Friday, June 26, 2009

Klien Calls For Boycott of Israel

We could not agree more! It's about time someone in America, whose name lets her off the sticky hook of antisemitism, actually said what many more of us have been thinking and saying for years now.

I am not, nor have I ever been, a antisemite nor anti-Jewish. I have no patience with anyone who is. Nevertheless, I am not anti-Arab or Muslim either.

If we cannot, as Americans, be fair brokers of peace in that region, we should shut the hell up!

 

Author Naomi Klein Calls for Boycott of Israel

Bestselling author Naomi Klein on Friday took her call for a boycott of Israel to the occupied West Bank village of Bilin, where she witnessed Israeli forces clashing with protesters. “It's a boycott of Israeli institutions, it's a boycott of the Israeli economy," the Canadian writer told journalists as she joined a weekly demonstration against Israel's controversial separation wall. "Boycott is a tactic . . . we're trying to create a dynamic which was the dynamic that ultimately ended apartheid in South Africa," said Klein, the author of "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism."


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Let The Sun Shine In......

Dissent = Terrorism?




Ed
itor’s Note: It is a sad irony that the mainstream U.S. news media, which has protested human rights violations in Iran, has taken far less umbrage when American dissidents are spied on, arrested and otherwise punished.



In this guest essay, Emily Spence traces this hypocrisy from the last century to this one, through George W. Bush’s “war on terror”:
Although DoD officials removed the offensive section at the urging of ACLU members, the DoD stance is still troubling since a longstanding practice to designate peaceful, law-abiding activists as dangerous and treasonable still exists in many government departments and agencies.



Indeed the participants of the first antiwar protest against the Vietnam incursion, put together in the mid-1960's using Gandhi's Salt March as a model for a nonviolent demonstration, faced government operatives filming them face by face from rooftops as they moved en masse down Broadway to the UN Plaza.



(My mother, a pacifist married to a World War II Conscientious Objector, and I, a child at the time of the march, both were in attendance. When the film crew focused on us, she stood tall, faced the agents with their telephoto lens, glared in disdainful defiance and, simultaneously, threw the corner of her coat over my face. Afterwards, she muttered, "How dare they try to intimidate us!")



With that history in mind, it shouldn’t be assumed that the treatment of Nobel Peace Award winner Aung San Sui Kyi in Myanmar would be all that different if she were leading protests in the United States. While it's commendable that U.S. spokespersons object to her most recent arrest, they still might seem to be a bunch of hypocrites.



For instance, a number of Nobel Peace Award recipients, such as the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), have had difficulties of their own on American soil.
"



AFSC’s work, always open and resolutely nonviolent, has been under government surveillance for decades. The Service Committee secured nearly 1,700 pages of files from the FBI under a Freedom of Information request in 1976,” the AFSC said in seeking more recent “war on terror” records.



“These [earlier] files show that the FBI kept files on AFSC that dated back to 1921. Ten other federal agencies kept files on AFSC, including the CIA, Air Force, Navy, Internal Revenue Service, Secret Service, and the State Department. The CIA has intercepted overseas mail and cables in the 1950s, and some AFSC offices (and even its staff's homes) have been infiltrated and burglarized in the late 1960s into the 1970s." [2]



AFSC associate general secretary for justice and human rights, Joyce Miller, asked, “How can we speak of spreading democracy in Iraq while dismantling it here at home?” She further remarked, “Political dissent is fundamental to a free and democratic society. It should not be equated with crime.”



Add to the AFSC problems, those pertaining to Nobel Peace Award recipient Nelson Mandela, who only a year ago had the designation "terrorist" removed from his name, under protest by the State Department, so that he no longer suffered travel restrictions from the U.S. government.



Yet his travel curtailment was not nearly as awful as was Ramzy Baroud's blockage. He, the editor of Palestine Chronicle, had his U.S. passport seized by a consular officer at an overseas American Embassy [3]. Similarly, Sen.Edward Kennedy was, also, flagged by the U.S. no-fly list.



Then again, Ted Kennedy received much less harassment than did Nobel Peace Award winner Mairead Corrigan Maguire after her flight from Guatemala had been directed to Ireland through Houston:
"She was probably tired and ready to get back to Belfast, where her attempts to bring about an end to The Troubles in 1976 made her at 32 the youngest Nobel Peace Prize-winner ever,” according to an article in the Houston Press.


“Since then, she's been given the Pacem in Terris Award by Pope John Paul II, and the United Nations selected her (along with the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Jordan's Queen Noor and a dozen or so other fellow Nobel Laureates) as an honorary board member of the International Coalition for the Decade.



"Unfortunately for Maguire, her flight back home to Northern Ireland was routed through Houston, where none of that meant diddly. Federal Customs officials were far less interested in any of that than they were in a box on the back of the transit form she filled out on her flight.



"'They questioned me about my nonviolent protests in USA against the Afghanistan invasion and Iraqi war,' Maguire said later in a statement. 'They insisted I must tick the box in the Immigration form admitting to criminal activities.'



