Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Recipe for war: Israeli hysteria and imperial logic by James Brooks


"Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." --Voltaire
The Bush administration's agreement to join international talks with Iran has been hailed as a bright hope for a peaceful resolution of the engineered crisis in the Persian Gulf.

But the agreement carries a poison pill; Iran must subject its legal rights under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to negotiation, something it has sworn never to do again. Washington is telling Tehran to surrender its main point before it sits down to the negotiating table.

It's simply another move in the effort to establish a great power consensus against uranium enrichment in Iran, which the Bush administration hopes to use as an excuse for war, much as it used UN Security Council Resolution 1441 as a fig-leaf for its illegal invasion of Iraq.

The poison pill should protect the US from the threat of serious talks by forcing Tehran to reject a "generous package" of international incentives, which should make it more difficult for Moscow and Beijing to exit the "nternational consensus" that Washington has already declared.

More evidence that the US change of heart is nothing of the sort emerged with the news that it was all pre-approved by the Israeli government. Bush and Rice had consulted separately with Israeli PM Ehud Olmert and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. Both Israelis said they were in 'complete agreement' with US plans for Iran.

A few days earlier, Olmert had told Congress that Iran threatens Israel's very existence and an Iranian nuclear weapon "cannot be permitted to materialize."

In response to mistranslations of the Iranian presiden's comments about Israel, Israeli Vice Premier Shimon Peres recently said that Ahmadinejad "should bear in mind that his own country could also be destroyed." In an interview last month Peres confidently stated, "In the end there will be no choice but war with Iran." The newspaper reassured its Israeli readers that he was "referring to the international military option against Iran's nuclear program, not a war between Israel and Iran."

The Israeli lobby sees the development of Iran's nuclear program as a convenient timetable for war, a golden opportunity to weaken or destroy Israel’s enemies in Tehran and settle Israel's strategic horizon for a generation, preferably by goading others (the US) to do the job.

Unlike its relatively coy public position in pushing the US war on Iraq, Israel's warmongering against Iran has been unabashed and relentless. Bush has also been explicit in linking Iran’s nuclear development to Israel’s security. He has pledged on more than one occasion to protect Israel from Iranian attack.

The codependence of this binational hysteria has become so obvious that several American Jewish groups recently sent quiet requests to the White House to cool it. The linkage was becoming embarrassing. Abraham Foxman, the head of the ADL, explained that " . . . because there is this debate on Iraq, where people are trying to put the blame on us, maybe you shouldn't say it that often or that loud."

Those of us who work for an end to Israel's war on the Palestinians would not mind seeing Israel's government take the blame for the disasters that would follow a US attack on Iran. If Israel's American political machine is hitched to Bush's star, may they both go down together.

But we should know by now that the issues imperialists emphasize in public almost never reflect the dimensions of the struggle at hand. The public scenario usually serves to inflame passions and divert public attention from crimes in progress.

In the US, Israel is useful as a propaganda cutout, to portray the innocent potential victim of an Islamic terrorist "Hitler." This gambit electrifies Bush’s political base and breathes new life into the old Zionist lies about 'poor defenseless Israel.'

Internationally, Israeli leaders understand that the disaster in Iraq has reduced the diplomatic pressure to end their relentless destruction of Palestine. They might conclude that creating a new crisis over the "Iranian threat" would buy them the elimination of another enemy, plus a few more years of international diversion, during which they might complete their theft of Palestine.

Yet, despite all the political muscle that Israel brings to the game and all the advantages it stands to win, it appears to be but one of several subtexts to the impending US war on Iran.

Nuclear non-proliferation is the other public issue bandied about by Washington and the EU, but it, too, is nothing but smoke and mirrors. There is no legal basis for halting Iran's nuclear program at this time. Its current enrichment work is necessary to develop nuclear power generation and is allowed under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Iran is a party to the treaty and has submitted to IAEA inspections, unlike US favorites India and Israel, which rejected the NPT in order to secretly build their own nuclear arsenals.

As David Peterson points out in Iran's Manufactured Crisis, the current US-EU demands are so absurd that they would actually force Iran to violate the NPT, and if this tactic is sustained it could fatally undermine the battered treaty.

We assume that Iran wants to "build a bomb," but it is never made clear why this would be an intolerable event. By conventional geostrategic standards, it is logical for Iran to seek nuclear deterrence. For starters, the US has demonstrated a brutal will to invade and destroy nations on the terrorism pretext, provided they do not have nukes. And Iran now stands encircled by nations "hosting" the nuclear-tipped US military.

Iran has reasonably good relations with its balanced nuclear neighbors to the east, Pakistan and India, and Russia and China, but on its western front it has long been vulnerable to attack by the fifth strongest military force in the world -- nuclear Israel.

Tehran must be further concerned that, since Baghdad fell three years ago, Israel's diplomats, spooks, and politicians have been steadily selling Iran as an "existential threat" to the survival of the "Jewish State."

The issue of nuclear weapons demands a modicum of sobriety and respect for the truth. We must ask the Israelis, Why did you build those 200 to 400 nuclear warheads and place them in submarines and atop intercontinental missiles? Was it not to establish a credible deterrent that would protect you in exactly this kind of scenario? How can you claim to be defenseless?

John Negroponte, the newly minted US intelligence czar, recently said that Iran is probably 10 years away from acquiring a usable nuclear weapon. Does this rehash of previously released CIA estimates signal a change of policy? Probably not, but it confirms that there is no logical basis for the current madness.

Iran's nuclear potential is a symbol, not a tangible threat. In one sense, it's merely a targeting device, a way of marking out Iran for intervention. Yet the symbolism itself is a deadly serious matter to the geostrategists who presume to plan the presumed future of our empire. The US power elite has more than one problem with the idea of Iran’s acquisition of nuclear weapons. And it has other problems with the country's resources, geography, economy, and religion.

Iran is a major oil producer and may have the world's largest reserves of natural gas, the projected carbon fuel of the future. According to the unspoken rules of the New World Order, major petroleum sources are not allowed to acquire nukes. That would be "destabilizing." We must always have "access" to vital petroleum resources. Iran's presumed interest in acquiring nuclear weapons is considered a threat to our strategic assets.

Next door, Iraq continues to disintegrate under the watchful guidance of Proconsul Khalilzad. The prospect of a Shia state emerging in the southern half of the country is increasingly plausible. Dividing Iraq into three parts should make it easier for Washington to exploit the whole, but there’s concern that a Shia state bordering Iran would be influenced by Tehran, and might even opt to join Iran. If Iraq should manage to stay together, Iran will be considered a threat to its fragile unity.

In the logic of imperialism, when you weaken or destroy a nation for advantage and control, you must also weaken or destroy any neighboring states that might take advantage of the chaos you’re sowing for your own benefit. So this is another casus belli fueling up our long-range bombers.

And of course Iran is supposed to be our enemy, because it supports Hezbollah and Palestinian militants, which makes it a terrorist state, which by definition can't be allowed to have nukes. Following this line of "reasoning" we join and even trump the Israelis by denying the obscenely larger power of our own deterrent force.

The wonderful thing about a brazenly absurd foreign policy is that when the public accepts it, it is prone to draw predictably logical yet equally absurd conclusions about the policy's assumptions.

If our overkill deterrence can't protect us from Iran's putative nuclear "threat," it must be because the Iranians would not handle a nuclear weapon the way you or I would. Probably they would use it just as soon as they could get their hands on it, despite the consequences, sort of like a national suicide bomber.

Just the sort of Islamophobic mush the war-on-terrorists would have us believe.

As nearly everyone knows by now, Iran has been identified as a prime target for war, before or after Iraq, in several documents produced by neoconservatives later prominent in the Bush administration.

And there's the matter of the Iranian Oil Bourse, which was scheduled to open in March but was postponed indefinitely and without comment by the government. It is planned as a global oil exchange to challenge the two in London and New York that now dominate world oil trade. To add potential injury to this insult to Anglo domination of world oil trades, the IOB plans to buck the US-OPEC "petrodollar" by offering oil for sale in euros.

Everyone expects the deflating dollar's domination of world oil markets to end soon, perhaps by gradually phasing in a mix of currencies. But some analysts believe that if the choice to trade oil in euros or dollars is left up to market forces (per neoliberalism and the IOB), it could dramatically reverse dollar flows and evaporate the value of an already weak greenback, throwing the US economy into a depression.

Most of the elites of Europe and Asia would not relish this prospect; they would rather acquire our crumbling mantle of power and wealth by gradual and predictable means. No one is talking about it, including officials in Tehran, but for now the "threat" of the IOB is on ice.

Whether the IOB ever sees the light of day, powerful people in Washington and elsewhere have already tossed it onto the scales with the nuclear issue and the terrorism charge. And they have passed a dreadful judgment: Iran is not a "reliable" player in global energy markets. This by itself may be deemed sufficient cause to ignore the niceties of national sovereignty and international law.

Meanwhile, the "Great Game" of global empire is quietly coming to a head, and Iran finds itself in the middle of the struggle.

One of the key objectives in the US quest for global supremacy (a goal asserted openly in recent National Security and Defense policy statements) is to acquire control of a broad arc of territory stretching from Southwest Asia through Central Asia to the border of China.

In his exploitation of 9/11, Bush lost no time in destroying and radioactively poisoning Afghanistan and planting US military bases across Central Asia. But we've been kicked out of Uzbekistan and things aren't going well in Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, or Tajikistan, either. It seems Central Asia would rather deal with China and Russia than the United States, a very sensible decision under the geographic, economic, cultural, and political circumstances.

