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Archive for December 9th, 2006

Afghanistan’s opium crop at an all-time high

Posted by musliminsuffer on December 9, 2006


bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Afghanistan’s opium crop at an all-time high

Jerry Mazza, Online Journal Associate Editor

December 8, 2006, OnlineJounrnal

The question is why. Under Taliban rule, which began in the late 1990s, Afghanistan just about kicked the growing habit by 2001. After five years the Taliban is slipping back in, but poppy production has grown by leaps and bounds.

According to the Washington Post, “Opium production in Afghanistan, which provides more than 90 percent of the world’s heroin, broke all records in 2006, reaching a historic high despite ongoing U.S.-sponsored eradication efforts, the Bush administration reported yesterday.

“In addition to a 26 percent production increase over the past year — for a total of 5,644 metric tons — the amount of land under cultivation in opium poppies grew by 61 percent. Cultivation in the two main production provinces, Helmand in the southwest and Oruzgan in central Afghanistan, was up by 132 percent.”

With a flair for understatement, White House drug policy chief John Walters called the news “disappointing.” I’d say it was shocking. But curiously, the “resurgent Taliban forces” were cited “as the main impediment to stabilization and reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan and the U.S. military investment has far exceeded anti-narcotic and development programs.”

But Walters went so far as to say “the drug trade as a problem . . . rivals and in some ways exceeds the Taliban, threatening to derail other aspects of U.S. policy.” But I thought when those bearded brigands, the Taliban, were there, poppy production was near nil, 94% gone.

Somehow this brings to mind a Michael Ruppert article, “The Bush-Cheney Drug Empire,” published in Nexus Magazine. He wrote, “The Bush family’s involvement in drug-running is an open secret, but Dick Cheney’s direct link to a global drug pipeline through a US construction company is less well known.” Sparing no toes, Mike takes the next step . . .

From Medellin To Moscow With Brown & Root

“Halliburton Corporation’s Brown & Root is one of the major components of the Bush-Cheney Drug Empire. The success of Bush Vice-Presidential running mate Richard Cheney at leading Halliburton, Inc. to a five-year, US $3.8 billion ‘pig-out’ on federal contracts and taxpayer-insured loans is only a partial indicator of what may happen, now that the Bush ticket has won the US presidential election.”

But is Cheney’s former company’s subsidiary, Brown and Root, involved in Afghanistan as well? Well, The Center for Public Integrity reports, “KBR was awarded a $100 million contract in 2002 to build a new U.S. embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, from the State Department.” Ah, so. And . . .

“KBR has also been awarded 15 LOGCAP [Logistics Civil Augmentation Program] task orders worth more than $216 million for work under ‘Operation Enduring Freedom,’ the military name for operations in Afghanistan. These include establishing base camps at Kandahar and Bagram Air Force Base and training foreign troops from the Republic of Georgia.”

But hasn’t the CIA traditionally had a hand in Afghanistan’s drug business, going back to the 80s, and also with the Iran-Contra scam, providing a continuous drug-revenue stream to what has been called “our shadow government,” sponsor of worldwide dark ops? Again, according to Ruppert, the Afghanistan opium growing began with the CIA around that time.

CIA planted the opium currently growing

Ruppert says, “Before 1980, Afghanistan produced 0% of the world’s opium. But then the CIA moved in, and by 1986 they were producing 40% of the world’s heroin supply. By 1999, they were churning out 3,200 TONS of heroin a year ­ nearly 80% of the total market supply. But then something unexpected happened. The Taliban rose to power, and by 2000 they had destroyed nearly all of the opium fields. Production dropped from 3,000+ tons to only 185 tons, a 94% reduction! This enormous drop in revenue subsequently hurt not only the CIA’s Black Budget projects, but also the free-flow of laundered money in and out of the Controller’s banks”

University of Wisconsin History Professor Alfred McCoy, writing for The World Traveler, mostly corroborates Ruppert’s views . . .”Within a few years, the currents of global geopolitics then shifted in ways that pushed the CIA into new alliances with drug traffickers. In 1979, the Soviets invaded Afghanistan and the Sandinista revolution seized Nicaragua, prompting two CIA covert operations with some revealing similarities.