"Maguire was detained for two hours -- grilled once, fingerprinted, photographed, and grilled again. She missed her flight home. She was only released after an organization she helped found -- the Nobel Women's Initiative -- started kicking up a fuss." [4]



One can add to her troubles countless other ones wherein human rights and environmental supporters have been repeatedly hassled for no other reason than that they're holding views that don't jive with positions at any number of U.S. government institutions.



One needn't return in time to the McCarthy Era to find many individuals who have been investigated and persecuted for holding vilified opinions. For example, Stephen Lendman, a peace advocate and writer in his seventies with a permanent knee injury that delimits travel, has been repeatedly investigated by the FBI.



At the same time, he is joined by myriad others such as assorted activists in Maryland whose names were put on federal terrorist lists by state police who infiltrated their groups. [5] As such, their perfectly legal activities, freedom of speech and right to unhindered assembly have been criminalized.



Simultaneously, there's a certain inescapable irony and disingenuous quality presented by the Western government heads who are harshly critical of the Iran crackdown on dissenting citizens while they, themselves, condone similar ironfisted policies in their own lands.



Their two-faced position is barely hidden beneath the surface of their mock concern for the well-being of Iranian protesters as they urge their own and allied troops into battle, show little (if any) sincere remorse over the slaughter of masses of civilians that happen in the process and make sure that demonstrators at home are disregarded, denigrated or preemptively rounded up as happened at the 2008 Republican National Convention and similar events.



Then again, one might find himself in pretty good company if he were singled out as unpatriotic and treacherous for holding viewpoints or undertaking actions that go contrary to the perspectives that a certain hawkish and totalitarian segment of society holds.



All the same, every method conceivable might be used to hunt down the offenders and, when taken to the extreme, render their seemingly provocative positions ineffectual by any means possible, including imprisonment and murder.



Anyone who doubts this to be the case needs only to remember what happened to people like Howard Fast; the slain Freedom Riders Andy Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner; the thirteen shot students at Kent State University at which Ohio National Guardsman fired sixty-seven rounds over a thirteen second period, and scores of others who have stood against mainstream policies.



Meanwhile, stigmatizing dissidents is a fairly common practice. As such, “There are 1.1 million people on the [U.S.] Terrorist Watch List and there is a 35 per cent error rate, minimum, for that list,” according to ACLU's Michael German. [6]



Furthermore, the overzealous and aggressive surveillance tactics used by the National Security Agency (NSA) to check the public's e-mails, telephone calls and other communications are the same ones as were in use during George W. Bush's administration. Likewise, the amount of spying on personal exchanges is as high as it ever was.



In relation to recent claims by Justice Department and national security officials that the over-collection was unintentional, U.S. Rep. Rush Holt, a Democrat from New Jersey and Chairman of the House Select Intelligence Oversight Panel, commented: “Some actions are so flagrant that they can't be accidental.”



Additionally, the act of tracking e-mailed transmissions and other interactions has seemed in violation of federal law, according to lawyers at the Justice Department. Regardless, the practice continues.



At the same time, the decision to designate social activists as troublemakers, while singling them out for intimidation, threats and investigations, carries serious legal and political implications in democratic societies.



The further measure of subjecting them to the sorts of difficulties that Mairead Corrigan Maguire, Ramzy Baroud, AFSC members and innumerable others have endured is clearly based in xenophobic, paranoid and despotic thinking. It embodies the kind of authoritarian mentality and oppressive activities that one finds in the worst types of tyrannical regimes.



As Harry S. Truman suggested, "Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear."



Due to this fear, are we, then, to all conform with lock-step in perverse obedience to the State's dictates, outlooks and agendas in an increasingly Orwellian milieu?



If not, then we must constantly remind ourselves and each other of U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas's vision: "Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions. It is the one un-American act that could most easily defeat us."



Emily Spence
is an author living in Massachusetts. She has spent many years involved in human rights, environmental and social services efforts.
References


[1] Pentagon Rebrands Protest as “Low-Level Terrorism”
[2] American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
[3] "Punishing activists or pursuing terrorists?" by Maggie Mitchell Salem in Asia Times Online :: Asian News, Business and Economy.
[4] Nobel Prize Winner Gets Hassled At Bush Intercontinental ...
[5] Police Spied on Activists In Md. - washingtonpost.com and Md. Police Put Activists' Names On Terror Lists - ...
[6] One third of FBI Terror Watch List are innocent people | Top ...

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Let The Sun Shine In......

Iran Divided & the 'October Surprise'




Iran’s current political divisions can be traced back to a controversy nearly three decades ago when Iran faced war with Iraq and became entwined with U.S. and Israeli political maneuvers that set all three countries on a dangerous course that continues to this day.



In the election dispute now gripping the streets of Tehran, Iran is experiencing a revival of the internal rivalries born in the judgments made in 1980 and later that decade about how and whether to deal with the Little Satan (Israel) and the Great Satan (the United States).



Former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims he is the rightful winner of the June 12 presidential election, was part of the group (along with his current allies former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and former House Speaker Mehdi Karoubi) that favored secret contacts with the United States and Israel to get the military supplies needed to fight the war with Iraq.



Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s current spiritual leader and the key supporter of reelected President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was more the ideological purist in the early 1980s, apparently opposing the unorthodox strategy that involved going behind President Carter’s back to gain promises of weapons from Israel and the future Reagan administration.



