Welcome Charles Pena!

Hey, Everybody! Check out Antiwar.com’s new regular writer Charles Pena. He is just the kind of heavy hitter we like to have around here: a senior fellow with the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy, an adviser to the Straus Military Reform Project and an analyst for MSNBC television. Pena is the co-author of Exiting Iraq: Why the U.S. Must End the Military Occupation and Renew the War Against al-Qaeda, and author of the upcoming Winning the Un-War: A New Strategy for the War on Terrorism.

His new column is called Dispatches from the Un-War, and today’s, A New York State of Mind, deals with the hoax terror threat in New York last week.

Score one for Anti-interventionism!

Hey, Patrick Fitzgerald!

You’re going to indict Michael Ledeen and his CIA buddies for forging those Niger uranium documents, right?

As quoted in the Wikipedia entry for Yellowcake forgery:

In an interview on July 26, 2005, Cannistraro’s business partner and columnist for the “American Conservative” magazine, former CIA counter terrorism officer Philip Giraldi, confirmed to Scott Horton that the forgeries were produced by “a couple of former CIA officers who are familiar with that part of the world who are associated with a certain well-known neoconservative who has close connections with Italy.” When Horton said that must be Ledeen, he confirmed it, and added that the ex-CIA officers, “also had some equity interests, shall we say, with the operation. A lot of these people are in consulting positions, and they get various, shall we say, emoluments in overseas accounts, and that kind of thing.” [9]

In a second interview with Horton, Giraldi elaborated to say that Ledeen and his former CIA friends worked with Ahmad Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress. “These people did it probably for a couple of reasons, but one of the reasons was that these people were involved, through the neoconservatives, with the Iraqi National Congress and Chalabi and had a financial interest in cranking up the pressure against Saddam Hussein and potentially going to war with him.” [10]

Or is it a crime to lie a country into war?

Short mp3 of the relevant Giraldi quotes here.

Bring the IRR Home Now!

It’s been a while since I’ve seen some press about the Individual Ready Reserve in Iraq (oh, here’s some), but Saturday night I met a young lady who’s father was called up to go kill people 20 years after being discharged from the army. He is opposed to the war, and told his kids before going that it was unjust. Apparently he thought it was his duty to go anyway. As misguided as that belief is, many good men have died for having it. Her little sister has had a chance to meet her father only once, the day she was born, then he was off to the wonderful land of liberation and democracy that is Iraq, where he gets to play the IED lottery for the chance to never see her again.

I can report to you that this man’s absence has caused great pain and fear for this family – my neighbors. The girl became particularly upset while decribing her frustration with mass media. In all the hype surrounding this war, she says, there is a distict lack of focus on the lives of the individuals doing the fighting and dying on all sides. Remember the Dover test?

When the life of a dead American soldier is brought up in the press, it is invariably a pack of lies used to exploit their foolish sacrifice in some PR stunt.

Many US troops don’t want to be there at all – some say so outright, and some refuse to fight, but most shut their mouths and do their “duty,” keeping their fingers crossed and biding their time.

The fact that this conflict, which even that traitor Bill O’Reilly calls a “war of choice,” is being fought by guardsmen, the IRR and those unfortunate enough to miss the cut and get “stop-lossed,” is an outrage.

Any American who is for the continued occupation of Iraq, yet has not signed up to go take the place of a man who wants to come home is a pathetic coward and hypocrite.

The Post Gets Over its Bravery

Strange, but for some reason, today the Washington Post decided to run the Larry Franklin plea deal story on page B-1 – the Metro section.
According to the great libertarian journalist Jim Bovard, in today’s Maryland edition,

It is below the fold, next to an article about a geezer from New Orleans who was re-united with his 11 year old dog named Sassy, and also next to and below an article about the frustrated maestro of the former now-defunct Arlington, Va. symphony.

What’s the matter? The Post has been doing a pretty good job with this story up until now.