When imperial dreams start going up in smoke on contact with reality, imperialists get desperate. Iran may be looming as the last stand for the US campaign to establish a beachhead in the belly of Asia. If the neocons lose this self-manufactured opportunity to take down Iran and cement their "gains” in the Middle East, they will have to admit failure, even to themselves.

When will they admit that war is the greatest failure of all?


James Brooks serves as webmaster for Vermonters for a Just Peace in Palestine/Israel. He can be contacted at jamiedb@wildblue.net.

Notes:

PM urges U.S. to end threat of nuclear Iran, Ha'aretz, 5/25/2006

Video - Peres: ‘Iran can also be destroyed’, YNet News, 5/9/2006

Groups to Bush: Drop Iran-Israel Linkage, Forward, 5/12/2006

Iran's Manufactured Crisis, By David Peterson, Palestine Chronicle, 6/1/2006

Petrodollar Warfare: Dollars, Euros and the Upcoming Iranian Oil Bourse, By William R. Clark, Media Monitors Network, 8/5/2005

Terrorist Up For U.S. Citizenship: The Strange Case of Luis Posada Carriles by Adam Elkus

The release of United 93 has brought renewed attention to the tragic events of 9/11. Yet Americans are less familiar with the story of another jet full of innocent people destroyed by terrorists: Cubana Flight 455.


On October 6, 1976, it was scheduled to take off from Barbados to Kingston, Jamaica. Nine minutes after takeoff, a bomb in the aircraft’s rear lavatory exploded. The captain radioed to the control tower: "We have an explosion aboard, we are descending immediately!" A second bomb exploded, causing the plane to crash into the water. All 73 people on board died, including all 24 members of the Cuban national fencing team, many of them teenagers. (1) Until 9/11, Cubana Flight 455 was the worst act of terrorism aboard a commercial airline in the Americas. One of the men responsible for the planning of this incident currently lives within the United States, and is currently applying for citizenship. His name is Luis Posada Carriles.
A fanatical anti-Castro Cuban exile, Posada has left a bloody swath of terror and destruction across the Gulf of Mexico. By his own admission, the CIA-trained and Miami-funded Posada has planned bombings of Cuban hotels, cafes, and dancehalls. (2) Although he has denied involvement, strong evidence exists that Posada was involved in the bombing of Cubana Flight 455. CIA and FBI documents unearthed by George Washington University’s National Security Archive place Posada among the conspirators at two planning meetings for the bombing. (3)

Posada has spent thirty years on the run from the government of Venezuela, which tried him for his role in the bombing. His trial was never completed and Posada escaped from prison while prosecutors appealed an acquittal and is still wanted by the government of Venezuela. He was arrested in the United States in 2005, and since has been involved in a bid for asylum. A judge ruled last September that he could be deported, but not to Cuba, where he faces execution, or Venezuela, where Posada’s lawyers alleged he would be tortured. Now, in a new twist, Posada applied on April 26, 2006 for US citizenship. (4) He has a good chance of getting it. Not surprisingly, Posada’s case has not made national news. The reason for the resounding silence and indifference given to his case is the double standard that exists in the United States: the very slim difference between a terrorist and a freedom fighter.

In a November 2001 news conference, President George W. Bush declared that, in the "War on Terror", there is no room for neutrality: "A coalition partner must do more than just express sympathy, a coalition partner must perform…All nations…must do something…[It’s] important for nations to know they will be held accountable for inactivity. …[Y]ou’re either with us or against us in the fight against terror." (5) It sounded simple enough: Bush had thrown down the gauntlet, declaring that those nations who protected terrorists or did not do anything to expel or arrest terrorists inside their borders would face U.S. diplomatic, economic, and military consequences. He effectively eliminated the distinction between passive and active sponsors of terror. Georgetown Professor Daniel Byman says that a regime is "guilty of passive sponsorship if it knowingly allows a terrorist group to raise money, enjoy a sanctuary, recruit, or otherwise flourish but does not directly aid the group itself." (6) Again, there is a refreshing simplicity in this definition. Those who harbor terrorists, for whatever reason, are just as guilty as the terrorists themselves. But why then, has the U.S harbored a vicious group of terrorists for over forty years?

Posada’s case is by no means unique. Ever since the Bay of Pigs disaster, the United States government has ignored Cuban exile involvement in terrorist operations against Cuba, and Cuban interests as well as violence and intimidation directed against American citizens. According to the Center for International Policy, "Militant hard-line exile activities in the late 70s and early 80s caused the FBI to designate Miami the ‘terrorist capital’ of the United States. The terrorist activities in Miami included death threats, beatings, mob attacks, vandalism, extortion, bombings and outright murder," (7) The same article reports 68 acts of terror in Miami since 1968, including the bombings of:

The Continental National Bank, where Bernardo Benes, who was one of seventy-five Cuban exiles who met with Fidel Castro to negotiate the release of 3600 political prisoners in Cuba, was an executive (in 1983); the Cuban Museum of Art (in 1988 and again 1990); the home of Maria Cristina Herrera, the organizer of a conference on U.S.-Cuba relations (1988- the bomb was discovered in her garage before it went off); Marazul Tours, which arranges travel to Cuba (1989 and again in 1996): Little Havana’s Centro Vasco, prior to the performance of Cuban singer Rosita Fornes (1996); the Amnesia nightclub before a performance by Cuban singer ManolĂ­n (1999)…

Actions abroad have included bombings and assassinations directed against Cuban interests in Venezuela, Guatemala, and other countries. Yet in many cases the CIA and FBI did little to prevent these actions or apprehend the perpetrators. The documents in the National Security Archive’s cache demonstrate that US intelligence had advance knowledge of the bombing of Cubana Flight 455, but did nothing to warn Cuban authorities or stop it. (8)

The Cuban exiles are not the only ones who have enjoyed such passivity from US law enforcement and intelligence. According to an article Georgetown’s Professor Daniel Byman wrote in Survival magazine, the United States also allowed representatives of the anti-Iran terror group Mujahedin-e Khalq to lobby government officials until 1997, and turned a blind eye to blatant IRA fundraising by front organizations such as the Irish Northern Aid Committee during the bloodiest time of "The Troubles". (9) Of course there is also the now familiar clandestine US aid to the Contras in Nicaragua and the anti-Soviet Islamic fighters in Afghanistan during the 1980s. Undeniably, the United States has been both a passive and active sponsor of terrorism for many years. However, to officials in Washington, such people are not terrorists but "heroes" and "freedom fighters."

Why does the U.S. government harbor and tolerate international killers and thugs like Posada? Cold War-era opposition to Castro certainly is one explanation. The enemy of an enemy was a friend, no matter how unsavory. The National Security Archive documents reveal a surprising degree of collusion between Posada and the United States. His involvement can be found in the Iran-Contra affair, where he worked as an overseer in the illegal supplying of weapons for the American-backed rebels. He worked for a CIA operative who reported directly to the White House (10). "The F.B.I. and the C.I.A. don't bother me, and I am neutral with them. Whenever I can help them, I do," Posada boasted (11). But for all intents and purposes, the Cold War ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union fifteen years ago. As President Bush and his allies are so fond of reminding us, September 11 dramatically changed the world order. There is no excuse, then, for the continued toleration, if not outright acceptance, of murderers like Posada. He is an unrepentant, fanatical terrorist who has taken innocent human lives and will most likely do so again. When asked whether he felt any guilt over his campaign of hotel and café bombings, Posada declared that he "sleeps like a baby" (12).

Why is someone like Posada on the threshold of becoming a United States citizen? The answer lies in the insidious influence of the Cuban exile lobby in America. Blinded by rage over their expulsion from Cuba, they will settle for nothing less than the total destruction of Castro’s regime by any means necessary. Like Al Qaeda’s bombers and hijackers, the murder of innocent civilians is of little consequence. Yet politicians of every political stripe bend over backwards to pander to them because of Florida’s importance as a swing state.

Lobbying by wealthy, politically connected Cuban exiles has resulted in softball treatment for many Cuban exile terrorists, and, if some are to believed, material aid. Posada claims to have the financial backing of the Cuban-American National Foundation (CANF), a powerful tax-exempt lobbying group whose reach extends deep into the Beltway. (13) The CANF has frequently intervened on behalf of terrorists, including Virgilio Paz, one of the killers of the former Chilean foreign minister Orlando Letelier in a 1976 Washington car-bombing. Paz was released from INS custody after a campaign largely organized by CANF. Similarly, the first Bush administration, under pressure from the Cuban exile lobby, gave asylum to exile terrorist Orlando Bosch. Bosch fired a bazooka at a Polish freighter docked in Miami and has been linked by the Justice Department to "more than thirty acts of sabotage and violence" in the United States, Puerto Rico, Panama and Cuba; planning the murder of two Cuban diplomats in Argentina (who subsequently were kidnapped and disappeared); the bombing of the Mexican embassy in Guatamala in 1976; and package bombs to Cuban embassies in Lima, Madrid, Ottawa and Buenos Aires." Bosch has also been suspected of involvement in the bombing of Cubana 455, though never convicted. (14)

In the United States, there is little public knowledge of these exiles’ horrible crimes. The media is simply not interested in reporting on acts of terrorism that do not fit the simplistic template constructed by the Bush administration. As Jeff Cohen noted in a Los Angeles Times op-ed, "The stories of Luis Posada and the CIA's historic links to right-wing terror groups overseas have been under-reported because much of the U.S. media is content presenting a simplistic view of the world where Americans in white hats police the globe of black hats--usually worn by Middle Eastern terrorists." (15) The idea of a murderous campaign waged by US citizens both at home and abroad is deeply unsettling and a contradiction of the "official" values of the "War on Terror."

