Saturday 21 April 2007

Don't Slag Sanjaya: He's A True Star

by: ACE BURPEE

Source:
http://winnipegsun.com/News/Winnipeg/2007/04/20/4078911-sun.html



His name has become a household word, but now the best thing to happen to television in years (for me, not so much for many others, apparently) has been kicked off American Idol.

Sanjaya Malakar's unprecedented and glorious run on the biggest TV show in the world has finally come to an end.

American Idol fans, you have your show back.

And I could not be less interested in how it turns out.


A five-pack on the would-be star:

5. Don't be mad at Sanjaya. Aren't you always telling your kids that all you're asking is that they try their best? He likes his parents, he tries hard, he's good to others. This should be your kid's role model.

4. Sanjaya was raked over the coals for apparently being a sub-par singer in what essentially is a singing competition. Since when is a good singing voice a pre-requisite for joining the music industry? Neil Young wouldn't win American Idol and he's done OK for himself.

3. If you want someone to blame for Sanjaya ruining your show, blame the guy who canceled The Gong Show in 1980. There should never have been a talent contest by any other name.

2. Do those who wanted the kid off the show also want Gabe to stop dancing? I hope not.

1. I'm going to start growing my hair and go as Sanjaya for Halloween. That's a mark of your impact on popular culture. How many other Idol contestants could be a Halloween costume? None. That means the biggest star didn't win.

Sunday 8 April 2007

Arab Street Warms To Showman Ahmadinejad

by: Andrew England (in Cairo)

Friday, April 06, 2007

Source:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/a2ccdde6-e450-11db-bf06-000b5df10621,dwp_uuid=fc3334c0-2f7a-11da-8b51-00000e2511c8.html


On the dusty streets of Cairo, once considered the most important capital in the Arab world, Egyptians mulled over the recent performance of Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, with most concluding he deserved a thumbs-up.

The Iranian President’s eye-catching showmanship as he announced the release of the 15 British sailors and marines seems to have generated admiration laced with a hint of frustration – why couldn’t Arab leaders be more like him?

The fact that Mr Ahmadi-Nejad is the leader of a Persian, predominantly Shia nation, seemed not to matter. “I consider Ahmadi-Nejad a leader of the Arab and Muslim people. He has the confidence. It angers and upsets me to no end, and a source of our Arab humiliation, that we don’t have such a leader among the Arab nations,” says Mohamed Ali, a 20-year-old student.

As Sunni Arab leaders voice concerns about sectarian tensions they say are fuelled by Iran and its interference in Iraq and Lebanon and watch Tehran’s nuclear programme with suspicion, other, ordinary Arabs see Mr Ahmadi-Nejad as a breath of fresh air.

The feelings are compounded by the perception that Sunni states, such as US allies Egypt, Jordan, and Arabia, simply follow Washington’s bidding, analysts say.

Abdullah Alshayji, a professor of international relations and head of the US studies unit at Kuwait University, says the Iranian leader strikes a balance that resonates in the Arab world: candid and outspoken in his criticism of the west and Israel, while appearing as a humble man of the people.

“We see that this could really give credence to Iran, that they are standing up to the two dominant powers,” Mr Alshayji says.

“What we see is Iran gaining the hearts and minds by standing up to the major powers, so it is likely the masses in the Arab street, or maybe the Muslim street, look at Iran as the only country that can play head to head with the these powers, while the Arab leaders cannot be counted on.”

Still, others say Mr Ahmadi-Nejad’s and Iran’s image in the Arab world have been hurt by the continuing violence in Iraq and the recent street clashes in Lebanon – both countries where Iran backs Shia movements.

Iran’s growing influence in the region has also triggered reactions among the governments of Sunni states. Recent announcements by Egypt, Jordan, and the six nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council that they would look at developing nuclear technology were deemed in part to be a message directed at Tehran.

Arabia has also become conspicuously more active in the region, hosting last week’s Arab League summit after initially giving up its turn to hold the meeting. Riyadh has also recently brokered a deal on a Palestinian unity government, another area where Sunni states complain of Iranian interference.

Mr Alshayji says that Iran’s decision to “embrace” the Palestinian issue and support Hamas proved to be a major embarrassment to Sunni leaders.

“Iran has played very smart politics and very showmanship politics, and has been able to gain a lot of support in the Arab street,” says Prof Alshayji.

Back in Cairo, Ashraf al-Loughi, a 43-year-old carpenter, describes Mr Ahmadi-Nejad as a “decent, moderate, man who didn’t want any problems”.

“He released the British sailors. He had the decency to send them home,” Mr Loughi says.


Additional reporting by: Waleed Marzouk

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007
Apocalypse again -- Call Up The Vietnam Vets -- Where Else Can Bush Get 21,500 Trained Soldiers For His 'Surge'?

by: Paul Whitefield, Los Angeles Times
(PAUL WHITEFIELD supervises the editorial pages' copy desk.)

