. Best also hasn't had good meeting attendance I have heard. The other candidates I hadn't heard of, so I didn't know what they stood for.

For mayor I voted for Bill Bell, despite his part in creating our current school board disputes. I forgot to look for Jackie Wagstaff's website before voting.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

September 24th protests

I took one of Durham's two chartered buses to the huge anti-war demonstration in Washington, DC September 24th. There were at least 300,000 people in the march I have heard. It looked like it would be large, since there were so many buses from here in the Triangle, including two from Raleigh (one a Green Party bus). There were other events that weekend as well, and a lobbying day and mass civil disobedience action at the White House the following Monday.

Our bus got there later than planned and it was hard to see what was going on in the crowds. I went to find the NC contingent, but I didn't see it and the march hadn't started yet, I thought, so I went looking for the NC Peace and Justice Coalition's table. This would have been in the tabling fair across the street from the opening rally, so I missed the speeches. I ended up spending my entire time there looking at the tables, and I still was able to visit only 2/3rds or fewer and got loaded down with information and ideas for local actions. I had an impeach Bush sign and Alliance pamphlets on impeachment, but I ended up not doing much leafletting. The pamphlet was included in the Durham bus packets. I rode a bus that seemed to be mainly people from the local organization TRACTION, which is a youth group, so many people saw the protest with fresh eyes. It was also a more sociable bus than others I have been to DC on, with discussion before and after the demonstration. It was a good event, but there was so much to do and not enough time and it seemed disorganized at the start of the march. The only other thing marring the day for me personally was that I accidentally killed a copperhead as I went to the bus (at that time of year watch out, because in certain areas copperheads seem to prefer to cross roads).

I circulated the Downing Street memos/impeachment petition on the Durham buses and got many signatures (see the campaign blog, downingstreetactionnc.blogspot.com). Someone was going to circulate it on Chapel Hill's three buses, but in the rush it was forgotten.

The two big anti-war coalitions, UFPJ and ANSWER (or the related TONC) were able to work together in organizing a united demonstration, though I have heard that UFPJ thinks it was a mistake and refuses to do this again. There may have been government sabotage of the march. I heard that trains from several Northern cities were stopped by some kind of an electrical problem. Later it was announced that airborne traces of Tularemia were picked up Saturday at the March. This looks like a possible biological weapon release like the Anthrax Scare. The week after the march I felt sick and was slightly worried, but it seems to have been just a cold and I have basically recovered.

There will probably be more in a report-back in the upcoming issue of Alliance!

This week I read an email by a UFPJ organizer from NC on how he (and UFPJ) view the event. He pointed out a RollingStone magazine article as having a good critique of our movement. I find this article by Tim Dickinson (see www.rollingstone.com, in the politics section; it is the only anti-war article) outrageous and wrong.

Basically the article seems to say that the anti-war movement needs to moderate and focus its demands, so that it can unite with veterans, MoveOn.org, Win Without War, Democrats, and Republicans. It would then have mass support and could present a "responsible" exit plan allowing us to declare "victory" in Iraq. I may overstate the author's views, but he quotes mainly from opponents of ANSWER, and even of UFPJ, and obviously is not very anti-imperialist (opposing the forced and undemocratic military and economic domination of other countries in general, not just the military occupation of Iraq). This has elitist and racist overtones. The article criticizes the diversity of demands at the protest, from freeing Haiti, to anti-Israel speeches, to freeing US political prisoners. It seems racist to say we want the support of what are probably mostly white (and "middle class") groups like MoveOn, and not that of Haitian and Arab Americans, or of the blue-collar working class. And I think Americans should be able to understand violent resistance by patriotic Iraqis, and recognize that they have a right to defend their country, as much as Americans in the 18th century, the French in WWII, and other Europeans.

These concerns are very linked to opposing the War, not diversions hijacking the movement. Israel does not control the United States, but it seems obvious to me that it is our agent in the Middle East and benefitted from this war, since Iraq ws a poweful Arab nationalist opponent, which also aided Palestinian groups fighting Israel. We supported Israel's Zionist colonial policies for our own ends. It is the same arrogant US imperialism in Iraq as the imperialism that supported the Haitian coup, meddles in the Philippines, meddles on the Korean peninsula, and pursues neo-liberal, anti-popular policies in Iraq, New Orleans, and Bolivia. Consider the case of the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. The UK removed the islanders for a military base, and this military base is also used by the US to attack Middle Eastern countries. Opposing the Iraq War on a narrow basis only throws away our momentum, doing nothing to prevent future wars, such as against Iran or a world war, against China or the EU (which I think is very possible in the coming decades).