If the U.S. gives Posada citizenship, what separates the U.S. from Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and the other countries that the United States has been charged with passive sponsorship of terrorism? It is the height of hypocrisy to lecture other countries to do more about terrorism when we are seriously entertaining a bid for citizenship by a man who is wanted for helping to destroy a passenger airplane. The United States invaded and occupied Afghanistan because the country’s Taliban regime refused to give up Bin Laden. Why should Pakistan curb the activities of its Kashmiri terrorist groups if we condone a similar campaign of violence against a legitimate government? The citizenship of Luis Posada Carriles will make a mockery of the United States and all it claims to stand for.

On a more human level, the families of those lost in the bombing of Cubana Flight 455 deserve justice. Ordinary people, not soldiers of Castro’s regime, perished in the attack, people whose lives matter just as much as those lost in 9/11. Unlike the famous passengers of Flight 93, the passengers of Cubana Flight 455 apparently do not merit a Hollywood movie or widespread fame. To the relatives of the victims, the Posada citizenship proceedings are a ghoulish insult. The anguish behind the words of Carlos Cremata, who lost his father at the age of 16, is palpable: "What made things worse was that we were never able to bury my father….[The asylum proceedings] makes everything worse…It’s inconceivable." (16)

Posada must not be allowed to wrap himself in the refuge of citizenship. In turn, the United States must act to punish Cuban exile terrorists. Those who have or plan to do harm must be arrested and tried. Those organizations that provide financial support and aid must be banned, like the many Muslim charities under suspicion of being fronts for Al-Qaeda and Hezbollah. The assets of those who bankroll terror out of their own pockets must be frozen. It is time to end the mockery of justice, peace, and order that has existed for too long in Miami.

Adam Elkus lives in Pacific Palisades, Calif. He has written for Truthdig, Strawberry Press Magazine, Wanderings and Altar Magazine.


Sources:

1. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7678398/ http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/

belligerence/caso-avion-cubano.pdf

2. http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/

americas/071298cuba-plot.html

3. http://www.familiesforjustice.cu/common/

assets/docs/articles/ingles/miami-heral1.pdf

4. http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/

news/14428817.htm

5. http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/11/06/

gen.attack.on.terror/

6. http://web.mit.edu/SSP/seminars/

wed_archives_04fall/byman.htm

7. http://ciponline.org/cuba/cubaandterrorism/

keepingthingsinperspective.htm

8. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/

NSAEBB153/index.htm

9. http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/

openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.

1080/00396330500433399

10. http://www.jeffcohen.org/docs/columnposada.html

11. http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/

americas/071298cuba-plot.html

12. http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/

americas/071298cuba-plot.html

13. http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/

americas/071298cuba-plot.html

14. http://ciponline.org/cuba/

cubaandterrorism/keepingthingsinperspective.htm

15. http://www.jeffcohen.org/docs/columnposada.html

16. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7678398/

American Accomplice of Terrorist Linked to Death Squads in Iraq

Havana, June 6 (ACN) US Army Colonel James Steele, who was involved in the Iran-Contras scandal along with international terrorist Luis Posada Carriles at his command, is now an advisor to death squads in Iraq.

The presence of the US army officer in Iraq has just been revealed by US Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich, Granma daily reports.

Luis Posada Carriles, currently under arrest in the US charged with illegal entry into that country, was the first to report to Colonel Steele about the downing of a DC-3 aircraft in Nicaragua and the arrest of Eugene Hassenfus, the incident that led to the Iran-Contras scandal.

In a letter addressed to the US State Department, Kucinich notes that Colonel Steele, a current advisor to the US ambassador in Iraq, implemented a plan in El Salvador under which tens of thousands Salvadorans "disappeared" or were murdered, including Archbishop Oscar Romero and four American nuns.

Colonel Steele has been assigned to the new counter-insurgence unit known as the Special Police Commando, which operates under the Iraqi Interior Ministry, said Kucinich.

A 1996 investigation by US journalist Robert Parry, who formerly worked as a reporter for Associated Press, Newsweek and PBS TV, revealed that Posada reported to two FBI officers on his participation in the huge drug trafficking and weapon smuggling operation at the orders of Colonel Steele, a close ally of Colonel Oliver North and his bosses in the White House.

In his book titled "Caminos del Guerrero" (Paths of the Guerilla), terrorist Posada Carriles boasts of his close links to Steele and wrote that in El Salvador, he, Felix Rodriguez Mendigutiand and Colonel Luis Orlando Rodriguez jointly cooperated with Colonel Steel outside their formal bounds of service."

In its article, the Granma newspaper points out that it is no surprise that —having such powerful allies— Posada now enjoys the protection and privileges that he is being given in El Paso, Texas.

At the same time that Posada is being held in that city, five Cuban anti-terrorist fighters remain in prison for having risked their lives by infiltrating Florida-based Cuban-American terrorist groups which served as faithful accomplices of the US’ dirty wars against Latin America.

So you thought Iraqis would receive justice?

Sovereignty in Iraq. It is worth remembering those three words when you weigh the number of atrocities committed by US troops and private security (former US, UK, South African and other military personnel) firms against the number of those charged, punished or even incarcerated.

I told you about how the US military blatantly lied about Ishaqi. And for the past two years they lied about Falluja and the use of White Phosphorous in addition to shooting at civilians carrying white flags, blowing up hospitals, and wome and children.

(The excuse was that every male above the age of 15 was legitimate target, every person carrying a white flag was a terrorist, every hospital was a terrorist stronghold, every ... well you get the picture. Just keep it in mind the next time a US soldier surrenders or is captured, git?)

The world public have seen video evidence, pictures, heard testimony and despite all of this the Western military man is NEVER WRONG. The fault is on the Iraqis for being ... Iraqis.

So, is anyone really surprised that military contractors videotaping strafing civilian cars are found illegible for criminal charges.

Yes, that means investigators found no criminal act had been committed.
The U.S. military has concluded its investigation into a video that appeared to show private security contractors shooting at civilian vehicles driving on highways in Iraq and determined that no one involved will be charged with a crime, a military spokesman in Baghdad said.

Agents with the Army's Criminal Investigation Division "reviewed the facts available concerning the incident to determine if there was any potential criminality that falls within CID's investigative purview," Maj. Timothy Keefe said in a written statement. "The review determined that no further investigative effort on the part of Army CID was warranted."

The investigation, which officials have not released or discussed publicly, began after the video was posted on an Internet site purportedly run by employees of Aegis Defense Services, a London-based firm with a $293 million U.S. government security contract -- the largest of any security firm working in Iraq.

An Aegis spokeswoman, Sarah Pearson, declined to comment on the findings, saying the company had not yet seen the report. She also would not comment on the company's internal investigation into the matter.

The initial online version of the video, posted in late 2005 on the site, ( http://www.aegisiraq.co.uk ) appeared to have been taken from a camera mounted in the rear window of a sport-utility vehicle. It contained several brief clips of cars being strafed by machine-gun fire, set to the music of the Elvis Presley song "Mystery Train." A version posted months later contained laughter and the voices of men joking with one another during the shootings...

No security contractor has been prosecuted for such incidents, in part because of an agreement forged soon after the U.S. invasion in 2003 that made it impossible for the Iraqi government to prosecute contract workers. While several contractors have been relieved of their duties for shooting without cause, actions taken against contractors are generally carried out quietly and rarely, if ever, disclosed.


Imperialism. Racism. Xenophobia. Islamophobia. Death cult. Bloodthirsty. Nazi. Nazi. Nazi.

Is anyone beginning to see the pattern here? How do Iraqis get justice for the crimes perpetrated against them?

How do they protect their families and friends and ensure they to do not get ground down by the merciless inhuman racist war machine that has occupied their land?

One of the kidnapped men who was eventually released/freed said one of his captors, whom they nicknamed "Junior", said he had joined the resistance after his father, mother, fiance, best friend and fiance were killed in a US air strike on Falluja.

Pretty soon, all of Iraq will be resistance.

For those who talk to me about democracy, stuff yourselves. It lies dead next to all the children the "democratic" troops have murdered.

Happy Anniversary, Pentagon Papers

Today is the 35th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times. The traditional gift on such dates is coral. Thus I'm going to give the Papers a plaque made of coral that says "I Don't Understand—How Could This Possibly Be Relevant To The Present Day?" This plaque also has a small button that, when pressed, produces the sound of two million Vietnamese peasants dying.

Now, here's an article from the LA Times by Daniel Ellsberg:

Today, there must be, at the very least, hundreds of civilian and military officials in the Pentagon, CIA, State Department, National Security Agency and White House who have in their safes and computers comparable documentation of intense internal debates — so far carefully concealed from Congress and the public — about prospective or actual war crimes, reckless policies and domestic crimes: the Pentagon Papers of Iraq, Iran or the ongoing war on U.S. liberties. Some of those officials, I hope, will choose to accept the personal risks of revealing the truth — earlier than I did — before more lives are lost or a new war is launched.
A U.S. News & World Report story on the anniversary is here. And the National Radio Project has produced a thirty minute segment of Ellsberg talking about civil disobedience in Crawford, Texas.