“During the 1980s, while the Soviets occupied Afghanistan, the CIA, working through Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence, spent some $2 billion to support the Afghan resistance. When the operation started in 1979, this region grew opium only for regional markets and produced no heroin.

“Within two years, however, the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands became the world’s top heroin producer, supplying 60 percent of U.S. demand. In Pakistan, the heroin-addict population went from near zero in 1979 to 5,000 in 1981 and to 1.2 million by 1985-a much steeper rise than in any other nation.

“CIA assets again controlled this heroin trade. As the Mujaheddin guerrillas seized territory inside Afghanistan, they ordered peasants to plant opium as a revolutionary tax. Across the border in Pakistan, Afghan leaders and local syndicates under the protection of Pakistan Intelligence operated hundreds of heroin laboratories. During this decade of wide-open drug-dealing, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency in Islamabad failed to instigate major seizures or arrests.

“In May 1990, as the CIA operation was winding down, The Washington Post published a front-page expose charging that Gulbudin Hekmatar, the ClA’s favored Afghan leader, was a major heroin manufacturer. The Post argued, in a manner similar to the San Jose Mercury News’s later report about the contras, that U.S. officials had refused to investigate charges of heroin dealing by its Afghan allies ‘because U.S. narcotics policy in Afghanistan has been subordinated to the war against Soviet influence there.’”

Bottom line

So, I guess we “inspired” the Afghans to grow heroin, we exported it to finance dark ops, including a full-scale war. Therefore the miracle of the poppies popping back this year must be what, an accident, an ill wind that blows no good, the testy Taliban or those warlock warlords who fought with us once, or conceivably the favorite U.S. contractor, Brown and Root, in the middle of some larger CIA effort?

Returning for an answer to the Washington Post article, its author Karen DeYoung reported that “Gen. James L. Jones, supreme allied NATO commander said in a recent speech at the Council on Foreign Relations, Afghanistan is NATO’s biggest operation with more than 30,000 troops. Drug cartels with their own armies engage in regular combat with NATO forces deployed in Afghanistan. He said, ‘It would be wrong to say that it is just the Taliban. I think I need to set that record straight.’” Well all right. We like straight talk.

DeYoung also reports, CIA Director Michael V. Hayden told Congress last month, “It’s almost the devil’s own problem . . . Right now the issue is stability. . . . Going in there in itself and attacking the drug trade actually feeds the instability that you want to overcome.” You’ll excuse me while I go and think about that one, “the devil’s own problem.” And who would that devil be?

Lt. Gen. Michael D. Maples, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, agrees. He said, “Attacking the problem directly in terms of the drug trade . . . would undermine the attempt to gain popular support in the region. There’s a real conflict I think.” I think so, too. The conflict seems to be between the people who seeded and grew the opium business and who are now faced with losing their profits from it completely.

We also have Afghan President Hamid Karzai noting that, “once we thought terrorism was Afghanistan’s biggest enemy . . .” I believe that was a Bush-Cheney proposition, not “we” as in all of America’s citizens. Part of that supposition was that we needed to attack the country because it was “harboring” bin Laden and his baddies. To date, bin Laden eludes his pursuers. The president claims he is no longer important. And to finish President Karzai’s quote, now he says “poppy, its cultivation and drugs are Afghanistan’s major enemy.” Aha.

So let’s go get the purveyors. But DeYoung tells us, “Eradication and alternative development programs have made little discernible headway. Cultivation — measured annually with high-resolution satellite imagery that is then parsed by analysts using specialized computer software — is nearly double its highest pre-Karzai level.”

So what does that expensively mined data really tell us? Perhaps, aside from friends at his former employer, Unocal, the pipeline folks, President Karzai may have more friends at the seemingly befuddled CIA, not to mention Halliburton subsidiary Brown and Root, the ineffable Mr. Cheney’s former firm.