January 21, 2007

Source:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-op-modestproposal21jan21,0,1717035.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions



LISTENING TO President Bush's speech on Iraq earlier this month, my first thought was: "Where the heck are we going to get 21,500 more soldiers to send to Iraq?" Our Reserves are depleted, our National Guard is worn out, our Army and Marine Corps are stretched to the limit.

Then it hit me: Re-up our Vietnam War veterans and send them.

They're trained. They're battle-hardened. Many already have post-traumatic stress disorder. Also, some have their own vehicles — Harleys mostly, which are cheap to run, make small targets and are highly mobile. I'll even bet that lots of these guys still have guns (you know, just in case).

OK, some vets are a bit long in the tooth (or don't have teeth — because of Agent Orange?). Or their eyesight isn't what it was. Or their reflexes have slowed. But with today's modern weaponry, how well do you have to see?

Too out of shape, you say? Listen, if Rocky Balboa can step back into the ring at age 60, all these Vietnam War vets need is a little boot-camp magic and they'll be good to go. I mean, who doesn't want to drop a few pounds?

Don't want geezers fighting for us? Well, let's face it, our young people have greater value right here. Most of us want to retire and collect our hard-earned Social Security, and we need those youngsters here, working and paying taxes — lots of taxes.

Finally, these Vietnam War guys are hungry for revenge. After all, they fought in the only war the U.S. ever lost. And they didn't even get a parade. So this is their chance. We can throw them that big parade when they come marching home.


Saturday 7 April 2007

Another U.S. Base In The Indian Ocean?

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Source:
http://www.sibernews.com/news/news-feature/-200703137651/


India, from a long-term perspective, has every reason to be concerned about the Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement between the U.S. and Sri Lanka. THE TEN-YEAR Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) signed by the United States and Sri Lanka on March 5, which provides for among other things logistics supplies and re-fuelling facilities, has major ramifications for the region, particularly India.

However, New Delhi's silence on the development is a reflection of the changed geo-political environment in the post-Cold War era with the emergence of the U.S. as the sole superpower. The new dynamics in India-U.S. ties could be another reason for South Block's silence.

For all the sophistry and spin by the Americans, the ACSA is a military deal and, on the face of it, is loaded in Washington's favour. For the U.S., it is as good as acquiring a base in the Indian Ocean and at little or no cost. In the immediate context, the ACSA suits the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime as an advertisement of its influence with the superpower in general and in its fight against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in particular.

Just a few years ago, such an agreement would have been inconceivable given the sensitivities of India in view of the geographical proximity of Sri Lanka. For example, the grant of permission by Colombo to Voice of America to establish its transmitter in the island and the leasing of oil tanks in Trincomalee port to pro-American firms were major bones of contention between India and Sri Lanka for decades.

Both the subjects were covered elaborately in the exchange of letters between Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and Sri Lanka's President J.R. Jayawardene as part of the 1987 Indo-Sri Lanka Accord. The key element in the letters was the agreement that given "the importance of nurturing this traditional friendship, it is imperative that both Sri Lanka and India reaffirm the decision not to allow our respective territories to be used for activities prejudicial to each other's unity, territorial integrity and security."

The provisions of the ACSA cannot be described as being detrimental to New Delhi's interests in the current phase of its relations with Washington.

However, in a possible new context India has every reason to be concerned about the pact. A brief summary of the nature of the agreement will illustrate this.

Sri Lanka is the 90th country to sign an ACSA with the U.S.; Washington had been keen on such an agreement for years. The fact it took so long for Colombo to join the ACSA club is illuminating. The agreement provides a framework for increased inter-operability to transfer and exchange logistics supplies, and support and re-fuelling services during peacekeeping missions, humanitarian operations, and joint exercises.

The U.S. is engaged in these operations in different parts of the globe. Sri Lanka, a nation of 20 million saddled with an ethnic conflict, does not have the capabilities or infrastructure for such ventures even if it desired. The definition of some of the operations under the ASCA could be politically tricky. Iraq and Afghanistan are a case in point. Are the U.S. and its allies engaged in peacekeeping operations or waging a war in Iraq and Afghanistan? The answer will depend on who is posing the question to whom.

The categories of allowable goods and services include food, petroleum, and transportation. Of course, the provision of weapons systems or ammunition is expressly prohibited under the agreement. There are examples galore where food and fuel have been used as weapons. Indeed, there are safeguards in the pact that logistics support allowed under it cannot be transferred beyond the forces of the receiving party without consent of the providing party. And all transactions must be mutually agreed upon before any transfer is made.

However, is a foolproof mechanism possible to ensure compliance in letter and spirit of such accords particularly for smaller countries in dealing with a superpower?

Curiously, the signatory to the document from the Sri Lankan side was Gothabaya Rajapaksa, Defence Secretary and brother of the President. The American side was represented by its envoy in Colombo, Robert Blake. The ACSA comes under the Pentagon's jurisdiction. Though the signing ceremony took place in Colombo, the Sri Lankan regime did not deem it necessary to issue any statement on the subject. The Ministries of Defence, Foreign Affairs, and Information merrily circulated the press release issued by the U.S. Embassy in Colombo on the deal.