Gitmo Sings the Tombstone Blues by Chris Floyd

I was going to write something about the prisoner suicides at Bush's Cuban concentration camp, and the Pentagon's ludicrous "explanation" that the deaths were, simultaneously, both a carefully planned act of "asymmetric warfare" and also an outburst of pure mumbo-jumbo among primitive darkies who had somehow concocted the mystical belief that if three of them died then all the prisoners would be freed.

(Sidenote: The utter contempt in which the Bush Regime holds the American people was clearly on display here: they're not even trying to make a coherent, plausible defense of the torturous limboland they've devised in Gitmo anymore. They just say anything, even if it contradicts itself, anything to muddy the waters, knowing that people -- or at least the ever-servile media -- will swallow it and move on to the next news cycle. But they also don't care if people don't swallow it; the blatant Bushist attitude toward public relations now is: "This is our story, we're sticking to it -- and what are you going to do about it if you don't like it? Nothing, punk." The self-contradictory explanation of the Gitmo suicides -- rational, deliberate, intelligent act of guerilla warfare and crack-brained hoodoo from exotic lands -- is strangely reminiscent of the Regime's take on the 9/11 attacks: an act of war so rationally and intelligently planned that not even the world's largest intelligence apparatus could detect it, much less stop it -- and a lucky shot from a bunch of half-baked kooks dreaming about 72 virgins in Heaven.)

So I was going to write about all this, and how the suicides bring home the morally corrosive nature of torture and inhumane treatment, and how the aggressive, hyper-macho bluster of insecure national leaders create the noxious atmosphere in which atrocity and dehumanization thrive....but then I remembered that Bob Dylan had covered all this more than 40 years ago, in the middle of another godforsaken military adventure that saw torture, murder and mass destruction wielded in the name of democracy and freedom, way back when George W. Bush was still a high-school creep chugging brewskis and chasing tail, long before his apotheosis as the law-transcending War Leader. It was these lines from "Tombstone Blues," from the 1965 album, Highway 61 Revisited:

Well, John the Baptist after torturing a thief
Looks up at his hero the Commander-in-Chief
Saying, "Tell me great hero, but please make it brief,
Is there a hole for me to get sick in?"

The Commander-in-Chief answers him while chasing a fly,
Saying, "Death to all those who would whimper and cry!"
And dropping a bar bell he points to the sky,
Saying, "The sun's not yellow, it's chicken."
What more can you say about our current situation? Those who are given the illegal orders from the leaders of a government they have been taught to respect and believe are the only ones who might feel troubled at the moral hell they've been plunged into; but the Commander-in-Chief is too full of pseudo he-man blather and sexually anxious swagger to notice or care.

But of course, Dylan wrote these lines four decades ago; this stain goes deep in our republic, it's been around a long time: the bellicose liars of the Bush Regime are only its latest manifestation. ***

Cure the Disease By Cindy Sheehan

Oftentimes when I am interviewed before a speaking engagement, the reporter will ask me what I am going to talk about. I often answer: "I have no idea, but I am excited to find out!"

I never write speeches, and I rarely even make notes. I just speak from my heart, and many times, I am even surprised by what I say.

Recently, I was speaking to a very large, warm, and enthusiastic crowd in Cincinnati. My thinking has been evolving about what I call BushCo. I started out believing that George was just a puppet (although willing) of a much larger machine that used him as badly as he was using his troops in his role as commander in chief. I still believe that.

Yet, although George is the not so clever, greedy, power-hungry string-puppet of many clever, greedy, power-hungry puppeteers, he is not the problem: he is just the symptom of a much greater problem: the corruptness of our democracy.

I was conveying this thinking to the audience at my talk in Cincy when I said, "George Bush is only a boil on the ass of democracy." He is not, no matter what the world thinks, the ass and, similarly, he is not, no matter what he thinks, the democracy. No doubt about it, he is a boil that needs to be lanced (impeached and removed from office) to cure immediate problems, such as crimes against humanity, but lancing him is only temporary relief. We have to look at why our democracy was so ill that it manifested itself in the symptom of George Bush. A symptom is also a warning sign and a wake up call. Let's examine the disease before we break out in more boils ... which could be even more severe and poisonous than George.

One of the deep-seated diseases in the USA is the false sense of patriotism that we are infected with from the time we are toddlers that allows our leaders to mislead us into war after war. Between the first and second world wars, Marine Major General Smedley Butler wrote the seminal work, War is a Racket. Up until that time, he was the most highly decorated Marine in history. He wrote in the first two paragraphs of his booklet:
War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.
A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small "inside" group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes.
These occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan are nothing but sickly rackets, with the war machine getting wealthy off of our children's flesh and blood and off of the ruination of two countries and the deaths of many, many civilians. One way to cure the disease of losing our children in war that infects the mere citizens of America while the war profiteers' bank accounts are glowing with health is to quit giving the military industrial complex our children, like fatted calves, to be sacrificed for their own bottom lines. We must know deep in our hearts and teach our children that our military only exists to keep the world safe for our corporations and that our military should only be used, as General Butler said, to defend our country.

Recently, the US administration claims to have killed al-Qaeda leader al-Zarqawi and crowed about killing the man who Rummy called the person responsible for killing more innocent men, women and children than anyone in the world (was he looking in a mirror?). I and anyone else with eyes have to be skeptical that a person who had two 500 pound bombs dropped on his head would look so good in his nicely framed "death" photo. My dear friend Michael Berg, whose son Nicholas was allegedly beheaded by al-Zarqawi, had the unmitigated nerve to go on national TV and say that, no, it did not make him feel better that this person was killed, because he knows that it won't bring Nicholas back and in making al-Zarqawi a martyr it will probably only increase the violence. Violence is a cycle that can be stopped by stopping violence. Michael, who is running for Congress on the Green Party ticket in Delaware, knows that our diseased democracy really killed his son, anyway.

BushCo. keeps spewing the vomit that we have to "honor the sacrifices of the fallen by completing the mission for which they gave their lives." Number one, they didn't "give their lives," they were stolen by the tumor of the war machine, and number two, it is seriously disordered when one has to keep killing more people just because so many have already died. Since the "mission" erupts from the same boil that is on the ass of our democracy, the mission is inherently disordered. The cycle of violence has to stop somewhere before our democracy can even sit up in bed.

Our society is a violent one:

among the most violent on earth. Individually, we need to cure and purge our own hearts from any violence in them. Each and every one of us has the responsibility for stopping our own violence and encouraging our children, friends and family members to do the same. Only then can we point at our leaders and demand that they stop their violence in our names. Or, even better, we can elect leaders who are advocating for a Ministry of Peace to be a much needed check and balance on the War Department. Gandhi said that all humanity has a "heart unity." Our hearts are connected to everyone on this planet and when we allow our leaders to kill innocent people, it is like we are damaging or killing our own hearts, like a smoker who can't quit even though he/she knows what the poison is doing to his/her heart.

In the USA, we allegedly have a two party system (that is only traditional and not mandated by the Constitution) and each party should provide tension and checks and balances on each other. As I see it, in our ailing democracy one of our biggest problems is that we now have a one party system. True, there are many courageous members of both parties who have been or are speaking out against the war, but mostly they are all bobble-headed, rubber stamp co-conspirators in the crimes of BushCo. When it comes to social issues like gay marriage and a woman's right to choose, give me a Democrat any day; but when it comes to issues of war and peace, I am afraid the Democrats are getting their strings pulled by the same greed-infected puppeteers that are pulling the strings of the Republicans. To prove this, we only have to look at how many Democrats in both houses are NOT supporting bills or resolutions that have been introduced by such public servants as: Rep John Murtha (D-Pa.), Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Senator Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.). We can also see how most members of both houses keep on giving the boil more money to wage the killing in Iraq. It is shameless, but Congress is suffering from the same disease as the executive branch of our government.

Congress-itis can be cured, but only when a few basic treatments are accomplished:

  • Fix the voting machine problem. The GAO has estimated that 350,000 votes were miscounted, lost, or disappeared into the thin air of the Ohio political machine run by the current Republican candidate for Governor of Ohio, Ken Blackwell. We cannot assure that our democracy will be healthy again without having paper trails for each vote.
  • We voters need to start voting courageously with our consciences. We need to vote for individuals who reflect our Beatitudes. We cannot keep stepping into the voting booth and holding our noses and voting for the "lesser of two evils" because we are afraid of wasting our votes. If we consistently vote for the lesser of two evils, we will perpetuate the cancer of greed for power and mammon.
Recently, Progressives had at least two wonderful chances to offer two candidates for Congress who would have made a tremendous difference in curing the disease that afflicts our Congress: Christine Cegelis in Illinois and Marcy Winograd in Los Angeles. In each case, voters chose the other candidate, and in each case the victors are not calling for an end to the occupation of Iraq (Marcy's opponent, incumbent, Jane Harman, consistently supports BushCo. in carrying out the war crimes in Iraq) or an investigation into the symptomatic diseases of BushCo. Both Marcy and Christine would have gone to Congress calling for an immediate end to the occupation of Iraq and impeachment hearings for BushCo. But the power of the party machine in Christine's case that airlifted a disabled Iraqi war vet who supports the continuing occupation of Iraq into Cegelis's district, and the club of incumbency and defective machinery in Marcy's case, have left us with just a deepening of the illness - no relief, whatsoever.