Perhaps that was stated more delicately by Karen DeYoung: “After the overthrow of the Taliban government by U.S. forces in the fall of that year [2001], the Bush administration said that keeping a lid on production among its highest priorities. But corruption and alliances formed by Washington and the Afghan government with anti-Taliban tribal chieftains, some of whom are believed to be deeply involved in the trade, undercut the effort.” The italics are mine. The sin is theirs.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New York. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net.

source:
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_1511.shtml

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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650,000 Dead Iraqis – Authors Of Comprehensive Lancet Study On Iraq Civilian Casualties To Present Findings To Congress Monday

Posted by musliminsuffer on December 9, 2006


bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

[]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DECEMBER 8, 2006
11:31 AM

CONTACT: Congressman Dennis Kucinich
Doug Gordon (202) 225-5871(o); (202) 494-5141(cell)

650,000 Dead Iraqis
Authors Of Comprehensive Lancet Study On Iraq Civilian Casualties To Present Findings To Congress Monday

Monday, December 11th AT 10am In 2247 Rayburn House Office Building

WASHINGTON – December 8 – In a bipartisan Congressional briefing hosted by Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich (D-OH) and Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) the authors of the Lancet Study, which found that as many as 650,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed during the war, will present their full findings to Congress.

The briefing will take place Monday, December 11th from 10:00am – 12:00pm in 2247 Rayburn House Office Building.

Congressional Briefing on Lancet Study

Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH)
Congressman Paul (R-TX)
Gilbert Burnham Ph.D., co-director of the Center for Refugee and Disaster Response at Johns Hopkins, co-author of the Lancet Study

Les Roberts Ph.D, lecturer at the Johns Hopkins University and Columbia University, co-author of the Lancet Study.

Juan Cole, Ph.D, Modern Middle East and South Asian History at the University of Michigan. Author of blog Informed Consent.

Richard Garfield, RN DrPH, professor of Clinical International Nursing Deputy Director for Public Health, Operation Assist, National Center for Disaster Preparedness, Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University

###

source:
http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/newsprint.cgi?file=/news2006/1208-03.htm

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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War Crime : A Young Marine Speaks Out

Posted by musliminsuffer on December 9, 2006


bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

War Crime :
A Young Marine Speaks Out

By Philip Martin

12/08/06 “Lew Rockwell” — I’m sick and tired of this patriotic, nationalistic and fascist crap. I stood through a memorial service today for a young Marine that was killed in Iraq back in April. During this memorial a number of people spoke about the guy and about his sacrifice for the country. How do you justify ‘sacrificing’ your life for a war which is not only illegal, but is being prosecuted to the extent where the only thing keeping us there is one man’s power, and his ego. A recent Marine Corps intelligence report that was leaked said that the war in the al-Anbar province is unwinnable. It said that there was nothing we could do to win the hearts and minds, or the military operations in that area. So I wonder, why are we still there? Democracy is not forced upon people at gunpoint. It’s the result of forward thinking individuals who take the initiative and risks to give their fellow countrymen a better way of life.

When I joined I took an oath. In that oath I swore to protect the Constitution of the United States. I didn’t swear to build democracies in countries on the other side of the world under the guise of “national security.” I didn’t join the military to be part of an Orwellian (“1984″) war machine that is in an obligatory war against whoever the state deems the enemy to be so that the populace can be controlled and riled up in a pro-nationalistic frenzy to support any new and oppressive law that will be the key to destroying the enemy. Example given – the Patriot Act. So aptly named, and totally against all that the constitution stands for. President Bush used the reactionary nature of our society to bring our country together and to infuse into the national psyche a need to give up their little-used rights in the hope to make our nation a little safer. The same scare tactics he used to win elections. He drones on and on about how America and the world would be a less safe place if we weren’t killing Iraqis, and that we’d have to fight the terrorists at home if we weren’t abroad. In our modern day emotive society this strategy (or strategery?) works, or had worked, up until last month’s elections.

My point in this; to show that America was never nationalistic. If anything they were Statalistic (giving their allegiance to the state of their residence). This is shown in the fact that the founders created states with fully capable and independent governments and not provinces that were just a division of the federal government. These men believed that America was a place where imperialistic values would be non-existent. Where the people trying to make their lives better by working hard, thinking, inventing and using the free market would tie up so much of normal life that imperialistic colonization and the fighting of wars thousands of miles away for interests that are not our own would be avoided. They believed this expansion of power could be left to the European nations, the England, France and Spain of their time. However this recent, and current influx of nationalistic feeling has created an environment where giving up your rights, going to a foreign country to fight a people who did not ask for us to be there, nor did their leader do anything to warrant us being there, and dying would be considered honorable and heroic. I don’t believe it anymore. I don’t believe it’s right for any American to go along with it anymore. Yes I know that we in the military are bound by the UCMJ and somehow don’t fall under the Constitution (the very thing we’re suppose to be defending) but sooner or later there is a decision that every American soldier, marine, airmen and seamen makes to allow themselves to be sent to a war that is against every fiber this country was founded on. I know that when April rolls around I will be thinking long and hard on that decision. Even though we in the military are just doing as we’re told we still have the moral and ethical obligation to choose to do as we’re told, or to say, “No, that isn’t right.” I believe that if more troopers like me and the professional military, the officers and commanders, start standing up and saying that they won’t let themselves or their troops go to this illegal war people will start standing up and realizing what the heck is going on over there.