Khamenei appears to have favored a more straightforward arrangement with the Carter administration for settling the dispute over 52 American hostages seized by Iranian radicals in 1979.



In 1980, the internal Iranian divisions played out against a dramatic backdrop. Iranian radicals still held the 52 hostages seized at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran; President Jimmy Carter had imposed an arms embargo while seeking the hostages’ release – and he was struggling to fend off a strong campaign challenge from Republican Ronald Reagan.



Meanwhile, Israel’s Likud Prime Minister Menachem Begin was furious at Carter for pushing him into the Camp David peace deal with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat that required Israel returning the Sinai to Egypt in exchange for normalized relations.



Begin also was upset at Carter’s perceived failure to protect the Shah of Iran, who had been an Israeli strategic ally. Begin was worried, too, about the growing influence of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq as it massed troops along the Iranian border.




Upsetting Carter


Determined to help Iran counter Iraq – and hopeful about rebuilding at least covert ties to Tehran – Begin’s government cleared the first small shipments of U.S. military supplies to Iran in spring 1980, including 300 tires for Iran’s U.S.-manufactured jet fighters. Soon, Carter learned about the covert shipments and lodged an angry complaint.



“There had been a rather tense discussion between President Carter and Prime Minister Begin in the spring of 1980 in which the President made clear that the Israelis had to stop that, and that we knew that they were doing it, and that we would not allow it to continue, at least not allow it to continue privately and without the knowledge of the American people,” Carter’s press secretary Jody Powell told me in an interview.



“And it stopped,” Powell said -- at least, it stopped temporarily.



Questioned by congressional investigators a dozen years later, Carter said he felt that by April 1980, “Israel cast their lot with Reagan,” according to notes I found among the unpublished documents in the files of a congressional investigation conducted in 1992.



Carter traced the Israeli opposition to his possible reelection in 1980 to a “lingering concern [among] Jewish leaders that I was too friendly with Arabs.”



Carter’s National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski also recognized the Israeli hostility. Brzezinski said the Carter White House was well aware that the Begin government had “an obvious preference for a Reagan victory.”



Begin’s alarm about a possible Carter second term was described, too, by Israeli intelligence and foreign affairs official David Kimche in his 1991 book, The Last Option. Kimche wrote that Begin’s government believed that Carter was overly sympathetic to the Palestinian cause and was conspiring with Arabs to force Israel to withdraw from the West Bank.



“Begin was being set up for diplomatic slaughter by the master butchers in Washington,” Kimche wrote. “They had, moreover, the apparent blessing of the two presidents, Carter and Sadat, for this bizarre and clumsy attempt at collusion designed to force Israel to abandon her refusal to withdraw from territories occupied in 1967, including Jerusalem, and to agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state.”



Collaborating with Republicans



Extensive evidence now exists that Begin’s preference for a Reagan victory led Israelis to join in a covert operation with Republicans to contact Iranian leaders behind Carter’s back and delay release of the 52 American hostages until after Reagan defeated Carter in November 1980.



That controversy, known as the “October Surprise” case, and its sequel, the Iran-Contra scandal in the mid-1980s, involved clandestine ties between some leading figures in today’s Iran crisis and U.S. and Israeli officials who supplied Iran with missiles and other weaponry for its war with Iraq. The Iran-Iraq conflict began simmering in spring 1980 and broke into full-scale war in September.



Khamenei, who was then an influential aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, appears to have been part of a contingent exploring ways to resolve the hostage dispute with Carter.



According to Army Col. Charles Wesley Scott, who was one of the 52 hostages, Khamenei visited him on



May 1, 1980, at the old U.S. consulate in Tabriz to ask whether milder demands from Iran to the Carter administration might lead to a resolution of the hostage impasse and allow the resumption of U.S. military supplies, former National Security Council aide Gary Sick reported in his book October Surprise.




“You’re asking the wrong man,” Scott replied, noting that he had been out of touch with his government during his five months of captivity before adding that he doubted the Carter administration would be eager to resume military shipments quickly.




“Frankly, my guess is that it will be a long time before you’ll get any cooperation on spare parts from America, after what you’ve done and continue to do to us,” Scott said he told Khamenei.
However, Khamenei’s outreach to a captive U.S. military officer – outlining terms that became the basis of a near settlement of the crisis with the Carter administration in September 1980 – suggests that Khamenei favored a more traditional approach toward resolving the hostage crisis than the parallel channel that soon involved the Israelis and the Republicans.



In that narrow sense at least, Khamenei was allied with Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, the sitting Iranian president in 1980 who also has said he opposed dealing with Israel and the Republicans behind President Carter’s back. In a little-noticed letter to the U.S. Congress, dated Dec. 17, 1992, Bani-Sadr said he first learned of the Republican hostage initiative in July 1980.



Bani-Sadr said a nephew of Ayatollah Khomeini, then Iran’s supreme leader, returned from a meeting with an Iranian banker, Cyrus Hashemi, who had led the Carter administration to believe he was helping broker a hostage release but who had close ties to Reagan’s campaign chief William Casey and to Casey’s business associate, John Shaheen.



