Iraqi Desperation Watch

After reading my post yesterday quoting Lt. Col. Paul Hastings as saying, “The terrorists are growing more desperate in their attempts to derail the elections and they’re trying to put it all on the line and give it all they can,” the author of the blog Hairy Fish Nuts sent a link to Desperation Watch, his collection of “desperate” quotes. So, there’s another thing to start bothering me as I read articles about Iraq. The desperate theme is almost as irritating as “anti-Iraqi forces” used to describe the resistance.

But, another thing about the “desperate” post seemed relevant this morning.

The former regime elements have watched Tikrit . . . slip away from their grasp over a period of time to the point where they have minimal influence over the local situation. They are desperate.

December 29, 2004 – spokesman for the 1st Infantry Division Maj. Neal O’Brien

You’d think that if the resistance had “minimal influence” over Tikrit, the US would use it’s stretched-thin manpower elsewhere, wouldn’t you? Like in Mosul, maybe.

Elections – Mission Accomplished again

Something Eli said the other day has been bugging me when I read news articles about the Iraqi resistance, because I never really noticed it before.

With MacWorld approaching, I’m reminded of the famous Steve Jobs Reality Distortion Field. But Jobs has got nothing on the U.S. and Israeli governments, and the Reality Distortion Field they cast on the American corporate media.

Virtually every single attack by Iraqi insurgents these days is heralded in the media as “an attempt to derail the upcoming elections.” Not once have I heard an attack described as “an attempt to expel the American occupiers” or, perhaps less provocatively, as “an attempt to weaken the American resolve to continue their occupation of Iraq.” Even today, when there were a series of attacks not on elected officials or candidates but Iraqi police and National Guard, a Reuters article links the attacks to bin Laden’s message about the elections yesterday, notwithstanding the fact that bin Laden simply called for a boycott of the elections, and did not call for a “holy war” on elections on Reuters claims.

I came across this perfect example of where this is coming from today :

Insurgents tried to ram a truck with half a ton of explosives into a U.S. military post in the northern city of Mosul on Thursday then ambushed reinforcements in a huge gunbattle in which 25 rebels and one American soldier were killed. Warplanes fired missiles and strafed gunmen during the fight.

The assault on the outpost, which U.S. soldiers finally repulsed, appeared to be better coordinated than past attacks, with guerrillas apparently pulling out their strongest assaults in an effort to derail Jan. 30 elections, U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. Paul Hastings said.

“The terrorists are growing more desperate in their attempts to derail the elections and they’re trying to put it all on the line and give it all they can,” Hastings said.

Right. It isn’t the occupation, it’s the elections. That’s why they’re attacking the US and anyone collaborating with the US. After the “elections,” which the US has already admitted will do nothing to stop the resistance, what will the next excuse be? I can already hear it. “They just don’t want Iraq to have a constitution,” they’ll say as they continue to occupy the country, and Americans and Iraqis continue to die. We just go from one Mission Accomplished moment to the next.

Mercy Corps Accepting Tsunami-Aid Donations

Mercy Corps is a reputable aid agency that has swiftly begun providing assistance to Tsunami-damaged areas in Asia, and accepts online donations (I just donated and they acknowledged immediately and it was painless). Here is some info on what they are doing now, from Care2.com:

Mercy Corps’ emergency team is on the ground, assessing damage and beginning a lifesaving response. They’ve started rushing shelter materials and other essential items to children and families who survived the earthquake. In the critical days ahead, Mercy Corps staff will work with local governments and other organizations to ensure that the greatest needs are being met.

Mercy Corps has the experience and expertise to effectively and efficiently respond to this disaster. They have operated in many areas of Southeast Asia for many years. They were the first U.S. agency to respond to the devastating earthquake in Bam, Iran last December. This year, they served over 6 million people in 35 countries.

Today, Mercy Corps need your generous, timely donations to help the thousands of survivors who will need shelter, food and medicine. Please give what you can now.

In a segue: looking at a map of the affected countries in Asia, and the numbers of casualties each country suffered, it was apparent that Myanmar (Burma) has been, somehow, miraculously spared — 90 People Killed in Burma – or at least this is all the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), the country’s ruling military junta is admitting to. What a pity that speaking what must be the truth is seen as weakness and will result in the people in that country not getting aid they so clearly could use.

Ralph Raico: Enough Hitlers Already!

Ralph Raico writes:

    On Monday, the indefatigable, indispensable Justin Raimondo gave us a column titled, The Fallacy of 39: Why is every petty tyrant dubbed the new Hitler?

    That is a very good question. Here is a possible answer.

    For many millions of Americans, the first figure in 20th-century European history who comes to mind, often the only one, is Adolf Hitler.

    Taking my own college students, not the best in the country but not the worst, and probably better informed than the average citizen: these state-schooled kids are mostly not even sure who exactly Churchill was. But Hitler they know, and what they know about him is that he was a very bad man. Which, needless to say, he was.

    Given the general ignorance, it is not surprising that, to justify their own hegemonic designs, the contemptible opportunists who pose as our leaders invoke Hitlerian opponents at every turn.

    Oh, so many Hitlers! Now the Iranian mullahcracy, a while ago Hussein and Milosevic, before them Cedras in Haiti, Aidid in Somalia, Noriega in Panama, and it goes on, and it will go on and on. After all, our leaders’ power feeds on the people’s boundless cluelessness, doesn’t it? I hereby propose a test to judge whether a future designated enemy of the Washington power elite is or is not a real Hitler.