The sad fact of the matter is that we are not fighting terrorists in Iraq. We are fighting the Iraqi people who feel like a conquered and occupied people. Personally I have a hard time believing that if I was an Iraqi that I wouldn’t be doing everything in my power to kill and maim as many Americans as possible. I know that the vast majority of Americans would not be happy with the Canadian government, or any other foreign government, liberating us from the clutches of George W. Bush, even though a large number of us would like that, and forcing us to accept their system of government. Would not millions of Americans rise up and fight back? Would you not rise up to protect and defend your house and your neighborhood if someone invaded your country? But we send thousands of troops to a foreign country to do just that. How is it moral to fight a people who are just trying to defend their homes and families? I think next time I go to Iraq perhaps I should wear a bright red coat and carry a Brown Bess instead of my digitalized utilities and M16.

Notice I never once used the word homeland in any of this. I have a secondary point I want to bring up now. Never once was the term homeland ever used to describe the country of America until Mr. Bush began the department of homeland security after the 9/11 attacks. Taking a 20th century history class will teach us that the most notable countries in the last century that referred to their country in this way were Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Hitler used the term fatherland to drum up support, nationalistic support, for his growing war machine. He used the nationalism he created in the minds of the Germans to justify the sacrifice of their livelihood to build the war machine to get back their power from the oppressive restrictions the English and French had put on them at Versailles. This is the same feeling that has been virulently infecting the American psyche in the last hundred years. This is the same feeling that consoles a mother after her son is killed in an attempt to prosecute an aggressor’s war 10,000 miles away. It’s also known as Patriotism these days, but I say, “No more.” No more nationalistic inanity, no more passing it off as patriotism. Patriotism is learning, and educating oneself to understand what their country really stands for.

I heard a lot during the memorial service about how the dead Marine did so much good for others and how his helping others was like a little microcosm of America helping because we have the power to do so. Well if we have the power to help people why aren’t we helping in Darfur where hundreds of thousands of people have died in the last 10 years. Saddam was convicted and sentenced to death for killing 143 Shiites who conspired to assassinate him. (I know all you “patriotic” Americans would be calling for the heads of anyone who conspired to assassinate supreme leader Bush). And yet we spend upwards of 1 trillion dollars and nearing 3,000 lives to help these Iraqis when they don’t even want us there. Not to mention we don’t have the legal justification to be there. I guess we should wait around for the omnipotent W Bush to decide who we should use our superpowerdom to help next. It’s about time to throw him and the rest of the fascists out. Moreover it’s about time to start educating Americans about their past and history, and letting them know that imperialistic leaders are not what the founders of this great country wanted.

Philip Martin <grimmythedog@netscape.net> has been a Marine for 2 years. He is in the infantry (a “grunt”), and spent 7 months in the al-Anbar province of Iraq. He went on more than 180 combat patrols in and outside of the city of Fallujah, where he was hit with 2 IEDs (luckily never injured) and was involved in a number of firefights. He is currently stationed in Twentynine Palms, CA, and due to return to Iraq for a second deployment in April 2007. He is 21-years-old.

source:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig7/martin-p1.html

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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A Plot Revealed : Shiaa factions were behind the Sadr City explosions on the 23rd November

Posted by musliminsuffer on December 9, 2006


bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

A Plot Revealed :

Shiaa factions were behind the Sadr City explosions on the 23rd November

Iraqi League

Shiaa factions were behind the Sadr City explosions on the 23rd

Published December 3, 2006

IL Correspondants – Sadr City

However, the Iraqi League managed recently to obtain a mobile-phone video footage shot by members of Mehdi army while they were interrogating a young man called (Firas Abdul-Zahra Al-Rikabi). He admitted to have planted bombs in the midst of labourers in an area called (55 square) in Sadr city, which is frequented by building work labourers and shoppers.