There is the argument that we need to moderate so the bourgeois poiticians will join with us. I think it is the purpose of protest movements to make a demand and leave it to the politicians, who are really against us, to produce a solution to save themselves and placate us. If we had influence, and could say we want X exit plan, we wouldn't be protesting. My understanding is that this is how the civil rights and anti-Vietnam War struggles were won (the last movement is critized in the RollingStone piece). The Democrats are not only "spineless" in general on the War, they are also really opposed to us even when they support peace. The leading Democrats fault Bush with not winning in Iraq, isolating us internationally, and distracting from the "War on Terror." They don't oppose the toppling of a foreign government that has done nothing to the American people, for economic and geopolitical gain. They fear we will lost "credibility" as the global bully if a Iraqis can force us out of Iraq. A "victory" in Iraq will hurt the American people - it will be the groundwork for future wars, it will support the Bush Administration, and it will support the neoliberal globalization hurting workers and farmers from Durham to India. And even with our radical demands Democrats and even Republicans are calling for an exit plan.

Finally, I am uneasy with the idea that veterans and their relatives are the people most able to speak on the War. They should be priviledged as experienced, directly involved, and valuable speakers, but all of us supposedly have a voice in government policy and all of us are affected in some way by the War. We are victimized by it here at home when it causes Muslims to support fundamentalists who bomb civilians in this country, when it is used to justify repression of protesters, and when it results in mercenaries patrolling the streets of New Orleans. We don't live in a society where only veterans, or taxpayers, can speak on or supposedly determine government policy.

It would be good if even groups like Win Without War would join us in the streets, but narrowing what we demand to suit more "responsible" groups only serves the warmongers and ensures that we have to do this all over again in 2010. Also don't forget the quiet wars waged in our names, such as the strangling of Iraq after the first war, which may have killed a million Iraqis. It would also be very difficult and undemocratic to impose a uniform message on a protest by 300,000 people, for example I went there protesting for impeaching Bush. It is true that CSPAN coverage wouldn't show much of this, since their idea of covering a protest seems to be just focusing on the official speakers.

There is more to say, but this has taken too long, so I will end it here.

Friday, September 16, 2005

More on New Orleans

Our handling of the Hurricane Katrina disaster compares poorly to that of Cuba, according to an article I read. According to that article, Cuba has plans to respond to hurricanes, including evacuation of residents, their animals (I hope this includes pets and not just livestock), and appliances like TVs and refrigerators (to prevent looting)! On this it may be the local and state officials' faultdts, since they must have had vehicles they could have used for evacuation. It must have been very bad for New Orleans residents to have to leave their pets behind, and to just leave them alone to fend for themselves is inhumane.

Thursday night Bush said there would be an investigation or review of the disaster response - but why was the idea of an independent (or at least Congressional) investigation of the response dropped in Congress recently? We need an independent, reasonably objective investigation to find out what went wrong (just like there should have been a better investigation of 9/11).

The Internet encourages rumors and conspiracy theorizing, but with this Administration it is hard to tell what is reasonable to believe (after all, it compulsively withholds facts, even from Congress, and has lied to the public so many times). Thursday I saw an article saying that the levee in New Orleans could have been broken by military forces who were there, about 5 of whom were shot by New Orleans police. The purpose of the flooding would then be to force out the black residents to allow corporate redevelopment. Whether this is true or not, it looks like a corporate, neoliberal-style reconstruction of the Gulf region is being planned. Unions are already under attack and a free trade-based economy is planned. This is like the situation in occupied Iraq, where the US has liberalized laws on foreign ownership of Iraqi companies and resources, given reconstruction money to foreign companies like Halliburton, instead of native (and cheaper) contractors, and even attacked Iraqi agriculture with new rules on seed saving (or maybe it was something else). Some or all of these changes are also illegal under international law, which prevents occupiers from re-writing the laws of a conquered country.