Friday 6 April 2007

Injured In Iraq, A Soldier Is Shattered At Home

by: Deborah Sontag

April 05, 2007

Source:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/05/us/05VET.html



DUNBAR, Pa. — Blinded and disabled on the 54th day of the war in Iraq, Sam Ross returned home to a rousing parade that outdid anything this small, depressed Appalachian town had ever seen. “Sam’s parade put Dunbar on the map,” his grandfather said.

That was then.

Now Mr. Ross, 24, faces charges of attempted homicide, assault and arson in the burning of a family trailer in February. Nobody in the trailer was hurt, but Mr. Ross fought the assistant fire chief who reported to the scene, and later threatened a state trooper with his prosthetic leg, which was taken away from him, according to the police.

The police locked up Mr. Ross in the Fayette County prison. In his cell, he tried to hang himself with a sheet. After he was cut down, Mr. Ross was committed to a state psychiatric hospital, where, he said in a recent interview there, he is finally getting — and accepting — the help he needs, having spiraled downward in the years since the welcoming fanfare faded.

“I came home a hero, and now I’m a bum,” Mr. Ross, whose full name is Salvatore Ross Jr., said.
The story of Sam Ross has the makings of a ballad, with its heart-rending arc from hardscrabble childhood to decorated war hero to hardscrabble adulthood. His effort to create a future for himself by enlisting in the Army exploded in the desert during a munitions disposal operation in Baghdad. He was 20.

He was also on his own. Mr. Ross, who is estranged from his mother and whose father is serving a life sentence for murdering his stepmother, does not have the family support that many other severely wounded veterans depend on. Various relatives have stepped in at various times, but Mr. Ross, embittered by a difficult childhood and by what the war cost him, has had a push-pull relationship with those who sought to assist him.

Several people have taken a keen interest in Mr. Ross, among them Representative John P. Murtha, the once-hawkish Democrat from Pennsylvania. When Mr. Murtha publicly turned against the war in Iraq in 2005, he cited the shattered life of Mr. Ross, one of his first constituents to be seriously wounded, as a pivotal influence.

Mr. Murtha’s office assisted Mr. Ross in negotiating the military health care bureaucracy. Homes for Our Troops, a nonprofit group based in Massachusetts, built him a beautiful log cabin. Military doctors carefully tended Mr. Ross’s physical wounds: the loss of his eyesight, of his left leg below the knee, and of his hearing in one ear, among other problems.

But that help was not enough to save Mr. Ross from the loneliness and despair that engulfed him. Overwhelmed by severe symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, including routine nightmares of floating over Iraq that ended with a blinding boom, he “self-medicated” with alcohol and illegal drugs. He finally hit rock bottom when he landed in the state psychiatric hospital, where he is, sadly, thrilled to be.

“Seventeen times of trying to commit suicide, I think it’s time to give up,” Mr. Ross said, speaking in the forensic unit of the Mayview State Hospital in Bridgeville. “Lots of them were screaming out cries for help, and nobody paid attention. But finally somebody has.”

Finding a Way Out

Fayette County in southwestern Pennsylvania, once a prosperous coal mining center, is now one of the poorest counties in the state. The bucolic but ramshackle town of Dunbar sits off State Route 119 near the intersection marked by the Butchko Brothers junkyard.

Past the railroad tracks and not far up Hardy Hill Road, the blackened remains of Mr. Ross’s hillside trailer are testament to his disintegration. The Support our Troops ribbon is charred, the No Trespassing sign unfazed.

Mr. Ross lived in that trailer, where his father shot his stepmother, at several points in his life, including alone after he returned from Iraq. Its most recent tenant, his younger brother, Thomas, was in jail when the fire occurred.

Many in Mr. Ross’s large, quarreling family are on one side of the law or the other, prison guards or prisoners, police officers or probationers. Their internal feuds are so commonplace that family reunions have to be carefully plotted with an eye to who has a protective order out against whom, Mr. Ross’s 25-year-old cousin, Joseph Lee Ross, joked.

Sam Ross’s childhood was not easy. “Sam’s had a rough life from the time he was born,” his grandfather, Joseph Frank Ross, said. His parents fought, sometimes with guns, until they separated and his mother moved out of state. Mr. Ross bore some of the brunt of the turmoil.

Private Ross says that from his first days of basic training, he was hooked. But just months into his tour in Iraq, an explosion left him with several disabilities.

Joseph Frank Ross, outside the trailer that his grandson is accused of burning down. Mr. Ross said, “Sam’s had a rough life from the time he was born.”

“When that kid was little, the way he got beat around, it was awful,” his uncle, Joseph Frank Ross Jr., a prison guard, said.

When he was just shy of 12, Mr. Ross moved in with his father’s father, who for a time was married to his mother’s mother. The grandfather-grandson relationship was and continues to be tumultuous.