In the video, Al-Rikabi confirmed that he was Shiaa, also confirmed that a man called Hakam, also Shiaa, had paid him $200 to plant the bombs, which he detonated using a “blue” remote control device.

Here is the full translation of the interrogation:

Interrogator: What is your name?
Suspect: Firas

Interrogator: Firas, and what (your father)?
Suspect: Mohammed

Interrogator: Mohammed, and what (your grandfather)?
Suspect: Abd-uz-Zahrah.

Interrogator: Abd-uz-Zahrah?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: Raise your voice!
Suspect: Abd-uz-Zahrah.

Interrogator: Abd-uz-Zahrah, What is your tribe’s name?
Suspect: Ar-Rikabi

Interrogator: Who gave you the bag to throw in the 55th square (in Sadr City)? And what did he tell you?
Suspect: It is not me.

Interrogator: Not you?! Who else?
Suspect: It is my friend Hakam (who told me to do so.)

Interrogator: Your friend Hakam who gave you the bag?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: What did he tell you? Raise your voice!
Suspect: Throw it in the square (which is frequented by building work laborers and shoppers.)

Interrogator: Did you know what was inside it? How much he said he would pay you?
Suspect: $ 200

Interrogator: And he told you to detonate it amongst people?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: And he told you to detonate it amongst people?!
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: Where did you stand?
Suspect: What?

Interrogator: Where did you stand?
Suspect: Across the street.

Interrogator: Across the street and detonated it?
Suspect: I pushed the blue button.

Interrogator: What?
Suspect: I pushed the blue button.

Interrogator: What is that? A Remote (control?) What is that?
Another voice: A button

Interrogator: And you detonated it amongst people?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: And you saw the people got killed. Right?
Suspect: Yes. What can I do?!

Interrogator: What can you do?
Suspect: My friend pushed me to do so!

Interrogator: What about the people who got killed? What do you say to Allah? What?? Would you tell him that your friend pushed you to do so? What? Where is your friend now?
Suspect: In Rashad (a district in near Sadr city).

Interrogator: In Rashad?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: Is he a Shiaat?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: And you are a Shiaat?
Suspect: Yes.

The second Interrogator: Do you thing there is a group with him?
Suspect: What?

The second Interrogator: Do you thing there is a group with him?
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: Are you a Shiaat?!
Suspect: Yes, I swear by Allah

Interrogator: Why did you come here today?
Suspect: To work.

Interrogator: For work?! Where?
Suspect: In the Square.

Interrogator: So you work in the square?!
Suspect: Yes.

Interrogator: That means you killed your colleagues? Did not you ask your conscience? Did you ask yourself?
Suspect: Yes. I did.

Interrogator: What is the benefit? You killed a lot of people who came to work. Why you did you not detonate it among the Americans near the Canal? Why did you not throw it among the Americans?
Suspect: He told me to detonate it there (in the square).

Interrogator: He did tell you to throw it there?
Suspect: Yes.

source:
http://www.iraqirabita.org/english/index.php?do=article&id=801

===

-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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US Terrorize The World – 18 Dzulqaidah 1427 H (9.12.06)

Posted by musliminsuffer on December 9, 2006


bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

=== News Update ===

Fighting for the rights of Uyghurs – Nobel Peace Prize nominee to raise the case of persecuted Muslim minority


Rebiya Kadeer, once one of China’s richest entrepreneurs, traded her privileged life in Xinjiang to live in exile near Washington, D.C., as the voice of the persecuted Uyghurs, a Muslim ethnic minority in China.

One of the cases worrying the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize nominee is that of Burlington imam Huseyincan Celil, now a political prisoner at an unspecified location in China.
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1165531811174&call_page=TS_GTA&call_pageid=968350130169&call_pagepath=GTA/News&pubid=968163964505

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Number Of Iraqi Civilians Slaughtered In America’s War? More Than 655,000


http://tinyurl.com/usq4x


Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed (Officially acknowledged) In Bush’s War 2920

http://icasualties.org/oif/


The War in Iraq Costs $348,298,130,351 – See the cost in your community

http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=182


===

650,000 Dead Iraqis


In a bipartisan Congressional briefing hosted by Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich (D-OH) and Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) the authors of the Lancet Study, which found that as many as 650,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed during the war, will present their full findings to Congress.
http://www.commondreams.org/news2006/1208-03.htm

===

Another US crime in Ashaqi : Photographic evidence


Eyewitnesses say that the US occupation forces committed a crime against innocent people in Ishaqi.