Fascism is a hard concept to define. Most people think of dictators and armies marching in lockstep in grand parades, but one of the classical definitions of fascism is when corporate interests run the government and when the corporate-owned government controls the media. We have seen this in very real practice: we know that our government has paid journalists to spread propaganda like it is fact, especially in Iraq, where the people of Iraq are propagandized by the Pentagon. We live in a very dangerous age, in which our information has become sensationalized and we are told that we should care more about Lacrosse sex scandals then we are to care about crimes against humanity perpetrated by our government. Not one corporate-owned media outlet will even dare claim that our sick leaders in DC are committing crimes against humanity.

We are ill-informed, and that contributes to the illness of our democracy. Martin Luther King Jr. said: "Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." We must sincerely seek out the truth and be conscientious in our search for justice and peace. We cannot allow ourselves to wallow in the numbness of apathy any longer.

One of the most pervasive illnesses that is affecting our democracy is that of apathy and complacency. Dr. Howard Dean said that democracy fails when we wait for our neighbor to practice it. In my travels around the world I marvel at the level of knowledge that most of our brothers and sisters in other countries have about American current events. They are far more savvy about the machinations and workings of our government than many of our citizens here. I believe that the combination of all of the above deep-seated maladies strive to make this so. An entertained electorate is far preferable to an informed one.

We need to take the responsibility on ourselves to inform our decisions with balanced material and to shut out the rhetoric and the political punditry that tells us all about what we just heard and what we should think about it. We need to look for honest reporting: as Jack Webb used to say, "Just the facts, ma'am." We not only need to be informed, we need to take direct action on all fronts to holistically restore our democracy to health.

I fully endorse and advocate an investigation into the lies, treason, and crimes against humanity that BushCo. are perpetrating on the world. Justice needs to be served. However, and this is an important
point: even if we rid our government of every neo-con cyst that is festering on our democracy, what we get in replacement will still be corrupt and the change will be meaningless unless the disease that is affecting our democracy is healed.

Our democracy is on its last legs thanks to the murderous policies and the mutilation of our Constitution by BushCo. and its free rein from Congress and "we the people," but it can be nursed back to health. It may take a miracle, but we have seen those before. Extreme intervention must begin now.

We are the miracle workers we have been waiting for. Let's get busy, stat!

--------

Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Casey Sheehan, who was killed in Iraq on 4/4/04. She is the co-founder and president of Gold Star Families for Peace, and the author of two books: Not One More Mother's Child and Dear President Bush.

Monday, June 12, 2006

"How is it possible that the government assassinates a young student and nothing changes? By Subcomandante Marcos

"How is it possible that the government assassinates a young student and to the government, the political parties and the mass media everything stays the same?"
"I am going to deliver this (tear gas canister) to his Alexis’ father so that it can be used as evidence… I recommend that they look for the fingerprints of Vicente Fox and Enrique Peña Nieto on it."
By Subcomandante Marcos
Translation of Remarks on the 35th Memorial of a Student Massacre in Mexico City
June 12, 2006

Compañeros and compañeras of the Other Campaign: 35 years after the paramilitary group named “Halcones” (“Falcons”), trained, equipped and paid by the government, attacked a peaceful demonstration by students, the police assassinated the young student Alexis Benhumea HernĂ¡ndez, a militant of the Other Campaign.

On the 4th of May of this year, Alex was in San Salvador Atenco, showing his solidarity with the townspeople when the police forces of the government assaulted the place. Hundreds of men and women were beaten, arbitrarily and illegally arrested, women raped, minors of age imprisoned, homes looted and a child spectator of the police brutality was assassinated.

Alexis was seriously wounded in the head by a tear gas projectile, a projectile like the one that I am showing you… in the house where Alexis found himself at the moment he was attacked by the police. I am going to deliver this to Alexis’ father so that it can be used as evidence. I’m not touching it. I recommend that they look for the fingerprints of Vicente Fox and of Enrique Peña Nieto on it.

Alexis waited many hours without receiving medical attention, owed to the state of siege that the government imposed on Atenco. Alexis stayed alive for more than a month, until death took him in the early hours of this June 7th. Alexis is dead and the projectile that killed him was made in the United States, fired from a grenade launcher with which the police assaulted Atenco on May 4, 2006.

Alexis is dead and we ask ourselves why. Why did the police assassinate a 20-year-old youth, a brilliant student, an artist? And why do the politicians up above act like this doesn’t matter to them? How is it possible that the government assassinates a young student and to the government, the political parties and the mass media everything stays the same? They haven’t even bothered to insist that it be investigated, not even a timid and weak insinuation, but full speed ahead with the commercials that offer political positions as if they were deodorants that can cover up the bad smell that the Mexican political system emits.

The homicide of this young man, our compañero of the Other Campaign, as been disrespected by the Mexican political class, that doesn’t dignify itself to even look at the pain of Alexis’ family, just as it has neither eyes nor ears for the injustice that keeps our compañeras and compañeros in the prisons of the State of Mexico.

Why haven’t the candidates said anything about this assassination? It’s because Alexis’ death is not saleable. It’s not an attractive product on the electoral market. That’s why they say nothing. But we, however, do seek a response to the homicide of our compañero,

Alexis is assassinated because he was young and rebellious, because he was in the Other Campaign, because he had chosen to path of transforming a system that turns youth into a crime that is punished with the death penalty. Any youth from below, man or woman, knows that he is persecuted as a delinquent for his way of dress, of wearing his hair, his manner of speaking, his music. The graffiti artist, the banda, those who listen to ska, dress in black, the punk, the anarchist, the libertarian, the hop hop musician, the student, the street vendor, the worker, the rocker, the employee, any youth from below is favorite prisoner for the police, whichever party symbol runs the government.

And the governmental argument is that these youths seem like drug addicts, crooks, criminals, while those that don’t seem like them are: businessmen, congressmen, senators, secretaries of state, mayors, the president, functionaries on all levels, police chiefs, generals, the president’s wife; that’s where you’ll find the assassins, the crooks, the criminals, and not among the youths. Because it scares them that young people reject authority, since it is authority that persecutes them, that jails them, tortures, rapes and assassinates them. What respect can they possibly construct over the weapons that oppress and the jails that imprison?

Alexis Benhumea HernĂ¡ndez is dead, his family is in pain, and we, La Otra, are in pain. The government says it laments it, that it understands, so says he who is in charge, and he pulls out the checkbook and asks how much Alexis’ life was worth. But we, here, below and to the left, don’t ask ourselves the price of his death. We know what it is already and we have written down the cost in our hearts.

In La Otra we ask ourselves: How much was Alexis’ life worth and with it the life of our Homeland? How much for the life of Alexis? How much for the woman, the child, the man, the youth, the elder that is repressed, raped, prisoner, assassinated every day with the alibi of the Law and Order. And we respond: How much for another country? For an Other Mexico?

A Mexico where crime is not rewarded with governmental posts, but with punishment in jail.

A country where the youth are not persecuted, beaten, raped, imprisoned and assassinated because of their age, their culture, their style, if there are not studies, recreation, sports and culture for all of them?

A Mexico where politics ceases to be a business, where it stops being a place where hypocrisy and treason are cheered?

A country where he who works and lives with dignity wins.

A Mexico where he that constructs his wellbeing at the cost of misery for others, he does not exist.

A country where democracy doesn’t involve the pathetic dispute between political parties, that are not parties, but commercial products that deceive the consumer in every way.

A country, a Mexico with democracy, freedom and justice.

If up there above they think they can assassinate Alexis and plant fear and immobility in us, they’re wrong. We will continue. We are going to grow and we will organize that growth. We will continue and we will rise up. And we will not just topple he who leads by ordering, but also he who is owner of it all, he who, decrees from up above a sentence of prison, pain and death for those below. We are what we are and with those from the below that we are we are going to have to find the justice we need, the freedom we deserve and the democracy that we long for.

When that day comes, when we comply with our job, then the streets and the countryside of our country will no longer be a place of broken dreams, of badly achieved lights, of mature cynicism, of death for life.

That day our country, our Mexico, will be a path to dignity.

It will be another country, an Other Mexico.

Long life to Alexis.

May death die.

Thank you, compañeros.

Indigenous March in Support of Chavez in Venezuela By: Michael Fox - Venezuelanalysis.com

Caracas, Venezuela, June 10, 2006—Hundreds of representatives from various indigenous Venezuelan ethnicities marched in Caracas on Wednesday in the “First National March of the Indigenous People.”

The march was organized by the National Indigenous Council of Venezuela (CONIVE) and was held in support of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, against US military operations in Caribbean waters, in support of Venezuela’s withdrawal from the Andean Community of Nations (CAN), and for the unity of their communities in Venezuela. According to CONIVE, the march was the first of many indigenous mobilizations which will be “heating up the streets” over the next 6 months.

CONIVE was born in 1989 and is composed of 60 organizations and representatives from 32 indigenous ethnic groups including the Warao, Yucpa, Wayuu, Timotes, Panare, Yanomami and Yecuana, among others.