“I idolized my grandpaps, but he’s an alcoholic and he mentally abuses people,” Mr. Ross said.

His grandfather, 72, a former coal miner who sells used cars, said, “I’m not an alcoholic. I can quit. I just love the taste of it.”

The grandfather, who still keeps an A-plus English test by Mr. Ross on his refrigerator, said his grandson did well in school, even though he cared most about his wrestling team, baseball, hunting and fishing. Mr. Ross graduated in June 2001.

“Sammy wanted me to pay his way to college, but I’m not financially fixed to do that,” his grandfather said.

Feeling that Fayette County was a dead end, Mr. Ross said he had wanted to find a way out after he graduated. One night in late 2001, he said, he saw “one of those ‘Be all you can be’ ads” on television. The next day, he went to the mall and enlisted, getting a $3,000 bonus for signing up to be a combat engineer.

From his first days of basic training, Mr. Ross embraced the military as his salvation. “It was like, ‘Wow, man, I was born for the Army,’ ” he said. “I was an adrenaline junkie. I was super, super fit. I craved discipline. I wanted adventure. I was patriotic. I loved the bonding. And there was nothing that I was feared of. I mean, man, I was made for war.”

In early 2003, Private Ross, who earned his jump wings as a parachutist, shipped off to Kuwait with the 82nd Airborne Division, which pushed into Iraq with the invasion in March. The early days of the war were heady for many soldiers like Private Ross. He was assigned to an engineer squad given the task of rounding up munitions.

On May 18, Private Ross and his squad set out to de-mine an area in south Baghdad. Moving quickly, as they did on such operations, he collected about 15 UXO’s, or unexploded ordnances, in a pit. Somehow, something — he never learned what — caused them to detonate.

“The initial blast hit me and I went numb and everything went totally silent,” he said. “Then I hear people start hollering, ‘Ross! Ross! Ross!’ It started getting louder, louder, louder. My whole body was mangled. I was spitting up blood. I faded in and out. I was bawling my eyes out, saying, ‘Please don’t let me go; don’t let me go.’ ”

A Casualty of War

When his relatives first saw Mr. Ross at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, he was in a coma. “That boy was dead,” his grandfather said. “We was looking at a corpse lying in that bed.”

As he lay unconscious, the Army discharged him — one year, four months and 18 days after he enlisted, by his calculation. After 31 days, Mr. Ross came off the respirator. Groggily but insistently, he pointed to his eyes and then to his leg. An aunt gingerly told him he was blind and an amputee. He cried for days, he said.

It was during Mr. Ross’s stay at Walter Reed that Representative Murtha, a former Marine colonel, first met his young constituent and presented him with a Purple Heart.

From the start of the war, Mr. Murtha said in an interview, he made regular, painful excursions to visit wounded soldiers. Gradually, those visits, combined with his disillusionment about the Bush regime’s management of the war, led him to call in late 2005 for the troops to be brought home in six months.

“Sam Ross had an impact on me,” Mr. Murtha said. “Eventually, I just felt that we had gotten to a point where we were talking so much about winning the war itself — and it couldn’t be won militarily — that we were forgetting about the results of the war on individuals like Sam.”

Over the next three years, Mr. Ross underwent more than 20 surgical procedures, including: “Five on my right eye, one on my left eye, two or three when they cut my left leg off, three or four on my right leg, a couple on my throat, skin grafts, chest tubes and, you know, one where they gutted me from belly button to groin” to remove metal fragments from his intestines.

But, although he was prescribed psychiatric medication, he never received in-patient treatment for the post-traumatic stress disorder that was diagnosed at Walter Reed. And, in retrospect he, like his relatives, said he believes he should have been put in an intensive program soon after his urgent physical injuries were addressed.

“They should have given him treatment before they let him come back into civilization,” his grandfather said.

A Hero’s Welcome

The parade, on a sunny day in late summer 2003, was spectacular. Hundreds of flag-waving locals lined the streets. Mr. Ross had just turned 21. Wearing his green uniform and burgundy beret, he rode in a Jeep, accompanied by other veterans and the Connellsville Area Senior High School Marching Band. The festivities included bagpipers, Civil War re-enactors and a dunking pool.

“It wasn’t the medals on former Army Pfc. Sam Ross’s uniform that reflected his courage yesterday,” The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote. “It was the Dunbar native’s poise as he greeted well-wishers and insisted on sharing attention with other soldiers that proved the grit he’ll need to recover from extensive injuries he suffered in Iraq.”

For a little while, “it was joy joy, happiness happiness,” Mr. Ross said. He felt the glimmerings of a new kind of potential within himself, and saw no reason why he could not go on to college, even law school. Then the black moods, the panic attacks, the irritability set in. He was dogged by chronic pain; fragments of metal littered his body.

Mr. Ross said he was “stuck in denial” about his disabilities. The day he tried to resume a favorite pastime, fishing, hit him hard. Off-balance on the water, it came as a revelation that, without eyesight, he did not know where to cast his rod. He threw his equipment in the water and sold his boat.