The occupation forces besieged the homes of brothers Mohammed Hussein Jalmood and Mahmoud Hussein Jalmood, opened fire on members of the two families in the early hours today, to cover up the crime they air bombed the houses.

People of the area who rushed to the crime scene and removed the bodies from the rubble found that all victims had been shot at close range, which confirms that they were mass executed.

About 32 martyrs were targeted by the American forces intentionally among them 6 children and 8 women.
http://www.roadstoiraq.com/2006/12/08/another-us-crime-in-ashaqi/

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Shiaa factions were behind the Sadr City explosions on the 23rd November – video footage attached Iraqi League


However, the Iraqi League managed recently to obtain a mobile-phone video footage shot by members of Mehdi army while they were interrogating a young man called (Firas Abdul-Zahra Al-Rikabi). He admitted to have planted bombs in the midst of labourers in an area called (55 square) in Sadr city, which is frequented by building work labourers and shoppers.
http://www.iraqirabita.org/english/index.php?do=article&id=801

===

A Young Marine Speaks Out


I’m sick and tired of this patriotic, nationalistic and fascist crap. I stood through a memorial service today for a young Marine that was killed in Iraq back in April. During this memorial a number of people spoke about the guy and about his sacrifice for the country. How do you justify ‘sacrificing’ your life for a war which is not only illegal, but is being prosecuted to the extent where the only thing keeping us there is one man’s power, and his ego.
http://tinyurl.com/yywt9g

===

Honesty in Iraq


How often do we hear the voices of Iraqis in American journalism? How many of us know their stories? We’ve killed 650,000 of them, measured as excess deaths above the level of deaths our sanctions were causing each year before the war. Since the Spring of 2004 most Iraqis have viewed America as their primary enemy. But what do we know about their lives?
http://tinyurl.com/y3hvaq

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America’s great self-inflicted debacle in Iraq


The United States lost many more men in Vietnam than in Iraq, yet the Iraq invasion and its aftermath will rank as the greatest self-inflicted foreign policy disaster in American history.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061208.wsimpson08/BNStory/International/home

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Iraq’s People : Forgotten Victims of the 21st-Century Holocaust


The war that should have been prevented is once again dominating Arab foreign policy and the concerns of the politicos in the Middle East and Washington, but the most important stories – that of the Iraqi people themselves – are going unreported.
http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1165327562713&pagename=Zone-English-Muslim_Affairs%2FMAELayout

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In a new massacre : the occupation forces executes lowered birth rates shot in the al-Ishaqi area, and then demolished homes with missiles to conceal the crime photographer-report


The American occupation forces committed horrific carnage might be the most hideous since the start of the occupation and until now, where the death’32 were shot dead while members of lowered birth rates, including six children and eight women.
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.iraqirabita.org%2Findex.php%3Fdo%3Darticle%26id%3D6401&langpair=ar%7Cen&hl=en&safe=off&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&prev=%2Flanguage_tools

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Iraqis, U.S. dispute 20 deaths in raid


Iraqi officials said five children were killed in a U.S. air strike on Friday which the U.S. military said killed 20 suspected al Qaeda militants.

Grieving relatives near Ishaqi, 90 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, showed the bodies of five children wrapped in blankets to journalists.

How can they possibly mind our killing their kids and destroying their futures?