Bani-Sadr said the message from the Khomeini emissary was clear: the Reagan campaign was in league with pro-Republican elements of the CIA in an effort to undermine Carter and wanted Iran’s help. Bani-Sadr said the emissary “told me that if I do not accept this proposal they [the Republicans] would make the same offer to my rivals.”



The emissary added that the Republicans “have enormous influence in the CIA,” Bani-Sadr wrote. “Lastly, he told me my refusal of their offer would result in my elimination.” Bani-Sadr said he resisted the GOP scheme, but the plan ultimately was accepted by Ayatollah Khomeini, who appears to have made up his mind around the time of Iraq’s invasion in mid-September 1980.



Clearing the Way



Khomeini’s approval meant the end of the initiative that Khamenei had outlined to Col. Scott, which was being pursued with Carter’s representatives in West Germany before Iraq launched its attack. Khomeini’s blessing allowed Rafsanjani, Karoubi and later Mousavi to proceed with secret contacts that involved emissaries from the Reagan camp and the Israeli government.



The Republican-Israeli-Iranian agreement appears to have been sealed through a series of meetings that culminated in discussions in Paris arranged by the right-wing chief of French intelligence Alexandre deMarenches and allegedly involving Casey, vice presidential nominee George H.W. Bush, CIA officer Robert Gates and other U.S. and Israeli representatives on one side and cleric Mehdi Karoubi and a team of Iranian representatives on the other.



Bush, Gates and Karoubi all have denied participating in the meeting (Karoubi did so in an interview with me in Tehran in 1990). But deMarenches admitted arranging the Paris conclave to his biographer, former New York Times correspondent David Andelman.



Andelman said deMarenches ordered that the secret meeting be kept out of his memoir because the story could otherwise damage the reputation of his friends, William Casey and George H.W. Bush. At the time of Andelman’s work ghostwriting the memoir in 1991, Bush was running for re-election as President of the United States.


Andelman’s sworn testimony in December 1992 to a House task force assigned to examine the October Surprise controversy buttressed longstanding claims from international intelligence operatives about a Paris meeting involving Casey and Bush.


Besides the testimony from intelligence operatives, including Israeli military intelligence officer Ari Ben-Menashe, there was contemporaneous knowledge of the alleged Bush-to-Paris trip by Chicago Tribune reporter John Maclean, son of author Norman Maclean who wrote A River Runs Through It.



Maclean said a well-placed Republican source told him in mid-October 1980 about Bush’s secret trip to Paris to meet with Iranians on the U.S. hostage issue. Maclean passed on that information to State Department official David Henderson, who recalled the date as Oct. 18, 1980.



Since Maclean had never written a story about the leak and Henderson didn’t mentioned it until Congress started its cursory October Surprise investigation in 1991, the Maclean-Henderson conversation had been locked in a kind of historical amber.



One could not accuse Maclean of concocting the Bush-to-Paris allegation for some ulterior motive, since he hadn’t used it in 1980, nor had he volunteered it a decade later. He only confirmed it when approached by a researcher working with me on a PBS Frontline documentary and in a subsequent videotaped interview with me.



Also, alibis concocted for Casey and Bush – supposedly to prove they could not have traveled to the alleged overseas meetings – either collapsed under close scrutiny or had serious holes. [For details on the October Surprise case, see Robert Parry’s Secrecy & Privilege.]



Military Shipments



Though the precise details of the October Surprise case remain hazy, it is a historic fact that Carter failed to resolve the hostage crisis before losing in a surprising landslide to Reagan and that the hostages were not released until Reagan and Bush had been sworn in on Jan. 20, 1981.



It also is clear that U.S. military supplies were soon moving to Iran via Israeli middlemen with the approval of the new Reagan administration.



In a PBS interview, Nicholas Veliotes, Reagan’s assistant secretary of state for the Middle East, said he first discovered the secret arms pipeline to Iran when an Israeli weapons flight was shot down over the Soviet Union on July 18, 1981, after straying off course on its third mission to deliver U.S. military supplies from Israel to Iran via Larnaca, Cyprus.



“It was clear to me after my conversations with people on high that indeed we had agreed that the Israelis could transship to Iran some American-origin military equipment,” Veliotes said.
In checking out the Israeli flight, Veliotes came to believe that the Reagan-Bush camp’s dealings with Iran dated back to before the 1980 election.



“It seems to have started in earnest in the period probably prior to the election of 1980, as the Israelis had identified who would become the new players in the national security area in the Reagan administration,” Veliotes said. “And I understand some contacts were made at that time.”



In the early 1980s, the players in Iran also experienced a shakeup. Bani-Sadr was ousted in 1981 and fled for his life; he was replaced as president by Khamenei; Mousavi was named prime minister; Rafsanjani consolidated his financial and political power as speaker of the Majlis; and Karoubi became a powerful figure in Iran’s military-and-foreign-policy establishment.
Besides tapping into stockpiles of U.S.-made weaponry, the Israelis also arranged shipments from third countries, including Poland, according to Israeli intelligence officer Ben-Menashe, who described his work on the arms pipeline in his 1992 book, Profits of War.