“I just gave up,” he said. “I give up on everything.”

About a year after he was injured, Mr. Ross enrolled in an in-patient program for blind veterans in Chicago. He learned the Braille alphabet, but his fingers were too numb from embedded shrapnel to read, he said. He figured that he did not have much else to learn since he had been functioning blind for a year. He left the program early.

Similarly, Mr. Ross repeatedly declined outpatient psychiatric treatment at the veterans hospital in Pittsburgh, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. He said he felt that people at the hospital had disrespected him.

After living with relatives, Mr. Ross withdrew from the world into the trailer on the hill in 2004. That year, he got into a dispute with his grandfather over old vehicles on the property, resolving it by setting them on fire. His run-ins with local law enforcement, which did not occur before he went to Iraq, the Fayette County sheriff said, had begun.

But his image locally had not yet been tarnished. In early 2005, Mr. Murtha held a second Purple Heart ceremony for Mr. Ross at a Fayette County hospital “to try to show him how much affection we had for him and his sacrifice,” Mr. Murtha said.

A local newspaper article about Mr. Ross’s desire to build himself a house came to the attention of Homes for Our Troops.

“He’s a great kid; he really is,” said Kirt Rebello, the group’s director of projects and veterans affairs. “Early on, even before he was injured, the kid had this humongous deck stacked against him in life. That’s one of the reasons we wanted to help him.”

Mr. Ross, who had received a $100,000 government payment for his catastrophic injury, bought land adjacent to his grandfather’s. Mr. Rebello asked Mr. Ross whether he might prefer to move to somewhere with more services and opportunities. But Mr. Ross said that Dunbar’s winding roads were implanted in his psyche, “that he could see the place in his mind,” Mr. Rebello said.
A Life Falls Apart
In May 2005, Mr. Ross broke up with a girlfriend and grew increasingly depressed. He felt oppressively idle, he said. One day, he tacked a suicide note to the door of his trailer and hitched a ride to a trail head, disappearing into the woods. A daylong manhunt ensued.

Mr. Ross fell asleep in the woods that night, waking up with the sun on his face, which he took to be a sign that God wanted him to live. When he was found, he was taken to a psychiatric ward and released after a few weeks.

The construction of his house proved a distraction from his misery. Mr. Ross enjoyed the camaraderie of the volunteers who fashioned him a cabin from white pine logs. But when the house, which he named Second Heaven, was finished in early 2006, “they all left, I moved in, and I was all alone,” he said. “That’s when the drugs really started.”

At first, Mr. Ross said, he used drugs — pills, heroin, crack, and methadone — “basically to mellow myself out and to have people around.” Local ne’er-do-wells enjoyed themselves on Mr. Ross’s tab for quite some time, his relatives said.

“These kids were loading him into a car, taking him to strip clubs, letting him foot the bills,” his uncle, Joseph Ross Jr., said. “They were dopies and druggies.”

Mr. Ross’s girlfriend, Barbara Hall, moved in with him. But relationships with many of his relatives had deteriorated.

“If that boy would have come home and accepted what happened to him, that boy never would have wanted for anything in Dunbar,” his grandfather said. “If he had accepted that he’s wounded and he’s blinded, you know? He’s not the only one that happened to. There’s tens of thousands of boys like him.”

Some sympathy began to erode in the town, too. “There’s pro and con on him,” a local official said. “Some people don’t even believe he’s totally blind.”

After overdosing first on heroin and then on methadone last fall, Mr. Ross said, he quit consuming illegal drugs, replacing them with drinking until he blacked out.

Mr. Ross relied on his brother, Thomas, when he suffered panic attacks. When Thomas was jailed earlier this year, Mr. Ross reached out to older members of his family. In early February, his uncle, Joseph Ross Jr., persuaded him to be driven several hours to the veterans’ hospital in Coatesville to apply for its in-patient program for post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Due to the severity of his case, they accepted him on the spot and gave him a bed date for right after Valentine’s Day,” his uncle said. “Then he wigged out five days before he was supposed to go there.”

It started when his brother’s girlfriend, Monica Kuhns, overheard a phone call in which he was arranging to buy anti-depressants. She thought it was a transaction to buy cocaine, he said, and he feared that she would tell his sister and brother.

After downing several beers, Mr. Ross, in a deranged rage, went to his old trailer, where Ms. Kuhns was living with her young son, he said.

“He started pounding on the door,” said Ms. Hall, who accompanied him. “He went in and threatened to burn the place down. Me and Monica didn’t actually think he was going to do it. But then he pulled out the lighter.”

Having convinced himself that the trailer — a source of so much family misery — needed to be destroyed, Mr. Ross set a pile of clothing on fire. The women and the child fled. When a volunteer firefighter showed up, Mr. Ross attacked and choked him, according to a police complaint.

A judge set bail at $250,000. In the Fayette County prison, Mr. Ross got “totally out of hand,” the sheriff, Gary Brownfield, said. Mr. Ross’s lawyer, James Geibig, said the situation was a chaotic mess.