Hey, this is what Bush calls “the liberation” of Iraq, right?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061208/ts_nm/iraq_dc

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U.S., Iraqi troops seal off Haditha – residents


U.S. and Iraqi troops have sealed off the city of Haditha in Anbar province, in the heartland of the Sunni insurgency, and have warned residents to keep off the streets and stay indoors, officials and residents said on Friday. The U.S. military said troops were manning checkpoints and building a sand berm to crack down on insurgents in Haditha and in neighbouring Barwana. It said U.S. troops were protecting “the population and good citizens of Haditha”…
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28875&hd=&size=1&l=e

===

Lynching Saddam – Part 9: “arbitrary detention”


This past summer, as a note to a piece on the role of the so-called international community in this scandal, I wrote that Saddam Hussein is “a head of state KIDNAPPED by a foreign power while committing the “crime against the peace”, the “war of aggression” against Iraq. He’s now held HOSTAGE by that foreign power together with the illegitimate so-called “government” of Iraq”. The AFP reported just a few days ago: Saddam Hussein’s trial fell so far short of international standards that his detention was “arbitrary”, and as such the death sentence should not be carried out, a working party of the United Nations Human Rights Council has said. “The non-observance of the relevant international standards during Mr. Hussein’s trial was of such gravity as to confer Mr. Hussein’s deprivation of liberty an arbitrary character,” the Council’s working group on arbitrary detention said Tuesday. (…) But since the Insane Society keeps paralyzing our brains, the AFP goes on: However the working group on arbitrary detention stressed it was not calling for Saddam Hussein to be released…
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28839&hd=&size=1&l=e

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32 Civilians Including ‘Children Killed’ In US Iraq Attack

Six children and eight women are among at least 32 people killed in a US air raid northwest of Baghdad, according to Iraqi police and local officials.
http://tinyurl.com/wfxx9

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U.S. troops suffer heavy losses this month in Iraq

At least 32 U.S. troops have died in Iraq this month, according to the Defense Department. Eleven died Wednesdayt. Another soldier wounded Wednesday died Thursday, the military said.
http://tinyurl.com/y37x85

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Video: 30 soldiers dead in first week of December in Iraq


CNN’s Nick Roberson provides an ominous report, live from Iraq, one day after the Iraq Study Group report was released calling the situation “grave and deteriorating.” “They are very terrible statistics, Soledat,” Roberson says. “We know now that 30 soldiers have died, now, in the first week of December. That is a very high and alarming statistic for US casulaties.” …
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28840&hd=&size=1&l=e

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5 U.S. soldiers killed 2 in Anbar 3 in Baghdad


The U.S. military said on Friday that two more U.S. soldiers have been killed in the volatile Anbar province. A soldier assigned to 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division died Thursday from wounds sustained due to a fierce clash on Wednesday with insurgents in Ramadi, during which 14 insurgents were killed and three other U.S. soldiers were wounded, the military said in a statement (…)INSURGENTS killed three US soldiers and wounded two others in separate roadside bomb attacks in and around the Iraqi capital, the US military reported overnight. Two soldiers died and two others were wounded during a “dismounted patrol” on Thursday when a roadside bomb exploded south of Baghdad, the military said…
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28878&hd=&size=1&l=e

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Two more U.S. soldiers killed in western Iraq

The U.S. military said on Friday that two more U.S. soldiers have been killed in the volatile Anbar province.
http://tinyurl.com/y82g2r

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Iraqi Resistance Report for events of Thursday, 7 December 2006.

  • US troops rampage through al-Fallujah General Hospital Thursday afternoon “searching” for Resistance fighters they claim receive treatment at the facility.
  • American patrol pours gunfire into ambulance near al-Fallujah Wednesday afternoon, severely wounding driver.
  • US troops kill Iraqi civilian in Hit following Resistance bomb attack.
  • American soldier reported killed in bombing in Baghdad as Resistance operations against US and Iraqi puppet forces and sectarian militias continue.
  • Two US troops reported killed in Thursday morning bomb attack in Bayji.
  • Puppet police, US troops conduct mass raids in Tall ‘Afar Wednesday rounding up people unconnected with the Resistance when no Resistance fighters could be found.
  • Resistance bomb kills four puppet policemen in al-Fallujah Thursday morning.
  • US troops arrest high school teacher, his two sons in Hit Wednesday.
  • Altogether on Thursday some 14 Iraqi Resistance bombs exploded in the al-Karakh side of Baghdad, most of them targeted on puppet “Iraqi Interior Ministry Shock Troops (Maghawir)” and pro-Iranian Jaysh al-Mahdi Shi‘i sectarian militias.
  • Resistance fighters ambush car carrying pro-Iranian militiamen in ad-Durah.
  • Resistance rockets Jaysh al-Mahdi headquarters in Baghdad’s ash-Shu‘lah district Thursday morning.
  • Resistance bomb kills two puppet “Iraqi National Guards” in Baghdad’s al-‘Amiriyah on Thursday morning.
  • Resistance bomb targets US patrol in al-Ghazaliyah Wednesday.
  • US forces arrest puppet police commander, pro-occupation professor in ad-Dulu‘iyah on Wednesday.
  • Resistance mortars blast into US headquarters in al-Mahmudiyah Thursday morning.