Since representatives of Likud had initiated the arms-middleman role for Iran, the profits flowed into coffers that the right-wing party controlled, a situation that created envy inside the rival Labor Party especially after it gained a share of power in the 1984 elections, Ben-Menashe said.



The Iran-Contra Case



In this analysis, Labor’s desire to open its own arms channel to Iran laid the groundwork for the Iran-Contra scandal, as the government of Prime Minister Shimon Peres tapped into the emerging neoconservative network inside the Reagan administration on one hand and began making contacts to Iran’s leadership on the other.



Reagan’s National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, who had close ties to the Israeli leadership, worked with Peres’s aide Amiram Nir and neocon intellectual (and NSC consultant) Michael Ledeen in spring 1985 to make contact with the Iranians.



Ledeen’s chief intermediary to Iran was a businessman named Manucher Ghorbanifar, who was held in disdain by the CIA as a fabricator but claimed he represented high-ranking Iranians who favored improved relations with the United States and were eager for American weapons.
Ghorbanifar’s chief contact, as identified in official Iran-Contra records, was Mohsen Kangarlu, who worked as an aide to Prime Minister Mousavi, according to Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman in his 2008 book, The Secret War with Iran.



However, Ghorbanifar’s real backer inside Iran appears to have been Mousavi himself. According to a Time magazine article from January 1987, Ghorbanifar “became a trusted friend and kitchen adviser to Mir Hussein Mousavi, Prime Minister in the Khomeini government.”



In November 1985, at a key moment in the scandal as one of the early missile shipments via Israel went awry, Ghorbanifar conveyed Mousavi’s anger to the White House.



"On or about November 25, 1985, Ledeen received a frantic phone call from Ghorbanifar, asking him to relay a message from the prime minister of Iran to President Reagan regarding the shipment of the wrong type of HAWKs,” according to Iran-Contra special prosecutor Lawrence Walsh’s Final Report.



“Ledeen said the message essentially was ‘we've been holding up our part of the bargain, and here you people are now cheating us and tricking us and deceiving us and you had better correct this situation right away.’”



Earlier in the process, Ghorbanifar had dangled the possibility of McFarlane meeting with high-level Iranian officials, including Mousavi and Rafsanjani.



Another one of Ghorbanifar’s Iranian contacts was Hassan Karoubi, the brother of Mehdi Karoubi. Hassan Karoubi met with Ghorbanifar and Ledeen in Geneva in late October 1985 regarding missile shipments in exchange for Iranian help in getting a group of U.S. hostages freed in Lebanon, according to Walsh’s report.



A Split Leadership



As Ben-Menashe describes the maneuvering in Tehran, the basic split in the Iranian leadership put then-President Khamenei on the ideologically purist side of rejecting U.S.-Israeli military help and Rafsanjani, Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi in favor of exploiting those openings in a pragmatic way to better fight the war with Iraq.



The key decider during this period – as in the October Surprise phase – was Ayatollah Khomeini, who agreed with the pragmatists on the need to get as much materiel from the Americans and the Israelis as possible, Ben-Menashe said in an interview this week from his home in Canada.
Ben-Menashe said Rafsanjani and most other senior Iranian officials were satisfied dealing with the original (Likud) Israeli channel and were offended by the Reagan administration’s double game of tilting toward Iraq with military and intelligence support while also offering weapons deals to Iran via the second (Labor) channel.



The ex-Israeli intelligence officer said the Iranians were especially thankful in 1985-86 when the Likud channel secured SCUD missiles from Poland so Iran could respond to SCUD attacks that Iraq had launched against Iranian cities.



“After that (transaction), I got access to the highest authorities” in Iran, Ben-Menashe said, including a personal meeting with Mousavi at which Ben-Menashe said he learned that Mousavi knew the history of the Israeli-arranged shipments in the October Surprise deal of 1980.
Ben-Menashe quoted Mousavi as saying, “we did everything you guys wanted. We got rid of the Democrats.



We did everything we could, but the Americans aren’t delivering [and] they are dealing with the Iraqis.”



In that account, the Iranian leadership in 1980 viewed its agreement to delay the release of the U.S. Embassy hostages not primarily as a favor to the Republicans, but to the Israelis who were considered the key for Iran to get the necessary military supplies for its war with Iraq.



Today, many of the same Iranian players are back at center stage in the election dispute, but it’s unclear what the power struggle might mean for President Barack Obama's desire to negotiate agreements on Iran's nuclear program and on broader Middle East peace.



For instance, does the Mousavi-Rafsanjani-Karoubi contingent still have its more pragmatic view about the West? Does Khamenei still favor his more straightforward approach toward dealing with Washington?



Since Khamenei holds Ahmadinejad’s political strings, one could conclude that the Khamenei-Ahmadinejad faction might be easier to deal with in a traditional diplomatic framework that seeks a direct solution and wants to avoid endless bickering. However, others might see the Mousavi-Rafsanjani-Karoubi faction as the more flexible negotiating partners.



Whatever the case, President Obama might want to get a better grasp on the
complex history of U.S.-Iranian-Israeli relations before he charges off into that negotiating thicket.