“It was just a nightmare,” Mr. Geibig said. “First the underlying charges — attempted homicide, come on — were blown out of proportion. Then bail is set sky high, straight cash. They put him in a little cell, in isolation, and barely let him shower. Things went from bad to worse until they found him hanging.”

Now Mr. Geibig’s goal is to get Mr. Ross sentenced into the post-traumatic stress disorder program he was supposed to attend.

“He does not need to be in jail,” Mr. Geibig said. “He has suffered enough. I’m not a bleeding heart, but his is a pretty gut-wrenching tale. And at the end, right before this incident, he sought out help. It didn’t arrive in time. But it’s not too late, I hope, for Sam Ross to have some kind of future.”
Few Americans Trust Military Or Media For Information On Iraq War: Poll

Thursday, April 05, 2007


WASHINGTON (AFP) - Most Americans have little or no confidence in the information they receive from the military or the media about the situation in Iraq, according to a poll released Thursday.

The survey by the Washington-based Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found that 52 percent have little or no faith in the military's portrayal of the four-year war, compared with 60 percent who feel the same way about the press reports of the conflict.

The figures are a far cry from the overwhelming confidence Americans had in the military and the media at the outset of the war in March 2003.

At the time, fully 85 percent said they had at least a fair amount of confidence in military information and 81 percent were confident the press was giving an accurate picture of the war.
Michael Dimock, associate director of the Pew Research Center, said the poll findings mirror the public's perception of how well the war is going overall.

"People are questioning whether they are getting good information about how things are going and it's affecting the public's confidence in the government and military as well as the press," Dimock told AFP.

He noted differences along party lines in how people responded to the survey questions with Democrats more skeptical about government information whereas Republicans were more leery of press coverage.

The survey of 1,038 adult Americans was conducted between March 30 and April 2 and had a 3.5 percent plus or minus margin of error.
Ecuador Confirms Decision To
Rejoin OPEC

Wednesday, April 04, 2007


BRASILIA (AFP) - Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa confirmed here Wednesday that his country will return to the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, 15 years after quitting the oil cartel.

"The decision to return to OPEC has been taken and this will open up a lot of opportunities, among them access to credit in Middle East banks," Correa said in a news conference during an official visit to Brasilia.

OPEC president Mohammed al-Hamili said last month that Ecuador could return to the group it left in 1992 "at any time."

Ecuador's bid is backed by Venezuela, the only Latin American member of OPEC. Ecuador produces 530,000 barrels of oil per day -- its top export -- and is the fifth largest producer in South America.

Correa had announced that Ecuador would apply to rejoin OPEC after the leftist leader was elected in November.

However, the Andean nation faces a debt to OPEC of 5.3 billion dollars, which it left when it withdrew from the organization.
Brits Out Of Falkland Islands: Venezuela's Chavez

Tueday, April 03, 2007


CARACAS (AFP) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez proclaimed on Monday that the Falkland Islands belong to Argentina on the 25th anniversary of the Argentine invasion of the territory which sparked a war with Britain.

"Enough already with colonialism," Chavez said on state television voicing solidarity with his fellow South American country which still lays claim to the British-run islands in the south Atlantic.

"Venezuela is among the countries demanding dialogue with Britain, which does not want to discuss it," he said.

"Today we pay tribute to those Argentine soldiers who gave their lives attempting to recover what belonged to them," he said.

Chavez did not miss the opportunity to criticize the United States, which he often refers to as "the empire," and which he said "disgraced" itself by aiding Britain in the conflict.

He also criticized Latin American countries that stood by "with their arms folded" during the 10-week conflict except for Cuba, "the only government that offered to send troops to go fight."

Chavez also proposed setting up a South American military organization for similar situations in the future.

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Margaret Thatcher, prime minister during the 1982 Falklands War, paid homage to British veterans on the 25th anniversary of the conflict in low-key ceremonies in London.

More than 900 people died -- including 649 Argentine and 255 British troops and three islanders -- during air, land, and sea hostilities.

Wednesday 4 April 2007

U.S. Effort To 'Pacify' Somalia Meets Resistance

by: G. Dunkel


April 01, 2007


Source:
http://www.workers.org/
http://www.workers.org/2007/world/somalia-0405/


Some 100 to 200 U.S. Army Special Forces are currently operating in Somalia. While not generally reported, the New York Times on both March 22 and March 23 did mention this fact. The Independent, a major bourgeois British paper, reported March 6 that special forces from both Britain and the U.S. were operating in Somalia.

They are meeting armed resistance from the Somali people.

Some analysts, like Ignatio Ramonet in Le Monde Diplomatique, a social democratic monthly in France, claim the U.S. has opened up a third theater in its “war on terror,” which is really a war to dominate the Middle East. Iraq and Afghanistan are the other two theaters. Somalia is right across the Gulf of Aden from the Arabian Peninsula and every ship headed through the Suez Canal must pass close by.