http://www.albasrah.net/pages/mod.php?mod=art&lapage=../en_articles_2006/1206/iraqiresistancereport_071206.htm

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Afghanistan’s opium crop at an all-time high


The question is why. Under Taliban rule, which began in the late 1990s, Afghanistan just about kicked the growing habit by 2001. After five years the Taliban is slipping back in, but poppy production has grown by leaps and bounds.

According to the Washington Post, “Opium production in Afghanistan, which provides more than 90 percent of the world’s heroin, broke all records in 2006, reaching a historic high despite ongoing U.S.-sponsored eradication efforts, the Bush administration reported yesterday.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_1511.shtml

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Never Mind The Taliban


Video – Unreported World – Five years after the fall of the Taliban, western intervention has produced a mafia-style state. Reporter Kate Clark and director Tom Porter discover a fractured country and an economy dominated by the drugs trade.
http://tinyurl.com/wxdzp

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DEMAND A STOP TO ETHNIC CLEANSING IN THE NAQAB


According to recent reports, Israeli interior minister, Roni Bar-On, declared that his ministry has planned the demolition of more than 42,000 Palestinian homes in the Naqab (Negev) region of Palestine, inside the borders of present-day Israel. Reports this morning indicate that the village of Twail Abu-Jarwal has been demolished by the Zionist occupation. This barbaric escalation against the Palestinians of the Naqab region is a continuation of the ongoing Zionist project to remove from Palestine its indigenous inhabitants, and that Israel has practiced since its inception since 1948. The Palestinians in the Naqab region carry “Israeli citizenship”…
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m28853&hd=&size=1&l=e

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The politics of anti-Semitism


Zionism is racism and Zionist ideologists are by definition racist to the bone
http://tinyurl.com/uck8z

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Israeli soldiers shoot child playing with toy gun

Israel soldiers opened fire on a group of children playing with a plastic rifle in the Aydah refugee camp.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20061208/wl_mideast_afp/mideastpalestinian

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Haniya vows not to recognise Israel

“The Zionists … want us to recognise the usurpation of our land … but these things will never happen.
http://tinyurl.com/yxnyyu

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In pictures: Was Jose Padilla Tortured?

A video of the accused “terrorist” shows he was subjected to unduly harsh treatment, his lawyers claim, leaving him psychologically damaged and unfit to stand trial
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1565798,00.html

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U.S. asks judge to bar testimony about Padilla military custody

Federal prosecutors asked a judge Thursday to prevent terror suspect Jose Padilla’s defense lawyers from questioning Defense Department officials or obtaining documents about Padilla’s treatment during 3 1/2 years in military custody as an “enemy combatant.”
http://tinyurl.com/y5eshn

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Rumsfeld faces personal suit by detainees

The case is an attempt to have U.S. officials held accountable for alleged abuse of Iraqi and Afghan civilians who were never held as enemy combatants or charged with any crime.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16099926/

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Rumsfeld Wants Torture Case Dismissed

Outgoing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld is asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit that would hold him personally responsible for allegations of torture in oversees military prisons.
http://tinyurl.com/vrngn

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New Guantanamo prison condemned

Human Rights Watch has renewed its calls for the Guantanamo Bay detention facility to be shut down as inmates were being moved to a new maximum-security jail there.
http://tinyurl.com/ynxdpq

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‘Dirty War’ extradition approved

A Uruguayan judge has approved the extradition to Argentina of six former military and police officers to face trial on human rights charges.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6161131.stm

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Kyrgyzstan’s president wants to revoke U.S. troops’ immunity

President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Thursday called for U.S. troops deployed in the former Soviet nation to be stripped of diplomatic immunity after a U.S. serviceman fatally shot a Kyrgyz civilian.
http://tinyurl.com/ydfwed

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-muslim voice-
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BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW

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