Earlier there was a controversy about what to call the people displaced by the disaster. By definition refugee fits, but at least some people are against the term. Why is that? I don't think it compares the suffering of survivors to the suffering of people in Africa (which is what one Herald-Sun letter writer said). Evacuees seems to be the preferred term now, so I'll use that.

The other big national story right now is the Roberts confirmation hearings. I've heard the hearings on NPR and not a lot sticks out as dangerous about Roberts there. But we have little information on what he thinks, since he won't comment on many issues and he says as a lawyer he would have taken whichever side he was hired to defend. I distrust Bush's motives in nominating Roberts and Bush will be able to fill two Supreme Court seats - is there a hidden plan at work to turn the Court further right or towards the Executive branch, starting with nominating Roberts? According to the radio program Democracy Now, Roberts may stand for increasing Presidential power, rather than a conservative agenda. This idea fits with the Bush Administration's secrecy and concentration of power in the Executive branch. I worry though that if Roberts is rejected Bush will not nominate a better candidate (one who won't turn the Court further right or serve the Executive branch), and maybe a worse one.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

The Disaster in New Orleans and other delayed posts

I haven't posted in awhile so I have several stories to mention.

I was hoping to do more reading into what has happened in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina went through, but I haven't had time. From what I've heard it sounds like the government at all levels failed the people of the Gulf coast. It seems like if you're in a major disaster, expecially if you are considered political unimportant by the elite, watch out, because you may be on your own for awhile. I plan to look into how the results and response to Katrina and Hurricane Floyd in eastern North Carolina compare - has disaster relief gotten worse, or did the Clinton Administration and the State government allow poor and working class people to die needlessly here too?

Now there are Blackwater mercenaries in New Orleans and civil rights are or were suspended (I doubt a shoot to kill policy encourages respect for the lives and rights of any citizens caught in the open). I was surprised that national political figures would talk of abondoning a great and historic city like New Orleans. New Orleans has problems, since it is below sea level and on the coast, but we have always rebuilt our large cities after disasters and New Orleans could be made safer. If New Orleans residents want to rebuild, they should be allowed to and helped. Also, I have seen news articles about the affects of pathogens in the floodwaters and air pollution, but what about all of the poisons released by the flood? After all, the lower Mississippi and other affected areas are already dangerously contaminated in places by carcinogens from the chemical and oil industries. What will this do to the natural ecosystem? I have given to the Red Cross for disaster relief, but there is also an issue here (and with Pat Robertson's charity even more so).

Hopefully I will have time to write something more substantive later on.

I think an article in the Durham section of the Herald-Sun today said that ARAMARK was among the companies possibly violating Durham County's living wage law (by not releasing their payroll records to allow verification of compliance). This reminds me of the many payroll problems reported by ARAMARK workers at UNC-CH (see article in the July 2005 edition of Alliance!).

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Duke and UNC progressives are being too quiet

Social justice activists at Duke and UNC are still active, but over the last few months I think they've been too silent on some issues, allowing the right to appeal to the public without any counterarguments.

At Duke last fall anti-Palestine Solidarity Movement letters and op-eds in the Herald-Sun were not answered or were answered late in the lead up to the PSM Conference. Organizers might have felt that it is pointless to debate ideological Zionists and conservatives, which might be true. But what about people who would read the articles and not have time or motivation to look for the truth? For example, one letter or article made it sound like participants at a past PSM Conference chanted "Kill the Jews." I was told that it did not happen but it was never denied in the Paper and it is hard to find information online.

Now with Israel's false withdrawal from the occupied Gaza Strip there are pro-Israel letters to the editor in the Herald-Sun and two more anti-PSM op-eds. The letters were sparked by a letter on Israel divestment by churches in NC. Of course the editors and the media in general are hyping the Gaza withdrawal (although the previous editors were not openly against the PSM Conference at Duke I think). The op-eds portray the PSM as supporting terrorists and the International Solidarity Movement (Rachel Corrie and Brian Avery belonged to this group) as being itself terrorist. The movement doesn't need this libel, since Americans are probably generally pro-Zionist and anti-Arab to begin with, because of ignorance. I know it was summer vacation, but I know some participants are around, and I did my part in writing a letter on the Gaza ruse. If Duke activists have been writing to the editors they should say so, so we can know that the editors go that far to support Zionism and Israel.