U.S. Army Special Forces intervened in Somalia at least once before, in 1992. After a major defeat in 1993, when U.S. helicopters strafed the capital but were downed by small arms fire—memorialized in the movie and book “Black Hawk Down”—the U.S. and the U.N. withdrew their forces. However, the CIA continued to supply some Somali agents and operatives with money, weapons and intelligence.

The country did not have an effective central government from the late 1980s to 2005.
The Islamic Courts Union started growing strong in 2004, especially in the capital city of Mogadishu, where constant fighting was making economic activity difficult. By June of 2006, however, after the ICU had established its authority, Mogadishu was so stable that families could even go to the beach, something that had been impossible for 15 years. (Toronto Star, March 22)

The U.S. government, however, considered the ICU an ally of al Qaeda and an obstacle to Anglo-U.S. domination of the region. Washington enticed the regime in neighboring Ethiopia, using significant financial and political support, to cooperate with some of its “assets” in Somalia operating under the name of the Transitional Government. Thousands of Ethiopian troops, backed by imperialist special forces and U.S. Navy ships, invaded Somalia and the ICU was swept from power by the end of 2006.

The ICU tried to mount a resistance in southern Somalia, near Kenya, but the special forces called in air strikes from a U.S. carrier group off the Somali coast and dislodged the ICU from its bases.

Kenyan authorities rounded up Somali refugees who fled the fighting and the U.S. set up a program of “extraordinary renditions,” with at least four flights taking captives to Mogadishu and then on to Ethiopia. (Independent, March 6)

While the ICU couldn’t hold on in southern Somalia, anger was growing in Mogadishu and other Somali cities. When Ethiopian and Somali troops from the U.S.-backed “transitional government” tried to stage a raid March 21 on a Mogadishu neighborhood opposed to the present regime, they were met with heavy weapons and a sustained fire fight. Some 15 raiders were killed and members of the community burned their bodies, dragged them through the streets and walked on them. A significant number were also wounded.

The next day a Byelorussian plane—carrying supplies to 1,000 Ugandan troops occupying Mogadishu as African Union “peacekeepers”—was shot down by a missile fired from an opposition neighborhood.

Even in a country poorer and more disunited than Afghanistan, the U.S. government and its agents can’t stop the resistance to foreign occupation. The U.S. ruling class wants to send more U.S. troops to Somalia, which is reported to have significant off-shore oil reserves, but it can’t even find enough for its beleaguered campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan.



---------------------------------------------------------

Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World.

Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011


Email:
ww@workers.org

Subscribe:
wwnews-subscribe@workersworld.net

Support independent news:

Sunday 1 April 2007

America Is Losing The Middle East Also

by: Haluk Ozdalga

23 August 2006

Source:
http://www.zaman.com/
http://www.zaman.com/?bl=commentary&alt=&trh=20060823&hn=35916



For the first time, America openly opposed Arabs in war during the attack aimed at disabling the Hezbollah. Before the planned war with Iran, America may be expected to make two more "preparations" to narrow down the opposition front anticipated to develop in the region after an attack.

A passionate persuasion diplomacy for Syria: Your place is not with Iran. Do like Egypt and Jordan have; come and join our ranks. The bait to be offered might even include affording Damascus the influence it enjoyed in Lebanon until recently. The main ambassadors of persuasion efforts: Husnu Mubarek and King Abdullah. The second piece of groundwork (to the extent that opportunity exists in Iraq's civil war atmosphere) is weakening the Army of Mehdi, tied to Mukteda el-Sadr (not militias like Sistani's Badr Brigades or the Peshmerge). As for the US's general approach to the Arab world, it is based on two dubious premises: cooperation with despotic governments like Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia that close their ears to the voice of the people and developing an America-Sunni Arab front by exploiting Shiite-Sunni differences.


US ally Mubarek

Ruling Egypt for 25 years under martial law, Mubarek is besieged by the Muslim Brotherhood (MB, al-Ihvan al-Muslumin). The biggest political and economic support that affords him to stay on his feet comes from the US. General elections were held in November, 2005. In spite of heavy suppression by the Mubarek government, the prohibition of free participation by parties and candidates, and the open theft of votes, the MB gained 88 representatives (out of 420) by showing independent candidates. Egypt's oldest party and leader of the independent struggle, Vafd, only won 6 representatives. Unable to endure the merciless conditions of the Mubarek regime, Vafd is now in a process of disintegration. The Brotherhood is Mubarek's only political rival. Claiming to have won by a wide margin, Mubarek's National Democratic Party is nowhere to be found on the streets. Just like Sunalp Pasha"s MDP. Because the MB is sure to gain a greater victory, Mubarek cancelled this year's local elections. Repression has increased. During May and June, 645 MB members, including some prominent leaders, were arrested. Ayman Nur, who showed courage to oppose Mubarek in the last presidential elections, is now in jail. He doesn't even have a right to defense. Meanwhile, the army has to be bridled. Mubarek showers military officers with attractive material benefits, but commanders whose names become a little well-known are immediately dismissed. General Abu Gazala, whose name was frequently mentioned in Egyptian public circles, has been under house arrest for a long time.

