Dear Kitty. Some blog

On animals, peace and war, science, social justice, women's issues, arts, and much more

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Home
  • About
  • Awards
  • Frequently asked questions

Daily Archives: December 26, 2009

Stop the war in Afghanistan

Posted on December 26, 2009 by petrel41
3

This video from the USA says about itself:

Augustin Aguayo served in Iraq then spent eight months in prison for refusing a second deployment to Iraq. Now full time antiwar, Augustin speaks out.

www.couragetoresist.org …

filmed June 16 2007 in Chicago by Paul Hubbard

By Sarah Lazare in the USA:

Published on Saturday, December 26, 2009 by Al-Jazeera

The US Military is ‘Exhausted’

The call for over 30,000 more troops to be sent to Afghanistan is a travesty for the people of that country who have already suffered eight brutal years of occupation.

It is also a harsh blow to the US soldiers facing imminent deployment.

As Barack Obama, the US president, gears up for a further escalation that will bring the total number of troops in Afghanistan to over 100,000, he faces a military force that has been exhausted and overextended by fighting two wars.

Many from within the ranks are openly declaring that they have had enough, allying with anti-war veterans and activists in calling for an end to the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, with some active duty soldiers publicly refusing to deploy.

This growing movement of military refusers is a voice of sanity in a country slipping deeper into unending war.

“They shifted me from one war to the next”

Eddie Falcon, Iraq and Afghanistan veteran

The architects of this war would be well-advised to listen to the concerns of the soldiers and veterans tasked with carrying out their war policies on the ground.

Many of those being deployed have already faced multiple deployments to combat zones: the 101st Airborne Division, which will be deployed to Afghanistan in early 2010, faces its fifth combat tour since 2002.

“They are just going to start moving the soldiers who already served in Iraq to Afghanistan, just like they shifted me from one war to the next,” said Eddie Falcon, a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW), who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“Soldiers are going to start coming back with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), missing limbs, problems with alcohol, and depression.”

Many of these troops are still suffering the mental and physical fallout from previous deployments.

Rates of PTSD and traumatic brain injury among troops deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan have been disproportionately high, with a third of returning troops reporting mental problems and 18.5 per cent of all returning service members battling either PTSD or depression, according to a study by the Rand Corporation.

Marine suicides doubled between 2006 and 2007, and army suicides are at the highest rate since records were kept in 1980.

Resistance in the ranks

US army soldiers are refusing to serve at the highest rate since 1980, with an 80 per cent increase in desertions since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, according to the Associated Press.

These troops refuse deployment for a variety of reasons: some because they ethically oppose the wars, some because they have had a negative experience with the military, and some because they cannot psychologically survive another deployment, having fallen victim to what has been termed “Broken Joe” syndrome.

Over 150 GIs have publicly refused service and spoken out against the wars, all risking prison and some serving long sentences, and an estimated 250 US war resisters are currently taking refuge in Canada.

This resistance includes two Fort Hood, Texas, soldiers, Victor Agosto and Travis Bishop, who publicly resisted deployment to Afghanistan this year, facing prison sentences as a result, with Bishop still currently detained.

“There is no way I will deploy to Afghanistan,” wrote Agosto, upon refusing his service last May. “The occupation is immoral and unjust.”

Within the US military, GI resisters and anti-war veterans have organised through broad networks of veteran and civilian alliances, as well as through IVAW, comprised of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

This organisation, which is over 1,700 strong, with members across the world, including active-duty members on military bases, is opposed to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and openly supports GI resistance.

“Iraq Veterans Against the War calls on Obama to end the war in Afghanistan (and Iraq) by withdrawing troops immediately and unconditionally,” wrote Jose Vasquez, the executive director of IVAW, in a December 2 open letter.

“It’s not time for our brothers and sisters in arms to go to Afghanistan. It’s time for them to come home.”

No clear progress

GI coffee houses have sprung up at several military bases around the country. In the tradition of the GI coffee houses of the Vietnam war era, these cafes provide a space where active duty troops can speak freely and access resources about military refusal, PTSD, and veteran and GI movements against the war.

“Here at Fort Lewis, we’ve lost 20 soldiers from the most recent round of deployments,” said Seth Menzel, an Iraq combat veteran and founding organiser of Coffee Strong, a GI coffee house at the sprawling Washington army base.

“We’ve seen resistance to deployment, mainly based on the fact that soldiers have been deployed so many times they don’t have the patience to do it again.”