(Could be he already knows more than that with which we give him credit. If not, wake the hell up, Boo! )




Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to Amazon.com.


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Let The Sun Shine In......

Our DOJ Had Better Listen Up!

Published on Thursday, June 25, 2009 by The Washington Post

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Let The Sun Shine In......

Ex-CIA Columnist Suspects Interference by His Former Employer

 

 
 
Stephen Lee, a former CIA operations manager who blogs for The Washington Examiner, suspects the spy agency's censors are trying to sabotage his new career.

Lee recently launched the critical "Examiner Spy" column for the Examiner newspaper chain, which has a D.C. daily edition.  He also pens a biting cartoon for his own Web site, NationalSecurityDrone.com, under the name Frank Naif.

"I believe I am being subjected to a campaign of low-level harrassment," Lee said Wednesday.


As required by his CIA secrecy agreement, he submits all his columns, and even his cartoons, to the agency's Publications Review Board, or PRB, for approval.

Since the Examiner expects him to write at least four pieces a week, he said, it's essential for the censors to return his manuscripts at a swift, or at least predictable, pace.  

An Army veteran who worked in counterterrorism for the CIA, Lee said he takes pains not to mention, or even hint at, material that he knows must remain secret. 

But like virtually all ex-CIA employees who have dealt with the PRB, he is sometimes mystified by what it chooses to censor.

In a June 19 piece, "Despite reform pledges, Panetta enables CIA's bad old habits," agency censors blacked out the name an al Qaeda suspect abducted by a CIA team in Italy in 2003, plus the name of the city where the snatch occurred, and the name of the CIA station chief in Rome -- all of which have been widely reported, based on publicly available court documents and sources.

Lee reworded that piece and then it was quickly approved, he said. The same went for his next two manuscripts.

But then, he says, the PRB "lost" the next three he turned in for review.

The first was a critical piece on former CIA Director Michael V. Hayden, acidly headlined, "CIA ex-chief Hayden blames bloggers for damage caused by his policies."

Lee says he submitted the piece for clearance on Friday, June 19. The weekend passed. Finally, at mid-morning on Tuesday, June 23, he learned the PRB had "lost" it.

He resubmitted the piece, and around 4 p.m. Tuesday, he got an answer: It was cleared.

Meantime, he says, two more of his articles had gone "missing." One was about CIA-related legislation in Congress, another a criticism of CIA recruiting and training.

Both were submitted Sunday night, June 21. On Tuesday, he learned that they, too, had been "lost."

The CIA censors, he said, "apologized."

Lee resubmitted them, and over the next 48 hours, they were cleared, he says.

Spooky writers

Scores of former CIA employees write books and articles every year, but Lee, 43, is maybe the first to write a daily newspaper column. 

The late William F. Buckley founded National Review and regularly wrote opinion pieces. And  Tom Braden, who died in April, wrote a syndicated column that appeared in The Washington Post. 

Both Buckley and Braden worked for the CIA in its very early years after World War Two. Neither were career CIA employees.

Ex-CIA Middle East operative Robert Baer, who writes regularly for Time magazine, says the CIA vets some of the facts he intends to use in a column. But he says he does not give the spies an opportunity to pass judgment on his editorial opinions or analyses.

"It's never been a problem so far," says Baer, who pens withering criticism of his former employer in his books and magazine pieces. 

"They turn it around in 24 -- or if needed -- a couple of hours," he told me.

CIA spokesman George Little denied the agency was singling out Lee.

"That's not true at all," Little said. "For former CIA officers with no contractual relationship with the agency, the sole yardstick for pre-publication review is classification."

But Washington attorney Mark Zaid, who specializes in pre-publication review cases - among other gripes of current and ex-CIA employees -- told me he's seen a trend toward more censorship.

"It's far more routine now that I have to challenge the PRB's censorship actions on behalf of my clients," Zaid said in an e-mail, "and the inconsistencies in its decisions are unbelievably frustrating and often incomprehensible at times."

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Should Jenny Sanford Get A Skill-saw?

In a word, NO!

Not unless she wants to spend the rest of her life in prison or get the death penalty.

Adultery, no matter how humiliating to one's spouse, is not yet against the law. If it were left to the same Christian-right who helped elect Sanford, it would be a major crime and Sanford might be on his way to the gallows or the dungeon for the rest of his life.

Don't get me wrong. I don't want to see Sanford in prison or executed. I think that he will have suffered enough by the time this unholy mess is over-with. I'm just pointing out that the very people who elected him want to put the 10 commandments in every southern state capitol, if not codify the ten commandments and other selected parts of the Bible as American law. 

I would like to hear Governor Sanford speak to how stupid that would be in our Democratic Republic with a constitution that forbids an official religion.

 

Jenny Sanford's tough-minded response

It's safe to say that Jenny Sullivan Sanford, wife of South Carolina's governor, will not be appearing on "I'm a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here!"

But overnight Jenny Sanford has turned into a celebrity, yet another woman forcibly inducted into the sorority of famously aggrieved political wives. She has to wish she could get out of that.

One poignancy of the Sanford story is that, like so many wives brazenly humiliated by the politicians they married, Sanford is as smart, maybe smarter, than her husband.