“Here we are raising our hands for the first time to say, enough… The indigenous peoples in Venezuela are united, we are united because it’s the only way to advance, it’s the only road to speak loudly and I believe that that’s what we are doing right now,” declared CONIVE President and National Assembly representative, Nicia Maldonado at the beginning of the march. “We wanted to express this to the President of the Republic, that the indigenous people are going to give the first shout and [the presidential election] on December 3rd, isn’t just any old thing, it is about saving ourselves, about dignity for the indigenous people.”The march was also joined by indigenous from Peru and Ecuador.

“The withdrawal from CAN makes us very happy, because, first off, it helps us to protect our traditional knowledge. That space was there to sell off the traditional knowledge and the natural resources, without even consulting the organizations… we also say that we support Chavez’ politics in terms of the G-3. We are happy that you have gone, you have to analyze all of the spaces of power, because for us they are tentacles of imperialism,” said Maldonado.

“We are also saying to the government of Mr. Bush, take all your military that you have in the Caribbean and get out, because here, we want peace, we want to live, because we are in search of our greatness, our spirituality and the flourishing of our liberty.” She said, “we don’t want war, we want peace, because the liberation is here in Venezuela. You can’t call President Chavez an imperialist, because you are the imperialists and when you speak about President Chavez, you are speaking about the indigenous people.”

As the march wound it’s way towards the Presidential Palace of Miraflores, it paused at the Attorney General’s office, the National Assembly and the Vice-President’s office, to deliver three respective documents declaring the unity of Venezuela’s indigenous, offering their support to President Chavez, condemning the recent elimination by the supreme court (TSJ) of a constitutional article against the violence against women and calling for increased consultation with all of Venezuela’s indigenous.

“We are calling for the construction and the institution of the Organic Law of Political Participation of the Indigenous People which says that they must consult the indigenous people… and ask that they consult all of the people, not just a small part,” said Maldonado.

Maldonado further expressed that she believes Venezuela’s indigenous can offer 300,000 votes towards Chavez’ goal of 10 million in this December’s presidential elections.

“What we wanted to express in the documents is that here are the indigenous peoples, and they can count on our support,” she said.

According to Representative Maldonado, who represents approximately 30,000 indigenous peoples from 25 communities in the southern Venezuelan states of Apure and Amazonia, there are approximately 800,000 indigenous in Venezuela.

Chapter 8 of the 2001 Venezuelan Constitution explicitly protects the rights of Venezuela’s indigenous peoples:

“The state recognizes the existence of the indigenous people and communities, their social, political and economic organization, their cultures, uses and customs, languages and religions, as well as their habitat, original rights to the land that their ancestors traditionally occupied and that is necessary for their development and in order to guarantee their way of life.” Reads Article 119.

But even with protection under the Constitution, many indigenous participants in the march expressed grave problems. “We are losing our culture. Without culture, we can’t live, so we are trying to revive our indigenous culture, so that it is re-born again,” said Valerio Hernandez, one of 300 indigenous fishermen, farmers and artisans from the Macuro Delta who traveled to Caracas for the march. “Economics, transportation and health are also difficult, because the doctors don’t arrive to where we are. And we don’t have the means of communication or transportation. We don’t have anything and that’s how we have been, well, stepped on. But now we want to shed light on this…”

While overwhelmingly supporting President Chavez, CONIVE also lent their support to the indigenous people struggling against the exploration of coal on their “sacred” lands in the state of Zulia, which has become a controversial issue in Venezuela over the last few years.

“For the Yucpa people, that land is sacred,” said Maldonado “and the President has said, that if you can’t save the land, the coal will stay under ground… I think that’s important. We are defending and accompanying our Yucpa brothers… the companies can’t just come and kick them off… our president has said that it’s a question of dialoging between the people and the government, the coal companies and the international organizations…

We are convinced that through the dialogue with the private companies we will come to a solution, but they need to respect us, and they can’t disrespect our sacred sites.”

As the sun set on Wednesday evening most of the participants in the march were filing back onto their buses and preparing to head home, but Maldonado expressed that this is just the beginning and that they are planning numerous demonstrations for June, July and beyond.

“Right now we are going to incorporate in to the events. On June 22, we are going to unite the masses with mobilizations in all of the states.” Said Maldonado. “After August, everything will be headed towards 10 million [votes].”

Interestingly, just beyond the Vice-President’s Office, the road over Llaguno Bridge (the infamous site of the April 11, 2002 events) towards the presidential palace, Miraflores, was blocked by an armored vehicle and several anti-riot police dressed in storm-trooper gear.

An official with another group of armored police blocking a side street stated that it was not the indigenous march but the students that they were prepared for. The official said that the students had “promised violence” and vowed to go to Miraflores.

The Venezuelan daily, Ultimas Noticias, reported on Thursday, that students from the Central Venezuelan University were on the streets last Wednesday, protesting against “the persecution” of University of the Andes student Nixon Moreno, who has been accused of instigating the recent violence in Merida, and for which a Venezuelan court has issued an arrest warrant. No conflicts between the military guards and the students were reported.

Four South American countries refuse to send their military personnel to the controversial School of the Americas.

Venezuela, Bolivia, Argentina and Uruguay have stopped sending their military officers to the School of the Americas (SOA), the US army-run Spanish-language military academy. Over the last 60 years, 62,000 officials have graduated from the institution, among them some of Latin America’s most ruthless dictators.

The SOA is losing four countries whose citizens lived through some of its bloodiest teachings, and more withdrawals could be on the way.

Brazil, Chile, Peru and Ecuador are stops on a tour by Roy Bourgeois, a Catholic priest who runs the School of the Americas Watch (SOAW), a watchdog group whose mission is to close the institution indefinitely. In a visit to Latin America in March and April Bourgeois helped convince Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay to leave the SOA, following Venezuela’s January 2005 decision.

In the 60 years since the SOA began training military personnel from 18 countries in the region in low-intensity warfare, counter-insurgency tactics, commando operations, psychological and other interrogation techniques, "all so far from that aim of promoting democracy and educating military personnel in the respect of human rights, the motto with which it was created in 1946," said Bourgeois.

At least 11 Latin American dictators graduated from the SOA, including Argentines Leopoldo Galtieri (1981-82) and Roberto Viola (1981), Bolivians Hugo Banzer Suarez (1971-78) and Luis Garcia Meza (1980-81), Guatemalan Efrain Rios Montt (1982-83), Honduran Juan Melgar Castro (1975-79), Panamanian Manuel Noriega (1983-89), Brazilian Humberto Castelo Branco (1964-67), Uruguayan Gregorio Alvarez (1981-85), Ecuadorian Guillermo Rodriguez Lara (1972-76), and Chilean Augusto Pinochet (1973-90).

Another of the SOA's students was now-deceased Salvadoran army major Roberto D'Aubuisson, who graduated in 1972. D'Aubuisson is credited with founding death squads in El Salvador, one of which was responsible for the murder of Bishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero en 1980.

But powerful officials in the shadow of Latin American heads of state also received training from the institution, and put the SOA’s teachings to work in the form of regimented assassinations and torture. Vladimiro Montesinos, the "power behind the throne," security advisor to Peru's ex-President Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), was a star student at the SOA, as was Manuel Contreras, head of secret services during the Chilean dictatorship, who was responsible for the murders of former army chief Carlos Prats in 1974 and ex-Foreign Minister Orlando Letelier in 1976.

On March 27, Argentina’s Defense Minister Nilda GarrĂ© said: "Not only will Argentina not send officials to the School of the Americas, but it is illegal to send them because this ill-fated institution provides training in areas of interior security and the fight against drug-trafficking, and the military are prohibited by law to do that here."

Uruguay's Defense Minister Azucena Berrutti said March 29 that the government of President Tabare Vazquez "has no intention" of sending military personnel to these courses. "This relationship is completely disqualified," she said.

Bolivia, which suffered through two bloody dictatorships headed by alumni of the SOA, was the fourth country to announce that it was pulling its military personnel out of the courses.
"Our personnel will be gradually removed from the dictator-forming school," said Juan Quintana, the Bolivian government’s chief of staff.

"Bolivia's priority is to finance forms of cooperation that allow for our military personnel to be trained in South American countries, marking a new structure of regional security," Quintana said.

"The Venezuelan soldiers will never set foot in that place again," said Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez during a conference in the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew in New York last September, when he announced his decision that he stop sending troops to the school, located in Fort Benning, in the southern state of Georgia. "In that school, for many years, the majority of the most terrible dictators in Latin America were formed."

A brief look at its history shows that the Latin American countries with most extensive lists of human rights violations have also sent the highest number of officials for training in the School of the Americas. Colombia, with 8,679 alumni, tops the list, followed by El Salvador (6,776), Nicaragua (4,693), Panama (4,235), Bolivia (4,049) and Honduras (3,691).

A Latin American movement to close the school began to develop in the 1990s and it resonated quickly in the United States.

In 1996, the campaign in favor of SOA’s closure received a big boost when The Washington Post published an article showing torture manuals and other techniques taught to Latin American military personnel.

The US Congress intervened and demanded that the Pentagon cease the use of the name "School of the Americas."

SOA was legally closed in 2001, the name was changed to The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, or WHISEC.

"It was like perfuming it in a toxic dump," said Bourgeois.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

207,149 NUMBERS (Venezuela)

207,149 NUMBERS
June 07 2006
This morning when I stopped at the newsstand to buy the daily newspaper, I realized immediately that it was much heavier than usual. Opening to an insert, I saw ninety-five pages filled in relatively small print with numbers--only numbers! They started with 1,104 and ended with 3,320,938.