UNC-Chapel Hill had its annual Fallfest street fair welcoming students to the University Sunday night, 9pm-2am. During Fallfest part of South Road (Highway 54) is closed on Campus near the Student Union. Student groups table, local restaurants have vending stands, there is music, and a climbing wall, break dancing, etc. at Fallfest. This time there were so many small George Bush signs, at at least three tables - signs such as "W is for Women" and something about farmers. I don't remember so many signs being there last August before the national election and there weren't any Democratic Party signs this time (the Young Democrats were tabling though).

I was diappointed that Student Action with Workers didn't table - it will hurt recruiting. I can't believe such a larger group could evaporate over the summer and I think it still exists. Boiling Point magazine tabled - except it did so under a big sign for the conservative Campus Crusade for Christ. A relatively new fair trade group (started last fall) was tabling - and using sex appeal in some shoutouts I think. The GLBTSA was there I heard. Did I miss Campaign to End the Cycle of Violence, UNC's anti-war group?! I know they have plans for the fall, yet I did not see them tbling. I could easily have missed them though. It seemed more conservative than before and I saw at least one new conservative group tabling. Like last year I was alienated by how the University is changing from how it was when I was a student in 2004. I also saw a guy wearing a bright red t-shirt emblazoned with a big hammer-and-sickle, but I'm sure it was like a Che Guevara shirt rather than being supportive of socialism. It's nice to see the emblem, but it was politically pointless for us. We'll see what happens at UNC this fall.

The Alliance ML interest meetings will be Thursday, September 8th from 7-9pm at Internationalist Books (405 W. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill) and Monday, September 12th at the same time at the Southwest Library (I think its address is 3605 Shannon Road - it is near the old South Square; see www.durhamcountylibrary.org to check the address). The meetings will be about the group and our part in the DSM investigation/impeachment campaign. Members of other Marxist groups are welcome and I'm thinking of organizing an event this fall to encourage inter-group communication.

A blog, downingstreetactionnc.blogspot.com, has been created for DSM discussion and campaign planning. It is provisional since there haven't been any comments there yet to make it grassroots.

In a way I'm overly optimistic and advantaged, but things seem to be looking up in a way. For example, unions are growing in the state, Cindy Sheehan is pressuring Bush, and the public is turning more and more against Bush and the Iraq War. This is at the cost of thousands of American soldiers and others though, who were sent into an war of aggression and are now being hurt by Iraqis rightfully resisting foreign occupation.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

DSM Day in the Triangle

Several of us in the Triangle organized a town meeting about the Downing Street memos on July 23rd, the third anniversary of an incriminating meeting recorded in one of those documents. It was a day of action called for by Rep John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) and the After Downing Street Coalition. The meeting was at the Community Church of Chapel Hill, 7-9:30pm and about 42 people came. The general tone was that we should lobby Price on this continuously wherever we can. I circulated the petition I mentioned earlier and got almost two pages of signatures and gave a petition to someone to circulate. Right now we need to support Rep. Barbara Lee's (D-CA) Resolution of Inquiry requiring the Administration to hand over British-American communications from most of 2002. It will be voted on sometime within 16 days from Thursday, the 21st, when it was introduced. This is Bush's chance to come clean, or it could provide new revelations about how the Iraq War was launched.

A blog will probably be set up to keep in touch and maybe a listserve. There will be a story on this in the August issue of Triangle Free Press. I think the lack of a definte plan and follow up meeting could be a problem. There was also a house party in Raleigh for DSM Day.

Organizations aren't as interested in the petition as I was hoping but I will go forward with it. There are copies at Internationalist Books in Chapel Hill and at the Durham Food Co-op. I plan to leave copies at The Know Bookshop Friday also. Three other people might be circulating the petition as well. Maybe there will be enough signatures in late August or in September to call a meeting on how to present this to Rep. Price.

The July issue of Alliance! (www.allianceml.com) is out and has an article calling for impeachment that refers to the DSM and a call for Alliance ML comrades to work on this issue.