Mubarek is preparing his son Jamal to take his place. Jamal has been appointed to the position of Political Commission Chairman, a rather important office. A constitutional change enables only NDP members to be candidates for chairmanship. Occasionally Jamal travels to Washington. He is received on the highest level by Bush-Cheney administration, and he is gaining diplomatic and state administrative experience. At forty-two, Jamal is Cairo's most well-known "Playboy." He is excessively fond of women and luxury cars. A short time ago, his family said, "This is enough," and Jamal was married to the 22 year-old daughter of one of Egypt's richest businessmen. Outlawed by the Mubarek regime, support for the MB is continually rising among intellectuals and academicians. Lawyers supporting the MB won a majority in the Egyption Bar administration. Recently Mubarek has been having trouble with the 8000-member Judges Association. Egyptian judges are pushing hard for judicial independence. Association president Abdulaziz is calling for "civil disobedience." One of the key results of judicial independence will be the supervision of elections by independent judges.

Egypt is one of the countries most suitable for democracy in the Middle East. Sitting on an unequaled cultural heritage, Egyptian intellectuals have can express themselves in almost effective manner. A comparatively strong, enterprising middle-class carry a potential for rapid growth and it is business-wise. Slowly its economy is opening up to the world. Perhaps most importantly, there is a dynamic and progressively yearning for democracy. There's no need for US "help" for democracy; A neutral U.S. will probably suffice. However, the forked-tongue Bush Administration, which is dragging Iraq through a dirty war in order to "bring democracy," continues to support Mubarek, an enemy of democracy in Egypt.

Another U.S. trick is to promote the Shiite-Sunni polarization. The U.S. is known to incite its despotic friends in the region in that direction. King Abdullah has uttered words to the effect that he is concerned by the "Shiite crescent" in the region. The Saudi administration makes imams under its command give religious declarations against the Shiite Hezbollah. Mubarek accuses Iraqi Shiites of being more loyal to Iran than to their own country. It's obvious what the real concern of these dictators is. Taking control in Iraq after Saddam, America not only divided Iraqis into Sunni and Shiite while forming civil and military administrations, but it also separated them according to their place of birth. Whereas, as Jewish researcher Izhak Nakash indicated, for Iraqi Shiites the Arab identity is superior to the Shiite identity and their political preferences are along those lines.


Will Religious Sect exploitation attain its goal?

At a time, America was planning to bring Jordan's Hashemi family to power in Iraq. The views of Richard Perle and Douglas Feith, fathers of Neo-con ideas who were brought to the highest levels in the Defense Department by the Bush administration, are as follows: "Using their influence on Najaf, the Hashemi family (if in power in Iraq) can enable Shiites in southern Lebanon to be saved from the influence of Hezbollah, Iran and Syria, because for their strong ties to the Hashemis. The Shiites are foremost tied to the Prophet Muhammad's family and the Jordan King, who with the Prophet's blood flowing in his veins, is a direct descendant of that family."

The desire of the Neo-cons to exploit sect differences in the Middle East is pathetically clear. But so is their ignorance of the region they want to govern. Just as anyone in the slightest way informed about the Middle East knows, Ali is the Prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law. But the Shiites loyalty is only to those coming from Ali's lineage. If someone is descended from the Prophet's line, like the Abbasids and Omayyads, they wouldn't be happy about the others either. In addition, Shiites hate the Hashemi family who were brought to power in Jordan as the puppet of the British.

As long as Israel's occupation of Arab lands and the suppression of Arabs continues, and as long as politics are cogently imposed by the US-Israel partnership's one-sided will, America will not be successful in the Middle East. The number of countries in the region following America will not increase; to the contrary, current governments siding with the US are under threat and may be overthrown. A change of regime in one of these will have serious consequences in the region. The Bush Administration's ignorance about the region where it wants to draw a new map is nothing less than mind boggling. Only a few weeks ago, they were planning for Mubarek to send troops to Lebanon. Egyptian soldiers were to implement Israel's politics there. They would take arms from the hands of the Hezbollah! Mubarak, knowing too this American nonsense would pave the Muslim Brotherhood's road to power, said no.

Other resistance movements embracing Islamic ideology like Hamas and Hezbollah will grow stronger. Common denominator of these movements is their new leadership positions in Arab nationalism that has been left without a patron. For this reason, America's efforts to place a wedge between the Sunnis and Shiites is doomed to failure. In spite of the royal family's efforts to the contrary, in Saudi Arabia individuals with favorable attitudes toward Shiites, in general, and the Hezbollah, in particular, have started to appear, even among conservative Wahabis. Forget about a Shiite- Sunni split, now an Arab-Iran rapprochement can be expected. The global leadership of an America that doesn't reach its political aims in the Middle East might be buried in the Arabian desert. This will not only be the birth of a New Middle East, but the birth of a multi-power New World Order.