I was ready to ask the owner of the newsstand to throw the section away so I wouldn't have to carry it home. But then I saw the front page of the section and decided to study it further.

I discovered that tomorrow another similar section will be printed, with more numbers. Totally, there will be 207,146 of them.

And what do these numbers mean? They are the Venezuelan identity card numbers of people who are entitled to social security benefits, some of whom have been waiting since 1971 to receive them. Most are retired individuals, but about 30,000 are survivors and another 20,000 handicapped or invalids. Over $200,400,000 will be distributed to pay off half of what the government owes them. The other half will be paid in November.

I can only imagine what these people feel when they see their identity card number in print.

Some will say that it is a political ploy since presidential elections are coming in December. But why haven't other governments used the same tactic during the past thirty-five years? There was a lot of oil money during those years that was distributed also--to other people instead of those entitled to it.

Critics complain that this is a "populist" government. If populist means giving people that to which they are justly entitled, I like populist governments. And I think the millions of people in the U.S. without decent social security benefits would like a populist government also.

Russia Shifts Part of Its Forex Reserves from Dollars to Euros

On Thursday, June 8, Russia became the latest in the list of countries that shifted a part of its Central Bank reserves from the dollar. Sergei Ignatyev, chairman of the Central Bank, said that only 50 percent of its reserves are now held in dollars, with 40 percent in euros and the rest in pounds sterling. Earlier it was believed that just 25-30 percent of Russia’s reserves were held in euros, with virtually all the rest held in dollars.

Russia's gold and foreign currency reserves have grown rapidly over the last few years in tandem with high oil and gas prices. As MosNews has reported earlier, Russia currently has the world’s fourth-largest reserves, after China, Japan and Taiwan, and it looks to overcome Taiwan by the end of the year, with reserves growing by $5-6 billion monthly.

The Russian Central Bank's move ties in with increasing signs"This is a bearish development for the dollar," Chris Turner, head of currency research at ING Financial Markets, told the British Financial Times. "It reminds us that global surpluses are accumulating to the oil exporters,and Russia is telling us that an increasingly lower proportion of these reserves will be held in dollars. This suggests there is a trend shift away from the dollar."

Clyde Wardle, senior Emerging Market Currency strategist at HSBC, told the paper: "We have heard talk that Middle Eastern countries are doing a similar thing and even some Asian countries have indicated their desire to do so."

Moscow's move was unsurprising. Russia's $71.5billion Stabilization fund, which accumulates windfall oil revenues, is due to be converted from rubles to 45 percent dollars, 45 percent euros and 10 percent sterling. The day-to-day movements of the ruble are monitored against a basket of 0.6 dollars and 0.4 euros. About 39 percent of Russia’s goods imports came from the eurozone in 2005, against just 4 percent from the US.

The statement plays into a perception that central banks, which together hold $4.25 trillion of reserves, are increasingly channeling fresh reserves away from the dollar to reduce potential losses if the dollar was to fall sharply.

Al-Zarqawi Circus Sideshow Continues Unabated

It is sincerely a corporate media circus, a multi-dimensional propaganda effort designed to convince the public al-Zarqawi was indeed alive and then killed by our fearless soldiers in Iraq. As we know, al-Zarqawi was killed some time ago, prior to the neocon invasion of Iraq, and his image was subsequently adopted by the Pentagon, refashioned, and trotted out by Colin Powell at the United Nations. All manner of super-human nastiness was attributed to the ghost of al-Zarqawi, from ricin attacks to a spate of gruesome beheadings. Somewhere along the line, the propagandists in the Pentagon decided to kill al-Zarqawi, and thus chalk up a victory against those who hate our way of life and our freedom to stand in line to use Diebold voting machines.

Now we are told an “autopsy on al-Zarqawi, the leader of the terrorist group al Qaeda in Iraq,” will be performed by “personnel … familiar with background and cultural concerns,” presumably of Muslims and Arabs, never mind the two 500lb bombs dropped on the “al-Qaeda” safe house, reduced to scattered rubble, would have rendered al-Zarqawi to little more than strewn hamburger meat. But then, of course, we are talking about Bushzarro world here, where corporate journalists, basically Pentagon stenographers, never question the absurdity of neocon lies and fantastic fabrications (recall Saddam’s model airplanes, colorfully named “drones of death,” claimed to be “robot aircraft designed to spray poisonous toxins over civilian areas,” and the corporate media sucking it up like a slurpie through a straw, and then asking for more).

As the Bush Ministry of Propaganda, CNN division, would have it, the al-Zarqawi patsy “survived the attack Wednesday in which an Air Force F-16 dropped two 500-pound bombs on a safehouse near Baquba where he was holding a meeting with associates…. Al-Zarqawi was placed on a stretcher by arriving Iraqi police and was still alive when coalition forces arrived, some by helicopter…. Two coalition troops interacted with al-Zarqawi; one began administering first aid, while the second attempted to talk to him.”

However, this is at odds with accounts provided by other witnesses. “An Iraqi man who was one of the first people on the scene of the U.S. airstrike targeting Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said he saw American troops beating a man who had a beard like the al Qaeda leader,” reports CBS News. “The witness, who lives near the house where al-Zarqawi spent his last days, said he saw the man lying on the ground near an irrigation canal. He was badly wounded but still alive, the man told Associated Press Television News…. U.S. troops arriving on the scene wrapped the man’s head in an Arab robe and began beating him, said the local man, who refused to give his name or show his face to the camera. His account could not be independently verified.”

Of course, the CNN version cannot be “independently verified” either, but then it came out of the Pentagon where stories are never questioned, or if they are the journalists doing the questioning are not allowed near the press room again, or are reassigned to research stations at the North Pole.

Al-Zarqawi “obviously had some kind of visual recognition of who they were because he attempted to roll off the stretcher, as I am told, and get away, realizing it was the U.S. military,” Maj. Gen. William Caldwell told Pentagon stenographers via videoconference from Baghdad.

Nice touch, an appropriately climatic end for the al-Zarqawi fairy tale, a manufactured PSYOP program, as reported by the Sydney Morning Herald. Naturally, in the rubberneck frenzy to report the demise of the leader of Iraq’s “insurgency,” the corporate media does not bother to reference this story, reported in April.

Reading the details of the al-Zarqawi fiction, we are expected to suspend all doubt, for instance the stupidity of terrorists and the inability of the Pentagon to catch or kill the stupid terrorists. “In an exclusive interview, an Iraqi army colonel told CNN Friday that intelligence from cell phone technology helped U.S. forces find and kill al-Zarqawi…. Col. Dhiya Tamimi said he worked with U.S. forces to monitor al-Zarqawi and his associates’ cell phones, helping to lead to Wednesday night’s airstrike.” Now, if you were a hunted terrorist with a $25 million bounty on your head, would you be casually using a cell phone? Obviously, this al-Zarqawi guy wasn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer. If al-Zarqawi and his associates were such blithering idiots, why didn’t the Pentagon catch them long ago? Not even Osama used his satellite phone after he caught wind of the United States snooping on him, or so we are told.

But never mind. All of this is like watching Independence Day and believing aliens might actually invade.

Anyway, the al-Zarqawi story has all but wiped the Haditha massacre off the front pages, so for our leader and the neocons it is a blessing, albeit it a manufactured blessing.

1950 letter shows US approved of killing Korean war refugees

1950 letter shows US approved of killing Korean war refugees
By Charles J Hanley and Martha Mendoza in New York
Published: 30 May 2006

More than half a century after hostilities ended in Korea, a document from the war's chaotic early days has come to light - a letter from the US ambassador to Seoul, informing the State Department that American soldiers would shoot refugees approaching their lines.

The letter, dated the day of the army's mass killing of South Korean refugees at No Gun Ri in 1950, is the strongest indication yet that such a policy existed for all US forces in Korea, and the first evidence that that policy was known to upper ranks of the US government.

"If refugees do appear from north of US lines they will receive warning shots, and if they then persist in advancing they will be shot," wrote the ambassador, John J Muccio, in his message to the Assistant Secretary of State, Dean Rusk.

The letter reported on decisions made at a high-level meeting in South Korea on 25 July 1950, the night before the 7th US Cavalry Regiment shot the refugees at No Gun Ri.

Estimates vary on the number of dead at No Gun Ri. American soldiers' estimates ranged from under 100 to "hundreds" dead; Korean survivors say about 400, mostly women and children, were killed at the village 100 miles (160km) south-east of Seoul, the South Korean capital. Hundreds more refugees were killed in later, similar episodes, survivors say.

The No Gun Ri killings were documented in a Pulitzer Prize-winning story by the Associated Press agency in 1999 that prompted a 16-month inquiry by the Pentagon.

The Pentagon concluded that the No Gun Ri shootings, which lasted three days, were "an unfortunate tragedy", not a deliberate killing. It suggested that panicky soldiers, acting without orders, opened fire because they feared that an approaching line of families, baggage and farm animals was concealing enemy troops.

But Mr Muccio's letter indicates that the actions of the 7th Cavalry were consistent with policy, adopted because of concern that North Koreans would infiltrate via refugee columns. And in subsequent months, US commanders repeatedly ordered refugees shot, documents show.

The Muccio letter, declassified in 1982, is discussed in a book by the American historian Sahr Conway-Lanz, who discovered the document at the US National Archives.