She grew up in Winnetka, the granddaughter of the founder of Chicago's Skil Corp., maker of power tools. When she and her husband met, she was a vice president at Lazard Freres, the investment firm. When he ran for Congress and then governor, she managed his campaigns.
Mary Schmich Mary Schmich Bio | E-mail | Recent columns

An heiress who shops at Wal-Mart (as the press likes to point out), she is known for her iron intelligence.

"It may be relatively easy to get 'one up' on the governor," a South Carolina blogger noted a while back, "but you don't mess with Jenny Sanford, people."

Mark Sanford has messed mightily with Jenny Sanford. After disappearing for several days, he resurfaced this week and confessed that he'd spent Father's Day in Argentina with another woman.

He claims to love that woman -- this was not just a sexual exploit! -- which may make his behavior less tawdry but is likely to make it even more hurtful to his wife.

So once again we, the public, step eagerly into our roles as marriage counselors.

Should Jenny Sanford join the long line of political wives who stand by their man?

Or should she have at him with a Skill-saw?

She didn't stand next to him when he stood up at a press conference Wednesday. Instead she issued a statement saying she still loved him and was open to reconciliation but had asked him two weeks ago for a trial separation.

"We reached a point," she said, "where I felt it was important to look my sons in the eyes and maintain my dignity, self-respect, and my basic sense of right and wrong."

Sanford's response struck me as sensible, subtle and strong. She stood up for herself and corrected him without lashing out.

Tina Brown, publisher of The Daily Beast, a Web site, however, declared that the first lady of South Carolina "blew it."
 
(Ain't none of Tina's business, but whatever!)

Instead of "a pious manifesto that lets the governor off the hook," Brown wrote, Sanford should have "set the table for a big-ticket matrimonial lawyer to have a payday on behalf of all the humiliated political wives -- ashen Mrs. Eliot Spitzer; pulverized Dina Matos McGreevey; quietly imploding Mrs. Larry Craig; fuming deity Elizabeth Edwards."

But it's not Jenny Sanford's job to do anything on behalf of those other wives, or on behalf of a public that's affronted by sexually wayward politicos. Her job is to care for herself and her family.


AMEN!!!

And, really, a lot of the public outrage at the politicians isn't about the politicians. It's about us, our own experience of love or betrayal, our own fears for our relationships or the fate of women. When we proclaim what Jenny Sanford should do, we're really pondering what we, in that situation, might do.



Mostly, what it is all about for me and my friends is hypocrisy in the extreme! I have actually read the gospels and I seem to remember that Jesus of Nazareth was much more concerned with hypocrisy than adultery.

But no two relationships are precisely the same. Walking out isn't the only good answer to the insult of infidelity. As Hillary Clinton has shown, it may not even be the best revenge.


Revenge is a damned poor reason to do anything; stay, go, implode, explode, run for political office or invade and occupy another nation. 

Revenge is a form of mental illness or it is a crime. Most of us know that today in a way that we did not 100 years ago or less.

mschmich@tribune.com


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Economic Collapse And The Second American Revolution

We have some problems with this post at ATS. Anyone have any thoughts on the topic?

Dealing With Denial of the NWO, the Coming Economic Collapse and the Second American Revolution

Posted on: June 15, 2009, by SGTChas

Denial means "unconscious suppression of painful or embarrassing feelings" first attested 1914 in A.A. Brill's translation of Freud's "Psychopathology of Everyday Life"; popularized in the 1980s by the phrase 'in denial'." Online Etymology Dictionary

Some of the facts that should be plain that clearly show that revolution and economic collapse are coming:

1. 15% of all subprime mortgages were foreclosed in May with foreclosure rates climbing. Alan M. White of the Valparaiso Law School.
 
2. The Federal Reserve needs to "borrow up to $3.25 trillion in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30″. Bloomberg
 
3. China has agreed to buy only 200 billion of Treasury T Bills (sold to finance the debt) total next year, while the oil exporting nations and the rest of the world have agreed to buy 300 billion total. This leaves over 2 trillion dollars that domestic investors will have to buy to float the deficit of the fiscal year that starts September 30th. Congressional Budget Office (After private investors had their private investments taken by the Government and the Unions in the Chrysler and General Motors deal, the experts say that the vast majority of the T Bills will not be sold, meaning the Government will have to print the money monetizing the debt)

Visit the full thread and read the complete opening post and member replies.


When, pray tell, did all those private investors have their money taken by the government? We heard nothing about that. They probably should have had their fortunes, made off the backs of the corporate serfs, taken by the treasury, but has anyone else heard anything about anyone's accounts even being frozen?

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Hasn't Dick Cheney made enough money off Criminal Policies

And, yes, policies can, indeed, be criminal.

Quite a few governments, around the world, in my life time have had their policies labeled as criminal by the United States as well as the U.N.

Just because we do it, does not make it legal, moral or even smart. Actually, given our former power, military as well as economic, Bush policies, which include the use of wars of aggression, based on deception and fear-mongering, and torture, just to name a couple of international crimes from the last administration, the crimes of the last administration are even more horrible than most.