    He will rule over a population comparable to 80 million Germans. He will be able to conquer more of Europe than Napoleon, and even to set out, foolishly, fatally, on the conquest of Russia. Unless a future adversary more or less fits this description, the lying D.C. warmongers should just shut up about all their Hitlers popping up around the world. But don’t hold your breath.

Helping the Earthquake & Tsunami Victims

How can anyone be unmoved by the images of devastation? With the billions of dollars spent on deliberate destruction (wars), we should be motivated to counter with our individual help to the victims of this natural disaster.

I have been most impressed with the work of Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres). They have been focusing on some of the areas most devastated by the 9.2 earthquake, like Sumatra, where the island actually moved 100 feet, destroying virtually every structure on it.

Their website is swamped, but you can call 1-888-392-0392 to make a contribution. I urge you to do so.

It looks like their server overload is causing some web visitors to be offloaded to Network Solutions’ Earthquake Relief page, which doesn’t include DWB. Please ignore this and call 1-888-392-0392 directly.

Nichols countdown—1

(see 10 for introduction)
0.5 next

Count the columns, John Nichols insists, but the result has been certified–that’s 109 down, one to go and he’ll have made it through the year without using the word “Israel.”

An earlier countdown entry contained a gratuitous reference to Yasir Arafat, but after smoking a joint I decided it was fortuitously gratuitous. With Arafat gone, “to whom will we give the job of the demonic villain?” Israeli writer Meron Benvenisti asks. “We need a scapegoat on whom to cast the blame for everything, and to clear our consciences.” Elie Wiesel will be lost without one.

Religious studies prof Ira Chernus thought that the 60s had taught us to appreciate the fact that we probably won’t be able to answer the “most important” question about 9/11, did the Bush administration know about the attacks and not stop them, or maybe even orchestrate them? He was surprised to learn that many “leftists” (I think he means “progressives”) had a good vs. evil world view as simple-minded as Bush’s.

According to the Commission Report (p. 149), Khalid Sheikh Mohammed met Bin Ladin in “mid-1996” and made the proposal that “eventually would become the 9/11 operation.” In August, Bin Ladin declared war against the U.S. in his first public fatwa.

After the Oslo II accords were sign in September, 1995, Edward Said implored “liberals” to be aware that the peace “process has made matters far worse” for the “vast majority” of Palestinians. They are “demoralized,” they “may have lost hope” (The Nation 10/16/95).

A New York Times story on December 1, 1995, was headlined, “Iraq Sanctions Kill Children, U.N. Reports,” 567,000 of them. On April, 11, 1996, Israel unleashed “Operation Grapes of Wrath,” bombing an Arab capital (Beirut) for the first time in ten years. A week later, it bombed a UN compound in Qana, killing over 100 women and children. On 60 Minutes, May 12, 1996, Madeleine Albright said, yes, “keeping Saddam in his box” was worth the sacrifice of half a million Iraqi children.

Hijacker Mohamed Atta’s will was dated April 11, 1996, the day Israel unleashed Grapes. Bin Ladin’s first fatwa was issued while “the horrifying pictures of the massacre of Qana, in Lebanon are still fresh in our memory.” Whereas Leslie Stahl rounded down the 567,000 sanctions figure, Bin Ladin rounded it up. No matter the actual figure, the impact was devastating. As an Iraqi student said, “sanctions really killed our dreams — not my personal dreams only, but those of my Iraqi people, all of us.”

The “1998 bombings of Sudan and Afghanistan created bin Laden as a symbol…and led to a sharp increase in support, recruitment, and financing for al-Qaeda,” according to Jason Burke. “It was in late 1998 or early 1999” that Bin Ladin gave “the green light” for the 9/11 operation, the Commission Report indicates (p. 149).

As one of its recommendations, the Report urges America to “offer an example of moral leadership in the world, committed to treat people humanely, abide by the rule of law…” As opposed to Bin Ladin, “we can we can offer [Muslim] parents a vision that might give their children a better future” (p. 376).

Benvenisti says the Israelis need a demonic villain to clear their consciences. Does that mean they at least vaguely know that they should have something on their consciences? If so, they appear to be a step ahead of Chernus’ “leftists” and my John Nichols, “progressive bellwether.” Of course, Arafat didn’t “steal” the 2000 election like Bush did (John is the author of a hastily and shoddily put together “book” titled “Jews for Buchanan”).

Where was the brunt of the “anti-war” movement when the Clinton administration was making mincemeat of what was to be the Report’s recommendation? A “most important” unanswerable question is, had a significant fraction of the people who now find Bush’s Iraq invasion and occupation intolerable been awake and protesting in 1996-1998, would the “twin towers have crumbled?” And what wisdom do the 60s have to impart regarding unasked questions?

In 1996-1998, John wrote 483 columns for the Capital Times, two of them containing criticism of the sanctions and two criticism of Israeli policy. He can say he opposed them but he never made them an issue. Now he remembers the Clinton era as a “period of relative peace and prosperity,” and he’s got plenty of company in that regard.

There is tragedy here. Introspection has been swept away in a tidal wave of hatred and scorn, no lesson has been learned.