"With this additional piece of evidence, the Pentagon report's interpretation [of No Gun Ri] becomes difficult to sustain," Mr Conway-Lanz argues in his book, Collateral Damage, published by Routledge.

In the army's 1999-2001 investigation its researchers reviewed the microfilm containing the Muccio letter. But the 300-page report did not mention it.AP

Hans Blix, today warned against any military attempt at regime change to resolve the nuclear crises in Iran and North Korea.

THE former chief UN weapons inspector in Iraq, Hans Blix, today warned against any military attempt at regime change to resolve the nuclear crises surrounding Iran and North Korea.
Both countries figured prominently in a report from the Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission that Mr Blix presented to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.

The 14-member international commission - set up by Sweden in 2003 to probe ways of reducing the dangers from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons - argued that any negotiations with Iran and North Korea had to consider their security concerns.

"In such states, incentives to acquire nuclear weapons may be reduced by offers of normal relations and assurances that military intervention or subversion aimed at regime change will not be undertaken," the report said.

In the case of Iran, Mr Blix, who chairs the commission, said it was also important to recognise the depth of national pride in nuclear accomplishment.

"There is very much a question of prestige here ... and I think that the other side negotiating with them would do well to take that into account, as well as issues of security," he told reporters at the UN's New York headquarters.

The commission report generally decried the stagnation of global nuclear disarmament efforts and offered a list of 60 recommendations, topped by a call for all governments to accept the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) that was agreed 10 years ago.

It also urged all nuclear states to reduce their arsenals and halt the production of plutonium and highly enriched uranium for nuclear weapons.

And it firmly rejected the idea that nuclear weapons were only dangerous in the hands of rogue governments.

"The commission does not accept that argument," Mr Blix said.

"These weapons are dangerous in anybody's hands, although that doesn't exclude that some could be more reckless than others."

In his preface to the report, Mr Blix urged Washington to take the initiative in bringing the CTBT into force and negotiating a treaty to halt fissile material production.

"In both these areas, the US has the decisive leverage," he said.

"If it takes the lead, the world is likely to follow. If it does not take the lead, there could be more nuclear tests and new nuclear arms races."

The report was welcomed by several non-governmental organisations dealing with disarmament issues.

John Burroughs, executive director of the New York-based Lawyers' Committee on Nuclear Policy, welcomed the case made for a return to multilateralism in US policy on nuclear weapons.

"The problems of existing arsenals, potential spread and potential acquisition by terrorists are all linked," Mr Burroughs said. "The problems can be solved only by a comprehensive approach leading to elimination of all weapons."

FBI admits, "No hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11"

FBI says, "No hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11"

June 10, 2006

This past weekend, a thought provoking e-mail circulated through Internet news groups, and was sent to the Muckraker Report by Mr. Paul V. Sheridan (Winner of the 2005 Civil Justice Foundation Award), bringing attention to the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist web page for Usama Bin Laden.[1] (See bottom of this web page for Most Wanted page) In the e-mail, the question is asked, "Why doesn’t Usama Bin Laden's Most Wanted poster make any direct connection with the events of September 11, 2001?" The FBI says on its Bin Laden web page that Usama Bin Laden is wanted in connection with the August 7, 1998 bombings of the United States Embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya. According to the FBI, these attacks killed over 200 people. The FBI concludes its reason for "wanting" Bin Laden by saying, "In addition, Bin Laden is a suspect in other terrorists attacks throughout the world."

On June 5, 2006, the Muckraker Report contacted the FBI Headquarters, (202) 324-3000, to learn why Bin Laden's Most Wanted poster did not indicate that Usama was also wanted in connection with 9/11. The Muckraker Report spoke with Rex Tomb, Chief of Investigative Publicity for the FBI. When asked why there is no mention of 9/11 on Bin Laden's Most Wanted web page, Tomb said, "The reason why 9/11 is not mentioned on Usama Bin Laden's Most Wanted page is because the FBI has no hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11."

Surprised by the ease in which this FBI spokesman made such an astonishing statement, I asked, "How this was possible?" Tomb continued, "Bin Laden has not been formally charged in connection to 9/11." I asked, "How does that work?" Tomb continued, "The FBI gathers evidence. Once evidence is gathered, it is turned over to the Department of Justice. The Department of Justice than decides whether it has enough evidence to present to a federal grand jury. In the case of the 1998 United States Embassies being bombed, Bin Laden has been formally indicted and charged by a grand jury. He has not been formally indicted and charged in connection with 9/11 because the FBI has no hard evidence connected Bin Laden to 9/11."

It shouldn’t take long before the full meaning of these FBI statements start to prick your brain and raise your blood pressure. If you think the way I think, in quick order you will be wrestling with a barrage of very powerful questions that must be answered. First and foremost, if the U.S. government does not have enough hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11, how is it possible that it had enough evidence to invade Afghanistan to "smoke him out of his cave?" The federal government claims to have invaded Afghanistan to "root out" Bin Laden and the Taliban. Through the talking heads in the mainstream media, the Bush Administration told the American people that Usama Bin Laden was Public Enemy Number One and responsible for the deaths of nearly 3000 people on September 11, 2001. Yet nearly five years later, the FBI says that it has no hard evidence connecting Bin Laden to 9/11.

Next is the Bin Laden "confession" video that was released by the U.S. government on December 13, 2001. Most Americans remember this video. It was the video showing Bin Laden with a few of his comrades recounting with delight the September 11 terrorist attacks against the United States. The Department of Defense issued a press release to accompany this video in which Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld said, "There was no doubt of bin Laden's responsibility for the September 11 attacks before the tape was discovered."[2] What Rumsfeld implied by his statement was that Bin Laden was the known mastermind behind 9/11 even before the "confession video" and that the video simply served to confirm what the U.S. government already knew; that Bin Laden was responsible for the 9/11 attacks.

In a BBC News article[3] reporting on the "9/11 confession video" release, President Bush is said to have been hesitant to release the tape because he knew it would be a vivid reminder to many people of their loss. But, he also knew it would be "a devastating declaration" of Bin Laden’s guilt. "Were going to get him," said President Bush. "Dead or alive, it doesn't matter to me."

In a CNN article[4] regarding the Bin Laden tape, then New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said that "the tape removes any doubt that the U.S. military campaign targeting bin Laden and his associates is more than justified." Senator Richard Shelby, R-Alabama, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee said, "The tape's release is central to informing people in the outside world who don't believe bin Laden was involved in the September 11 attacks." Shelby went on to say "I don't know how they can be in denial after they see this tape." Well Senator Shelby, apparently the Federal Bureau of Investigation isn't convinced by the taped confession, so why are you?

The Muckraker Report attempted to secure a reference to the U.S. government authenticating the Bin Laden "confession video", to no avail. However, it is conclusive that the Bush Administration and U.S. Congress, along with the dead stream media, played the video as if it was authentic. So why doesn't the FBI view the "confession video" as hard evidence? After all, if the FBI is investigating a crime such as drug trafficking, and it discovers a video of members of a drug cartel opening talking about a successful distribution operation in the United States, that video would be presented to a federal grand jury. The identified participants of the video would be indicted, and if captured, the video alone would serve as sufficient evidence to net a conviction in a federal court. So why is the Bin Laden "confession video" not carrying the same weight with the FBI?

Remember, on June 5, 2006, FBI spokesman, Chief of Investigative Publicity Rex Tomb said, "The FBI has no hard evidence connecting Usama Bin Laden to 9/11." This should be headline news worldwide. The challenge to the reader is to find out why it is not. Why has the U.S. media blindly read the government-provided 9/11 scripts, rather than investigate without passion, prejudice, or bias, the events of September 11, 2001? Why has the U.S. media blacklisted any guest that might speak of a government sponsored 9/11 cover-up, rather than seeking out those people who have something to say about 9/11 that is contrary to the government's account? And on those few rare occasions when a 9/11 dissenter has made it upon the airways, why has the mainstream media ridiculed the guest as a conspiracy nut, rather than listen to the evidence that clearly raises valid questions about the government’s 9/11 account? Why is the Big Media Conglomeration blindly content with the government’s 9/11 story when so much verifiable information to the contrary is available with a few clicks of a computer mouse?

Who is it that is controlling the media message, and how is it that the U.S. media has indicted Usama Bin Laden for the events of September 11, 2001, but the U.S. government has not? How is it that the FBI has no "hard evidence" connecting Usama Bin Laden to the events of September 11, 2001, while the U.S. media has played the Bin Laden - 9/11 connection story for five years now as if it has conclusive evidence that Bin Laden is responsible for the collapse of the twin towers, the Pentagon attack, and the demise of United Flight 93?

No hard evidence connecting Usama Bin Laden to 9/11... Think about it.

[1] Federal Bureau of Investigation, Most Wanted Terrorists, Usama Bin Laden, http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/terrorists/terbinladen.htm, [Accessed May 31, 2006]
[2] United States Department of Defense, News Release, U.S. Releases Videotape of Osama bin Laden, December 13, 2001, http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/2001/b12132001_bt630-01.html, [Accessed June 5, 2006]
[3] BBC News, Bin Laden video angers New Yorkers, December 14, 2001, Peter Gould, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1711874.stm, [Accessed June 5, 2006]
[4] CNN, Bin Laden on tape: Attacks ‘benefited Islam greatly”, December 14, 2001, http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/12/13/ret.bin.laden.videotape, [Accessed June 5, 2006]