Don't even get me started on the domestic crimes!

Contrary to popular belief, the president takes an oath to protect and defend the Constitution, not the people of America. Certainly any POTUS sees his or her mission as protecting the people when we are under attack, but that is not what a president is sworn to do. Our Constitution is far more important than any 1 or one hundred thousand Americans.

If certain Americans would not feel more protected with real time information about a threat to our nation, those Americans are obvious victims of the dumbing down of America.

How fearful have any of you really been?

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
by Christine Bowman

As Molly Ivins used to like to say, dripping with irony, "Isn't that nice?" Dick Cheney has found a publisher for his memoirs. Now all he needs is some #2 pencils and a good title.

A recent contest at BuzzFlash should certainly help with the latter. Our readers were brimming with creative ideas for titling Cheney's memoir., and the winning entries are.....

As a progresssive political watchdog site on the Internet, BuzzFlash has kept an eager watch on former Vice President Dick Cheney's retirement activities. And, honestly? There's been much less hunting and fishing than we had hoped. Instead, the Veep has settled into his residence in Virginia, evidently in close proximity to a Fox News studio. He could have headed for the Wyoming hills or helped out daughter Liz by babysitting the grandkids, but Cheney instead has focused on trashing the Democratic president publicly and 'splainin' anew his take on American foreign policy.
Matalin, Cheney, Bunker
But once again, he has a real project to sink his teeth into. His pal and former employee Mary Matalin has agreed to pay Cheney millions (that's the speculation) to spill his guts.

Or, will Editor Matalin, who also signed Glenn Beck and Mark Levin to the CBS-owned Simon & Schuster Threshold imprint, make sure that he doesn't? After all, she, too, was one of the insiders in the 2002 lead-up to the Iraq War -- one of the White House Iraq Study Group (WHIG) gang who brainstormed the marketing of the war, eventually settling on the WMDs and mushroom cloud story.

(We hear that Vice is getting $2,000,000. Pardon me, but has my memory failed me? Didn't Hillary Clinton get a better advance than that, like $10,000,000? Looks like Mary had to dig for the cash her old pal and boss.)


"I’m persuaded there are a lot of interesting stories that ought to be told," Cheney told the AP this week. On that point, we would heartily agree. "I want my grandkids, 20 or 30 years from now, to be able to read it and understand what I did, and why I did it." It remains a mystery just how the reported $2 million contract will enhance Grandpa's ability to just tell the family his side of things.

(Yeah, why not simply leave them a letter from Grandpa? Hasn't Cheney made enough money off the policies of the last administration?)

Writers at The New York Times seem to have explained Cheney's motivations a bit more realistically when they reported back in May that he was shopping the upcoming memoir to publishers. They observed that his memoir ...

... would add to what is already an unusually dense collection of post-Bush-presidency memoirs that will offer a collective rebuttal to the many harshly critical works released while the writers were in office and beyond.

(We plan to boycott all of them, unless there is truth in them. Publishers
should lose money if they knowingly publish lies, especially recycled lies, while not under oath).)


Yep. There are stories to be told, all right, and they should be told in perfect harmony:

Already working hard to meet publishers’ deadlines is an informal writers’ workshop of historic proportions: President George W. Bush; Laura Bush, the former first lady; former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; former Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr.; former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld; and Karl Rove, the former presidential political mastermind.

(God, what a Rogues Gallery that is!)


Members of the Bush group are in regular contact as they seek to jog their memories, compare notes and trade stylistic tips in their new lives as authors, according to friends and current and former aides.

The coming crush of books reflects what former Bush officials describe as a desire to produce their own drafts of history ...

Mr. Cheney is writing out his thoughts longhand in an office above his garage in Virginia and is in frequent contact with the other newly minted Bush administration authors, right on up to Mr. Bush.

A report by U.S. News & World Report about a visit by Mr. Cheney to Mr. Rumsfeld’s Washington office in March prompted speculation that they were trying to match up their stories, which a Rumsfeld spokesman, Keith Urbahn, denied.

Dick Cheney and his eager assistant, daughter Liz, sure have their work cut out for them. But they had better get cracking if they want to shape the eventual tale and beat others to the book tour circuit. Whatever would they do if a Colin Powell, for instance, were to jump in and write their history first? And suppose Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson were to lend Powell a helping hand ...?

(Where in hell is Lynn? Has anyone heard anything from the former, mouthy second-lady since Dick shot the old guy in the face? The reason we ask is that it was revealed at the time, briefly, that one of the women in attendance at Dick's fake hunting trip (The birds are caged and released so they can be shot by any fool.) was hated by Lynn Cheney. Mrs. Cheney strikes me as a lady not easy to forgive public slights or embarrassments.


Unlike a Cheney memoir, that alternative, indeed, would soar to the top and become a bestseller for us at The BuzzFlash Progressive Marketplace.

I won't hold my breath.

Washington Post Photo: "In a bunker under the White House on Sept. 11, 2001, Cheney speaks to administration officials, including from far left, Joshua B. Bolten, Karen Hughes, Mary Matalin (standing), Condoleezza Rice and I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby (behind Rice)"

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Let The Sun Shine In......