As the occupation of Afghanistan passes its eighth year, with no clear progress, goals that remain elusive, and a high civilian death count, this war is coming to resemble the Iraq war that has been roundly condemned by world and US public opinion.

The never-ending nature of this conflict belies the real project of establishing US dominance in the Middle East and control of the region’s resources, at the expense of the Afghan civilians and US soldiers being placed in harm’s way.

The voices of refusal coming from within the US military send a powerful message that soldiers will not be fodder for an unjust and unnecessary war. By withdrawing their labour from a war that depends on their consent, these soldiers have the power to help bring this war to an end, as did their predecessors in the GI resistance movement against the Vietnam war.

And the longer the war in Afghanistan drags on – the more lives that are lost and destroyed – the more resistance we will see coming from within the ranks.

Sarah Lazare is an anti-militarist and GI resistance organiser with Dialogues Against Militarism and Courage to Resist. She is interested in connecting struggles for justice at home with global movements against war and empire.

War deserter released from U.S. prison: here.

Joe Glenton: here. And here.

Share this:

  • Digg
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Google +1
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Print
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Medicine, health, Peace and war | Tagged Afghanistan, Iraq | 3 Replies

CIA ‘Muslim terror plot’ hysteria exposed

Posted on December 26, 2009 by petrel41
Reply

This video from the USA says about itself:

Bush Admin Relied on Conman to Determine Terror Alert Level

A new report in Playboy has revealed the Bush administration raised the terror alert level to high in 2003 after a self-proclaimed scientist from Nevada convinced the CIA that the TV network Al Jazeera was transmitting secret messages to al-Qaeda sleepers.

The alleged codebreaker, Dennis Montgomery, claimed that secret bar codes were hidden in Al Jazeeras broadcast that told terrorists the terms of their next mission, laying out the latitudes and longitudes of targets, sometimes even flight numbers and dates. Montgomery also claimed he had developed technology to decrypt this code. Convinced that Montgomery had cracked an important code, the Bush administration relied on the conman for years for information used to determine when to increase the terror alert level. Montgomerys intelligence found its way to the CIA, the Department of Homeland Security, Special Forces Command, the Navy, the Air Force, the Senate Intelligence Committee, and even to Vice President Dick Cheneys office. Eventually a branch of the French intelligence services helped convince the Americans that Montgomerys claims were all faked.

From British daily The Guardian:

The Nevada gambler, al-Qaida, the CIA and the mother of all cons

* Chris McGreal in Washington

* Wednesday 23 December 2009 21.47 GMT

The intelligence reports fitted the suspicions of the time: al-Qaida sleeper agents were scattered across the US awaiting orders that were broadcast in secret codes over the al-Jazeera television network.

Flights from Britain and France were cancelled. Officials warned of a looming “spectacular attack” to rival 9/11. In 2003 President Bush’s homeland security tsar, Tom Ridge, spoke of a “credible source” whose information had US military bracing for a new terrorist onslaught.

Then suddenly no more was said.

Six years later, Playboy magazine has revealed that the CIA fell victim to an elaborate con by a compulsive gambler who claimed to have developed software that discovered al-Jazeera broadcasts were being used to transmit messages to terrorists buried deep in America.

Dennis Montgomery, 56, the co-owner of a software gaming company in Nevada, who has since been arrested for bouncing $1m worth of cheques, claims his program read messages hidden in barcodes listing international flights to the US, their positions and airports to be targeted.

The CIA took the information seriously, working with Montgomery at his offices and paying him an undisclosed amount of money. The “intelligence” Montgomery claimed to have found was passed on to the White House and homeland security where it kickstarted an alert that bordered on panic.

According to Playboy, Montgomery’s claims caused the cancellation of British Airways and other flights supposedly mentioned in the codes.

Some officials were not at all surprised to hear the allegation that al-Jazeera was involved. The then defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, later vilified the station for “vicious, inaccurate and inexcusable” reporting of the US invasion of Iraq.

For months, the source of the information was kept under wraps within the CIA but once it became more widely known in the agency it immediately came under question. Playboy quotes one former counterterrorism official who attended a briefing on the source as being furious. He said: “I was saying: ‘This is crazy. This is embarrassing.’ They claimed they were breaking the code, getting latitude and longitude, and al-Qaida operatives were decoding it. They were coming up with airports and everything, and we were just saying: ‘You know, this is horseshit!’ “

Frances Townsend, a homeland security adviser to Bush, defended the decision to work with Montgomery. “It didn’t seem beyond the realm of possibility. We were relying on technical people to tell us whether or not it was feasible. I don’t regret having acted on it,” she told Playboy.

