“Mother’s Little Helper”

The Rolling Stones 1966 hit, “Mother’s Little Helper,” was a warning about addiction to Valium, a tranquilizer used by a legion of western women “…to get her through her busy day.” Of course, there is no comparison between the relatively placid suburban existence of the 1960s and the nightmare of Baghdad at war today. According to Riverbend, Valium is in the emergency first-aid kit of most Baghdad families to help them them make it through their day, and through the night.

Drug addiction is growing in Iraq, but as Riverbend remarks, Iraqis have other concerns which are more pressing; like protecting their children from kidnappers and bombs in this continuing disastrous war and occupation. As she puts it so well, it’s “like discovering you have cancer while you’re fighting off a hungry alligator- you’ll worry about the disease later.”

Read more…

Mayhem in Iraq – Green Zone casualties

Eight people are dead and four wounded in two explosions in the Green Zone. At least two Americans are among the casualties.:

It is believed to be the first time that insurgents have struck from within the heavily guarded compound that is home to the US and British embassies as well as Iraqi government offices.

Initial reports said that six people were killed and three wounded at the zone’s bazaar, while two were killed and an unspecified number were wounded at the Green Zone CafĂ©, but later reports amended the death toll to seven, including two Americans.

The blasts sent a large plume of thick, black smoke rising from the zone, home to about 10,000 Iraqis alongside US troops and international officials and contractors.

  • One US soldier killed and two wounded by a roadside bomb in east Baghdad.
  • ……an Iraqi female TV reporter was killed by gunmen in a morning drive-by shooting in Baghdad today.

    Zeina Mahmoud, who worked for Kurdish-run Al-Hurriya TV, was shot by three assailants driving by in an Opel car, said officials.

  • In an apparently unrelated shooting that took place less than a half mile away, a judge was shot dead just minutes earlier.
  • RFE is reporting five assassinations: Iraqi police say five people have died in a series of assassinations today in Baghdad, and the town of Baquba. They include two army officers, a judge, and a woman journalist, who were shot by gunmen.
  • Update: Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi’s Tawhid wal Jihad claims responsibility for the Green Zone attack, “Two lions from the `Martyrdom-seeking Brigade` (suicide bombers), which is affiliated to the military wing of Tawhid wal Jihad (Unity and Holy War) group, managed to enter the US embassy compound inside the Green Zone in the capital Baghdad,” said the statement posted on the Internet.

Update: AP reporting ten dead in the Green Zone bombings.

Suicide bombers today penetrated Baghdad’s heavily-secured Green Zone for the first time, setting off bombs at a market and cafe that left ten dead.

The victims were four Americans and six Iraqis.

The U-S military says the bombs were carried by hand into the fortified zone that houses American and Iraqi government headquarters.

Witnesses say they saw two men carrying backpacks sitting in a cafe full of Americans, chatting and drinking tea. They say a blast was heard after one man left — and that the second man then set off his bomb.

They say neither man was wearing a required I-D badge.

Blogroll Double Play

Jim Henley on the newest rationale for the war:

    It is high time we recognize the grammatical inversion that has seized our Imperial Wing. While they produce sentences of the form “I support the War for the sake of this reason,” the truer template is “I support this reason for the sake of the War.”

Read the whole thing.

The Libertarian Jackass on the favorite excuse for the war:

    I hate to be the one to point out the obvious (actually, scratch that, I love it!) but all humans act under conditions of imperfect information and uncertainty. If there was perfect information and certainty in human action, humans simply would not need to choose and act. They would be like robots on a path. The existence of “imperfect information” certainly does not justify the initiation of force. If it did, we certainly would not have advanced human civilization.

Read the whole thing.

And check out our new blogrollees:Tim Swanson, Chris Andersen, and James Landrith.

Zarqawi jerks Allawi’s puppet strings

Comical Allawi, the man without a military, is threatening “military action” against the people of Fallujah:

13 October 2004 — Interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi is threatening military action against the main insurgent stronghold of Al-Fallujah if residents don’t hand over Jordanian-born militant Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi and his comrades.

“If al-Zarqawi and his group are not handed over to us, we are ready for major operations in Fallujah,” Allawi said. “We are determined to safeguard the Iraqi people, because there are forces that want to inflict harm on the Iraqi people. I hope they [people in Al-Fallujah] will respond. If they don’t, we will have to use force.”
[…]
Meanwhile, a group led by al-Zarqawi posted a video on the Internet that showed two Iraqi intelligence officers beheaded.

I guess upping the bounty for Zarqawi from ten million to twenty five million hasn’t worked any better than it has for capturing Osama bin Laden. Of course, massive force didn’t work against bin Laden either. Massive force is usually counterproductive in a guerrilla conflict anyway, since inevitably large numbers of civilians get killed, which turns more of the population into insurgents or rebel-sympathizers, which is why guerillas try to provoke the massive use of force – sort of like what Zarqawi is doing to Allawi and the US military.

Anyway, how do they know he’s in Fallujah? More of that whiz-bang “intelligence?”

The United States tried twice to rescue the two Americans and one British citizen held hostage in Iraq, according to a U.S. official with direct knowledge of the attempts.

The attempts involved deploying U.S. military as well as other government personnel on two occasions. Intelligence led the rescue teams to two locations in Baghdad, the official said.

Both times, the source said, the missions came up with “dry holes.”

US ‘Disappears’ detainees to Jordan

For those who may have been wondering where the US disappears their super-secret captives, Haaretz is claiming to know:

Most of the Al-Qaida detainees who were arrested in Afghanistan in the course of the war or its aftermath were transfered to the American base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. A minority were held in Pakistan, where some had been picked up, and were later moved to Jordan.

It is not known where precisely in the Hashemite kingdom they are being held, but they are thought to be at a secret facility belonging to Jordanian intelligence or at a secret base.

Their detention outside the U.S. enables CIA interrogators to apply interrogation methods that are banned by U.S. law, and to do so in a country where cooperation with the Americans is particularly close, thereby reducing the danger of leaks.

According to the Human Rights Watch report, the CIA was granted special permission by the U.S. law enforcement authorities to operate “other laws” at the secret facility with regard to interrogation methods.

Detainees are subjected to physical and psychological pressure that includes the use of simulated drowning, loud music, sleep deprivation, and sensory deprivation. Some of these methods were exposed with the revelation of torture techniques used by American interrogators at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

The CIA’s prisoners at the facility in Jordan include Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, considered Al-Qaida’s head of operations and number three in the Al-Qaida hierarchy after Osama bin Laden and Aiman al-Zawahiri, who have eluded capture.

On this topic, zeynep at Under the Same Sun makes this perceptive observation:

Human Rights Watch has tracked down 11 people that the U.S. won’t even acknowledge are in custody. The fact that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed as well as Abu Zubaydah are amone the eleven will make many people think, oh, well — those are bunch of terrorists. Frankly, I’d find it hard to get excited about anyone who planned the mass murder of thousands of people. But this is not about them, but about what kind of society are.

In fact, people’s reluctance to respect the rights of the guilty –or those perceived to be guilty as those freed from death-row will testify– is why we have courts and laws. How do we know it’s only eleven people who’ve disappeared down this Gulag? How do we know they’re guilty? Why can’t they be brought to justice, be tried in court? What are they hiding?

History is crystal clear on this topic: once a society okays the disappearance of a few without accountability, the unaccountable inevitably widen their scope of operations. We’ve been warned.