But the doubts began to prevail as Montgomery refused to reveal how he was finding the barcodes, when no one else could, and he demanded $100m for the software. The CIA also began to wonder why al-Qaida didn’t use emails and web pages to communicate with its agents.

Share this:

  • Digg
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Google +1
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Print
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Like this:

Like Loading...
Posted in Crime, Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Media, Peace and war | Leave a reply

Recent Posts

  • Mary Pickford, first Hollywood movie star
  • Scoter ducks still near Texel, cold spring
  • Arab plant exhibition in Dutch botanical garden
  • Spanish government honours Hitler’s soldiers
  • Isle of Man, Scotland dolphins
  • Greek-Egyptian-French singer Georges Moustaki dies
  • Good Dutch flower news

Categories

Archives

December 2009
M T W T F S S
« Nov   Jan »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,216 other followers

petrel41

Blogging on animals, peace and war, science, social justice, women's issues, arts, and much more

View Full Profile →

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.com

Blog Stats

  • 219,233 hits
Blog of the Year 2012 award

Blog of the Year 2012 award

Tags

Afghanistan Africa Arab spring austerity Australia Bahrain blogging Bush Canada dinosaurs Egypt France Germany Greece history India Indonesia insects Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Japan Libya London NATO nazis Netherlands New Zealand Occupy Wall Street oil paleontology Pentagon photography poetry Saudi Arabia Scotland Spain Texel Tony Blair torture travel UK USA whales

Top Posts & Pages

  • Cattle transport, not badgers, really causes bovine tuberculosis
  • Shine On Award, thanks Shaun and Tazein!
  • Bahraini king's sexual harassment of Lebanese singer
  • Unique triceratops discovery in the USA
  • Wild bison calf born in Germany after centuries
  • Scottish black grouse discovery
  • About
  • Kenyan torture victims' compensation after fifty years?
  • Greek nazis threaten 'slaughter' of Muslims
  • Chinese endangered animals on camera traps

Community

Amphibians Animals Archaeology Architecture Art Astronomy, space Biology Birds Chemistry Computers, Internet Crime Dancing Disasters Economic, social, trade union, etc. Environment Film Fish Human rights Humour Invertebrates Literature Mammals Mathematics Media Medicine, health Music Peace and war Physics Plants etc. Politics Racism and anti-racism Religion Reptiles Science; health Social sciences Sports This blog Visual arts Women's issues

Top rated posts and comments

Animals, biology

  • About.com Animals
  • Afarensis: anthropology, evolution and science
  • Animal webcams
  • Animals and plants of Ireland
  • Biodiversity in California
  • Dar-Winning!
  • INTO THE EREMOZOIC
  • Laelaps
  • Առլեն Շահվերդյան. հեղինակային բլոգ-կայք
  • The annotated budak
  • What's Wild in Cornwall

Birds

  • About.com Birding
  • Save the albatross
  • thom.van.dooren, about extinction

Film

  • About.com Documentaries
  • moviemojoblog

Music

  • bestrockmusical
  • Birmingham Clarion Singers
  • Classical music
  • Folk music
  • Punk music

My other blogs

  • My blog at blog.co.uk
  • My Blogger blog
  • My Daily Kos blog

Politics

  • gfmurphy101
  • ThePoliticalIdealist.com
  • Truthout
  • Veterans for Peace

Science

  • Find an Archive on the Web
  • From Stars To Stalagmites
  • Scirus scientific search engine

Various blogs, various subjects

  • "R"HubBlog

Visual arts

  • Art History about.com
  • Doli Siregar ~ Photography
  • Free Tag Zone
  • marina kanavaki
  • misseychelles
  • PhotoBotos
  • Tracie Louise Photography

WordPress related

  • Discuss
  • Get Inspired
  • Get Polling
  • Get Support
  • Learn WordPress.com
  • Theme Showcase
  • WordPress Planet
  • WordPress.com News

StatCounter

wordpress hit counter

GoStats

_gos='c4.gostats.com';_goa=369670; _got=6;_goi=1;_gol='counter free hit invisible';_GoStatsRun(); counter free hit invisible
Theme: Twenty Eleven | Blog at WordPress.com.
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,216 other followers

Powered by WordPress.com
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
%d bloggers like this: